The 12 Tables bound the formerly alien populations to the fortunes of Rome & drew them into the Roman political & cultural system.
Yes, progressively.
The plebeians gained their political rights by civil unrest and work stoppage. The patricians soon realized that they needed the plebeians not only for their work, but for their bodies in the army. So they granted them a couple of tribunes to look after their interests.
The plebeians gained their political rights by civil unrest and work stoppage. The patricians soon realized that they needed the plebeians not only for their work, but for their bodies in the army. So they granted them a couple of tribunes to look after their interests.
The 12 Tables bound the formerly alien populations to the fortunes of Rome & drew them into the Roman political & cultural system.
The gain the right to vote and to make their own laws
The plebeians gained their political rights by civil unrest and work stoppage. The patricians soon realized that they needed the plebeians not only for their work, but for their bodies in the army. So they granted them a couple of tribunes to look after their interests.
The plebeians gained their political rights by civil unrest and work stoppage. The patricians soon realized that they needed the plebeians not only for their work, but for their bodies in the army. So they granted them a couple of tribunes to look after their interests.
The plebeians gained their political rights by civil unrest and work stoppage. The patricians soon realized that they needed the plebeians not only for their work, but for their bodies in the army. So they granted them a couple of tribunes to look after their interests.
The plebians gained power by going on strike.
The gracchus brothers helped make reforms and made them into realities
Yes, they did gain a larger role in politics. In fact, after their strikes, protests, and actually leaving the city for their own enclave on the Adventine hill, they got what they wanted. By the time of the mid to late republic one consul had to be a plebeian.
The senators were members of the aristocracy and the wealthy entrepreneurial elites. Therefore, they were treated with the respect due to the top layers of society. There were, however, times of conflict with the senators. One of these was by rich plebeians during the Conflict of the Orders (between patricians and plebeians) of the early Republic in which the rich plebeians fought to gain access to the senate and the consulship (the office of heads of the Republic) which were monopolised by the patrician aristocracy. They eventually succeeded in gaining power-sharing Poor plebeians were often in conflict with the senators through most of the republican period. Poor plebeians often fought for reforms which would relieve the poor and which were opposed by the senators. After the Republic these was at times conflict between the emperor and the senator.