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- [Instructor] Talk a little bit about
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the social and political
structures of ancient Rome.
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It's important to keep
in mind that ancient Rome
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wasn't just this static
thing that never changed.
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It existed for over 1,000 years,
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from its period from its
founding as a kingdom,
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if you believe the founding myth,
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founded by Romulus in 753 BCE.
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Most historians don't
accept that founding myth.
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But then it became they
overthrew their last king
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in 509 BCE, Tarquin the Proud,
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and then they established
the Roman republic,
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which was eventually then turned into
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an empire by Julius Caesar and Augustus.
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And so, whenever you have
something this long lasting,
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you could imagine the social and
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the political structures
evolved over time.
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But let's begin with the
period when it was a kingdom,
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because even then there were some things
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that were noteworthy and some social
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and political structures that continued
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into the republic period and
even when it was an empire.
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So one interesting thing is that
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when we typically think of kings,
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we think of it as being
dynastic, that if I am king,
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then my oldest son, or
maybe in certain cultures,
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my oldest daughter might
become king or queen.
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But turns out, that many of the,
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especially the early kings
of the Roman kingdom,
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were actually elected.
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They had a lot of power, all
the power resided in them,
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they were the executive, the legislative,
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they were the judicial, they
even had religious power.
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But it's interesting to think
of the idea of elected kings.
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Now all of them weren't elected.
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Several of them were dynastic
but it is an interesting idea.
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Now another idea that emerged during
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the Roman kingdom is
this idea of citizenship.
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Now it's important to realize today,
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in a lot of countries, we think of
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oh, everyone who's a formal
resident of that country,
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you can view them as a citizen,
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or most of the people, you
could think of citizens,
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especially maybe people born in a country.
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But that was not the case in Rome.
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And when we go into this Roman kingdom,
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I'll remind, and I do this in many videos,
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we're not thinking about
this sprawling Roman empire
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that we'll see several
hundred years later.
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At that time, Rome was really
just in control of Rome
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and over time, especially
during the republic period,
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it starts to expand and
eventually have hegemony
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or dominant power over the Mediterranean
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or parts of the Middle East, I should say,
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and in southern Europe.
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But let's go back to this kingdom period.
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And what I'm about to
draw actually stays true
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through most of Roman civilization.
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If this white circle are the people
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who lived under Roman rule,
only a subset were citizens.
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So this were the citizens.
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These were male landowners,
citizens right over here.
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And within the citizens,
they were further divided
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between patricians,
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and you can think of them as the nobility,
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these were people and
they became patrician
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based on what family they were born into.
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And it's based on this idea and the word
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literally comes from this
idea that you are descended
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from the founding fathers of Rome.
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And then all the other
citizens were the plebians.
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So all of the other
ones were the plebians,
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right over here.
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And, as we'll see, over the patricians
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held most of the power
and most of the wealth
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for a significant amount of time.
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But as we go through the republic period,
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the plebians start to gain
more and more and more power
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and many plebians also
start to accrue wealth
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and some patrician
families do end up poor.
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But, for the most part, the patricians,
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they're the nobility,
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they're associated with the
aristocracy, but the plebians,
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some of them become wealthy
and powerful as well.
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Now you're probably saying what about
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all of these other people?
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Well, you could imagine
non-landholding males,
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you could imagine women,
you could imagine slaves.
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And even though we aggrandize Rome
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and there were many very
interesting things about Rome,
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one of the legacies that
Rome had, which maybe
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as the historians reflect a
little bit more negatively on,
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is that Roman society was
built on the idea of slaves.
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And most of the slaves were
people that they subjugated
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people that they conquered in other lands.
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They might have been people who at least
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the authorities thought they
committed a crime of some kind.
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But the society was built on slavery.
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So you had a large
segment of the population
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that had no rights, that
were considered slaves.
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Later on, they start to
gain some very, very basic,
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rudimentary rights, but you
can imagine, as a slave,
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close to no rights whatsoever.
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Now, other institutions that developed
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during the time of the Roman kingdom were
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an institution that developed at the time
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of the Roman kingdom was the
Senate, was the Roman Senate.
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And under the king, the
king had most of the power,
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but once the Roman
republic gets established,
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it's actually the Senate where
most of the power resides.
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Now, this right over here, is a depiction,
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that came much later, of the Roman Senate.
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And it's important to realize that
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the Senate was not the only institution
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or the only position
within the Roman republic.
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The consuls were there
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and you could view the
consuls as the executives,
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or if you think of a system
like the United States,
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the executive power
resides in the President,
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so it's analogous to the President.
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They are running the government.
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They are also commander
in chief of the military.
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Now, consuls, even
though it was considered
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a very high title, their
power was very limited.
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There was two of them at any given time,
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so I just drew the two consuls.
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They could veto each
other at any given time
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to keep any one consul
from getting too powerful
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and they only had a one year term.
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And during that one year,
they would alternate
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on a monthly basis on who
was the more senior consul.
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So you could imagine the consuls
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were limited in many, many, many ways.
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And even though the Senate officially
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was supposed to advise the consuls,
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in practice, what the Senate told
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the consuls to do, the
consuls actually did.
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So another question is,
well, who gets to be a consul
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and who gets to be a Senate?
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Well, in the early days, the Senate
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was mainly or it was
patrician, and over time,
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as plebians start to
exert more and more power,
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especially as we go into
the mid and later republic,
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Roman republic, you start to have
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more wealthy plebians in the Senate.
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But in general, the Senate is
composed of the aristocracy.
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So wealthy and influential
men of Rome are in the Senate.
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How are they selected for the Senate?
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Well, in the early days,
it was actually the consuls
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who selected the Senators.
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Later on, or shortly thereafter,
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and for most of the
republic period of Rome,
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it was a position called the censor
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that decided who got to
actually serve in the Senate.
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Now another question you might say
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is well, who's deciding
who gets to be a consul,
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who gets to be a censor,
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and there's many other of
these executive positions
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that are generally called magistrates,
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and that came from one
of the assemblies of
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the Roman republic, in particular,
the Centuriate assembly.
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Centuriate assembly,
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which elected consuls,
the senior executives,
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the senior magistrates,
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is one way that you could think
about it, they elected them.
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And who was in the Centuriate assembly
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and why did they call it
the Centuriate assembly?
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Well, it started off as citizen soldiers
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being grouped into groups of
100 and on a particular issue,
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including who should be elected consul,
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this group of 100 would vote,
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whatever the majority would
be, then their representative
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to the assembly would vote that way.
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So they wouldn't just
select a representative
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and that representative
could do anything they want.
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They would tell that
representative how to vote,
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but that's why it was called
a Centuriate assembly,
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because you had these groups of 100.
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And a lot of their power was
in electing these consuls
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and these other senior magistrates.
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But that wasn't the only assembly.
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You also had the tribunal assembly.
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This is breaking up the Roman population,
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the Roman citizenry, by tribe.
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And this had both plebians
and patricians in it.
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So this is the tribunal assembly.
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You also have the Plebian
Council, this was only plebians.
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You also have the Plebian Council.
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And even though, all of these,
and they evolved over time.
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Over time, the plebians started
to get more and more power,
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the general idea, especially
during the Roman republic,
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is that the Senate is
where the important debates
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on foreign policy happened,
the important debates
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on what Rome should become as a society,
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as a republic, and
eventually as an empire.