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A Companion to the Political Culture of the Roman Republic


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The world of classical civilisations rendered itself particularly meaningful by providing paradigmatic examples of republican ideals and standards of conduct, with Rome being especially useful, having its own political discourse of exemplarity. Patriots turned repeatedly to the classical republican societies, first and foremost to Rome, in order to define their own republicanism and to situate their ideologies in a historical context. However, revolutionaries did not perceive republicanism merely as an ideology, or as a model structure of government or political system; rather, they understood it as a well-defined and tested attitude toward political life. Such an attitude was based on public civic virtue, a political mode of action that historically originated in classical antiquity.

      The foundation of such virtue, which lay at the core of a republican society, was the ancients’ stress of liberty as in-dependence, and hatred of tyranny (on this issue, see Nelson 2014). In the emerging American political imagination only an autonomous, self-sufficient yeoman (an unattainable fantasy, to be sure), who would bear arms to protect his republic, was deemed truly free (for the origins of this concept of liberty, see Skinner 2012). Accordingly, many of the countless references to Rome in revolutionary America involved examples of the noble sentiments that underlay that glorious commonwealth of the past. The historian Henry Steele Commager has pointed out that ‘the scorn of luxury and effeminacy and the acceptance of austerity; the preference for the rural life … the eloquence … the devotion to the law; the dedication to public service; the sense of honor and dignity and virtue – all of this was American as it was Roman’ (Commager 1971: 10). This Roman-American defiance played out in the wake of the Revolution through classical exempla intended to educate and inspire the American public.

      In such light it is not hard to appreciate why not only the Revolution’s leaders but even ‘the common sort’ were valorised as classical ancients. A nameless ‘mechanic’ who asserted in 1774 that he would prefer to eat acorns in the forest rather than submit to British tyranny, extracted from William Tudor a classicised praise: ‘What a Roman! By Heavens, I glory in being this Man’s fellow Citizen’ (Richard 1994: 119).

      5.4 Rome Reborn on American Shores

      The pamphlet Observations on the act of Parliament Commonly Called the Boston Port Bill, published in that same watershed year of 1774, was straightforward in its conception of America as a new Rome. The author mused that the republican, self-sacrificing spirit that ‘rose in Rome’ would ‘one day make glorious this more Western world’. America was on the verge of unfolding its imperial, Roman-like potential; she ‘hath in her store her Bruti and Cassii’ (Quincy 1774: 82). The pamphlet’s