Introduction
Augustus
is arguably the single most important figure in
Roman history. In the course of his long and
spectacular career, he put an end to the advancing
decay of the Republic and established a new basis
for Roman government that was to stand for three
centuries. This system, termed the "Principate," was
far from flawless, but it provided the Roman Empire
with a series of rulers who presided over the
longest period of unity, peace, and prosperity that
Western Europe, the Middle East and the North
African seaboard have known in their entire recorded
history. Even if the rulers themselves on occasion
left much to be desired, the scale of Augustus's
achievement in establishing the system cannot be
overstated. Aside from the immense importance of
Augustus's reign from the broad historical
perspective, he himself is an intriguing figure: at
once tolerant and implacable, ruthless and
forgiving, brazen and tactful. Clearly a man of many
facets, he underwent three major political
reinventions in his lifetime and negotiated the
stormy and dangerous seas of the last phase of the
Roman Revolution with skill and foresight. With
Augustus established in power and with the
Principate firmly rooted, the internal machinations
of the imperial household provide a fascinating
glimpse into the one issue that painted this
otherwise gifted organizer and politician into a
corner from which he could find no easy exit: the
problem of the succession. [[1]]
The Background
To understand Augustus, it is necessary to
appreciate briefly the nature of the Roman
Revolution and, in particular, the place of Julius
Caesar within it. The Roman Republic had no written
constitution but was, rather, a system of
agreed-upon procedures crystallized by tradition
(the mos maiorum, "the way of our ancestors").
Administration was carried out by (mostly) annually
elected officials, answerable to the senate (a
senior council, but with no legislative powers) and
the people (who, when constituted into voting
assemblies, were the sovereign body of the state).
Precedent prescribed procedure and consensus set the
parameters for acceptable behavior. Near the end of
the second century BC, however, the system started
to break down. Politicians began to push at the
boundaries of acceptable behavior, and in so doing
set new and perilous precedents. Violence also
entered the arena of domestic politics. (This long
process of disintegration, completed a century later
by Augustus, has been termed by modern scholars the
"Roman Revolution.") By the time of Caesar's
dominance in 49-44 BC the Republic had not been
functioning effectively for at least a dozen years,
some would argue for longer. Politics had come to be
dominated by violence and intimidation; scores were
settled with clubs and daggers rather than with
speeches and persuasion. Powerful generals at the
head of politicized armies extorted from the state
more and greater power for themselves and their
supporters. When "constitutional" methods proved
inadequate, the generals occasionally resorted to
open rebellion. Intimidation of the senate through
the use of armies camped near Rome or veterans
brought to the city to influence the voting
assemblies also proved effective and was regularly
employed as a political tactic from ca. 100 BC
onwards. These generals also used their provincial
commands to extract money from the locals as a way
of funding their domestic political ambitions. As
the conflict in the state wore on, popular
assemblies, the only avenue for the passage of
binding legislation in the Roman Republic, routinely
ended in disorder and rioting. The senatorial
aristocracy, riven by internal disputes, proved
incapable of dealing effectively with the mounting
disorder, yet the alternative, monarchy, was not
openly proposed by anyone. When civil war erupted
between Pompey and Caesar in 49 BC, few could have
been surprised. These two men were the strongest
personalities in the state, each in command of
significant military forces, and they were mutually
antagonistic. [[2]]
Despite vanquishing his opponents in the long series
of civil wars 49-45 BC, Caesar did little to address
the underlying ills of the Republic. His concerns
were first and foremost the defeat in the field of
his political opponents. During these years, and
following his final victory, he was content to
maintain control by a combination of the consulship
and the revived, albeit reviled, dictatorship.
Extensive and excessive honors of all sorts were
also voted to Caesar by a sycophantic senate: he
refused none, save attempts to crown him king.
Nevertheless, his broad disregard for tradition and
precedent, and the general air of arrogance and
high-handedness that marked Caesar's dealings with
his peers, made him appear Rome's king in all but
name. To be sure, he passed various items of
legislation dealing with immediate problems (for
instance, debt relief or the calendar), but he made
no serious effort to systematize his position or
tackle the issues that had generated the Roman
Revolution in the first place. In fact, in the last
months of his life he was planning to leave Rome for
several years to campaign against the Parthians in
the East. That the cabal of nobles who conspired to
kill Caesar included disaffected members of his own
party constitutes stark testimony as to the effects
of Caesar's tactlessness. On 15 March, 44 BC C.
Julius Caesar, dictator for life, was surrounded by
the conspirators at a meeting of the senate and cut
down with twenty-three stab wounds. He died at the
foot of a statue of his great rival, Pompey. The
senatorial "Liberators," covered in blood and
brandishing their daggers, rushed out to accept the
gratitude of the liberated. They met with a somewhat
different reception.
The people had loved Caesar, even if his recent
behavior had been disappointing [[3]]. The
Liberators, who were led by L. Cassius Longinus and
M. Junius Brutus, held public meetings in the Forum,
but the reaction of the people was equivocal at
best. The senate, meeting on March 17, vacillated
and declared an amnesty for the Liberators
(inferring legitimacy for their act of tyrannicide)
while ratifying all of Caesar's acts and decreeing
him a public funeral in the Forum (inferring
legitimacy for Caesar's power). It may have seemed a
workable compromise, but when Caesar's mutilated
body was displayed to the crowd and the contents of
his will were made public--in which some gardens
were bequeathed to the public and an individual
stipend given to each member of the Roman
people--the dam of emotion burst and rioting ensued.
The Liberators fled the city. Power seemed firmly in
the hands of the pro-Caesar camp and, in particular,
in those of M. Antonius (Mark Antony), Caesar's
right-hand man. The dictator's will, however, had
contained something of a political bombshell that
was to shake this situation to its foundations. For
Caesar named as his chief heir and adopted son one
of his three great-nephews, C. Octavius.
Early Life and Adoption
C. Octavius (later Augustus) was born on 23
September, 63 BC, the son of a man from Velitrae who
had reached the praetorship before dying
unexpectedly when Octavius was four. His father
Octavius had earned the hand of Atia, daughter of
Caesar's sister, Julia, and this seemingly remote
family link between the young Octavius and Caesar
was to play a determinative role in shaping the rest
of Octavius's life. When his grandmother Julia died
in 51 BC, Octavius delivered the eulogy at her
funeral, which was his first public appearance.
[[4]]
The nature of the relationship between Caesar and
the young Octavius is not clear. Dio claims (45.1.2)
that after Octavius reached maturity (in 48 BC),
Caesar took him in and began training him to be his
successor. This assertion is clearly more informed
by later imperial behavior than by Late Republican
practice, and is unlikely in any case, since Caesar
was much occupied with the civil wars at this time
(49-45 BC). There is no evidence that the two
actually met before Octavius was in his mid-teens,
but that the dictator noticed Octavius is hardly to
be doubted. Suetonius (Aug. 8.1) presents a more
likely series of events. In 48 BC the young Octavius
was elected to the pontifical college. When Caesar
celebrated his multiple triumphs in September 46 BC,
Octavius took part in the procession and was
accorded military honors. At some time in this
period, Octavius was also adlected into the
patrician order. He then followed Caesar to Spain
when the latter went to fight the Pompeians at Munda
(45 BC). He earned the admiration of the dictator
for the daring of his journey, which included a
shipwreck; he was to show this same daring
repeatedly in future months and years. In 44 BC
Caesar nominated the magistrates several years in
advance (another shunning of tradition on Caesar's
part), and the young man was included as his Master
of Horse for 43 or 42 BC. Despite these indications
of favor, it is fair to say that in the broad scheme
of things Octavius was a non-player and a political
nobody in March 44 BC, when his great-uncle was
killed. When he heard of
Caesar's murder, Octavius was in Apollonia in
Illyricum, preparing to join Caesar on his Parthian
campaign. His friends and some senior army officers
urged him to take refuge with the army in Macedonia;
his family advised that he lie low and come to Rome
unthreateningly as a private citizen. He opted for
the latter course of action and arrived in southern
Italy, south of Brundisium. Here, he heard more
details about Caesar's death and of his own
adoption. His family, now fearful for his life,
urged him to renounce the adoption and inheritance
in order to secure his personal safety. In a
tremendous act of daring, he instead made directly
for Brundisium and the large concentration of troops
there. [[5]]
Entrance into Politics: April 44-November 43 BC
[[6]]
By virtue of his adoption, following Roman custom,
Octavius now assumed the name C. Julius Caesar
Octavianus (hereafter "Octavian"). To identify
himself fully with his adoptive father and to lend
his subsequent actions a veneer of legitimacy, he
simply called himself "Caesar," and is usually so
named in ancient sources. [[7]] The name had a
tremendous pull and Octavian's use of it represents
his first major political reinvention: from unknown
Octavius to Caesar, son of Caesar. Many of the
troops at Brundisium joined his cause, and as he
moved toward Rome his retinue grew in size,
especially from among the ranks of veterans settled
by Caesar in Italian colonies. By mid-April, he was
nearing Rome. [[8]]
Antony paid no attention, at least officially. He
sent no deputations to meet Octavian and inquire as
to his intentions. Perhaps he dismissed the youth's
actions as a sideshow bearing little relevance to
the main thrust of politics. [[9]] At that time
Antony was deeply occupied with several important
matters, not the least being to secure powerful
provinces for himself while downgrading those of
Cassius and Brutus, the leaders of the Liberators.
Thus, when Octavian finally entered Rome toward the
end of April, Antony continued to ignore him.
Octavian kept his cool and arranged a meeting. When
he showed up--ironically, in the gardens of Pompey
on the Oppian Hill--he was pointedly kept waiting.
The ensuing exchange did not go well. [[10]] In
subsequent weeks, Antony blocked Octavian's moves to
have his adoption officially recognized and also
prevented him from standing for public office. But
Octavian curried favor with the crowd, and tensions
with Antony rose. [[11]]
Events around Mutina in northern Italy brought
matters to a head, both between the Caesarian camp
and the Liberators and between Antony and Octavian.
Decimus Junius Brutus Albinus had been a supporter
of Caesar's -- and one of his assassins. The
dictator had appointed him to the governorship of
Cisalpine Gaul (roughly the Po Valley region of
modern Italy), an appointment confirmed by the
senate. The senate had also assigned Antony, consul
in 44 BC, the province of Macedonia. Through
tribunician legislation in June 44 BC, Antony had
his command in Macedonia exchanged for that in
proximate and powerful Cisalpine Gaul. Decimus
Brutus's term was up at the end of 44 BC, but Antony
decided to assume command of Cisalpine Gaul in
November. Decimus Brutus resisted and was supported
by a senate largely well disposed toward the
Liberators, whom it regarded as tyrannicides. [[12]]
Against this backdrop of
looming crisis between the Caesarians and the
Liberators, the relationship between Antony and
Octavian continued to deteriorate, despite
occasional public reconciliations. Antony accused
Octavian of plotting against him, while Octavian
attempted, through agents, to undermine the loyalty
of the army that Antony was bringing to Italy from
Macedonia. Antony went to Brundisium to secure his
army (things did not go well there for him), at
which juncture Octavian showed his daring once more.
Despite the risk of being branded a public enemy, he
toured the Caesarian colonies of Campania and,
relying on old loyalties, raised a private army from
among Caesar's veterans, perhaps 10,000 strong. It
was a vivid demonstration of the power of the name
"Caesar." Antony, meanwhile, returned to Rome and
intended to denounce Octavian to the senate when he
heard that two of his five legions from Macedonia
had defected to Octavian. Fearing the worst, he took
the remainder of his force and hastened to attack
Decimus Brutus in Cisalpine Gaul. [[13]]
The situation was now highly volatile. Decimus
Brutus, backed by the senate, was resisting Antony
under arms, and retired to the fortified town of
Mutina in Cisalpine Gaul. Antony had four legions,
Octavian had five. All the armed parties were
mutually antagonistic. The senate, led by Cicero in
his last great political action, identified Antony
as the greater threat. [[14]] Cicero and Antony were
now on opposing sides, following an acrimonious
oratorical exchange in the senate that started in
September 44 BC. At this crucial juncture, then,
Cicero deployed his considerable rhetorical skill to
Octavian's benefit and began to champion his cause
as a foil to Antony's power. As a result, on 1
January, 43 BC Octavian's essentially illegal
command of men under arms was legitimized with a
grant of propraetorian power. As such, Octavian
continued his preparations to attack Antony, now
declared a public enemy, who had begun besieging
Decimus Brutus at Mutina. Octavian, now an official
representative of the republic, led his force into
the region and moved against Antony. [[15]]
In two engagements in April, Antony was bested and
fled over the Alps to his political allies in
Transalpine Gaul. Both consuls for 43 BC, however,
perished in the fighting around Mutina, and
Octavian, as the senior commander on the spot,
refused to cooperate any further with Decimus
Brutus, a murderer of his father. The senators, it
appears, hoped that Octavian would now go away. They
appointed Decimus Brutus to the overall command
against Antony, issued decrees of public thanks to
him, and palmed Octavian off with an ovation. When a
commission to distribute land to veterans was set
up, Octavian was pointedly omitted. Smarting at such
insulting treatment, Octavian bided his time and put
in requests for a consulship (with Cicero as his
colleague) and a triumph. Meanwhile, Antony was
preparing to return to Cisalpine Gaul with enormous
forces gained from Caesarian commanders in
Transalpine Gaul. The situation remained
unstable.[[16]] In the
face of all these developments, Octavian once more
acted with courage and determination, even if with
shocking directness. Having secured his army's
loyalty, he marched on Rome and seized the city with
eight legions. Three legions brought from outside
Italy to counter him defected. Unsurprisingly,
Octavian was elected consul to replace the deceased
consuls of 43 BC. He now carried the long-delayed
ratification of his adoption, paid out the remainder
of Caesar's legacy, revoked the amnesty for the
Liberators, and tried and convicted them en masse
and in absentia on a single day. Despite his control
of Rome, Octavian's position was perilous. Antony
was massing huge forces in Cisalpine Gaul and,
across the Adriatic, Cassius and Brutus had taken
the opportunity offered by the enmity between the
Caesarian leaders to gain control of most of the
eastern empire, it might be noted, with no great
regard for either legality or scruple. [[17]]
These complicated events have been treated here in
detail due to their immense importance in
establishing Octavian in the mainstream of Roman
politics. Dismissed by Antony and then by the senate
as a bit player, he proved repeatedly capable of
deft and resolute action in defence of his
interests. On account of his tender years, he lacked
the nexus of influential support that most leading
Roman politicians, including Antony, found essential
to their success and therefore he had to rely more
on direct appeals to the mob, his troops, and
supporters of Caesar. His actions might not have
been always scrupulous or admirable, but
Late-Republican politics was a vicious and cutthroat
business and few involved adhered solely to
principle (the Liberators, for instance, went about
the eastern empire seizing provinces and only had
their acts ratified post factum by a compliant
senate). Octavian had only two reliable tools
available to him at this early stage in his career:
his name, Caesar, and promises of bounty to the
soldiers, and he deployed both with daring and
decisiveness when he had to. In the autumn of 43 BC,
he was to make his most ambitious move yet.
