The Annals of Aelius -- A History of Rome Under the Julian Emperors

Which writing style should I stick with from here on out?

  • I love reading your mediocre imitation of Latin prose, keep the historian-style

  • The full text gave me suicidal thoughts, TL;DR, stick to the summaries

  • Both is fine, I'm only skimming anyways


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Parthia and Armenia
  • Chronicle of the Eastern Kings
    Et album historia de Oriente regum

    or a history of the East and a list of kings

    The assemblage of courts and patronages in the East is a considerable and ancient collection thereof, and it is not commonplace for any legionaries, governors, or diplomats, to be acquainted with the likewise histories when it ought be commonplace. To this end, I have compiled a chronicle of the regnal periods thereof in the style of the ancient Aegyptian and Aramaic king lists which may be used by Asiaticus in his governorship of Syria as well as by successive magistracies and by the princeps himself. The current state of the Eastern courts is thus:

    King of Kings, Philhellene, King of Parthia, Tiridates III
    Ascended after a revolution overthrew Vonones, the heir to Phraates V, whom had been initially succeeded by his cousin, Orodes III

    King in Osroene, Abgar V of Edessa
    Holding power for the second time after defeating the usurper Ma'nu IV and reclaiming the throne

    King in Adiabene, Izates
    Adopted Jewish son of the previous Arsacid governor, Artaxares, and first sovereign king of Adiabene

    King in Media, Artabanus II
    Succeeded Vonones, the eventual King of Kings, whom had been the Arsacid king there previously

    King in Charax, Attambolos III
    Legitimate son of his predecessor, Abinegros

    King in Elam, Orodes
    Having usurped the lineage of seven successive Kamnaskirid kings

    King in Persia, Pakor
    Son of his predecessor, Vahshir, and descendant of the house of Arsaces

    Parthia.jpg

    The Parthian Empire, the greatest rival to Rome

    Kings of the House of Arsaces, Philhellenes, Kings of Kings and of Parthia, of Mesopotamia, and of the reaches of Asia with their throne at Ctesiphon
    The house of Arsaces, having decisively defeated the house of Seleucus in the consulship of Lucius Caecilius Metellus for the second time and Numerius Fabius Buteo, assumed for themselves the title of “Shahansha”, which in the language of the Persians is reserved singularly for the king above all kings, acquired the throne of the East, under the banner of Arsaces I, and thereafter all men to hold any likewise title was called Arsaces, although this chronicle will refer simultaneously to their princely names, rather than singularly their regnal names in the year which they took power. These kings also retained direct control over the realms of Hyrcania, Abarshahr, Hatra, Elam, Korduene, and India.

    Arsaces I - cos. L. Caecilius Metellus II and N. Fabius Buteo (247 BCE)
    Artabanus I (Ars. II) - cos. Gn. Fulvius Centumalus Maximus and P. Sulpicius Galba Maximus (211 BCE)
    Phruapatius (Ars. III) - cos. Ap. Claudius Pulcher and M. Sempronius Tuditanus (185 BCE)
    Phraates I (Ars. IV) - cos. A. Hostilius Mancinus and A. Atilius Serranus (170 BCE)
    Mithridates I (Ars. V) - cos. Q. Aelius Paetus and M. Junius Pennus (167 BCE)
    Phraates II (Ars. VI) - cos. P. Popillius Laenas and P. Rupilius (132 BCE)
    Artabanus II (Ars. VII) - cos. L. Cassius Longinus Ravilla and L. Cornelius Cinna (127 BCE)
    Arsaces VIII - cos. M. Aemilius Lepidus and L. Aurelius Orestes (126 BCE)
    Tiridates I (Ars. IX) - cos. Gn. Domitius Ahenobarbus and G. Fannius (122 BCE)
    Mithridates II (Ars. X) - cos. L. Opimius and Q. Fabius Maximus Allobrogicus (121 BCE)
    Gotarzes I (Ars. XI) - cos. L. Marcius Philippus and Sex. Julius Caesar (91 BCE)
    Arsaces XII - seized power in the same year from Gotarzes I
    Mithridates III (Ars. XIII) - cos. L. Cornelius Sulla Felix the Dictator and Q. Pompeius Rufus (88 BCE)
    Orodes I (Ars. XIV) - cos. L. Cornelius Sulla Felix the Dictator II and Q. Caecilius Metellus Pius (80 BCE)
    Sanatruces (Ars. XV) - cos. D. Junius Brutus and Mam. Aemilius Lepidus Livianus (77 BCE)
    Arsaces XVI - seized power in the same year from Sanatruces
    Phraates III (Ars. XVII) - cos. Gn. Pompeius Magnus the Triumvir and M. Licinius Crassus the Triumvir (70 BCE)
    Arsaces XVIII - cos. M’. Aemilius Lepidus and L. Volcatius Tullus (66 BCE)
    Mithridates III (Ars. XIX) - cos. L. Aurelius Cotta and L. Manlius Torquatus (65 BCE)
    Orodes II (Ars. XX) - cos. P. Cornelius Lentulus Spinther and Q. Caecilius Metellus Nepos (57 BCE)
    Pacorus (Ars. XXI) - cos. L. Aemilius Lepidus Paullus and G. Claudius Marcellus Minor (50 BCE)
    Phraates IV (Ars. XXII) - cos. Ap. Claudius Pulcher and G. Norbanus Flaccus (38 BCE)
    Tiridates II (Ars. XXIII) - cos. Imp. Caesar Divi f. Augustus IV and M. Licinius Crassus (30 BCE)
    Mithridates IV (Ars. XXIV) - cos. M. Valerius Messalla Appianus and P. Sulpicius Quirinius (12 BCE)
    Phraates V (Ars. XXV) - cos. Imp. Caesar Divi f. Augustus XIII and M. Valerius Messalla (2 BCE)
    Orodes III (Ars. XXVI) - seized power from Phraates V in cos. L. Julius Caesar Vipsanianus and P. Vinicius with the aid of Musa, the former wife of Phraates IV and herself a powerful patron in the Arsacid court (4 CE)
    Vonones (Ars. XXVII) - cos. T. Statilius Taurus and L. Norbanus Balbus (17 CE)
    Tiridates III (Ars. XXVIII) - cos. M. Cocceius Nerva and Mam. Aemilius Scaurus (21 CE)

    Maps_of_the_Armenian_Empire_of_Tigranes.gif

    The modern political situation in the East, which came about after the Mithridatic Wars

    Kings of Osroene, Arabian vassals to the King of Kings and victors over Crassus and Antonius with their throne at Edessa
    The house of Osroes were originated in their powers at the fall of the house of Seleucus at the behest of both Parthia and Armenia, as well as Pontus, which at that time gave patronage to a great multitude of eastern kings. The kings thereof descended from a sect of the Nabataeans which had migrated into Mesopotamia and were likewise known to speak Greek and Aramaic in addition to their native Arabian languages. The Arabs are most notable in our histories for their slaughter of Marcus Crassus, his son, and his legions at Carrhae and they have since been thralls to the Arsacid court, whom themselves have leveraged the vulnerability of the realm to depose numerous kings including Abgar V of Edessa, whom in addition to reigning concurrently with his august prince Germanicus had been deposed in the consulship of Postumus and Metellus Creticus.

    Aryu - cos. P. Popillius Laenas and P. Rupilius (132 BCE)
    Abdu - cos. L. Cassius Longinus Ravilla and L. Cornelius Cinna (127 BCE)
    Osroes Fradhast - cos. P. Manilius and G. Papirius Carbo (120 BCE)
    Bakru I - cos. M. Aemilius Scaurus and M. Caecilius Metellus (115 BCE)
    Bakru II - cos. M. Livius Drusus and L. Calpurnius Piso Caesoninus (112 BCE)
    Ma’nu I - cos. G. Coelius Caldus and L. Domitius Ahenobarbus (94 BCE)
    Abgar I Piqua - seized power from Ma’nu in the same year
    Abgar II the Traitor - cos. L. Caecilius Metellus and Q. Marcius Rex (68 BCE), victor over Crassus
    Ma’nu II - cos. Gn. Pompeius Magnus III and Q. Caecilius Metellus Pius Scipio (52 BCE), victor over Antonius
    Paqor - cos. M. Antonius the Triumvir II and L. Scribonius Libo (34 BCE)
    Abgar III - cos. Imp. Caesar Divi f. Augustus V and Sex. Appuleius (29 BCE)
    Abgar IV Sumaqa - cos. Imp. Caesar Divi f. Augustus VIII and T. Statilius Taurus II (26 BCE)
    Ma’nu III Saphul - cos. Imp. Caesar Divi f. Augustus XI and Gn. Calpurnius Piso (23 BCE)
    Abgar V of Edessa - cos. Q. Haterius and L. Passenius Rufus (4 BCE)
    Ma’nu IV - cos. G. Vibius Postumus and Q. Caecilius Metellus Creticus (7 CE)
    Abgar V of Edessa - seized power from Ma’nu IV in cos. Dr. Claudius Nero and G. Visellius Varro (13 CE)

    330px-Transcaucasia_2nd_BC.jpg

    Kings in Media, themselves in union with the Arsacids and vassals to the King of Kings with their throne at Ganzak
    The Median throne of Atropatene was among the royal houses which emerged following the death of Alexander. The dynasty was founded by Atropates, whom himself was the satrap of Media, and revolted against Antigonus in the consulship of Titus Vetrurius Calvinus for the second time and Spurius Postumius Albinus Caudinus for the second time. However, the ensuing anarchy in the East left the Medians without sufficient written records for the next century, and thus the regnal chronicle will begin a hundred years later.

    Atropates - cos. T. Vetrurius Calvinus II and Sp. Postumius Albinus Caudinus II (321 BCE)
    --No record for the next century--
    Artabazanes - contemporary of Antiochus III Magnus beginning in cos. P. Cornelius Scipio Asina and M. Minucius Rufus (221 BCE)
    --Another gap in our records exists for the next century and a half--
    Mithridates - came to power as a contemporary of Tigranes Magnus in cos. G. Calpurnius Piso and M’. Acilius Glabrio (67 BCE)
    Darius - cos. L. Aurelius Cotta and L. Manlius Torquatus (65 BCE)
    Ariobarzanes I - seized power from Darius in the same year
    Artavasdes I - cos. Gn. Cornelius Lentulus Marcellinus and L. Marcius Philippus (56 BCE)
    Asinnalus - cos. Imp. Caesar Divi f. Augustus III and M. Antonius the Triumvir III (31 BCE)
    Ariobarzanes II - cos. Imp. Caesar Divi f. Augustus XI and Gn. Calpurnius Piso (23 BCE)
    Artavasdes II - cos. L. Julius Caesar Vipsanianus and P. Vinicius (4 CE)
    Artabanus I - cos. A. Licinius Nerva and M. Aemilius Lepidus (6 CE)
    Vonones - cos. Imp. Caesar Dr. Divi f. Augustus Germanicus III and Ger. Julius Caesar (10 CE)
    Artabanus II - cos. G. Vibius Marsus and L. Voluseius Proculus (18 CE)

    Unknown.jpeg

    Kings and Philhellenes of Charax, themselves vassals to the King of Kings with the throne at Spasinou whom were frequently subsumed in their imperia by the Shahs of Parthia during the numerous interregna
    The realms of Characene, or Charax as it is called by the Greeks who inhabit it, emerged with their royal house, the house of Aspasine, from the auspices of the satrap of Babylon during the reign of Antiochus IV Epiphanes. They have thenceforth enjoyed a privileged position in Mesopotamia and have frequently incurred the wrath of the kings of kings in their insubordination. Thusly, the regnal chronicle of this realm is punctuated by interregna during which the kings of kings have assumed direct patronage over this realm in retribution against their Greek vassals.

    Hyspaosines - cos. L. Cassius Longinus Ravilla and L. Cornelius Cinna (127 BCE)
    Apodakos - held power from cos. M. Minucius Rufus and Sp. Postumius Albinus to cos. G. Marius and L. Aurelius Orestes (110 - 103 BCE)
    --Interregnum of eight years during which time Mithridates II, the King of Kings, was also the king in Charax
    Tiraios - held power from cos. L. Licinius Crassus and Q. Mucius Scaevola to cos. Gn. Pompeius Strabo and L. Porcius Cato (95 - 89 BCE)
    --Interregnum of ten years during which time Arsaces XII was king in Charax for one year, Mithridates III was king in Charax for eight years, and Orodes I was king in Charax for a further year before reinstating their autonomous rights, while each of these also held the title of King of Kings
    Tiraios II - held power from cos. P. Servilius Vatia Isauricus and Ap. Claudius Pulcher to cos. G. Julius Caesar the Dictator II and P. Servilius Isauricus (79 - 48 BCE)
    Artabazos - seized power from Tiraios II in the above year and held it for one year
    Attambalos I - held power from cos. Q. Fufius Calenus and P. Vatinius to cos. Imp. Caesar Divi f. Augustus X and G. Norbanus Flaccus (47 - 24 BCE)
    --Interregnum of five years during which time Tiridates II was the king in Charax while also reigning as the King of Kings
    Theonesios - cos. G. Sentius Saturninus and Q. Lucretius Vespillo (19 BCE)
    Attambolos II - cos. G. Furnius and G. Junius SIlanus (17 BCE)
    Abinergaos - cos. Imp. Caesar Drusus Divi f. Germanicus Augustus III and Ger. Julius Caesar (10 CE)
    Attambolos III - cos. Imp. Caesar G. Divi f. Augustus III and M. Aurelius Cotta II (23 CE)

    Unknown-1.jpeg

    Kings in Elam, themselves vassals to the King of Kings and successors to the Elamite lineage of time immemorial
    Elam is believed to be the most ancient lineage in Asia, drawing their histories from a time preceding the Chaldeans and Assyrians. They were conquered by the house of Achaemanes in the time of the Conflict of the Orders before their later conquest by Alexander and the house of Seleucus. They threw off this yoke during the time of the Macedonian Wars and have been under the rule of the house of Kamnaskires ever since, with numerous of their rulers bearing the same name, and the Kings of Kings have shown deference to their sovereignties in the succeeding centuries.

    Kamnaskires I Megas Soter - cos. P. Cornelius Scipio Africanus Aemilianus and G. Livius Drusus (147 BCE)
    Kamnaskires II Nikephoros - cos. Q. Cornelius Scipio Aemilianus and L. Hostilius Mancinus (145 BCE)
    Okkonaspes - cos. Gn. Calpurnius Piso and M. Popilius Laenas (139 BCE)
    Tigraios - cos. M. Aemilius Lepidus Porcina and G. Hostilius Mancinus (137 BCE)
    Darius - ruled for less than one year while claiming to be a descendant of the last Achaemanid king in cos. P. Popilius Laenas and P. Rupilius (132 BCE)
    --Interregnum during which time Vadfradad I, king in Persia, and his immediate successors, held dominion over Elam
    Kamnaskires III Megas Nikepohorus - rebelled against Vadfradad III in cos. L. Cornelius Cinna III and Gn. Papirius Carbo (85 BCE)
    Kamnaskires IV - ruled jointly with his wife, Anzaze, beginning in cos. G. Marius Minor and Gn. Papirius Carbo III (82 BCE)
    Kamnaskires V - cos. M. Terentius Varro Lucullus and G. Cassius Longinus (73 BCE)
    Kamnaskires VI - cos. G. Julius Caesar the Dictator III and M. Aemilius Lepidus (46 BCE)
    Kamnaskires VII - cos. Imp. Caesar Divi f. Augustus VI and M. Vipsanius Agrippa II (28 BCE)
    Kamnaskires VIII - cos. G. Julius Caesar and L. Aemilis Paullus (1 CE)
    Kamnaskires IX - cos. M. Vipsanius Agrippa Postumus and L. Scribonius Libo (15 CE)
    Orodes - cos. Imp. Caesar G. Divi f. Augustus V and M. Vipsanius Agrippa Postumus II (25 CE)

    persianempire.jpg

    The location of Persis within the old Persian Empire

    Kings of Persia of the house of Bazrhangi and successors to the house of Achaemenes, themselves vassals to the King of Kings with their throne at Persepolis
    After the fall of the house of Achaemanes at the hands of Alexander, the house of Seleucus was unable to fully wrest control of the Persian homeland from the newly established royal house. These men did not record the precise breadth of reigns with respect to their subsequent overlordships, and thus their regnal chronicle is imprecise and it is inappropriate to use the traditional calendar, and I will thuswise employ generalities in this respect. The chronicle of Achaemanid kings is likewise included with the subsequent interregnum.

    Achaemanes - vassal to the Chaldeans, ascended in 48 ab Urbe condita, or reg. Numa Pompilius X (705 BCE)
    Teispes - son of Achaemanes, reg. Ancus Marcius II
    Cyrus I - son of Teispes, reg. Ancus Marcius XVII
    Chambyses I - son of Cyrus I, reg. L. Tarquinius Priscus XXXVI
    Cyrus II Magnus - son of Chambyses I, reg. Ser. Tullius XXV (559 BCE)
    Chambyses II - son of Cyrus II, reg. L. Tarquinius Superbus V (530 BCE)
    Bardiya - usurper after the early death of Chambyses II, reg. L. Tarquinius Superbus XII (522 BCE)
    Darius I - nephew of Cyrus II, seized power from Bardiya in the same year
    Xerxes I - son of Darius I, cos. Ser. Cornelius Maluginensis and Q. Fabius Vibulanus (485 BCE)
    Artaxerxes I - son of Xerxes I, cos. Q. Fabius Vibulanus II and T. Quinctius Capitolinus Barbatus III (465 BCE)
    Xerxes II - son of Artaxerxes I, cos. Trib. Ap. Claudius Crassus, L. Sergius Fidenas II, Sp. Nautius Rutilus, and Sex. Julius Iulus (424 BCE)
    Sogdianus - brother of Xerxes II, seized power in the same year
    Darius II - brother of Xerxes II and Sogdianus, cos. G. Sempronius Atratinus and Q. Fabius Vibulianus (423 BCE)
    Artaxerxes II - son of Darius II, cos. Trib. G. Valerius Potitus Volusus III, Gn. Cornelius Cossus II, M’. Sergius Fidenas, P. Cornelius Maluginensis, K. Fabius Ambustus, and Sp. Nautius Rutilus III (404 BCE)
    Artaxerxes III - son of Artaxerxes II, cos. G. Fabius Ambustus and G. Plautius Proculus (358 BCE)
    Artaxerxes IV - son of Artaxerxes III, cos. L. Furius Camillus and G. Maenius (338 BCE)
    Darius III - grandson of Darius II, cos. L. Papirius Crassus and K. Dullius (336 BCE)
    Artaxerxes V Bessus - usurper, cos. L. Papirius Crassus II and L. Plautius Venno (330 BCE)
    Alexander Magnus - conquered Persia in cos. L. Aemilius Mamercinus Privernas II and G. Plautius Decianus (329 BCE)
    --Alexander died in cos. G. Sulpicius Longus II and Q. Aemilius Cerretanus and Persia fell under the regency of Perdiccas, followed by Antigonus, before their conquest by Seleucus
    Vahbarz I - led a revolution against the Seleucids at the time of the Samnite Wars
    Baykard - capitulated to a reconquest by the Seleucids, although they allowed the Persian royal house to remain in power as satraps
    --The precise officeholders in the satrapies are not recorded for the intervening period--
    Baydad - satrap of Persia during the time of the War with Hannibal
    Ardashir I - satrap of Persia during Macedonian Wars
    Vahbarz II - re-established sovereignty in Persia from the Seleucids after the Syrian Wars
    Vadfradad I - son of Vahbarz II and ruler of Persia during the Third Punic War, he married into the Arsacid family at this time
    Vadfradad II - came to power in cos. G. Laelius and Q. Servilius Caepio (140 BCE)
    Syknit - seized power from Vadfradad II around the time of the tribuneship of Ti. Sempronius Gracchus
    Darev I - reigned concurrently with the successive consulships of G. Marius
    Vadfradad III - reigned concurrently with the Mithridatic Wars
    Daraev II - son of Vadfradad III and reigned concurrently with the Civil Wars
    Ardashir II - brother of Daraev II and ruled after his premature death
    Vahshir - brother the the previous two kings and seized power from Ardashir II concurrently with the accession of the divine Augustus
    Pakor (Pacorus) - son of Vahshir and descendant of Arsaces XXI, came to power in cos. L. Apronius and M. Servilius (12 CE)


    I will be publish a number of historical manuscripts in the coming years, which I have compiled during my great tenure in Syria and Cappadocia, which I hope will preserve this knowledge for use by the republican auspices for our descendants and successors.

    By Tiberius Julius Caesar Germanicus, son of the divine Drusus and brother to Caesar
     
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    Scythia
  • Report on the Far Reaches of Europe and Asia
    Negotiis et Bosporon et alius proximus quasque

    or the affairs of the Bosporan Kingdom and the neighboring nomadic peoples

    crimea-and-ancient-scythia.jpg

    An approximation of the inhabitants of inland Europe at the time of our stay in Chara

    The king of the Bosporus, originally called Aspurgus Dynamis, has acclimated to the secured patronage of our imperatorship over their estates by his embrace of a civilized name. He is thenceforth called Drusus Julius Aspurgus Philoromaios, the latter of which refers to his love for Rome itself. This did not ingratiate him to his subjects, although the court at Chara has followed suit in their nomenclatures, adopting such names as Gaius, Claudius, and Tiberius. In this fashion, they style themselves as Roman citizens, although their efforts remain concentrated on their northern neighbors, rather than any concerted effort at the integration of their society into our own. They trade their wares in league with the Pontics and the Bithynians, but there is scarcely another port which might see their vessels more than once in a year.

    They greatly fear the cavalry hordes which emerge with considerable force every few years from the sea of grass on the Pontic steppe, whereafter they vanish from view with equal haste. The first of these barbarians were the Scythians, whom have in recent decades subsided their vigor to make way for the Sarmatians, whom themselves hail from the area to the North of Colchis.

    However, we have also held court with numerous overland traders, whom have divulged numerous occurrences from the farthest reaches of the Earth. A man who calls himself Diocles, a Greek by birth from the city of Olbia, has traveled by horse to traffic in salt and amber to the numerous reaches of Asia, and he has reported the following:

    The Germans themselves do not possess a mastery of Europe after the limits of the Albis. Rather, the bulk of Germans are provincials, and their numbers beyond our borders are paled by the Dacians or the Scythians with whom they share numerous properties.

    To the North of the Bosporus there are a multitude of peoples who speak through grunts and hunt along the rivers of their realm. These people, the Venedi [1], are believed to have descended from Hercules, whose labors saw him travel the circuit of the Earth, and they are thuswise imbued with a warrior spirit which bids them hostile to any travelers unfortunate enough to lose their way in the untamed woods of Borealis.

    To the East of the Bosporus, and to the North of the Sarmatians, lie the fabled Thyssagetae and the Argippaei, whom are relatives of the Scythians and traffic the finest horses of the steppe, native to a land far to the East ruled by a people called the Songi [2], whom themselves labor in a boundless struggle against the decadent and infirm peoples further South, along the shores of the Great Oriental Sea [3].

    The Parthians have also engaged in traffic with the various travelers from the boundless steppes, through the medium of their clienteles in Chorasmia and Bactria. In fact, some believe that the Parthians themselves came from this desolate place, which has caused their great envy of Rome and their hostilities thereafter.

    If the mighty Caesar wishes us bid any further wills at the court of the Bosporus, we have the fullest confidence that the Rex Drusus Aspurgus might engage in strict deference to his will thereafter, and in any other circumstance it might surely take but a few cohors and a handful of triremes to reduce the kingdom into their servitude.

    By Paullus Julius Germanicus Libertas Fronto and Claudius Antonius Drusus Libertas Primus

    *****
    [1] Proto-Slavs
    [2] The Xiongnu, or possibly the Huns
    [3] China, obviously
     
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    Aethiopia and the Orient
  • Inference on the Wider World by Cartographers and Merchants
    Negotiatores universique scruta aurum et ab Aethiopia et ab oriente homines

    or a report on the traffic of gold and persons from Aethiopia and the East

    800px-MapHymiariteKingdom.jpg

    Trade routes around Arabia and the Horn of Africa

    1430100469-122_india1AD.jpg

    India on the eve of the rise of the Kushan Empire

    The-Silk-Road-overland-and-maritime-routes-The-overland-and-maritime-commercial-routes.png

    The silk road, which was in full swing around 30 CE
     
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    Volume Six -- Birthright Throne
  • Volume Six - Birthright Throne
    Translated by Clodius Theodoricus Alexander, MDXXXII ab Urbe Condita for the Imperial Universities at Alexandria, Carthage, and Utica

    I would like to begin this installment by expressing my personal condolences for the loss of the Imperial University at Byzantium to the invasions of the Eastern confederacy, and for those that were able to escape to Carthage and Utica, the costs of this translation will be borne by the ministry in Alexandria. The ongoing war is hard on all of us, especially after the death of the emperor, and we can only hope that the new joint emperors, Paullus Aquilla and Galerius Germanicus are up to the task of manning this ship of state. In any case, this and later translations, as well as all earlier installments of these annals will be transcribed and sent to every imperial university in the hopes that they will survive with the chronicles of later rulers, even in the event that the Empire itself falls into disarray once more. We have survived crises such as these before, and there is no reason that we cannot complete such a feat a second time.

    getty-lead.jpg

    A recreation of the villa in Sardinia to which Gaius I retreated after his deposition during the Julian Schism

    We know in hindsight that the reign of Gaius I was merely a stop-gap during the long and prosperous Drusillan dynasty which lasted from the accession of Drusus to the early death of Appian more than a century later, but at the time in which Volume Six takes place, this was far from certain. Germanicus Invictus, who had spent considerable time in the provinces and away from Rome before his ascension, fought resistance at every turn. Volume Six, which covers most of his reign, will establish this dynasty, and set the tone for the next century of Rome, which will see the conclusion of these Annals and their continuation by Callistus.

    Chronicle of Volume Six (780 - 793 AUC)

    Germanicus began his reign by awarding many honors to his allies from the civil war. His comrades-in-arms, Gaius Aviola and Valerius Asiaticus were granted consulships and prestigious legionary commands in the early years, and the powerful men who took his side in that struggle would be consistent members of his inner-circle for the duration of his reign. However, behind the scenes, Germanicus engaged in a nonviolent, but considerable, purge of the praetorian guards to rid their ranks of any dissenters. The second year of his reign however, drew great controversy when he arranged for the election of twelve consuls in the span of a single year. Several of these men were allies of him and his family, including Domitius Ahenobarbus, Servius Galba, and Aulus Plautius. However, several of them were not appeased by these token magistracies, and the political upheaval from this year would have far-reaching implications in the subsequent years. In particular, many of the Julian family disengaged from politics at this time, including Germanicus’ younger brother, Tiberius, as well as Lucius Caesar, brother of the previous emperor.

