Publius Clodius Pulcher

Publius Clodius Pulcher
Bornc. 92 BC
Died18 January 52 BC
Cause of deathMurdered
Office
Quaestor 61 BC
XVvir sacris faciundis 60–52 BC
Plebeian tribune 58 BC
Curule aedile 56 BC
SpouseFulvia
ChildrenPublius and Claudia
Parent
Relatives

Publius Clodius Pulcher (c. 92[1] – 18 January 52 BC) was a Roman politician and demagogue. A noted opponent of Cicero, he was responsible during his plebeian tribunate in 58 BC for a massive expansion of the Roman grain dole as well as Cicero's exile from the city. Leader of one of the political mobs in the 50s, his political tactics – combining connections throughout the oligarchy with mass support from the poor plebs – made him a central player in the politics of the era.

Born to the influential patrician gens Claudia, he was embroiled early in his political career in a religious scandal which saw him develop a rivalry with the orator Cicero and become a plebeian in order to be eligible for the plebeian tribunate. He successfully stood as tribune of the plebs for 58 BC and passed six laws to restore Rome's collegia (private guilds and fraternities), expand the grain dole (making it free rather than subsidised while also using those collegia as means for distribution), annex Cyprus to pay for the dole, clarify augural law on religious obstruction, make it more difficult for the censors to expel senators from the senate, and exile Cicero for the unlawful execution of conspirators during the Catilinarian conspiracy.

When curule aedile in 56 BC, he feuded with and attempted to prosecute his political enemy, Titus Annius Milo, who controlled a rival set of urban mobs. Starting the year an opponent of Caesar, Pompey, and Crassus, he and his family reconciled with them to form a political alliance. A few years later in 52 BC, amid renewed political violence and a campaign for the praetorship, Milo and Clodius encountered each other on the via Appia outside Rome, where Clodius was killed. His body, brought back to Rome, was brought to the forum and then cremated in the senate house, causing its destruction by fire.

His politics were advanced largely by his cultivation of urban mobs in Rome which, by exercising violent control of the places where the republic operated, furthered his political objectives. These violent tactics, however, were not his only sources of influence: his family connections and nobilitas made him a valuable ally to many parties – including, at various times, Caesar, Cato, and Pompey – in the ad hoc factionalism of the late republic. The older view that Clodius acted as an agent of magnates, such as Caesar or Pompey, is now rejected by scholars; he is now seen as an opportunistic and independent politician.[2]

  1. ^ Tatum 1999, p. 33; Chilver & Lintott 2016.
  2. ^ Rich 2000. "The old view that in politics Clodius operated as the instrument of others was exploded over thirty years ago... the modern consensus [is] that Clodius was always his own man". See Gruen 1966; Lintott 1967; Gruen 1995, p. 98, "It should no longer be necessary to refute the older notion that Clodius acted as agent or tool of the triumvirate"; Tatum 1999.

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