Overview
The Social War was Rome’s war against its Italian allies, who had long provided troops and burdens without full citizenship. The conflict forced Rome to grant citizenship more broadly, but the integration was grudging and politically destabilising.
Historical Context
The allies wanted recognition inside the Roman political body. Their revolt showed that Rome’s imperial structure within Italy itself had become unsustainable.
Consequences
Citizenship expanded, but resentment remained. The war also hardened commanders like Sulla and revealed how easily Roman and Italian violence could merge.
This first atlas entry is drafted from the Livarva manuscripts and will be expanded with exact chapter and source references in a later version.