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Ten Caesars

Page 35

by Barry Strauss


  But what are the monarchs of the Roman East doing in Ravenna? Neither Justinian nor Theodora ever set foot in the city that is forever associated with their names. They ruled from Constantinople. Like Ravenna’s lost imperial palace, they are ghosts.

  Yet one other thing remains of the presence of the Roman emperor in Ravenna. That is the name of the region where Ravenna sits: Romagna, “the land of the Romans,” as it is still called today. The term was first used in the four hundreds and then again when the area was under Byzantine rule. It is understandable that people would be proud of their connection to that empire. Under Justinian, the Roman Empire was one of the greatest powers in the world, and Constantinople was one of the greatest cities.

  Yet when Augustus created the Roman Empire, he could never have guessed that it would be in little Ravenna, a port city far from Rome, that the empire’s last afterglow in the west would linger.

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  Gratitude, says Cicero, contains the memory of friendships and of kindness on the part of others, and the desire to repay them (Cicero, On Invention, 2.161). If so, then my memory is sweet, my desire is ardent, but my ability to repay is poor. What follows is inadequate as a way of saying thank you for the friendship and generosity shown to me in the course of writing this book.

  I’m deeply grateful to the colleagues, friends, and students who read all or part of the manuscript in draft. They made it much better. The faults, of course, remain my own. Thank you to Maia Aron, Kathleen Breitman, Serhan Güngör, Adam Mogelonsky, Jacob Nabel, and Tim Sorg.

  Dr. Francesco M. Galassi, University of Zurich, shared his expertise on ancient medicine. Mary McHugh shared her work and thoughts on the two Agrippinas. Waller Newell offered many stimulating conversations on ancient tyranny. Walter Scheidel shared ideas from his forthcoming project on Roman emperors. Barry Weingast offered insights on institutions and paradigms, ancient and modern. Kevin Bloomfield and Jonathan Warner provided expert research assistance. Lieutenant Colonel (ret.) Timothy Wilson, Royal Artillery, proved a generous guide to Hadrian’s Wall Country.

  Four institutions generously offered support for this project: the American Academy of Rome, where I was a visiting scholar; the Bogliasco Foundation, where I was a fellow; the Hoover Institution, where I was a visiting scholar; and Cornell University, which was kind enough to grant me leave to research and write. At the American Academy in Rome, there are too many people to thank, but I would like especially to mention current and former directors John Ochsendorfer and Kim Bowes. At the Bogliasco Foundation, I would like to thank Laura Harrison as well as many others. At the Hoover Institution, I would like to thank Victor Davis Hanson for his friendship and hospitality as well as for the example he sets as a historian. I would also like to thank David Berkey and Eric Wakin. At Cornell, I would like to thank my colleagues and the staffs of the Departments of History and of Classics. I would also like to express my gratitude to Cornell’s wonderful John M. Olin Library.

  A long list of people shared expertise, displayed hospitality, offered guidance around ancient sites, served as sounding boards, offered encouragement, and provided the most important service of all: they were there when needed. Thank you to Benjamin Anderson, Darius Arya, Jed Atkins, Ernst Baltrusch, Elizabeth Bartman, Colin Behrens, Leo Belli, Sandra Bernstein, Lisa Blaydes, Nikki Bonanni, Philippe Bohström, Dorian Borbonus, Elizabeth Bradley, Mary Brown, Judith Byfield, Holly Case, Christopher Celenza, Giordano Conti, Bill Crawley, Craig Davis, Angelo De Gennaro, Megan Drinkwater, Ertürk Durmus, Radcliffe Edmonds, Gary Evans, Michael Fontaine, Bernard Frischer, Adam Friedman, Lorenzo Gasperoni, Rick Geddes, Genevieve Gessert, Giovanni Giorgini, Stephen Greenblatt, Meyer Gross, Stephen Haber, John Hyland, Isabel Hull, Brian Jay Jones, Eleanor Leach, Susann Lusnia, Craig Lyons, Sturt Manning, Harvey Mansfield, Brook Manville, Adrienne Mayor, Kelly McClinton, J. Kimball McKnight, Alison McQueen, Ian Morris, Thomas J. Morton, Josiah Ober, Grant Parker, Piergiorgio Pellicioni, Verity Platt, Danielle Pletka, Sergio Poeta, David Pollio, Eric Rebillard, Claudia Rosett, Lukasz Rzycki, Aaron Sachs, Daniel Szpiro, Ramie Targoff, Robert Travers, Christian Wendt, Greg Woolf, and M. Theodora Zemek.

  At Simon & Schuster, my editor, Bob Bender, outdid himself as far as the care and attention he devoted to this manuscript and the wisdom and good judgment that he was always ready to share. His assistant, Johanna Li, was helpful and patient. I would like to thank them as well as Marketing Director Stephen Bedford. My literary agent, Cathy Hemming, is an author’s best friend.

