Title: Patricians and Plebeians Patrons and Clients in Republican Rome
1Patricians and PlebeiansPatrons and Clientsin
Republican Rome
2Patricians and Plebeians
- The Problem of Patrician Identity
- The Struggle of the Orders Unhistorical?
- "As a working hypothesis, I suggest that the
first Senate contained priests that priests were
the patres, those with automatic seats in the
Senate by virtue of their priesthoods that
initially their heirs automatically succeeded to
their priesthoods and thereby to their Senate
seats and, since priests/patres held their
positions for life and were caretakers of
ancestral practices, that they were the ones who
gave their approval (patrum auctoritas) to those
public measures found to be in keeping with
traditional behavior (mos maiorum) - Mitchell, Patricians and Plebeians, 63.
3Compare the Ogulnian law of 300 BCE one of the
last concessions to the plebeians was access to
the major priesthoods. Even if Mitchell is right
in the idea that patrician priest, aren't
religious power and political power in early Rome
closely intertwined, and we could still have a
Struggle of the Orders?Patres Conscripti-
"Fathers and Conscripts"? This is the standard
address in later sources for the members of the
Senate. Are the "Fathers" an original noble
elite and the "Conscripts" their well-to-do
dependents? If so, we have further
differentiation in early Roman society beyond a
patrician/plebeian dichotomy. See A. Momigliano,
"The Rise of the Plebs in the Archaic Age of
Rome," in Social Struggles, ed. K. Raaflaub
(1986).
4Two Ways of Viewing Roman Society
- Class Conflict? Horizontal Division of Early
Roman Republican Society? - An Alternative Model Patrons and Clients-
Vertical Division - Roman Paternalism and Authoritarianism (patria
potestas) - Patronage- The Extra-Constitutional Institution
- (Ernst Badian, Foreign Clientelae).
- The Fabian Clan and the Battle of the Cremera
479 BCE
5Patrons in Competition
6Complexities of Roman Politico-Social Hierarchies
7(No Transcript)
8Ancient Passages on Patronage
- Cicero, On the Republic (De Re Publica), 2.16,
written in the mid-50s BCE "He Romulus also
divided the plebeians up among the prominent
citizens, who were to be their patrons..."
(Compare Dionysius of Halicarnassus, Roman
Antiquities, 2.9-11). - 12 Tables (Table 8 RC I, 32, pg. 113) "If a
patron shall have defrauded his client, he must
be solemnly forfeited".
9The Locus of Power
- Center of Power (great Roman families) and
Periphery (A. Wallace-Hadrill). - Access to Senate only through individuals.
- Rome does not develop a representative
government. Rome remains the locus of power