Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus (consul 177 BC)

Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus (c. 220 BC – c. 154 BC[1]) was a Roman politician and general of the 2nd century BC. He served two consulships, one in 177[2] and one 163 BC,[3] and was awarded two triumphs.[4] He was also the father of the two famous Gracchi brothers: Tiberius and Gaius.

Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus
Bornc. 220 BC
Diedc. 154 BC (aged c. 66)
NationalityRoman
Office
Spouse(s)Cornelia
ChildrenTiberius, Gaius, and Sempronia

Tiberius was of plebeian status and was a member of the well-connected gens Sempronia, a family of ancient Rome. Tiberius was the son of Publius Sempronius Gracchus. He was nephew of the consul and general Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus (killed 212 BC).[5][6] His paternal grandfather was also a consul in 238 BC. His mother's identity is not known.

His father was not the same Publius Sempronius Gracchus who served as tribune of the plebs in 189 BC. Instead his father had possibly died during the Second Punic War, since no further references exist to him.

Early career

Not much is known of his early life. He may have been made an augur in 204 BC in place of Marcus Pomponius Matho.[7] He did, however, serve in the Roman army: while serving with the Scipios in Asia, he was sent as an envoy to Philip V of Macedon to negotiate safe passage to the Hellespont.[8]

He may have been sent a few years later, in 185 BC to adjudicate a dispute between Macedon and its Greek neighbours to the south over disputed territory.[9]

Tiberius served as tribune of the plebs in 184 BC (or possibly in 187 BC);[5] he is recorded as having saved Scipio Africanus from prosecution and Lucius Cornelius Scipio Asiaticus from prison by interposing his veto.[10] Tiberius was no friend nor political ally to Scipio, but felt that the general's services to Rome merited his release from the threat of trial. Supposedly, in gratitude for this action, either Scipio or his son Publius Cornelius Scipio betrothed Scipio's youngest daughter to him.

However, accounts of this are mixed with similar accounts about the betrothal of the younger Tiberius Gracchus to his wife Claudia, so the facts are not certain. In both versions, the father hastens to make a betrothal to a Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus, without consulting the mother (his wife), to which the wife protests until she is informed that the bridegroom is Gracchus.

Since Scipio died in 184 BC or 183 BC and retired into the country well before then, and his youngest daughter Cornelia was only 6 or 7 at his death, it is more likely that the betrothal took place after Scipio's death, or that Tiberius was betrothed circa 186 BC to an older daughter who died before the marriage could take place. Plutarch's Life of Scipio has been lost, along with Scipio's own memoirs, and no contemporary histories or biographies of Scipio or Tiberius exist.

Military and political career

Tiberius was elected praetor for 180 BC, a post that required men to be at least 40 years of age according to the Cursus Honorum, which brings estimates of his birth to around 220 BC.  Following his praetorship, he took up the governorship of Hispania Citerior[11] in 179 BC after successfully objecting to his predecessor's attempt to have the army in Hispania recalled for a triumph on the grounds that the task was not yet done.[12] He served there with the rank of proconsul from 179–178 BC.[13] Rome had been fighting a prolonged and continuous conflict in Iberia since the mid-190s BC.[14][15] While governor and in conjunction with the other Spanish governor, Lucius Postumius Albinus, he campaigned successfully against the Celtiberians, Lusitanians, and other hostile groups while negotiating treaties to ensure a prolonged peace.[14] The agreements made mainly regularised tribute arrangements.[14]

During his proconsulship, he also founded the city of Gracchuris in 178 BC, on the river Ebro, becoming the first Roman to name a city after himself.[16] During his campaigns, he claimed to have destroyed three hundred cities in Spain (almost certainly an exaggeration).[17] Upon his return, the senate awarded him a triumph where he and his colleague Albinus presented some 60 thousand pounds of silver.[18]

In 177 BC, he was elected consul with Gaius Claudius Pulcher.[2] He was posted to Sardinia, where he suppressed a revolt assisted by propraetor Titus Aebutius Parrus.[19] He waged two "ruthless" campaigns,[5] fighting the Ilienses and the Balari,[20] forcing their submission. At the close of 175 BC, he returned to Rome, claiming he had killed and captured some 80 thousand Sardinians,[21] and triumphed for the second time in 175 BC.[5][22]

He was elected censor starting in 169 BC with his former consular colleague Gaius Claudius Pulcher.[23] The censors helped raise men for the war against Macedon, and was so strict that it provoked a prosecution of his colleague Claudius.[24] Claudius was narrowly acquitted with Gracchus' help.[24][5] Supposedly, during his censorship, citizens extinguished their lights when Gracchus passed at night from fear of being thought overly indulgent.[25] While censor in 168 BC, he restricted the votes of freedmen by registering all of them into just one of the urban tribes over the objection of his colleague Claudius.[24] He also had the basilica Sempronia constructed in the Roman forum; the request of theirs, however, to see the building programme to completion was vetoed.[24][5]

After his censorship, in 165 BC, Gracchus was dispatched as head of an embassy to various eastern kingdoms on a mission to investigate the attitudes thereof to Rome, reporting that all had favourable views of the Romans.[26]

In 163 BC, Tiberius was again elected consul.[3] When performing the auspices when conducting the consular elections for 162 BC, he committed a procedural error: after observing a negative omen, he crossed the pomerium to consult the senate and therefore relinquished the auspicia militiae needed to hold the election.[27] He discovered this procedural error after his successors had taken office and he had arrived in Sardinia for his promagistracy, whereon he reported it to the senate.[28] The consuls were forced to resign,[29] one of which was his brother-in-law Publius Cornelius Scipio Nasica Corculum, husband of his wife's elder sister.