  Adjectives don’t begin to express my gratitude to my wife, Marcia, and to my children, Sylvie and Michael, for their continuing support and affection.

  I dedicate this book to my students, past and present. I can think of no better way to express my appreciation for their energy, their insights, and their friendship than the statement of the Talmud: “I have learned much from my teachers, more from my colleagues, and the most from my students.”

  CAST OF CHARACTERS

  AUGUSTUS

  Octavian, later Augustus

  Rome’s first emperor, 27 BC–AD 14

  Atia

  Augustus’s mother

  Octavia

  Augustus’s sister

  Julius Caesar

  Dictator, Augustus’s great-uncle and adoptive father

  Marcus Agrippa

  Augustus’s second in command and eventually his son-in-law

  Cicero

  Rome’s greatest orator

  Mark Antony

  Octavian’s greatest rival

  Cleopatra

  Queen of Egypt

  Livia

  Augustus’s wife

  Julia

  Augustus’s daughter

  Tiberius

  Livia’s son, eventually Augustus’s adopted son and successor

  TIBERIUS

  Tiberius

  Augustus’s successor, emperor 14–37

  Livia

  Tiberius’s mother, Augustus’s widow, honored with title of Julia Augusta

  Vipsania

  Tiberius’s wife, later divorced

  Julia

  Tiberius’s wife, later divorced

  Germanicus

  Tiberius’s nephew, named by Augustus as Tiberius’s successor

  Agrippina the Elder

  Augustus’s granddaughter, married to Germanicus

  Sejanus

  Praetorian prefect, Tiberius’s second in command and a threat to his power

  Antonia

  Augustus’s niece

  Gaius, also known as Caligula

  Son of Germanicus and Agrippina the Elder, later Tiberius’s successor

  NERO

  Gaius, also known as Caligula

  Emperor, 37–41

  Claudius

  Emperor, 41–54

  Nero

  Emperor, 54–68

  Messalina

  Claudius’s wife, later executed

  Agrippina the Younger

  Nero’s mother, Claudius’s wife

  Seneca

  Nero’s tutor and advisor; philosopher, man of letters

  Poppaea Sabina

  Nero’s greatest love, later his wife

  VESPASIAN

  Galba

  Emperor, 68–69

  Otho

  Emperor, 69

  Vitellius

  Emperor, 69

  Vespasian

  Emperor, 69–79

  Caenis

  Vespasian’s mistress

  Titus

  Vespasian’s older son, emperor 79–81

  Mucianus

  Governor of Syria, ally of Vespasian

  Berenice

  Jewish princess, Titus’s mistress

  Antonius Primus

  General, politician, ally of Vespasian

  TRAJAN

  Domitian

  Emperor, 81–96

  Nerva

  Emperor, 96–98

  Trajan

  Emperor, 98–117

 
Plotina

  Trajan’s wife, later Augusta

  Marciana

  Trajan’s sister, later Augusta

  Sura

  Trajan’s second in command

  Pliny the Younger

  Intellectual, imperial propagandist, provincial governor

  HADRIAN

  Hadrian

  Emperor, 117–138

  Sabina

  Hadrian’s wife, later Augusta

  Plotina

  Augusta, Hadrian’s patron and promoter

  Suetonius

  Hadrian’s chief secretary, imperial biographer

  Antinous

  Hadrian’s boyfriend, divinized after death

  MARCUS AURELIUS

  Antoninus Pius

  Emperor, 138–161

  Marcus Aurelius

  Emperor, 161–180

  Domitia Lucilla

  Marcus Aurelius’s mother

  Fronto

  Tutor to Marcus Aurelius

  Lucius Verus

  Co-emperor with Marcus Aurelius, 161–169

  Faustina the Younger

  Antoninus Pius’s daughter, Marcus Aurelius’s wife, Augusta and Mother of the Camp

