The History of Rome - 060- No Better Slave, No Worse Master
Episode Date: March 1, 2010Caligula was insane. Luckily for the Romans, he wielded absolute power....
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And welcome to the history of Rome.
Episode 60, no better slave, no worse master.
The honeymoon lasted for about six months.
The brief window of optimism that opened with the death of Tiberius
was slammed shut by Caligula before the year was out.
The half year between Tiberius' death and Caligula's nearly fatal illness
can be described as the period after which the Romans had jumped from the frying pan,
but before they hit the fire.
Because as it turns out that while Tiberius was cruel,
cruel, paranoid, and calculating, Caligula was simply mad as a hatter.
Now, I think most of us, even those who are relatively new to Roman history, know that
Caligula was up to some pretty rotten stuff. Even people I know who have no interest in history
whatsoever generally know, for example, that a pretty disturbing flick called Caligula came out
once upon a time, and that the guy had to be pretty messed up for the movie based on his life
to gin up so much controversy. Which is true. Incoherent to
it is, Collegula the movie does do a pretty good job capturing the essence of the man as portrayed
by the ancient historians. But the question is then, how accurate were those ancient historians?
Should we really believe every detail that has been handed down to us as objective truth,
or should we take some of it with a grain of salt?
Unfortunately, we've lost the relevant chapters from Tacitus, who is generally the most reliable
source for information on the early imperial period, and were left with a combination of
Suitonius and Cassius Dio, both of whom were writing well after the fact, and the contemporary
passing accounts of Philo of Alexandria and Seneca, both of whom have their own individual
bones to pick with the mad emperor.
In his sex in the ancient world, John Jay Younger points out that Romans would often use tales
of sexual deviancy to emphasize how bad a public official was, the way that we might say
that some despised ruler regularly kicks puppies or refuses to call his mother on her birthday.
So with everyone agreeing that Caligula had psychological issues and that he was a train wreck of an emperor,
it is not surprising that his biography has become packed with deviant sexual activity.
The same basic dynamic, by the way, is at play with biographies of Tiberius,
and will be at play again when we get to Nero and his alleged Oedipole relationship with his mother, Agrippina.
So I'm sure that there is a lot that the ancient historians got right about Caligula,
but much of it is undoubtedly exaggeration.
When Caligula recovered from his illness in late 37, his personality either changed dramatically
or more likely, who he was simply began to break through the magnificent glow the people
had shrouded him in.
In the wake of Tiberius, the Romans were quick to project their own needs onto this
savior, Caligula.
So I think it's quite likely that he was the same man throughout.
It's just that nobody was really ready to notice what a crazy Cretan he was until the initial
honeymoon period was over.
I mean, he had been dealt both.
blow after traumatic blow his entire life, and had spent years thoroughly repressed, sucking
up to the man who had killed his father, his mother, and his two brothers. So I don't think
that Caligula needed anything so dramatic as a near-death experience to go off the deep end.
Imperial slaves, who spent more time around the boy than anyone, certainly would have agreed
that Caligula needed no illness to become unhinged. Watching him alternate between the pliant
and passive servant of Tiberius, and the sadistic teenager who relaxed by witnessing the beatings and
executions that occurred regularly at the Imperial Villa on Capri, the slaves reported that concerning
Gaius there was no better slave and no worse master. Now that he was emperor, he was the slave to
no man, and it was all no worse master from here on out. So let's jump on into the fun house of
horrors, shall we? We should probably get the most famous rumor about Collegial out of the way early.
and that is that he was engaged in incestual relationships with his sisters,
Julia Lavilla, Agrippina, and particularly his favorite Drusilla.
The charges, like I say, likely spring from the fact that later unhappiness with Caligula
led to some serious character assassination.
But it's worth noting that the perception of incest was not made up out of whole cloth.
It is understandable that Caligula and his sisters, suffering as orphans together,
would be closer than your average set of siblings, but Caligula appears to have taken things to an extreme.
The emperor, for example, seems to have had an atypical married life.
He was married four times in his short life, with his first wife dying in childbirth,
and his second and third wives coming and going within a matter of months.
The constant matrons of Caligula's house then in the early part of his reign were not his wives,
but rather his sisters, particularly, like I say, Drusilla.
His relationship with Drusilla was so close, in fact, that during his bachelor periods between wives,
Caligula eschewed the custom of rotating hostesses for his dinner parties, instead sticking exclusively with Drusilla,
in effect saying that she is my wife.
