The Consular Elections of 82 B.C.

 
PIIS032103910014051-9-1
DOI10.31857/S032103910014051-9
Publication type Article
Status Published
Authors
Affiliation:
Herzen State Pedagogical University
Pskov State University
Address: Russian Federation, Saint Petersburg
Affiliation: State Academic University for Humanities
Address: Russian Federation, Moscow
Journal nameVestnik drevnei istorii
EditionVolume 82 Issue 2
Pages360-368
Abstract

The article is devoted to the first consular elections under Sulla’s rule, which took place in 82 B.C. In the authors’ view, that is when Lucretius Afella was killed on Sulla’s order for his refusal to withdraw his candidacy. They argue that Afella was an expraetor rather than a mere equestrian as most researchers believe. The authors attempt to ascertain why it was Cn. Cornelius Dolabella and M. Tullius Decula who won the elections and not Q. Metellus Pius, P. Servilius Vatia or Ap. Claudius Pulcher, who were more distinguished and/or noble. Presumably, the latter three persons did not want to be fully dependent on Sulla during his dictatorship. They might not have doubted they would become consuls whenever they wanted to (and that did happen when they were elected a little later). As regards Dolabella and Decula, figures of the second rank, they were eager to become consuls by any means, and so they did. Sulla did not order to elect them, yet he did not prevent them from being elected.

KeywordsSulla’s dictatorship, consular elections, Lucius Cornelius Sulla, Gnaeus Cornelius Dolabella, Marcus Tullius Decula
Received14.03.2022
Publication date22.06.2022
Number of characters21870
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