in which caesar hasn’t even been born yet
[Hi, this is me stanning Adrian Goldsworthy’s biography of Caesar. I studied Classics, but not this period, so all I can contribute here are squeals of delight, a few mistakes and the occasional witty comment. If you’d like to know more, please buy the book - it’s really good and a fun read.]
PART 1
So the first thing that’s important to remember if we’re talking about Rome is that Rome sucked. And, I mean, it sucked in a wide variety of very specific ways, but when it comes to the world Caesar would soon be born into, well - Rome sucked because it fooled everyone into thinking it was a democracy (to. this. fucking. day.) when it really, really wasn’t.
Basically, Rome worked the usual way: if you’re rich, you get a say; if you’re not, fucking starve maybe? Loser.
Specifically, the main reason why Rome had managed to defeat everyone else by that point is because it was a very well-structured, yet oddly flexible, oligarchy - which means you don’t have a mad king suddenly deciding he’s going to invade the Moon (= monarchy) or some rich asshole forming a new party and causing a civil war (= democracy). Instead, wealthy people worked together to remain wealthy, and those who seemed a bit dangerous or too ambitious could be booted out before they became a problem.
More specifically, there were three bodies of power (we’re talking about 130 BC or so): the magistrates, the Senate and the Popular Assemblies.
The magistrates are few, and they normally only stay in power for one year, but they can do a lot of things. A lot. They’re sort of the executive, and if you’re rich and talented, that’s where you start your career.
The Senate is a ~parliament: it convenes when the magistrates decide it should, debates stuff and votes on stuff. You’re automatically part of it if you’re a) rich enough and b) old enough and c) obviously a man and also d) a Roman (duh).
The Assemblies are fun. They can’t debate or propose anything, just vote on items from a list, and traditionally vote what the Senate tells them they should vote. Also the nice part is - in theory, these were open to all male citizens BUT not everyone’s vote was equal. There were, like, groups depending on class and wealth, and every group had one vote. Surprisingly, this tended to favour richer people, simply because there’s always more poor people than rich people. So a group of three very rich people would share one vote, and a group of two billion poor people would also share one vote.
Another fun fact is that shortly before Caesar was born the system was starting to crack because imperialism.
You’d think imperialism would be a good thing! But nope!! History is full of surprises!!! See, the problem is as follows:
You have a beautiful new country but it’s tiny and all your neighbours have Things and could be Dangerous, so you start attacking them and later write 9896-line poems on how you had to attack them because alas, your tribe had no women and women are the absolute best.
To prevent the survivors from stabbing you in the back, you offer them generous peace terms, like low taxes, paved roads and not-quite-a-Roman-but-hey-at-least-you’re-not-a-barbarian-anymore status.
Great. Now you have a larger territory and a free supply of soldiers (which your allies have to provide, cf. *Terms &Conditions) to go to war.
Unfortunately, these new wars take more time because in order to kill people and destroy entire civilisations you’re forced to go farther and farther away from home. #LiveLoveTravel
What this means is that the poorer soldiers in your army are struggling to keep their day job - if they’re away from home for five years, their farms won’t produce anything much.
Luckily, you and your friends are getting richer and richer because of everything you stole in the conquered lands and also all the slaves you’re bringing back.
[*instert light bulb gif*]
That’s how rich people start buying poor people off their land and creating vast estates farmed by slaves.
Meanwhile, those who can’t afford to play Roman monopoly basically become professional soldiers, which means more than half or the economy suddenly depends on being in a permanent state of war.
Spoiler alert: this fine and just system stops working when a) you run out of countries to crush or b) your military commanders are rich idiots who keep losing battles or c) enough soldiers get old and need an actual job, money and a house.
And this brings us to about 30 BC (before Caesar), ie 130 BC (before Christ, but at this point, of course, it’s all a bit Christ who?).
By now, all of those three things have started to happen.
In particular, a large bit of the Roman army is massacred by some Northern tribes who, honestly, were just moving around and Didn’t see you there, my bad, and the entire city of Rome starts to freak the fuck out. As it usually happens, this means the one decent startegist they’ve got in the entire army gets promoted - Marius, Caesar’s uncle and a hero of many foreign wars, becomes consul and basically stays consul well after the official terms.
(Which: weird and dangerous! A threat to ‘democracy’!
But: he slaughters a lot of dangerous enemies abroad, so that’s fine.)
And secondly: someone realizes inequality is a ticking time bomb and they’d better find a place and a good salary for all those soldiers before they form a mob and burn everything to the ground.
Enter the Gracchi brothers.
I know everyone goes through a teenage phase of stanning the Gracchi (including the whole ‘I’ll pretend-kiss that poster of yours I’ve got in my bedroom’), but just as a reminder, Tiberius and Gaius Gracchus were two tribunes who tried to make the Roman system work for everyone, not just the 1%, and were brutally murdered for their trouble.
(Of course, this being Rome it’s completely possible they were self-serving assholes drafting legislation to win over the public and crown themselves Mr et Mr Universum, but let’s be optimistic for fucking once.
I like them.
There.)
Their proposals were stuff like: limiting how much land one guy can own, redistribution of all that other land to the poor (which automatically created more soldiers for the army, btw, because you couldn’t fight if you didn’t own land), fighting against senatorial corruption, giving more rights to allied tribes and keeping wheat at a set price so nobody would actually starve to death when the markets were bad.
As I said, they were both lynched by political opponents, which doesn’t surprise me. What does surprise me is that Rome was surprised. Apparently, despite - well - everything - until 133 BC, when Tiberius and his friends were chased down the streets by angry senators, killed with random furniture and then thrown in the Tiber, Roman politics had been sort of civilised.
(Uh.)
With that murder, it all changed, and this is how Caesar’s story begins.
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