The History of Rome - 052- Caesar Augustus
Episode Date: February 28, 2010The Senate bestowed upon Octavian the title Caesar Augustus during the constitutional settlement of 27 BC. Four years later Augustus and the Senate altered their power sharing agreement....
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Hello, and welcome to the history of Rome.
Episode 52, Caesar Augustus.
Antony and Cleopatra were dead, though no one knew it at the time, when Octavian emerged victorious
from the brief war with his old triumph or colleague in 30 BC.
He was also ending nearly 20 years of continuous civil war.
From the time Julius Caesar crossed the Rubicon in 49 BC, the empire had been subjected to
almost two decades of constant civil strife.
Had the sickly Octavian died young,
no doubt the victory at Actium and the conquest of Alexandria,
would have been just two more milestones on the long road to stability.
But much to everyone's surprise, not the least of which his own,
Octavian wound up living well into his 70s.
This meant that his victories were not just a few more markers along the way.
They turned out to be the destination.
So what was that destination?
Was the Republic really dead?
Would things ever go back to the way they had been before?
Did anyone want things to go back to the way they had been before?
Who was in control now?
The Senate?
Octavian?
And what about the 60 Legion still in arms?
These were open questions with no obvious answers.
We of course know now how things turned out
and know the ABCs of how Octavian solidified his personal rule
and what that meant for the long-term makeup and outlook of the Roman Empire.
But as the victorious young Caesar sailed back to Rome in 30 BC, no one knew what was going to happen next.
When Octavian arrived home in August of that year, though it was not called August yet, and we'll get to that,
the great constitutional questions did not have to be addressed straight away.
He was, after all, still consul, which gave him all the legitimate power he needed to rule the empire.
Eventually, being elected consul year after year would no longer be a sustainable base,
upon which to rest his authority but for now it was enough his first steps were to sort
through all the friends and enemies he had made in the previous decade and decide what to
do with them all first up on the list of names mark antony of course now you may
think well mark antony is dead so isn't that enough and the answer is that no it
wasn't enough Octavian wanted his old rival erased from the collective
consciousness so he ordered that Antony's name be literally purged from the history
books. The official annals that recorded the events of the year were opened and edited. Every
mention of Marcus Antonius was erased. The same was done to various monuments and statues
that had been erected in the last 30 years and still bore his name. Finally, it was decreed
that no future son of the Antonius clan could be named Marcus. Octavian was making it clear
that there is no Mark Antony. There never was a Mark Antony and that we have always been at war with
East Asia. As for the former allies of the now non-existent Mark Antony, Octavian decided their
fates on a case-by-case basis. Unlike his uncle, Octavian was predisposed towards bloody vengeance,
but with Messina's acting as a moderating hand behind the scenes, Octavian actually ordered
as many pardons as he did executions. The die-hard anti-Cesarians were killed or exiled,
but the rest of his former enemies were folded into the new regime. The last, the last
Matter of fact, was highly publicized.
The former, not so much.
In 29 BC, Octavian continued to serve as consul.
Being an extremely deliberate and patient man,
Octavian knew that the process of transforming himself
into something bigger and greater than anything Rome had yet known
would be a long process.
For now, he would serve as the traditional executive,
but he planned much greater heights for himself in the future.
To prepare the population for his ascent to near God,
good, Octavian had Messina's set his army of poets to the task of glorifying their newly
victorious patron. The culmination of the poetic propaganda campaign was, of course,
the Aeneid, written by Virgil. Begun soon after Octavian's return to Rome, the epic poem
would be published a decade later and eventually stand as one of the few great masterpieces
of Latin verse. Though the quality of the work was no doubt a pleasant bonus, Octavian by then
Augustus was most pleased to find Virgil taking pains to highlight the
Giulia clan's connection to Aeneas and the description of Augustus's assent to power
as a preordained inevitability.
The myth of Augustus was beginning to take shape.
The highlight of the year was the celebration of three triumphs in Octavian's honor,
one each for his victories in Illyricum, Alexandria, and an Actium.
Of course, with Antony now written out of the history books,
the triumphs celebrating Actium in Alexandria were recast as victories over Cleopatra alone,
the demonic Eastern Queen who had tried to conquer noble Rome.
For these latter two events, Octavian forced Cleopatra's children to parade through the streets of Rome and chains.