However, there is no solid evidence of sexual activity between the two, and coupled with his more general embrace of living godhood,
it looks like he may have just been playing out the kind of sister-brother, husband-wife dynamic,
seen in many Eastern relations.
religions. But the very public role Drusilla's primary female companion makes it a not
particularly hard leap to believe that maybe something was going on behind closed doors. Not long
before her death, which we'll get to in a moment, Caligula further demanded that she be included
in the oaths taken by legionary soldiers when swearing to protect the emperor, again in effect
saying that she was to be considered his wife. So while the incest rap may be a bad one,
Caligula basically did everything in his power to make it hard for people to believe otherwise.
That all being said, the incest charges only dominated the gossip of the early part of Caligula's reign,
because in mid-38, Drusilla came down with a fever and died.
The grief-stricken Caligula, who did not leave Drusilla's side during the illness,
ordered that the entire empire go into mourning upon her death,
and thereafter would often swear oaths to the divine Drusilla,
whom he inducted into the growing imperial pantheon.
Unfortunately for Rome, though, once she was gone, the gloves really came off.
For the three years left on his reign, Roman historians describe at length the man who personifies everything that is awful about absolute power resting in the hands of a single man.
Unlike Augustus and Tiberius, who tried to downplay their power and defer to the Senate as much as possible,
Caligula had no interest in such things and actually went out of his way to do everything he could to demean the Senate and exalt himself above them.
For example, he would force them to run alongside his carriage while it made its way through Rome,
and any senator who failed to show up or display the proper amount of enthusiasm were noted
by the emperor and then targeted for future humiliations.
One of his reported favorite pastimes was to bring senators and their wives to dinner,
and over the course of the meal, pick out one of the married women and disappear with her
to the bedroom while her shamed husband was forced to remain at the table.
Caligula would then return with the wife in question and proceed to describe in detail everything
that had gone on in the bedroom.
There was no recourse for the distraised couple.
Any challenge to Caligula's whims was fast becoming a capital offence.
Both Caligula's second and third marriages were actually the result of stealing women
from their husbands, and in the case of his second wife, Livia Orestola, it was actually
on the occasion of her marriage that the theft went down.
Invited to the wedding, Caligula took a shine to the bride and told the new husband, Gaius Calpurnius Piso,
who will feature prominently in the episode on Nero to, quote, get away from my wife, and then
immediately absconded with the poor woman. Caligula would abandon her just days later, but not before
twisting the knife further and forbidding her to remarry Piso. Why did he do it? Who knows?
men and women now lived in perpetual fear that they would say the wrong thing or do the wrong thing
or do the right thing but at the wrong time.
One young aristocrat was forced to fight as a gladiator simply because he was good-looking
and made Caligula jealous.
After the man won both of his matches, Caligula had him hauled off in chains and executed.
Good times.
But the biggest fear was that Caligula would simply covet your estate and confiscate it all
after arresting and killing you for no reason.
In this, he was indiscriminate.
He didn't even bother working up any kind of paranoid fantasy
to explain who he was targeting.
He would just send agents to your doors one day,
and you would be hauled off to court, tried, and exiled or killed.
The executions themselves became a hallmark of Caligula's sadism,
as he would force parents to come witness the executions of their children.
When one man said that he was too sick to attend,
Caligula sent around one of his imperial carriages to pick the man up and make sure that he could be there.
And when the condemned were killed, they were not simply strangled or hurled from the Tarpean rock.
No, Caligula was famous for promoting the maxim of death by a thousand cuts.
Major organs were left alone as the victims were nicked and bled and stabbed over the course of sometimes days.
His usual order to the executioners was to make him feel that he is done.
dying. When one man continued to proclaim his innocent as the execution began, Caligula halted
the proceedings. Then he ordered the soldiers to cut out the man's tongue so Caligula would be able
to enjoy the execution in peace. Charming stuff. The only practical foundation for all of this
random cruelty was that Caligula needed money, lots and lots of money. Tiberius had been,
famously, a spendthrift, who in his later life basically vetoed every spending bill he
he ever saw. He probably took it too far, leaving many worthy projects unfunded, but there is no denying
that when he died, the empire was an excellent financial shape. The treasury was well stocked,
and revenue was outpacing expenditures. Caligula managed to blow up this financial cushion
within two years of taking office, leaving the empire and the imperial family massively in debt.
Some things he did were decent enough. He finished the Temple of Augustus and built.
to improve ports at Regium and on Sicily to facilitate more grain shipments.
He also expanded the aqueduct system that was essential for bringing clean water into the city.
But mostly, he just blew through the treasury, building huge personal yachts, lavish villas,
and a personal chariot racetrack.
