The Republic Destroys Itself: Gracchi to Caesar's Rise
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About this listen
At the heart of the story is a fatal feedback loop: military expansion produced slaves, slaves displaced small farmers, displaced farmers lost the property qualification for military service, and a new kind of soldier emerged — one whose loyalty belonged not to the Senate or the Republic, but to the general who promised him land. Marius opened the legions to the landless poor in 107 BCE and changed Roman history forever.
What followed was a generation of consequences. Sulla marched his legions on Rome itself, crossed the sacred boundary no Roman army was supposed to cross, made himself dictator, massacred his enemies, and then — bafflingly — resigned. He believed he had restored the old order. He had actually demonstrated that Roman institutions could be seized by force and that the Republic had no mechanism to stop it.
That lesson was not wasted. Pompey, Crassus, and Caesar absorbed it completely, forming the First Triumvirate — an arrangement with no constitutional basis, no formal name, and total practical power. The Senate still met. Elections still happened. But the Republic, in any meaningful sense, was already over.
Scholarship, storytelling, and some of the most dramatic political self-destruction in human history.
This episode includes AI-generated content. A YesOui.ai Production.
This episode includes AI-generated content.
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