Saturday, June 11, 2016

52 Roman Emperors, Prosperity and Decline

Roman Emperors, Prosperity and Decline

First Emperor, Augustus (27 BCE - 14 CE)

rOMe's empire began more than two centuries before Rome's republic faded into rule by those called emperors, but it is by the name of Roman Empire that the post-Republican phase of ancient Roman civilization is often described.
The first emperor who ruled was Octavius, the nephew of Julius Caesar. He was recognized by the Senate as having authority over all of Rome's military, outside the city of Rome and within Rome. As a tribune for life he was allowed to convene the Senate when he pleased, to lay business before it and to veto its actions, to preside over elections and to speak first at any meeting. Given the powers of a censor, he had the right to supervise public morals and scrutinize laws to make sure they were what he thought to be in Rome's interest. And the title of augustus signified religious authority. Rome's priests were obliged to put him in their prayers.

The first emperor who ruled was Octavius, the nephew of Julius Caesar. He was recognized by the Senate as having authority over all of Rome's military, outside the city of Rome and within Rome. As a tribune for life he was allowed to convene the Senate when he pleased, to lay business before it and to veto its actions, to preside over elections and to speak first at any meeting. Given the powers of a censor, he had the right to supervise public morals and scrutinize laws to make sure they were what he thought to be in Rome's interest. And the title of augustus signified religious authority. Rome's priests were obliged to put him in their prayers.


Augustus made an effort to put himself on the side of the gods by launching a crusade to revive temperance and morality. He tried setting an example by dressing without extravagance and by living in a modest house. He emphasized the worship of those gods he thought had given him victory in battle, among them the god Apollo. He claimed that Rome's gods had given him victory over Cleopatra and what he saw as the monstrous gods of Egypt. He forbade the worship of Isis, and he forbade Druidism and fortune telling. He collected the oracles of Sibyl – the woman believed to have prophetic power by way of Apollo – and he had her writings stored in a newly built temple for Apollo on the Palatine Hill.
Augustus Caesar
Augustus Caesar
Augustus tried to persuade one of the foremost writers of his time, the poet Horace, to create a work comparable to Homer's Iliad that would inspire Romans to the worship of the state's traditional gods and give the Romans pride in their history and their race. Horace was not interested, but the poet Virgil was. Virgil wrote the Aeneid, a story about the gods and the founding of the Roman race, a myth about the Romans having descended from Trojans who had fled the flames of Troy. The god Aeneas was described as the son of the goddess Venus and the Trojan Anchises. According to Virgil, among the descendants of Aeneas was Rhea Silva, who married Mars and gave birth to Romulus and Remus. And Virgil described Julius Caesar as a more distant descendant of Aeneas.
Augustus decided to protect the Roman race. Between 2 BCE and CE 4 he had laws passed that he hoped would reduce inter-breeding between Romans and non-Romans. These laws prohibited an indiscriminate emancipation of slaves, prohibited freed slaves from marrying Latins and prohibited Senators from marrying freed women.

Family Values

The Romans believed in the family, and they agreed that adultery should be illegal. They believed that the virtue of their women helped win their city favor from their gods, and they continued to be disgusted by criminality. Many Romans found pleasure in seeing criminals punished, which was done in the arena, Rome's entertainment center, where convicted criminals were forced to fight against each other or against ferocious animals. Occasionally, convicted criminals ran from the center of the arena, and men at the edge of the arena used hot branding irons to force the unwilling participant back to the contest, while the crowd expressed its disgust with the criminal's cowardice.
With wars having reduced Rome's population to a level lower than pleased him, Augustus saw having children as moral. He used his powers as tribune-for-life to initiate legislation that he hoped would encourage marriage. Infanticide remained legal and at a husband's discretion, but people who remained single or married without children after they were twenty were to be penalized through taxation. To further what he saw as morality, Augustus had prostitution taxed, and he made homosexuality a punishable offense. Adultery remained a crime, but it was no longer commonly punished by death. An adulterous wife and her lover could now be banished to different islands, with the woman obliged to wear the kind of short tunic worn by prostitutes.




No comments:

Post a Comment