- been for
decades largely occupied without title by Rome's
Italian allies.
Gracchan claims of
Italian rural depo****tion also are
contradicted by archaeological...
- or
other combinations of
Gracchan allies had
murdered him.
These charges are not
believed by
modern historians. Some
Gracchan supporters were prosecuted...
- (like that of his brother) survived; the
Roman aristocracy disliked the
Gracchan agitation but
accepted their policies. In 121, the
province of
Gallia Narbonensis...
- he
started his
political career with
election as a
commissioner in the
Gracchan land
commission to
distribute public land to poor families. In 126 BC,...
-
Agrarian laws (from the
Latin ager,
meaning "land") were laws
among the
Romans regulating the
division of the
public lands, or ager publicus. In its broader...
- the end of
Pleminius include a
timely death in jail
during trial. Some
Gracchan sympathizers ended up in the Carcer,
where the
haruspex Herennius Siculus...
-
connections with the
Fulvii Flacci and the
patrician Claudii, who were
Gracchan allies. The main
anecdote for Piso's
opposition is an
anecdote placed in...
-
Terentius Varro Lucullus and
Gaius C****ius Longinus,
reviving the
original Gracchan scheme.
Marcus Porcius Cato
further expanded the
grain dole
during his...
- This
history narrates the
history of the
Romans from the time of the
Gracchan tribunates,
through the
civil wars of Marius, Sulla,
Caesar and Pompey...
-
control of the
courts from the equites, who had held
control since the
Gracchan reforms, to the senators. This,
along with the
increase in the
number of...