The Triumvirate I: Early Challenges, 43-36 BC
Shortly after Mutina, Octavian had begun showing
signs of seeking a reconciliation with Antony; now,
he acted resolutely. On the pretence of preparing
his army for campaign, he moved north in November
and met with his rival; while Octavian was en route,
his consular colleague had secured the repeal of the
decrees declaring Antony a public enemy. The two
met, with Antony's supporter, M. Aemilius Lepidus,
on an island in a river near Bononia. Two days of
difficult negotiation produced an agreement: the
three Caesarians were to form a "Board of Three for
Organizing the State" (triumviri rei publicae
constituendae) that would run for five years, until
31 December, 38 BC. Unlike the so-called "First
Triumvirate" (comprised of Caesar, Pompey, and
Crassus), this "Second Triumvirate" was legally
constituted by a tribunician law, the lex Titia,
passed on 27 November, 43 BC. The triumvirs also
agreed to divide the western provinces of the empire
among themselves, with Octavian drawing seemingly
minor allocations in Sardinia, Sicily, and Africa
while Antony retained Cisalpine and Transalpine
Gaul, and Lepidus got Spain and Gallia Narbonensis.
In effect, the Second Triumvirate was a military
junta whose decisions were made without reference to
the senate or any other traditional organ of the
Roman state. [[18]]
The rule of the three got off to an inauspicious
start. Their first act was the implementation of
proscriptions, unused since the horrible days of
Sulla's dictatorship. Since the property of the
proscribed was forfeited, the main motive of the
triumvirs in instigating the terror appears to have
been financial, as many of their most implacable
enemies were not in Rome or Italy at all but with
Brutus and Cassius in the East. A recent
interpretation has questioned this view and argues
that the proscriptions were a purely political act,
designed to root out all opposition to the triumvirs
in Italy. Our sources preserve, in excruciating
detail, dozens of tragic anecdotes about the
proscribed as well as the text of the chilling
proclamation announcing the proscriptions. Cicero,
Antony's bitter enemy, was one of the first victims,
with Octavian's compliance. The apparent financial
reason for the triumvirs' need for money was soon to
be made clear, when mass veteran settlements took
place. Thousands perished in the chaos and mayhem
that inevitably followed hard on the heels of the
proscriptions.[[19]]
Next, the Liberators had to be dealt with. After a
prelude in Africa early in 42 BC, in which a
pro-senate governor was ousted by Octavian's
appointee, Antony and Octavian moved on Cassius and
Brutus in the summer and autumn of that same year.
The campaign took place in the Balkans and
culminated in a double battle some weeks apart in
October at Philippi in Macedonia. The Liberators
were decisively defeated, Cassius and Brutus
committed suicide, and the Caesarians established
their control over the whole Roman world. Octavian,
who had not played a glorious part in the battles,
showed complete implacability in executing any and
all of those implicated in the murder of Caesar who
fell into his hands. A reshuffling of the provinces
was required in light of the new situation: Antony
got the East but retained Transalpine and Narbonese
Gaul; Octavian got most of the West; Lepidus, fast
being overshadowed by his more ambitious and
ruthless partners, was effectively sidelined in
Africa. Following Philippi, Antony moved east,
Octavian returned to Italy, and a new polarization
of the Roman world began to manifest itself. [[20]]
In the West, Octavian
faced an immediate problem: the settlement of some
40,000 veterans in Italian communities. Veteran
settlement was of paramount concern, since it spoke
to Octavian's trustworthiness as a patron and so
could influence the future loyalty of his armies.
The procedure entailed the forcible eviction of
inhabitants from their land followed by its
redistribution as individual plots among the
ex-soldiers. Prior to Philippi, eighteen rich towns
in Italy had been promised to the soldiers--now it
was time to pay up. Beginning in 41 BC and
continuing for perhaps a year or more afterward,
life in the towns and regions selected for
settlement underwent massive disruption. It seems
that the dispossessed were not compensated for their
loss, so that the whole process made Octavian
enormously unpopular in Italy. [[21]]
This unpopularity generated an opportunity for the
opponents of the triumvirate and led to the
so-called Perusine War. One of the consuls of 41 BC
was L. Antonius, brother of Mark Antony. Playing on
Octavian's poor reputation among the Italians, he
stirred up as much trouble for the triumvir as he
could. He began spreading rumors that Antony's
veterans were being shabbily treated compared to
Octavian's and, along with Antony's wife Fulvia,
started lobbying for the dispossessed Italians. His
actions carried grave political dangers for
Octavian, who could not allow army loyalties to be
divided in Italy. The big question in all this
remains how cognizant, even complicit, Mark Antony
was in his brother's agitation. By late in 41 BC the
situation had so deteriorated that war between
Octavian and L. Antonius in Italy was inevitable.
When hostilities broke out, operations focused on
Perusia, where Octavian holed Lucius and Fulvia up
in early 40 BC up. After several months of siege,
Lucius surrendered and was magnanimously spared by
Octavian, though the councilors and people of
Perusia were not so fortunate: Octavian executed the
local council and gave the town over to his soldiers
to plunder. He then adjourned to Gaul, there to
supervise the transfer of the region to his own
command, since the Antonian governor had died.
[[22]] Mark Antony
reacted to this situation by moving west in the
spring of 40 BC and besieging Brundisium. Octavian
gathered his forces and marched south to confront
him. The triumvirate appeared to be over, its two
chief members at war. However, neither army was keen
for war and negotiations produced an agreement
instead, termed the "Pact of Brundisium." By means
of this agreement, Antony ceded Gaul to Octavian,
relinquishing his last foothold in the West, but was
confirmed in the East. Lepidus continued to languish
in Africa. Further, Antony was married to Octavian's
sister, Octavia. (Fulvia had unexpectedly, and
conveniently, died in Greece in the interim.) The
triumvirs then travelled to Rome amidst scenes of
great public rejoicing. [[23]]
The attention of the triumvirs was then directed
toward Sextus Pompeius in Sicily, who was posing a
challenge to their authority in the West. Sextus,
the youngest son of Pompey, is one of the more
colorful characters of the Roman Revolution.
Surviving the Pompeian defeat at Munda in 45 BC, he
fought guerilla warfare in Spain and then took to
the sea as a pirate leader. When he was recalled to
Rome following Caesar's murder, he cautiously sailed
to Massilia and awaited developments. During the war
at Mutina, when the fortunes of the senate and the
Liberators appeared to be in the ascendant, he found
himself appointed prefect of Rome's fleets and
Italy's coastal zones (on 20 March, 43 BC). With the
establishment of the triumvirate six months later,
he seized Sicily and, as a beacon of resistance
against the triumvirs, was greatly reinforced by
refugees from the proscriptions, survivors of
Philippi, those dispossessed by the veteran
settlements in Italy, and any remaining forces of
republican sentiment. He beat off attempts by
Octavian to oust him from Sicily. Antony formed a
pact with him, in order to make his move against
Octavian in 40 BC but, if Sextus had hoped for some
concrete reward for this service, he got none: he
benefited in no way from the Pact of Brundisium and
was not officially recognized by the triumvirs. Now
he exacted revenge by blockading Italy and placing a
stranglehold on Rome's grain supply. Antony and
Octavian were forced to act. Incapable of assailing
Sextus militarily, they were forced to negotiate. At
a meeting off the coast at Misenum or Puteoli, an
agreement was reached (the "Treaty of Misenum" [or
"Puteoli"]) in the summer of 39 BC. This agreement
saw Sextus's control over Corsica, Sardinia, and
Sicily made "official" with a promise that he'd be
given the Peloponnese and a consulship in due
course. Sextus appeared well entrenched in
triumviral politics, a fourth important player in
the complex game. [[24]]
The Treaty of Misenum was to have a short shelf
life. Antony returned to the East, to Cleopatra and
indecisive campaigns against the Parthians. Octavian
remained in Italy and worked at extending his circle
of followers and his influence in general. Toward
that end, the presence of Sextus Pompeius was an
obstacle. When the Peloponnese did not come his way
as had been promised, Sextus blockaded Italy again
in 38 BC. Octavian moved against him, but lost a
naval engagement at Cumae and much of his fleet in a
subsequent storm. He now appealed to Antony for
help. The two met at Tarentum in the summer of 37
BC. Aside from Octavian's acquisition of some 120
ships from Antony for the effort against Sextus (in
return for a promise of 20,000 Italian troops for
Antony's planned Parthian campaign), the meeting saw
the triumvirate renewed for a further five years.
The office had expired on 31 December, 38 BC, but
none of the incumbents had paid any attention to
that inconvenient detail and continued to exercise
its prerogatives (illegally) for the first months of
37 BC. Now their power was renewed. [[25]]
Since equilibrium had been restored with Antony,
Octavian now turned his full attention to defeating
Sextus. Elaborate preparations, mostly under the
direction M. Vipsanius Agrippa, finally readied
Octavian's fleet for action in 36 BC. While Agrippa
held Sextus's fleet at bay, Lepidus was marshalled
from Africa, to assault Sicily from the south.
Another of Octavian's generals was to converge on
Italy from the northeast, while Octavian himself
would move from Campania. But ship-destroying storms
and another naval defeat for Octavian at the hands
of Sextus seemed to signal the failure of the entire
operation. Agrippa, however, saved the day and took
several of Sextus's ports before engaging and
destroying the rebel's fleet at the battle of
Naulochus on 3 September, 36 BC. Sextus fled east
but was murdered not long afterward. Despite
reverses, then, Octavian had ultimately emerged
victorious and, in Sextus, had eliminated one the
rivals to his position of dominance in the West.
Fate allowed him to neutralize the other. Lepidus,
so long in the shadows, now decided to make a play
for power. Finding himself in control of twenty-two
legions in Sicily, he defied Octavian and made
demands that he quit the island for good. Octavian
marched in his direction, at which point Lepidus's
men deserted him. At an embarrassing scene in
Lepidus's camp, Octavian spared his former
triumviral colleague but stripped him of his powers
and confined him to house arrest at the pleasant
seaside town of Circeii. There he lived out his life
unmolested until he died, of natural causes, in 12
BC.[[26]] Octavian was
now the unchallenged master of the Roman West. In
one campaigning season he had rid himself of the
open challenge of Sextus Pompeius and the sleeping
challenge of Lepidus. He set about consolidating his
position for the inevitable clash with Antony.
The Triumvirate II: Showdown with Antony, 36-30 BC
When Octavian returned to Rome in triumph following
the defeat of Sextus, the senate naturally moved to
honor him extravagantly. Among the proposed honors
was the suggestion that Octavian be named pontifex
maximus, pagan Rome's chief priest. Octavian
refused. Lepidus, though disgraced, was pontifex
maximus; and it would be against established
practice for an incumbent to be stripped of this
august priesthood while still alive. Here emerges
the first sign of a second major political
reinvention on Octavian's part, from avenger of
Caesar and militarist revolutionary to upholder and
guardian of Roman tradition. The war against Sextus
had been tremendously difficult. Despite his
popularity in some circles, Sextus had been
successfully cast as an enemy of the Roman people,
the one who threatened them with famine and
starvation by cutting off grain shipments.
Conversely, Octavian had presented himself as the
defender of the people's interests. For this reason,
his victory was immensely popular. It also seems
that the war caused Octavian to consider what
alternative bases for his power were available to
him, and to seek new and broader platforms of
support beyond the army. His political reinvention
was symbolized by Octavian's decree that all records
of his acts up to that point be burned. He was
starting over. From this perspective, the Principate
may be argued to have had its roots not with
Caesar's murder in March 44 BC but with Sextus
Pompeius's defeat in September 36 BC.[[27]]
In the East, Antony was not faring terribly well. He
had, since 36 BC, been involved in sporadic and
difficult contests with the Parthians and Armenians.
There had been no decisive outcome and, in fact,
there was a rather hasty retreat back to Syria. This
was all the more regrettable (in Antony's eyes),
since Octavian had been successful against Sextus
and then, in 35-33 BC, against the tribes of
Illyricum. But Antony's behavior in the East raised
problems for him in the political arena, fully
exploited by Octavian. His continuing link with
Cleopatra, despite his marriage to Octavia, was
among the most troublesome, and it had produced two
children. Antony also appeared to have "gone
native," wearing eastern dress, with an eastern
despot as a consort, and practising eastern customs.
Even more appalling, having seized Armenia in 34 BC,
Antony staged a spectacle in Alexandria's gymnasium
known since as the "Donations of Alexandria." In
this spectacle, Antony declared Cleopatra "Queen of
Kings" and her son by Caesar, Caesarion, "King of
Kings"; he then divided up the eastern Roman Empire
among Cleopatra, Caesarion, and his own children. It
seemed, from an Italian perspective, that Antony was
under the spell of Cleopatra, whose ultimate goal,
it was rumored, was to become Queen of Rome.
Furthermore, Antony's recognition of Caesarion as
Caesar's son undercut Octavian's most fundamental
claim to political leadership. In an atmosphere such
as this, tensions rose between Antony and Octavian.
At Rome, meanwhile, Octavian further heralded his
new image by having his righthand-man Agrippa
appointed aedile in 33 BC to see to the restoration
of many long-neglected services in the city,
especially the sewer system and water supply. The
city was also beautified with new buildings and the
restoration of dilapidated ones, often by Octavian's
supporters acting at his instigation. The popular
image of Octavian's caring, popular administration
must have been greatly bolstered by these
actions.[[28]] The year
32 BC was a difficult one and saw Octavian and
Antony finally embark openly on the road to war. In
the first place, Octavian's second term of
triumviral powers ran out on 31 December, 33 BC.
