In the early Roman Republic, the temporary dictatorship was a bold solution to extraordinary crises, granting one man near-absolute authority, but only for a limited time and under strict legal oversight. Figures like Cincinnatus embodied the ideal of power exercised responsibly, acting decisively in war or civic emergencies before relinquishing control. This episode explores how Rome balanced urgency, legality, and virtue in a system that foreshadowed both effective governance and the dangers of unchecked ambition.
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