Saturday, January 30, 2010

Augustus Ascendant Part 10


A person of great importance enters into our story here around this time. While Agrippa was subduing the last remnants of resistance to Rome in the west, Augustus was busying himself with the boundaries and rulers of the client kingdoms of the east, along the empire's eastern frontier. His final aim was to have some sort of answer to the Parthian "problem." Augustus decided to use a two-pronged approach with King Frahata of Parthia-one diplomatic, one military or "carrot and stick" diplomacy in other words.

The diplomatic approach fell into Augustus' lap. A pretender to the Parthian throne had kidnapped one of King Frahata's sons and made off to Rome with him. Augustus sent the boy back to his father, thus making the first overture, on the condition that Parthia returned any surviving prisoners of war and the Roman standards lost by Crassus and Antony. While he was attempting to make this deal with King Frahata, a military expedition was formed against the strategically important kingdom of Armenia.

Augustus wanted to depose the anti-Roman King Ardashes and replace him with a client king. If Rome could achieve this and Armenia became a satellite of the empire, the Parthians would have a contentious northern border added to other unfriendly neighbors. Tiberius, aged 22 years and Augustus' stepson was the general he chose to lead his legions against the Armenians in 20 BC. Tiberius was powerfully built and above average height. His body was not only well proportioned but he also had a handsome face with penetrating eyes. Tiberius had long hair at the back of his skull and neck, which was a habit of the Claudian clan.

Tiberius didn't take to religion at all, but he did have faith in astrology, and the motions of the stars and planets in the heavens led him to believe the world was ruled by fate. Tiberius shared the same horror of thunder as Augustus. He would put a laurel wreath on his head when the skies threatened, which Romans believed made them safe from lightning. Tiberius was a scholarly/philisophical type and admired Greek and Latin literature. He adored ancient myths and legends. Tiberius truly sought out and liked to be in the company of professors of Greek literature. He took great pleasure in asking these men arcane and unanswerable questions: such as "Who was Hecuba Queen of Troy's mother?," "What song did the Sirens sing?" "By what name was Achilles called when he was disguised as a girl?"

Tiberius had an elaborate sytle of speaking that was hindered by so many affectations that his spontaneous speeches were thought to be much better than the ones he had prepared.

Turning again to Anthony Everitt's Augustus on page 226: Augustus arranged for Tiberius to enter public life in his late teens; the young man undertook high-profile prosecutions and special commissions, among the latter, the crucial task of reorganizing Rome's grain supply. He acquitted himself well. The princeps was pleased, for he was keen for Tiberius and his brother, the eighteen-year-old Drusus, to share the burden of government. They were to be the packhorses of the regime, for the princeps had not given up his dynastic ambitions. In 20 B.C., Agrippa's union with Julia produced a boy, Gaius. If he survived the multiple potentially lethal ailments of infancy, he could become the heir to the empire, and on this occasion Augustus' old school friend would be hardly likely to object."

Tiberius' first major assignment turned out to be quite easy-for the Armenians deposed and killed Ardashes before the Romans arrived! Tiberius put the crown on the head of the new king ( a pro-Roman exile) himself.

With the takeover of Armenia by a pro-Roman king, King Frahata decided it was much better for him to be at peace with the Romans, and he returned the standards and prisoners. Of course the Roman public would have liked to see the Parthians taken to task militarily, but Augustus, ever the deliberate and forward planning politician had won a great diplomatic victory.

The relationship between the two empires went from absolutely frosty to a level between detente and entente and stayed that way for quite awhile. Augustus gilded the lily just a bit about this event in the official account of his life: "I compelled the Parthians to restore the spoils and the standards of three Roman legions to me and to ask as suppliants the friendship of the Roman people."

