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Plut Brut

Plutarch, Brutus

Plut Cat Maj

Plutarch, Cato the Elder [Cato Major]

Plut Cat Min

Plutarch, Cato the Younger [Cato Minor]

Plut Cic

Plutarch, Cicero

Plut Ant

Plutarch, Mark Antony

Plut T & C Grac

Plutarch, Tiberius and Caius Gracchus

Plut Pomp

Plutarch, Pompey the Great

Powell/Welch

A. Powell and K. Welch, eds., Sextus Pompeius

Prop

Propertius, Carmina

Quint Inst Or

Quintilian, Institutio Oratoria

Sall Bell Cat

Sallust, Bellum Catilinae

Sen Contr 10 Praef

Seneca the Elder, Controversiae 10 Praefatio

Sen Suas

Seneca the Elder, Suasoriae

Sen Ep

Seneca the Younger, Epistles

Sen Clem

Seneca the Younger, De Clementia

Serv Ad Aen

Servius, Ad Aeneidem

Stambaugh

John E. Stambaugh, The Ancient Roman City

Strabo

Strabo, Geography

Suet Aug

Suetonius, Life of Augustus

Suet Clau

————, Life of Claudius

Suet De Vir Ill

————, On Famous Men

Suet Gaius

————, Life of Gaius

Suet Galb

————, Life of Galba

Suet Caes

————, Life of Julius Caesar

Suet Nero

————, Life of Nero

Suet Tib

————, Life of Tiberius

Syme AA

Ronald Syme, The Augustan Aristocracy

Syme RR

Ronald Syme, The Roman Revolution

Tac Ann

Tacitus, Annals

Tac Dial

Tacitus, Dialogus de Oratoribus

Val Max

Valerius Maximus, Memorable Doings and Sayings

Varro

Varro, Res Rusticae

Vell Pat

Velleius Paterculus, History of Rome

Virg Aen

Virgil, Aeneid

Virg Ecl

Virgil, Eclogues

Virg Geo

Virgil, Georgics

PREFACE

“most events began” Dio 53 19 3.

INTRODUCTION

The introduction is an imagined narration of Augustus’ death. I take as my premise the proposition that the sometimes extraordinary stories told by the ancient sources are broadly correct, and attempt as satisfactory an explanation as possible. My central assumption is that the regime was, over-whelmingly and rightly, determined to effect as painless a transition as possible from Augustus to his successor. I note that the regime’s obsession with maintaining its power was accompanied by an undeviating patriotism and a willingness to sacrifice personal interests. Although there are problems and implausibilities with the stories, the explanation I offer is, just about, credible. This is how it might have happened. I use Suetonius’ Life of Augustus, especially chapters 97 to 100; Tacitus 15, 6; Dio 56 29–30; Velleius 2102, 123.

“Poor Rome” Suet Tib 21 2.

I. SCENES FROM A PROVINCIAL CHILDHOOD

The main ancient sources for this chapter are Suetonius and Nicolaus. The stories classical writers tell of the childhood of famous men are unreliable. That of Augustus is no exception. Children were of little intrinsic interest to Roman adults and their doings were seldom recorded, so historians devised fictional beginnings appropriate to their subjects’ later lives and propaganda needs. I have tried to weed out obviously legendary material (to which I return when dealing with the period when it was probably invented). Nicolaus knew Augustus, who may have been the source of the more day-to-day events of his early life.

“coin-stained hands” Suet Aug 42.

“came from a rich old equestrian family” Ibid., 23.

bad prognosis This story, told with circumstantial detail in Dio 45 1, may be a later invention by historians and biographers wishing to create an appropriately interesting childhood for Augustus.

“a small room” Suet Aug 6.

“a dignified person” Vell Pat 2592.

“a talking instrument” Varro 117.

“I can prove” Suet Aug 71.

“justly and courageously” Ibid., 32.

many health hazards This paragraph draws on Jackson, especially pp. 37, 42–43, 46.

by his maternal grandmother Nic 3.

Atia won a reputation Ibid.

“We must apply to our fellow-countrymen” Cic De Or 3137.

“There was not a great difference” Castle, p. 129.

“a good man skilled in speech” Quint Inst Or 12 1.

“humble origin” Suet Gaius 23 1.

He may have come from Venetia Syme AA p. 44.

According to Aulus Gellius Aul Gell 16 16 1–4.

born in this perilous manner Pliny 745.

II. THE GREAT-UNCLE

Most of the personal characteristics I ascribe to Julius Caesar, Pompey, Crassus, Cato, and Mark Antony are drawn from the accounts given in Plutarch and Suetonius. Again Nicolaus is useful. Caesar’s own history of the civil war is accurate but self-serving. Appian is valuable.

“From now onward” Vell Pat 233.

optimates I use the English form, for the Latin word can only be used in the plural.

“His dress was” Suet Caes 45 3.

“It was really very difficult” Plut Cat Min 12.

“That cannot be true” Ibid., 19 4.

“Caesar was the only sober man” Suet Caes 53.

“in common with Antony’s” Plut Ant 25.

“provoked by the sight of her” App 58.

“for he often helped others” Plut Ant 43.

they quietly sent Gaius Nic 4.

“Let the dice fly high!” Plut Pomp 60 2.

“the new style of conquest” Cic Att 174c (97c).

“He does not know” Suet Caes 36.

III. A POLITICAL MASTER CLASS

Nicolaus remains a source for anecdotes about Gaius. Plutarch’s and Suetonius’ lives of Caesar throw light on Caesar’s activities, as do Appian and the commentaries on the Alexandrian war and the African war, written by Caesarian supporters. Plutarch’s life of Cato recounts his suicide. Here and elsewhere I am indebted to Michael Grant’s Cleopatra.

“I shall have the whole Senatorial” Dio 45 2 5–6.

“with body and limbs” Suet Aug 79 2.

“He attracted many women” Nic 4.

“he was of age” Ibid.

“The year/Drags for orphan boys” Hor Ep 1121–22.

Alexander the Great’s Macedonian commanders For more on Alexander, see Green, Peter, Alexander of Macedon (London: Penguin, 1974), and on his successors the same author’s Alexander to Actium (London: Thames and Hudson, 1990).