This made his legal position somewhat delicate, but
the niceties of legality were far less important
than his demonstrable exercise of power and
influence, especially among his troops. Who was
going to challenge him? It is interesting to observe
that Octavian immediately ceased using the title
"triumvir"; Antony did not. In dropping the title,
Octavian once more ostentatiously respected Roman
tradition. As matters turned out, events at Rome
were to offer Octavian a new basis for claiming
legitimate leadership of the Roman people, albeit a
non-legal one. On 1 January, 32 BC, the Antonian
consul, C. Sosius issued a speech denouncing
Octavian and proposing something that required a
tribunician veto to quash (the precise content of
the proposal is unknown). Octavian, not in the city
at the time, soon entered with an armed escort,
convened the senate, and denounced Antony. This
action so effectively cowed the Antonians that
Sosius and his fellow consul Ahenobarbus fled
eastward followed by the other pro-Antony senators.
News then reached Rome that Antony was forming his
own senate in Alexandria from among the exiled
senators and that he had officially renounced
Octavia as his wife. Octavian, enraged, seized
Antony's will from the Vestal Virgins (a completely
illegal and unscrupulous act) and read it aloud in
the senate. Its contents shocked Roman sentiment:
Antony wished to be buried in Alexandria, next to
Cleopatra. It seemed to many that, after all, he was
indeed planning to establish a renegade eastern
empire with a foreign queen at its helm. War was
declared on Cleopatra, and traditional rituals
revived to emphasize that the official enemy was a
foreigner, not a fellow Roman. As preparations for
war geared up in the summer of 32 BC, a remarkable
thing happened. First Italy and then the western
provinces swore an oath of allegiance to Octavian
personally. Whether the oath was voluntary, as
Augustus later claimed in his Res Gestae, or a more
carefully orchestrated piece of political theater,
Octavian could now claim to be the people's choice
for the war against Cleopatra. It was not a legal
position, but it was an unassailable one. [[29]]
In prospect, the war between Antony and Octavian
promised to be the largest civil conflict ever
conducted by the Romans. Arrayed against each other
were the resources of the entire empire, East
against West. The not inconsiderable resources of
Ptolemaic Egypt, the last surviving major
Hellenistic kingdom, were also in the mix. In the
end, however, the war ended not with a bang but with
a fizzle. The massive forces moved against each
other and converged in Greece, as had Caesar and
Pompey at the outset of an earlier great conflict.
The two sides encamped on the north side of the
Ambracian gulf, near the promontory of Actium.
Cleopatra's presence proved problematic for Antony,
and there were defections to Octavian. Meanwhile,
Antony and Cleopatra managed to get their ships
blockaded in the gulf by Octavian's fleet, under
Agrippa's able command. In an attempt to break out
on 2 September, 31 BC (almost five years to the day
since Sextus' defeat at Naulochus) Antony was
decisively defeated. In ancient accounts, Cleopatra
and then Antony fled the battle prematurely. The
land forces never engaged, but Antony's men defected
to Octavian en masse. Everything had been decided in
a few hours of naval warfare. [[30]]
The victory of Octavian was complete. Antony and
Cleopatra fled to Egypt. Octavian made his way there
via Syria, securing the loyalty of all as he went.
Antony's forces and former supporters defected in
droves. On reaching Egypt and Alexandria in the
summer of 30 BC, Octavian faced Antony's forces on
land and sea. A great battle seemed imminent --
until Antony's navy and cavalry defected en masse
before the very eyes of their general and his
infantry were defeated (1 August, 30 BC). Antony and
Cleopatra committed suicide, and passed from
historical reality into the realm of romantic
legend. Octavian had Caesarion and Antony's eldest
son (Antyllus) executed, and he annexed Egypt as a
province of Rome, ending the Ptolemaic period of
that country's history. He was now sole master of
the entire Roman world. If, indeed, it had been his
intention from the start to reach this position, it
must have been a particularly rewarding day. For
fourteen years he had played a careful, dangerous,
and patient game. Now it was time to secure the
future, for himself and for Rome.[[31]]
From Octavian to Augustus: A New Order
Established
The third and final political reinvention of
Augustus was about to take place. That the Republic
needed a guiding hand was beyond doubt. The old
system had failed utterly and, if reinstated, would
do so again. Even someone as republican in sentiment
as Cicero had finally admitted the need for a
"governing leader" of the state (rector). Octavian
was to remain in control, that much was clear. But
how? Over the next three decades, his position in
the state was established in a complex amalgam of
legal and non-legal powers and privileges. The
process was not instantaneous nor did it adhere to a
single agenda relentlessly pursued; rather, it
evolved piecemeal over time, occasionally
reactionary, occasionally with foresight. Many
details remain debated or uncertain, but the overall
process is clearly discernible: it extends through
two main "Constitutional Settlements" in 27 and 23
BC respectively, some refinements in 19 BC, and
sporadic assignations of numerous rights and
privileges down to the granting of the ultimate
title, "Father of his Country" (Pater Patriae), in 2
BC.
In the wake of Actium, however, there was work to be
done. After taking Egypt and settling affairs there,
Octavian stayed away from Rome as he saw to the
organization of the East. For the most part,
Antony's arrangements were left in place, as long as
old loyalties were suitably redirected. Octavian
returned to Rome and Italy, amid tumultuous
celebrations, in August of 29 BC. Large numbers of
veterans were settled (perhaps 25 legions totalling
40,000 men or more) both in Italy and the provinces,
this time without complaint, since the vast wealth
of Egypt allowed for ample compensation. When he
entered Rome, he celebrated three triumphs over
three days (over Dalmatia, Actium, and Egypt).
Legally, his difficult position of 32 BC had been
bypassed and Octavian held the consulship every year
from 31 BC onwards (until 23 BC). Just as important,
however, was the non-legal basis for his dominance,
later expressed by Augustus as "universal consent."
The roots of this consent must lie in the oath of 32
BC, now extended in principle, if not in practice,
to embrace the entire empire and all its armies.
Octavian was, as he later put it, "in complete
control of affairs" precisely because everyone
wanted him to be and, just as significantly, because
he was the last man standing. There is political
posturing in his claim to "universal consent," to be
sure, but possibly also some kernel of truth. He had
ended the civil wars, and all hopes for a peaceful
future now rested with him and him alone. In light
of this, the senate and people voted him numerous
honors in 29 BC, some of which Octavian judiciously
refused, consonant with his image as respecter of
tradition. [[32]]
Octavian's holding continuous consulships would be
insufficient as a mode of administration in the long
term, especially if, as he intended, the old order
was to be seen to be restored. He needed, somehow,
to find a firm place simultaneously within and above
established norms. His position at the head of
affairs therefore needed careful consideration, and
this no doubt explains the eighteen-month gap
between his return to Rome in August 29 BC and the
so-called First Constitutional Settlement of 13
January, 27 BC which, with the broadest of brush
strokes, began painting the portrait of the new
order. Memories of Caesar's fate must have loomed
large. Despite that dictator's huge popularity among
the masses, his complete victory over his enemies in
civil war, and the devotion of his troops, he had
been laid low by a few dozen disillusioned
aristrocrats. Among the uppermost considerations
pressing on Octavian, therefore, must have been the
need to appease the sensibilities of the elite. In
addition, the divided loyalties of highly
politicized armies had been a plague on the Late
Republic. This situation too would require
remedying. These two issues, in fact, were at the
heart of the "First Settlement," staged in the
senate on 13 January, 27 BC.[[33]]
On that day, Octavian entered the senate and, to the
shock of those not in the know, surrendered his
position and retired to private life. The senators,
possibly confused, reacted with indignance and
insisted that Octavian remain at the helm of the
state. After a show of reluctance, Octavian
graciously accepted a share in the running of the
state, gaining command of Spain (except Baetica),
Gaul, Syria, Cyprus, and Egypt while the senate and
people kept the rest. Within his extended provincia,
granted for ten years, Octavian could appoint
legates to administer regions on his behalf. Modern
scholars have failed to reach agreement on the exact
legal status of Octavian's command over his
provinces (was it by virtue of imperium consulare or
proconsulare, imperium maius or aequum?), but the
case for imperium proconsulare is the stronger; it
also had precedents, in the form of the
"extraordinary commands" of Pompey or Caesar in the
Late Republic. This situation would have appealed to
Octavian's desire to appear to be maintaining
traditions while also doing nothing alarmingly new
or innovative. Other honors and privileges were also
forthcoming, at a second meeting on 16 January. Here
Octavian was named Augustus, a word ringing with
religious (augur) and social (auctoritas) meaning
but not suggestive of overt political dominance. C.
Julius Caesar Octavianus now became Imperator Caesar
Augustus. Other honors carried more symbolic meaning
(laurels placed on the door of his house; award of
the corona civica for saving the lives of citizens;
the "Shield of Virtues" erected in his honor) but
they were no less significant for that: they helped
establish Augustus's pre-eminent place in the state
and craft the beginnings of an Augustan ideology. By
means of this settlement, Augustus was
simultaneously commander, leader, savior. [[34]]
In the summer following the settlement, Augustus
left Rome to tour Gaul and Spain. The journey kept
him away from Rome until 24 BC--probably a wise
choice on his part, to be out of the public eye
while the new arrangements took root. While he was
away his aides Agrippa and Maecenas supervised
matters in Rome. The summer after his return,
probably in June or July, the "Second Constitutional
Settlement" was staged. At around this time a
conspiracy was unearthed and two principals, Fannius
Caepio and Varro Murena, were executed. In the
absence of evidence, scholarly debate has raged
about the timing, aims, methods, and members of the
conspiracy: was the "Second Settlement" a reaction
to the conspiracy, or vice versa? Or were the events
unrelated? In the end, the conclusion has to be left
open, but the case for the conspiracy's occurring
after the settlement seems the stronger, though any
causative links between events remains little more
than putative. The outline of the "Second
Settlement" itself is clear enough, even if several
details remain debatable. Augustus relinquished the
consulship (which he had been monopolizing since 31
BC) and was only to take it up on two further
occasions in the rest of his life, for dynastic
reasons. In return, he received an empire-wide grant
of proconsular power (imperium proconsulare) for
five years. It is debated whether this imperium was
"greater" (maius) than that of any other governor or
"equal" (aequum) to it. Five decrees found in
Cyrenaica, dated to the period 6-4 BC, show Augustus
intervening in the internal affairs of this
province. The implication is that his imperium
overrode that of the governor on the spot (and so
was maius), though the possibility that it was
co-extensive with it must also be allowed (making
the imperium aequum). Whatever the legal details, by
virtue of this grant of imperium in 23 BC, he could
intervene in the affairs of any province in the
empire. Unlike other governors, he was also given
dispensation to retain his power within the city
limits of Rome (the pomerium), probably for purely
practical reasons: otherwise, every time he left the
city, his proconsular power would need to be
renewed. In relinquishing the consulship, Augustus
lost certain powers and privileges within the city
of Rome and its polity (his proconsular power
notwithstanding). These were now compensated for by
a grant of tribunician power (tribunicia potestas),
also for five years, that allowed him all the rights
and privileges of a tribune of the people, without
actually holding that office: he could summon the
people, propose legislation, veto meetings and
proposals, and so on. With both his tribunician
power and proconsular power, Augustus now had the
ability to direct affairs in every wing of domestic
and foreign administration. These two powers were
long to remain the twin pillars of the Roman
emperors' legal position. [[35]]
While the major settlements of 27 and 23 BC
established the bases of Augustus's position,
further refinements were necessary. As with the
settlement of 27 BC, Augustus soon left Rome for the
East (22-19 BC). Before he left, he was forced to
refuse offers of the dictatorship or perpetual
consulship pressed on him by the people, who appear
to have completely missed the subtleties of the
Second Settlement the year before. Over the coming
years, he received, piecemeal, some significant
privileges and honors. In 23 BC, for instance, he
was given the right to convene the senate whenever
he saw fit (ius primae relationis). In 22 BC, he was
appointed to oversee Rome's grain supply (for how
long is unclear). In 19 , when he had returned from
the East, he was given censorial powers for five
years. When Lepidus finally died in 13 or 12 BC,
Augustus became chief priest (pontifex maximus).
Finally, in 2 BC, he was granted the title "Father
of his Country" (pater patriae), a title of which he
was immensely proud. It is not hard to see why,
since the title placed Augustus in a relationship
with the Roman state analogous to that of a
paterfamilias over his charges: he was to be in
complete control of everything. In addition, there
was his membership of all the colleges of priests,
numerous symbolic privileges (e.g., immunity from
taxes), and the matter of auctoritas. This personal
quality, impossible to translate into English with a
single word, was a combination of authority and
influence derived from one's social and political
position, family, abilities, and achievements. It
was, most importantly, an informal virtue: it could
not be voted to anyone by the senate or the people.
In this way, the extent of Augustus's auctoritas
reflected the extent and success of his life's work,
and it helped him get a lot of business done without
constantly invoking his legally-conferred powers.
Augustus simply had to make known his preferences
for matters to transpire accordingly, so that, for
instance, candidates for office whom he favored
invariably got elected. No wonder he was proud to
boast that he "surpassed all in auctoritas." [[36]]
The complex edifice of
the Augustan Principate was, at heart, a sham. But,
like any successful sham, it was one that people
could believe in. Above all, there was political
genius in Augustus's slow and careful acquisition of
overarching authority in every area of public life.
At every step of the way--from the oath of 32 BC
through the "constitutional settlements" and the
honors and privileges conferred upon him
piecemeal--he could present himself as the passive
partner. On all occasions, the senate and people of
Rome voluntarily conferred powers, privileges, and
honors on him. He sought nothing for himself; he was
no Caesar. Indeed, he often expressed reluctance to
accept offices and honors that struck him as
excessive, and occasionally he refused them
outright. In sharp contrast to Caesar, Augustus
constantly had one eye on aristocratic
sensitivities. Furthermore, none of his cardinal
powers were conferred for life but, rather, for
fixed periods of five or (later) ten years. That
these powers were never rescinded when they came up
for renewal is entirely beside the point: there was
the illusion of choice. That is what mattered. The
vocabulary Augustus chose to express his power, too,
was a model of tact: "leading citizen" (princeps)
not dictator, "authoritative influence" (auctoritas)
not "command" (imperium). Throw into the equation
his modest lifestyle, affable approachability,
routine consultation of the senate, and genuinely
impressive work ethic, and we have in Augustus one
of the greatest and most skillfully manipulative
politicians of any nation in any age.