    The next few years would be marked by Germanicus taking a considerable and direct effort to engage the younger members of the Julian family, including his own sons, with the politics of the imperial government. Both his eldest sons, as well as the sons of Agrippa, would serve consulships at this time, and subsequently would spend many years serving commands in the legions. However, Germanicus was wary of the charisma and influence of Agrippa, which had only grown since the Julian Schism, and so he sent him to serve a command in Africa where he might be satiated yet politically marginalized.

    Another fixture of Germanicus’ early reign would prove to be the reform of the structure of legionary commands. A key fixture of his own rise to power was the contradictory imperium of the various legates and proconsuls serving in the imperial provinces. In order to tame this unwieldy and potentially seditious apparatus, he sought to centralize legionary commands of each region of the empire under a central regional command. This was first undertaken in Germania to great effect, where an escalating war against the Marcomanni would serve as a fertile testing ground. The legions, commanded first by Marcus Vinicius, then Lentulus Scipio, and later Gaius Aviola and Junius Blaesus, prosecuted a war against the Germans with brutal efficiency. The Marcomanni, whom had been the aggressors against the Pannonia garrison, were routed northward, where the legions of Cisalbis intercepted them as part of a unified command theatre. After three years of consistent fighting, the Marcomannic king would be assassinated and several legions would be garrisoned in barbarian territory to defend against future threats. This war would prove a fertile proving ground, not just for the legionary commanders of Germanicus’ inner-circle, but also for the young rising stars of imperial politics, including Domitius Corbulo and Gaius Silius, who were friends of Drusus.

    However, the region of Illyricum would soon be gripped by another devastating revolt. The provincial governors in the Balkans, led by the ex-consul Naevius Surdinus, revolted against the martial reforms of Germanicus, which saw themselves stripped of military command in favor of a more professionalized officer corps. The revolt rapidly engulfed the region, and Germanicus’ allies were forced to flee to Italy where a loyalist expeditionary force began to assemble. Germanicus himself traveled with this expedition to quell the rebellion, which he viewed as a severe threat to his regime. Initial successes in Noricum and Pannonia were followed up by a decisive two-pronged invasion of Dalmatia which saw the revolutionaries turn on one another and the war was over as quickly as it had begun. However, Germanicus would quickly learn on the heels of this victory that all was not well in Italy in his absence.

    Agrippa had returned to Rome and was resentful at being sidelined by Germanicus after assisting his rise to power. He assembled a group of similar malcontents and, when they seized control of the highest magistracies, they addressed the senate and denounced the regime of Germanicus. This second revolution, consisting of Agrippa’s family, their allies, the leftovers from Gaius’ regime, and several old senatorial stalwarts, quickly seized control of Rome and the surrounding countryside with illegally levied legions. Many allies of Germanicus were murdered as they tried to flee the city, and the remnants of the Julian family fled, including Felix Pius and Marcus Rufus, the sons of Gaius Augustus. These Julians rallied a number of veterans into two impromptu legions which were joined by a token force withdrawn from the garrison in Germania and in winter of the next year, they crossed the Rubicon.

    This next civil war was as brief as it was brutal. Germanicus’ second son, Vopiscus, had snuck into Rome and was leading an armed citizens’ insurrection against Agrippa, which resulted in the untimely deaths of both of the consuls for that year. Agrippa saw the installation of Aulus Gabinius and Octavius Laenas as consuls, but this would prove to be a fatal mistake as these men opened the gates of Rome to the besieging legions of Felix Pius. The bloodshed was considerable, and Agrippa as well as Lucius and both of their sons were killed. Most surprisingly, Agrippa’s second son, Antonius Agrippa, took part in the massacre as a legate under the command of Felix, and this drew considerable controversy as he betrayed his father to serve his patron.

    When Germanicus arrived back in Rome, he resolved to put the traumatized city at ease from the bloodshed of the last ten years by implementing a monumental reform effort. The censors and consuls together worked to appoint a ten-man “decemvirate” which would be set forth with the task of rationalizing the laws of the later Republic with those of Augustus and Drusus in order to form a more coherent governing structure of the empire. The two men at the forefront of this effort would be Marcus Cato and Sextus Marius, both of whom boasted noble ancestries. The most notable of these laws made official what Germanicus’ efforts had established as a largely informal system. The legions would be commanded by a body of officers wholly separate from the provincial governors, who would be confined to judicial and administrative matters. Most crucially, these laws established a new and powerful magistracy — the praetor patriae — who would oversee all treason trials and serve a unique, eighteen-month term. With this new administrative apparatus, Germanicus could rest easy and re-allocate his attention to grander plans.

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    Gaius (left), the third princeps, next to his brother, Lucius in a statue commissioned by Lucius to be displayed in Rome
     
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    Book 22: 28-29 CE
  • Liber Sextius ——— DCCLXXX ad DCCXCIII Annos ab Urbe Condita
    Book Twenty Two - Germanicus and the Senate


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    The imperial palace at Rome, which hosted Germanicus and his entire family, along with Lucius, Agrippa, and their sons in the center of Rome

    —In the consulship of Germanicus Julius Caesar Invictus for the Second Time as Augustus and Gaius Calpurnius Aviola…
    The stewardship of the Empire passed from the House of Agrippa to the House of Drusus. Caesar spoke to the auspices of his inauguration before the assembled curia and the senate, “The Republic has weathered a monumental conflagration, and numerous of the tribes assembled here have seen their patres familia cast either thusly out by my uncle in his imperium or by brigands in the stead of legions. These brigands, though they act in kind, shall not be made to govern the gates of this great city, and I will thenceforth act that laws and efforts be made to see these men return to their households, to their wives, and to their estates. For mine is not a reign of terror, and suits thenceforth might not tried nor names proscribed on the Forum walls, but rather might, as I hope will be, a concert of wills that might heal these wounds to which the city has been subjected.”

    His co-consul, Gaius Aviola, was selected by the curia in the previous year in the absence of any other candidates, as the consuls designate, Gaius Augustus and Publius Vinicius, had each fled the city and vacated their offices. However, Aviola was hated by the senate, as he had been among the first to have risen in arms against their promagistrates in Galatia, although the advocates of Caesar had conferred upon him much goodwill and the compliance of Gaius Cassius, the consul suffectus of the previous year with Gaius Marcellus. Having leveraged the compliance of the senate, Caesar sought to recall his erstwhile supporters to Rome. His cousin, Drusus Nero, and his brother Tiberius returned to the city at this time, as did many of his friends, such as Servius Sulpicius Galba and Sextus Pompeius. When Caesar offered to his brother to share in the consulship with him the next year, Tiberius refused, expressing his fatigue at his exposure to the political intrigue of the preceding years. He thusly withdrew from public life and into a life of scholarship, whereafter he published a number of historical works regarding the East, wherein he had spent a considerable portion of the intervening years.

    Caesar likewise resolved that his sons might travel to Hispania, as he had in his youth, to receive military training in the fashion of their father, that they might assume the consulship at the earliest reasonable juncture. To this end, he entrusted Appius Junius Silanus, the suffect consul of the previous year whom had opened the gates of Rome to Caesar’s legions, to ensure the safe travel of his eldest three sons, Drusus, Tiberius, and Gaius, with many other young men with relations to the family of Caesar. This included Decimus Laelius Balbus Minor, whose father had twice been consul, and Lucius Aemilius Paullus, both of whom had been the children of Julia, the daughter of Agrippa, by different fathers.

    While in Rome, Caesar had stepped down from his consulship and been replaced by Lucius Antonius, whom was a cousin of Caesar by his mother, Antonia and her brother, Jullus Antonius, whom had previously been consul. At the urging of Caesar through his freedmen advisors, Antonius and Aviola arrange for the election of the censors who would replace Severus and Piso, whom had been the censors appointed by Gaius, although Severus and Piso would not be tried or exiled but would merely be stripped of senatorial rank. In their place would be elected Marcus Cocceius Nerva, the consul of seven years prior, and Marcus Junius Silanus Torquatus, the consul of twelve years prior to the censorship, both of whom were fathers-in-law of Agrippa’s eldest son, Marcus Aquileanus, and Caesar’s second-eldest son, Tiberius Vopiscus, respectively.

    Caesar spent the last portion of the year traversing Italy in an inspection of the Praetorian castra. The men who would be made prefects, Gaius Rufinius Florus and Publius Scribonius Postumus, whom had previously served as notable tribunes among the praetorians, made knowledgable to Caesar which of their men were loyal to the elder Gaius and whom might rally behind his sons, Lucius Felix Pius and Marcus Rufus, whom were still in Rome at this time. These men were dismissed entirely or otherwise given minor assignments in dispersed locations far from Italy such that they might not want towards revolution against the lawful Caesar. This was executed to the fullest extent of Caesar’s wishes, and he returned to Rome imbued with further confidence in the security of his regime and would concentrate forthright on further matters of consolidation in the city.

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    One of the numerous consular inaugurations of the year

    —In the consulship of Germanicus Julius Caesar Invictus for the Third Time as Augustus and Lucius Junius Silanus…
    There was a crisis of leadership among the consular legates in the provinces. The Schism had provided a great catharsis of leadership among the Empire, with numerous loyalties now in question, and Caesar was not confident in his security thereafter. Cornelius Dolabella remain proconsul in Germania Cisalbis, as did Asiaticus in Syria and Cappadocia, however Caesar feared the tenuous loyalties of the governors in Moesia and Illyricum. He firstly resolved that the province of Illyricum might be partitioned such that the Pannonians might be governed independently of the Dalmatians and that no single proconsul might administer greater than three legions thereby. However, the number of men of consular rank whom might possess both the martial skill and personal loyalty that Caesar desired was insufficient in his foresight. To this end, he divined a solution, with the help of the augurs Lucius Marcus Philippus and Lucius Verginius Rufus. With the aid of the censors, Caesar would install a number of men as consul in the same year such that the senate might not incense themselves by witnessing an affront to the stipulations of proconsular office.

    Thusly, Caesar resigned his consulship on the Ides of Januarius and elected Aulus Plautius, whom was a young ex-praetor of excellent repute whom had commanded a legion of Marcellus during the Schism, as his replacement. Plautius, whom was a friend of Lucius Silanus, the consul posterior, became a trusted advisor of Caesar, as there was an urgent matter that commanded the attention of Caesar at Rome. Drusus Nero, the first cousin of Caesar by birth, had considerable difficulty recultivating his network of informants after Gaius Augustus had uprooted them in the consulship of Gaius Augustus for the sixth time and Faustus Sulla. This, coupled with the inexperience of Caesar with the politics of Rome posed a threat to his position in the city, and should he leave, Gaius Augustus might return from exile, or one of the other numerous princes might seize the principate by force of arms.

    To this end, Caesar conferred with Lucius, whom had withdrawn into forlorn exclusion with his complicity in the exile of his brother and the bloodshed thereby. Lucius himself sought no further ambitions, as he had been twice consul and grown cynical toward the bloodshed on his hands, and when he was greeted by Caesar, he cast him away, “What have you for me, bloodied Caesar? I have all things, and you have all things, yet we clamor for that which we lost on this path. Do not pity me as service to your ends, nor draw my nephews and sons as pawns in this, the greatest of games. You own all things in this decadent city, but in here I am the imperator invictus, and you shall not wander indiscriminately as you do in these streets, wearing the same fashioned togas of your uncle, and father, and grandfather before him. For though you are the styled master of the world, you shall not come here again, nor shall your envoys, lest they appear bearing wine.”

    Caesar, frustrated at the noncompliance of Lucius, turned again to Drusus, whom had recovered his relations with numerous patricians and equites whom had silently opposed Gaius Augustus in the preceding years. Drusus thusly acclaimed the valor of numerous plebeian families whom had become citizens during the reigns of the divine Drusus and Augustus. Caesar thus resolved that a number of these men might be enrolled among the senatorial ranks, and the censors added the numerous men of the Salvii, the Aelii, the Fulcinii, the Annii, and other gentes to the senatorial rolls, and extended patronage thereafter. Their tasks completed, news of a mutiny among the legions in Pannonia incurred Caesar to dispatch Lucius Silanus thereafter, as the governor in the province, Sextus Pompeius, had been unable to quiet the mutiny, as he had at the mutiny in Moesia previously. In his place, Lucius Fulcinius Trio, whom was a friend of Drusus, was elected consul posterior on the Ides of Martius.

    During this time, Caesar had corresponded with his sons and their advisors while they were in Hispania, and they recommended a number of citizens from the province for enrollment in the senate, and Marcus Silanus the censor obliged this. Within the year, the patri familii from the provinces of Baetica, Lusitania, and Narbonensis were enrolled into the senate and quaestors. These included Quintus Baebius Macer, Gaius Annius Rusticus, Aulus Pomponius Milo, Servius Rufidius Crispus, Marcus Umbrius Vindex, and Publius Aelius Rufus, all of whom would continue their cursi honora to become praetors and consuls, along with numerous others.

    However, Caesar at this time became fearful of Agrippa, whom had remained at Rome in the year since the Schism and was a man of considerable respect and prowess among the patricians at Rome due to his great length spent within the city between his first and second consulships. In particular, the relationships which he shared with Gaius Cassius, the consul of two years prior, Sextus Pompeius, the governor of Pannonia and the consul of nineteen years prior, and Marcus Nerva the censor worried Caesar in his foresightedness, as all of these were men of high repute as well as relatives of his children by marriage, as a courtesy of Drusus Augustus. Caesar sought that he might not force any divorces upon this family as it might act to galvanize these senators and their clienteles against him, so he devised a plan that might mitigate the influence of Agrippa while simultaneously acquiring his influence upon the senate. Caesar made a great effort to encourage Nerva to assign Agrippa to the proconsulship of Africa, which had previously been assigned to himself and which entailed the accruement of great wealth. He likewise encouraged that his sons might remain at Rome where they would receive the utmost charitable treatment, including consulships for each of them in the forthcoming years. He furthermore awarded a consulship suffectus to Lucius Cassius, the brother of Gaius Cassius, on the Kalends of Junius, such that Gaius might welcome the charity of Caesar.

    The first of these designs saw great fruition, and Agrippa accepted his assignment with grace, albeit tempered by some reluctance, as he was no fool and foresaw the political marginalization that his proconsulship might entail. Furthermore, at their assigned dates, Lucius Cassius Longinus and Gaius Sallustius Passenius Crispus assumed their consulships, while Aulus Plautius and Fulcinius Trio departed to assume the proconsulships of Syria and Cappadocia, whereas Asiaticus departed for Rome, where he was due to marry the daughter of Caesar, Julia Agrippina. However, Lucius Cassius did not assume his consulship kindly, and was openly cynical of the relevance of his own office, as he was an idealist whom longed for the republican order which was long dead. He resigned his consulship after only seventeen days, in spite of the protestations of his elder brother, whereafter he would be replaced by Marcus Licinius Crassus Dives, whom was the father-in-law of Marcus Rufus, the younger son of Gaius Augustus, although Rufus himself was in Campania at this time. Crassus Dives, the descendant of the triumvir, was also the brother-in-law of Lucius Calpurnius Piso, the censor of Gaius Augustus, and was thusly a man of high repute, despite his considerable miserliness, and he had borne many children which themselves married many patricians of considerable status, including the descendants of Marcus Antonius the triumvir, Lucius Cornelius Cinna the consul, and Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus the triumvir.

    Crassus’ tenure as consul saw his realization with a legislative agenda by which he might secure greater powers for the senate among the provinces, as he was deeply ingratiated among the ranks of the senate and sought greater influence for his comrades. He sought that senatorial promagistrates might be made to levy cohors for their provinces among the less quiescent frontiers of the Empire, such as Lusitania and Cilicia. However, Caesar was not tolerant toward these, and interposed his tribunician personage upon the bill, condemning it to the decrepit fate of so many likewise initiatives of the republicans. Crassus, having expended considerable effort at the passage of this and like bills, resigned his consulship in embarrassment, as did his colleague Crispus, although they were lauded with considerable valor by the senate and granted commands in Moesia and Dalmatia, which they accepted with grace and relief. In their place, on the Kalends of September, Quintus Junius Blaesus, the son of the consul, and Lucius Rubellius Geminus, brother of the exiled praetor whom allied with Gaius Augustus during the Schism, were made consuls.

    Caesar was realized, at this time, with a desire to partition the final bloc of legions over which any single proconsul might wield authority. The province of Germania Cisalbis housed six legions, a number of which had been effectively commanded by Marcellus in insurrection against Gaius Augustus. Caesar desired that no general might repeat this act, and resolved that Cisalbis might be partitioned by a border perpendicular to the Albis. The northern portion, which would house three legions, would retain the name Germania Cisalbis, whereas the southern would come to be called Germania Angiliensis, after the largest colonia in the province, the Colonia Augusta Drusilla Angiliorum, or simply Angiliorum. The governor of the province erstwhile, Cornelius Dolabella, was recalled to Rome, where he would serve as a senator and a partisan of Caesar, for Caesar’s earlier use of his tribunician power had enraged many senators, and there had since been whispers of passive resistance, which Caesar feared might escalate in his forthcoming absence from Rome.

    Before Dolabella had even arrived at Rome, Quintus Blaesus and Geminus were dispatched to Germania to assume their proconsulships. In their place, Gnaeus Domitius Ahenobarbus, whom was the first cousin of Caesar by birth and the son of the consul, and Servius Sulpicius Galba, whom had been Caesar’s most vocal ally in the senate during his exile, were made consuls on the Kalends of September. Their consulships passed uneventfully, as the climate of the city had become tense and uneasy, and the senate feared openly challenging Caesar, although they fumed in silence. Galba left to assume the proconsulship of Cappadocia on the Kalends of November, and the final consul suffectus for the year, Marcus Vinicius assumed his office. The two consuls oversaw the election of the eldest son of Caesar, Drusus Germanicus, and the eldest son of Agrippa, Marcus Aquileanus, to a joint consulship in the next year, and they departed for Tarraconensis and Coloniensis respectively. Caesar was uneasy, particularly with the tenuous loyalty of Gaius Petronius, the prefect of Aegypt, whose brother had been an ally of Gaius Augustus during his exile. He resolved that his guard might be heightened, so that no senatorial conspiracy might unseat his birthright office.

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    A concise consular list for 781 AUC
     
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    Book 23: 30-32 CE
  • Book Twenty Three - Coming of Age

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    Marcus Aquileanus, the eldest son of Agrippa, and consul for the year

    —In the consulship of Drusus Julius Caesar Germanicus and Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa Postumus Aquileanus…

    Caesar wished that his sons might confer upon themselves the greatest legitimacy possible, and thus did not recall Drusus to Rome, but rather conferred him to Pannonia that he might aid Lucius Silanus in his quelling of the mutiny of the Danuvian legions. Sextus Pompeius, whom had twice commanded mutinous legions, but was in spite of this a personal friend of Caesar, had been recalled to Rome to serve in the senate, as he did not command the respect of his own legions. Lucius Silanus was likewise not an imposing man. Rather, he was patient and calculating, but not ambitious, which is the reason he was entrusted by Caesar with imperium over the crucial province. However, his men were also wise to this spinelessness and thus did not respect him in kind. The arrival of the son of Caesar, however, imposed upon the centurions a reverence and respect for the imperial insignia.

    His co-consul, Marcus Aquileanus, was considerably less active at his post in Rome. He was enlisted by Caesar, by the overwhelming authority of his own presence to impress upon the senate a number of reforms to the college of augurs, whom by this time were only enlisted for the annual inaugurations of the urban magistracies. At this time, there were a number of auguries which were fulfilled by the lesser sons of the patrician gentes at Rome. Chief among these men were Lucius Valerius Catullus, Gaius Caecilius Metellus Scipio, and Titus Manlius Torquatus, although Caesar wished that this pontificate magistracy might assume a clientele to his personage. To this end, in his capacity as the pontifex maximus, he increased the number of auguries from fifteen, where it stood in the consulship of Sulla for the second time and Metellus Pius, to twenty-five, appointing ten new men to the auspices, although the lex Servilia, which limited each gens to the occupation of a single auspex, would remain in place. Among these men appointed to the office were a number of men related to the family of Caesar at Rome. Among these men were Lucius Domitius Ahenobarbus, brother of the consul from the previous year, and Decimus Laelius Balbus, whom was the nephew-in-law of Caesar. Furthermore, several young men of notable ancestry were elevated as well, including Marcus Porcius Cato, Gaius Sempronius Longus Licinianus, and Lucius Verginius Rufus, all of whom were descended from the great men of the end of the Republic.

    Caesar likewise took this juncture to consolidate his influence over the remainder of the Julian family. He was particularly fearful of Rufus and Felix Pius, the sons of Gaius Augustus, whom were rumored to have corresponded with their father in his exile through the medium of freedmen clients. Caesar did not fear these young men directly, as they themselves were barely greater than twenty years of age, however, he feared that powerful senators might leverage their ancestries in revolution should Caesar ever leave Rome. To this end, he recalled Rufus to Rome where he would live with Lucius and his son, Gaius Solus, at the imperial palace whereas Felix Pius would see court with Drusus in Pannonia. This would enable the clients of Caesar in that province to monitor his correspondence, and likely held designs upon his life that might be more easily concealed by the uncertainties of war.

    However, anticipating this pilgrimage, Caesar tasked a number of his trusted freedmen, including Paullus Julius Fronto and Claudius Antonius Primus to advise Drusus in Pannonia while accompanying Felix Pius as envoys and escorts. Gaius Aviola, the consul of two years prior, would also accompany this mission with his clients Gaius Sillius Nerva and Quintus Ostorius Scapula. Caesar was comforted at these developments, however he was troubled by the consistent requests from Agrippa, whom was still in Africa, that his sons might be returned to him, which at the present time acted as Caesar’s greatest leverage against the second most powerful citizen of the Empire.

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    The peoples of Germania (pink being Roman clients)

    —In the consulship of Lucius Arruntius Camillus Scribonianus and Lucius Naevius Surdinus…
    The Suebic peoples on the further banks of the Albis, having sufficiently recovered their combat capable numbers from the considerable engagements they had undertaken with the legions, and thus sought further engagements thereby. To this end, a number of legionaries serving as scouts based at the Colonia Julia Augusta Albiensis were ambushed by such brigands and killed or imprisoned during the winter months of the year. Marcus Vinicius, the proconsul of Angilia, assembled his legions thereafter in retaliation. Although a number of the officers thereof feared a repetition of the Gallian disaster. Vinicius, after encouragement from a number of his freedmen whom had been assigned to him by Caesar, established a formal bureau which might task individual commanders with autonomous tasks during the forthcoming campaign. The broad strategic objectives thereof would be governed and decided upon by Vinicius himself, whom would likewise also be responsible for the appointment of legati to head the six legions which would execute the campaign.

    Vinicius tasked a number of his auxiliary cohorts selected from among the Germans to act as gatherers of information with respect to their barbarian foes. These, and like efforts made by traffickers in amber being paid by the provincial treasury, would be commanded in all tasks by a young, ambitious, and ruthless equite named Quintus Naevius Sutorius Macro, whom had seen employ among the Praetorian cohorts which defected from the employ of Gaius Augustus during the Schism. This information which he enjoyed from these operations would be passed to the ranking officer below Vinicius, Gaius Aviola, whom would act on such intelligence to plan and execute the forthcoming campaigns in his capacity as the magister concilium. Two more men, Quintus Junius Blaesus, the consul of two years hence and the proconsul of Cisalbis, and Gaius Julius Arminianus, whose father had been a German auxiliary, would be tasked with the expedient conscription and training of a new legion, the XIII Germanica, and the associated auxiliae, which would complement the expeditionary legions. This council of five men would oversee the campaign against the Sueves to its conclusion, as granted by the imperial auspices of Caesar.

    Likewise, as Drusus made himself familiar with the legions of Pannonia, Caesar ordered that two new legions be levied thereby. To this end, Lucius Silanus assembled a number of young and capable patricians whom had left Rome with the entourage of Drusus and assigned them as a multitude of legati to his own legions. Likewise, the capable freedmen advisors to Caesar, Paullus Fronto and Claudius Primus, would receive similar command authority, and the remainder of the year was spent in preparation for the forthcoming campaigns.

    However, an administrator of considerable merit, Drusus Julius Sabinus, whom was the procurator of Coloniensis, rallied a considerable number of auxiliaries to a mutinous banner against Caesar, with whom he shared no courtesies. Vinicius tasked Arminianus with the suppression of these revolutionaries, which he was able to execute without considerable effort. Arminianus’ length of service among the auxiliae and the legions in the province lent him considerable harmony with the provincial inhabitants as well as the terrain. The mutineers were besieged at Colonia Visurgium, whereupon a number of their number of decrepit loyalties abandoned their demagogue in the midst of the attrition. Sabinus, after learning of this, fell upon his sword and his thralls were dispersed into the countryside, whereupon their auxiliary cohors were disbanded, and a number more were levied from among the Gauls and deployed to the German provinces.

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    Legionaries rally in a defense of Pannonia

    —In the consulship of Tiberius Julius Caesar Vopiscus Germanicus and Decimus Valerius Asiaticus…
    The expedition into Germania on the further side of the Albis commenced. The agents of Sutorius Macro had reported the deployment of a large number of Sueves encamped along the hither banks of the Viadrus River with their families, chiefs, and pack animals which numbered in the order of fifty-thousand. Three legions, under the command of Lucius Sentius Saturninus and a young patrician named Lucius Salvius Otho, whom themselves were subordinated to Lucius Rubellius Geminus, the consul of three years hence, disembarked the Albis with full speed in the fullest of their armaments. In this, they were intercepted by a number of foraging parties which were parried in their feeble arms, although they alerted the larger assemblage of barbarians to the approach of the legions. Their imperator, a man of Suebic ancestry named Patriovarus, resolved that they must remain mobile or else wise be met by the full might of the legions upon unfavorable terms, and thus he gathered the men of fighting age among his band and forwent the rest. The legions, on their arrival at the Viadrus learned of this and pillaged the remaining encampments thereby, and the surviving women and children fled into the surrounding areas, although a number were drowned in the frigid river in their flight.

