Showing posts with label Sulla. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sulla. Show all posts

Sunday, November 23, 2008

Life as Dictator

During his rule as dictator, Sulla strengthened the aristocracy and Senate in Rome. He also increased the size of the Senate from 300 to 600 seats and raised the number of magistrates elected each year. He removed the need for a censor, now known as a census, when assigning districts for electing senators. He is known for being very conservative when it came to politics with the exception of a few visionary ideas he enacted. He is also said to have warned the Senate about Julius Caesar saying, “In this Caesar there are many a Marius.” In 80 BC he reigned from and disbanded his dictatorship (he was later mocked by Caesar for doing this). Then in his retirement, he wrote his autobiography Res Gestae, which he completed in 78 BC.

From General to Dictator

Sulla was a cruel and very successful general in the Roman army, who is most famous for the capture of Jugurtha, his campaigns in the First Mithridatic War, and his two marches on Rome. It was after his second march on Rome and his return to Italy that Sulla forced the constitutional changes, which allowed him to be appointed dictator in 82 BC. He was appointed but was never given a time period for which he may rule Rome, an unusual honor normally reserved for leaders in times of war, such as during the Second Punic War. His dictatorship is often seen as setting a precedent for the rule of Julius Caesar. It also marks the beginning of the end of the Roman Republic and foreshadowed the Roman Empire.

A Brief Biography of Lucius Cornelius Sulla


Lucius Cornelius Sulla (138 BC-78 BC) served as a consul twice (in 88 BC and again in 80 BC) and dictator from 82 to 79 BC. Sulla was a conservative politician but a cruel leader. During his first years as dictator, he adopted the practice of executing all those he deemed enemies of the state, such as when he ordered the killing of some 1,500 nobles. Sulla was born into a patrician family that had fallen into poverty by the time of his birth. He spent most of his youth with Rome's comics, actors, dancers, and musicians. Later in life, he earned himself the nickname Felix for his military success. It was this same success that brought him to power.