The life of Tiberius, by Plutarch.
The events of 133 B.C., by Appian.
A well-meaning conservative who leads a revolution, by T. Mommsen.
Poor sources for Tiberius, by E. Meyer.
The first sign of a great awakening, by A. H. J. Greenidge.
The difficulty of interpreting the sources on Tiberius, by M. Gelzer.
Plutarch's and Appian's sources, by P. Fraccaro.
An uncompromising reformer who may have acted legally, by F. B. Marsh.
The need for agricultural reform and the illegality of Octavius' removal, by H. M. Last.
The political origins of the agrarian program, by J. Carcopino.
Tiberius' purpose: include all Italians in the land bill, by J. Gohler.
Purely a social reformer for the Romans, by D. Kontchalovsky.
The urban side of the Gracchan economic crisis, by H. C. Boren.
A politician and not a social reformer, by D. C. Earl.
Guilty of unconstitutional behavior, by E. Badian.
The relationship between the Licinian-Sextian law of 367 and Tiberius' law of 133, by G. Tibiletti.
Destroyer of the harmony of the Republic, by R. E. Smith.
Forerunners of the Gracchi, by L. R. Taylor.
The opposition's view of Tiberius, by H. C. Boren.
A summary and an opinion, by S. Katz.
Suggestions for additional reading (p. 91-94)