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Summary POTLR - Cicero and the res publica

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Notes on: Cicero’s ideas about the ideal state and how it had developed in Rome - role of concordia ordinum (’agreement of the orders’), ideal state of affairs as cum dignitate otium (’peace with dignity’), how his actions during his career can be rationalised with his political ideals, his attempt to reconcile senators and equites in concordia ordinum and the reasons why this failed, explanation of his relationships with and attitudes towards: optimates - including Cato, populares - including Clodius and Caesar, Pompey, the first triumvirate, Catiline, the provinces, land reform, civil war between Pompey and Caesar, Mark Antony

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Cicero and the res publica

Cicero’s ideal Rome

- Wished for roman republic to exist in a state of Concordia ordinum – political ideal held by cicero
where the original structures of the republican constitution were encouraged to flourish and continue
 Aristocracy and equites united in common good of governing the roman state
 Ideal involved maintain a perfect status quo of a clear social order of Rome
 Ideal that could be retrieved and re-embedded
- Gracchi brothers – extended power of tribunate so far it had been deliberately squashed by Sulla later
- Time of cicero – ‘traditional’ oligarchy of the republic had been challenged by powerful individuals
 Took advantage of the social and economic change of the 2 nd century
- Aim was to establish a Rome that prospered from a period and future of cum dignitate otium –
‘leisure with prestige’
 Refer to an absolute social, religious, legal and political status quo
 In response to recent periods of conquest, civil violence and political disruption
- Importance placed on a umber of qualities needed for those with the responsibility of the health of
the roman state
 Duty, libertas, dignitas and traditional moral values embodied in part by stoic philosophy
- Verres case – projected his idealism further afield than simply in Rome
 Raising fundamental new questions about how Rome should govern its provinces
- Driven by a strong intellectual and moral outlook
- Not in favour of meritocracy/democracy
- Made clear his negative feelings towards the general populace and their inability to govern the state
 Through philosophical treatises on politics and letters to Atticus
- Key to Rome’s successful future
 Ensuring dignitas and power of upper classes
 Ensuring a harmony between the optimates and the equites
 Only the boni (very best, wealthy and capable men) were placed in positions of political, legal,
financial and military power
o Duty as patrons of the lower orders would make sure that the ruling classes would
establish peace and justice

Cicero, the optimates and populares

- Relationship with optimates – central from outset of his career
 Had to convince them that he as a novus homo and member of the equites could work alongside
them while continuing to build up a significant network of amicitia at all social levels
- Aedile in 69 – successfully defended his first senator in court
 Fonteius – accusation of extortion during his governorship of Gaul
 Grew his political network of supporters from both orders – Fonteius had been a senator who had
protected in the interests of the equites
- 60’s – forced to side as pragmatically as possible between rising political factions
- Had to court a path between optimates and individuals like Pompey
 Popularity and power could not be ignored
- 67 – campaigning for office of praetor
- 66 – lengthy political speech advocating Pompey as the ideal man to assume another extraordinary
command
 Replace optimate Lucullus in the east – unsuccessful in concluding Rome’s fight against
mithridates
 Small group of optimates – closely supported Lucullus
 Chose to announce his support of Pompey in public – risked his own alienation from the group of
men he had supported
- Manilian law passed – Pompey granted imperium to fight in the east
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