Conspicuously absent, though, was 15-year-old Cesarian.
As the one real threat to Octavian's claim on the Caesar name,
there was no way Octavian was going to let young Caesarian make it out of Alexandria alive.
famously remarking that two Caesars is one Caesar too many.
Octavian had the boy executed.
It may seem harsh, but in Roman society, when a boy reaches the age of 18 and passes through
the rituals of manhood, he is a man, no less so because he is a young one.
There is no hesitating over Caesarian's fate.
Two Caesars is one Caesar too many.
The rest of the children were handed over to Octavia to care for, and she attended to
them lovingly until the eldest daughter was married to the king of Numidia. The new bride took
her brothers and sisters with her to Africa, where they lived the rest of their lives in peaceful
obscurity. But just as the triumphs marked the passing of Cleopatra's young children from the
world stage, the celebrations also saw the introduction of two Roman teenagers onto the same stage.
Joining Octavian in his triumphal chariot were 14-year-old Marcus Claudius Marcellus, the eldest
son of Octavia and 13-year-old Tiberius Claudius Nero, Octavian's stepson.
There was no mistaking the dynastic implications of their prominent inclusion in the procession.
Soon enough, it would become clear that Octavian was grooming his nephew Markelles to succeed him,
just as his uncle Julius Caesar had groomed him to rule the empire.
Tiberius, despite heavy lobbying from his mother, Livia, would remain a backup plan.
In fact, he would remain the backup plan.
planned for most of his life as Augustus cast about the family trying to find someone, anyone who could replace him.
In the end, he was able to find none, and Tiberias, who was never supposed to become emperor, became emperor.
In 28 BC, Agrippa joined Octavian in the consulship, and the two worked together to shore up Octavian's power,
while simultaneously restoring order to the empire.
One of the first things they did was formally annul all the laws that had been enacted during the Second Triumvirate.
As I mentioned at the end of last week, it was time for Octavian to leave his ruthlessly ambitious
past behind him.
So it may seem odd that he cancelled laws and decrees he himself had enacted just a few years
previously, but he wanted to send the message that he was not that man anymore, that the rule
of law had returned to Rome for good.
Canceling a few laws, though, was just a matter of bookkeeping.
The real question facing Octavian in Agrippa was what to do with the 60 legions that
remain mobilized.
Obviously, there was no need to keep so many men under arms.
Not only could the Treasury not support them, but what were they all going to do?
Knowing full well that a restless army is a dangerous army, Octavian and Agrippa worked through
a plan to demobilize half the men and keep the rest posted on the frontiers where they
would guard the empire from foreign invasion.
Eventually, they settled at keeping on 28 legions, around 150,000 men, posted primarily
in Gaul, Spain, and Syria.
As I mentioned
last week, one of Octavian's
overriding goals after Actium
was to capture Egypt and hold it as a
personal territory. Having
achieved this goal, he was now able
to more or less tell 150,000
soldiers to go home
without worrying about bonus riots.
Here's your retirement
check. Paid for from the riches
captured in Alexandria. Have a nice
life. No IOUs
this time around. He had money to pay the
all. During this year, Octavian and Agrippa also appointed themselves to be censors, the powerful
office that was in charge not only of the mundane task of determining the population, but also the
much more controversial task of determining who was in and who was out of the Senate. Right away,
they fiddled with the senatorial ranks, reducing the total number from 1,000 to 800, and
subbing in prominent supporters from across the empire, rather than relying strictly on old Roman
families to fill the ranks.
The pushback from the existing Senate, though, was swift, and Octavian prudently backed off his
plan, granting waivers to anyone who wanted to remain in the Senate to settle the matter.
But like I say, Octavian was a patient man.
By no means was he done trying to mold the Senate into something more to his liking.
But there was no reason to risk it all in a showdown with the old guard right away.
There were still appearances to keep up.
Over the course of 28 BC, Octavian in a grip of,
also added two great temples to the Roman skyline, beginning the process of turning the city of brick into a city of marble.
First was the temple to Apollo that Octavian had vowed to build if he emerged victorious from the war with Sextus Pompey.
Built on the Palatine Hill, adjacent to his slowly expanding residence, the temple would take on great public significance
when Octavian ordered that the Sibyline books be moved there from the temple of Jupiter, where they had been kept from the time of the king.
Ever so subtly, Octavian was consolidating all power, religious, political, and martial under his own roof.
