the "most humble" that is what the Romans called them
The plebeians.
The largest and lowest social class in both Egypt and Rome were made up of common people. In Egypt they were referred to as peasants. In Rome they were called plebeians.
The aristocracy.
In the early Roman Republic the plebeians were the poor, working class people.In the early Roman republic the plebeians were the poor, working class people.In the early Roman republic the plebeians were the poor, working class people.In the early Roman republic the plebeians were the poor, working class people.In the early Roman republic the plebeians were the poor, working class people.In the early Roman republic the plebeians were the poor, working class people.In the early Roman republic the plebeians were the poor, working class people.In the early Roman republic the plebeians were the poor, working class people.In the early Roman republic the plebeians were the poor, working class people.
The Plebeians, or working class of Rome, grouped together made up the Roman mob, under the reign of Commodus.
In the early Roman Republic the plebeians were the poor, working class people.In the early Roman republic the plebeians were the poor, working class people.In the early Roman republic the plebeians were the poor, working class people.In the early Roman republic the plebeians were the poor, working class people.In the early Roman republic the plebeians were the poor, working class people.In the early Roman republic the plebeians were the poor, working class people.In the early Roman republic the plebeians were the poor, working class people.In the early Roman republic the plebeians were the poor, working class people.In the early Roman republic the plebeians were the poor, working class people.
Five of the social classes in ancient Rome were the patricians, the plebeians, the equites, freedmen and slaves.
At first, the upper class was exclusively made up of the patricians, but as the plebeians gained power and new people moved into the city, the plebeians too, became part of the nobility. By the last quarter of the republic a new class of people emerged called the equestrians. These equites were not a part of the aristocracy or the nobility.
The plebeians were the commoners or lower-class citizens of ancient Rome who were not part of the aristocracy. They made up the majority of the population and were often farmers, craftsmen, and laborers. Plebeians struggled for political rights and representation in the Roman Republic.
The Roman citizens called plebeians where those who could trace their ancestry back to the founding of the city. In the early days, the plebeians were the lower class, the poor and the landless. Over time they gained status and wealth. By the mid republic they were considered the nobility along with the patricians.
The three classes of citizens that made up Roman society were the Patricians, the Plebeians and the Equestrians. There were plenty of other people who were either non-citizens or who were citizens but did not have the wealth to qualify for social mobility. These were the Proletariat. They were the poor, the working class or the middle class, the freedmen and foreigners.
The social structure of the Roman Republic was class orientated. The patricians and plebeians made up then nobility with the equites as the middle class. The proletariat were the rest of the free citizens, followed by the freedmen and slaves.