Epilogue: The Fall of the Roman Republic
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2008
Summary
At the beginning of this volume readers were offered a brief survey of opinions down the ages about the causes of the fall of the Republic; now, with the facts before them, they will have formed opinions of their own. However, they may still, reasonably, expect the editors of the volume to state theirs: how should this tumultuous period be summed up, and, especially, are there any integrating concepts to link the political and military narrative of the first part with the subsequent chapters about law and society, economics, religion and ideas?
Some parallel may here be perceived to the debates about the fall of the Roman Empire. In that case the simplistic question,’did it decline or was it assassinated?’, though requiring to be reformulated and answered with considerable subtlety, remains not a bad starting-point. So: did the political order that we know as the Roman Republic decline, or was it assassinated? Did it contain the dialectic of its own collapse, or could it, but for the ambitions of certain dynasts (above all, Pompey and Caesar, Antony and Octavian), have survived the changes taking place in Roman society?
Both the experience of another twenty centuries and the refinements of modern historical explanation make it out of the question for us to be content with the standard answer given by the Romans themselves, that the political order was destroyed by moral decline resulting from wealth, greed and luxury. Change was occurring in moral conceptions, as in everything else, but that is true of all periods and is not necessarily a symptom of morbidity in the body politic. Nor is it easily open to us now to say that what fell was in any case only a corrupt and unlamented oligarchy. Recent analyses of the Republican constitution have laid stress on its genuinely democratic aspects:3 it is nowadays insisted that Polybius drew a true picture after all, and that Rome did have a ‘mixed constitution’, and the governing class, being dependent in each generation upon the electorate, could not treat the res publica as their private game. In so far as such analyses are right, we cannot ascribe the fall of the Republic merely to the fortuitously disastrous outcome of a political poker-match amongst the principes viri, any more than to a downturn in some Dow-Jones index of morality, but must turn to the identification of structural faults.
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- The Cambridge Ancient History , pp. 769 - 776Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1994