Agrippa, meanwhile, took the lead on building a great temple to all the gods to be called simply the Pantheon.
Today, the Pantheon remains one of the great tourist destinations in Rome, and if you ever get a chance to see it, don't miss out.
Keep in mind, though, that the pantheon standing today is actually a rebuild commissioned by Trajan in 126 BC,
the original construction having been destroyed by a devastating fire in 80 AD.
But, cognizant of the historical significance of the temple, Trajan ordered his pantheon
built to the original blueprints, right down to the inscription on the cornerstone,
which reads, Marcus Agrippa, son of Lucius, consul for the third time, built this.
It's pretty cool.
As 27 BC arrived, Octavian felt secure enough in his position that he decided to work out the details of his new world order with the Senate.
The trick, of course, was to maintain the pretense of Republican governance while at the same time keeping power in his own hands.
In performing this trick, he was actually aided by a willing Senate.
You may think that the body who stood to lose the most by Octavian's power grab would also protest the most.
But while some members disliked Octavian's rule, most of the hardcore Republicans had long since been purged and replaced by men handpicked by Octavian.
Not surprisingly, when in January 27 BC, Octavian announced to the assembled body that he was stepping down from his position and wished no more to bear the burdens of government.
The senators present tripped over themselves, begging Octavian to reconsider.
reluctantly, Octavian agreed that if the Senate, as the representatives of Republican authority,
deemed him worthy of remaining Rome's leading man, how could he possibly say no?
The deal worked out with the Senate, all arranged in advance, of course, granted Octavian 10 years
pro-consular authority over the provinces of Spain, Gaul, Cilicia, Syria, and Egypt.
These particular provinces were important because they all stood on the borders of the empire.
If a foreign threat, say from the Germans or the Parthians, was going to threaten Rome,
it was essential that the strong and wise hand of Octavian was there to protect the empire.
The brass taxed the agreement, though, was that of the 28 standing legions,
20 of them were stationed in provinces seated to Octavian.
There had never been any confusion about where young Caesar's authority had always rested.
With this grant of pro-consular authority, Octavian guaranteed that three,
quarters of Rome's military was under his personal command.
The rest of the provinces were left to the Senate to administer.
If you go to the history of Rome.
Dotipad.com, you'll find a map breaking down the territorial divisions of the 27 BC settlement.
As you may have noticed, these agreements showed that unlike Julius Caesar, who had pushed a radical new governmental structure, Octavian was seeking to work within existing precedent.
He was not proclaiming himself dictator for life or a new king of Rome.
He was simply a humble consul, duly elected by the people,
who had been granted by the Senate's authority pro-consular powers wherever they had seen fit for him to govern.
Who was he to argue with the representatives of the people?
The last little bit to come out of the constitutional settlement of 27 BC was the small matter
of what to call Octavian in this new order.
The Senate decided that he ought to at least be given.
a title of some distinction, something that acknowledged the indispensable nature of the man.
The Senate finally settled on a new name, the name by which most people know Octavian today,
and the name by which this podcast will henceforth refer to him, Augustus, or revered one.
If this were a history channel documentary, this is the point where we would cue a new actor
for the reenactments, gone the fresh-faced young man, replaced by the serious-faced old man.
I had toyed with the notion, and if I had more guts I might have done it, of eschewing the common
practice of referring to him as Augustus from this point on.
I think the name switch has the effect of subconsciously dividing up his career, making it
seem as if it really was two different men doing all of these things.
To call him Octavian through the last portion of his life would really bring home the idea
that it is Octavian who's ruling the empire from here on, not some new guy named Augustus
who was called in off the bench as a second half replacement.
The wise and all-knowing substitute for the young and Ruthless starter.
I'm not going to do it because sometimes fighting convention just isn't worth it.
But please don't forget to keep the same face in your mind when you picture Octavian now as Caesar Augustus.
Don't replace the actor in your head.
He is still the same man.
To complicate things even further, just as Octavian never really went by Octavian,
he was always Gaius Julius Caesar to the Romans, he never really went by Augustus much either.
When you're trying to maintain the facade of Republican virtue, it's not really in your best interest to go around referring to yourself as revered one.
It sends the wrong message.
So Octavian, Augustus, whatever, requested that in practice he be called simply preinceps or for citizen.