    Meanwhile, at Rome, the consuls for the year, whom were the son and son-in-law of Caesar, saw considerable discomfort at their postings. Tiberius Vopiscus, whom was growing into a man of energetic and adventurous character in the mold of his father and grandfather, wished that he might return to a deployment in the legions, as he had become accustomed to this life during his years in Gaul and Hispania. Likewise, Asiaticus feared that a number of senators had desires upon his estates and reputation, as he was from Gaul, and was viewed by the senate as a foreigner upon their rostra. His marriage to Agrippina the younger, whom was the favorite daughter of the wife of Caesar, helped in this, as Agrippina the elder was well liked among the senatorial ranks, and entertained a number of them at the imperial household. However, Caesar made known to them that the primary object of their attentions might be Marcus Rufus, whom remained active within the city and was a man of considerable vigor and determination, and remained distant from the court of Caesar. The elder Drusus would aid them in these and like efforts, which sought the pacification of the fractious political order that the city had undertaken in recent years. Undertaking efforts of the same vein, Caesar elected to assign a suffect consulship, in the place of his own son, Sextus Tedius Valerius Catulus, whom was the nephew-in-law of Tiberius by his son Livius’ marriage to the sister of Catulus. Tiberius however, would not respond to these pontifications, and remained stoically resident at his villa North of the Campus Martius.

    Vopiscus was incensed at his father for his premature dismissal from the consulship, as Drusus the younger had been awarded to the full duration of his term despite departing the city before its expiration. However, Caesar and Agrippina had jointly conferred and resolved that Vopiscus might aid them in the accumulation of support from a number of Italian patricians whom had grown disinterested at politics in the interim. The descendants of the first Praetorian prefect, Publius Salvius Aper, had achieved senatorial rank, and Vopiscus would spend considerable time at their estates, as their paterfamilias, Publius Salvius Glabrio, was married to his sister-in-law, Junia Lepida.

    However, the security of the Empire was compromised in part when the Marcomannic tribes under the stewardship of the young king, Norbalus, raided the legionary castra on the Danuvius and considerably thereafter to the South of that great river. The commanders in that province, Lucius Junius Silanus and his brother, Appius, had assembled a confluence of officers in the mold of Vinicius’ martial council. Lucius Silanus would assume the general imperatorship whereas the magisterships thereunder would be assigned to Gaius Octavius Laenas, whom was a distant cousin of Caesar, the younger Domitius Ahenobarbus, and Lucius Antonius, the consul of four years prior. The rapid response of the Pannonian legions were able to disperse the marauders at the Battle of Aquinicum, where the swift charge of Drusus the younger dispatched the Sarmatian cavalry under Norbalus’ employ, and in the aftermath, Caesar ordered that three new legions be levied for a forthcoming unified campaign against the Germanic peoples.
     
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    Book 24: 33-35 CE
  • Book Twenty Four - Chaos in the North

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    Drusus Nero, the first-cousin of Germanicus and elder censor for the year

    —In the consulship of Gaius Sentius Saturninus and Antonius Vipsanius Agrippa Postumus…

    Caesar would set about the reformation of the provincial legions to imitate those undertaken by the Albian and Pannonian legions. The legions in Hispania, Moesia, Syria, and Africa would be appointed additional officers superior to the legati thereof each with tasks pursuant to the effective general operation of the legions. To each of these postings, he assigned a cohort of consular men whom might act with consular imperium there over with the consent of Caesar in such matters as military intelligence, recruitment of auxiliaries, and the payment of legions such that the individual powers of proconsular governors might be diminished. To these ends, he assigned a number of men to the imperatorships in the provinces thereof. To the imperatorship of Hispania, he tasked to Lucius Norbanus Balbus, the consul of sixteen years prior, where he would oversee the legions of Lucius Cassius, whom was the proconsul of Tarraconensis in that year. Elsewhere would Publius Cornelius Lentulus Scipio, the consul of thirty-one years previously be made the commander of Germania, wherefore he would oversee in his imperatorship the commands of Marcus Vinicius and Lucius Silanus for the duration of their campaigns against the Germans. Likewise imperatorships would be awarded to Gaius Vibius Marsus in Syria, Agrippa in Africa, and Livienus Regulus in Moesia whereupon they would install the clients of Caesar as the magistri thereunder.

    Having secured his control over the provincial legions, Caesar set about establishing the new censors in their posts. Nerva and Torquatus resigned and were awarded legionary commands in Hispania thereafter. In their place, Sextus Pompeius and Drusus the Elder would be elected to the venerable office. The ceremony accompanying this inauguration was one of the few public events where Lucius might be seen with his young son, Gaius Solus. Solus himself was rapidly becoming a popular entertainer among the patricians at Rome, hosting a number of parties at the imperial palace with the consent of Caesar, whom was also Solus’ father-in-law. Pursuant that he might win the favor of Lucius, whom remained wealthy and influential within the political circles of Rome, Caesar elected that Solus serve as a suffect consul for the month of Quintilis and the months thereafter at his twentieth year, and Caesar’s nephew-in-law, Lucius Cornelius Sulla Felix, would serve as a suffect consul in the interim. The consuls Gaius Saturninus and Antonius Agrippa would be dispatched to Pannonia that they might aid in the preferment of the campaign against the Germans.

    Two days before the Nones of Quintilis, Lentulus Scipio arrived at Angiliorum and conferred with the imperatores resident thereby. Periodic raids by the Sueves had incurred the embarkment of two legions thereafter, but thenceforth the expedition had been stalled at a temporary castrum on the Vidarius. Lentulus Scipio traveled with his concilium to the front and drilled the erstwhile legions into the fittest shape for combat with the Germans. Lentulus Scipio then sent orders to Lucius Silanus in his castrum wherefore he assumed command thereof as well. He ordered a secondary campaign, including the three legions levied in the previous years, begin northward in retaliation against the Marcomanni and their king Norbalus, whom were believed to be casting lots with the Sueves in their transgressions. The Marcomannic forces, having been routed in the previous year at Aquinicum, continued their flight northward, engaging the legions of Silanus only in periodic sparring as Norbalus sought to lengthen the distance between their forces. However, Lentulus Scipio engaged thereafter in a march to the south with three legions, where they might encircle the Marcomanni, whom themselves numbered on the order of twenty-thousand, and their superior numbers, including approximately seven legions and their auxiliae, might overwhelm the barbarians. The Marcomanni retreated to a series of forts on the slopes of Mons Tanibus proximate to the castrum at Colonia Limitaniensis whereafter the legions encamped for the winter, and laid siege to the barbarians thus forth.

    For the duration of this tenure encamped among the number of the Marcomanni, Drusus conferred with a number of the officers resident concurrently. The multitude of young officers which grew restless in their attrition, including Gnaeus Domitius Corbulo of the Legio XV Apollonaris, Lucius Salvius Otho of the VIII Hispanica, and Gaius Sillius Nerva of the I Augusta, sought decisive action with the support of the elder magistrate, Sutorius Macro. The imperator thereover, Lentulus Scipio, was not swayed by this conference of young men, despite the assurances of Macro, as Lentulus Scipio himself was wary of the presence of Paullus Fronto, whom had established contacts within the legionary and provincial command offices. The presence of Felix Pius, whom was becoming a man of patient and cunning character, was being closely monitored by the swelling assemblage of persons tasked by the freedmen of Caesar, and the tensions in the castrum of Lentulus Scipio would only exacerbate over the course of the unfolding campaign.

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    The funeral procession for Sextus Caesar, approaching the Temples of Concord and Saturn behind the Rostra

    —In the consulship of Marcus Junius Silanus Torquatus for the Second Time and Decimus Laelius Balbus Minor…
    The city of Rome was cast into a state of mourning at the death of Sextus Caesar, Caesar's fourth son by Agrippina. Having become stricken with an illness in the previous winter, he succumbed in spite of the efforts of numerous Greek physicians whom had been assembled at Rome. The great multitude of the senate and people of Rome gathered themselves in the Forum wherein a procession of the praetorians led by Caesar and Agrippina escorted the body of the princes to his funeral pyre. Caesar himself became stricken with grief and closed all public businesses and disbursements until the Kalends of Februarius had passed. However, the lieutenants of Caesar among the senate had assembled a quorum of attendance such that a consultum was passed in amendment to the Lex Claudia, which had been authored by the Divine Drusus. This consultum, the chief sponsor of which was Balbus the consul, allowed exemptions to be made with respect to the Lex Claudia, which itself entitled the descendants of the Divine Augustus to various honors and magistracies. This action was undertaken such that any of the Julian princes openly desirous against the regime of Caesar might be muted in their aspirations. In compensation for this compliance with the agenda of Caesar, Balbus was assigned to the proconsulship of Africa in the stead of Agrippa, whom himself was recalled to Rome, with Caesar having acquiesced to his precipitous contest of command therein. In the place of Balbus, Publius Quinctilius Varus, the son of the censor, was elected to the posterior consulship.

    In the intervening months, the ranking magistrates in Illyricum, Appius Silanus and Crassus Dives, had executed the levies ordered by Caesar. The Legiones II Julia, IV Civilis, and VIII Classica had been assembled at Dalmatia and encamped thereupon. Likewise, the legions of Camillus Scribonianus, the consul of three years hence, and Titus Aelius Geminus, whom had served as praetor in the previous year, had assembled into battle order at Mutina. These legions would be joined in command by Titus Flavius Sabinus, whom had served as the envoy and procurator of Caesar to the Britons since the consulship of Scribonianus and Surdinus, and whom had thus become learned with respect to the combat capabilities of the northmen.

    At the arrival of the spring thaw, the Marcomanni disengaged from their fortifications and fled through a succession of escarpments which had become cleared of snow and debris. Their multitude, which had been purged of the ill and weak elements by the harsh alpine winter, marched with all due urgency into the country of Noricum, wherein they possessed a number of allies. However, the realm of Noricum had been flush with the clients of the Caesars since the time of the Divine Julius, whom had shown them great favor during the Gallic and Civil Wars. When the marauders passed through the northern reaches of that country, they were supplied by a few, but refused entry and resupply by the broad plurality thereof, as the Noricans had received word of the legions in pursuit. Lentulus Scipio had disembarked likewise and the mass of legions laid waste on their route to any towns or settlements which had been purported to have lent aid to the barbarians in their transgressions. However, a number of self-important Noricans were able to leverage the trust with which they were possessed by the legions and destroy their rivals through false rumors of collusion. The end result of this was that the whole of the landed estates in Noricum were possessed by only a few persons, many of whom were citizens.

    Simultaneously, the legions under the command of Scribonianus had transited the Alps and descended upon the horde of brigands with great haste, because they had disengaged their baggage procession at the foot of the mountains. The Marcomannic swarm, being unfamiliar with the country of Noricum, encamped upon a large plain fixed in the space between two highlands, whereupon the multitude of legions pursuing them enclosed upon them and encamped thereby, dividing their number between the high ground and the southern transit of the valley. After a time spent in equilibrium, the Germans had reached a state of such want for provisions that they assembled in battle order and sought to engage the might of nine legions and the accompanying auxiliaries on unfavorable terrain. The legions joined them in battle in the midday hours two days before the Nones of Quintilis, first with their cavalry, only making contact with their cohorts once the Marcomannic cavalry was engaged. In spite of their superior numbers and rigor of resolve, the unmatched discipline of the legions broke the barbarian flanks and they were overwhelmed in short order. A large portion of their numbers were felled under force of arms, but their leadership, among whom was Norbalus and his family and entourage. The legions elected to encamp upon the nearby Siluvitian Fields and replenished their strength while gathering supplies and intelligence for a final, decisive engagement. During this time, the younger Drusus cultivated a friendship with Antonius Agrippa and Claudius Primus whereupon they resolved that they might seek the favors of the elder Caesar and supremacy at Rome.

    Meanwhile, the agents of Sutorius Macro, whom were based at Carnuntum, became learned of designs by Norbalus which had been rallied to the multitude of the Quadi, being led as they were by the son-in-law of Norbalus, a man named Carpores. Norbalus sought that their strength might reinforce their own after their numerous losses to the legions, and the agents of Macro reported this with great haste. Macro consulted with the magister consilium, Gaius Aviola, whom was incurred immediately by Lentulus Scipio that he might campaign in a preemptive fashion against the multitude of the Quadi. They were dispatched in short order from their assemblage along the banks of the Poravis River whereafter they were consolidated by Carpores into a decisive confrontation with the legions at the foot of the Tertamian Hills. Their warriors were once again routed by a maneuver undertaken by Gaius Saturninus, the consul of the previous year, and Aulus Pomponius Milo, whom had served as praetor in the consulship of Scribonianus and Surdinus. The martial skill of these men, as well as that of Drusus and his compatriots was noted by Caesar, and they were thus forth lauded with titles and honors from the largess of the state.

    However, the fates would not be satiated at the deaths of Sextus Caesar and the elder Balbus in that year. The rigors and stresses of the year’s campaigns had taken their toll upon the officers in Germania, and the imperator thereof, Lentulus Scipio, fell ill and died in the embrace of his subordinates in the twilight hours of November. Aviola was raised to the rank of imperator germaniae in his place whereupon he would be possessed of overall command of the fifteen legions on campaign therein in varying capacities from their castra in Pannonia, Angilia, and Cisalbis. Caesar furthermore sought that the supplies being transited to the legions in that country might be more secure, and thusly decreed, by avenue of the senate, that the country of Noricum might be made constituent to the provinces of the Empire. This was not met with resistance on their part, as the Noricans had been stable subservients to the Empire for three generations, and their elites had long possessed numerous rights and privileges. Caesar dispatched Quintus Servilius Fimbria, whom was a friend of Agrippa and had been praetor in the previous year, to fulfill the governorship thereof. Furthermore, in his foresight and wisdom, Caesar recalled Lucius Paullus Lepidus, his nephew-in-law by Agrippina’s sister Julia, to Rome where he might serve as an agent of Caesar among the patrician circles therein, as he was borne of the respected families of the Aemilii as well as the Julii.

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    Norican auxiliaries being trained in the fashion of Roman legionaries

    —In the consulship of Paullus Aemilius Scaurus Terentianus and Gaius Galerius for the Second Time…
    Agrippa returned to the city of Rome to reunite with his eldest son, Marcus Aquileanus, and was received by the senate and people with great fervor. His allies among the senatorial class had become restive in the interim, having themselves become politically marginal within the regime of Caesar. This cohort of men included such senators as Sextus Valerius, the consul of three years hence, and Servius Cornelius Cathegus, the consul of eleven years hence, whom had themselves been deprived of any further honors in spite of their loyalty to Caesar. Likewise, the sons of Vibius Marsus, the consul of seventeen years hence, whom were surnamed Pullo and Lamia and had served as quaestors in the consulship of Gaius Augustus for the seventh time with Pollio, were folded into this nascent coalition, as they had been marginalized by the regime of Caesar along with the sons of Pollio, Servius Celer and Asinius Agrippa. These latter two were also cousins of Agrippa by his half-sister Vipsania whom had married Asinius Gallus, the consul of forty-two years hence. With the deaths of Balbus and Nerva, the former censor, the constituency of the senate was one which was vulnerable to those whom were desirous that they might undermine the regime of Caesar. To this end, during a session of the senate during which Agrippa was present, he lauded the heroism of Galerius and moved that he be rewarded for his second consulship with the governorship of Macedonia. Caesar and his allies, among whom were the censors Pompeius and the elder Drusus, concurred with this motion, as the sitting proconsul Titus Manlius, had embezzled upon the public treasuries and Caesar wished to try him by the judgement of his peers. Galerius, though he had become comfortable at Rome, accepted this post with grace and caution, as he was a man of patient and calculating character who sought to exploit his new post, although not with the same reckless abandon as his predecessor in this capacity. He had departed Rome by the Kalends of Maius and Paullus Lepidus was made consul in his place.

    While such actions were undertaken at Rome, Aviola continued to prosecute the campaign against the Marcomanni. As the legions laid waste to their towns and villages, the various elements of nobility among the barbarians grew discontented with the leadership of Norbalus. He was assassinated in short order by this ambitious cohort of his lieutenants, and a man named Cervinus assumed imperatorship over the Marcomanni. He thenceforth laid down the arms of the barbarians and extended a tribute of hostages to Caesar; his brother, Sarcova was likewise made king of the Quadi and the unrest along the upper reaches of the Danuvius were pacified.

    But elsewhere, the Germans in the vicinity of the Suebic Sea, including the multitude of the Saxi, the Teutons, and a number of other Sueves, conducted periodic breaches of the imperial terminus to traffic in amber and hostages. The proconsul of Cisalbis, Junius Blaesus, sought that he might engage these highwaymen, and furthermore achieve the fullest retribution for the loss of Vipstanius Gallus’ campaign of eight years hence. To this end, he assembled a consilium including Cossus Lentulus and Appius Hirtius, whom had both served as officers in Vinicius’ campaign against the Sueves in the consulship of Saturninus and Postumus. They rallied the legiones V Alaudae, VIII Hispanica, and XIV Gemina Victoria in the castrum at Albion and disembarked in the early days of Aprilis. The supremacy and dominance of the legions was reinforced during the forthcoming months as warmongering bands of brigands were dispatched into the wilderness with their homesteads in flames. The success of this campaign incurred Caesar to install Blaesus as the imperator over Cisalbis, Angilia, and Coloniensis as well as the numerous legions therein. In this capacity, Blaesus coalesced the legions in Marcomannicum, which had been pacified, into their northerly castra such that any retaliatory measures undertaken by the Sueves might be cast onto desperate grounds without a sufficient multitude for any further transgressions. Likewise, the previous imperator, Gaius Aviola, was made the administrative prefect of the castrum at Mutina.

    However, given that at this time a great mass of legions had concentrated in the North, a great conspiracy of senatorial governors materialized among the lower Danuvian provinces. This rebellion was undertaken as a great backlash against the administrative reforms enacted by Caesar which bifurcated the martial roles in the provinces from those which were purely bureaucratic. At the head of these treasons was Naevius Surdinus, the consul of four years hence, whom was the governor of Illyricum and his colleagues serving in Pannonia, Cornelius Balbus, the grand-nephew of the consul, and Domitius Calvinus, whom had each served as praetors and then as legati, but whom had each been denied the consulship by Caesar in spite of their noble ancestries. Also among the traitors was the propraetor, Servilius Fimbria, whom had levied a large militia of loyal auxiliae in the preceding year. The Illyrian governors accumulated by means of bribery and gifts of offices, a number of officers and centurions who might command the loyalty of the legions, including Licinius Murena, whose father had served in the Illyrian legions during the consulship of Nerva and Lepidus. It remains uncertain whether the designs of these traitors were to depose Caesar and restore the commonwealth, to install Surdinus as the princeps, or to pressure Caesar to return direct military commands to the governors. What is known is that on the Ides of Junius, the legions on the Danuvius mutinied against their commanders, among whom were the elderly Livineius Regulus, the consul of sixteen years hence, Servius Galba and Crassus Dives, whom had both been consuls six years hence, and Hosidius Geta, whom was a novus homo and a close friend to Lucius Caesar and his family. This cohort of senators fled to Italia whereupon they relayed to Caesar the state of the crisis in that country.

    Caesar immediately recognized the threat of this revolt as the most severe challenge to his dominion thusfar, and made all due preparations to extinguish the treason with the fullest extent of his power. He first sought that his regime in Rome might be secure and so he recalled Paullus Fronto to Rome and gathered a group of wealthy and loyal freedmen that they might serve as the executors of his designs in the city. Among these men were Gaius Julius Faustus, whom had served as a clerk in the urban courts until his manumission by Gaius Solus, and Marcus Vipsanius Fontinius Caeso, whom had been a secretary of the public treasury in the Temple of Saturn. In preparation for the forthcoming campaign, Caesar then assembled an army with which he might be able to reclaim the mutinous provinces. The first addition hitherto was the whole assemblage of the praetorians led by Rufinius Florus and Scribonius Postumus. Additionally, Norbanus Balbus, the elder consul of eighteen years hence, leaving only the Balearic auxiliaries whom were stationed there in Castra Legionis. This assemblage of forces would number on the order of thirty-thousand men when joined by the militias of Raetia and Vindelicia, and the forthcoming campaign would be prosecuted under the direct purview of Caesar and his son Drusus. Also among the officer corps would serve the elder Balbus, as well as Galba and Aulus Plautius, the consuls of six years hence, and a number of provincial noblemen including Julius Bato and Claudius Philippus. The year ended thus with a civil war for the second time in that decade.
     
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    Book 25: 36-37 CE
  • Book Twenty Five - Discord of the Wills

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    The sons of Germanicus (from left to right): Drusus, Tiberius Vopiscus, Gaius, Sextus (deceased), and Marcus

    —In the consulship of Publius Cornelius Lentulus Scipio and Marcus Porcius Cato…
    Cornelius Dolabella was elected to the suffect censorship on the death of Sextus Pompeius. Caesar was concerned with the grave confluence of these events, but he was advised that his direct presence be made, as the Illyrian legions had mutinied numerous times, and the austere presence of Caesar might instill the infantry therein with a sense of loyalty to the imperial personage. However, the agents of Caesar would be less capable of addressing the governing demands of the city in his absence. He thusly assembled a council of four wealthy freedmen into a formal body. This included Faustus, Paullus Fronto, Caeso, and a fourth named Tiberius Julius Trachalus. Each of these men would be tasked with wielding their wealth, influence, and clientele to ensure the stability and compliance of the city of Rome. The most senior among them, Faustus, would exercise indirect oversight over all elections, trials, and public business in the senate and the courts, whereas Caeso and Trachalus would oversee public correspondence and the treasuries respectively. Fronto would be given a wholly autonomous jurisdiction over a network of well-connected informants and ambassadors through which he might act as the eyes and ears of Caesar for the tenure of his absence.

    On the morning of the Kalends of Martius, Caesar, Drusus, and their entourage departed Rome. Vopiscus protested his disinclusion among the staff of the endeavor, as he was well-respected among the praetorian cohorts. However, Caesar insisted that he and his brothers, Gaius and Marcus, remain in Italia and disperse gifts from the personal treasuries of the imperial largesse. In a span of time not exceeding one month, the legions of Caesar and Norbanus joined in ready order and disembarked northward to engage the forces of Fimbria in Noricum. Around the same time, Galerius had established himself as the undisputed governor of Macedonia and Greece, and had levied a force which included large numbers of Thessalian cavalryman. The amassing army in Illyricum numbered on the order of forty-five-thousand, including a number of Thracian cavalry whom had volunteered their services to the army of Surdinus. They had established a number of defensive fortifications in the perimeter of Pannonia by which they sought to repel the forthcoming onslaught of the legions from Italia, whom had been reinforced by the forces of Camillus Scribonianus.

    At the outset of their departure, Caesar wished that Drusus might become learned as a commander of the legions, and as such delegated to him the staff of Aulus Plautius, the magister consilium thereof. Drusus was discontented at this, as he had previously served as a legatus during the Marcomannic campaigns, and was preferential to a direct hand in the course of a battle rather than one of oversight and meticulous preparation. The advance guard of the loyalist legion, commanded by Scribonianus, engaged with the Norican militia of Fimbria and drew the singular legion of Fimbria’s into battle order in a rescue effort to the vastly inferior Noricans. However, the inferior discipline and experience of the mutinous legion became their ruin, and a number of their cohorts elected to defect their loyalties to the auspices of Caesar. Fimbria himself fled to Pannonia on this development, and the rebellious cohorts were decimated on the order of Scribonianus, while those which had defected were given honors, although they would not receive any disbursements in that year. Upon receiving word of the fall of Noricum to Caesar, the Illyrian governors vigorously prosecuted several allies of Caesar whom they had arrested within their jurisdictions, including Livineius Regulus. His fallacious trial saw him banished to Rhodes, and they rallied their forces to defensible positions in central Dalmatia to await the sallies of Caesar and his allies. Caesar himself marched into Pannonia where the siege of Carnuntum by Domitius Calvinus had encircled the staff of Appius Silanus. The mutinous governor, whom had been joined by the remnants of Fimbria’s infantry, fled southward into Dalmatia near Delminium, whereafter they were pursued in some measure by the cohorts of the praetorians under the command of Rufinius Florus. The remainder of Caesar’s army remained encamped at Siscia in order to resupply their number, as Caesar had elected to abandon their heavy baggage train in Noricum and were in want for provisions.

    At the same juncture, the legions of Germania had been engaged in punitive exactions of tribute from among the tribesmen on the further banks of the Albis and the vicinity of the Visurgis. However, Blaesus had been ordered by Caesar that his campaign there over might be de-escalated because the demands of the Illyrian campaign were increasing as Surdinus marshaled his forces.

    Concurrently, at Rome, the government of Caesar held in a tenuous balance. The elder Drusus and his co-censor Dolabella upheld the will of Caesar among the senate by a number of continuous membership revisions thereof. In this effort, they were aided by Caeso and Fronto, whom each managed networks of informants both within Rome and throughout Latium and Italia. Agrippa had spent the previous year aiding in the preferment of designs of the elder Drusus, with whom he shared a particular kinship. Having achieved many of his political ends, including the trial and banishment of the obstinate praetor Lucius Nonius, the elder censor sought to accrue favors from the aspirant officeholders among the ranks of the youngest senators. This cohort of men, including Gaius Oppius, whom was aedile in the consulship of Saturninus and Postumus, and Memmius Regulus, whom had been praetor in the previous year, would be sponsored in their tracks up the cursus honorum in a manner such that a quid pro quo might be understood to exist between them and the censor. Likewise, the sons of Vibius Marsus, Pullo and Lamia, were elected to the peregrine and urban praetorships respectively, along with numerous of their allies and kinsmen. At this confluence of events, Agrippa recalled numerous of his magisterial allies from their estates in Picenum and Campania. Among these men were Fulcinius Trio and Lucius Cassius, the consuls of seven years hence, and the praetors of two years hence, Acceronius Proculus and Aelius Rufinius. With a great assemblage of allies within Rome, Agrippa became desirous toward the tangible possibility of greater influence within the regime of Caesar. He called upon Caeso to sequester the various correspondences routed through the circuit of roads surrounding Rome. He undertook this at the direction of Agrippa because of their kinship, as Caeso had been manumitted by Agrippa a number of years previously. At the same urgency, Asinius Celer began to quietly raise troops in Italia from among the discharged legions of Gaius Vipsanianus, which had been settled thereby at the conclusion of the Julian Schism.