The Nature of the Principate and The Problem of
the Succession
While his tact and the careful construction of his
position shielded Augustus from contemporary
accusations of grasping ambition and lust for power,
it did bring with it an unpleasant corollary:
tremendous uncertainty as to happened when the
"leading citizen" died. Technically, Augustus's
position was a particular package of powers granted
to him by the senate and people, for fixed periods.
When he died, therefore, technically, it was up to
the senate and people to decide what happened next.
They could appoint another princeps to replace
Augustus, or return to the republican system of
popular votes and annual magistrates. Both of these
options, however, would undoubtedly lead to civil
war. What would stop army commanders, particularly
those related to Augustus, from challenging a
princeps chosen by the senators? If there were a
return to the "free republic," what would prevent a
resurgence of the chaos that had preceded Augustus?
Indeed, paradoxically, Augustus's very position had
set a new precedent for what one could achieve:
others would almost certainly aspire to it, even it
were officially abandoned. In short, there was no
possibility of Augustus leaving the choice of what
happened after his death to the senate and people,
despite their legal position as the source of his
powers. He himself realized this. Suetonius reports
his published ambition that the new order continue
after his death. But there was a problem here, too.
If, as Augustus himself claimed in his Res Gestae,
he really "possessed no more official power than the
others who were my colleagues in the several
magistracies," then he had as little right to
appoint a successor as did a governor, or a consul,
or a praetor. Such an action would traduce tradition
and smack too openly of the despised kingship. So
Augustus was in a real bind in the matter of the
succession. His solution will be familiar to
Kremlinologists: the granting of signs of preference
to favored individuals, in this case drawn largely
from within the princeps' own house. In selecting
members of his extended family, Augustus was
behaving entirely within the ethos of the Roman
aristocracy, for whom family was paramount. It would
also ensure that the name "Caesar," which had been
so vital in establishing Augustus's own control over
the armed forces, would remain at the head of the
state. But the informal nature of Augustus's
succession arrangements, even if forced on him by
the nature of his position, opened the door to
domestic turmoil and proved the single most
consistently destabilizing political factor in his
reign and those of future emperors. [[37]]
After Actium, Augustus moved on the succession
problem quickly. He began to show signs of favor to
his nephew, Marcellus. He himself only had one
natural child, Julia, his daughter by his second
wife, Scribonia. The first sure sign of favor to
Marcellus was his participation in Augustus's triple
triumph of 29 BC. In 25 BC, Marcellus was married to
Julia, forming a closer family link with Augustus.
The following year, Marcellus became aedile and, on
Augustus's request, was granted the privilege of
sitting as an ex-praetor in the senate and of
standing for the consulship ten years in advance of
the legal age. By 23 BC he was widely considered, in
Velleius's words, Augustus's "successor in power"
(successor potentiae). Then, a surprise. Augustus
fell seriously ill in 23 BC. As he lay on what he
thought was his deathbed, he handed an account of
the state's resources to the consul Cn. Calpurnius
Piso, and his signet ring to Agrippa. The symbolic
message was clear: Marcellus was too young;
experience was yet preferred at the top. Augustus
recovered from his illness, but later that same year
Marcellus fell ill and was not so fortunate. He was
nineteen when he died and was entombed with all due
pomp and ceremony in Augustus's family mausoleum.
[[38]] The career of
Marcellus, short though it was, already revealed the
elements of Augustus's methods: he was to use family
links (marriage or adoption) in conjunction with
constitutional privileges (office-holding and the
privilege of standing for office early) to indicate
his successor. His inspiration appears to have been
his personal experience: as Caesar had presented
Octavius to the public at his triumphs of September
46 BC, so now did Augustus display Marcellus at his
own triumphs in August 29 BC; as the senate had
Octavius granted the right to stand for the
consulship ten years in advance of the legal age in
43 BC, so Augustus had the same right granted to
Marcellus in 24 BC; and just as Caesar had bound
Octavius to him by a familial link, so now did
Augustus with Marcellus's marriage to Julia
(although such political alliances through family
ties had long been a staple of the Roman nobility).
Each event had its precedent; it was their
combination that was significant. [[39]]
Marcellus was soon
replaced by Agrippa. Shortly before Marcellus's
death, Agrippa had left for the East. In the face of
Marcellus's earlier preferment, the sources abound
with rumors of Agrippa's voluntary departure in high
dudgeon or of his forcible exile, but such
speculations are demonstrably without merit. Agrippa
had been favored when Augustus was ill in 23 BC and
subsequently went East with a grant of imperium
proconsulare, a share in Augustus's own powers. This
is not what Augustus would have done with a man of
whom he was suspicious or who had fallen in any way
from favor. Augustus had business in the East, to
which he was shortly to attend personally, and
Agrippa was doubtless sent ahead to pave the way.
Maecenas, Augustus's other chief advisor and no
friend of Agrippa, is reported to have commented in
21 BC that Agrippa had now been raised so high that
either Augustus must marry him to Julia or kill him.
Augustus chose the former route. Julia was married
to Agrippa in that year. Until his death in 12 BC,
Agrippa was clearly intended to be Augustus's
successor. Aside from his marriage to Julia, in 18
BC Agrippa's proconsular power was renewed and, more
significantly, he received a share of tribunician
power (renewed in 13 BC). [[40]]
By virtue of these powers and privileges, had
anything happened to Augustus in the years 21-13 BC,
Agrippa would have been ideally placed to take over
the reins of government. Coins of the period 13-12
BC depict Agrippa as virtual co-emperor with
Augustus, although the latter was always the senior
partner. This straightforward interpretation of the
situation in these years has been complicated by
Augustus's treatment of Agrippa and Julia's sons,
Gaius (born in 20 BC) and Lucius (born in 17 BC).
When Lucius was born, Augustus adopted them both as
his own sons and they became Gaius and Lucius
Caesar. A further complication is added when the
ongoing careers of Augustus's stepsons, Tiberius and
Drusus, who were also advanced over these years, are
taken into consideration. The intent behind these
labyrinthine machinations appears to have been to
create a pool of eligible candidates, headed by a
frontrunner. Any other princes as were advanced in
the background are best considered as insurance
against fate or as indicators of Augustus's
preferences for the third generation of the
Principate. In this way, Agrippa was to succeed
Augustus, but the adoption of Gaius and Lucius
signalled Augustus's desire that one of them succeed
Agrippa (which one was to be preferred remains
unclear, given subsequent events). Tiberius and
Drusus, as imperial princes, can be expected to have
enjoyed high public profiles and earned various
privileges, but they were very much on the
backburner in these years. Notions of Regency
(Agrippa over Gaius and Lucius) or paired succession
(Gaius and Lucius, Tiberius and Drusus) proposed by
modern scholars seem remoter possibilities. [[41]]
Augustus's vision for
the succession can be seen in action again in 12 BC,
when Agrippa died. Julia, now widowed a second time,
was married to Tiberius the following year. Tiberius
was Augustus's stepson and the most senior and
experienced of the "secondary" princes in the
imperial house. As such, he was a natural choice.
Not long afterward, Tiberius left for campaigns in
Germany and Pannonia, possibly with a grant of
proconsular imperium. In 7 BC he entered his second
consulship and the following year his position was
made plain when he received a large commission in
the East and a grant of tribunician power. In short,
between 12 and 6 BC Tiberius was upgraded to take
Agrippa's place in Augustus's scheme and was
installed to be Augustus's successor. But it was to
be a rocky road indeed that led to his eventual
succession in AD 14. In 6 BC Tiberius unexpectedly
"retired" to Rhodes, despite his prominent public
position. Augustus, apparently angered by Tiberius's
action, had little choice (Drusus, Tiberius's
brother had died in Germany in 9 BC). He appears to
have relied on his increasingly robust health to see
his adopted sons Gaius and Lucius Caesar to their
maturity. But fate intervened once more and both
young men died, Lucius in AD 2 and Gaius two years
after that. In a burst of dynastic activity in June
of AD 4, Tiberius was rehabilitated and adopted by
Augustus, as was Agrippa Postumus (the youngest
child of Julia and Agrippa); Tiberius was
constrained to adopt his nephew Germanicus. Again,
debate has swirled around these arrangements but,
following the suggestions made above, it is probably
best to avoid notions of regency or paired
succcession and see here an attempt by Augustus to
re-establish a "pool" of princes from which to draw
candidates, with Tiberius as the favored successor
and Germanicus to come behind him. The adoption of
Agrippa Postumus remains puzzling, but he was still
only a teenager at the time and the move may have
been intended only to secure his prominence in
future succession plans. Germanicus, twenty years
old at the time of his adoption by Tiberius, was
clearly the frontrunner for the third generation of
the Principate. Through him, also, Augustus could
hope for a Julian heir to the throne, but it is far
from clear whether this remote consideration played
any decisive role in Augustus's thinking. [[42]]
The succession issue was not a happy one for the
imperial house and carried in its train some
domestic tragedies. Aside from the deaths of the
various princes, Augustus banished his own daughter
Julia in 2 BC and her daughter, also named Julia, in
AD 8. In AD 6-7 Agrippa Postumus was disinherited
and banished to the small island of Planasia, only
to be murdered shortly after Augustus's death. The
banishment of Julia the Elder is emblematic of this
group of events. Julia's marriage to Tiberius had
not been successful and she appears to have sought
solace in the arms of various noblemen and
equestrians. In 2 BC her indiscretions were brought
to Augustus's attention and, enraged, he banished
her to the island of Pandateria. She never returned
to Rome. The sources unanimously ascribe Julia's
fate to her licentiousness and immorality, but
modern scholars have rightly questioned this
presentation and seen instead dynastic scheming
behind Julia's actions and subsequent banishment.
Whatever the actual degree of Julia's political
acumen, the informal and allusive nature of the
succession system itself was the root cause of her
demise. For, in the Augustan system, an imperial
princess who had been married to no less than three
indicated favorites (Marcellus, Agrippa, and
Tiberius) and who then brought outsiders into her
bed was also bringing them into the heart of the
dynasty. That could not be tolerated. That Augustus
interpreted his daughter's misdeeds in political
terms, at least in part, is suggested by the trial
for treason of one of Julia's lovers, Iullus
Antonius, and his subsequent execution or suicide;
others of her lovers were banished. The same can be
said for the fall of Agrippa Postumus and then of
Julia the Younger. However murky the details in each
case, they can all be seen as victims of the
Augustan succession system. [[43]]
In all, then, the succession problem was a difficult
one for Augustus, and his solutions only perpetuated
it for all future emperors. Despite the internal
difficulties engendered by the issue, Augustus was
keen to present a united image of the imperial house
to the populace. This is best illustrated by the
"Altar of the Augustan Peace" (Ara Pacis Augustae),
dedicated in January, 9 BC, and laden with symbolic
significance largely outside the purview of this
biography. For our current purposes, most important
is the presentation to the people, on the south
frieze, of the imperial family--women and children
included--as a corporate entity. The message of
dynastic harmony and the promise of future stability
emanating from the imperial house is palpable. The
reality, as we have just seen, was rather different.
Augustus and the
Empire I: the Army
At the heart of Augustus's position in the state lay
the army. It had been a major player in the chaotic
events of the Late Republic and it had carried
Augustus to power. Concern for its proper
maintenance and for the effective channelling of its
loyalties was therefore one of the chief goals of
the Augustan settlement. In achieving these goals,
Augustus's actions were a rousing success, since the
army was tamed as a force in imperial politics for
the better part of a century.
Augustus completed the ongoing professionalization
of the Roman military by establishing a force of 28
standing legions (three were to be lost in Germany
in AD 9), made up of volunteer recruits. For the
citizen soldiers of the legions, service was for a
prescribed period (first 16, then 20 years), on a
regular wage, and with fixed rewards upon discharge.
After 14 BC, land grants were discontinued in favor
of cash pension payments; such payments were funded,
after AD 6, by a new public treasury (the aerarium
militare). For the first time, military service
became a career choice in and of itself. Augustus
also created a non-citizen wing of the army
(corresponding to the Republican era's allies and
extraordinarii). These auxiliary troops were formed
into cohorts of infantry and wings (alae) of
cavalry, usually 500 or 1000 strong, sometimes under
their own commanders, sometimes under a Roman
officer (an ex-centurion or tribune). Under
Augustus, auxiliary units were mostly raised as
needed and disbanded when the campaign(s) ended;
some units were incorporated into the new permanent
force, on terms of service similar to those for the
legionaries. Augustus also regularized the
organization and terms of service in the Roman navy
and created the praetorian guard, a personal force
which he discreetly and tactfully billeted in
townships around Rome. [[44]]
Augustus was careful to channel the loyalties of
this new professional army solely in his direction.
The troops' loyalty to Augustus was assured by their
taking a personal oath of loyalty to him and by his
role as their sole paymaster and guarantor of their
rewards on discharge. In short, he was their patron.
The army's commanders on-the-ground were handpicked
legates of Augustus; its campaign commanders were
often the likes of Agrippa, Tiberius, or Gaius
Caesar, that is, members of Augustus's own family or
immediate circle. He also kept the army busy in
major campaigns in Spain, the Alpine regions, along
the Danube and Rhine rivers, across the Rhine in
Germany, and in numerous small-scale actions all
along the empire's frontiers. Where active campaigns
were not prosecuted, as in Gaul or in the East, the
army was used as a means of aiding political
settlements (as in the return of the Parthian eagles
in 20 BC or the meeting of C. Caesar and the
Parthians on an island in the Euphrates in AD 2) or
as a garrison over local populations (as in Gaul).