Simple, classy, unpretentious.
as soon as the power-sharing agreement was reached with the Senate,
Augustus decided to leave town for a while and tour his new provinces.
He was acutely aware of the effect he had on the people in general,
and the Senate in particular.
One of his overarching goals through this early period of his reign
was to undercut the Senate's real authority,
while simultaneously building it back up into an organization with some prestige.
If he remained in Rome, he would be a constant reminder that, you know what,
the Senate is just a powerless social club.
By absenting himself from the capital, he allowed the Senate a degree of autonomy that went a long way towards rebuilding their bruised egos.
But make no mistake about it, it was about building back up their egos, not their real power.
Augustus first went to Gaul, where years of Roman neglect had reduced the province to somewhere between organized revolt and outright anarchy.
It did not take long, though, for the steadying hand of mighty Caesar to put all the tribe's conquers.
by his uncle back on their best behavior.
So from Gaul, he traveled to Spain, where the situation was just as chaotic, but this time, the natives were not simply awed by the power of Caesar.
Even though Hispania had been one of the first overseas territories claimed by Rome back during the Punic Wars, the local Spanish had never really taken to foreign rule, and were, in many places, subjects in name only.
Augustus had a mind to put a stop to all of that once and for all.
all. He spent the next few years in Spain, but as was so often the case, for most of the time
he was not leading troops in battle, but rather recovering from a severe illness that overtook
him not long after crossing the Pyrenees. The early going of the pacification campaign
had proved to be full of false starts and frustrating engagements with guerrilla fighters,
and as usual, the stress of the hard campaign weakened Augustus' immune system, and he was
forced to retire from the field.
While he recovered beside the mountain springs and the Pyrenees, his lieutenant's continued
the fight and eventually brought it to a successful conclusion.
Spain was, at least for now, under firm Roman control, or perhaps more accurately, under
firm Augustine control.
The severity of the illness which befell Augustus in Spain, which laid him up for at least
a year, focused his attention more acutely on the problem of succession.
If an heir was not solidly in place, the death of the Princeps would plunge the Roman world back into civil war.
To that end, Augustus bucked his wife's usually persuasive advice and continued to hone in on his nephew Markelles rather than Livia's son Tiberius as his heir apparent.
In 28 BC, Augustus arranged for Markeles to marry his own daughter, Julia, leaving no doubt as to who he felt should take over when he died.
I should point out here that to the staunchly patriarchal Romans, familial bonds followed from the men and the men alone.
So Julia and Marcellus, though they were first cousins by blood, were not thought to have entered into anything resembling an untoward incestual marriage.
Julia was the daughter of Augustus, Marcellus, the son of Gaius Claudius Marcellus.
When it came to marriage, Octavia's relation to Augustus did not matter at all.
In addition to the bonds of marriage that now tied Markelles to Augustus, the prince
prentz arranged for the passage of special legislation, granting his nephew slash son-in-law,
the right to be exempted from traditional age requirements for holding office.
With life-threatening illness as always knocking at the door, it was important to bring
Markelles into public life as quickly as possible, not just to give him the experience he would
need if he was going to be an able governor, but to introduce him to the Roman people.
Augustus made sure that the 21-year-old would be elected Adial for 23 BC.
From this office, which you will recall was in charge of public games,
Marcellus would be able to throw lavish festivities
that were bound to make him extremely popular with the common man.
With Augustus bankrolling everything,
the games of Markeles promised to be a spectacle of unprecedented proportions.
Augustus returned to Rome in 24 BC
to oversee his nephew's emergence onto the public.
stage. But before he could
preside over that happy event,
he was treated to a tragic falling out with
Messinas. At some
point during the year, a plot
against Augustus was either uncovered
or invented, depending on
who you talk to, and among
those implicated was one of the consuls
for the year, Olus Terentius
Faro Marina.
Marina just so happened to be
Messinus' brother-in-law, and
when Messinus came home and discussed
the uncovered plot with his wife,
She quickly warned her brother to flee the city.
When Augustus found out about the breach and trust,
the relationship between the two men was altered forever.
While Massines continued to support the regime,
he was out of the inner circle for good,
a casualty of high-stakes politics.
23 BC would prove to be a watershed year for the empire.
It was a year that showed just how quickly fate could wreak havoc
on the carefully laid plans of men.
Just as Marquellus was stepping into the office of Adial, Augustus became deathly ill.
