Meanwhile in Rome…
The victorious wars, especially the existential one with Carthage, brought wealth and pride to Rome. It seemed that everybody was bent to either erode the mos maiorum, the traditions of ancestors, or to promote it. Some political rifts opened in the society. Similarly, like president Obama promoting European ideals, which are unsustainable, and which are greeted with suspicion by right of centre American public. The battle lines are drawn, as they were in the 2nd century BC Rome.
Roman jewelry |
Within the Roman
society there was a transition in progress: from rusticity to Hellenistic
civilization and oriental spending habits. The chief offices of the state had
become almost hereditary of a few distinguished families, whose wealth corresponded to their noble birth.
However, there
was a strong reaction to their elitist manners. Other individuals, eager to ascend the ladder of magistracies,
were jealous of this exclusivity and
openly watchful for any decadence and disorder associated with luxury and
placed themselves at the head of a party which showed its determination to rely
on purer models and that attached much importance to the ancient ways.
A Roman couple. Roman women had a much better position and freedom in Roman society than Greek women |
In their
eyes, rusticity, austerity, and asceticism were the marks of a proper Roman robustness and of the old Roman integrity and love of order. M. Claudius Marcellus or philhellenic Scipio
Africanus and T. Quinctius Flaminius, were an example of the new
hellenistically educated class; Fabius
Maximus, Valerius Flaccus and especially Marcus Porcius Cato the Elder led a
party of determined rustics, eager to put the Cornelii into undyed tunics woven by their own wives.
Cato the Censor |
There was a big clash of both parties in 195 BC. Besides
constantly hounding Scipio Africanus with petty charges, there was an
opportunity to put upstart females in their place. After the battle of Cannae in 216 BC,
many restrictions were placed on any luxuries and one of them was ban on women
having and wearing jewelry, because all precious metals had to be lend to the state to pay for the war supplies.
Roman Matron |
All other austerity measures were gradually
repealed, except for women’s finery. Two Tribunes of the Plebs were pushed by
their wives to propose repeal of this law in the Assembly. Two tribunes were
against the repeal, and this matter caused unusual rift in the College of the
Tribunes of the Plebs.
When the day came to debate this proposal in the
Assembly, women were in the streets and on the roofs, and harassed the men
going to the Assembly meeting to put them in the right frame of mind. Women portraits |
When the issue went to vote, other Roman citizen women from
surrounding communities arrived in Rome to help their feisty colleagues. The
austerity law was repealed, and no tribune interposed their veto, because those
two who would be on Cato’s side were imprisoned at home by the more radical
female elements. It is interesting from legal point of view, that there were no
measures taken against women, or against the ringleaders of this female mutiny.
The men though were surely swayed not only by the possibility that they might get lousy suppers for the next who knows how long, but by a very reasonable issue brought to the men's attention - namely, the austerity law applied to the Roman citizen women, but not to Roman allies - that meant, that any wife or daughter of a non-Roman citizen could be carried around in a litter, be bedecked by precious metals and fine cloth, but not the wives and daughters of the victorious Romans.
The men though were surely swayed not only by the possibility that they might get lousy suppers for the next who knows how long, but by a very reasonable issue brought to the men's attention - namely, the austerity law applied to the Roman citizen women, but not to Roman allies - that meant, that any wife or daughter of a non-Roman citizen could be carried around in a litter, be bedecked by precious metals and fine cloth, but not the wives and daughters of the victorious Romans.