The History of Rome - 095- The Beginning of the End
Episode Date: May 24, 2010Marcus elevated Commodus to the position of co-Emperor and then died a few years later while campaigning in the north....
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Hello, and welcome to the history of Rome.
Episode 95, the beginning of the end.
Don't worry about the title of this episode.
The transition from Marcus Aurelius to his son Cometus is usually pointed to as the point at which the luck of the Roman Empire began to run out.
But it has also been joked on more than one occasion that as declined phases go, we should all be so lucky to enjoy one as long as the Romans did.
We are still 300 years from the last Roman emperor and more than a thousand years from the fall of Constantinople.
To put it another way, the United States has officially been a big S state for about 230 years,
which would fit neatly into the pocket of Rome's, quote, decline phase.
So for those of you who might fear that we are nearing the end of our little podcast, don't worry.
Focus on the fact that this is merely the beginning of the end.
There is still a lot to cover.
difference is that rather than talking about what battles the Romans won and what territory they
added to the empire, we'll be talking about what battles they lost and what territory they abandoned.
Something whose end is rapidly approaching, though, is Augustus's principate.
Just as the republic cracked and by necessity gave way to a new imperial system, so too is the
principate now on the verge of cracking, and by necessity giving way to a new system, which
scholars have usually dubbed the Dominate.
After the fall of comadus, the often-troubled Severin dynasty will begin the transition
away from the convenient fictions that the emperor is merely the first citizen, and the Senate
still maintains its ancient power, to a more authoritarian and more militant political order.
When the severans were toppled, the crisis period of the mid-third century, roughly analogous
to the civil wars of the first century BC, finally obliterated the Rome.
of Augustus and Vespasian and Hadrian, just as Caesar's civil wars had obliterated the Rome of
Camillus and Cato and Cicero. Rome would, surprisingly, live through the crisis, but what would
come out the other side would be a very different animal than what went in. The empire would no longer
be a quasi-republican, magisterial dictatorship. Instead, it would be transformed by Erelian
and Diocletian into a quasi-divine monarchy, almost in the mode of
ancient Persia. Comedus then earns the distinction of being the last true precepts. And since he
turned out to be such a disaster, Marcus Aurelius earns the distinction of being the last good
precepts. Not that Marcus didn't try to ensure that Comedus would be up to the task. He gave the
boy a great education, introduced him to military affairs, and took him along on his one extended
tour of the empire. But in the end, it seems that Comedus just wasn't having it. He was growing up
into a man far more in the mold of his uncle Lucius Virus than in the mold of his father.
So much so that it was an accepted fact in Rome that Comedus was not actually Marcus's son at all,
and that he was in fact the product of an affair between Faustina and a gladiator.
Commodus loved games and gambling and spectacle and partying, all the things his father utterly disdained.
Setting aside any psychoanalytical reasons for Comedus turning out to be the exact opposite of his father,
the boy did face a considerable uphill battle on the road to becoming a conscientious, serious, and virtuous man.
He was, after all, the first emperor who was born to the purple, as they say.
Surprising as it is, thus far, not a single Roman emperor was himself born to an emperor.
Not Augustus, or Tiberius, or Caligula, or Claudius, or Nero, or Galba or Otho, or Vitellius, or Vespasius,
or Vespasian or Titus or Domitian or Nerva or Trajan or Hadrian or Marcus Aurelius.
Only Titus and Domitian were even the bloods of an emperor,
and they spent their formative years as the obscure sons of a minor politician in general.
But Cominus was born shortly after Marcus became emperor
and was thus raised in the palace as true Roman royalty,
surrounded by all the pleasures indulgent sycophants could drum up.
much as the austere Marcus did his best to mold comodus in his own image,
he stood little chance against the spoiling atmosphere that crown princes are often submerged in.
Marcus could see what was happening and openly worried that he was raising another Nero.
But for all his stoic wisdom, he fell victim to the realities of fraternal love,
and when he wasn't maintaining a strict regimen of denial,
he was rationalizing away his son's behavior.
after all, hadn't Philip the second been mortified at how Alexander the Great was turning out,
and he turned out to be Alexander the Great.
So there's no reason to believe Commodus won't turn it around once he matures a bit.
People have often wondered, though, why Marcus of all people would break with the imperial tradition
of adopting a worthy heir and instead choose to hand it all over to a son, who was pretty clearly a bad egg,
and it was pretty clearly not going to mature into Alexander the Great one day.