    The princes of the Julian house were not quiescent at the closure of the year either. Marcus Aquileanus acted as a great currier of gifts on behalf of the Vipsanian household while his sister, Postumia, entertained numerous guests in the household of her husband, Gaius Cassius. Marcus Rufus had traveled with Gaius Solus to Arpinium from which they held court with the sons of many freedmen to accrue favors from which they might achieve high office with the broad support of the nobles and people of Rome. The sons of Caesar, however, remained a short distance from Rome at Praeneste. Vopiscus sought that he might return to Rome, even at the refusal of his father. However, the consuls for that year, Cato and Scipio, advised him to the contrary, as they were conscious of an impending conflict of wills among the established senatorial order. The consuls themselves had departed the city before the Kalends of the next Januarius and the censors were left in sole control of the senate.

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    Agrippa, Apronius, and Vibius Lamia denounce Fabius Persicus, consul for the year (Apronius is seated between Agrippa and Lamia)

    —In the consulship of Germanicus Julius Caesar Invictus for the Fourth Time as Augustus and Paullus Fabius Persicus…
    Caesar intended that his grant of consular imperium would not exacerbate the imbalance brought about by his absence from Rome. In this year, Caesar sought that he might exact a swift campaign against Surdinus and return to Rome within a number of months. However, events began to unfold within the city as many of the allies of Caesar had been elected to provincial commands of all stripes or had accompanied him to Illyricum. A void existed among the number of the senate, as Dolabella displayed little interest in his office and Drusus became consumed with the care of his son Tiberius Gemellus, after sickness had claimed the life of his brother, also named Drusus. The censors, being periodically absent from sessions of the senate, deferred their roles to the princeps senatus, an office which had once been one of magnanimous public service but which now possessed only the appearance of dignity. At this time, the princeps senatus was the senior-most consular from among the senate, whom at this time was Lucius Apronius, the consul of twenty-five years hence. In his advanced age, he himself was aided greatly by the urban praetor, Vibius Lamia. At the onset of that year, Caeso began to selectively appropriate numerous reports from the various provincial agents of Caesar and concurrently collaborated with Agrippa in order to fabricate complementary reports. In this way, to the knowledge of the senate and people of Rome, Caesar and Drusus had both fallen to illness, and the elites among the senate had begun to incite panic under duress from these rumors. Under these circumstance, Lamia called the senate to meet on the Ides of Martius, an auspicious date. A number of consulares mounted curia to speak and they bade the following pronouncements:

    Gaius Vibius Lamia, son of Marsus, grandson of Postumus, and praetor urbanus:
    I have assembled my brothers and fathers herein at the behest of the auspices of Mars, which have been induced to lunacy by the impiety of the expeditious magistrates whim have heretofore abused their imperia to a degree which has discarded wholly the decency of the law in letter as well as in spirit. The perpetrator thereof is none less than the the father of the country, first citizen, tribune, and consul, the Imperator Caesar, son of the Divine Drusus with divine ancestors likewise for three generations. Lengthy consultations with the scholars of the law as well as my magisterial colleagues, Oppius and Rufinius, have yielded charges that are as varied as they are numerous.

    These transgressions were perpetrated likewise: In the consulship of Gaius Vipsanianus for the seventh time and Pollio, the accused committed violence against the following magistrates - Vipsanianus and Pollio themselves, Lucius Piso and Aulus Caecina the censors, and Publius Vinicius the consul-elect. In addition to these charges, the noble Caesar has levied unilateral and unlawful judgements thereover and confiscated the inheritances thereof, in addition to those of the equites Lucius Strabo and Aelius Saturninus and the following senators: Gaius Geminus, Statilius Taurus, Vipstanius Gallus, Marcus Cotta, and Lucius Messalla, the latter two of which were men of nobility in their own right as well as kinsmen of the mighty and just Caesar.

    But the crimes of Caesar are twofold. They have been perpetrated in both outright and brutal fashions, as well as in subtle and avarous ones. The considerable monetary prowess of the blessed Caesar has found its home in the estates and togas of the numerous men of this chamber. Two successive consulships are the cost of the integrity of this chamber, and the hands of the noble and honest Caesar are the ones which made this transaction. These acts are as noble as they are contingent upon the laws, and their unchallenged usurpations thereof has dealt a grievous blow to the dignity of the Commonwealth and to its traditions, and any inaction on the part of this chamber will confer equal culpability to the hands of each of you. I conclude my charge thusly with a levy to action. My brothers and father, do not let our inheritances and the dignity of our ancestors be trampled at the fickle whims of this noble and petulant Caesar. Support the motion that the present consuls be divested from their offices and that they be brought to answer for these and like charges. Thank you and long live the Republic.

    Lucius Apronius Pius, son of Apronius, grandson of Strabo, princeps senatus, pater patriae, and consul twenty-five years hence:
    I have been blessed by the fates with a tenure upon the curia greater than numerous others. I was elected to this noble chamber under the proprietorship of the Divine Augustus, and I served as consul in the stewardship of the Divine Drusus thereover. And it is by the grace of the gods that my tenure hereunder has not been snuffed out by any of the avarice and blood feuds which have claimed the lives of my brothers and sons. My own consular colleague, Marcus Servilius, was one such unfortunate, as was Gnaeus Cinna, as was Scribonius Libo, as was Metellus Creticus, and as was Visellius Varro, all of whom were consuls and friends to me as well as the Divine Drusus.

    Not hence the consulship of Felix and Rufus has scantly a decade come absent the heinous death of a consulare at the hands of his fellows, and the noble Caesar shares complicity in this equal to that of Marcus Brutus. This transgression is so great that the man whom ought to divulge testimony in my place, the uncle and brother of the noble Caesar, Lucius Caesar Vipsanianus, has scarcely left his home, foisting this awesome responsibility onto my humbled shoulders. I bear this mantle with unspeakable gratitude, but also with grave resignation. For I have claimed the inheritance of such men as Cicero and Catullus and Scaurus, whom themselves mourned the desecration of our Commonwealth in their times. Woe to whomever might wreak upon himself such omens as to recount the chronicle of recent years to these great men. Suffer not yourselves to become the perpetrators in equal measure to Caesar in the slaughter of our Republic. Suffer not, and absolve your complicity, my comrades and sons, and support this motion. Thank you, and long live the Republic
    .”

    A fierce debate thus ensued on the floor of the senate, such that the consular lictors were called into the curia to dissuade these men from violence toward one another. Persicus, Caesar’s co-consul, sharply denounced Lamia and Apronius, as did Silanus Torquatus, the former consul. Other men as noble defended the dignity of Caesar, like Sulla Felix, the younger brother of the consuls with Vipsanianus, whom had himself been a suffect consul. Valerius Asiaticus, Marcus Vinicius, and Appius Pulcher lauded great praise upon Caesar and his sons, and likewise questioned the veracity of the counsel of Caeso regarding his alleged ill-health. However, several men whom had erstwhile been allies of Caesar bade forth their true intentions at the urging of Apronius and Lamia. Among these men were Valerius Catullus, descendant of the former consul and censor whom had been invoked by Apronius, and Lucius Cassius, whom had been dissatisfied with a brief suffect consulship several years hence. However, the last senator to speak was Agrippa, and he bade the following odious pronouncement:

    Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa Postumus, son of Marcus Agrippa, grandson of Lucius, and twice consul of twelve and twenty-two years hence:
    Woe is the Commonwealth, for she has fallen into the hands of a self-righteous brigand and his hapless lapdogs! Whereas once the world was governed by men of conspicuous merit and noble ancestry, now the whole circuit of the Earth is held in the hands of the cup bearers of a man whom can scarcely claim any martial honors to his name, or to those of his children but for their premature and fallacious magistracies. Was it not but scantly three years hence that their own brother claimed himself of the fates that they have not bestowed but paltry respects to their fallen kinsman, though he rests with the likes of the Divine Augustus? How have they justified these impieties but by their tribunician powers and nepotistic pontificates?

    The tribunate itself, in addition to the priesthood, is reduced in its antiquity to the bludgeon of these princes, whim have claimed this awesome burden by inheritance, rather than any conspicuous merit. How many among our number, dear brothers, have been denied the magistracies in favor of their sons in spite of the nobility of their ancestors or the statesmanship of their patronage to the preferences of Caesar and his sycophants? For despite their lofty rank, they have been drawn from such quarters as Spain, Gaul, and Germany. When our midst has been flooded by these foreign nobles, whom themselves are descended from those whom had raised up arms against the Divine Augustus, and the nobility of Italy is cast out of this chamber in their misfortune, whom will be left to advocate for Rome and her noble antiquity? Whom will advocate for the descendants of her nobility, whom themselves gave freely of their lives and riches such that we might enjoy their spoils? What share of our commonwealth will be left for our children, as they are sure to be discarded in favor of these barbarian grovelers which the patronage of Caesar and his sons will surely cast into our midst?

    However, even these gifts do not maintain their antiquity and prestige due to the debasements and indignities forced upon the magistracies by Caesar! For in the last nine years, thirty-four men have been consuls! And of these, Caesar occupied the office thrice fold! Moreover the dignity of such men has degraded considerably. One need look no further than the rebellion of Surdinus to see this. The further gravity of this regime can be seen clearly on the securities of Syria and Cappadocia, which have seen their legions stripped bare to service the imperial ambitions of this once-despised prince. Wherefore once the provinces of the East were prosperous and wanted for nothing, the citizens thereof live in grave peril for fear of the Arsacids and their thralls. Even the former governor thereof, Fulcinius Trio, acknowledges this, and any contrary testimonies are in flagrant denial.

    My call is this, dear senators: the vile Caesar has discarded fully the peace and dignity which his grandfather, whom is also my grandfather — the Divine Augustus — labored for so many years to imbue into our lives. The inaction of this chamber, which surely disturbs every ancestral sepulcher near these walls, can no longer be tolerated. As we speak, a great confluence of my kinsmen have gathered an army and are prepared to divest Caesar of his offices, by force if necessary, as well as those who would lend their services to the slavery of his vice. Thank you dear senators, and long live the Republic.

    At once, fury erupted at Rome and in the senate. Troops levied by Asinius Celer entered the city through the Flaminian Gate at a signal given by Caeso and slayed before them many allies of Caesar. Among these unfortunates were those whom had bade Caesar fortunes before the senate — Silanus Torquatus, Valerius Asiaticus, and Marcus Vinicius. Furthermore were slain men on the stature of Marcus Lepidus, son of the censor, and Voluseius Proculus, both of whom had been consuls. Also claimed in the bloodshed was Gnaeus Saturninus, the son of the consul, and numerous other innocent men whom claimed the favor of the house of Caesar. Sulla Felix escaped with his life and recounted these indignities to the Julians at Praeneste. In the wake of this violence, Memmius Regulus and Asinius Celer were elected consuls, as neither of the sitting consuls were in Rome. From these offices, they committed a number of crimes including the confiscation of properties of many sitting magistrates and violence against numerous tribunes and officials.

    At this juncture, Marcus Rufus sent word to his brother Felix detailing the gravity of the conflict within Rome. he rapidly left the city with the freedmen secretaries — Fronto, Faustus, and Trachalus. Likewise, the elder Tiberius and his son Livius fled to Nola with the sons of Caesar as Agrippa consolidated his hold over Rome. Caeso mobilized his considerable wealth at the direction of Agrippa to levy a sizable militia from among their numerous clients, freedmen, and slaves. These armed bands exacted support from the veterans in Italia, many of whom had migrated to Rome from the vicinities of Pompeii, Tusculum, and Corfinium. As the cohorts gathered at Rome, Vopiscus infiltrated Rome with a retinue of freedmen assistants, and by so doing, distinguished his merit and courage from among the rest of the Julian family. This was the status of Rome whilst Caesar and Drusus were embroiled in combat against the Illyrians.

    The Thracians, led by the petulent barbarian nobleman, Cotys II, having been secured as allies of Surdinus, surged their number into Macedonia and ravaged numerous settlements. This diverted the forces of Galerius from their posting in Epirus to intercept the marauders. However, reprieve from these transgressions would be soon at hand. For all their bravado, the Thracians rapidly exposed their flank whilst they besieged Amphipolis and the surrounding towns. Galerius’ lieutenant, Verginius Rufus, took the initiative and engaged the Thracians with his command of the cavalry and cohors equitae, moving at incredible speed after becoming learned of this siege. The barbarians were taken aback by the speed of these reprisals and a number of them fled back to Thrace. The rest of their number, including Cotys, were killed or captured outside the walls of Amphipolis whereupon they were imprisoned or enslaved. For this swift victory, Galerius earned the agnomen Macedonicus.

    Meanwhile, further to the North, the legions under Aulus Caecina and Paullus Lepidus advanced southward, disrupting the supply lines of the rebellious legions and destroying the still-assembling cohorts of auxiliaries. Surdinus had divided his forces between the rear guard at Sirmium and his primary force at Salona, and it was this second force that came first under pressure from the legions of Caesar. The general staff of this force, led by Gaius Lucullus and Sempronius Longus had levied a number of auxiliaries for Caesar from Illyricum. Many of these men were the sons and grandsons of the revolutionaries in the Illyrian War, and many of them had accrued honors and titles in a civilized fashion. These men were conscious of the flagrant abuses of the many governors of Illyricum in the earlier years, and they did not desire the senatorial elites in the mold of Surdinus to regain absolute imperium over their provinces whereby they might exact exorbitant taxes from their estates. They were led by Postumius Verres, a man of Dalmatian descent whom was well-respected throughout the numerous cities thereof. This force set about undermining Surdinus’ control over Salona and the nearby settlements, thereby diverting a substantial force of his legions to the policing of order in the streets.

    At this confluence, Caesar’s legates, Galba and Flavius Sabinus, encircled Salona, wherein two legions were fortified. After a brief siege, Surdinus and his advisors fled the city under the cover of darkness with their bodyguards. However, as they journeyed northward, they received word that the legions at Sirmium had defected to the auspices of Caesar. Licinius Murena, a man of impeccable aristocratic ancestry, knew that their cause was hopeless and incited the centurions of their bodyguards to massacre Surdinus along with his lieutenants, including Domitius Calvinus. He and these soldiers reached Sirmium and prostrated themselves before Caesar, whereupon many of them were granted clemency, while many others were crucified for their treachery. Upon learning of this, the legions at Salona surrendered and the civil war was at an end. Caesar re-established the Danuvian command apparatus with Norbanus Balbus as its imperator and Galba, Sempronius Longus, and Galerius each occupying offices of considerable influence thereunder.

    Meanwhile in Italia, Felix Pius and Rufus had each sold many of their estates and purchased the loyalties of the sons and grandsons of the legionaries of the Divine Augustus. These legions, the I Fidelis and II Restitutoris transited the Alps during the Summer months and presented themselves to Blaesus, whom was stationed at Liminaniensis and whom had heard the troubling reports of Rome’s disorder. However, the bulk of his forces remained garrisoned in Marcomannicum for the year, and their removal may upset the tenuous peace therein. With Caesar’s legions engaged in Illyricum and combating the Thracians, and the Spanish legions accompanying him, Blaesus knew that his legions were the only ones capable of restoring order to the eternal city. Reluctantly, and fearful of the reprisals of Caesar, he instructed Aviola to discharge four of his legions from Marcomannicum and to the command of the Julian army. In order to ensure the loyalty of this force, Aviola selected his most loyal and capable officers, including Macro, Corbulo, and Lucius Marcellus to command these legions, and he carefully selected his most experienced legions such that any discord between these and those of Felix and Rufus might result in their favor.

    With this precaution having been taken, Aviola was shocked when Antonius Agrippa, whom was one of his legates, volunteered his services to command the cavalry of this expedition. His father, sister, and elder brother were all present in Rome, and if they did not concede control upon contact, considerable bloodshed would ensue, which would certainly result in their death or exile. Antonius declared his unwavering loyalty of Caesar and denounced his father and brother for taking up arms against the same man with whom they had sided in the civil war scantly ten years previously. Cautious and yet not wishing to discharge only his most experienced officers, he acceded to the young man’s request. This force of six legions crossed the Alps once more just before the winter snows fell and encamped at Luca. Felix and Rufus, whom were delegated with overall joint imperium in Italia, stood on the banks of the Rubicon, in exactly the same spot as had their great-great-grandfather the Divine Julius had, and cast their lot with fate just as he had done in his hour of crisis.


    NOTE: Since the legions have been jumbled around a bit, here's a quick refresher if you had trouble keeping track.

    3 legions in Northern Germany commanded by Q. Junius Blaesus
    3 legions garrisoned in Marcomannicum commanded by G. Calpurnius Aviola
    4 legions engaged in Illyricum commanded by Germanicus and Drusus (incl. the praetorian guard and the Spanish legions)
    6 legions disarmed in Illyricum and Moesia formerly commanded by L. Naevius Surdinus
    6 legions in Northern Italy commanded by Felix Pius and M. Rufus
    7 legions total in Syria, Cappadocia, Aegypt, and Africa
    Unspecified number of forces under the command of Agrippa in Italy
     
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    Book 26: 38-39 CE
  • Book Twenty Six - The Long March

    Commander in winter.jpg

    Felix Pius prepares his men to cross the Rubicon in the dead of Winter to catch the army of Agrippa off guard.

    —In the consulship of Tiberius Aelius Rufinius and Gnaeus Acceronius Proculus…

    The city of Rome erupted into chaos. Word of the legions marching south reached the city quickly by word of mouth from the numerous poor farmers whose stores had been confiscated by the undersupplied legions. The legions quickly spread their number in order that they might secure a perimeter North of Rome to prevent any rapid or decisive maneuvers by the amassing revolutionaries. The legions divided themselves between task forces assigned to the numerous major cities around the perimeter of Rome. Corbulo garrisoned Ariminum, Otho did the same to Ravenna, Marcellus to Volterra, and Domitius Ahenobarbus to Perusia. The remainder of their forces occupied the Via Flaminia and awaited orders from their headquarters, which at this time had moved to Arretium to order a final, decisive march on Rome. The officer corps, led chiefly by Lollius and Salvius Glabrio, the latter of whom had fled North from his estates on the seizure of Rome by Agrippa, returned in a tenuous venture southward with the remainder of the treasury which had been located in the mint at Mediolanum. This reserve was used to preempt any attempts by Agrippa and Asinius Celer to purchase the loyalty of the landowners at Volsinii or Campania. With this base of support, the legions awaited orders to march. These orders would not come until Caesar arrived at Dyrrhachium, whereupon he was learned of the grave events in Italia.

    In the meanwhile, Vopiscus had expended his own personal estates at the armament of a citizen mob within Rome. This mob, which doubled as a bulwark of safety in which such regime stalwarts as Drusus the censor and Fabius Persicus might find refuge, was put towards occupying the Palatine Hill, which was a quarter of the city heretofore untouched by Agrippa, who limited his dominion to the Forum and the Campus Martius. However, the disposable manpower of this impromptu legion was limited to that which the citizens of the Aventine might muster, in addition to numerous slaves of the imperial household whom had been unlawfully manumitted by Vopiscus. Despite the otherwise effective control which Agrippa exerted over the city, this nuisance remained, and a single legion of forces encircled the bulwark of the Julians such that they might starve. However, the generosity of the peoples therein as well as the loyalties of the vigils allowed these persons to survive a number of months.

    On the Ides of Aprilis, Caesar ordered the legions to march on Rome, and they were given broad discretion to exact justice upon the debauched persons therein, for neither Caesar nor did the legions know that Vopiscus was in Rome. They duly marched South and at the old site of Veii, the army of Asinius Celer interceded. The mass of six legions and their accompanying cavalry was an overwhelming force with which Felix Pius dispatched the treacherous proconsul with ease. Asinius Celer attempted a flight to Syracuse, where his elder brother Pollio was living in exile, however he was intercepted at Puteoli by bounty hunters who duly brought his head to the victorious legions. The only remaining forces in Rome had mounted the old Servian Walls and blocked all attempts by the army of Felix to enter.

    However, once again within the city, chaos reigned. The fickle loyalties of Agrippa’s lieutenants, one of whom was a prefect named Pinarius Natta, had led to conflict among their armed guards on the Via Sacra. The prior consul, Aelius Rufinius, was struck down by a missile in one such altercation, whereafter he was left to his fate by his lictors, whom themselves had their fasces scattered. In a flagrant fraud of an election organized by Agrippa, whom had appointed himself sole censor in the disorder, appointed the politically inert Aulus Gabinus. This gained him the enmity of Vibius Lamia, whom had himself sought the consulship after his loyal services in the previous year.

    Meanwhile, in Thrace, as Caesar had departed to Dyrrhachium, Drusus was left in sole command of the force of five reconstituted legions. With the Thracian army routed, his legions were unopposed in their march into that country from the North. His chief lieutenant in this campaign would be Galba, whom by this time had earned the respect of the legions as well as of Caesar, in spite of his young age. Galba’s young son accompanied the legions, and his kinship with Drusus insured a promising future for the boy. On their advance southward, considerable resistance was met by local nobles whom feared the annexation of their country for the impieties of their king. This peaked at the Rhodian Gates wherein a militia raised by Cotys’ brother, Rhescuporis denied the legions passage for two weeks before their nerve shattered and the cavalry, led by Flavius Sabinus, encircled their line and the insubordinate noble committed suicide. The legions marched to Cabyle, wherein the Thracian imperial residence was located, and installed Rhoemetacles III, whom was a nephew of Cotys, as king of the Thracians, although his court would host a number of cohorts commanded by Aulus Plautius for the next number of years.

    In the Autumn months, Agrippa mounted numerous sallies of his troops outwards to engage the legions of Felix in order that they might not sever the supply of water by aqueducts to the city whilst he was inside. However, on the third day before the Nones of October, Vopiscus led a procession of armed citizens accompanied by retired praetorian guardsmen as well as the remainder of the consular lictors and the vigiles. This procession was unopposed as they marched to the Forum, as Agrippa was organizing troops in the northerly quarters of the city, where the pressure of the besieging legions was felt most strongly. Vopiscus mounted the Rostra and delivered a call to arms for any senators remaining in the city. To the amazement of many onlookers, out from the Curia strode Aulus Gabinus, the consul, who joined his lictors with those of Vopiscus. Acceronius Proculus, the other consul, was apoplectic at this flagrant betrayal and himself led a band of men armed with daggers and clubs and set upon the crowd. However, his numbers were paltry in comparison to those of the loyalists, and the beguiled consul fled into the arms of his patron, Agrippa. However, as soon as Agrippa became learned of this, Gabinus had done the unthinkable and opened the Tregiminine Gate.

    At a signal given by Vopiscus, the procession marched out and occupied either side of the gate. When Agrippa was made aware of these developments, he left a small garrison at the Colline Gate and marched with ten-thousand troops to the Aventine Hill. At this juncture, he unleashed his troops onto the fortified wall of lictors and vigiles, whereupon many of them were killed. This bloodshed ensued for several hours before the army of Agrippa was dissolved at the trumpet calls of the Legio III Gallica. The legions of Felix had reached the breach in the wall, and the open arms of Vopiscus and Gabinus ushered them into the city. Bloodshed ensued which had not been seen at Rome since the proscriptions of Sulla. The legions did not discriminate in their slaughter. As Agrippa mounted a defense of the Palatine Hill, his army of slaves and freedmen abandoned their patron. The legion of Domitius Ahenobarbus marched up to the palace and slaughtered all who did not flee before them. Agrippa and his son were cut down as they attempted to escape, as was Caeso, whom was himself betrayed by one of his slaves. Acceronius Proculus likewise committed suicide over the dishonorable death brought by the onslaught of the legions. However, the deaths of noble men did not end with these. Many of the Julian clan were resident in the palace, and the legions did not discriminate in their butchery. Lucius Caesar, the son of the Divine Augustus, was murdered on being woken from his sleep by a centurion, as was his son Gaius Solus, who pleaded their innocence to no avail. Fires spread throughout the tenement buildings on the Viminal Hill, where the estates of many senators which had been used as refuge were located. Vibius Lamia and his brother Pullo were killed here in a fire, perishing as they ordered the few remaining vigiles to control the conflagration.

    In the wake of this chaos, Vopiscus assembled a meeting of the senate, which was one of the few legal actions undertaken in that year, as Vopiscus had been given tribunician power and was entitled to this assembly. However, the decency of the action ended there, as fewer than one-hundred senators were in attendance, which was not sufficient for a quorum to be met. At this meeting, Dolabella, the only legally elected magistrate left in the city, proposed that Vopiscus be made the acting urban prefect, as a reward for his deliverance of the city from Agrippa, which was met with universal acclaim. Likewise, another unambitious man in the mold of Gabinus, one Octavius Laenas, was elected to fulfill Proculus’ now-vacant consulship for the remaining months of the year. Triumphal honors were voted upon Felix as well as the subordinate commanders of the liberation, among whom were three ex-consuls. Antonius Agrippa in particular would be awarded special honors for his filial piety to uphold the state and his patron, even at the expense of his father and brother. However, many senators were said to have commented that the young Agrippa merely wished that he might become the paterfamilias of the Vipsanii from which he might leverage greater political power.

    Caesar entered the city in November, and there was considerable mourning on his arrival. The violent deaths of so many noblemen of all ages had depleted many of the priesthoods and lower magistracies. Dolabella himself had grown weary of his austere post and begged Caesar to allow him to retire. Caesar obliged him and arranged for the elections of Calpurnius Aviola and Appius Pulcher to serve as censors. This was a reward for their loyal service to him during both of the civil wars as well as a favor to the remaining wealthy patricians that their kinsmen remained entitled to the highest magistracies.

    However, the tenuous balance of power in the city would not satiate the cautious Caesar, and he assembled a conference of his closest advisors. This consilium, including the elder Drusus, the censors, his most capable freedmen, and many prominent legal scholars — among whom were Marcus Cato, Fabius Persicus, and Marcus Lepidus — put forth their considerable knowledge and political power towards divining a solution to the crises that had unfolded over the preceding decade. To this end, they looked towards the works of Titus Livius, whom had chronicled the early histories of Rome. The upheavals of the early Commonwealth had resolved many of their revolutionary desires by a codification of the heretofore unwritten laws of the Republic, especially during the period ruled by the decemvirs. Caesar came to believe that the upheavals of the Civil Wars, which had begun with the War of the Allies and culminated in his own recent triumph, had come as a result of the Divine Augustus’ failure to resolve the tensions thereof by a codification of laws, instead settling for a series of constitutional resolutions and personal relationships maintained with the various institutions of the Republic, including the senate, the legions, the pontificate, the equestrian order, and the magistracies. To this end, Caesar conferred that a new body of lawmakers would be convened in the following years whereby they might resolve these legal insufficiencies. These extraordinary magistrates would not supersede the authority of the consuls and praetors in that year, however, and their legal production might still be subject to a plebiscite among the number of the senate, whom had been deferred such powers by the Divine Drusus. The membership of this body would be hotly contested by the senate, whom themselves reserved the right to the election of such magistrates. However, all nominees for such positions were under the legal purview of the censors in accordance with the Lex Julia de censoribus.