While Augustus did not go so far as to station the
legions along the frontier as a defensive garrison
force (as was to happen in later ages), he at least
removed them from the center of power and began the
process of keeping them in the vicinity of the
frontiers. Although Augustus appears to some
scholars to have been aiming at establishing
"scientific frontiers" along the Rhine/Elbe and
Danube lines, the whole issue of his foreign
policy--indeed, whether even such a policy
existed--remains most unclear. For the "scientific
frontiers" view to be true, certain problematic
assumptions are requisite, not the least concerning
the Romans' cartographic capabilities and their
appreciation of geographic realities well beyond
their immediate purview; it is also questionable to
what degree the administration of the empire in
general adhered to clearly conceived "policy" on
anything, rather than reacting ad hoc as
circumstances and local conditions dictated. On the
whole, then, we should probably avoid notions of
Roman "imperial policy" on the model of modern
national policies. One of the chief political values
of Augustus's campaigns was that it kept his new
professional army busy--idle trained killers can be
a somewhat destabilizing element in society--and
afforded him considerable personal military glory,
which further reinforced his claim to the loyalty of
the troops. [[45]] The
importance to Augustus, as well as to the state, of
his monopolization of army loyalties is revealed in
two suggestive incidents in 27 BC, when the Augustan
order was still in its infancy. At this delicate
time, M. Licinius Crassus, grandson of the great
Late Republican magnate, raised a serious problem
for Augustus. As governor of Macedonia he had
undertaken successful campaigns south of the Danube
in 29-28 BC and had personally killed the enemy
leader in battle. In 27 BC, then, he was awarded a
triumph but he went further: he claimed the ancient
honor of spolia opima ("the most honorable spoils"),
awarded to a Roman commander who had slain his
counterpart with his own hand. These honors,
involving the dedication of the enemy commander's
captured panoply to Jupiter Feretrius, had only been
earned on three prior occasions in all of Roman
history. Since Crassus's claim to the spolia opima
would have raised Crassus into the uppermost
echelons of military glory, it had the potential to
confuse the soldiers' loyalty toward Augustus. So
Augustus blocked the claim on a technicality.
Crassus held his triumph and promptly disappears
from our records. (It is unlikely that he was killed
but, rather, that his public profile died a death in
the face of Augustus's displeasure, a good example,
if true, of the workings of auctoritas.) Not long
afterward, another governor proved problematic. C.
Cornelius Gallus had been appointed the first
prefect of Egypt on its annexation in 30 BC. Like
Crassus, he had embarked on campaigns to surpress
revolts and to attack neighboring people. He then
celebrated his successes with statues of himself and
bragging inscriptions, one of which has survived.
Enraged, Augustus let it be known that he no longer
considered Gallus his friend. Charges were
immediately brought and proposals laid that Gallus
be convicted in absentia, exiled, and his property
given to Augustus. His social status and political
career in ruins, his very life perhaps in danger,
Gallus committed suicide (possibly in 26 BC). Both
of these men had behaved fully within the boundaries
of republican precedent but had failed utterly to
appreciate a fundamental rule of the new order:
there was to be no military glory but Augustus's. In
contrast, Agrippa, for so long Augustus's right-hand
man, repeatedly refused honors and triumphs granted
to him; all his victories were celebrated by
Augustus. [[46]]
Augustus and the Empire II: Administration
Augustus also reformed and refined the
administration of the Roman empire in many respects.
In the domestic sphere, the senate had moved from
being the chief organ of the state to being a
subordinate entity, an assemblage of administrators
at the disposal of Augustus. What was essential from
Augustus's viewpoint was that the senators not have
this fact dangled before their faces, hence his tact
in dealing with them. Consuls, for instance,
continued to hold office annually but the need to
pass the honor around more liberally required
Augustus to create "suffect" consulships, a sort of
supplementary consulship that doubled the number of
men holding the consulship per year (the suffects
replaced the "ordinary" consuls, who stepped down
from office in mid-term, so there was always the
traditional pair of consuls in office at any given
time). This is a good illustration of the mixture of
tradition and innovation that marks so much of
Augustus's activity. Augustus also appointed
senators to newly-created positions such as the
curatorships of the aqueducts or of the public
works, the prefecture of the city, and so on.
Throughout, he consulted the senate frequently and
fully and treated it with respect. More
significantly, he formed an inner "cabinet"
(consilium) from the two presiding consuls, a
representation of minor magistrates, and fifteen
senators chosen by lot. Nevertheless, in Dio's
revealing words, "nothing was done that did not
please Caesar." As the administration of the state
became more regularized, Augustus also drew
administrators from the non-senatorial section of
the elite, the equites. A variety of new posts was
created exclusively for equestrians, including
command of the praetorian cohorts and of the vigiles
(firefighters), and the important prefectures of the
corn supply and of Egypt; their role as army
officers also appears to have expanded in these
years. As a result, the equites benefited enormously
from Augustus's rule, and that of future emperors.
Altogether, the thrust of Augustus's administrative
reforms was to create permanent, standing offices
headed by longer-term appointments where the
Republican system had preferred occasional or
rotating appointments, or none at all. [[47]]
In the sphere of external affairs, many of the
army's conquests were formed into new provinces,
especially along the south shore of the Danube
(Moesia, Pannonia, Noricum, and Raetia) and the Alps
(Alpes Cottiae and Maritimae). In the East and in
Mauretania in North Africa, client kingdoms and
principalities were allowed to exist, sometimes in
very complex arrangements, as with the Tetrarchs in
Palestine or the numerous lesser kingdoms that
dotted the interior and eastern reaches of Asia
Minor. From 27 BC onward these provinces were
divided into those that fell into the vast provincia
of Augustus (the "imperial" provinces) and those
that were retained by the senate and people (the
"senatorial" or "public" provinces; see above, "From
Octavian to Augutus: A New Order Established"). When
the disposition of the provinces is examined (as it
stood on Augustus's death in AD 14), it shows that
the imperial territories outnumber the public ones
by a factor of almost two, and that all but one of
the empire's twenty-five legions then in service
fell under the emperor's command. Further, the
Cyrenaica decrees reveal the emperor making
decisions about the internal operation of this, a
public province. Such interference on Augustus's
part was legitimated by the improved imperium
proconsulare granted him in the settlement of 23 BC
and brings into question any notions of joint rule
by senate and princeps (so-called dyarchy).
Ultimately, all the provinces were Augustus's
concern. [[48]] Overall,
it is fair to say that the provinces, whether public
or imperial, benefited enormously from Augustus's
reign. Not only had he brought them peace, he also
brought them good government. Legates in imperial
provinces were appointed by Augustus for periods of
three years or more depending on local conditions,
whereas proconsuls in the public provinces continued
to rotate annually. The men varied in rank from
senators (proconsuls, usually of praetorian rank, in
public provinces; legates of praetorian or consular
rank in imperial ones) to equites (governing as
prefects, as in Egypt and some of the smaller,
unarmed provinces). Whatever their status, under the
new order governors had no reason to extort from
their provinces the huge sums of money that
Republican-era proconsuls and propraetors had used
to bankroll their domestic political careers, since
the success of those careers now depended less on
victory at the polls and more on the emperor's
favor. Indeed, extortion in the provinces could be
positively dangerous, as it raised suspicions about
the nature of one's ultimate ambitions. These
strictures applied no less in the public than in the
imperial provinces, since all governors were now
answerable to a single source of authority in a way
they had not been under the Republic. This does not
mean that rapacious governors entirely disappeared
as a breed but that, for the most part--the
disappointments of Gallus and Crassus
aside--Augustus's gubernatorial appointments were
sound. We hear of no major failings in the
management of the provinces during his reign and
certainly nothing on a par with the rapacious
activities of the likes of Caesar or Sulla under the
Republic. Augustus, by virtue of proconsular power,
could also intervene directly in any provincial
dispute, as he did famously in Cyrenaica. Hardly
surprising, then, is the fact that of all the
emperors, Augustus's image is the most commonly
found in the provinces, even long after his death.
The remarkable period of peace and prosperity
ushered in by Augustus's reign is known not only as
the Pax Romana but also as the Pax Augusta. [[49]]
Augustus, as the
protector and guardian of Roman tradition, also
sought to inculcate a return to that tradition by
means of legislation: "by new laws passed at my
instigation, I brought back those practices of our
ancestors that were passing away in our age" (RG
8.5). Thus, for instance, he passed laws limiting
public displays of extravagance (so-called sumptuary
legislation) in the manner of the old Republican
senate, and he attempted through marriage
regulations to put a cap on divorces and punish
childlessness and adultery among the elite. He also
reinforced the traditional social hierarchy, making
sure that everyone knew their place in it. Minimum
property qualifications for membership of the upper
orders were reinforced, and status symbols for all
the classes, especially the amorphous equestrians,
clearly established. The convergence of this sort of
legislation is illustrated by the series of laws
pertaining to freed slaves, passed between 17 BC and
AD 4. In the first place, the numbers of slaves that
could be informally manumitted or freed in wills was
restricted in proportion to the total number of
slaves owned. This is a piece of sumptuary
regulation, limiting overly extravagant displays of
wealth and generosity in public. Second, informally
freed slaves were placed into a special class of
quasi-citizenship termed Junian Latinity that was
capable of being upgraded to full citizenship only
after the Junians had proved themselves worthy; one
way of achieving worthiness was to have children.
Such regulations, then, encapsulated the Augustan
attitudes toward public extravagance, maintenance of
the social hierarchy, and marriage and reproduction.
In his private life, Augustus fell short of his own
ideals (witness the turmoil engendered in his family
by adultery and infidelities of all sorts), but the
thrust of his social legislation was less to
regulate individuals' private behavior than to
maintain the proper outward appearance of dignitas
and decency that Augustus felt had been lost during
the Late Republic. As such, it pertained to the
ruling classes of the state and hardly at all
affected the commoner on the street. [[50]]
Finally, there is the issue of the worship of
Augustus. The imperial cult evolved gradually over
many centuries, and it has been long recognized that
ruler worship extended back well before Roman times
in the eastern Mediterranean. In the East, then, the
worship of Augustus as a god commenced not long
after Actium. Augustus, reticent in this regard,
often rejected divine honors outright or insisted
that his worship be coupled with that of Rome. He
probably had an eye on Caesar's fate in so acting.
The situation in the West, however, was more
difficult. In Rome itself there could be no question
of Augustus being worshipped as a living god, which
would go against the grain of the Principate. In any
case, he was already the son of a god and the
"revered one" (Augustus). A compromise solution
appears to have been to have his will (numen) or
essence (genius) recognized as divine. In Italy and
out in the western provinces Augustus did not
actively block direct worship, and two major cult
centers were established at Lugdunum in Gaul and
Cologne on the Rhine with altars at each place to
Rome and Augustus, maintained by officials drawn
from the local elite. In communities all across the
West, in fact, altars and temples to Rome and
Augustus and to Augustus himself are attested, all
staffed by locals. Such cult centers therefore acted
not only to promote unity in the previously
barbarous western provinces and to direct loyalties
accordingly, but they also facilitated the
assimilation of local populations into a Roman way
of life. [[51]] "The
Augustan Age"
As Rome's pre-eminent citizen, Augustus quickly
became the empire's pre-eminent patron of the arts,
and many of the people within his ambit enjoyed
similar roles. In the sphere of art and
architecture, the Augustan building programme was
extensive, prompting his famous quote: "I found Rome
a city of brick and left it a city of marble."
Augustus himself proudly boasted of the dozens of
building projects (constructions, restorations, and
adornments) he undertook at his own expense. These
projects exclude the innumerable acts of munificence
carried out by members of his household, his inner
circle, or the elite at his instigation. Among his
major monuments in the city were his Forum (still an
impressive ruin), the Ara Pacis Augustae, and
Agrippa's extensive activity in the Campus Martius,
which generated the Baths of Agrippa, the Stagnum
and Euripus, the Pantheon, and the Saepta Julia.
Throughout, the Augustan style is a mixture of
conservatism and innovation and often strives for a
Greek look so that it has been termed "classicizing"
in tone, which is aptly demonstrated by the way
Augustus's ageless portraits stand in sharp
constrast with the sometimes brutally frank
"veristic" representations of the Late-Republican
elite. [[52]]
The Augustan literary scene was also exceptionally
vibrant. This is the era of some of Rome's most
famous and influential writers, including Vergil,
Horace, Ovid, Propertius, and Tibullus in poetry,
and Livy in prose. Vergil, in particular, crafted a
new national epic for the Romans in the Aeneid,
which quickly came to replace Ennius's Annales as
the poem every schoolchild learned by heart. This
great flowering of literary activity was generated
by the development of literary circles of patronage,
which had been mostly in abeyance since the second
century BC. The most famous literary, indeed
artistic, patron of his day was C. Maecenas, a close
associate of Augustus from the very beginning but
one who never played an active role in politics (in
contrast to Agrippa). Something of a bon vivant, he
actively supported the careers of Vergil and Horace,
for instance, until his death in 8 BC. Another
circle formed around M. Valerius Messalla Corvinus,
who promoted the careers of Tibullus and Ovid. For
the historian the most intriguing question such
literary circles prompt is the degree to which the
political and cultural sentiments expressed by these
writers were officially directed, and so in effect
provided propaganda for the Augustan regime. When
all the evidence is weighed, there can be no
question of a state-controlled literature (on the
model of media in modern totalitarian states) but
there may have been encouragement from the top to
express the correct view coupled, no doubt, with
genuine gratitude and relief on the part of the
patrons and writers alike that Augustus had restored
peace and stability to public affairs. In this way,
Vergil's Eclogues and Georgics can reflect the hope
Augustus brought for a restoration of peace to the
Italian countryside, while the Republican sentiments
of Livy's history could be so pronounced that
Augustus jokingly termed him "my Pompeian." The
point is that both authors flourished under the
regime. [[53]] Death
and Retrospective
In his later years, Augustus withdrew more and more
from the public eye, although he continued to
transact public business. He was getting older, and
old age in ancient times must have been considerably
more debilitating than it is today. In any case,
Tiberius had been installed as his successor and, by
AD 13, was virtually emperor already. In AD 4 he had
received grants of both proconsular and tribunician
power, which had been renewed as a matter of course
whenever they needed to be; in AD 13, Tiberius's
imperium had been made co-extensive with that of
Augustus. While traveling in Campania, Augustus died
peacefully at Nola on 19 August, AD 14. Tiberius,
who was en route to Illyricum, hurried to the scene
and, depending on the source, arrived too late or
spent a day in consultation with the dying princeps.