The answer involves some speculation on our part, but in the first case, we should never forget
that the reason why every previous Roman emperor had adopted an heir was because there were
simply very few blood sons to be had. There were, in fact, only two emperors who died with living
sons, Vespasian, who left the throne to Titus, and Claudius, who had wanted to leave the
throne to Britannicus, but was manipulated into adopting Nero instead.
For every other emperor, air adoption was not an explicit policy or even a preferred mode of succession.
It was the result of inescapable circumstance.
Augustus tried like mad to get anyone with a blood connection to him in power, but was forced by fate to roll with Tiberius instead.
Beyond the simple fact that just about every emperor probably would have left the throne to his son had they had the chance,
The further fact is that not letting Comedus succeed him brought with it its own problems.
In his recent biography of Marcus Aurelius, Frank McLean talks about Marcus' quandary at length,
after relaying Septimius Severus' quote that Marcus's great mistake was not killing the rotten
comidus when he had the chance.
In McLean's formulation, Marcus was faced with a stark choice.
Either he had to kill Commodus or promote him.
there was no middle ground.
When, for what I hope are easy to understand reasons,
Marcus did not assassinate his own son,
he had no choice then but to make him emperor.
The alternative would have been to leave the empire
with all the ingredients for a civil war.
There would naturally be either out of jealousy,
spite, or stifled ambition,
those opposed to whoever Marcus decided to adopt in Comedus' place.
Those disgruntled elements,
would likely, as we have seen in other times and places, rally around the overlooked crown prince,
whispering in his ear that it was outrageous and unjust that his birthright had been stolen by some usurper,
and then, voila, voila, civil war. Had Marcus left Cometus both alive and out of power,
we might be talking about that decision as one of the great blunders in history.
And the alternative left to Marcus, the not blunder choice, as it were, meant killing his own
son. Are we really supposed to fault him for not going down that road? Marcus and Comedus arrived
back in Rome in late 176, and the emperor quickly set about promoting his son politically.
The emperor had already granted his son the title Germanicus in recognition of, oh, I guess
the fact that he had been physically present at the front. And now, upon their return to the capital,
Marcus shared his triumphal parade with the young man, and they stood side by side in a gleaming
chariot as the procession made its way through the city.
Probably coinciding with the triumph, though the chronology is a bit hazy, Marcus commissioned his
own triumphal column, an intricate spiral relief monument to rival that of Trajans, telling
the story of Marcus's victories along the Danube.
The column still stands today, and as I hinted, it is one of the key pieces of evidence
we have for putting together a narrative of the Markomanic Wars.
The depiction of the rain miracle is perhaps the most famous panel, but the section
usefully depicting a proto-democratic German Council of War is also often pointed to by
anthropologists of early German history.
As the column winds its way up and the momentum of war shifts away from the Germans, we
are treated to multiple depictions of a larger-than-life Marcus overseeing prisoners, beheadings,
and wailing families.
Today, these panels act as a sort of Roershack test for the viewer, with some claiming to see Marcus playing the part of merciful conqueror offering clemency to the captured, while others see Stoic Marcus playing the part of harsh realist and ordering the executions to proceed.
The History of Rome has posted a few of the more famous scenes from the column on the blog at the History of Rome.tipad.com and invites you to offer your own interpretation.
177 opened with Commodus elevated to an ordinary consulship.
A consulship of particular note, not for anything Comedus did while in office, but because, at
15, he was the youngest consul in the history of the empire.
Just as Hadrian had set a precedent whereby the rules would not apply to Marcus, Marcus himself
followed the same line with Comedus.
For those of you wondering who received the honor of serving as the future emperor's
colleague, it was a nephew of Lucius Vyrus named Plodius Quintillus, who was now married to one of
Marcus's daughters. Quintillus would eventually serve as an advisor to the Emperor Comedus,
and after being ignored in the succession battles that followed his brother-in-law's death,
he would wind up committing suicide in 205 to escape execution at the hands of Septimius Severus.
The peaceful lull that the empire had enjoyed following first the session of hostilities along the Danube,
and then the abrupt end to Cassius' revolt in the east, proved to be just that, a lull, later that year.
When spring arrived, the quad-eye took advantage of the emperor's withdrawal from the north
and began attacking Roman positions across the frontier.
They were soon joined by the Marco Mani, and once again the northern border was awash in bloody skirmishes.
Marcus hoped his presence would not be required,
and that the generals he left behind would be able to bottle up the menace,
as he remained in Rome to focus on administrative work and the all-important task of establishing
his son's legacy. In the summer of 177, Cometus was given the title Augustus, and with the
honorific, the now probably 16-year-old boy found himself elevated to the same level of power
Lucius Verus had enjoyed. Technically, father and son were now co-emperors.