    In order that open confrontation among the surviving senators might be avoided, Caesar resolved that the censors might defer the appointment of half of the nominees to the consuls, both of whom were well-liked among the noblemen in Rome. Those appointed by the censors were Marcus Cato — a man of considerable merit and whom enjoyed a positive reputation due to his ancestry, Domitius Afer — whom was an orator and formerly a praetor whom had won great respect among the senators, Poppaeus Sabinus — an elder statesman whom was a respected lawyer among the nobles, Sextus Marius — a young man of wisdom whom had flourished in spite of his inauspicious name, and Paullus Fabius Maximus — whom was the son of a great friend of the Divine Augustus, and whom had accompanied him to Nola when he underwent his apotheosis. Those appointed by the consuls were men of less considerable legal scholarship, but rather men whom commanded a great following and were possessed of charisma and respect due to their oratory. These men were Thrasea Paetus, Aurelius Severus, Tarius Gratianus, Gellius Publicola, and Livius Ocella, none of whom had served in any post greater than the quaestorship. The only man disqualified by the intercession of Caesar was Asinius Saloninus, whom had been nominated by the consuls, but was the younger brother of the revolutionaries Pollio and Celer, and was judged to be a threat to Caesar in this endeavor.

    Lastly in that year, an agent of Caesar had reported to him that Gaius Vipsanianus, the former princeps and seven-times consul, had died due to his reported infirmities and disease. This was the tragedy of the house of Agrippa. Within the same year, all three of his sons perished, and the political landscape of the Empire had seen a total upheaval in leadership since the time of his own early death. The only men of established power among the imperial family whom remained were Caesar himself as well as his brother Tiberius and his cousin, Drusus. This cohort of men were tasked with the ultimate aim of all great men — to ensure the preservation of their legacy and the security of their progeny.

    102418-19-Ancient-History-Roman-Rome-Plebeian-Patrician-Class.jpg

    The decemvirs led by Cato discuss the various legal precedents that their work involved.

    —In the consulship of Lucius Claudius Marcellus and Gnaeus Domitius Corbulo...
    The decemvirs entered upon their offices to great anticipation. The senior-most decemvir, Marcus Cato, appointed a space within the Tabularium wherein they might gather and conduct their work. The Lex Gabina Octavia which chartered the purview of these extraordinary authors defined their jurisdiction as the laws pertaining to the constitution and courts of the Empire with no further stipulations. Cato himself was realized of great ambitions at this opportunity, and sought to leverage the status of his ancestry coupled with his own extraordinary reputation among the legal scholars of the senate. However, he was also a close friend to Vopiscus and a faithful ally of the family of Caesar. He thusly sought to confirm the powers and prestige awarded to him by Caesar by a simultaneous confirmation of the powers inherited by Caesar and a rationalization of his reforms as well as those of his father and grandfather. To this end, he guided the efforts of the decemvirate towards a comprehensive rationalization of the ad hoc powers and delegations which had thus far governed the Empire since the end of the triumvirate. This included a complete set of laws and offices, each with stipulations and powers imbued, as the cursus honorum had in the days of the old commonwealth. The primary partner he would have in these labors would be Sextus Marius, whom would show himself in the forthcoming year to be a man of determined and capable character, much in the mold of his auspicious ancestor. Together, the two men would author nearly half of the laws which would be produced in that year, and would enjoy incredible clout among their peers thereafter.

    With the appearance of accordance with the law upheld by the establishment of the decemvirate, Caesar sought about purging the senate of its revolutionary elements. Although many of the accomplices of Agrippa had fled the city or been killed in the previous year, several of them remained at Rome. One in particular was Lucius Apronius, whom despite the pleading of his son, Apronius Caesianus, had refused to flee the city in fear of the wrath of Caesar. Several other men, including Valerius Catullus and Asinius Gallus had remained in their estates at Rome. Caesar would show remarkable clemency towards many of these men, however no such restraint was shown to Apronius, whom Caesar viewed as a traitor to his father’s will. He was hauled before an assembly of senators and equites before which one of the most distinguished orators of that day, Gaius Cassius, heaped abuses upon him for his filial impiety. The charge of majestas was levied against him for his incitement of violence against the magistrates of the state, and his defense was undertaken by his own son, whom was himself a learned man. The charge of majestas carried with it a penalty of death, however, the senate was so moved by the filial piety of Caesianus, that the consuls commuted his sentence to exile at Argos. He departed the city with his head held high, although his estates were confiscated by Caesar into the military treasury.

    At that time, the younger Drusus remained at Moesia at the head of a large army, which had been subsequently reconsolidated in their forts nearer to the border. This was to the chagrin of Galerius, whom was himself both the magister restitutor of the Danuvian legions as well as the governor of Macedonia, and so desired the comprehensive security of his own province, in the case that Aulus Plautius and his garrison might be overrun by the Thracians. However, Drusus at this time dismissed the calls of Galerius to circumvent a Thracian resurgence and focused his attentions instead upon the endemic raiding of the Sarmatians and the various horseman of the country of Scythia. However, the protestations of Galerius grew so great that Drusus dismissed him from his command, and appointed in his place the son of a freedman named Sextus Mummius who hailed from Thessalonika and had been a respected administrator therein. With the discord in his staff having been resolved, Galerius returned to Rome, and Drusus set about preparing for a punitive campaign against the Roxolani herdsmen from beyond the lower Danuvius.

    This campaign began as a response to a number of border transgressions by the horse-mounted brigands of that country, and Drusus marched with two legions thereafter, including the expert Thessalian cavalry levied by Mummius. The Sarmatians drew up in battle order in the vicinity of the Greek colony of Olbia. In the center of the line were the Gallic cavalry of Julius Aquila, whereas the right wing was commanded by Paullus Lepidus and the left by Drusus. An additional cavalry contingent led by Mummius was assigned to survey a nearby hilltop from which they could view the field of battle. The Sarmatians drew the multitude of their horsemen across the entire width of the field, as their cavalry were more numerous than those of the legions. The eager Sarmatians engaged the Gallic horseman forthwith and without hesitation, whereupon their numbers prevailed and the Gauls withdrew some distance from this sortie. Specially armed legionaries led by Paullus Lepidus were outfitted with sturdy spears and blunted the charge of further cavalrymen while the Illyrian cavalry of Claudius Bato drew a line on their flank. Meanwhile the meager infantry of the barbarians engaged directly with the legion of Drusus, and he valiantly led his infantry from within their lines as long as his attention was not needed elsewhere. It was at the crucial juncture that the Sarmatians had fully engaged their troops that the decisive blow was struck. A signal was sent to Mummius, who led his Thessalians in a sally directly into the flank of the barbarian foot soldiers. Their number were routed and massacred, although a portion of their cavalry managed to escape. After a brief campaign of reprisal and insurance, Drusus returned his troops to Moesia and re-established them in their fortifications from whence they had been idle.

    At Rome, a great assemblage of consulares whom had fled the city or else been assigned to provincial postings. Vopiscus, whom had remained the urban prefect, was embraced by these men, among whom were Lentulus Scipio, the former consul and son of the elder consul, Quinctilius Varus, and Camillus Scribonianus, the consuls of six and nine years hence. Vopiscus was awarded the corona civica by the senate for his valor as well as the triumphal regalia. Caesar likewise awarded the legates of the faithful legions by arranging for the elections of Salvius Otho and Ostorius Scapula as suffect consuls for the second half of the year. It was at the direction of these consuls that the works of the decemvirs were presented to the senate.

    This program of laws was an effort to reconcile the entire history of laws of the Commonwealth with the recent reforms of the pricipes. Among them were a series of laws confirming the laws already extant — including the many Julian laws of the Divine Julius and Augustus as well as the Clodian Laws of Publius Pulcher the tribune, the Cornelian Laws of Sulla, and the Cassian corruption laws. The lesser of these laws addressed such matters as the investment of certain cities in the provinces with Latin rights, the expansion of the number of minor administrative magistracies in Rome from twenty to fifty, the prohibition on consecutive magistracies, the regulation of adoptions with ulterior political motives, and the eligibility of the sons of freedmen for various magistracies. However, the more consequential of these laws were those authored by Cato, Sextus Marius, Domitius Afer, Thrasea Paetus, Paullus Fabius, and Poppaeus Sabinus. The Poppaean law imbued the censors with the power to elevate persons to the patriciate on their mutual consent, while also limiting the number of persons able to serve as senators thereafter. The Clodian Laws of Thrasea made formal the transfer of all electoral, judicial, and legislative powers to the senate — with the sole exception of the election of the plebeian tribunes, whom would remain the purview of the tribal assembly. The Domitian Laws reconciled the list of public crimes which could be brought before a praetor’s tribunal as well as limiting the power of the princeps with regard to his privilege concerning the Empire’s relationships with the various client kings thereof. Importantly, the Fabian Law imbued the censors with the power to arrange for the election of ten new decemvirs after the passage of a saeculum, such that the forbearance of any new irreconcilable laws might be rectified within that timeframe.

    However, as I have previously mentioned, the productions of Cato and Marius were the most consequential of these laws. The Marian Laws were threefold: firstly, the city of Rome might become home to a permanent office of appeals for the provincial populace. These councils, staffed by the wealthy citizens of these provinces, might serve as a conduit through which the grievances of the provinces might be heard quickly by the princeps. This was done at the discretion of Caesar himself, who wished that the revolutionary designs that had recently gained credence in Illyricum might not repeat themselves in other crucial regions. Secondly, Marius restricted the powers of the imperatores regionales, whom at this time commanded the bulk of the legions in Caesar’s provinces. He sought that they might not declare war, nor leave their provinces on penalty of majestas. Thirdly, and most crucially, Marius set into law the bifurcation between provincial governorships and regional imperatorships. Furthermore, in order to avoid the revolutions of recent history, it was judged that all proconsuls and praetorial legates must be confirmed in their commands every year by the word of the princeps and that the governors would likewise be restricted to purely administrative and judicial functions while the financial levies would fall under the purview of procurators.

    Cato likewise, produced a fourfold law, the first of which officially delegated the powers of the urban magistracies between one another, as their powers had been left vague by the constitutional settlements of the Divine Augustus. The tribunate in particular had the right of interposition returned to that venerable office, however, it was limited to effectiveness in the case of all ten tribunes consenting. Secondly, Cato set out a set of elected offices which might establish an independent financial apparatus for the provinces, the candidacies for which would be open to both senators and equites. Thirdly, the number of praetorship was set at twelve, in addition to a special praetorship, the praetor patriae, which would oversee all treason trials and would serve for eighteen months rather than the traditional year. This was in accordance with the Domitian Law which regulated the jurisdictions of each of these praetors. Lastly, Cato established a permanent apparatus through which the princeps might introduce any legislation to the senate. This consilium would include the princeps himself, as well as the consuls, censors, and consuls-elect for that year. Additionally, each of the sitting praetors would be constituent, in addition to the two most senior ex-consuls present in Rome, the secretary-general, the urban prefect, and a single tribune, selected by lot among the ten for that year.

    This body of laws, known thereafter as the Germanican Lexicon, awed the senate, whom had themselves not expected such a comprehensive corpus of regulations, although they would accede to this proposal. The Lexicon became law with their unanimous approval, as none of the senior senators present were willing to challenge the will and allies of Caesar. Particular interest was drawn to the election of the praetor patriae in that year, as many young ex-quaestors sought the prestigious honor for themselves. The eventual winner was none other than Lucius Julius Caesar Felix Pius, the so-called “imperator of Italy” whom had earned great respect both from the senatorial stalwarts and the allies of Caesar. He would serve this office humbly for the next eighteen months. At this, the younger Drusus returned to Rome wherein he was greeted with likewise triumphal decorations, and set about planning his forthcoming designs upon the command among his favorite legions, those of Germania for whence his father had been named.
     
    Book 27: 40-41 CE
  • Book Twenty Seven - Aftermath of the Civil Wars

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    Aviola addresses the consilium principis before the arrival of Germanicus Invictus

    —In the consulship of Titus Flavius Sabinus and Publius Salvius Glabrio…

    The elder Tiberius, the brother of Caesar and son of the divine Drusus, reneged on his engagements at Rome and retired to the imperial estates at Nola, where he resumed his scholarship away from the dangers of the political environment at Rome. This was because, although his brother was Caesar, he was neither foolhardy nor ambitious, and so sheltered his household within the confines of Campania. At this same juncture, the freedman administrators whom had fled to the Italian countryside returned to Rome, and one among their number, named Quintus Marcianus Rex, had been productive in his absence. He had been the one to orchestrate the entrance of Vopiscus into Rome in the preceding years, and for his services, he was awarded the secretary generalship, which was assigned with the management of the imperial archives and the authorship of imperial instructions to the provinces.

    With this having been established, Caesar called for the assemblage within his household the first formal consilium of the princeps in accordance with the Porcian law. He called his sons into this meeting, but insisted that they remain silent, as they did not hold any formal magistracies at this time. Gaius Saturninus was made the urban prefect after Vopiscus’ brief tenure thereupon, and so he was present along with his brother Lucius, who was consul-elect in that year. His colleague was Calpurnius Serranus, and they likewise did not speak. The preeminent magistrates in attendance were of course the censors and consuls — Aviola, Pulcher, Sabinus, and Glabrio — along with five praetors. These were Felix Pius, whom was the first to hold his office and sought precedent congruent with the designs of Caesar, Sextus Marius, Poppaeus Sabinus, and Aurelius Severus — all of whom had been decemvirs previously, as well as a young patrician named Cestius Gallus. The junior member of this consilium was Caecilius Cilo, one of the tribunes for that year, and he was a man distinguished only by his wit, but was unambitious and feared Caesar. The great object of their endeavors was the consular elections of the following years, which the censors agreed would be in the best interests of Caesar to determine in advance. From among the great number of praetors seeking public office, only three would be allowed to run for office in each year, such that the senators would more likely aim their ambitions at one another rather than at Caesar. Among these men would be numerous members of the imperial family, including the sons of Caesar, Messalla Barbatus, and Felix Pius. Other men of notable ancestry, as well as several from humble origins, would stand for election, just as had been done in the times of the old commonwealth.

    At this consilium, Aviola spoke privately to Caesar in concern for the instability of the armies in Germania. The legions there had become battle-hardened and conscientious of their essential role within the imperial apparatus. Thus Caesar resolved to send Drusus and his cousin, Marcus Rufus to Germania whereupon they assumed an imperium over all of Gaul and Germania with which they had been imbued by Caesar. With this power, Drusus issued the establishment of new offices and commands among the legati and governors of those provinces. The whole theatre of war would be overseen by a Magister Occidens, whom was required to have been both a consul and a proconsul for a total of five years. Subordinate to this man would serve the imperatores of Spain, Germania, and Pannonia with their respective officers. The man appointed to this powerful office was Camillus Scribonianus, the consul of nine years hence whom had been one of the victorious commanders of the Illyrian Revolt. As he made the journey to assume this command, he was accompanied by Claudius Primus, whom had erstwhile accompanied Vopiscus at Rome for the last year. On his arrival, Drusus called a council of his comrades in the mold of Caesar’s consilium at Rome in the same year. This included all of his senior advisors, men such as Junius Blaesus and Quinctilius Varus, as well as his younger colleages, many of whom were now ex-consuls. In light of this vacuum of advocates at Rome, Drusus sent word for his numerous allies which he had acquired during his numerous years on campaign, among whom were the ex-praetors Sextus Mummius and Cornelius Gallus from Greece, as well as numerous Spaniards and Germans whom would earn esteem in the eyes of Caesar in light of his son’s favor.

    Meanwhile at this time, Gnaeus Domitius was exacting a cruel tribute from the peoples on the eastern coasts of Italia in the region of Picenum. These communities had been stalwart allies of Agrippa during the civil war, and many of their cities had not opened their gates to him and his allies as they had marched on Rome on the Flaminian Way. Many local magistrates were lynched by his legionaries and the ramparts of numerous settlements were torn down whereafter their inhabitants were harassed and robbed, in spite of their rights of citizenship. Many fled this terror to Rome whereby they appealed these abuses to Caesar personally, or to the majestic praetor in that year, Aurelius Severus. However, this Severus had been a friend of Domitius in their childhoods, and thus he refused that any charges might be brought against his friend.

    While this was going on, the women of the imperial family, having fled the city in the chaos of the civil wars, returned to Rome. This entourage included Agrippina Augusta, the wife of Caesar, and their numerous daughters. They were welcomed at Rome with great fanfare, as many of them were beloved by the urban plebeians and patricians alike for their great virtue and ancestries. Also in this group were the children of Marcus Aquileanus, the deceased son of Agrippa. Being without a father and far too young to assume familial duties of their own, they were graciously accepted into the household of their uncle, Antonius Agrippa. He adopted his two nephews, Marcus and Lucius Agrippa, into his household. This act of generosity and patronage was met with unanimous renown for Antonius’ filial piety and paternal duty and the two of them were celebrated in equal measure to Antonius the younger, whom was himself highly valued as a youth among the city of Rome.

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    A bust of Felix Pius, imperator of Italy and the first praetor patriae

    —In the consulship of Lucius Sentius Saturninus and Lucius Nonius Asprenas Calpurnius Serranus…
    Felix Pius, while serving in his capacity as praetor patriae was arranged to marry Claudia, the sister of Gemellus and the daughter of Drusus the elder. This was a remarkable step towards his integration with the regime of Caesar. Hitherto, he had been a marginal prince, eclipsed by not just Caesar’s sons, but also Aquileanus and Gaius Solus, but their untimely deaths had gifted to Pius the perfect opportunity to cast his lot either with Caesar or with Agrippa. His role in the struggle that ensued forced Caesar to call him to his side or else execute him, for fear that he might repeat Agrippa’s machinations with those old enough to remember the regime of Gaius Vipsanianus. However, his steadfast loyalty and piety ensured his absorption into the mainstream of imperial life, where he was thus forth an equal of many of his illustrious cousins.

    Before the consilium of Caesar could be assembled, a former magistrate from Asculum, Egnatius Calvinus, brought charges of majestas against Domitius, whom had returned to Rome in the early days of that year. The praetor thereover, named Gaius Cinna, was the son of the consul whom had been killed in the Julian schism, and had no affinity for Domitius, as his own father had been one of those complicit in the cruel regime of Vipsanianus. He thus brought Domitius to court on these charges, where he would be prosecuted by a young senator whom was a tribune in that year named Junius Aper. However, on the day that the trial was convened, the onlookers were aghast at the man who appeared as the counsel for the defense. This man was Vopiscus himself, whom had been granted the tribunician authority in his consulship nine years hence. He interposed his personage on the proceedings and ordered the trial dispersed. Furious at this, Aper denounced him on that day and continuously thereafter whenever an audience would hear him. Eventually Caesar interceded on behalf of his son and Aper was stripped of his office, whereafter he fled Rome in disgrace, whereafter he was accepted by the Asculans for his attempt to wrest justice from their arraigner, Domitius. In light of this, to placate the citizens of Picenum, Antonius Agrippa was dispatched by Caesar to bestow gifts of coins and grants from the military treasury and the household of the Julii, and thereafter, no efforts were made to prosecute the agents of Caesar whom had acted in bad faith after the insurgency of Agrippa.

    However, Felix Pius would be forced to resign his office of praetor patriae after only seventeen months because of news that reached him of the death of Marcus Rufus, his younger brother. The younger Drusus had sent this news with great sorrow, and many at Rome began to immediately suspect the freedman, Claudius Primus, whom had ended his brief residence in Germania after the stripling’s untimely death. After this, Caesar made no visible efforts to punish Primus, in spite of the apparent nature of his crimes, for he apparently valued the cohesiveness of his lieutenants over the integrity of his subordinates. In the wake of this, after Pius had been absolved of grief, he brought Primus before the peregrine praetor, Aelius Marcellinus, who oversaw crimes committed abroad or by foreigners in Rome. By doing so, rather than bringing him before the praetor in charge of assassination cases, he was deliberately implying that Primus was a foreigner to Rome, and thus deserved no place in the regime of Caesar. In his efforts, he was tacitly supported by Gaius Aviola, the censor, whom had grown uncomfortable with the administrative apparatus controlled by the imperial freedmen, and thus desired to check their ambitions through this public trial and exile of Primus. However, on the appointed day of the trial, Vopiscus once again interceded on the proceedings and the trial was cancelled.

    This infuriated the secretary of the capital, Drusus Julius Carbo, who took the opportunity to denounce publicly the repeated machinations and usurpations of Primus, whom he viewed as a rival within the secretariat. However, when he became learned of these developments, Caesar immediately reconciled the two and chastised them for disrupting the stability of Rome for their own personal vendettas. In order to placate this dispute, Caesar arranged for the trial and exile of Aurelius Severus, whom had been praetor in the previous year and also a decemvir. This was done such that the malcontents within Caesar’s camp would not view him as having sided with the ambitious jackals at his sides to their detriment. The exile of such an esteemed person whom had been a decemvir, praetor, and consul-elect would placate the party of Pius and those whom had prosecuted Domitius while simultaneously not alienating the growing following that Vopiscus had accrued.

    Drusus spent the summer of that year traveling around the German provinces distributing gifts and extending grants of Latin Rights to the peoples of various provincial settlements. A few of these were even given full citizenship, including the border cities of Tiberium, Limitanensis, and Arboretium. He tasked the numerous legions therein, whom had been recalled from their temporary quarters in Marcomannicum in the preceding years, with the construction of causeways and ramparts within the unruly country such that travel might be more expedient through that country. Simultaneously, Junius Blaesus, the imperator thereover, was kept vigilant along the frontiers with his lieutenant, Paullus Scaurus, engaged in periodic clashes with raiders along the border with the Lugii, whom resided just North of the Marcomanni and south of the Sueves and Lombards.

    Lastly, as a matter of course in this year, Vopiscus, as the primary patron in Rome after Caesar, saw fit to arrange for the marriages of the deceased Marcus Rufus’ daughters, Julia Livilla and Julia Rufinia. They, although still children, were betrothed to two of the pre-eminent young men in the city. Livilla was betrothed to Cossus Lentulus, son of the propraetor who fought alongside Caesar in the schism, and Rufinia was betrothed to Gaius Lollius, the former legatus in Germania. This was in opposition to the loud protests of Pius, whom had earned the enmity of Vopiscus for his delay in the seizure of Rome from Agrippa which led to the deaths of many of Vopiscus’ friends, including Gaius Solus. Vopiscus lastly saw fit to try Quintus Pedius and Pinarius Scarpus, whom were descendants of Julia Secunda, the younger sister of the Divine Julius for the crime of extortion. Both men had previously been of service to Drusus and Galerius in Macedonia, and Vopiscus, in order to court the favor of Galerius, whom was already discomforted by Caesar’s denial of him to the title of princeps senatus and not chastised Drusus for his foul treatment in Moesia several years prior. Galerius, whom had thusfar been living quietly at his estate in the Suburba, reestablished himself in the political life of Rome as the prosecutor of these men, accompanied by his son Galerius Trachalus. They were both exiled and their inheritances were confiscated by the agents of Caesar.
     
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    Volume Seven -- Changing of the Guard
  • Volume Seven - Changing of the Guard
    Translated by Clodius Theodoricus Alexander MDXXXIX ab Urbe Condita for all twelve of the Imperial Universities

    Hail the Caesars for his great victories over the easterners at the Battles of the Bosporus! With the present threat passed, I am happy that this, and all earlier translations of the annals will be available for use at all of the imperial universities, especially for Tiberium, and I wish them the best of omens in the reconstruction of their forum after it's recent catastrophe. I apologize for the great length of time between this and the most recent publications; I was called into service for the administrative clerical bureau in Nicaea for the last of the war years and was unable to have my books shipped to me because of poor weather conditions and the banditry in Syria. During my service, our tabularium was graced by the presence of Emperor Paullus Aquila as he made his way to inspect the garrisons in the East, and I received his blessing to return to my scholarship in Alexandria, and I have since been hard at work translating the most recent volume. I also had the privilege of attending a diplomatic summit in Palmyra where the kings of Persia, Armenia, Commagena, and Arabia were attendant, and as a sign of goodwill, the king of kings himself granted immense works of eastern scholarship to my entourage in return for a sum of sestercii. I was also granted great favors by Agrippa XXI of Judea as I passed through his country, and these gifts will hopefully improve the quality of any further publications. May the divine emperors bless all your endeavors.

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    The Temple of the Divine Drusus, constructed during the reign of Germanicus and finished by his successors, who would dedicate it to him as well.

    Chronicle of Volume Seven (795 - 809 AUC)

    Coming once I finish writing it...

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    Germanicus Invictus, the Fourth Emperor of Rome, who famously never lost a battle when he commanded legions.
     
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    Book 28: 42-45 CE
  • Liber Septimius ——— DCCXCIV ad DCCCIX Annos ab Urbe Condita
    Book Twenty Eight - Division of the House

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    Rogue Garamantine tribesmen charge the formation of Caecina

    —In the consulship of Marcus Valerius Messalla Corvinus and Sextus Papinius Allenius…

    There was a dispute in the elections of the numerous colleges of minor magistrates. In the times of the Commonwealth, these magistrates — among whom were minor judges, commissioners of the vigiles, mint administrators, and prefects of the various public roads and facilities around Italia — were elected by the assembly of the tribes, which had been abolished by the divine Drusus, however no electoral procedures were established for them among the senate. The censors had been ambivalent on this issue thusfar, and the consuls in the previous years were bothered by prostrations before Caesar and many were too young or inexperienced to concern themselves with such things. In this vacuum, the secretary-general, Marcianus Rex, had taken upon himself the duty of appointing such minor officials. However, at this time, Appius Pulcher elected to assert the privileges of the senate on this matter, as he was disdainful of the influence of the freedmen bureaucrats in Rome. He brought this matter before the consilium principis, and it was decided that they would, each year, determine the pool of candidates for these offices, whereafter they would be presented before the senate. Rex was cooperative with this measure, as he was confident in his position thusfar and did not fear the diminution of his power of appointments given his great wealth. However, this measure drove a wedge between the censors, as Aviola was a man more principled than ambitious, and his friendships with many of the freedmen secretaries made him cautious of the allegiance of Pulcher, whom was himself more ambitious than principled.

