The timeline below shows where the term Patricians appears in The Social Contract. The colored dots and icons indicate which themes are associated with that appearance.
Book 4, Chapter 2: The Suffrage
...appear divided when they are really healthy (like Rome, which was split between “its [upper-class] patricians and [lower-class] plebians”), or united because oppressed citizens have given up on participating in politics.
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Book 4, Chapter 4: The Roman Comitia
...The first gave the people a voice against the Senate, but it also let wealthy patricians pay “clients” to persuade the people. Servius replaced this with a comitia based on his...
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