GRACCHI

grăkˈī, two Roman statesmen and social reformers, sons of the consul Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus and of Cornelia. The brothers were brought up with great care by their mother. Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus, d.133 b.c., the elder of the Gracchi, fought at Carthage (146 b.c.) and in Spain (137). Alarmed at the state of Italy and the provinces, where the middle class was being totally eliminated by concentration of wealth and lands in the hands of a few, Tiberius stood for the tribunate of the people in 133 b.c. as an avowed reformer. On his election he immediately proposed and succeeded in passing the Sempronian Law (Lex Sempronia Agraria), a modification of the Licinian Rogations (see agrarian laws), which sought to redistribute the public lands that the rich had taken over. Tiberius' colleague Octavius vetoed the law, and Tiberius, by immediately holding an unconstitutional referendum, deposed Octavius. Later in the year Attalus III, king of Pergamum, died and bequeathed his property to Rome; Tiberius proposed to use the bequest to provide capital for the paupers who were to settle the lands allotted under the Sempronian Law. It was now election time, and Tiberius renominated himself; the senate declared this action illegal and had the election postponed. In a great riot on the following day Tiberius was killed. His brother, Caius Sempronius Gracchus, d.121 b.c., became the organizer of the reform movement begun by Tiberius. After serving (126) as quaestor in Sardinia, he returned to Rome and was elected (123) tribune of the people. Setting out to complete his brother's work, he immediately initiated a series of remarkable social reforms. The chief aim of these reforms was to unite the plebs and the equites, thus undermining the authority of the senate. The Lex Frumentaria benefited the small landholders by reappropriating the proceeds of the tax on allotted lands. The senate, which had formerly used this money for the aggrandizement of the aristocracy, was now required to use it for the good of the poor. In the Lex Judiciaria, Caius won over the equites by granting them control over the judgeships that had heretofore belonged to the senate. Caius was reelected (122) tribune, but the counterproposals of Marcus Livius Drusus began to gain popularity, and the following year Caius was defeated for reelection. Repeal of his measures was proposed, and in the ensuing riots Caius was killed. Within 10 years the reaction had annulled every Gracchan reform, and the social and political war began again, this time to culminate in the fatal and bloody struggle of Marius and Sulla.

See study by H. C. Boren (1969).

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Gracchi  - 890 results

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...fascinating material. His Lives of the two Gracchi are among his best; he made use of the...covers the years 133 to 70 B.C. For the Gracchi Appian has followed an excellent source...source, but in general his account of the Gracchi is first-rate. Finally Diodorus Siculus...
...country. 172 In the De Officiis, Cicero ranks the Gracchi among such demagogues as the Spartan kings...setting the model for Plutarch's pairing of the Gracchi with these kings. 173 The Gracchi represented political movements that destabilized...
...within a day the second of the remarkable Gracchi brothers was dead, the victim of a murder...mob of unemployed in the capital, the Gracchi brothers, Tiberius and Gaius, arose...descended on Rome after the murder of the Gracchi and their supporters, but within a generation...
...For an overview, see Badian, From the Gracchi to Sulla , pp. 197-245; "Tiberius...Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus , and Stockton, Gracchi . Earl, Tiberius Gracchus , Rich...Against this view, see Badian, "From the Gracchi to Sulla", p. 210 n. 52; "Tiberius...
...to describe the political deeds of the Gracchi reflects the slightly later optimate view...sympathetic to optimate criticism of the Gracchi. For the statue of Cornelia, see chapter...Aemilianus and not yet as the mother of the Gracchi Plut. TG 8.7 may be interpreted in...
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journal articles on: Gracchi  - 16 results

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...explanation of the agrarian laws revived in 133 B.C. by the Gracchi. Long a contested point in the interpretation of Roman history...overweening patricians. By this interpretive stroke, the Gracchi emerged as heroic defenders of the people but not Jacobin levelers...
...her and not a hired nurse. He praises "the mothers of the Gracchi, of Caesar, of Augustus who directed their childrens education...in Lefkowitz and Fant 141-42). Cornelia, mother of the Gracchi, figures prominently in Plutarchs biography of her sons...
...Neoclassical Roman history paintings, Cornelia, Mother of the Gracchi (1785, Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, Richmond); and two...the Greeks, and Angelica Kauffmans Cornelia, Mother of the Gracchi, the famous Roman matron who valued her children and their...
...cast the first stone"; let the straight laugh at the lame, he says, the white at the black; we cannot put up with the Gracchi complaining about sedition, Verres about thievery, Milo about murder, Clodius about adultery, Catiline about Cethegus...
...military endorsement as he explained the lessons he had learned in Japan to a Senate subcommittee: I dont think that since the Gracchi effort at land reform since the days of the Roman Empire there has been anything quite as successful of that nature that has...
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magazine articles on: Gracchi  - 11 results

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...Blairite approach to politics but with added bloodshed. The Gracchi brothers in the second century BC realised that class conflict...privileges and got their hired thugs to assassinate both the Gracchi. The Roman republic of the early first century BC was thus...
...included morally ambivalent subjects like Coriolanus and Antony, and in any case the most vivid of his Roman lives--the Gracchi, Marius, Sulla, Pompey, Cicero, Caesar, Brutus, Antony again--are from the period of the Republics collapse. Add...
...call political parties; but all the same, the Romans called populares a succession of leaders, starting from the brothers Gracchi in the 130s and 120s BC, who embraced the popular cause and used the ancient plebeian assembly to carry through their proposals...
...had hoped to reproduce on the books cover a painting from the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts depicting Cornelia, mother of the Gracchi, pointing to her children as her treasures--a tableau perfectly suited to Mrs. Graglias book. To our surprise, the state...
...now Lombardy), Rome had already suffered through decades of civil war. Reformers of the previous generation, such as the Gracchi and Marius, had largely failed to restructure the Roman social system, which turned in part on the protection of the food...
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...of Ancient Rome. In fact, he seems to relish entering classical territory, sort of stealing Boriss togas. He likes the Gracchi brothers, Romes second-century Kennedy brothers. "They were populists who changed the law, in effect nationalising the...


 

encyclopedia articles on: Gracchi  - 10 results

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GRACCHI grak i, two Roman statesmen and social reformers, sons of the consul Tiberius...mother. Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus, d.133 b.c., the elder of the Gracchi, fought at Carthage (146 b.c.) and in Spain (137). Alarmed at the...
...Flaccus, grandnephew of the first Quintus, lived in the 2d cent. b.c. and was a supporter of the liberal measures of the Gracchi family. As consul in 125, he proposed to make all allies Roman citizens. This proposal, which met Senate opposition, led...
...Roman matron, daughter of Scipio Africanus Major. She was the wife of Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus and mother of the Gracchi . She refused to remarry after her husbands death, devoting herself to her children, whom she educated well and inspired...
...rectify an increasingly difficult situation was the Sempronian Law of 133 b.c. devised by Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus (see Gracchi ). This reenacted the provisions of the Licinian Rogations and added to the maximum allowance an extra amount for each son...
...powerful, but such defiance was to no avail. Massacres and incredible barbarities disposed of the slaves restlessness, and the Gracchi were assassinated (133 and 121 b.c.). Marius defeated Jugurtha (106 b.c.) and the Cimbri and the Teutons (101 b...
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