    In the later weeks of Junius, Aulus Caecina, the governor of Africa, was approached by King Ptolemy of Mauritania, whom feared a revolution in that country. His request to establish a garrison of three cohorts in his capital under the oversight of an equestrian prefect was rejected outright, for fear of compromising the borders of Africa, although Caecina elected to personally lead a significant force on a tour through that country for a brief time in order to placate Ptolemy and dissuade the unruly from their brigandage. This column of five cohorts and their auxiliae met little resistance for the first weeks of the expedition. They were showered with gifts from the Mauritanian elites and populace alike, who greeted them as liberators from the despotisms forced upon them by the violence of banditry. However, as this column left the city of Sitifis, a detachment of the Garamantes, a nomadic people whom lived to the South of Africa and Mauritania, fell upon the unsuspecting legionaries and routed their auxiliary cavalry alae. Caecina briefly considered retreat, but when his tesserarius took note of the loose and disorganized sorties of the barbarians, he ordered a wing of his cohorts to feign retreat and upon their pursuit, wheel around and use their remaining pila as pikes against the charging cavalry. The untrained nerves of the barbarians saw them take flight at this maneuver, whereafter the recuperated alae of cavalry dispatched the remainder of the barbarians. A temporary camp was constructed and a few days of tense vigils saw Caecina fit to order a withdrawal to the province of Africa. He thusly requested that Caesar might reinforce their garrison with men from Spain and Aegypt, neither of which had seen significant combat in at least a decade. Caesar obliged and sent five cohorts under the command of Pinarius Natta, an equite, to be dispersed throughout Mauritania along the coast and based at Sitifis.

    Elsewhere, the younger Drusus continued his work of establishing a defensible frontier in Germany. Small forts were interspersed along the length of the Albis River as well as running perpendicular to it wherein the bulk of the legionary forces would be quartered and their watchtowers placed. This included numerous small palisades which might serve to delay any minor incursions while reinforcements might arrive by means of river transport in the event of a larger assault. Drusus also saw fit to increase the size of the Classis Albiensis, which patrolled the frigid Albian waters. While Drusus was occupied with these, his friend and ally Corbulo became disquieted. He had been a steadfast ally of Drusus and Caesar, and had been one of the legati to march against Agrippa, and yet his less-distinguished colleague, Lollius was granted greater favors in light of his marriage to the daughter of Marcus Rufus. Corbulo became resentful and sought to improve his own position by means of seeking to exact greater taxes from the peoples of Vindelicia, of which he was the governor at that time. This won him favor from Caesar, although it did not ingratiate him to the men whom had been made citizens in the settlements at Vindelicia, including Decumanticum and Vistriodunum.

    Meanwhile, at Rome, the new praetor patriae, Julius Fulvus, the son of a freedman of Augustus, entertained a number of prosecutions undertaken by Claudius Primus, whom despite having been chastised by his colleagues, was not deterred in his ambitions. Among his targets were numerous elder senators whom had been complicit in the coup undertaken by Agrippa. These were men on the stature of Fulcinius Trio, Lucius Silanus, and even the former consuls Octavius Laenas and Gabinius. Each was tried before the senate by Primus and the equite Lutorius Priscus, and each in turn was exiled and their estates were confiscated. Some, like Octavius, saw fit to commit suicide rather than undergo the humiliation that flight from the city would certainly bring. The younger of these men, Trio, would have no such compunctions, and managed to smuggle a significant amount of his assets with him to Rhodes where he would enjoy them in his exile. However, these prosecutions were not undertaken lightly or without strong opposition, and many young and impassioned men, such as Sextus Mummius, were particularly vocal in their misgivings. He soon came under surveillance and veiled threats from Primus, whereafter he fled the city to Germany and his patron, Drusus.

    In the closing of that year, Caesar dismissed Florus and Postumus, the praetorian prefects, and assigned in their place Hosidius Geta and Justus Catonius, whom were comrades in arms with his sons, having served in the last of the civil wars. Also at that time, a great embassy from the East arrived at Rome. Among its number were the kings and magistrates from Greece and Asia, including some whom no longer ruled in their own right, such as Antiochus of Cappadocia. Alternatively, some were merely delegates of greater kings, such as those of Judea and Bosporus, whom did not attend themselves due to internal matters in their own realms. These royal deputies lavished the great wealth of the East upon Caesar’s treasury, which was received by Paullus Fronto as the administrator of barbarian affairs. Thereafter Caesar dispatched a trusted familial ally, Lucius Antonius, to lead an embassy of his own to the East with the power to answer petitions brought to him by the allies and provincials alike. With this resolved, Caesar could rest confident in the security of his regime against any threats or usurpations. His subordinates were too busy fighting one another to be a serious threat to him, and the foreign enemies of the empire were far too weak to compromise this.

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    A relief depicting the surviving sons of Caesar in mourning, with Drusus in the center, Vopiscus in the front, and Gaius in the rear

    —In the consulship of Gaius Vettius Rufus and Decimus Haterius Agrippa…
    Pulcher and Aviola resigned their censorships at the appointed time and the consuls arranged for the election of their successors. In their place, the senate elected Appius Junius Silanus and Gaius Cassius, whom by this time were both senior statesmen and consulares, with the men their senior long having since perished in the civil wars. Cassius in particular confided to many of his friends that he never would have attained such rank without the upheaval of the civil wars, as his consulship and censorship were both borne from these events. He had proved loyal to Caesar, even though Agrippa had been his father-in-law, and his children, of whom there were three sons and two daughters, were raised on the Palatine in the house of Caesar with his own sons. Appius Silanus was a militarily distinguished man whom had served honorably in the Marcomannic War, as well as the nephew-in-law of Caesar through his marriage to Antonia, the daughter of Tiberius, after she was widowed by Agrippa's death. However, Lucius Cassius, the younger brother of the censor, was visibly distraught at this arrangement. He had become distant from his brother after he was chastised for his resignation of the consulship fourteen years hence, and after the elections, he openly denounced his brother for his betrayal of filial piety and his abandonment of Agrippa in the civil war. In retaliation, Gaius Cassius used his powers as censor to strip Lucius of his senate seat, as well as his consular decorations, and Lucius would commit suicide in the following months out of shame for this rebuke.

    Simultaneously, Aurelia, the widow of the deceased Lucius Vipsanianus and the mother of the deceased Gaius Solus, returned to Rome and appealed to Caesar to allow her younger brother, Lucius Cotta — son of Cotta Maximus whom was an ally of Gaius Vipsanianus and whom had been consul eighteen years hence — to return to Rome and deliver the funeral oration for Lucius, whom had yet to be receive one in earnest, although there had been a modest funeral. Caesar obliged, and even awarded the man with a senate seat, although this was without consular decorations and he was graded only as an ex-praetor. He went on to deliver the oration on the Rostra before cheering crowds, as the people had adored Lucius, and although the speech is lost to us today, one contemporary, Vellius Paterculus, commended that his speech was, “Without equal and one of the finest impassioned deliveries ever seen in the Forum in my lifetime since the death of Lepidus.” As cousins, Lucius Cotta quickly developed a camaraderie with Felix Pius, as they shared in common a traumatic experience in the downfall of their fathers from power in the schism and their diminution to obscurity in its aftermath. This saw them enjoy considerable time together, which Marcianus Rex feared, as both men together might accrue a strong following in opposition to his secretariat. To this end, to deprive them of a substantial ally, Rex arranged for Caesar to send Domitius to Spain and dispatch Lucius Antonius on the aforementioned embassy to the East. This would deprive these men of any substantial familial allies within Rome, as Vopiscus was resolutely against their ambitions, and without his support, Cotta and Pius, even with their friendship to Gemellus, would not be able to gain a following to oppose his unrivaled tribunician authority.

    Drusus at this time, went with Corbulo, Ostorius Scapula, and Gaius Silius to inspect the legions in their readiness in their castra. The legions were scattered along the border, primarily in individual camps, although the Legiones VII Tiberia and XIV Gemina Victrix were both quartered at Tibeirum in Cisalbis. Most of the legions were under strict and rigorous discipline from their time spent at war with the Sueves, Marcomanni, and Saxons, but many of the legionaries were reportedly of the age where they might retire. This portion, consisting of a significant number of the VII TIberia and VIII Hispanica, sought these disbursements. Unusually though and in contrast to tradition, they did not return to Italia upon their retirement, but instead settled throughout Germania in such cities as Tiberium, Idistaviso, Hyperboreum, and Taurontum — the bulk of which were in the northern quarters of that country. This was done because many of the legionaries, despite the official ban on the practice, had married local women against their orders, and some had even fathered children. Thus they had no desire to return to the noise and industry of the Italian countryside, and preferred to enjoy the quiet simplicity of life in Germania. Drusus thusly made a fateful decision in the capacity of his imperium. Having granted citizenship to the peoples of several of these cities, he ordered that a census and levy be undertaken by the procurators and governors of Cisalbis, Vindelicia, and Angiliensis such that the legions might be replenished from their own numbers, rather than from Italians and Spaniards whom had no familiarity with the terrain of Germany.

    Having accomplished this, and having ordered a number of fortified earthworks and palisades constructed in the hills and mountains on the border between Vindelicia and Marcomannicum as a temporary countermeasure against any aggressions thereby, Drusus gathered his allies from among the provincials. This included men from numerous quarters of the empire. Men of Greece and Asia, including Sextus Mummius and Cornelius Burrus, were prominent among this entourage, as were a number of Gauls and Germans descended from the enemies of Rome. Among these were Callistus Vorenus, the son of the Cherusci prince Arminius, and many Gauls sporting the nomen of the Julii from their grants of citizenship by the Divine Julius, Augustus, and Drusus. These men endured persecutions of the freedmen and patricians of Rome alike, and Drusus sought that their protection as his clients might be greater insured by his own presence. They undertook this journey to Rome with astonishing speed, and unescorted by a cavalry wing, which saw their entrance to Bononia within a month of their departure, and only a further two weeks before their entrance to Rome.

    In Rome, a number of occurrences that had come about in his absence deeply disturbed Drusus. The first of these was the death of Marcus Germanicus, the second of Caesar’s sons to perish before him. Marcus, named for Agrippa while he and Caesar had been comrades, had enjoyed the close favor and kinship of Drusus — more so than any of their other brothers — and Drusus did not leave his home for several days after the funeral, at which the oration was delivered by his now-youngest brother, Gaius. Secondarily, Caesar had arranged for numerous more marriages in the years since the end of the civil war from among his children and grandchildren. Drusus’ own daughter had been betrothed to the son of Galba, who shared his name, and because of Caesar’s status as paterfamilias, Drusus had been powerless to prevent this. He would have preferred a marriage to one of his own allies, Silius or Corbulo, and he had no particular affinity for Galba, as he had trained Drusus and his brothers in Spain and had been harsh and unwavering in his discipline. Drusus’ brothers had been given much more favorable arrangements. Vopiscus’ son — called Tiberius Julius Caesar Vopiscus Germanicus Publicola and henceforth called Publicola — was married to the granddaughter of Cornelius Dolabella, the former censor. The family of Gaius had been even more favored. He had, by this time, fathered four children, two sons and two daughters, and in the subsequent years he would sire two more daughters with his wife Cornelia — who herself was the descendant of Sulla the dictator. His eldest son, Faustus, was married to Claudia Gemella the Younger, the daughter of Gemellus, whereas his younger son, Marcus had been betrothed to Cornelia Cossa, the granddaughter of the former censor. The daughter of Agrippina by her first husband, Cato, was betrothed to Fabius Persicus in the previous year for his exemplary service to Caesar while Agrippa controlled Rome; the children of Livilla were also given spouses of noble birth, including Quinctilius Varus, Quintus Cassius — the youngest son of Postumia and grandson of Agrippa — and Scribonia, the daughter of Drusus Libo.

    His father appeared to have different designs for his eventual rule than did Drusus. Caesar wished that Drusus might consolidate the large and unwieldy Julian family into a small inner circle such that the rebellious tendencies of the noblemen might be tempered by their familial ties. Drusus, on the other hand, wished that a small cohort of his military colleagues and his friends from within the family as well as the provincials would form a group personally loyal to him that he might not be impeded by the actions of his younger brother. Vopiscus himself was themselves becoming more and more insistent of his entitled inheritance by Caesar in both wealth and offices. Vopiscus and Drusus had shared a tense relationship since their training in Spain wherein they had been treated differently by Galba and Domitius, whom had overseen their training. Drusus had been pressured and chided to the aim of perfection, as he was the eldest son of Caesar and the grandson of the Divine Drusus. Vopiscus, on the other hand, had enjoyed the intellectual rigors of history and military scholarship, which thoroughly impressed Galba, whom was content to allow him to study into the late hours of the night while Drusus had been training in a more physical military capacity. This tension was exacerbated when Vopiscus grew jealous at Drusus’ marriage to the daughter of Gaius Vipsanianus and even further when Drusus had been given numerous successive military commands in Germania and Illyricum. This had left Vopiscus alone to advocate for Caesar in Rome whilst Agrippa was in power, and Vopiscus, as a thanks for his services, had been dismissed from the urban prefecture in favor of a legatus whom had been friends with Drusus. He resented this deeply, and the relationship between the two brothers was one of sharp contention.

    This tension was becoming more and more apparent to both of these heirs, and neither of them desired to harm the other, for they still possessed of themselves loyalty to the family and a level of mutual care in spite of their disputes. They settled upon a private meeting with only a single slave as a scribe whereby they might bifurcate their responsibilities so as to not incur jealousy on either of their parts. The exact contents of this meeting have been lost to us, but one contemporary historian called Paterculus, claims that they agreed upon a duumvirate command of the provinces and armies upon their accessions and that their younger brother, Gaius, might be the mediator in any of their future disputes, as they both had good relations with him. The two of them would not seek to alienate their other from their fellow Julians in overt fashion, although this was unavoidable in its totality, and in fact several of the princes had already matriculated with a side in the apparently emerging struggle. Drusus enjoyed camaraderie with Felix Pius as well as Gemellus whereas Vopiscus was closer to Antonius Agrippa, whom had personally sought him out when they entered Rome under force of arms in order to ensure his safety and oversaw his election to the urban prefecture. With this conflict resolved, Vopiscus and his cousin Livius sought the advice and counsel of Tiberius the Elder, whom remained in retirement at Nola. Their journey would be a fruitful one, and while Drusus remained at Rome to ensure the formation of a bloc of his provincial allies in the senate, Vopiscus would seek more subtle avenues through which to pursue his own ends.

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    Antonius Agrippa, the eldest surviving male of the Vipsanii family and praetor patriae for that year

    —In the consulship of Drusus Julius Caesar Germanicus for the Second Time and Lucius Julius Caesar Felix Pius…
    Antonius Agrippa was elected as the praetor patriae and Julius Fulvus, his predecessor, was given the proconsulship of Africa. This was highly unusual, as he had previously been consul, and it was not traditional for men to occupy inferior magistracies in their latter parts of their careers. Many lauded his statesmanship and drew comparison to his grandfather, Marcus Agrippa, who himself occupied the curule aedileship despite having served as ordinary consul four years previously. Agrippa would later serve two successive consulships with the Divine Augustus, and many saw his election as a mark of personal favor from Caesar, and the aristocracy grew to see his own patronage as an avenue by which they might seek favors and honors for themselves. In his capacity as an administrator, and with the aid of his consular colleagues, Drusus and Felix, Antonius brought forth the creation of an extraordinary magistracy, the magister peditum. This office, split in responsibilities between two men, would wield overall imperium over the fields armies in Germania and Illyricum and the riverine fleets on the frontiers. This was in accordance with the body of the laws, which only stipulated that the establishment of an extraordinary magistracy might not be undertaken by men who sought this office for themselves, and as Antonius would be ineligible for this office whilst he served as praetor, he did not arouse suspicions among the senate of any madness for power or empire. The stipulation of this office was that once must have been a legatus or proconsul for at least ten years, although it was not necessary that each of these legatures or proconsulships be served consecutively or even in the same province. The elections were overseen by Appius Silanus, who ensured that his friends and allies, Gaius Aviola and Galerius would assume this awesome mantle. They departed within the year with their staffs and established a command center at Aquilea, which had easy access to both Illyricum, Italia, and Germania.

    At this time, Drusus established an understanding with his comrades whom had served with him in Germania. Several of them had become discontented at not having received consulships in exchange for their labors, while others had. Lollius and Silius in particular, resented Otho and Corbulo for their part in ousting Agrippa from Rome whilst they had remained sat in Germania tending to sheep and deterring armed revolt, rather than winning glory. Drusus remedied this by making promises to these men, and others, that the consular elections of the next several years would be personally overseen by him. The elder Caesar was becoming increasingly absent from public life, and Drusus believed that he would be elevated to co-emperor within a few years, and felt comfortable that his father would not dissuade him from taking such oaths. The remainder of these men, including Corbulo, Marcellus, and Scapula, would be dispersed to Germania and Illyria where they might assume greater command capacity than they had in the previous years. Each man would assume an imperatorial position in the provinces, and they would act as a safeguard by Drusus against any mutinous ideations upon the eventual transfer of power.

    However, Drusus was grief-stricken at the death of his only son, called Nero, in that same year. The young man had become well-known in his penchant for unrest and mischief in his youth, and had spent numerous nights on the streets of Rome causing disease with his compatriots. The vigiles, in their haste to dampen any such frivolities from the disruption of the peace, had wounded Nero, not recognizing him in the dark, and he had died of his wounds shortly thereafter. The prefect of the vigiles, Lucius Pontius, committed suicide upon hearing this news, and Drusus briefly considered decimating the urban cohorts in his rage, although he was tempered by the guiding hand of Caesar. His relationship with his wife, Julia Augusta — the daughter of Gaius Vipsanianus — was a strained one after Drusus’ many years spent in the provinces, and she was unlikely to produce another child. The solution upon which he settled was an unusual one; he adopted a young man whose father was a close ally of Caesar and who was militarily distinguished, but who was also his son-in-law. This man was Servius Sulpicius Galba the younger, the only son of Servius Galba, the consul of fifteen years hence. Galba and Drusilla were already betrothed, and thus the adoption of Servius into the family of the Caesars required no further disruptions within the family. This was done in spite of the personal disdain between the two men; Galba was a powerful agent of Caesar whom was widely respected in both the senate and the legions for his distinguished service in both Spain and Illyricum, and Drusus sought his gravitas as a means to his own ends. This was also done at the urging of Paullus Fronto, the freedman secretary to Caesar. Fronto was a savvy man whom had survived the turbulence of recent years, and sought for himself a secure position in which he might be safe from his enemies. Among these enemies was Claudius Primus, the freedman overseer of the informants of Caesar both within Rome and throughout Italia. Primus had been a creditor of Fronto’s during the reign of the Divine Drusus, when both men were young, and after the accession of Gaius Vipsanianus, numerous debts were cancelled as a program of his regime. The dismissal of these debts was confirmed by Caesar when he ousted Gaius in the civil war, and Paullus had thus forth been a vocal and covert opponent of Primus. Although Primus was the wealthier and more distinguished of the two men, Fronto enjoyed a close camaraderie with the freedmen secretaries — Julius Carbo, Horatius Etruscus, and Julius Trachalus — and thus sought to subvert the influence of Primus by this means.

    At this time, the situation in the eastern provinces had been deteriorating for some time. The death of Tiridates III saw a power vacuum which Tiridates’ sons, Phraates and Vologases, vied with one another for control of that whole country. The foreign clients of these men donated to each of them men and supplies, and the effects that this had on the various kingdoms in the East lent itself to widespread revolution. The kings of Hatra and Commagena had fallen under the suzerainty of Osroene and appealed to the governor of Syria, Lucius Antonius, whom was a kinsman of Caesar and the husband of Cassia Longina, the granddaughter of Agrippa by his daughter Postumia and her husband, Gaius Cassius the censor. Antonius sent word to Caesar, and in the meantime, marshaled his forces, as Syria was the only province in the empire apart from Aegypt in which the legions remained under the direct command of a governor. Caesar’s instructions were unusual to Antonius, whom was himself a traditionalist and an admirer of men such as Pompeius Magnus and the Divine Julius whom had founded great swaths under the empire. Caesar ordered Antonius to merely lend a few small cohorts to the aid of Commagena and to furthermore install the cousin of Polemo, the king of Pontus, whom was himself called Pharnaces Philopator, as the king of Cappadocia and to withdraw the two legions from that country. The living heir to Archelaeus of Cappadocia, Antiochus, was placated upon his return from Rome with the throne of Lesser Armenia. Caesar sought that the eastern borders of his empire might have as few points of congruence with those of the Parthians, such that the overwhelming superiority of the Syrian infantry might not be offset by the mobility of the Parthian cavalry. To this end, clients such as Commagena, Cappadocia, Pontus, and Lesser Armenia would bear the brunt of any such incursions for a brief time before the full might of the legions could be brought to bear. However, in the case of such transgressions, no Roman blood would be shed until absolutely necessary, and the legions in that country wholeheartedly approved of this. As insurance of the loyalty of Pharnaces, his daughter was sent to Judea to become the wife of Herod Agrippa, whom was the king in that country at the time.

    Later in the year, Vopiscus, his younger brother Gaius, and their uncle Tiberius the elder, the brother of Caesar, returned to Rome. They were welcomed by the people of the city as well as many of the senate, whom had grown to distrust Drusus’ favor for his military comerades, and preferred Vopiscus, whom they viewed as more closely aligned with the needs of Italia and with the city itself. However, this return was not a calm one, and Vopiscus immediately launched into a vigorous denouncement of Julius Trachalus, whom was at that time the secretary of the treasury. Vopiscus himself undertook the prosecution of Trachalus on the grounds of having supposedly arranged for the murder of a friend of Vopiscus — one Vibulenus Agrippa whom had been a tribune in the previous year. Trachalus himself possessed a poor record with respect to the tribunes, whom he viewed as bothersome, and he had mistreated several of them in the years since his return to Rome. Vopiscus was joined in this by the ex-tribunes Salvius Crispus and Petronius Niger as well as several prominent senators. Sempronius Longus and Verginius Rufus both made appearances at the various stages of the trial, which alarmed many of the other bureaucrats whom were colleagues of Trachalus, and they became fearful for their own position. Caesar elected not to intervene, and Trachalus was convicted and later committed suicide. In his place, the very wealthy yet also vicious freedman, Fabius Corvus, was selected by Vopiscus. Fronto and Carbo in particular were alarmed, and they sought refuge in the form of guarantees of their safety by Drusus while the secretary-general, Marcianus Rex, remained aloof to such machinations.

    Lastly in this year, another of the scions of the old order passed away. The elder Drusus Nero, having been consul with Visellius Varro and later censor with Sextus Pompeius and Cornelius Dolabella, succumbed to an illness in his home on the Caelian Hill. His son, Gemellus, delivered his funeral oration and presented his only issue, the young Gaius Claudius Nero with his bride-to-be, Domitia Longina, the daughter of Corbulo, as the sole inheritance of the Claudian house. This was a slight against Appius Pulcher, whom had recently been censor, although the man was too old and well-respected to have been seriously affected by the remarks of a noble stripling grasping for recognition in this manner.

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    Drusus gives orders from his headquarters in Germania for fortifications to be built

    —In the consulship of Tiberius Julius Caesar Germanicus Vopiscus for the Second Time and Aulus Didius Gallus…
    Caesar saw fit at this time to redeploy the legions levied by Felix and Rufus after the usurpation of Agrippa. However, he eschewed the tradition of exempting Italia from any such garrisons, and sought that these two legions might be stationed in the northern reaches of Italia as a safeguard against the seizure of that country by any unlawful usurper. These, and two others, would form the central Italian army, which was itself composed primarily of Italian recruits and conscripts, and it was decided that these legions would be commanded by the consuls after their year in office, whereafter the consuls might either leave for the provinces or return to Rome.

    Vopiscus at this time had been possessed of increasing alarm with the adoption of Galba’s son into the imperial family. Whereas Galba had once been a staunch supporter and friend to Vopiscus, the young Caesar now doubted the older general's loyalty. To this end, he sought to secure marriage alliances with the remainder of the imperial family through his own progeny as well as that of Gaius, whom had been compliant with the political whims of both of his brothers for some time. His own son had been betrothed, and he thusly sought to employ the daughters of Gaius to these same ends; Gaius’ daughters would each be married to men from within the extended imperial family. His eldest daughter, Julia Prima, would be married to the son of Antonius Agrippa, whom was also called Antonius. His second daughter, Cornelia would be married to Publius Claudius Pulcher, the younger son of the former censor, Appius Pulcher. His third daughter, Agrippina Prima, would receive as a husband Lucius Marcellus, the consul of six years hence and whom was a distant cousin of the Caesars. His youngest daughter, Drusilla would be married to Paullus Lepidus, the son of Julia the Younger, whom himself was the brother-in-law of Vopiscus by his sister Aemilia. These marriages would not enter into effect for several years, as the daughters of Gaius were too young to be betrothed, but in the succeeding years, each of these men would become closer to the designs of Vopiscus, whom had provided them with blood ties to the family of Augustus.

    The betrothal of the granddaughters of Caesar was accompanied by such grand festivities that it was said that the following day saw no man return to his place of work. At the end of these festivities and a brief period of public thanksgiving, the sons of Drusus and Vopiscus — Servius and Publicola — were sent to Spain with their imperial uncle, Gnaeus Domitius, where they might receive martial training in the style of their fathers and grandfathers. However, their wives did not accompany them, and were showered in Rome with gifts and banquets. Drusilla and Cornelia quickly became close friends and they sought advice from their aunt Cornelia, the wife of Gaius, whom was well acquainted with the rigors and luxuries of being a woman in the imperial household.

    A second great elder statesman died in as many years in the spring months of that year. Gaius Cassius Longinus, whom had been an accomplished orator for many years, consul seventeen years hence with Gaius Claudius Marcellus. He had subsequently been the son-in-law of Agrippa, and the father of a daughter and three sons by his young wife Postumia. Although in his early career he was viewed as a man of unsavory and volatile character, the ousting of Gaius Vipsanianus during his own consulship enabled him to establish himself as a powerful advocate of Caesar from within the senate, hence his election to the censorship. He had made many great sacrifices for the good of the Empire, including the expulsion of his own brother from the senate for his transgressions. His funeral oration was delivered by his brother-in-law, Antonius Agrippa the Elder, after which his widowed wife, Postumia, refused to be married off to another senator. Antonius, whom was the paterfamilias of the Vipsanii, respected this wish, and she devoted her time thus forth to the care of her children, for which she earned considerable respect from both the senate and people. However, such grief had no place in the heart of Caesar, whom had never fully trusted Cassius in any case, and had arranged for his censorship only to pacify him and for his colleague Silanus to monitor him. In his place, an unusual candidate was selected. This man had been the consular colleague of Vipsanianus, but in the years since, his daughter had married Gaius, the son of Caesar, and he and his two brothers had become reliable allies of the Caesars. This man was Faustus Sulla, the son of Lucius Sulla whom was consul with Augustus and himself the grandson of the dictator. He commanded much respect among the senators and had labored tirelessly in the senate to ensure the fair trials of a multitude of their number in the various law courts in which corrupt senators were tried. His character was as stern as it was dedicated to the law, and there was no opposition to his election to the censorship.

