Populares

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search
test

Populares ("favoring the people", singular popularis) were aristocratic leaders in the late Roman Republic who tended to use the people's assemblies and tribunate in an effort to break the stranglehold of the Senate on political power. They were opposed by the conservative optimates.

The populares wanted to strengthen the power of the plebs, sharing riches of the nobility with the people, giving away goods such as bread to the poor, and limiting slavery, since slavery took jobs from poor free citizens.

The populares' plans included moving some Roman citizens to provincial colonies; expanding citizenship to communities outside Rome and Italy; and modifying the grain dole and monetary value. The populares' cause reached its peak under the dictatorship of Julius Caesar, their most avid leader. After the creation of the Second Triumvirate (43 BC33 BC), the cause of the populares was essentially lost in the ensuing power struggle.

Besides Caesar, notable populares included the Gracchi brothers, Gaius Marius, Publius Clodius Pulcher, and (during the First Triumvirate) Marcus Licinius Crassus and Pompey. Both Pompey and Crassus had, however, fought on the side of Sulla during the civil war, and after the death of Crassus, Pompey eventually reverted to his position as a conservative optimas.