  Galen

  Physician to Marcus Aurelius

  Commodus

  Marcus Aurelius’s son, emperor 180–192

  SEPTIMIUS SEVERUS

  Pertinax

  Emperor, 192–193

  Julianus

  Emperor, 193

  Pescennius Niger

  Emperor, 193–195

  Clodius Albinus

  Emperor, 193–197

  Septimius Severus

  Emperor, 193–211

  Julia Domna

  Severus’s wife

  Caracalla

  Severus’s older son, emperor, 211–217

  Geta

  Caracalla’s younger brother, co-emperor, 211

  Elagabalus

  Emperor, 218–222

  Julia Mamaea

  Mother of Alexander Severus, virtual regent

  Alexander Severus

  Emperor, 222–235

  DIOCLETIAN

  Aurelian

  Emperor, 270–275

  Numerian

  Emperor, 283–284

  Diocletian

  Emperor, 284–305

  Aurelia Prisca

  Diocletian’s wife

  Valeria

  Diocletian’s daughter, Galerius’s wife

  Maximian

  Western Augustus

  Maxentius

  Son of Maximian

  Galerius

  Eastern Caesar

  Romula

  Galerius’s mother

  Constantius

  Western Caesar

  Constantine

  Son of Constantius

  CONSTANTINE

  Constantius

  Constantine’s father, Caesar and Augustus

  Helena

  Constantine’s mother, later a saint

  Constantine

  Emperor, 306–337

  Fausta

  Constantine’s second wife

  Crispus

  Constantine’s oldest son

  Maximinus Daia

  Emperor, 305–314

  Maxentius

  Emperor, 306–312

  Licinius

  Emperor, 308–324

  Eusebius

  Bishop of Caesarea

  RAVENNA

  Romulus Augustulus

  Emperor, 475–476

  Justinian

  Emperor, 527–565

  Theodora

  Empress, 527–548

  THE FAMILY OF AUGUSTUS/THE JULIO-CLAUDIAN DYNASTY

  THE FLAVIAN FAMILY TREE

  THE FAMILY OF TRAJAN AND HADRIAN/THE FIVE GOOD EMPERORS

  THE SEVERANS

  THE FIRST TETRARCHY

  THE FAMILY OF CONSTANTINE

  More from the Author

  The Death of Caesar

  Masters of Command

  The Spartacus War

  The Trojan War

  The Battle of Salamis

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  © CORNELL UNIVERSITY

  BARRY STRAUSS is Professor of History and Classics, Bryce and Edith M. Bowmar Professor in Humanistic Studies at Cornell University. He is the author of seven books on ancient history, including The Death of Caesar,The Spartacus War, and The Trojan War: A New History. His books have been translated into eleven foreign languages. Strauss has a BA from Cornell University and an MA and PhD from Yale University.

  Follow his podcast, Antiquitas: Leaders and Legends of the Ancient World.

  Visit www.BarryStrauss.com

  MEET THE AUTHORS, WATCH VIDEOS AND MORE AT

  SimonandSchuster.com

  Authors.SimonandSchuster.com/Barry-Strauss

  @simonbooks

  ALSO BY BARRY STRAUSS

  The Death of Caesar: The Story of History’s Most Famous Assassination

  Masters of Command: Alexander, Hannibal, Caesar, and the Genius of Leadership

  The Spartacus War

  The Trojan War: A New History

  The Battle of Salamis: The Naval Encounter That Saved Greece—and Western Civilization

  What If?: The World’s Foremost Military Historians Imagine What Might Have Been (contributor)

  Western Civilization: The Continuing Experiment (with Thomas F. X. Noble and others)

  War and Democracy: A Comparative Study of the Korean War and the Peloponnesian War (with David McCann, coeditor)

  Rowing Against the Current: On Learning to Scull at Forty

  Fathers and Sons in Athens: Ideology and Society in the Era of the Peloponnesian War

  Hegemonic Rivalry: From Thucydides to the Nuclear Age (with Richard Ned Lebow, coeditor)

  The Anatomy of Error: Ancient Military Disasters and Their Lessons for Modern Strategists (with Josiah Ober)

  Athens After the Peloponnesian War: Class, Faction, and Policy, 403–386 BC

  We hope you enjoyed reading this Simon & Schuster ebook.

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  NOTES

  PROLOGUE: A NIGHT ON THE PALATINE

  Circus Maximus: A Roman circus was an oblong-shaped space used for horse and chariot races and other events. The Circus Maximus or Greatest Circus was the largest of several circuses in the city.

  dining with Jupiter in midheaven: Statius, Silvae, 4.2.18.

  the emperor had the walls painted black: Cassius Dio, Roman History, 67.9.3.

  another emperor turned the palace into a brothel: Suetonius, Caligula, 41.1.

  the palace steps: Suetonius, Nero, 8.1; Suetonius, Vitellius, 15.2.

  the grand entrance: Cassius Dio, Roman History, 68.5.5.

  the back door: Suetonius, Claudius, 18.2.

  “money has no smell”: Suetonius, Vespasian, 23.3; Cassius Dio, Roman History, 66.14.5.

  CHAPTER 1: AUGUSTUS, THE FOUNDER

  “When I had extinguished the flames of civil war”: Res Gestae Divi Augusti, 34, trans. Loeb Classical Library, here and throughout.

  By “nobility,” the Romans meant a very small group: See Ronald Syme, “The Nobilitas” in The Augustan Aristocracy (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1986), 1–14.

  Her name was Atia: On Atia, see Ilse Becher, “Atia, die Mutter des Augustus—Legende und Politik,” Ernst Günther Schmidt, ed., Griechenland und Rom, Vergleichende Untersuchungen zu Entwicklungstendenzen und-höhepunkten der antiken Geschichte, Kunst und Literatur (Tbilissi: Universitätsverlag Tbilissi in Verbindung mit der Palm & Enke, Erlangen und Jena, 1996), 95–116. />
 

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