Marcus Livius Drusus | Reformist, Assassination, Gracchan | Britannica (original) (raw)

Marcus Livius Drusus (born c. 124 bc—died 91 bc) was the son of the tribune of 122 bc by the same name; as tribune in 91, Drusus made the last nonviolent civilian attempt to reform the government of republican Rome. Drusus began by proposing colonial and agrarian reform bills. He attempted to resolve the tensions between the senatorial order (the political class) and the equestrian order, or knights (the commercial class).

As tribune in 123–122, Gaius Sempronius Gracchus had given the right of collecting taxes to the knights and had made them the source of jurors on standing criminal courts. In 92 an honest senator, Publius Rutilius Rufus, was convicted of corruption in governing his province when in fact he had tried to control equestrian rapacity in tax collecting. Drusus came forward, as “patron of the Senate,” with a solution. Three hundred knights were to be raised to the Senate, and in the future jurors for standing criminal courts would be selected from this enlarged Senate. By this scheme, the wealthiest of the knights would become senators and the rest would lose control of the courts. Although supported by the distinguished senator Marcus Aemilius Scaurus, Drusus’s proposal did not satisfy extremists of either order, nor did it please those who stood to gain by the conflict between them, such as the general Gaius Marius.

Opposition from all sides increased when Drusus pushed for the enfranchisement of Rome’s Italian allies. The Senate declared his legislation invalid on technical grounds. Disturbances involving Drusus’s supporters among the allies increased, and the reformer was murdered. His assassin was never discovered. The immediate consequence of his murder was the Social War (91–87), the revolt of the Italian allies.

E. Badian