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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: RON-SAC |
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RULLUS, PUBLIUS SERVILIUS , Roman tribune of the people in 64 B.c., well known as the proposer of one of the most far-reaching agrarian laws
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Cicero delivered four speeches against the bill, of which three are still extant, although the first is mutilated at the beginning. The second is the most important for the history of the bill; nothing is known of the fourth. Very little enthusiasm was shown in the matter by the people, who preferred the distribution of doles in the city to the prospect of distant allotments. One of the tribunes even threatened to put his veto on the bill, which was withdrawn before the voting took place. The whole affair was obviously a political move, probably engineered by Caesar, his object being to make the democratic leaders the rulers of the state. Although Caesar could hardly have expected the bill to pass, the aristocratic party would be saddled with the odium of rejecting a popular measure, and the people themselves would be more ready to welcome a proposal by Caesar himself, an expectation fulfilled by the passing of the lex Julia in 59, whereby Caesar at least partly succeeded where Rullus had failed. See the orations of Cicero De lee cgraria, with the introduction in G. Long 's edition, and the same author's Decline of the Roman Republic, p. 241; Mommsen, Hist. of Rome, bk. v. ch. 5; art.End of Article: RULLUS, PUBLIUS SERVILIUS If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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