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Tiberius fought to restore land rights to the common Roman, and he would let nothing stop him. Nothing.

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The Brothers Gracchi - II: Populares - Extra History

Tiberius Gracchus took up the cause of land reform, determined to restore property rights to the average citizen and curtail the abuses of the rich. But another tribune vetoed his proposed law, so Tiberius began to fight back with his own veto and ground the government to a halt. At last, he held a special vote to remove his opponent from office so that his land reform bill could pass. (--More below) Support us on Patreon! http://bit.ly/EHPatreon Grab your Extra Credits gear at the store! http://bit.ly/ExtraStore Subscribe for new episodes every Saturday! http://bit.ly/SubToEC Learn about the war with Carthage that fueled Rome's early expansion: http://bit.ly/2aXEE5m Play games with us on Extra Play! http://bit.ly/WatchEXP Talk to us on Twitter (@ExtraCreditz): http://bit.ly/ECTweet Follow us on Facebook: http://bit.ly/ECFBPage Get our list of recommended games on Steam: http://bit.ly/ECCurator ____________ Tiberius Gracchus returned from war to find a Rome where soldiers reaped no rewards for their service, and the rich worked all the farmland with slaves who were the spoils of war. Determined to fix this, he took up the cause of land reform. His first goal: to restore the ager publicus, or "public land." Tradition held that some of the land won in war would always be set aside and distributed to the citizens, with no one allowed to hold more than 500 acres of it, but the rich had ignored that law so long that no one even tried to enforce it. Tiberius got himself electrd as tribune and wrote a law that didn't punish the rich, just asked them to surrender their illegally held land after the state paid them for it. Nevertheless, the richest of the rich accused him of trying to foment a revolution. They tried and failed to turn the people against Tiberius, but when his law passed anyway, they recruited one of his fellow tribunes to veto the law. Tiberius responded by drafting another, harsher version of the law - only to see this one vetoed also. He began using his own veto in retaliation, refusing to let any other law pass and stopping the senate from withdrawing money from the treasury. Government ground to a halt. Roman government had always relied on the responsible use of powers that were now being abused, and the snowball began to roll downhill. Tiberius took the unprecedented measure of holding a special vote to get his opponent, Octavius, removed from office by popular vote. Despite Octavius's efforts to hold out, the people voted with Tiberius: Octavius was stripped from office and barely escaped from the Campus Martius with his life after an angry crowd turned on him. But at last, with no more opposition from Octavius, the agrarian reform law proposed by Tiberius Gracchus passed. ____________ ♪ Get the intro music here! http://bit.ly/1EQA5N7 *Music by Demetori: http://bit.ly/1AaJG4H ♪ Get the outro music here! http://bit.ly/23isQfx *Music by Sean and Dean Kiner: http://bit.ly/1WdBhnm

Comments

Anonymous

Is this James' inventive way to make a political statement? If it is I like it.

Anonymous

Trivia: According to Plutarch, this Octavius is the ancestor (great-grandfather?) of Augustus.

Anonymous

Hmm. Fascinating. Tiberius appears to have largely had good intentions, but this is not going to end well...

Anonymous

Despite his cause, Tiberius' antics are undermining the whole republican system. The Romans took their oaths and traditions seriously, but the Gracchi showed them that they were so much hot air and so, the whole foundation eroded away. EH haven't really touched upon another problem that was just as serious for late republican Rome: if there are no more free-holding farmers, who could afford the equipment of war, there are no soldiers to fight the wars of conquest. If we ever get to Marius, we'll see where that leads. Ultimately, though, the Roman Senatorial class was in my opinion the most irresponsible part in the end. Even minor reforms and concessions would likely have kept the desperation of the poor in check and maintained a more stable 'middle class' of free-holding farmers.

Anonymous

Oh, America. History may not repeat itself but it does rhyme

QuakeRiley

The results of the shrinkage of the Roman middle-class had long lasting effects that went into the Empire.

Anonymous

I'm feeling like this is where the American idea for Eminent Domain stemmed from. The idea that the government can just take the land it needs for projects and such. The state buys the illegally owned land from the estates and then redistributes it to the people of Rome with the promise of a monthly tithed of some sort.

Anonymous

As an immigrant who had decided to take the oath of citizenship years ago, I fear for the events to never repeat in this country.

Anonymous

I fear a current political party in America would put themselves in the light of 'preventing a repeat of history' by 'keeping their Octavius in power' but at what cost? The very party that stood for change and progress is becoming no different from the party they often oppose.

Anonymous

*brazilian commenter writing down how to get an agrarian reform* ...huh-

Anonymous

Did the superhero ' s "R" stand for Robert?

Paul Grodt

This is so friggin' good.

Anonymous

Politicians that couldn't agree and compromise? GEE where have we heard THAT one before?

Anonymous

Doing the wrong thing for the right reasons. Yeah, that always ends well, right? Right? -Great series so far. Much Kitty Hugs!!-

Anonymous

It's something of an historical running joke, particularly in the Republican era, how often names repeat. The Gaius Octavius that would later become Augustus was something like the third or fourth Gaius Octavius in a row. It's not unique to the Republic though, just wait and see how popular Flavius becomes.

Anonymous

Good episode as always but you did skip some details on how Tiberius broke precedent by skipping the Senate in the legislative process, while not technically illegal this did break tradition and remove support from moderate Senators. I think it would be good to go over Roman government and legislative process for this series and any future topics in the late Roman Republic.

ExtraCredits

Well, you all voted for it, but never let it be said we didn't take an opportunity and run with it.

ExtraCredits

Nah, Eminent Domain existed in much harsher formats between Rome and the US, when it was basically just "I am mighty and want your land. It is mine now, so go screw." Eminent Domain was in some ways a step forward... but still mighty unpleasant.

ExtraCredits

It's gonna get worse before it gets bet-- wait, no. It's just going to get worse. :(

ExtraCredits

That kind of detail is what we encourage people to do their own research on, as EH is meant to be an intro series with a guiding narrative rather than a comprehensive analysis. Governmental processes would either be Lies material or fodder for a one-off further down the line!