Proscription

Proscription didn't just end a life; it ended a legacy. The sons and grandsons of the proscribed were often barred from holding public office, effectively erasing the family’s political future. Sulla and the Precedent of 82 BCE

Decades later, Octavian and Antony used proscription not just for revenge, but for funding. Their wars were expensive, and the wealthy elite provided a convenient source of capital. The most famous victim of this era was the orator . Despite his stature, his name was added to the list as a concession to Mark Antony. His head and hands were cut off and displayed on the Rostra—the very platform where he had once delivered his greatest speeches—symbolizing the total silencing of Republican liberty. Historical Significance proscription

Sulla introduced the first formal proscriptions to "purge" Rome of his Marian rivals. While he claimed the goal was to restore the Republic, the process became a chaotic bloodbath. Thousands of senators and knights were killed. It established a chilling precedent: that a Roman leader could bypass the courts and use the law itself to commit mass homicide for political and financial gain. The Second Triumvirate: Killing for Cash Proscription didn't just end a life; it ended a legacy