The tradition that Livia poisoned her husband is
scurrilous in the extreme and most unlikely to be
true. Whatever the case about these details,
Imperator Caesar Augustus, Son of a God, Father of
his Country, the man who had ruled the Roman world
alone for almost 45 years, or over half a century if
the triumviral period is included, was dead. He was
accorded a magnificent funeral, buried in the
mausoleum he had built in Rome, and entered the
Roman pantheon as Divus Augustus. In his will, he
left 1,000 sesterces apiece to the men of the
Praetorian guard, 500 to the urban cohorts, and 300
to each of the legionaries. In death, as in life,
Augustus acknowledged the true source of his power.
[[54]]
The inscription entitled "The Achievements of the
Divine Augustus" (Res Gestae Divi Augustae; usually
abbreviated RG) remains a remarkable piece of
evidence deriving from Augustus's reign. The fullest
copy of it is the bilingual Greek and Latin version
carved into the walls of the Temple of Rome and
Augustus at Ancyra in Galatia (for this reason the
RG used to be commonly referred to as the Monumentum
Ancyranum). Other evidence, however, demonstrates
that the original was inscribed on two bronze
pillars that flanked the entrance to the Mausoleum
of Augustus in Rome. The inscription remains the
only first-person summary of any Roman emperor's
political career and, as such, offers invaluable
insights into the Augustan regime's public
presentation of itself. [[55]]
In looking back on the reign of Augustus and its
legacy to the Roman world, its longevity ought not
to be overlooked as a key factor in its success.
People had been born and reached middle age without
knowing any form of government other than the
Principate. Had Augustus died earlier (in 23 BC, for
instance), matters may have turned out very
differently. The attrition of the civil wars on the
old Republican aristocracy and the longevity of
Augustus, therefore, must be seen as major
contributing factors in the transformation of the
Roman state into a monarchy in these years.
Augustus's own experience, his patience, his tact,
and his great political acumen also played their
part. All of these factors allowed him to put an end
to the chaos of the Late Republic and re-establish
the Roman state on a firm footing. He directed the
future of the empire down many lasting paths, from
the existence of a standing professional army
stationed at or near the frontiers, to the dynastic
principle so often employed in the imperial
succession, to the embellishment of the capital at
the emperor's expense. Augustus's ultimate legacy,
however, was the peace and prosperity the empire was
to enjoy for the next two centuries under the system
he initiated. His memory was enshrined in the
political ethos of the Imperial age as a paradigm of
the good emperor; although every emperor adopted his
name, Caesar Augustus, only a handful earned genuine
comparison with him.
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As always, but perhaps more so in this case, the
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plundered profitably for more focused studies. The
author welcomes notification of errors, omissions,
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- Raaflaub, K., and L. J. Samons II,
"Opposition to Augustus," in Raaflaub and Toher,
417-54.
- ________. and M. Toher (eds.), Between
Republic and Empire: Interpretations of Augustus
and his Principate (Berkeley, 1990).
- Ramage, E.S., The Nature and Purpose of
Augustus's Res Gestae (Stuttgart, 1987).
- Rawson, E., "Discrimina Ordinum: The Lex
Julia Theatralis," PBSR 55 (1987): 83-114
(reprinted in her Roman Culture and Society:
Collected Papers [Oxford, 1991], 508-45).
- Rich, J.W., Cassius Dio and the Augustan
Settlement (Warminster, 1990).
- Reinhold, M., Marcus Agrippa: A Biography
(Rome, 1965).
- Roddaz, J.-M., Marcus Agrippa (Rome, 1984).
- Salmon, E.T., "The Evolution of Augustus's
Principate," Historia 5 (1956): 456-78.
- Schlüter, W. "The Battle of the Teutoburg
Forest: Archaeological Research at Kalkreise
near Osnabrück," in J.D. Creighton and R.J.A.
Wilson (eds), Roman Germany: Studies in Cultural
Interaction (Portsmouth, RI, 1999), 125-59.
- Shotter, D.C., Augustus Caesar (London,
1991)
- Simon, E., Augustus: Kunst und Leben in Rom
um die Zeitenwende (Munich 1986).
- Southern, P., Augustus (London, 1998).
- Syme, R., The Roman Revolution, rev. ed.
(Oxford, 1952).
- ________. History in Ovid (Oxford, 1978).
- ________. The Augustan Aristocracy (Oxford,
1986).
- Talbert, R.J.A., The Senate of Imperial Rome
(Princeton, 1984).
- Taylor, L. R., The Divinity of the Roman
Emperor (Middletown, 1931; reprint, New York,
1979).
- Von Premerstein, A. Vom Werden und Wesen des
Prinzipate. (Munich, 1937).
- Ward-Perkins, J.B., Roman Imperial
Architecture, 2nd edition (Hammondsworth, 1981).
- Weigel, R.D., Lepidus: The Tarnished
Triumvir (London, 1992).
- Whittaker, C.R., Frontiers of the Roman
Empire: A Social and Economic Study (Baltimore,
1994).
- Williams, G., "Did Maecenas 'Fall from
Favor'? Augustan Literary Patronage," in
Raaflaub and Toher, 258-75
- Zanker, P., The Power of Images in the Age
of Augustus (Ann Arbor, 1988).
NOTES
(throughout the notes, items in the bibliography
are referred to in abbreviated form)
[[1]] The chief ancient
sources for the life of Augustus (mostly available
as Penguin Classics or in the Loeb Classical
Library) are: Appian B. Civ. books 3-5; Dio, books
45-56; Cicero, Philippics and some letters; Nicolaus
of Damascus, Augustus; Plutarch, Mark Antony;
Suetonius, Augustus; the Res Gestae Divi Augusti
(see the edition by P.A. Brunt and J.M. Moore
[Oxford, 1967]). Fragments of the biography of
Augustus by Nicolaus of Damascus (fl. ca. 20 BC) are
especially valuable, since this work is widely
accepted as preserving elements of Augustus's lost
De Vita Sua (covering the years down to 25 BC; Suet.
Aug. 1-18 appears also to be based on this
autobiography). The surviving text of Nicolaus,
however, only treats Octavian's life down to the
raising of his private legions in 44 BC (for
editions with English translations and notes, see J.
Bellemore, Nicolaus of Damascus: Life of Augustus
[Bristol, 1984]; C.M. Hall, Nicolaus of Damascus:
Life of Augustus [Baltimore, 1923]). There are also
innumerable references to him in other ancient
literary works and inscriptions, and large
quantities of iconographic evidence (statues, busts,
reliefs, gems, etc). The number of modern accounts
is also formidable, with useful and concise
introductions to be found in Shotter, Augustus
Caesar and Jones, Augustus. More thorough and
specific treatments include Bleicken, Augustus;
Kienast, Augustus; Millar and Segal, Caesar
Augustus: Seven Aspects; Raaflaub and Toher, Between
Republic and Empire; Southern, Augustus; Syme, Roman
Revolution; id. History in Ovid. In the interests of
conciseness, the notes emphasize the ancient
evidence; most of the secondary studies just cited
tackle the issues addressed in this article.
[[2]] The fall of the Roman Republic has also
generated vast quantities of bibliography; see,
esp., P.A. Brunt, The Fall of the Roman Republic and
Related Essays (Oxford, 1988); M. Crawford and M.
Beard, Rome in the Late Republic (Ithaca, 1985); F.
Millar, The Crowd in Rome in the Late Republic (Ann
Arbor, 1998); E. Gruen, The Last Generation of the
Roman Republic (Berkeley, 1974); Syme, Rom. Rev.
[[3]] The lack of popular enthusiasm for Caesar's
naked autocracy is reflected in a famous incident
during the Lupercalia (15 February) in 44 BC. Caesar
had twice been offered a royal diadem in front of
the crowd. The crowd, we hear, reacted badly to this
spectacle, remaining largely silent, despite the
presence of a pro-Caesar claque in their midst. Only
when Caesar refused the crown did the crowd cheer
wildly. See Dio 44.11-12; App. B. Civ. 2.109; Plut.
Caes. 61-62. Suet. Caes. 79.2 only alludes to the
incident. [[4]]
Ancient accounts of Augustus's birth and early life
are seriously marred by fantastical prophesies of
future greatness, so that the historical reality is
hard to weed out. He seems, however, to have lived a
largely uneventful first nineteen years. See Dio
45.1-2; Suet. Aug. 1-8; Nic. Aug. 2-5; Tac. Dial.
28.5 Cicero's letters provide the only contemporary
evidence for Augustus's early career, and are
indispensable for that, but provide little
information on his early life. A note on names:
Augustus was born C. Octavius, became C. Julius
Caesar Octavianus (usually abbreviated "Octavian" in
modern sources) in 44 BC, and was renamed yet again
as Imperator Augustus Caesar in 27 BC. Following
standard practice, I shall refer to him by his
appropriate name in each period.
[[5]] Association with Caesar: Nic. Aug. 7-12.
Aftermath of murder: App. B. Civ. 3.9-11. Octavian
seems to have arrived in Italy in early April or
late March: Cicero, in a letter from Astura dated 11
April, inquired of Atticus how it went (Att. 14.5.3
= SB 359). Note that the influential Caesarian L.
Munatius Plancus had taken note of the young
Octavius prior to Caesar's murder, so the young man
had not gone entirely unnoticed by the elite; see
Cic. Fam. 10.24.5
[[6]] For ancient narratives of the events here
described, see App. B. Civ. 3.11-98; Dio
45.5.1-46.52.4; Nic. Aug. 16-31; Suetonius (Aug.
8.3-12) presents a conflated and rather confused
account. Augustus's own summary of this phase of his
career (RG 1.1) is restricted to the simple and
tendentious assertion he "successfully championed
the liberty of the republic when it was oppressed by
the tyranny of a faction."
[[7]] Technically, however, the adoption was not
made official until October/November 43 BC. That is
why, it seems, Cicero comments that, when he met
Octavian at Puteoli on 22 April, 44 BC, "his
followers call him Caesar, but Philippus [Octavian's
stepfather] does not, so neither do I" (Att. 14.12.2
= SB 366); the Liberator M. Junius Brutus also
refers to Octavian as "Octavius" (Cic. Ad Brut.
17.5-6, 25.1, 2, 7, 8, 11; dated June and July 43
BC). In contrast, L. Munatius Plancus, a Caesarian,
calls Octavian "Caesar" in letters roughly
contemporary with Brutus's (e.g., Cic. Fam. 10.23.6,
10.24.4-8). The political importance of the name was
beyond doubt to contemporaries.
[[8]] Cicero first met Octavian in Naples on 19
April, 44 BC, one day after Octavian had arrived in
the city (Att. 14.10.3 = SB 364). A few days later,
on 22 April, he had decided that Octavian's
influence on events could not be good, since his
supporters were threatening death to the Liberators
(Att. 14.12.2 = SB 366).
[[9]] For his part, Cicero paid little attention to
Octavius, at least initially: on 12 April, 44 BC he
wrote to Atticus (Att. 14.6.1 = SB 360), "As for
Octavius -- it's neither here not there."
[[10]] Appian (B. Civ. 3.14-21) puts windy speeches
into both their mouths: Octavian asks for his
inheritance, Antony refuses by claiming the money is
tied up in litigation, largely spent already, or not
yet counted. In contrast, Dio (45.5.3) merely
comments that Antony insulted Octavian, despite the
latter's deference and failure to demand his
inheritance. Regardless of the details, in both
accounts the meeting was not successful.
[[11]] Cicero, in letters to Atticus dated 11 and 18
May, 44 BC (Att. 14.20.5 = SB 374, 14.21.4 = SB 375,
and 15.2.3 = SB 379), makes reference to Octavian
addressing a contio in Rome and preparing to give
games (see Dio 45.6.4). C. Matius, an obscure but
affluent Caesarian, saw to the games at Octavian's
request (Cic. Fam. 11.28.6).
[[12]] See App. B. Civ. 3.27, 30; Dio 45.9.3.
[[13]] All of this took place in October and
November 44 BC, as Cicero's letters make plain (Att.
16.8.1-2 = SB 418; Fam. 12.23.2). See also App. B.
Civ. 3.40-48; Dio 45.12.
[[14]] Cicero, however, had been from the outset
doubtful about Octavian's nature and intentions; see
Att. 14.12.2 = SB 366 (April 44 BC) and 16.9 = SB
419 (November 44 BC). Needless to say, it was also
to the political benefit of the Liberators and their
supporters (Cicero among them) to keep the Caesarian
leadership quarrelling.
[[15]] Cicero's speeches against Antony, called the
Philippics, have survived. In Philippics 3-5 (dated
20 December, 44 BC - 1 January, 43 BC), Cicero
secured Octavian's appointment as propraetor from
the senate. See also Cic. Fam. 10.28.3 (dated 2
February, 43 BC)
[[16]] App. B. Civ. 3.49-73; Cic. Fam. 11.8.2
(Cicero to Decimus Brutus, dated late January, 43
BC), 10.30.4 (letter from Ser. Sulpicius Galba
serving with consuls at Mutina, dated 15 April, 43
BC), 10.33.3-4 (letter from C. Asinius Pollio, dated
late May, 43 BC); Cic. Phil. 14; Dio 45.12-46.38.
Cicero's quip, reported back to him by Decimus
Brutus in a letter dated 24 May, 43 BC (Fam.
11.20.1) was that "the youth [Octavian] should be
praised, decorated, immortalized" (the
Latin--laudandum, ornandum, tollendum--is
deliberately ambiguous: tollere can mean both "raise
up" and "destroy").
[[17]] App. B. Civ. 3.74-95; Cic. Fam. 11.10.2,
11.13.1, 11.14.2 (correspondence to and from Decimus
Brutus, dated May, 43 BC), 10.23.6 (letter from
Plancus, dated 6 June, 43 BC). Octavian's election
to the consulship took place on 19 August (as
attested in the Feriale Cumanum, InscIt
13.2.278ff.), though his demand for the consulship
appears to have begun in June (Cic. Ad Brut. 18.3);
Dio 46.39-49. On Cassius and Brutus in the East, see
App. B. Civ. 3.26, 63, 77-79, 96; Dio 47.20-36.
[[18]] Overtures to Antony: App. B. Civ. 3.80-81.
Meeting and formation of the triumvirate: App. B.
Civ. 3.96-4.3 (Appian places the meeting at Mutina);
Dio 46.54.3-55.5. Passage of the lex Titia: App. B.