This time, his sickness was so bad that most everyone, including Augustus himself, did not believe he would survive.
Consumed by what scholars now believe was typhoid fever, Augustus was faced with a difficult choice.
He had planned for Marquellus to succeed him, but the young men was simply not experienced enough yet to take over.
So Augustus turned to the man who had stood by his wife.
his side all these years who though not technically a blood relative was still his
brother in all things marcus a gripa in a gripa augustus could be sure he was
leaving the empire incompetent hands a man who would rule wisely until
Marquellis was ready to share in the burdens of state everything was arranged
and agrippa was prepared to confidently step into the power vacuum his old
friend was about to leave behind when suddenly due to some inventive treatment by his
creative doctor Augustus recovered over the course of the illness though it became
apparent that the Senate was more than ready for Augustus to die and a grip at a
take over though he tried mightily not to step on senatorial toes Augustus couldn't
help but secretly butt into provinces over which he had no authority even more
emotionally important though Augustus's never-ending succession of consulships was
creating a logjam of men buying for the years one remaining slot men who were
denied access to the high office year after year were becoming embittered, and when they visited
him on his deathbed, he could see that they were ready for him to go.
Octavian could now seem plainly that the popularity of his regime was not what he had hoped it would
be. It was time to amend the settlements of 27 BC. The first step he took was to resign the consulship
on July 1st, 23 BC, a day which would go down in history as the date Augustus himself marked
the official beginning of his imperial reign.
In return for this concession, he had arranged to be named Tribune and perpetuity,
an ingeniously simple maneuver that allowed him to abandon the consulship without actually
giving up any power.
A Tribune, you recall, has the right to attend senatorial sessions, proposed legislation,
and veto legislation.
Is there really anything else that a despotic ruler needs to control the empire?
Well, actually there is.
While Augustus was supremely powerful in his own provinces, when it came to the senatorial provinces or Italy itself, he was left awkwardly without any real legal authority.
So he had the Senate award him what amounted to at-large pro-consular authority.
From here on out, whatever province he was in, Augustus would have the last word on everything.
Having been granted all these prerogatives, however, prerogatives which would form the legal basis for the rest of his reign,
Augustus was smart enough not to indulge in them.
When it came to a provincial administration, he usually deferred to the local governor.
And when it came to legislation, he neither personally proposed many bills, nor broke out the veto stamp very often.
This was all possible because he had signaled behind the scenes how he wanted things to go, of course.
But still, by avoiding public displays the power whenever possible, he left everyone feeling like they at least had some say in the matter.
Sure, Augustus controls everything, but it's not like he's some crazy tyrant.
The successors of Augustus would have done well to study exactly how Rome's first emperor
managed to reign for over 40 years, while they were usually assassinated after just a few years
at the helm.
The final piece of the so-called second constitutional settlement was the elevation of Agrippa
at a political heights almost as high as Augustus himself.
It was clear that the Senate felt more comfortable with Agrippa holding
some kind of formal power, and Augustus was obliged to agree. Granted similar at-large pro-consular
authority himself, Agrippa had now become something of a co-emperor. At this point, there is some
disagreement over what happened next. What we know is that Agrippa left Rome and set up a base
of operations on the island of Samos. What is unclear is why exactly he did so. In the account
offered by Soutaunnius, Agrippa was sent into exile by Augustus, because the latter was concerned
his old general's growing power would interfere with his planned elevation of Markelles.
But by another account, Agrippa was sent east because he was the only one Augustus could
really trust to look after his interests there.
The role that Agrippa would subsequently play in the negotiations with the Parthians over
the recovery of Crassus' lost legionary standards seems to point to the second reading.
in the end of course whether or not Agrippa was getting in the way of Marquellus or not proved to be a moot point.
At the end of 23 BC, with his successful year in the eight-isle ship winding down,
Markelles became sick and suddenly died after a brief illness.
This threw Augustus's plans into complete disarray and sent his sister Octavia into mourning for the rest of her life.
Suddenly left without an acceptable air, the status and rank of Agrippa now was.
loomed large. As he had so many times before, Augustus turned to Messinas for advice.
Messinus thought about the matter for a bit, and then told Augustus, well, you have made Agrippa
so powerful that he now must either become your son-in-law or be killed. And that was how Agrippa
officially joined the Julio-Claudean dynasty.