Caligula's basic motto was why pay retail when you can pay ten times retail?
At one point, he called for hundreds of ships to line up beside one another in the Gulf of Baye.
Then he packed them with earth and mortar, turning the whole line into a bridge between the resort at Baye and the port of Putioli on the other side of the Gulf.
He then rode his horse across the two-mile expanse.
Legend has it, the entire operation was undertaken because Tiberius's astrologer had once remarked that Caligula had no more hope of becoming empire than he did crossing the Gulf of Baye on horseback.
It would make for an almost light-hearted tale, except for the massive expenditure,
is involved and the fact that by pressing all the ships into becoming a bridge, Rome suffered from
a grain shortage due to the lack of available freighters. By 39, Caligula's relationship with
the Senate and people was shot. The man they had once hailed as their Savior had proved himself
to be nothing more than an erratic sadist, who was bankrupting the empire. Caligula had showed the
Senate nothing but disrespect, going so far as to promise to have his favorite horse named
consul, because it possessed more intelligence than the whole lot of them put together.
together. Eventually, senators began to mumble under their breath that we really need to do something
to rein this psychopath in. Catching wind that some kind of resistance movement was being
organized, Caligula called the Senate to meet and revealed to them a big surprise. He had made copies
of all the treason trial notes that he had allegedly destroyed upon taking office. Suddenly,
the treason trials were back up and running. The Senate was forced to accept the Emperor's decision.
But unlike with the 70-year-old Tiberius, they could not reasonably hope to outlast the emperor.
Caligula was still in his late 20s, so the madness could go on for 50 years or more.
So it is probably at this point that Caligula's death warrant was really signed.
He left them no choice but to eventually assassinate him.
The simple logic of survival demanded it.
It was right around this time, too, that Caligula began to let it be known that he was actually more than just a man.
Unlike Augustus and Tiberius, who made no claims of divinity while they were alive,
Augustus, in fact, went to great lengths to stop people from worshipping him as a god.
Caligula decided that everyone was free to worship him as divine if they wished.
In fact, he insisted.
He began appearing in public dressed as Hercules and Apollo and Mercury, sometimes even Venus.
More and more, he began to talk as if he were in fact a god, trapped down here on Earth with all
scummy mortals who forever got in his way.
The people more or less humored these claims because, hey, what else are you going to do?
So when Caligula ordered that his statue be placed in every temple in the empire for worship,
most everyone obliged.
But his extreme megalomania ran into a brick wall in the far eastern province of Judea.
When imperial agents brought word that a statue of the emperor was to be erected in the
holy Jewish temple in Jerusalem, there were nearly riots.
the fiercely monotheistic Jews, who were already pretty angry that they were forced to live under the Roman yoke to begin with,
had no intention of allowing some egotistical punk to share this stage with Yahweh.
It was only the timely intervention of Herod Agrippa that prevented a massive uprising against the Romans.
Herod was the grandson of Herod the Great, and as a child, he had been sent to live in Rome,
and was befriended by the imperial family.
When Caligula became emperor, Herod had been sent home to govern the Eastern Territ.
territories, and it was only because of his personal influence that he had with Caligula that he was able to first delay the idea of erecting the statue and then get the idea killed altogether.
Had Herod not been there to talk some sense into Caligula, the revolt in Judea almost certainly would have erupted 30 years earlier than it eventually did.
Having become a god, though, there was still something conspicuously absent from Caligula's resume.
Military Conquest
being an imperator without any military triumphs to point to,
it is like being a surgeon who has never performed surgery.
It just doesn't make sense on the face of it.
So to rectify the situation, he got it in his head
that he should return to the sight of his father's glory
and finally bring Germania to heal.
Completely lacking in skill, experience, and training, though,
the campaign was probably never going to end well,
so it was probably a good thing that it wound up ending early.
He did lead the legions across the Rhine, but was nervous about penetrating too far into the forests.
Not really craving an actual battle, he sent some allied galls into the woods dressed as Germans
so that he could pretend to charge heroically into their midst when they emerged from the woods at the appointed hour.
After this staged episode, he strutted about camp, bragging about his own bravery, in contrast to the rest of the men,
who had milled around when word of the attack came.
then reports arrived that there were really real Germans in the area,
at which point Caligula's entourage ran everyone over,
getting the emperor back to the Roman side of the brine.
The whole thing is just cartoonishly pathetic.
But while he was outplaying soldier,
a conspiracy involving a local Roman governor was uncovered
that seems to put the kibosh on the rest of the campaign.