Civ. 4.7; Dio 47.2.2. The terminal date of the
triumvirate is unequivocally established by the
Fasti Colotiani. On the legalities of the Second
Triumvirate, see Bleicken, Zwischen Republik und
Prinzipat; see also Millar, "Triumvirate."
[[19]] See App. B. Civ. 4.8-9 (text of proclamation)
and 4.10-51 (anecdotes of the proscribed); see also
Dio 47.9-13. Death of Cicero: App. B. Civ. 4.19; Dio
47.8.3-4; Plut. Cic. 46-49. Plutarch (Cic. 49.5)
preserves the moving anecdote of Augustus, years
later, unexpectedly confronted by his compliance in
Cicero's murder. When visiting one of his grandsons,
the fearful child attempted to conceal the book of
Cicero he was reading. Augustus took the book, read
it for some time, and gave it back to the boy
saying, "A learned man, my boy, learned and a true
patriot." Dio (47.8.1), Pliny (HN 7.147), Plutarch
(Ant. 21), Suetonius (Aug. 27.1), and Velleius
(2.66.1-3) unite in blaming the proscriptions mainly
on Antony (and Lepidus), the former "public enemies"
out for revenge; there has to be a suspicion of
pro-Augustan retroactive finger-pointing here.
(Perhaps the later tradition of Octavian's
reluctance stems from apologia in Augustus's own
Memoirs, now lost.) The final count of the dead is
given by Appian (B. Civ. 4.5) as 300 senators and
2,000 Knights. Southern (57-59) joins Kienast (35)
in arguing forcefully that the proscriptions were
motivated by the mentality of the political purge,
not financial need.
[[20]] Africa: App. B. Civ. 4.53-56. Campaign of
Philippi: App. B. Civ. 4.86-139; Dio 47.37-49.
Octavian's limited role in the fighting: Dio
47.41.1-4; Pliny HN 7.148. Re-alignment of the
triumviral provinces: App. B. Civ. 5.3, 12; Dio
48.1.2-3. (Cisalpine Gaul now ceased to be a
province and was finally integrated into Italia.)
[[21]] On the
depradations of the soldiers in Italy, see Dio
47.14.4-5. On this settlement, see Keppie,
Colonisation, 58-69. On the methods and impact of
veteran settlement, see ibid., 87-133. The eighteen
towns: App. B. Civ. 4.3 (Appian says the towns were
"remarkable for their wealth and fine lands and
houses"). It should be noted that where the
territory of a designated veteran colony proved
insufficient for the requirements of settlement, the
territory of neighboring towns would be encroached
upon, occasionally to the point of total subsumption
(e.g., Caudium, entirely absorbed by the settlement
at Beneventum). Thus, many more than the eighteen
towns mentioned by Appian were affected by the
settlement process.
[[22]] On the Perusine War, see App. B. Civ. 5.14,
30-51; Dio 48.13-14 . Antony's complicity: App. B.
Civ. 5.21-22; Dio 48.28. Execution of councilors:
App. B. Civ. 5.48; Dio 48.14.3. Acquisition of Gaul:
App. B. Civ. 5.51, 53; Dio 48.20.1, 3.
[[23]] Threatened war and "Pact of Brundisium": App.
B. Civ. 5.52-65; Dio 48.28-30.
[[24]] Career of Sextus: App. B. Civ. 2.105, 122,
3.4, 4.25, 36-54 (passim), 83-85, bk. 5 (passim);
Dio 47.36.4, 47.49.4, 48.16-20. Date of appointment
of Sextus to the prefecture of the fleet: Cic. Phil.
13.13. Sextus's pact with Antony: App. B. Civ. 5.56.
"Treaty of Misenum/Puteoli": App. B. Civ. 5.67-74
(Appian places the meeting at Puteoli); Dio
48.36-38. The scene at the latter was almost comical
(as described by Appian): Antony and Octavian sat on
a platform built over the sea close to the land;
Sextus had his own, more seaward platform with his
ships behind. A narrow strip of water separated the
two platforms. Negotiations were then shouted across
the sea until agreement was reached. On Sextus
Pompeius, see also Hadas, Sextus Pompey. In Syme's
view (Rom. Rev., 221), the "Peace of Puteoli
enlarged the Triumvirate to include a fourth
partner," which is something of an overstatement,
given its evidently expedient nature.
[[25]] Collapse of Misenum/Puteoli agreement and
war: App. B. Civ. 5.77-92; Dio 48.45.4-49 . "Treaty
of Tarentum" and renewal of triumvirate: App. B.
Civ. 5.93-95; Dio 48.54.1-6. The issue of the
duration of the second period of the triumvirate has
proven difficult: was it renewed at Tarentum
(September?, 37 BC) retroactively from 1 January, 37
BC (to end on 31 December, 33 BC) or did it run
directly from September(?), 37 BC (to end sometime
toward the end of 32 BC)? The more convincing case
is on the side of the "retroactive" view: see the
excellent summary in Benario, "Octavian's Status."
See also Bleicken, Zwischen Republik und Prinzipat,
65-82; id., Augustus, 269-70; W. Eder, "Augustus and
the Power of Tradition: The Augustan Principate as
Binding Link Between Republic and Empire," in
Raaflaub and Toher, 97-98; Jones, 31; Kienast, 55;
Southern, 94. In all likelihood, Republican
legalities played a lesser part in the
considerations of the time than the observable
reality of the triumvirate's dominance and,
therefore, in the actual operation of its power; see
below, n. 29. On the growth of Octavian's "party" at
this time, see Syme, Rom. Rev., 227-42.
[[26]] Final campaign against Sextus: App. B. Civ.
5.96-144; Dio 49.1-18. Lepidus: App. B. Civ. 5.123;
Dio 49.11.2-12.4; see also Weigel, Lepidus.
Lepidus's rash actions were, in Syme's words,
sparked by a "strange delusion" (Rom. Rev., 232).
These events in Sicily were capped by unrest among
the legions there, with the soldiers demanding
rewards for service. Octavian discharged 20,000 of
them on the spot and promised the rest bounties
after campaigns in Illyricum; see Appian and Dio
locc. citt.; Keppie, Colonisation, 69-73.
[[27]] One of the honors allegedly given to Octavian
after Naulochus, late in 36 BC, was the tribunician
power (App. B. Civ. 5.132). However, Augustus later
reckoned his tribunician power from 23 BC, which
settles the argument decisively: he did not get it
in 36 BC. Dio is probably correct (49.15.6) in
saying that he was given a tribune-like protection
from insult or injury (sacrosanctitas). Refusal of
the pontificate: App. B. Civ. 5.131; Dio 49.15.3;
Suet. Aug. 31.1. Burning of the records: App. B.
Civ. 3.132. [[28]]
Antony's wars in the East: Dio 49.19-30; Plut. Ant.
37-52. Octavian in Illyricum: App. Ill. 12-28.
Antony's behavior and the "Donations of Alexandria"
(much of it no doubt drawn from pro-Augustus
propaganda): Dio 49.41, Plut. Ant. 54.3-6
(Donations); Dio 50.4-5 (behavior). Cleopatra's
ambitions: Dio 50.4.1, 5.4. Rising tensions: Plut.
Ant. 54-55. Agrippa's aedileship and munificence
instigated by Octavian: Dio 49.43.1-4; Pliny HN
36.121; Roddaz, 145-57 (aedileship); Suet. Aug.
29.4-5; Vell. Pat. 2.89.4 (munificence).
[[29]] On the date of the expiration of the
triumviral powers, see above n. 25. It is my opinion
that many modern scholars, wedded to contemporary
paradigms of legally-sanctioned government, have
overstated the importance of legalities in
establishing the powers of Roman Republican
officials; precedent, ritual, and appearance were
just as important, if not more so. Certainly
traditional procedures and practices were used
during the Republic to legitimate magisterial
authority, but many of these niceties had fallen by
the wayside in the years since Pompey and Caesar.
Time and again in the period after Sulla
extraordinary powers and privileges had been voted
to generals in recognition of their de facto
supremacy. So too now, with Octavian. Technically,
his triumviral powers had lapsed. No one, however,
not even the Antonian consuls for 32 BC, C. Sosius
and Cn. Domitius Ahenobarbus, were going to point
that out publicly; although the content of Sosius's
anti-Octavian speech of 1 January, 32 BC has not
survived, that he focused on the expiration of the
triumviral powers is unlikely, since the lapse
applied to Antony as well. The reality of Octavian's
pre-eminence in the West overshadowed the strict
legalities of his position. On ritual, ceremony, and
appearance in Republican magistracy, see D.J.
Gargola, Lands, Laws and Gods: Magistrates and
Ceremony in the Regulation of Public Lands in
Republican Rome (Chapel Hill, 1995), esp. 16-24; R.
Stewart, Public Office in Early Rome: Ritual
Procedure and Political Practice (Ann Arbor, 1998).
The 1 January meeting of the senate and aftermath:
Dio 50.2.3-7. Reading Antony's will: Dio 50.3.1-4.1,
Plut. Ant. 58.3-4. Oath: RG 25.2; Dio 50.6.3-4
(where the oath is unmentioned but implicit); Suet.
Aug. 17.2. Augustus himself (RG, loc. cit.) states
that the oath was voluntary (sponte sua), but it may
not have been (see Dio and Suetonius, locc. citt.).
Syme (Rom. Rev., 284) was convinced the oath came
before the denunciation of Antony in the senate and
the declaration of war and, in a rousing phrase,
believed the oath "riveted the shackles of [Italy's]
servitude." [[30]]
Campaign at Actium: Dio 50.10-35; Plut. Ant.
61-68.3; Vell. Pat. 2.84-85; Carter, Battle of
Actium. The forces on each side were monumental:
about 30 legions apiece, and Antony had 500 warships
to Octavian's 250 (Plut. Ant. 61). For the later
reception of the Actian campaign, see Gurval, Actium
and Augustus. [[31]]
Aftermath of Actium: Dio 51.1-17; Plut. Ant.
68.4-86. Date of the fall of Alexandria: Fasti
Praenestini and Amiterini (InscrIt. 13.2.107 and
13.2.185). Cleopatra, according to Plutarch (Ant.
78-86.3), was taken alive by Octavian, who planned
to display her at his triumph. But she had an asp
smuggled into a banquet she was holding, hidden
among a plate of figs. (The asp bit her on the arm,
not the breast, according to Plutarch [Ant. 86.1-3]
and Dio [51.14.1-2].) The revolt or plot of Lepidus
is a shadowy affair: Vell. Pat. 2.88; Dio 54.15.4;
Suet. Aug. 19.1.
[[32]] Settling affairs in the East: Dio 51.18.
Veteran settlements: Keppie, Colonisation, 73-82.
Wealth of Egypt used for settlements: Dio 51.17.6-8.
Three triumphs: Dio 51.21.6-9. "By universal consent
I was in complete control of affairs": RG 34.1. On
11 January, 29 BC the doors of the Temple of Janus
in Rome were closed, symbolizing that the entire
Roman world was at peace (though Dio is quick to
point out the various wars still in progress in
diverse locales): it had only happened twice before
in all of Roman history (Dio 51.20.4-5). Such a
symbolic gesture must have had a powerful effect on
those who witnessed or heard about it and reinforced
the notion of Octavian as the bringer of peace.
Honors: Dio 51.19-21.
[[33]] None of this is meant to suggest that the
system later called the Principate was, in its
entirety, planned out and effected according to a
pre-ordained blueprint, but rather that Octavian, in
the run up to the First Settlement, must have given
careful thought to his position and acted
accordingly. That attitude, in fact, had marked his
behavior from the very outset of his career and was
encapsulated in his favorite aphorisms, "Rush
slowly" (festina lente) and "Whatever is done well
enough is done quickly enough" (sat celeriter fieri
quidquid fiat satis bene; see, for both, Suet. Aug.
25.4). These are the mottoes of a patient and
careful planner. Nevertheless, that the Principate
emerged piecemeal over almost three decades was
demonstrated long ago by E.T. Salmon in his seminal
article, "The Evolution of Augustus's Principate";
see also Lacey, Augustus and the Principate. Need
for a rector: Cic. Rep. 2.51; 5.5, 6; 6.13. As
consul in 28 BC, Octavian had annulled all the
"illegal" acts of the triumvirate, effectively
wiping the slate clean in that department (Dio
53.2.6); his behavior in this year, with Agrippa as
his colleague, was generally traditional, generous,
and exemplary (Dio 53.1-2). A new beginning was
being heralded, support for it organized, and its
nature indicated: later, Augustus himself considered
the events of 28 and 27 BC as part of a single
process of transferring "the republic from my power
to the dominion of the senate and people of Rome"
(RG 34.1). [[34]] First
Settlement: Dio 53.3-17.1; RG 34.1-2; Suet. Aug.
28.1; Vell. 2.89. "Settlement" staged: Dio 53.2.7.
Division of provinces: Dio 53.12; see also Millar,
"The Emperor, the Senate and the Roman Provinces."
Debate over legal status of Octavian: Southern,
111-13. Imperium proconsulare is more likely to have
been granted for ten years than imperium consulare,
which Octavian already held by virtue of his
consulship: or was it expected he would be consul
every year for the following ten years? On the
settlement, see, e.g., Bleicken, 315-42; Rich,
Cassius Dio; Southern, 111-17; Syme, Rom. Rev.
313-30. [[35]] Travels
of Augustus: Dio 53.22.5. Illness and recovery: Dio
53.30.3; Hor. Epist. 1.15; Pliny HN 25.77; Suet.
Aug. 81.1. Conspiracy: Dio 54.3.2-3 (who dates the
event to 22 BC, so breaking the direct link between
it and the Settlement of 23); Vell. Pat. 2.91.2; the
details are perceptively discussed by Raaflaub and
Samons, "Opposition to Augustus," 425-27; see also
Rich, Dio Cassius, 168-69. "Second Settlement": Dio
53.32; RG 10.1; Suet. Aug. 28.1. For the Cyrenaica
decrees, see below n. 48.
[[36]] Refusal of dictatorship et al.: Dio 54.1.3-4;
RG 5.1-2; Vell. Pat. 2.89.5; Suet. Aug. 52. Cura
annonae: Dio 54.1.3. Ius primae relationis: Dio
54.3.3. Privileges of 19 BC: Dio 54.10.3-7; RG 6.1;
Suet. Aug. 27.5. "Father of the Country": Dio
55.10.10; RG 35.1; Suet. Aug. 58. Priesthoods: RG
7.3. Auctoritas: RG 34.3; see also Cic. Off. 2.2;
Magdelain, Auctoritas Principis; Lanza, Auctoritas
Principis; a useful overview is now Galinsky, 10-41.