    However, this year also saw the first test of the martial skill of Aulus Plautius, whom was the imperator of Moesia in that year. The reticent Dacians had constructed periodic raids into Moesia to seize the assets of amber and slaves as well as wine. The Dacian capital had been destroy by Vipsanianus numerous years previously, and their state had significantly deteriorated and many of their men turned to banditry as a means of sustenance. However the imperator was aloof to these concerns, as indeed was Caesar, and halting the raids became a task of paramount importance. Numerous indecisive engagements ensued, as Plautius’ legates — Domitius Afer and Publius Crassus — were not men of substantial military capability. Plautius thus assumed direct command of the legions and engaged in a war of maneuver with the Dacians whereby he was able to position his troops at the top of a hill between the Dacian camp and the clearest path to their homeland, in an area known to them as the Fulminata Pass. The Dacians quickly attempted to negotiate, but their diplomats were captured and a battle swiftly ensued. The Dacians were routed after only a short time, and all those captured were sold as slaves, except for the ambassadors, who were set free that they might dissuade others from invoking the wrath of the legions.

    However, near the year’s close, the freedman Claudius Primus sought for himself a greater degree of oversight over not simply his own bureau, but those of his colleagues such that upon the eventual accession of Vopiscus, they might together monitor these departments more closely. To this end, each of the departments was assigned a deputy whom was simultaneously the inspector general of that bureau. The sole exception to this was the general-secretaryship, which was held at this time by Marcianus Rex, and whom was a close personal friend of Caesar. The remainder of the secretaries, those of the treasury, of justice, of correspondence, and the capital, were each assigned a deputy in this way. Among the men raised to these offices were the freedmen whom had been manumitted by Tiberius the Elder during his time at Rome in the years preceding his flights from the city. These men, each of them named Tiberius, were surnamed Didius Aper, Vibius Proximus, and Domitius Castorianus, as well as several of their own political allies. These men would be the watchmen over abuses of power by the freedmen, and their relationships would define the bureaucratic operations of the Empire for the next decade.

    EDIT: Fixed a few errors! My bad! It should be a more clear read now!
     
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    Book 29: 46-47 CE
  • Book Twenty Nine - Passing the Torch

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    A former senator is executed after being convicted by Felix and Cotta

    —In the consulship of Gaius Silius and Quintus Plautius…
    Cotta followed in the footsteps of Antonius Agrippa — thenceforth called Agrippa, as he was the paterfamilias of the Vipsanian household — and occupied the praetorship patriae, in spite of that he had been consul in his youth. However, this was his first praetorship, as the reigning Caesar at the time, Gaius Vipsanianus, had disregarded the qualifications for office in order to ensure the loyalty of Cotta’s extended family. He was realized at this time with considerable ambition, upon which he had spent many of the intervening years ruminating. He joined his efforts with those of Felix Pius, Messalla Barbatus, Publius Vinicius, and Gaius Piso whom each shared a commonality. Their fathers had been exiled or killed in the wake of Caesar’s overthrow of his predecessor. However, they knew that Caesar himself was beyond their reach and instead resolved to exact vengeance upon the men and the descendants of whom had acted against Vipsanianus’ regime in the favor of Caesar. Plautius, the consul, entertained these designs, as his uncle was Cornelius Cethegus, whom was another of Caesar’s victims. They authored a law which made the unilateral action of such men to take up arms against the reigning Caesar or to convene tribunals whilst troops were present in Italy. Caesar was not in any position to oppose such measures, as doing so would encourage usurpation and show him as weak and insecure. With this measure in place, Cotta saw charges brought against the sons of many men whom had aided in the overthrow of his father. Among these men were the sons of Cotta Maximus’ former centurions, Servius Rutilius and Vorenus Merula, whom had gained senatorial seats for themselves in the interim. These men did not have the means to oppose such charges and fled to Achaea rather than face the wrath of the princes. However, men of such low stature were not the only victims of this purge. The former consul of eleven years hence, Scaurus Terentianus, was made to bear the full weight of the law and was thusly convicted and sentenced to death, although he appealed this sentence and fled into exile instead. This was done because Terentianus’ father, Mamercus Aemilius Scaurus, had betrayed the army of Cotta’s father when they faced Caesar in open battle in Illyricum during the schism. Also sentenced to exile was the former censor, Dolabella, although he fell ill and died before leaving the city; his son’s inheritance was confiscated into the military treasury. However, the other targets of these efforts were more fortunate to have powerful allies. The three sons of Gaius Cassius employed for their defense Appius Junius Silanus, the former censor, whom himself had escaped prosecution by the same court. They were all acquitted and the labors of Cotta were largely foiled in this respect.

    Vopiscus, whom had spent the beginning of that year traveling around northern Italia to lavish donatives onto the loyal Italian legions whom had saved his life when he was captive inside Rome, returned to the great city at this time. Upon hearing of the exile of so many senators and the seizure of so much power by Cotta and Felix, he became furious. He styled himself as the master of Rome, as Caesar was elderly and Drusus was frequently on campaign in the provinces, and this perceived threat to his sole dominion would not be tolerated. Vopiscus was a man of fiery and capricious temperament, and his actions thereafter conformed precisely to this mold. He mounted the Rostra every day for several weeks and delivered chillingly veiled threats to Felix and Cotta, whom were prevented from retaliation in the own right by the tribunician authority of Vopiscus and that of his allies in the tribunate. Vopiscus assembled a council of his close friends and advisors, among whom were the former consuls Lucius Sentius Saturninus and Porcius Cato as well as the freedman Antonius Primus. These men wielded considerable power between themselves, both directly through their service in public office and indirectly through the immense respect they commanded among the senate, the legions, and the regime of Caesar. The urban prefecture had recently been vacated due to the untimely death of Sutorius Macro, and Vopiscus arranged for his replacement by Saturninus, whose elder brother had served in that same office just two years prior. He used this office to oversee the remainder of the trials in that year which would otherwise be delegated to the urban praetor, whom in that years was Silius Nerva, the younger brother of Gaius Silius the consul. Nerva was powerless to prevent this, and the legal machinations of Cotta and Felix were aborted by this undertaking. Vopiscus himself sought to bring Cotta to trial, although not Felix, whom he viewed as a lesser threat due to his ties to Vopiscus’ family. Caesar himself interceded at this time and chided his young son for his flagrant self-aggrandizement and demagoguery, after which Vopiscus became considerably less overt in his hostilities towards these men.

    However, the undertaking of this judicial battle illustrated plainly to the powerful men of Rome that such flagrant exercise of power by Vopiscus would soon become impossible to deny by the aging Caesar, and several of these men, among whom were the illustrious allies of Caesar, sought refuge among the clientele of Drusus, whom was the only man able to challenge Vopiscus. Among these men were Galba, the father-in-law of Drusus, Quinctilius Varus, the consul of twelve years hence, and Junius Blaesus, the former imperator of Germania and consul of seventeen years hence. Many of these men enjoyed a personal friendship with Drusus, and numerous others had served with him in the legions and admired his valor in battle. However, the most powerful among these men was Aviola, whom had been serving as the magister peditum with his uneasy comrade, Galerius. Aviola had been the consular colleague of Caesar as well as censor and imperator. He was among the most decorated of all the senators. However, he came to fear the wrath of Vopiscus whom enjoyed a close camaraderie with Aviola’s most despised rival, Claudius Pulcher, with whom had served as censor. Pulcher himself had no patience for the idealisms and ambitions of the soldiery, with whom Drusus and Aviola were so acquainted. Pulcher’s ancestry from the most illustrious house of the old Republic as well as his son’s marriage to the granddaughter of Caesar made him a powerful man to be reckoned with, and even the wrathful Vipsanianus had cautioned against his prosecution, although this would be his downfall as Pulcher was among those to open the gates of Rome to the legions of Caesar during the Julian schism. However, Aviola himself was not without his own enemies, whom by necessity had become friends of Pulcher and of Galerius. The sons of Cornelius Sulla — Lucullus, Magnus, and Felix, all of whom had been consuls — were men of unparalleled loyalty to one another whom had remained comrades through the turbulent reign of Vipsanianus, the senatorial upheavals of Caesar’s early reign, and the civil wars of Agrippa and Surdinus, and the three men shared marriage ties with numerous illustrious families, including the Vibii, the Lentuli, the Junii, the Aemilii, and of course, the Julii. This latter connection was a tenuous one — the daughter of Lucullus had married Gaius Primus — yet the brothers remained steadfastly loyal to one another and to their kinsmen. Among these was Vopiscus, whose cousin-in-law by his wife Aemilia, Cecilia Regula, was the wife of Magnus. These men were creatures of the senate and mistrusted the freedmen secretaries and officer corps in equal measure, and saw the steerage of the state as their birthright; their great-grandfather was Sulla the dictator himself. In the wake of this tension, Drusus arranged for the marriage of Silius to his youngest sister, Drusilla, which greatly pleased Silius and filled the allies of Vopiscus with dread.

    The freedmen as well, in that year, would become realized with ambitions above their station. Marcianus Rex, an equite and the secretary-general, was selected as the prefect of Italy on the death of Sutorius Macro, whom in addition to the urban prefecture served in this office. The Italian prefecture was a post with few administrative duties, however it was tasked with the crucial task of commanding and supplying the Italian legions in the absence of the consuls or any of Caesar’s legates. Rex, whom had served as a camp prefect in the legions during the schism, was well-equipped for this station, and he felt a great sense of relief as he departed Rome, as he was an aged man and did not desire to spend his twilight years embroiled in the power struggles of the young princes. His departure from Rome would have grave consequences, however. In his place, Paullus Fronto was made the secretary-general by Drusus where in his place, Vibius Proximus, the freedman of Tiberius the elder, was made the secretary overseeing the embassies to the barbarians. Immediately, Proximus sought that Caesar might install a contingent of imperial agents within the provinces which held legions yet were not led by his imperatores. These were few but included Africa, Aegyptus, and Syria. These three provinces were among the most crucial in the entire empire, and obliged this suggestion by Proximus, whom had thoroughly proven himself as an effective administrator of the public archives. This measure was met by considerable uproar from numerous provincial communities, including those of the Jews, whom in the years since the death of the Divine Augustus had fluctuated between government by their own kings and those of an imperial procurator. The subsequent unrest induced Gaius Caetronius, the governor of Syria to intervene with a legion of his own in that country. The Jews were cowed by this show of force, and Caetronius was awarded triumphal ornaments for his valor. Herod Agrippa was confirmed as the king in that country and the peoples therein were placated for a considerable time thereafter.

    However, grief struck the hearts of the Romans in the late part of that year when the patron mother of the empire, Agrippina Augusta, fell ill and died in the imperial palace. Caesar was heartbroken, as his wife had remained at his side since their marriage in the time of the Divine Augustus, even throughout the civil wars in the interim in which Caesar had partaken. Her funeral procession drew all the denizens of the city and several surrounding cities. Caesar, all his sons, and all the husbands of his daughters — Cato, Domitius, and Silius — neglected to shave as a sign of mourning for the remainder of that year. However, her last words had been a foreboding prophecy. She claimed to have spoken this utterance to her sons as they embraced her on her deathbed, “My sons, do not be driven to one another’s throats by the courtiers and advisors who seek only the empire for themselves.” This plea for peace in the wake of her own death and the advanced ago of Caesar gave Drusus and Vopiscus pause. The two of them agreed to meet in the imperial palace in order that they might partition the responsibilities of empire. They had already elected to apportion the consulships and censorships among their own friends, however what remained was that the secretariat might be included in this bifurcation and thusly any vacancies would thus forth be filled by each of them in turn.

    However, Caesar fell ill briefly in those same months, and Vopiscus was not satiated by this agreement and immediately sought to marginalize Felix and Cotta. Cotta by this time was still a sitting praetor, and was thus unable to be prosecuted, however Felix was brought to the court of Saturninus on charges of the illegal levying of troops in Italy, as he and his brother had done during the supremacy of Agrippa. Drusus was apoplectic at this and immediately intervened on their behalf, with his tribunician authority exceeding the prerogatives of Vopiscus in the law courts. Vopiscus and Drusus were both furious at their incongruous ambitions, and confessed this in private to their brother Gaius. Thus the year ended with a stalemate.

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    The greatest funeral pyre yet seen in Rome's history is beset by citizens in mourning

    —In the consulship of Gaius Lollius and Cossus Cornelius Lentulus Gaetulicus…
    The princes of the Julian, Claudian, and Vipsanian houses saw fit to meet out of fear of another outbreak of civil war between the two of Caesar’s heirs. Attendant to this meeting, held once again in the household of Tiberius, were the sons of the Julian house — Paullus Lepidus, Felix, and Balbus the younger — as well as Gemellus, Agrippa, and Gaius Primus. Each of them enjoyed good relationships with one or both of the heirs, and thus their concurrence was that none of them would openly declare loyalties to one over the other, as any such actions undertaken would necessitate each of them doing so and would consequently make conflict inevitable. As an additional measure to ensure this, each of them swore an oath not to serve as the consular colleague of either Drusus or Vopiscus, as doing so would necessarily indicate any such allegiances.

    Gaius sought the re-stabilization of the political situation in Rome. Thus, he wished a speedy removal of Drusus’ close allies from Rome where they might see greater complacency in the provinces, whether through administrative of military commissions. To this end, the consuls joined in their efforts to establish a series of extraordinary magistracies which might serve as intermediaries between the magistri peditum and the imperatores. These men, the Magister Oriens in the East and the Magister Occidens in the West, accompanied by their staffs, whom hereafter would be Appius Silanus in the West and Salvius Glabrio in the East. Likewise, men would be dispatched out to the provinces such that they might cultivate prestige for themselves without fear of the reprisals of Vopiscus, whom was himself dissuaded from leaving Rome. Otho and Galba were sent to the Danuvius and Africa, respectively, while Silius and Lucius Marcellus were assigned to the offices of the magister peditum. Aviola remained as a command officer in Illyricum rather than return to Rome, however his colleague Galerius returned to Italia, although he avoided an entrance to Rome in that year, as Vopiscus arranged for his election to the Italian prefecture in the next year.

    However, during his tenure in Africa, Galba showed himself to be a vicious and spiteful man. The discontented merchants of the various nomadic barbarian tribes were subjected to considerable levies by Galba and by his quaestor, Caesennius Paetus. This, in addition to the seizure of the property of numerous African freedmen, whom he claimed had been unlawfully manumitted. An embassy of the leading men from Carthage, Lepcis Magna, Hippo, Utica, and several other cities was thusly dispatched to Rome to appeal these usurpations to Caesar, although these ambassadors, led by a certain Avidius Bassianus, was refused entry to the city due to the circumstances which had come to fruition during their journey.

    Imperator Germanicus Caesar Invictus Augustus breathed his final breaths in the company of his sons and daughters in the latter months of that year. Drusus held his grief-stricken younger sisters in his arms as they wept for their father. He was judged to have fallen ill in his own grief for his wife, although some suspected one of his sons of poisoning him or even that he may have starved himself to death. These rumors are uncertain, but what is certain is that on the third day before the Ides of November, the death of Caesar was announced to the senate and people of Rome. He was sixty years old, and had ruled the Empire for nineteen years. According to the devastated Gaius, his youngest and most loving son, his dying words were, “Be mindful my sons, I’ve left far too many snakes with which you must now deal.” Drusus at once convened the senate and had the will of the late Caesar read to the senate. His two eldest sons were the primary beneficiaries, although all of the men related to the family of Augustus were given considerable properties and titles thereafter. His funeral was one which saw the entries city be absent of all public business for several days and which saw the largest funeral procession since the death of the Divine Augustus. His ashes were deposited into the Mausoleum of Augustus and a statue and altar dedicated to him was placed in the Temple of the Divine Drusus.

    He was deified by act of the senate shortly thereafter, and his sons were confirmed as joint heirs to his legacy. They immediately sought to annul the previous year’s elections such that they might serve a joint consulship in the next year. The previous consuls-elect, Vitellius and Scipio, were both awarded consulships in the next year. At the close of the year, the two Caesars led a religious ceremony in honor of their divine father wherein the two men, in their capacity as pontiffs, appointed a number of patricians to the priesthoods of the Divine Invictus. The close of that year saw a symbolic closure of the Gates of Janus, as if to signal to all Rome and her Empire that peace would be the legacy of the only princeps never defeated in battle.
     
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    Book 30: 48-49 CE
  • Book Thirty - The Twin Caesars

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    The Cassii brothers lead a mob to the court of Publius Vitellius (the praetor overseeing the corruption court) to try Lentulus Maluginensis

    —In the consulship of Drusus Julius Caesar Germanicus for the Third Time as Augustus and Tiberius Julius Caesar Vopiscus Germanicus for the Third Time as Augustus…

    The August family occupied all of the senior magistracies of the Empire. The Caesars were consuls while their brother Gaius was the chief praetor. The junior praetorships were occupied chiefly by the extended family of the Caesars. Drusus Livius, the son of Tiberius Livius, was the urban praetor while the great-grandson of Marcus Agrippa, Haterius Antoninus was the peregrine praetor. Among the other magistrates were Publius Crassus, son of the former consul, and Publius Vitellius, the cousin of Aulus Vitellius, whom was betrothed to the young Lollia Rufinia, the daughter of Lollius, and also the great-great-granddaughter of Augustus by his grandson Gaius Vipsanianus. Also serving in this year was Tiberius the Elder, serving in his third quaestorship in his career, the previous two of which were during the reigns of his father and grandfather. The censors in that year were Junius Blaesus — whom was due to marry Cassia Longina, the widow of Nero Caesar, whose second husband, Lucius Antonius, had recently died in Syria — and Paullus Lepidus, the uncle of the Caesars by their mother and son-in-law of Gaius by his daughter Drusilla.

    With this confluence of powers at Rome, the sons of the Caesars returned to Rome from Spain with their relative, Domitius, whom had spent several years in an unofficial exile as a penalty for his avarice in Italia following the death of Agrippa. Domitius himself was of advanced age and had little patience, although this was unchanged from his younger years. He enjoyed friendship with Vopiscus Caesar, whom had prevented his prosecution, although his open disdain for Felix and his cousin Lepidus Paullus, led to his eventual retirement from public life. However, the recent disasters in Syria led Drusus Caesar to order that the Spanish legions be recalled and dispersed to these frontiers, and to Africa, which had seen recent unrest. With them went the elder Tiberius in his capacity as quaestor. At this time it is appropriate, and I have elected to intercede upon the narrative such that I might relay the scope of the men at arms commanded by Empire.

    The fleets of the Empire defended Italia on both of her coasts, and a further multitude of ships were based at Carthage, Massilia, and Alexandria — although each of these had a limited scope of their domain. Fleets likewise patrolled the Pontic Sea, the Germanic Sea, and the Albis and Danuvius rivers. These, although subjected to the imperium of the princeps, were not subordinated to any other offices, except for the riverine and lesser fleets which fell under the imperium of the magistri of the East and West. The princeps was likewise advised by a number of equites whom had seen service for a great length of time in the legions whom themselves oversaw such tasks as the management of receipts to the military treasury, the supply of the legions on the frontiers, the payment of wages and of retirement disbursements to legionaries, the inspection of the legions’ readiness, and numerous other such menial domains. The remainder of the legions were commanded by the magistri pedita, whom in that year were Gaius Silius and Quinctilius Varus. Below these men were their staffs, their personal guards, an accompanying cohort of prefects and advisors, as well as the three magistri whom oversaw each of the great theatres of warfare. In the West was Appius Silanus, whom commanded an overwhelming strength of eighteen legions. However, he did not command these forces in the traditional manner of a magistrate with delegated imperium. This magistrate had no imperium and was tasked with purely administrative and bureaucratic roles within the apparatus of the legions. The command authority was derived from his three subordinates — the imperatores of Germania and Illyricum as well as the proconsul of Africa. In Germania there was a strength of seven legions, of which three were in Cisalbis, three were in Angilia, and one remained in Vindelicia. Along the Danuvius there resided nine legions of which four resided in Pannonia, one in Noricum, two in Dalmatia, and two in Moesia. Africa herself held two legions in addition to a significant force of auxiliae. However, the military forces in Italia were commanded wholly independently of the remainder of the western legions. The legions therein were under the purview of the consuls, or of the Italian prefect in their absence — except for the urban cohorts under the command of the urban prefect and the praetorian cohorts under the command of the two prefects thereover. The magister oriens, whom at this time was Salvius Glabrio, oversaw the fitness of the legions in the East, which were still commanded directly by provincial legates and prefects. Of the eight legions thereunder, five resided in Syria and the other three in Aegyptus. This made the total strength of the Empire’s legions that of approximately one-hundred-sixty-thousand, with accompanying forces of auxiliaries only slightly fewer in number.

    The senate in that years was furthermore induced by its membership to laud upon the Caesars considerable honors, titles, and offices. The allies of Drusus Caesar, led by Blaesus and Galba, heaped upon him not only all the offices and titles of their father, but also those of censor in perpetuity, prince of the youth, fifteen triumphal ornaments for his years on campaign, and father of the country and of the world. The allies of Vopiscus Caesar, led by Galerius, would do the same, in addition to awarding him the powers and decorations of numerous lesser magistracies, calling him the “tribune of the city”, which gave him the powers of an aedile, censor, and a praetor in addition to his consular and tribunician authority. Having established the security of their regimes, the Caesars abdicated their consulships and were replaced in their offices. Drusus Caesar was succeeded by his adopted son, Servius, and Vopiscus Caesar was succeeded by Paullus Scaurus, the cousin of the ex-consul tried and executed by Felix and Cotta.

    However, two deaths in the latter portion of that year roused the suspicions of Vopiscus Caesar and his allies. Firstly, the elderly and retired Domitius was found dead in his home of unknown causes, although many suspected the involvement of imperial freedmen, including Fronto and Carbo. This left Livilla, the sister of the two Caesars, widowed. Her hand in marriage served as a political expedient to a degree that precluded her continued isolation, and thus Vopiscus Caesar arranged for her marriage to Gnaeus Pompeius, the son of the former censor, whom was himself an energetic and capable young man with considerable clientelia. However, the second of these deaths was of far greater consequence, as the man whom was found dead was Galerius, the Italian prefect and twice consul. He had served as a staunch ally of Vopiscus Caesar during his youth and had shared a personal and political enmity with his elder brother. Drusus Caesar quickly replaced him with an equite, Justus Catonius, and thus secured greater control over the Italian legions outside Rome.

    The political disturbance that resulted with the passing of so many powerful men connected to the imperial family — as in addition to Domitius and Galerius, Lucius Antonius, Lucius Marcellus, and Claudius Pulcher had died in recent years as well — led the men on the periphery of the august family to take action that might consolidate their political position and supplant their misfortunes with glories and gravitas. The first among these was Gaius Cassius, the eldest son of the former censor, whom launched at once upon a vigorous prosecution of Lentulus Maluginensis, a cousin of Lentulus Scipio and Gaetulicus. He was a man of vicious and cold character, and he had taken upon the opportunity of the suicide of Lucius Cassius to seize many of his assets both in Rome and in Italia. The upheaval of the civil wars and the mistrust for the Cassii at that time due to their relationship with Agrippa, led the Divine Invictus to allow such brazen seizures, despite that they were unlawful. Maluginensis was hauled before a senatorial tribunal overseen by Publius Vitellius, nephew of the consul-elect, and was thusly convicted of an array of crimes, some of which may have been fabricated. However, the consul Scaurus and Pompeius, whom was a distinguished man of the law courts, secured these convictions with their oratorial skill, and Maluginensis was hurled from the Tarpeian Rock. This led many men to fear the power of this emerging coalition. Vopiscus Caesar himself had overseen the trial and had barred entry to the court by any equites and numerous senators. His considerable power and alienation from numerous distinguished senators and freedmen made him a natural ally of Gaius Cassius, as well as his brothers Lucius and Quintus. Pompeius was likewise a kinsman of the Cassii by the marriage of his sister Pompeia, to Antonius Agrippa, the uncle of the Cassii by his sister Postumia. This alliance of kinsmen stood in array against that of Felix, Cotta, and Gemellus, whom themselves courted the favor of Drusus Caesar. In the center of this struggle for power lay many powerful imperial men, including Paullus Lepidus, Appius Silanus, and Quinctilius Varus. This equilibrium held for the remainder of the year, and the consuls resigned their offices without incident, however uncertainty clouded the senate house and many men of prominence elected either to seek no public office or to withdraw to their estates in Italia and forsake their birthright membership in the senate. These men included many of the Calpurnii and Lentuli, as well as several lesser families such as that of the elder Marcelli and the many cousins of the Vinicii. Thus the senate began to take shape in the mold of the two emerging factions — that of the elder Caesar, and that of the younger.

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    A disaster unfolds on the Circus Maximus leading to several deaths

    —In the consulship of Lucius Vitellius and Publius Cornelius Scipio…
    Drusus Caesar saw that a multitude of his allies were elected to a number of honors and offices. The chief of these men were Sextus Mummius, whom was a Gaul from Macedonia, Quintus Baebius, whom was a Spaniard, and Clodius Macer, whom was of African descent. Each of these men was elected to a praetorship, and their ally, Pomponius Milo, whom was already a powerful man of Gallic descent, would be elected to the consulship in a few years. These men were vocal advocates of Drusus Caesar, whom already counted among his allies the most powerful generals of the whole Empire as well as the remainder of the elder statesmen whom had served his father. The elite from among the senate protested loudly the admissions of these men, whom they viewed as having vulgarized the distinctions of their offices which had been their ancestral birthright. However they assumed these seats in spite of the protests of such men as Messalla Corvinus and Quintus Plautius, both of whom had been consuls as well as the sons of consuls. The refuge of these men fell within one of two factions within the august family. The faction of Vopiscus Caesar counted among its ranks the distinguished families of the Cornelii — including the stripes of the Sullae, Dolabellae, Cinnae, Cethegi, Lentuli, and the Scipiones, whom were the most illustrious families of the old commonwealth — as well as the brothers of the Cassii, the men whom had gained distinction while serving as decemvirs, and the various wealthy Italians whom had gained membership in the senate. The tenuous balance of these factions was shattered in this year.