The details are unknown,
but it was a serious enough plot
that his brother-in-law was executed,
and his two remaining sisters, Agrippina and Julia Lavilla, wound up exiled, suggesting
Caligula had been hit fairly close to home.
Having accomplished nothing in Germania, Caligula did what any sensible politician would do
to save face.
He declared victory and left.
In 40 AD, the emperor turned his attention to Britannia, that foggy island on the edge of the
world.
But again, he managed to do little more there than add another bizarre chapter to his already
bizarre biography.
According to legend, he lined up the legions in battle formation along the banks of the
English Channel, even though there was no enemy there to fight.
The men waited around expectantly until Caligula's orders finally came down.
Go forth and collect all the seashells on the beach and bring them back to Italy as spoils of
this great victory over Neptune and the sea.
Uh-huh.
Having won another battle, Caligula returned to Rome and settled.
celebrated a dual triumph in honor of his successful campaigns in Germania and Britain.
The collected seashells were dutifully displayed as prized treasure.
Can someone, anyone, do us all a favor and just knife this guy?
Back home, Caligula settled into happy domesticity with his new wife and child.
In either 39 or 40, he had begun an affair with a woman named Kysonia
that resulted in the birth of a daughter, Julia Dursilla, named for Caligula's late lamented
sister. In Kysonia, Caligula finally found a kindred spirit, who he was not related to.
Though she was much older than he was, she relished in extravagance, opulence, and had no empathy
for anyone whatsoever. She was, in short, a perfect match for the mad emperor.
They seemed to be perfectly happy with one another, though Caligula would often remind her
in a doting sort of way that he could slit her throat whenever he wanted. But the good
times were not to last. Coligula may have thought that he was a god and that he could do whatever
he wanted, whenever he wanted to whomever he wanted, but that did not mean that people were
going to like it. It was only a matter of time before what went around came around, and in early
41 AD it came back around. There was a member of the Praetorian Guard by the name of Cassius
Caria who had had enough. Caligula would often single the man out and mock him for his effeminacy
and allude to a genitalio-related injury,
Caria had suffered while on campaign.
After being humiliated time and time again,
the angry Praetorian guardsmen
began to whisper with members of the Senate
who were looking for any opportunity
to off the psychotic brat of an emperor.
Caria agreed to be the man on the inside
and brought two others in as formal accomplices.
The plot was hatched with the tacit approval
of the Praetorian Prefect,
who was himself under investigation for treason
and thus needed to get rid of Caligula before Caligula got rid of him.
In January of 41 AD, after Caligula was done addressing a troop of actors for an upcoming theatrical performance, Caria and the two accomplices cornered the emperor and stabbed him to death.
Caligula was 28 years old and had ruled Rome for just shy of four years.
The assassins then quickly made their way to the imperial family's chambers and killed Cysonia and the infant Drusilla.
there could be no blood air to Caligula left alive.
With the emperor dead, the big question was, what came next?
Caria himself seems to have been under the impression that by killing the emperor,
it might give the Senate a chance to step into the power vacuum
and return Rome to its Republican roots.
But that was, of course, a pipe dream.
The Praetorian Guard as a whole did not share their comrades' idealism.
As it turned out, Caria and the other assassins were unable to get to Uncle Col.
Claudius before the rest of the guard hustled the stammering fool into the safety of their camp.
According to legend, Claudius was hiding behind a curtain when they found him, but that is most likely a later dramatic flourish.
That very night, the guard declared Claudius to be the new emperor, which, when word got out, seemed like some kind of sick joke.
Everyone knew that Claudius was a mushy-headed dunce who had managed to stay alive through the reins of Tiberius and Caligula because he made such a great butt for joke.
There was no way that he was capable of ruling the empire.
And this was, of course, precisely the point.
The Praetorian leadership figured Claudius would be easy to control.
As we'll see next week, though,
Claudius seems to have had everyone fooled pretty well.
He was no fool at all,
and would prove to be a thoroughly competent emperor,
even if his domestic life left something to be desired.
The short and brutal reign of Caligula is an object lesson
for why you don't put absolute power in the hands of one man,
especially without vetting him first.
Though he was the first really terrible emperor,
he would certainly not be the last,
as every generation or so another Caligula will emerge
to remind everyone why they tried to get away from all of this in the first place,
why they had shared consulships,
why they had thrown the kings out,
why they had set up the Senate,
why they had set up the people's assemblies,
why it was just dumb to give absolute power to judge,
just one guy.
But it was too late to go back to the days of a shared consulship or the diffusion of power.
All the Romans could do now was try to survive the bad years and hope that the next guy
would be better, because, like it or not, the emperors had all the power now.