Once again unsettling news came from Rome. Now that both Agrippa and Augustus were away the public left one of the consulship seats open in 19 BC and wanted Augustus to take the post. Egnatius Rufus, a man described as "better qualified to be a gladiator than a Senator," volunteered to fill the post himself. When Rufus had served as aedile in 21 BC, he became very popular by creating Rome's first fire service, and payed for it with his own money using 600 slaves. He had been elected praetor the following year. In the eyes of Roman law this was illegal because the rules called for an interim of years between successive elective posts. Rufus's bid for the office was blocked. However, this wasn't the last of the story. It is not known if there is a kernel of truth to this but he was arrested and prosecuted for conspiring to assassinate Augustus. Egnatius Rufus was convicted of this crime and executed.

In Augustus on page 227: Whether there was any truth in this is unknown, but it would not be surprising if the authorities decided to eliminate a great nuisance by inventing a capital charge. Augustus put an end to further agitation and speculation by nominating a second consul for the year.

Thanks once again to anyone following or commenting on this blog. I will try to keep up with this as best I can. I am trying to get over some bad fatigue now and am trying to work on a couple of other projects when I am not tired-but I am trying to make time for everything. All the best to anybody stopping by! The image is a gold aureus picturing Tiberius as emperor on the obverse and his mother, Livia on the reverse.

3 comments:

  1. nice post here Devin... I especially like the "lily" remark on Augustus claiming the Parthians came as "supplicants"... he had a bit of an ego reporting all this eh?

    Hope that you're well and that you get over the fatigue...

    Best to you friend,
    Jon

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  3. Jon-please never ever worry about getting over here to this blog or anything - I have been awful lately about keeping up with friends -i am having some health stuff going on - and sometimes i find the puter isn't connected - if it stays connected today i will try to say hi to you and some others - i am behind once again in research - so it might be a bit before i get anythign new here
    (or at mfm!!)
    i have decided to keep using the Everitt book all the way til the end for Augustus - and a book about the roman empire throughout the whole time-altho on this blog i hope to end after the period of the "5 good emperors" around 180AD-but compared to our scheming friend :-) the others will be "sketches" comparitively- oops offline -lets see if it comes back- will heat up a cuppa while waiting haha
    you have really been spot on with all of your comments -and what i like about your blog and comments is that they make me question things my own notions too-which i think is wonderful-
    In Augustus it seems we have a bit of a megalomaniac- but yet he did have a sense of forgiveness-and held back the reins of what could have been a horrifying reign of state terror-soon to be seen starting late in the reign of Tiberius, of course "little boots" haha-also late in the reign of Claudius- and of course Nero-who finished out the "Julio-Claudian" line as you know-plz forgive me for repeatign things you are well aware of- and talk about a man who plotted each and every step of the way until he reached supreme power!!
    to me -it almost seems as if there wasn't a step he took after the age of 19-that didn't have some element of reaching and keeping power -it is fascinating to me also that as he was always in poor health -the steps he took to begin a dynasty- which he then had to retrace as he kept on outliving his appointed successors!!- in some ways his "arrangements" to make it look as if there was still a Republic are also very interesting to me- he clearly wanted some sense of decency -perhaps a lot of it-especially considering some of the men who came after him-if not most of them until 98 AD to 180AD-in government and accountability too-I am surprised that with a man of Augusutus' introspection and intelligence-that he didn't realize "absolute power corrupts absolutely" -and perhaps he did- i wonder if Augustus had a "crystal ball" so to speak and could see the reign of some of his successors - if he would have made some massive changes in both the Senate and Military -at least due to begin immediately upon his death?
    once again I am not trying to make it sound like he was a great guy or anything- one more thing I had thought of -if there is such a thing as "alternate timelines" I wonder if Agrippa had outlived Augustus-and somehow managed to stay in power for awhile -if he would have tried to restore the Republic?
    best to you as always my friend and thanks so very much for your comments- and like i say never worry about rushing over here-i know you are very busy and don't want a "chainsaw" slip to happen -especially on my account:-)
    your friend always
    Devin

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