The Gracchi reforms were
land reforms attempted in the
Roman Republic in the 2nd century BC. They are explained in detail in the following articles: •
Tiberius Gracchus – the tribune who initiated the reforms in 133 BC, but was murdered by the Senate. •
Gaius Gracchus – his brother, who tried to resume Tiberius' reforms in 123 BC, but was also murdered in 121. The agrarian reform law required the transfer of land from the wealthy landowners to Rome's poorer citizens.
Outcomes The Gracchian reform had no permanent effect, for they did nothing to change the conditions giving rise to land concentration in the first place. Some of the reform laws were soon repealed, while others continued but with weakened effects over time. Land problems plagued the Romans for all times thereafter. Appian adds that within 15 years, all of the progress done under the Gracchi had been overturned and the poor were in a much worse position than ever before, many reduced to unemployment. == Servilius Rullus ==