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(see [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CPTIGLj2LCE here], [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sQqRBdC3JTY here], and [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bg2MT_FhGYs here] for more info.)
 
After a time the Romans lost patience with living in [[The Kingdom]] and threw out Tarquinius Superbus (Tarquin the Proud), and formed what they called a ''respublica'' (literally, "Thing of the People"), from which we gain the term "Republic." Rome was organized as an oligarchy with [[The Aristocracy]], called patricians, controlling the "Senate" (derived from ''senex'', meaning "old man"), though the public had some say on the issues through the tribunes<ref> This office was created about 250 years after the republic's founding. Details are at [[The Other Wiki]].</ref> (lit. Protector of the People, had veto power), as well as the less formal ability to beg favors from their patrons. This organization is reflected in the famous Roman slogan SPQR which stands for ''Senatus Populusque Romanus,'' or "The Senate and People of Rome." [[The Republic]] in social structure was quite family oriented with various clans becoming centers of webs of patronage, a patron/client relationship that has modern answers in political machines and [[The Mafia]]. While Rome's system was not democratic by modern standards it had [[Fair for Its Day|for its time]] a reputation for justice and stability and its elaborate checks and balances were often admired by Greeks whose cities were often troubled by [[We ARE Struggling Together!|chaos]].
 
The Republic had a succession of executive magistrates with one-year terms, including quaestors (low-level magistrates, 20 a year), praetors (mid-level judicial magistrates, the lowest office to grant its holder the benefit of lictors/bodyguards carrying around their telltale [[Does This Remind You of Anything?|''fasces'']]), and two consuls (top executives with executive powers checked only by each other and the Senate). In addition, the Republic came with a safety valve: in times of crisis, a six-month term for a special office, ''dictator'', could be granted to one person, granting him complete control of the state. There could be good dictators ([[Cincinnatus]], Quintus Fabius Maximus Cunctator), but usually the inherent danger of the office prevented widespread use, and both Lucius Cornelius Sulla Felix and [[Gaius Julius Caesar]] would declare themselves ''dictator pro vita'', or dictator for life, granting them supreme power until death.
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** Discussing highway maintenance in the middle of a murder trial.
** Discussing the inconvenient placement of Public Holidays in the middle of a murder trial.
** It is worth noting, after reading the above, that Cicero lost only one case. He lost that case because the court was filled with heavily armed, menacing looking men wanting a conviction and staring meaningfully at the jury throughout proceedings.
* [[Determinator]]: The Romans did not give up, no matter how many armies or fleets they lost.
* [[Determined Homesteader]]: What Romans of the Republic thought the ideal Roman should be.
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* [[The Evil Prince]]: Monarchy was so discredited by experiences of this that even Caesar had to pretend to be [[Just the First Citizen]]. Additionally, one of the proposed titles for Octavian after he attained sole power over the <s>Republic</s> Empire was "Romulus," after the mythical founder of Rome. This was rejected because Romulus had been both a king and kin-slayer.
* [[Fair for Its Day]]: Whether it was actually more than average even for its day is debatable. But the Romans did have useful system of law and organization that was able to win admiration from many historians.
* [[Feuding Families]]: Temporarily subverted. Roman [[The Clan|Clans]] would competitively try to draw attention to how useful they were to [[The Republic]], rather than simply fighting against each other. This made for a state with a remarkable cohesion. However though reduced and controlled [[Feuding Families]] were not unknown and may have been an element in the civil strife toward the end of [[The Republic]].
* [[Fighting For a Homeland]]: The legends surrounding the foundation of Rome.
* [[Gladiator Games]]: [[Trope Namer]] (literally, ''gladiator'' means "sword-user," from ''gladius'', "sword"). Romans were addicted to these.
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* [[The Government]]: One of the first examples of an abstract bureaucratized state that is not simply a monarchy's [[Family Business]].
* [[Heroic Sacrifice]]: Most famously, [[You Shall Not Pass|Horatius]] at the bridge, though there were many others. Sacrificing one's own life for Rome and one's fellow soldiers was considered a virtue in Roman society.
* [[Honor Before Reason]]: Both subverted and played straight. The Roman code of honor emphasized such rational concepts as discipline and team loyalty rather then being a [[Glory Hound]]. If [[Achilles in His Tent|Achilles]] had been a Roman the [[Drill Sergeant Nasty|centurion]] would have beaten him black and blue with his swagger stick. Nonetheless the Roman Code though not completely irrational was very exacting.
* [[I Am Spartacus]]: For the [[Trope Namer]], see above.
* [[Insane Troll Logic]]: Marcus Porcius Cato (Cato the Censor) ended every single speech he made in the Senate, whether it was on grain prices, the setting of public holidays, or treaties with Gauls, with "Carthago delenda est" or, "Carthage ought to be destroyed". Eventually the Senate fulfilled his wish.
* [[In the Blood]]: Romans had a superstition that this was literally true and thus would sometimes give votes based on which [[The Clan|Clan someone was from]] in the hope that he would have the qualities of a noted [[The Hero|hero]]. This added to the normal [[Nepotism]] of political life. Oddly enough the results were [[Better Than It Sounds]], and provided a number of bureaucrats that were competent to no-worse-than-average. Sometimes luck wins out.
* [[I Thought It Meant]]: The Social War was a war against the ''Socii,'' or "Allies" (basically Italians who got drafted to make the army bigger), not a civil war.
* [[Luckily, My Shield Will Protect Me]]: The big shield is a distinctive feature of Roman armies in all periods.
* [[Made a Slave]]: The fate of those who would presume to resist the might of Rome.
* [[My Defense Need Not Protect Me Forever]]: The Roman General Fabius Maximus Cunctator (Fabius the Great Delayer), preserved Rome by carefully retreating from Hannibal until Hannibal grew tired of pursuing. Meanwhile the rest of the Roman Legions carved up those areas of Carthage's empire where Hannibal wasn't.
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* In ''[[Over the Wine Dark Sea]]'' there are a few references to Rome, as well as a sea-fight with a Roman trireme. But it is otherwise agreed that it was one of those Barbarian cities [[Historical In-Joke|"that would never amount to anything."]].
* ''Scipio Africanus: The Man Who Defeated Hannibal'' by Ross Leckie: A fictional autobiography of Scipio, the general who commanded in the Second [[Punic Wars]] and was possibly Rome's greatest general ever.
* Steven Saylor's ''[[Roma Sub Rosa]]'' series.
* As if the '''real''' Roman Republic wasn't [[Badass]] enough, John Maddox Roberts' [[Alternate History]] ''Hannibal's Children'' has them [[Took a Level Inin Badass|take a level or three]] in reaction to being exiled north of the Alps. When they '''come back''' one hundred years later, a Greek thinks that the sound of Roman laughter reminds him of swords clashing against shields. They don't swagger or bully; they're too badass for that. In one battle, an "inexperienced" Roman army under a "second-rate" general faces a veteran mercenary force twice their size and led by Carthage's best general. The Romans are wiped out — but the Carthaginian army is '''wrecked''', [[Pyrrhic Victory|with two-thirds of its troops killed outright, and most of the rest badly battered]].
* Colleen McCullough's ''[[Masters of Rome]]'' series.
* [[David Drake]]'s ''[[Ranks of Bronze]]'' has intergalactic traders buying a legion of Roman soldiers (the survivors of Carrhae) and using them as muscle against primitive civilisations.
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[[Category:Hollywood History]]
[[Category:Useful Notes/Italy]]
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