Coins from this period go out of their way to establish the notion of their joint and unified rule.
But as with Lucius, Marcus was still in every way the senior Augusti.
Despite Marcus' hopes, the situation in Germania was refusing to solve itself.
The Germans had learned from the last round of fighting,
and this time refused to offer formal battle to the legions,
choosing instead to use guerrilla tactics to harass the Romans.
As is typical of most asymmetrical wars,
whenever the Romans were able to force a battle, they usually won,
But these brief moments of triumph could do little to stop the never-ending series of demoralizing raids and ambushes and traps that kept the legions harried and skittish.
The situation was quickly spiraling out of control, and after resisting calls for his presence, Marcus finally relented and in 178 began making preparations to return to the front.
his final bit of business before leaving was to hastily marry Comedus to Brutia Crispina,
daughter of a family distinguished mostly for their close connection to the imperial household.
At the age of 56, the always on the frail side Marcus had no way of knowing how much more campaigning his body would be able to handle.
But when he and Comedus left Rome in the summer of 178, Marcus was content in the knowledge that his son was now recognized by everyone as Augustus,
and that he was properly married and ready to carry on the imperial line.
The emperor's foresight would be rewarded, if you can call Comedus' unchallenged ascension
of reward, because when he left Rome this time, it would be for the last time.
In less than two years, Marcus would be dead, and just as he had arranged,
Comedus would face no opposition as he assumed the mantle of sole emperor.
Arriving at the front, Marcus renewed his surprisingly useful alliance with the Azizier.
going so far as to allow them passage through Dacia so they could travel to and from their
traditional homelands, and then set himself to the task of purging the Marco Mani and the quadi
of their hostile tendencies once and for all. As the emperor began to think about how best to
accomplish his goal, he started dreaming bigger dreams than the simple strategy of maintaining
Hadrian's borders had previously allowed him. Liberating himself from Hadrian's cowardice
or prudence or whatever you want to call it,
Marcus began to sketch out a plan to annex one or possibly even two new provinces into the empire,
internally dubbed Marcomania and Sarmatia.
Together, they would have encompassed most of the Czech Republic in Slovakia
and pushed the northern border of the empire into modern Bavaria.
Scholars have long pointed out that the scheme was ludicrous,
and as a result doubt the credulity of sources claiming that wise,
Marcus could have considered such an indefensible, literally indefensible plan. But the patience of the
emperor had apparently run out, and he seems to have just wanted to swallow the entire territory
into the empire so it could be rationally policed and taxed, rather than being allowed to continue
on as a breeding ground for strife and chaos. With the Azigi safely in his corner,
Marcus ordered 40,000 soldiers across the Danube, and the process of conquest was initiated.
The Marco Mani and Quad I refused to offer themselves in battle and continued the guerrilla campaign,
so the Romans methodically worked to sweep and hold every last piece of land until the German armies had nowhere else to hide.
This being no ordinary foreign excursion, the legions began to build stone forts rather than keeping to their mobile camps.
In the late summer, the Romans were able to trap and defeat a mid-sized tribe allied with the Marco Mani.
The captured Germans were marched into Lower Pannonia where they were disarmed and settled.
If this doesn't seem like the worst punishment in the world, you're right.
Other than the shame of being defeated and dislodged from their traditional homeland,
being moved into the empire, with its promise of eventual citizenship, was a pretty good deal.
The settlement reminds us of the toll the Antonine plague had taken on the empire.
The border provinces had become depopulated to the country.
point, that as often as the emperor was looking to destroy the tribes, he was also trying to figure
out ways to resettle them peacefully on Roman land so that they would become industrious new taxpayers.
Indeed, as we'll see in a minute with the quad-eye, Marcus's genocidal bent seems to have given way
to a policy of integration. He no longer wanted to exterminate the Germans. He wanted to make them
Romans. By the winner of 178-179, the quad-eye began to worry that the territorial squeeze Marcus
had ordered was having an effect. Not only were there fewer places to hide, but there was
almost no land to be fought over anymore. In response to the inevitable Roman conquest, the
quad I decided to just abandon the fight and migrate north, where they could make a new life free of
Roman troubles. But though this seems like the sort of thing Marcus would have welcomed, after all,
quadi were essentially seeding him this vast swath of new territory, so awesome, right?
The emperor instead ordered an army led by Maximianus to head the quadi off and prevent their
escape. Had the empire been bursting at the population seams with thousands upon thousands
of potential settlers ready and willing to colonize some new territory, Marcus probably would
have just let the quadi go. But Rome was enduring the opposite plight. In the hardest hit areas,
The plague had cost the empire something like 30% of its citizens.
