Social War: Meaning (information, definition, explanation, facts)

The Social War (also called the Italian War) was a war from 91 - 88 BC between the Romans and the other cities in Italy.

In 90 BC almost all of the Italian allies of Rome rebelled in what the Romans called the Social War (allies in Latin being Socii, related to the English "associates"). The allied cities in the Italian peninsula had sought for some time Roman citizenship and therefore more of a say in the external policy of the Roman Republic - most local affairs came under local governance and were not as important to the Romans as, for example, when the alliance would go to war or how they would divide the plunder. Rome undercut the military rebellion by extending citizenship to all of Italia south of the Po River and then spent two years defeating the cities still in arms. Lucius Cornelius Sulla came to prominence as an officer in this war. Roman citizenship and the right to vote was limited, as always in the ancient world, by the requirement of physical presence on voting day. After 88 BC candidates regularly paid the expenses (or part of them) for their supporters to travel to Rome in order to vote.

Preceded by:
Jugurthine War
Wars in history
Social War
91 BC - 88 BC
Followed by:
Roman Civil War of 82 BC

Find more facts
 
Further reference
Remember what Social War means:
Other sources
Search for Social War information on:  amazon.com
Your reference for information, definition
http://explanation-guide.info/meaning/Social-War.html
Licensing information:
This article uses material from Wikipedia (credits) and is made available under the terms of the GNU FDL (copy).
Image licensing information is accessible by clicking the image.

Welcome, guest!
You are not logged in
ID:
Password:

Social bookmarks


Book search

Recent searches