| Rome Returns to the Republic  by Jeff Provine 
     Author 
    says: what if Rome reverted to a Republic after the death of Commodus? 
    muses Jeff Provine's on his excellent blog
    This Day in 
    Alternate History. Please note that the opinions expressed in this post 
    do not necessarily reflect the views of the author(s). 
     
      On January 1st 193 AD,
     
      Please click the
        
        
          
           icon to follow us on Squidoo.after the assassination of Emperor 
        
        Commodus, the Roman Senate arose under the guidance of Publius Helvius 
        
        Pertinax to reinstate the principles of republicanism after more than two 
        
        centuries of rule by emperors. 
 Commodus (pictured) was the son of Marcus Aurelius, a good emperor who 
        
        ruled for some twenty years. Aurelius had been more of a philosopher king 
        
        than a politician, writing his Meditations on self-guidance in Greek, 
        
        possibly in imitation of the ancient wise men of Greece. He took his rule 
        
        as a civic duty, establishing justice and fighting numerous wars for the 
        
        good of Rome even though he preferred study. Aurelius died in Vindobona 
        
        (modern Vienna) while on campaign in 180, succeeded by his son, Commodus.
 
 "15 minutes after the frontier armies hear that his 
          
          stupidity happened they all rebel to put 'their' general on the throne and 
          
          get a huge donative. The problem was that the only electors who counted 
          
          were the legions. " - reader's commentCommodus had already ruled as 
        
        co-emperor for three years and, though young, assumed full command with 
        
        all skills needed, but his father had not anticipated him squandering 
        
        them. Dio Cassius, a contemporary historian, recorded that Commodus began 
        
        to turn Rome "from a kingdom of gold to one of rust and iron". Commodus 
        
        ignored the business affairs of state and instead took to entertaining the 
        
        army and populace with enormous monetary gifts and lavish games. Most 
        
        notoriously, Commodus would reject tradition and participate in the 
        
        gladiatorial combat himself. Early in his reign and then throughout, 
        
        dissatisfied leaders would organize conspiracies against him, finally 
        
        culminating in his death at the hand of his mistress Marcia, his manager 
        
        Eclectus, and the Praetorian Prefect Quintus Aemilius Laetus December 31, 
        
        192.
 
 Pertinax, the praefectus urbi (roughly, Mayor of Rome), was taken by the 
        
        Praetorian Guard and prepared to be named emperor, even against his will. 
        
        After a night of expert reasoning and discussion, Pertinax finally managed 
        
        to persuade the Praetorian soldiers to end the tradition of obeying an 
        
        emperor and instead uphold their oath to the Senatus Populusque Romanus 
        
        (the Senate and People of Rome). Marching into Rome in celebration, the 
        
        Senate was convened and ancient legal books brought out of libraries to 
        
        bring back the great Republic that had been dissolved into August's empire 
        
        when Rome was so corrupt. Corruption had now swallowed up the office of 
        
        imperator, and it was time for the Republic to stand again.
 
 "By this time, the only people who wanted the 
          
          Republic back were the people who identified with the Senatorial class, 
          
          and they were a small minority. Many of the peoples of the Empire were 
          
          more used to rule by kings or emperors, and wouldn't have known what to do 
          
          with a Republic if they'd had instructions in letters an inch high" - 
          
          reader's commentGreat new powers were granted to the prefects in 
        
        the provinces around the empire and citizens were enabled to vote for 
        
        representation among the censors. The Senate took up many pet projects 
        
        that had gone undone while the bureaucracy ruled, and Pertinax himself 
        
        retained his position as praefectus urbi, spending much of his tenure 
        
        restoring solvency and maintaining the grain supply to Rome. The 
        
        Praetorians were broken up diplomatically, paying commanders enormous sums 
        
        to retire or head eastward in General Septimus Severus's campaign to 
        
        conquer Mesopotamia while soldiers were dispersed through the legions 
        
        protecting the empire at large. Without the Praetorian Guard taking great 
        
        bribes and influencing politics with the sword, Rome transitioned fairly 
        
        peacefully into the New Republican Era.
 
 In 251, the Plague of Cyprian spread through the empire. In Rome, it was 
        
        rumored that some 5,000 people died each day. The Senate proved powerless 
        
        to stop the suffering, several potential solutions being frozen in debate 
        
        while disease raged. Prefects maintained control by establishing 
        
        quarantine zones, cutting off their borders and taking executive powers. 
        
        By the time the plague itself finished, the provinces were sick of making 
        
        payments to an ineffective Rome that now could scarcely defend its own 
        
        borders. The empire collapsed as Parthia rebelled and no one stopped them, 
        
        followed by Egypt, Asia Minor, and spreading westward until Rome had 
        
        become a checkerboard of mismatched kingdoms, republics, and city-states 
        
        by the beginning of the fourth century.
 
 Germanic invasions soon followed, turning the Mediterranean into a series 
        
        of feudal states built upon self-defense. Trade dwindled, and a dark age 
        
        settled across Europe and northern Africa. In the East, the Persian Empire 
        
        arose, dominating much of the Levant and maintaining trade along the Silk 
        
        Road, growing wealthy as it fed luxuries to the west, such as the Hun 
        
        Empire, Kingdom of the Franks, and New Carthage.
 
        
        
       
      
      
 
     
     Author 
    says in reality Pertinax was named emperor. His reign was only 86 days, 
    mostly spent attempting to push reforms against antagonists looking toward 
    their own advantages and selling Commodus's possessions in an attempt to 
    balance the strained imperial budget. The Praetorian Guard, having received 
    only half their pay, rushed the palace in March. Pertinax attempted to 
    persuade them to be patient, but a soldier slew him, and the tumultuous Year 
    of the Five Emperors began, nearly bringing down the Roman Empire before 
    Septimus Serevus established his dynasty that would maintain order for 
    another forty years. To view guest historian's comments on this post please 
    visit the
    
    Today in Alternate History web site. 
 
     Jeff Provine, Guest Historian of
    
    Today in Alternate History, a Daily Updating Blog of Important Events In 
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    Roosevelt winning his 3rd term as president abound in this interesting 
    fictional blog. 
 
 
    
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