Not only was there no excess population to be had,
Marcus was trying to fill the empty quarters with German settlers.
So if he just let the quad I walk away,
his new provinces would remain empty and unproductive
and not paying taxes.
Maximiana succeeded in preventing the quadi from escaping,
and in doing so set the stage for the last great battle of the Germanic wars.
The quadi were trapped in desperate,
the Marco Mani just saw their own Roman-dominated future pass before their eyes,
and a third tribe, the Roxalani, were spoiling for a fight
because they were bitter at having been denied all the favorable concessions their cousins the Azegis had won.
Together, they determined that the guerrilla campaign was futile,
and that they needed a decisive victory to prevent complete Roman envelopment.
In April 179, a combined German army faced off against the legions,
and were utterly routed.
The back of German resistance broken.
Once again, Marcus stood on the cusp of total victory.
A few mop-up operations were all that stood between the emperor
and his new province of Markomania.
But once again, fate stepped in to deny Marcus a final crowning glory.
While still encamped along the Danube,
Marcus contracted the Antonine plague in early 180 AD and was forced to his deathbed.
Knowing that the end was near, he refused to linger on as a shell of a man, or, more importantly, as a shell of an emperor, and stopped eating or drinking, content to let death release him from all the mortal burdens he had spent a lifetime attempting to bear.
He implored Comedus to complete the job on the Danube, but his son, who did his best to stay away from his dying and likely contagious father at the end, was already beginning to indulge in his own fantasies about what was good and bad for the empire.
and what was good and bad for Commodus.
In mid-March, Marcus gathered his core of advisors and generals,
a corps who had proved during these troubled decades
to be amongst the most capable men in Roman history,
and implored them to guide Comedus
and give the boy the benefit of their experience and wisdom.
Having done all he could do, Marcus died on March 17, 180 AD.
He was 59 years old, and had been sometimes emperor
and sometimes co-emperor for almost exactly 19 years.
His death will mark a turning point in Roman history,
or at least a turning point in the way we conceive of and tell the story of Roman history.
There would be no sixth good emperor.
The glory and power that was Rome in the second century
would quickly give way to the chaos and destruction that was Rome in the third century.
Though we conveniently point to Commodus as providing some crucial element
in the transition from good to bad from rise to
fall. The fact is that most of the seeds that eventually grew into the crisis of the third century
had taken root during the reign of Marcus Aurelius. Communists may have acted as some kind of
supercharged fertilizer, but it's not like he took an empire at its swinging best and single-handedly
destroyed all that was good in the world. First of all, the migration of the barbarian tribes
beyond the northern frontier, specifically the rise of an interconnected and sometimes ill-defined
people called the Goths, was already putting pressure on the borders in ways never before felt.
From the reign of Marcos on, the Western Empire would find itself under near constant attack
from these barbarian forces who were looking to raid the Empire or settle within the Empire
or conquer the Empire. In the past, the unified and disciplined legions had always been
able to easily mow down the proud but undisciplined warriors of the North, but a new breed
of horde was coming, one that was often led by men.
men who had fought in the legions and who knew how to fight the Roman way, which meant that the Romans were about to lose the one competitive advantage they had always had.
Further, the Antonine plague had sapped the strength of both the legions and the civilian population, reducing the Roman ranks at every level.
Senators were dying, farmers were dying, generals were dying, infantry men were dying, emperors were dying.
Food shortages resulted, reduced tax revenue resulted, and thus an increased tax.
burden on those still alive resulted, and of course the crippling of Rome's military strength
resulted. The problem of manning, feeding, and paying the armies would lead to a disconnect
between the interests of the people of Rome and the interests of its armies, which in turn led to the more
fully developed military dictatorship of the Severan dynasty. Finally, the brief revolt of
Avidius Cassius hinted that the unity between the eastern and western halves of the empire was
beginning to crack. When all is well, everyone loves everyone else. When times get tough,
everyone begins to look at everyone else as the cause of their misfortune. For those in the East,
the Western battles against migrating barbarians was a drain on their resources, financial
as well as human. And for those in the West, the East had become practically an alien world
inhabited by scheming eunuchs and oriental mystics who were destroying the moral fiber of the
empire. It is fair to say,
that commonists did not cause any of this, nor did he cause the decline and fall of the Roman Empire.
Next week, though, we will see what commonists did to exacerbate the situation.
Because though he got off to a good start, a botched assassination attempt early in his reign
would trigger an excess of paranoia.
A paranoia of the young emperor would offset by retreating into a megalomaniacal fantasy world.