Later life

He returned to Rome late in 162 BC (the first year of his promagistracy) to become an ambassador to examine conditions in Greece and Asia, and to settle various disputes with neighbouring Hellenistic kingdoms.[30]

It is not clear if the loss of Scipio Nasica's first consulship (he later served as consul in 155 BC[31]) led to strain or dissension between the brothers-in-law (Nasica was elected censor in 159 BC and again consul in 155 BC); however, their sons fell out politically some thirty years later with fatal consequences.

Family

Tiberius married the eighteen-year-old Cornelia in 172 BC when he was about 48 years old. Despite the age difference, the marriage was happy and fruitful. She bore him twelve children. Three children survived to adulthood: a daughter, Sempronia (who was betrothed to her mother's first cousin Scipio Aemilianus), Tiberius Gracchus, and Gaius Gracchus.[32]

Tiberius is said to have loved his wife dearly (see anecdote below). Tiberius and other Romans also thought very highly of Cornelia as a wife and mother. When Tiberius died, Cornelia took charge of his property and the household. She refused to remarry, although she was offered marriage by several Roman senators and by the Egyptian king Ptolemy VIII; Cornelia devoted the rest of her life to the education and upbringing of her sons.[33]

Plutarch's life of Tiberius Gracchus (son of this Tiberius) narrates that the father demonstrated his love for his much younger wife in an unusual manner:

There is a story told, that he once found in his bedchamber a couple of snakes, and that the soothsayers, being consulted concerning the prodigy, advised, that he should neither kill them both nor let them both escape; adding, that if the male serpent was killed, Tiberius should die, and if the female, Cornelia. And that, therefore, Tiberius, who extremely loved his wife, and thought, besides, that it was much more his part, who was an old man, to die, than it was hers, who as yet was but a young woman, killed the male serpent, and let the female escape; and soon after himself died, leaving behind him twelve children borne to him by Cornelia.

Tiberius's own life and achievement are obscured, however, by the reputation of his widow and the deeds of his two surviving sons. The elder son Tiberius would have been in his youth, while the younger son Gaius was a mere infant at his death. Both sons were apparently raised as much in the household of their kinsman and brother-in-law Scipio Aemilianus as in their own house and would have been influenced and educated by men such as the historian Polybius, the philosopher Panaetius, the satirist Lucilius, and the slave-turned-playwright Terence, as well as Scipio's own circle of friends from the Roman elite.

See also

Notes

  1. Astin, AE (1967). Scipio Aemilianus. Oxford: Clarendon Press. p. 34. ISBN 0-19-814257-9. OCLC 928115. [He] died in the late 150's or early 140's.
  2. Broughton 1951, p. 397.
  3. Broughton 1951, p. 440.
  4. Duncan 2017, p. 17.
  5. Badian 2012, p. 1344.
  6. Badian 2012a, p. 1344.
  7. Broughton 1951, p. 309.
  8. Broughton 1951, p. 358.
  9. Broughton 1951, p. 373.
  10. Broughton 1951, p. 376.
  11. Harris 1989, p. 125.
  12. Drogula 2015, p. 262.
  13. Broughton 1951, p. 395–96.
  14. Baker 2021, p. 179.
  15. Baker 2021, p. 183.
  16. Harris 1989, p. 128. "Who inhabited Gracchuris, which was founded on the upper Ebro by Ti. Gracchus in 178 (he thus became the first Roman to name a city after himself), the sources do not tell us..."
  17. Baker 2021, p. 77.
  18. Josiah, Osgood (2014). "The rise of empire in the West". In Flower, Harriet (ed.). The Cambridge Companion to the Roman Republic (2nd ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 309. ISBN 978-1-107-03224-8.
  19. Drogula 2015, p. 203.
  20. Broughton 1951, p. 398.
  21. Baker 2021, p. 78.
  22. Broughton 1951, p. 402.
  23. Broughton 1951, p. 423.
  24. Broughton 1951, p. 424.
  25. Astin 1989, p. 183.
  26. Broughton 1951, p. 438.
  27. Drogula 2015, p. 77.
  28. Drogula, Fred (2007). "Imperium, Potestas, and the Pomerium in the Roman Republic". Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte. 56 (4): 439. ISSN 0018-2311. After his successors had been elected and taken office, and Gracchus himself had already arrived in his province, he suddenly realized that a flaw had occurred in the auspices during his successors' election. After he reported the flaw to the senate, the two men who had been elected were forced to resign...
  29. Broughton 1951, pp. 441–42.
  30. Broughton 1951, p. 443.
  31. Broughton 1951, p. 448.
  32. Badian 2012, p. 1345.
  33. Astin, Alan E; Badian, Ernst (2015-12-22). "Cornelia (1), mother of Tiberius Gracchus (3) and Gaius Gracchus". Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Classics. doi:10.1093/acrefore/9780199381135.013.1829. Retrieved 2022-02-16.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.