The Roman elite and the end of the Republic : the boni, the nobles and Cicero

Bibliographic Information

The Roman elite and the end of the Republic : the boni, the nobles and Cicero

Henrik Mouritsen

Cambridge University Press, 2022

  • : hbk

Available at  / 2 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p.305-318) and index

Summary: "The boni - the wealthy, but largely non-political, section of the Roman elite - have hitherto escaped scholarly attention. This book draws a detailed and rounded picture of the boni, their identity, values and interests, also tracing their - often tense - relationship to the political class, whose inner circle of noble families eventually lost their trust and support. Concerns about property played a central part in the process, and the book explores key Roman concepts associated with property, including frugality, luxury, patrimony, debt and the all-important otium that ensured the peaceful enjoyment of private possessions. Through close readings of Cicero and other republican writers, a new narrative of the 'fall of the republic' emerges. The shifting allegiances of the wider elite of boni viri played an important part of the events that brought an end to the republic and ushered in a new political system better attuned to their material interests"-- Provided by publisher

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The boni, the wealthy, but largely non-political, section of the Roman elite, have hitherto escaped scholarly attention. This book draws a detailed and rounded picture of the boni, their identity, values and interests, also tracing their - often tense - relationship to the political class, whose inner circle of noble families eventually lost their trust and support. Concerns about property played a central part in this process, and the book explores key Roman concepts associated with property, including frugality, luxury, patrimony, debt and the all-important otium that ensured the peaceful enjoyment of private possessions. Through close readings of Cicero and other republican writers, a new narrative of the 'fall of the republic' emerges. The shifting allegiances of the wider elite of boni viri played an important part in the events that brought an end to the republic and ushered in a new political system better attuned to their material interests.

Table of Contents

  • Introduction
  • Part I. The Boni in the Late Republic: 1. Lost in translation: modern interpretations of the Boni
  • 2. Boni et Locupletes
  • 3. Who were the Boni?
  • 4. Boni and Equites in the late republic
  • 5. The Boni in Roman politics and public life
  • Part II. Property and Politics: 6. Wealth and morality revisited
  • 7. Boni: the 'Gentlemen' of republican Rome
  • 8. Boni and Improbi: the moral construction of Roman politics
  • 9. Otium and Tranquillitas: the politics of the Boni
  • 10. Vita et Bona: property and security
  • 11. The road to perdition: Egestas and Aes Alienum
  • 12. 'Egentes Sumptuosi Nobiles': politics and debt
  • Part III. The Boni and the End of the Republic: 13. Boni and Nobiles
  • 14. The power of the Nobiles
  • 15. 'Boni Non Sequentur': The Boni and the end of the republic
  • 16. Cicero and the formation of an alternative
  • 17. Epilogue: the Boni and Augustus

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