Examples of patrician in the following topics:
-
- The
patricians assented to their demands and the plebeian soldiers returned to
battle.
- Tribunes and
aediles were technically not magistrates since they were only elected by fellow
plebeians as opposed to the unified population of plebeians and patricians.
- Ultimately, a new
patricio-plebeian aristocracy emerged and replaced the old patrician nobility.
- Whereas the old patrician nobility existed simply on the basis of being able to
run for office, the new aristocracy existed on the basis of affluence.
- Although
a small number of plebeians had achieved the same standing as the patrician
families of the past, new plebeian aristocrats were less interested in the
plight of the average plebeian than the old patrician aristocrats.
-
- The most important division within Roman society was between
patricians, a small elite who monopolized political power, and plebeians, who
comprised the majority of Roman society.
- These designations were established at
birth, with patricians tracing their ancestry back to the first Senate
established under Romulus.
- Originally, all
public offices were only open to patricians and the classes could not
intermarry, but, over time, the differentiation between patrician and plebeian statuses
became less pronounced, particularly after the establishment of the Roman
republic.
-
- A number of patricians attended the debate, in which Brutus
proposed the banishment of the Tarquins from all territories of Rome and the
appointment of an interrex to nominate new magistrates and to oversee an
election of ratification.
- It was decided that a republican form of government
should temporarily replace the monarchy, with two consuls replacing the king
and executing the will of a patrician senate.
- His choice was ratified by the comitia
curiata, an organization of patrician families who primarily ratified
decrees of the king.
-
- The first century BCE saw tensions between patricians and plebeians erupt into violence as the Republic became increasingly more divided and unstable.
- This system consisted of noble families of the senatorial rank (patricians), the knight or equestrian class, citizens (grouped into two or three classes
of self-governing allies of Rome, landowners, and plebs or tenant
freemen depending on the time period), non-citizens who lived outside of southwestern Italy, and at the bottom, slaves.
- Caesar also facilitated the election of patrician Publius Clodius
Pulcher to the tribunate in 58 BCE, and Clodius sidelined Caesar’s senatorial
opponents, Cato and Cicero.
-
- Julius Caesar was a Late Republic statesman and general who waged civil war against the Roman Senate, defeating many patrician conservatives before he declared himself dictator.
-
- Emperor Zeno subsequently gave Theoderic the title of Patrician and the office of Magister militum (master of the soldiers), and even appointed him Roman Consul.
- In 488, Emperor Zeno ordered Theoderic to overthrow the German Foederatus Odoacer, who had likewise been made Patrician and even King of Italy, but who had since betrayed Zeno, supporting the rebellious Leontius.
-
- Odoacer generally used the Roman honorific patrician, granted by the Emperor Zeno, but is referred to as a king (Latin rex) in many documents.
- In 475 a Roman general named Orestes was appointed Magister militum and patrician by the Western Roman Emperor Julius Nepos and became head of the Germanic foederati (barbarian mercenary armies for Rome).
-
- After the pope granted Charlemagne the title of patrician, he returned to Pavia, where the Lombards were on the verge of surrendering.
-
- It was common for patrician families to adopt, and Roman emperors had adopted heirs in the past: The Emperor Augustus had adopted Tiberius and the Emperor Claudius had adopted Nero.
-
- As the Roman Republic conquered
Greek territory, expanding its imperial domain throughout the Hellenistic world,
official and patrician sculpture grew out of the Hellenistic style many Romans
encountered during their campaigns, making it difficult to distinguish truly
Roman elements from elements of Greek style, especially since much of what
survives of Greek sculpture is actually copies made of Greek originals by
Romans.