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Tiberius Gracchus: destroyer or reformer of the Republic? Edited with an introd. by John M. Riddle.

Title
Tiberius Gracchus: destroyer or reformer of the Republic? Edited with an introd. by John M. Riddle.
Author
Riddle, John M.
Publication
Lexington, Mass., Heath [1970]

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Description
xvii, 94 p.; 24 cm.
Summary
The life of Tiberius, by Plutarch.--The events of 133 B.C., by Appian.--A well-meaning conservative who leads a revolution, by T. Mommsen.--Poor sources for Tiberius, by E. Meyer.--The first sign of a great awakening, by A. H. J. Greenidge.--The difficulty of interpreting the sources on Tiberius, by M. Gelzer.--Plutarch's and Appian's sources, by P. Fraccaro.--An uncompromising reformer who may have acted legally, by F. B. Marsh.--The need for agricultural reform and the illegality of Octavius' removal, by H. M. Last.--The political origins of the agrarian program, by J. Carcopino.--Tiberius' purpose: include all Italians in the land bill, by J. Göhler.--Purely a social reformer for the Romans, by D. Kontchalovsky.--The urban side of the Gracchan economic crisis, by H. C. Boren.--A politician and not a social reformer, by D. C. Earl.--Guilty of unconstitutional behavior, by E. Badian.--The relationship between the Licinian-Sextian law of 367 and Tiberius' law of 133, by G. Tibiletti.--Destroyer of the harmony of the Republic, by R. E. Smith.--Forerunners of the Gracchi, by L. R. Taylor.--The opposition's view of Tiberius, by H. C. Boren.--A summary and an opinion, by S. Katz.--Suggestions for additional reading (p. 91-94).
Series Statement
Problems in European civilization
Uniform Title
Problems in European civilization
Subject
  • Gracchus, Tiberius Sempronius
  • Rome > History > Republic, 265-30 B.C
Bibliography (note)
  • Includes bibliographical references (pages 91-94).
Processing Action (note)
  • committed to retain
Contents
The life of Tiberius, by Plutarch.--The events of 133 B.C., by Appian.--A well-meaning conservative who leads a revolution, by T. Mommsen.--Poor sources for Tiberius, by E. Meyer.--The first sign of a great awakening, by A. H. J. Greenidge.--The difficulty of interpreting the sources on Tiberius, by M. Gelzer.--Plutarch's and Appian's sources, by P. Fraccaro.--An uncompromising reformer who may have acted legally, by F. B. Marsh.--The need for agricultural reform and the illegality of Octavius' removal, by H. M. Last.--The political origins of the agrarian program, by J. Carcopino.--Tiberius' purpose: include all Italians in the land bill, by J. Göhler.--Purely a social reformer for the Romans, by D. Kontchalovsky.--The urban side of the Gracchan economic crisis, by H. C. Boren.--A political and not a social reformer, by D. C. Earl.--Guilty of unconstitutional behavior, by E. Badian.--The relationship between the Licinian-Sextian law of 367 and Tiberius' law of 133, by G. Tibiletti.--Destroyer of the harmony of the Republic, by R. E. Smith.--Forerunners of the Gracchi, by L. R. Taylor.--The opposition's view of Tiberius, by H. C. Boren.--A summary and an opinion, by S. Katz.--Suggestions for additional reading (p. 91-94)
LCCN
^^^71075819^
OCLC
52286
Owning Institutions
Harvard Library