Dio (55.34.2) reports that in AD 8, when he had
become too infirm to attend elections in person,
Augustus would post the names of the candidates for
office he favored; it's hard to imagine such
candidates failing. Galinsky (42-79) surveys the
establishment of the Principate with emphasis on the
terminology of power Augustus uses to describe it.
[[37]] Continuity of
Principate: Suet. Aug. 28.1-2.
[[38]] Before marrying
Livia Drusilla in 39 BC, he had been married to
Clodia, stepdaughter of Antonius (PIR2 C 1057), from
43-41 BC; and then to Scribonia (PIR S 220), from
40-39 BC. Appearance at triumph: Suet. Tib. 6.4.
Marriage: Dio 53.27.5. Aedile/legal age: Dio
53.28.3. "Successor in power": Vell. Pat. 2.93.1.
"Deathbed" scene: Dio 53.30.1-2; Suet. Aug. 28.1.
Death and burial of Marcellus: Dio 53.30.4. Livia's
rumored hand in his demise (Dio 53.33.4.) is
entirely unproven; that summer in Rome was
considered particularly unhealthy and death by
illness was widespread (Dio loc. cit.). Marcellus
was not adopted by Augustus: the RG (21.1) refers to
him as "my son-in-law" as does Marcellus's epitaph
(Braund, 27). [[39]]
Octavius in Caesar's triumph: see n. 5. Octavius
granted right of standing early: App. B. Civ. 3.51.
[[40]] Agrippa goes East: Dio 53.31.2-4; Pliny HN
7.149; Tac. Ann. 14.53.3; Suet. Aug. 66.3, Tib.
10.3. Agrippa's power in the east: Gray, "Imperium
of M. Agrippa." Maecenas's quip: Dio, 54.6.5.
Marriage: Dio 54.6.5; Suet. Aug. 63.1. Agrippa's
powers: Dio 54.12.4-5 (18 BC), 54.28.1 (13 BC).
[[41]] Coins: RIC nos. 407, 408, 414. Gaius and
Lucius Caesar: Dio 54.18.1, Tac. Ann. 1.3. Tiberius
and Drusus' advancement: see DIR's Tiberius. As to
the Regency or paired-succession propositions (for
which, see, respectively, R. Seager, Tiberius
[London, 1972], 18-22, 24-26, 29-38, recently
restated in Southern, 162, 168; and B. Levick,
Tiberius the Politician (London, 1976), 19-67; ead.,
"Drusus Caesar"), what ensured that Agrippa the
regent would step down when required to do so? What
mechanisms realistically existed for depriving an
incumbent regent or princeps of his powers? Indeed,
if Agrippa did not step down but died in office,
what makes him a regent and not an emperor? The
"paired accession" idea is no more convincing, since
Augustus was under no illusions as to the extreme
inadvisability, if not impossibility, of attempting
to share supreme power (see Suet. Aug. 28.1): his
own career as triumvir was illustration enough of
that. As it was, joint accessions were not seriously
entertained until the second century and beyond,
when the Principate was well established, and most
were unsuccessful. That Augustus was blind to the
danger of presenting two equally qualified and
favored candidates to the armed forces is all but
inconceivable. [[42]]
Death of Agrippa: Dio 54.28.2-3, 29. Marriage of
Tiberius and Julia: Dio 54.31.2. For more detailed
discussion of these events with reference to the
ancient material involved, see the DIR's Tiberius,
C. and L. Caesar, Germanicus, Agrippa Postumus. See
also, Birch, "Settlement"; Levick, "Drusus Caesar";
Seager, Tiberius, 35-38. Germanicus, the son of
Tiberius' brother Drusus, was himself a Claudian but
his marriage to Agrippina (Augustus's granddaughter)
offered hope of a Julian heir in the fourth
generation. [[43]] Fall
of Julia the Elder: Dio 55.10.12-16; Suet. Aug.
65.1, Tib. 11.4; Tac. Ann. 1.53.1; Vell. Pat.
2.100.2-5. For the "political scheming" view, see
Levick, "Julians and Claudians." Fall of Agrippa
Postumus: Dio 55.32.1-2; Suet. Aug. 65.1, 65.4;
Levick, "Abdication"; Jameson, "Augustus and Agrippa
Postumus." Fall of Julia the Younger: Suet. Aug.
19.1, 65.1. [[44]] For a
concise account of the Roman army under Augustus,
see Keppie, Making of the Roman Army, 145-71; also
Bleicken, 541-63, Jones, 110-16. On the praetorians,
see Durry, Cohortes Prétoriennes, esp. 65-89.
[[45]] On Augustus's campaigns, see RG 26-27;
Keppie, loc. cit. in n. 44. On the Varan disaster,
see Schlüter, "The Battle of the Teutoburg Forest."
For an overview of Augustus's "foreign policy," see
Gruen, "Imperial Policy." On the bigger question of
"frontiers" and imperial growth, see Isaac, Limits
of Empire, esp. 372-418; Whittaker, Frontiers of the
Roman Empire, esp. 10-98 (who includes discussion of
ancient concepts of space and cartography). On the
reactive nature of ancient government, see Millar,
Roman Empire and its Neighbours, esp. 52-80. For the
stations of the legions on Augustus's death, see n.
48. [[46]] On the
Crassus affair, see Dio 52.23.2-27.3; Livy 4.19-20
(the previous awards of spolia opima were to A.
Cornelius Cossus in the late fifth century BC and M.
Claudius Marcellus in 222 BC). On Gallus, see Dio
53.23.5-24.1. The inscription (ILS 8995) is worth
quoting: "C. Cornelius Gallus, son of Cnaeus, Roman
knight, appointed the first Prefect of Alexandria
and of Egypt after its kings had been defeated by
Caesar, son of a god; he [Gallus] was twice victor
in pitched battles during the Theban revolt, within
15 days, in which he defeated the enemy; he took by
assault five cities (Boresos, Coptus, Ceramice,
Diospolis Magna, and Opheium) and captured the
leaders of their revolts; he led an army beyond the
cataphract of the Nile, into which region arms had
not previously been borne either by the Roman people
or by the kings of Egypt; he took Thebes, the shared
fear of all the kings (of Egypt); he received
ambassadors of the Ethiopian king at Philae and
received that king into his protection; he appointed
a ruler over the Ethiopian region of
Triacontaschoenus. He [Gallus] gave and dedicated
this monument to the ancestral gods and the Nile,
his helper." A useful overview of both incidents is
provided by Southern (115-17). Augustus arrogated
for himself victories won by his generals: the
successes of Tiberius and Drusus on the Rhine and
Danube in 12 and 11 BC caused him to add two
imperatorial acclamations to his titles; Tiberius
and Drusus got none (Dio 54.33.5). Agrippa refusing
triumphs: Dio 53.23.4 (general modesty of Agrippa),
54.11.6 (over the Cantabri), 54.24.7 (over the
Bosporus). [[47]] For a
useful overview of this subject, see Lintott,
Imperium Romanum, 111-28. On the consilium,
instituted between 27 and 18 BC, see Dio 53.21.3-5
(quote at 53.21.6); Suet. Aug. 35.4; Crook,
Consilium Principis. On the role of the imperial
senate, see Talbert, Senate of Imperial Rome, esp.
Part Three: Functions. On suffect consuls, see
ibid., 202-7. Newly-created positions: Suet. Aug.
37. On the equestrians, see Demougin, Ordre
Equestre. The rosy picture of imperial rule painted
by Velleius Paterculus (of equestrian status)
reflects, perhaps, not only Velleius's sycophantic
personality but also a genuine sense of gratitude
toward the imperial regime on the part of his class
as a whole. Note also Syme, Augustan Aristocracy.
[[48]] Cyrenaica
decrees: SEG 9 (1944) 8 = FIRA 1.68. The disposition
of the empire's territories on Augustus's death was
as follows: Territory
Status Type of Governor Legions
Spain
Baetica Public proconsul (ex-praetor) -
Lusitania Imperial legat. Aug.
(ex-praetor) -
Tarrocensis Imperial legat. Aug.
(ex-consul) 3
Gaul
Narbonensis Public (23 BC) proconsul
(ex-praetor) -
Aquitania Imperial legat. Aug.
(ex-praetor) -
Belgica Imperial legat. Aug. (ex-praetor)
-
Lugdunensis Imperial legat. Aug.
(ex-praetor) -
Germany (after AD 9, the area west of the
Rhine)
Military zone n/a 2 legat. Aug.
(ex-consuls) 8 (4 and 4)
(Upper and Lower)
Alps
Cottian Imperial equest. pref. -
Maritime Imperial equest. pref. -
Upper Danube region
Raetia Imperial equest. pref. -
Noricum Imperial equest. pref. -
Lower Danube region/northern Balkans
Illyricum Imperial (11 BC) legat. Aug.
(ex-consul) 2
Pannonia Imperial legat. Aug. (ex-consul)
3
Moesia Imperial legat. Aug. (ex-consul) 2
Southern Balkans/Greece
Macedonia Public proconsul (ex-praetor) -
Achaea Public proconsul (ex-praetor) -
Thrace Client kingdom - -
Asia Minor
Asia Public proconsul (ex-consul) -
Bythinia-Pontus Public proconsul
(ex-praetor) -
Galatia Imperial legat. Aug. (ex-praetor)
-
Lycia Free federation - -
Pontus Client kingdom - -
Cappadocia Client kingdom - -
Several client principalities - -
Near East
Syria Imperial legat. Aug. (ex-consul) 4
Judaea Imperial equest. pref. -
Several client principalities - -
Africa
Egypt Imperial equest. pref. 2
Cyrenaeca Public proconsul (ex-praetor) -
Africa Public proconsul (ex-consul) 1
Mauretania Client Kingdom - -
Islands
Sicily Public proconsul (ex-praetor) -
Sardinia Imperial (AD 6) equest. pref pro
legato -
Corsica Imperial (AD 6) equest. pref pro
legato -
Cyprus Public (23 BC) proconsul
(ex-praetor) -
Crete was part of Cyrenaeca
[[49]] For a concise
overview of Augustus's arrangement and
administration of the provinces, see Jones,
94-109. See also Bleicken, 391-438; Eck,
Verwaltung, 1.83-158. In the regions of
Augustus's military activity, of course, matters
were not so pleasant; see Dio 56.16.3 on the
comment of Bato, leader of the Pannonian revolt
of AD 6-9, that the Romans were responsible for
the war, since "you send as guardians of your
flocks not dogs or shepherds, but wolves." Sulla
in the East: Plut. Sulla 12.3-9 (pilfering of
Greece), 22.5 (indemnity from Mithridates), 25.2
(vast fine extorted from Asian communities).
Caesar in Spain and Gaul: Plut. Caes. 12.4
(Spain), 29.3-4. On Augustus's image, see
Zanker's seminal work, The Power of Images.
[[50]] There remains to be written a comprehensive
account of Augustus's legislation and social
programmes; most of the standard biographies contain
pertinent chapters or sections of chapters (e.g.,
Jones, 131-43; Southern, 146-52). On the marriage
laws, see Mette-Dittman, Ehegesetze. On the status
symbols of the equestrians, see Kolb,
"Status-symbolik." A good example of his stiffening
of the social hierarchy was the regulation of
seating arrangements at spectacles by social class,
enforced empire-wide: see Suet. Aug. 44.1; Rawson,
"Discrimina Ordinum." Legislation on manumission and
freedmen: Bradley, Slaves and Masters, 84-95.
Augustus's private foibles: Suet. Aug. 68-71.
[[51]] On the imperial cult, see the still classic
study of Taylor, Divinity. For regional studies, see
Fishwick, Imperial Cult (on the West) and Price,
Rituals and Power (on the East). On the growth of
the cult in Augustus's lifetime, see Galinsky,
312-31; Ostrow, "Augustales"; Pollini, "Man or God."
On the contemporary worship of Augustus's numen,
see, e.g., Hor. Epist. 2.1.15; Ovid Trist. 3.8.13.
[[52]] Quote: Dio
56.30.3; Suet. Aug. 28.3. Building projects: RG
19-21, 24. Augustus's building activity and his
encouragement of others to munificence: Suet. Aug.
28.2-29.5; Vell. Pat. 2.89.4. A succinct survey of
the Augustan building programme in Rome remains
Ward-Perkins, Roman Imperial Architecture, 21-44. On
the much-studied Ara Pacis, see RG 12.2; Dio
54.25.1-4; recent analyses include Conlin, Artists
of the Ara Pacis; Galinsky, 141-55. For a survey of
the varied artistic achievements of the period, see
Galinsky, 141-224; Kaiser Augustus und die verlorene
Republik. [[53]] On
the literature of the period, consult any standard
history of Latin literature (e.g., the Cambridge
History of Classical Literature, vol. 2, ed. E.J.
Kenney, [1982]); for a concise overview, see
Galinsky, 225-87. On Maecenas, see Williams, "Did
Maecenas 'Fall from Favor'?" (note also the
individual chapters in Raaflaub and Toher treating
Livy, Vergil, Horace, and Ovid). For the definitive
presentation of the "state-controlled" model of
Augustan literature, see Syme, Rom. Rev., 459-75.
For more moderated views, see., e.g., Galinsky,
passim (esp. 229-34). "My Pompeian": Tac. Ann.
4.34.4 (the anecdote, ironically, appears in the
context of the trial of a later historian, A.
Cremutius Cordus, charged with maiestas under
Tiberius in AD 25 for praising Brutus and Cassius in
his history). [[54]]
Withdrawal: Dio 55.33.5, 55.34.2, 56.26.2-3,
56.28.1-2; see also Southern, 181-90. Tiberius's
position: Suet. Tib. 21.1; Vell. Pat. 2.121.1.
Livia's alleged involvement: Dio 56.30. Death and
burial: Dio 56.29-42; Suet. Aug. 98-101. Will: Dio
56.32; Suet. Aug. 101.4.
[[55]] Original position of the RG: RG pr.; Suet.
Aug. 101.4. ). For a recent analysis, see Ramage,
Nature and Purpose. |