    Gaius Aviola, whom was princeps senatus, joined hands with his colleague Appius Silanus in the authorship of a law which would prohibit the prefecture of Aegypt, or of any other province or jurisdiction, from being held by freedmen, in accordance with the ancient custom, which likewise barred such offices from the purview of the sons of freedmen. This law, passed by the consul Vitellius, was aimed primarily at Marcianus Rex, whom was a freedman of the Divine Invictus, although he had served as the Italian prefect and later as the prefect of Aegypt. He was serving in this capacity at the time of the Vitellian law’s passage, and he was thusly recalled to Rome. However, Rex himself had wished for his posting to serve as an early retirement. He had loyally served the Divine Invictus for his entire life, and did not wish for the discord between his sons to bring about his death or exile in the political upheaval that followed. Rex hesitated to return, although he eventually conceded that had he remained in his province, the overwhelming force of the Syrian legions would be brought down upon him, and so he returned to Rome early in the year. However, his hesitation did not go unnoticed by those in Rome, and Cato in particular denounced Rex for his non-compliance with the will of the Caesars. He was thus arraigned on charges of treason and conspiracy and hauled before the court of Gaius Primus whereafter he was convicted and executed. This served as a signal to each of the men whom had served with the Divine Invictus that neutrality was no guarantee of the safety of any freedmen, and quite probably, any eques or senator.

    Also in that year, Tiberius the Elder served in his capacity as a curule aedile, although he was very senior to his five colleagues. He used his position as aedile to position himself within the emerging young senatorial faction, a number of whom were serving as aediles at that time. These men were Titus Vinius — whose father had wielded extraordinary power through his long friendship with Galba, though he had died in recent years — Caecilius Cilo, Junius Otho, Ulpius Trajanus — a young Spaniard — and Quintus Pompeius Macer, whom enjoyed a positive reputation among the friends of Gemellus and his father. These young men ingratiated themselves to Tiberius and to the family of the Caesars by undertaking the cost of public festivals on the birthdays and marriage anniversaries of various imperial family members. Tiberius himself abstained from public acclamations for these holy days, and was applauded for his humility and long life of statesmanship.

    Scapula, the consul of ten years prior, was a man of unusual tastes with little respect for the dignity of the senate, as he himself was a novus homo and the son of an eques. He displayed this foremost by his participation in the chariot races which accompanied the festival surrounding the birthday of the Divine Invictus. This was unusual, although Drusus Caesar had come to respect him for his long service in the legions of Germania and his honest dealing, and thus he did not intercede and blocked any efforts from Vopiscus Caesar and other senators to do so. However, during the climax of these festivities, he suffered a crash in the Circus Maximus and was run over by the chariot of one Decimus Meridius Maximus, whom was famed for his ruthlessness, although he had never committed such a grievous crime as the murder of an ex-consul. He was thus harangued on charges of murder and treason, although he plead for leniency by a confession that he had been paid a sum of sesterces for the deed in question. However, when the praetor of the murder court, called Veranius Incitatus, whom was a friend of Gaius Primus, summoned him to deliver his testimony before the senate, he was himself murdered. Shortly thereafter, a freedman of the Caesars, one Domitius Aurelianus, whom was an agent of Claudius Primus, the superintendent of the occuli, which was the name for members of the praetorian cohorts whom were stationed in civilian dress to serve as informants for the principes, was likewise found dead. This aroused great suspicion by men whom had become accustomed to the steadfast support and protection of Drusus Caesar such as Lucius Otho, the consul of ten years hence with Scapula. Many suspected Vopiscus Caesar as the perpetrator of the murder, as it was widely known that he and Claudius Primus were closely associated. However, no action was taken pursuant to this allegation, and thus the friends of Drusus Caesar became insecure of the tenability of their own positions and offices.
     
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    Book 31: 50-52 CE
  • Book Thirty One - The Armenian War

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    Gaius Aviola, one of the primary architects of Germanicus' regime and his most trusted political ally

    —In the consulship of Gaius Suetonius Paulinus and Aulus Caecina Paetus…

    The city of Rome was under duress. The consuls of the previous year had both been close associates of Vopiscus Caesar, and the political upheavals of that year did not go unnoticed by his elder brother, engaged with the politics of the provinces though he may have been. He had overseen personally the elections of that year’s magistrates on a session of the senate during which Vopiscus Caesar himself had been absent. The prior consul, Paulinus, was an unobjectionable man of considerable martial skill whom had served honorably in the Syrian and African legions during the reign of the Divine Invictus. However, the posterior consul, Caecina, was a close friend and associate of Felix and Cotta, with his father having served as a censor of Gaius Vipsanianus. The younger Caecina was a man of fiery and vengeful character, in contrast with the temperance and levelheadedness of his father, and had been recalled from his service in the German legions because of his unduly retributive disciplinary practices. Likewise, the chief praetors in that year were Gaius Saturninus, the son of the consul, and Julius Vindex, an Aeduan nobleman whom had seen his ambitions realized under the auspices of his patron Caesar.

    These actions were undertaken by Drusus Caesar in order to strengthen his position among his own allies, which had wavered due to his inaction in the previous year. However, the elder Caesar’s heart remained forever with the legions, much as had his father’s and grandfather’s. He disdained the city of Rome itself and preferred to leave its governance to his trusted friends and allies, while he oversaw the legions in their castra personally. He thusly arranged to depart Rome, leaving behind his freedmen Fronto and Carbo and the elder censor Blaesus to secure his interests from being undermined directly. His entourage included the ex-consuls Aulus Plautius, Didius Gallus, and Flavius Sabinus, as well as their young sons whom were all destined for consulships in their time. The elder Caesar’s successes in Germania in the preceding years had realized only a portion of his dreams for the Empire. For although he disdained the pursuits of scholars and historians, he had keenly observed the tribulations of his father in Illyricum, and at the time of his service there, the Divine Invictus had relayed many of his own concerns with regard to that frontier. The Germans were quiescent in this new world, he is said to have relayed, whereas, “The Illyrians hold the beating heart of the army. Hold this land dearly, for it cost the last tyrant his throne.” This was in reference to the crucial part played by the Illyrian legions of Agrippa during the civil war against Vipsanianus. The gradual escalation of the threat of the Dacians and Sarmatians over the last two decades only served to confirm this view for Caesar, and he thusly sought to secure these lands for himself.

    However, while Drusus Caesar was away, the faction of his brother would not remain idle. Their accomplishments in the previous year — including the execution of Lentulus Maluginensis, the removal of Marcianus Rex as the praefect of Aegyptus, and if rumors are to believed, the death of Scapula — had emboldened them to assail more prestigious adversaries. Although Vopiscus Caesar was in Macedonia at this time distributing gifts of Roman citizenship to local magistrates and addressing petitioners, his allies in the senate, led chiefly by Glabrio, the consul of ten years hence whom had recently retired from a successful posting as the magister orientis, were active on his behalf. Salvius Glabrio and Marcus Cato conceived a plan by which they might siphon the support of the elder Caesar’s primary beneficiaries. These were the provincials, whom had risen through the ranks of the equites in the army and been awarded with senatorial postings thereafter for their service. This cohort of senators were strongly loyal to one another, having faced concerted opposition from the Italian nobiles to their ascendancy. Chief among these men was Pomponius Milo, whom was strongly loyal to his patron, Drusus Caesar, but he was absent from Rome at this time serving as the governor of Syria in that year, and thus the chief men of this faction were Sextus Mummius, the consul-elect, Julius Fulvus, whom was praetor in the consulship of Corvinus and Allenius, Annius Pollio, a wealthy Spanish orator and poet, and the serving peregrine praetor, Julius Vindex. Among these men, Mummius was the most principled and thus unlikely to collaborate with the agents of the younger Caesar. The pair thusly employed a tribune, Quintus Labienus, the grandson of the disgraced historian and great-great-grandson of the comrade and enemy of the Divine Julius. Labienus was an orator of considerable skill and cunning wit, having been trained in this respect by the famed lawyer, Julius Africanus, whom was himself a disciple of Marcus Lepidus. He engaged in a series of prosecutions under the purview of his brother-in-law, Marcus Lucceius, whom was the praetor of the corruption court in that year, of the most vigorous opponents of the admission of provincials into the senate. These were the Messallae clan, whom had been one of the most illustrious families of the Empire since before its inception. The grandsons of Messalla Barbatus whom were called Corvinus, the consul of eight years hence, and Niger, whom was consul-elect in that year, were harangued on charges of corruption, and although they were acquitted, the counsel for their defense, one Vettius Bolanus, was exiled for bribery in its aftermath. Changing tactics, Labienus and Lucceius sought convictions from other men of status, though not of consular rank. Gaius Metellus was exiled for having abused his powers as proconsul of Narbo several years prior, and Quintus Titius was likewise exiled for poor conduct in Sicilia, a conviction that was especially easy to secure because of the dishonor brought upon his family by his father and grandfather.

    However, these and likewise seizures of power undertaken by the new prefect of the guard, Vedius Pollio, became too great for the elder statesmen to remain idle. Gaius Aviola, the princeps senatus and among the post powerful men in Rome convened a session of the senate whereupon he denounced the consuls for their inaction, denounced the censors for their apathy, and denounced the praetors for their complicity. During this speech he entered such a frenzy that his face swelled and he was forced to quit the senate house. He recovered quickly, and while the senate was still meeting, he mounted the Rostra and repeated his denunciation before onlooking throngs. The praetorian guard and urban cohorts alike would not seize him, in spite of their orders. He was the sole surviving scion of the illustrious Calpurnii, and had been the chief lieutenant of the Divine Invictus for his entire reign, and the loyalty of the troops to his memory was strong. They defied the orders of Vedius Pollio to arrest him, and instead the praetorians assembled at the base of the Rostra and around the Curia to prevent any of the senators from leaving the senate house and confronting him directly. When Aviola’s voice reached a fever pitch at midday, he collapsed onto the ground. His slaves rushed to his aid and carried him to his home, but he was dead within mere hours. A public funeral was hosted for him the next day at which his son, Calpurnius Bestia delivered a eulogy.

    Glabrio and Cato moved quickly at the news of Aviola’s death. He had been one of the last surviving members of the Divine Invictus’ inner circle to remain untouched by the escalating court politics of the recent years, and thusly, no other man stood in the way of the ambitious jackals to jockey for the reigns of the state. Having secured the exiles of Metellus and Titius, both of whom had vocally opposed and physically blocked the entry of Julius Vindex into the senate house during his quaestorship, Vindex himself became more likened to the friends of Glabrio. In particular, there was one man whom Vindex hated above all others due to his haughty demeanor and arrogant disdain for the provincials. That man was also the father-in-law of the elder Caesar and one of the most powerful men of the Empire — Galba. Vindex’s disdain for Galba was such that when Galba had traveled to Lugdunum as the head of a senatorial embassy to the Gauls, Vindex had abstained from attendance at a banquet. Many other wealthy Gauls did the same, and Galba’s banquet was attended by merely two chiefs, the youngest and least respected druids, and a host of women. For this, Galba was made into a laughingstock across Gaul for his failure to court their favor. The Gauls called him the “King of Massillia” implying his authority was not respected but for the sole Greek city across the whole of their country. By courting the favor of the Divine Invictus, Galba had secured a governorship over the majority of Gaul in the years following, and he extorted considerable levies and taxes from the Gauls, in addition to abolishing their civil councils for his time as governor — though they would be reconstituted as he departed for Rome. Having patiently awaited retribution, the Gauls in the senate in this year brought the full force of their wrath upon the old patrician. As a group, the Gauls in the senate constituted a portion of wealth far greater than their proportion of that body’s numbers, and thus their vast sums of gold and silver filled the pockets of the jurors in the senate, who thusly convicted Galba of extortion and saw to his exile to Gaul. This final humiliation proved too great, and Galba committed suicide rather than face this ignominy in the face of the men he so despised.

    Felix and Cotta, though they did not particularly care for Galba, saw the threat that his downfall posed to their own safety. Their own friends, the Messallae had suffered at the hands of the opposition in court, and the men of the Julii decided on drastic action. They enlisted the help of Caecina and Gaius Primus, the younger brother of the Caesars to secure provincial commands for them such that they would evade the reach of Vopiscus Caesar, whom had recently returned to Rome, and whom lauded the statesmanship of Labienus and Lucceius for their political prosecutions. Fortunately for Felix and Cotta, circumstances in the East intervened and they were able to leave the city. The recent claimant to the Arsacid throne, Vologases, had seized upon the death of Armenia’s king and instilled his own brother, Pacorus, as the Armenian monarch under the name Tigranes. Drusus Caesar was alerted of this by Milo, whom was passing through Illyricum on his way to Rome to serve as consul, and he immediately sent for his most trustworthy generals to congregate in Syria for the coming war. He brought with him two legions from the Danuvius and sent orders for additional auxiliaries to be drawn from Galatia and Thrace. Felix and Cotta departed as soon as they heard with the powerful generals Corbulo and Silius. However, Vopiscus Caesar did not wish for all of his brother’s allies to join the eastern legions in unison, and thusly he dispatched his ally Vergilius Capito to serve as the praefect of Aegyptus.

    In this great absence of powerful men from Rome, one rose above all the others in both ambition and energy to become the urban prefect and broker between the disparate factions of the Caesars. Agrippa had been complaint with the wishes of the Caesars in recent years, however, with all the other Julian men departing for Syria and so many senators living in the shadow of Vopiscus Caesar’s iron will, Agrippa was poised to become the moderating influence in the city. His cousin and brother-in-law, Paullus Lepidus, the censor, arranged for Agrippa to be made prefect of the vigiles, a post usually reserved for an eques, but in this role, he personally financed the expansion of aqueducts into the center of Rome, where periodic fires had proved a sporadic terror of the urban plebs. He renovated several temples including the Temples of Augustus and Drusus as well as the Altar of Peace. He likewise followed in the footsteps of his adoptive grandfather, Tiberius the Elder, and patronized a number of young senators whom themselves permeated the austere house with a moderating influence that sought to blunt the open hostilities between the traditional aristocracy and the novi homines of Drusus Caesar. Agrippa joined hands with another of the wealthy statesmen of Rome, Sulla Felix, whom was the sole surviving heir to that great family out of his brothers, whom had long served the Caesars since the days of their father whom was consul with the Divine Augustus. Through his extended family, which included the sons and daughters of his two deceased brothers as well as his sister, he commanded what was perhaps the largest network of clients in all of Rome. The men whom counted him as their patron included those of many prestigious families including Lucius Vipstanius, son of the consul, Gellius Publicola the decemvir, Publius Cicero, descendant of the orator, Cinna, the soon-to-be consul-elect, and Sisenna Statilius Taurus, sole inheritor of his great-grandfather’s fortune, which was considerable, as he had been the consular colleague of the Divine Augustus. These men soon filled the praetorships and would shape Rome for many years to come.

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    The Parthian heavy calvary charging with the support of mounted archers in the rear, a common tactical maneuver

    —In the consulship of Appius Valerius Messalla Niger Claudianus and Aulus Pomponius Milo…
    The inaction of the censors ceased by their decision to resolutely evaluate the membership of that body and expel many unruly and parasitic hangers-on. Paullus Lepidus was the instigator of this effort, as he had grown in his antipathy for the ingratitude and rapaciousness of many in that austere body, and he induced his colleague Blaesus to cooperate in his efforts. By stipulation of the Julian law on the censors, the pair need not secure any criminal convictions requisite to these expulsions, and their mutual consent was sufficient on its own. The first of the men they subjected to this revision were men whom had already suffered disgrace in their families and did not enjoy the support of the wider senate. They announced, on the Ides of Februarius, that the membership of the senate would be under review coupled with the first eight men to be expelled. The only notable man of this group was Annius Seneca, a haughty and irreverent Spaniard who was not well-liked or respected, and had earned the disdain of his father-in-law, Avidius Quietus. The remaining senators offered little opposition to this, although the disgraced Seneca appealed to Vopiscus Caesar, who announced that the law was not his purview to overturn, having been authored by his grandfather. Thus concluded the first of many revisions of the senate by the censors since the days of the Divine Drusus. The censors then saw fit to direct their powers at the nobiles whom had fallen out of favor or suffered disgrace in their families. The elder brother of the exiled Galba, Gaius, was among those stripped of rank, even though Galba was an ex-praetor. Also expelled from office were the brothers of the Aruntii Aquilae, even though their grand-uncle, Camillus Scribonianus was the princeps senatus; also discharged was Marcus Nerva, the nephew of Octavius Laenas, the ex-consul whom had committed suicide rather than face disgrace in trial. The final, and most prestigious victims of this purge were the brothers Quintus and Marcus Lepidus, whom were the grandsons of the orator, consul, and censor, and whom had only risen to the praetorship but commanded outsized influence due to their lofty ancestry. They raised considerable vigor at this affront, especially from their kinsman Paullus, but it was to no avail. The memory of Lepidus the orator was not one that rallied any great sympathy from the sycophants and grovelers whom had filled the senate in the preceding years, and when this revision was complete, the abject subjugation of the senate to the power of the Caesars was absolute.

    The only senators whom appeared above the fray of this public subordination were the kinsmen of the Caesars themselves. The vacation of so many prestigious men from the senate forced that body to make exemptions to those unqualified for office such that the magistracies every year were filled. Thusly, many men in their early twenties, including the young brothers of the Cassii, had ascended to the praetorship at this time in spite of their youth. However, as an affront to the intransigent censors and the absentmindedness of the consuls, a young praetor named Servilius Vatia, whom was of the highest patrician ancestry, organized the consular elections for the next year and saw the election of Vettius Bolanus and Vespasius Pollio. This was a direct affront to the regime of the Caesars as well, for they had predetermined the consuls for the next several years by a process of formal recommendation by an electoral college which had been assembled by lot, although it was widely know that its members enjoyed gracious benefits from the Caesars in exchange for their compliance. As this assembly of the senate had nearly drawn to a close, with the censors being unable to leave due to an intervention by the tribunes, the praetorian guardsmen burst into the curia with their patron Vopiscus Caesar. His ally and prefect Vedius Pollio had learned of this seditious assemblage and summoned the younger Caesar with all haste, who dissolved the senate and placed the seditious consuls-elect under arrest. They were later acquitted, but their disgrace in this affair precluded any return to public life and they both retired to their estates in Italia.

    Vopiscus Caesar at this time, had received numerous reports from his subordinates in the East as well as his brother, and he was raised to considerable alarm by their omens. The young Caesar called upon one of Rome’s greatest generals, Gaius Lollius, the consul of four years hence to take command of the Syrian legions, securing for him a grant of maius imperium over the provinces of Syria, Cilicia, and Cyprus. He marshaled his considerable wealth and resources, earned as well as gifted for his service in the Germanic wars, and departed the city with an entourage of his kinsmen. This was a boon for the young Caesar as well, for Lollius was the nephew-in-law of Felix Pius by his cousin Julia Rufinia, and among his entourage, in addition to Felix and Cotta, was the powerful and respected ex-consul Gaetulicus, as well as many of Drusus Caesar’s ex-praetors of provincial origin. During the course of the escalating Parthian War, Vopiscus Caesar had assumed the command which had been denied to him since his consulship — he was the undisputed master of Rome.

    The situation in the East had rapidly deteriorated. In the preceding two years, intermittent civil unrest in Armenia had enabled the Arsacid king of Parthia to march into that country under the pretense of a liberator, all the while subjecting the proud Armenians to his tribute. This was followed by still greater usurpations by the new Arsacid king of Armenia, whom demanded a levy of troops in his country for the reclamation of territory that was constituent to the mountain kingdom by birthright. His army had driven out the king of Lesser Armenia, Antiochus Gordianus, and menaced the Pontic shores. The seizure of Armenia itself was grounds enough for war, having been a violation of the treaties established by the Divine Augustus during the Armenian wars under his auspices, but these brute displays would not go unanswered. Drusus Caesar, whom at that time was at Sirmium, sent his capable aides, Vergilius Capito, Ventidius Bassus, and Coelius Rufus to assume total command of Aegypt from whence it might serve as the supply depot of the upcoming war. Before departing for Antioch, the elder Caesar ordered new fortifications and watchtowers to be built along that bend the Ister, and left his capable lieutenants Didius Gallus and Quintus Plautius, the consuls of six and five years hence, respectively, in the command of the Illyrian legions and made for Syria with all speed. On his arrival, he dismissed the magister oriens, Lucius Saturninus, the consul of ten years hence, and assumed general command over the provinces of the east, superseding Lollius and placing him in direct command of the legions. However, he eschewed his predecessor’s practice of leaving the legions to the command of his subordinates and resided in the castrum of the Legio XIII Augusta Invicta.

    The force in Syria, which had quickly swelled to include eight legions, was commanded by Lollius, who employed as his lieutenants, the capable generals Silius and Corbulo, as well as the wealthy equite and tactician, Claudius Stolo, whose father was a freedman of the Divine Tiberius. Also at his table was the knowledgable young Livius, the son of Tiberius the Elder, whom had served only as quaestor but whom was easily the most learned man in Rome on the affairs of the East, having spent many of his early years attendant to his father and uncle, Lucius Vipsanianus, in Syria and Cappadocia. The legati of this force were a peculiar assemblage of persons, whom owed their position more to political favors than any conspicuous command ability. By far the most capable of these men was Licinius Mucianus, a young eques whom had been adopted by Licinius Nerva and seen many years of service in the Syrian legions, but the remainder of the legati were Felix Pius and Cotta, whom commanded the most prestigious legion, the XX Deiotoriana, Lucius Asinius Gallus — a young ex-praetor whom was untainted by the shame in his family — Veranius Incitatus, the aedile of two years hence, Gaius Caetronius, a close friend of Silius, and several provincial novi homines who were favorites of Drusus Caesar from their time in the Germanic legions. However, many of these officers and troops had become unaccustomed to regular combat with the Parthians and thus had to be drilled up to the standard of readiness to which the officers had been accustomed with the Germanic legions. This would take time, and in the interim, Drusus Caesar ordered a general levy of troops from Rome’s allies across the Empire. Men from quarters as diverse as the Batavia, Mauritania, Galatia, and Arabia would be assembled in Syria for the reclamation of Armenia, and when joined by the bulk of the Aegyptian legions, this force numbered a total of sixty-thousand men with numerous cavalry as well. The force divided itself into three columns. The first of these was a diversionary force, sent to menace the cities of Mesopotamia and engage the bulk of the Parthian’s strength therein. This force of three legions was led by Felix and included a large portion of the cavalry such that it might easily disengage from whichever army might seek their destruction. The second of these columns was lightly armed and consisted only of a single legion and the remainder of the cavalry. This force, led by Veranius Incitatus, served to forestall any major counterattack by the Parthians and would patrol the supply lines of the third and final column. This was the primary offensive force, consisting of four legions and several cohorts of the praetorian guard. Drusus Caesar himself commanded this force, accompanied by his his provincial lieutenants, the freedman secretary Paullus Fronto, and his son Servius.

    On the Kalends of Aprilis, the legions of Felix marched into Osrhoene, the westernmost kingdom held by the Arsacids. They raided and laid waste to numerous cities including Edessa and Amida, dispersing the meager defense forces mounted by the king of Osrhoene and accruing reinforcements from defections and from levies undertaken by Alexander, the king of Commagena. The forces of the Parthian king’s youngest brother, Tiridates, shadowed this force, but did not engage them directly due to their inferior numbers. While this force was otherwise engaged, the primary force of the legions marched into Armenia through Cappadocia, gaining the full support of the Cappadocian army, which was the largest of the Anatolian kingdoms. This force quickly dispatched a relief army mustering under the King of Sophene, one Sohaemus, and marched straight for the Armenian capital, Artaxata.

    The army of Tigranes was engaged partially in a war against the Iberians, whom were friends of the Roman people, and when he heard of this development, he rapidly withdrew to defend the city. However, the legions arrived at Volandum concurrently with Tigranes’ entry to Artaxata, and in spite of the mildness of their resistance to the legions, Volandum was put to the torch and many of its inhabitants were sold into slavery. On hearing this, Tigranes marched immediately to intercept the army of Caesar, but the cavalry of Incitatus engaged their rear, forcing them to retreat to a defensible hilltop a few miles to the west of the capital. Here, the Armenians watched helplessly as the legions encircled and besieged their prestigious seat of government. They twice attempted to counterattack the besiegers’ flank, but were twice repulsed and retreated southward. Their primary aim in this was to rendezvous with the main Parthian army, which had meanwhile been occupied suppressing a revolt of the Hyrcanians — an independent mountainous people whom warred intermittently with the Arsacid kings. The legions would remain at the siege of Artaxata through the winter and into the next year, and the war would continue as the Armenians remained undeterred by the resolve of their former patrons. As the year closed, the legions of Felix, having accomplished their primary aims, marched North, leaving the uncoordinated Parthian army to restore order to Osrhoene. They engaged the Armenian militias outside of another major city, Tigranocerta, which was in the southwesterly portion of that country. The legions had won overwhelming victories, yet the Arsacids were resolute in their conviction to wrest control of Armenia from their rightful masters.

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    Pompeia, the wife of Agrippa, travels in Rome with her two children, Agrippa the younger and Vipsania

    —In the consulship of Sextus Mummius and Lucius Verginius Rufus…
    Agrippa was elected to the urban prefecture, and the young Publius Cicero, the sole inheritor of the orator’s legacy, assumed the office of praetor patriae. This was seen by many among the senate as a victory for their Italian order in opposition to the provincial magnates admitted to their body by Drusus Caesar. Sextus Mummius in particular, had suffered several indignities from the senators in Rome, even being blocked from entering the curia by an obstinate tribune. Gaius, the young brother of the Caesars, saw to it that each of the consuls were attended by a contubernium of the praetorians in their lorica segmentata, in addition to their consular lictors, and were thus able to travel about the city unimpeded. Verginius Rufus in particular was a close friend of both Gaius and his brother Vopiscus Caesar, and enjoyed their companionship as well as political support. He was the protege of Camillus Scribonianus, the princeps senatus and former commander of the Italian legions during the Marcomannic war, and the support of Camillus was sufficient to win for him considerable honors. This sycophancy was denounced by Appius Messalla, the consul of the previous year and the elder son of the censor Appius Pulcher. He served in that year as the Italian prefect, and thus enjoyed the considerable support of the Italian legions, which at that time numbered four in total, and he leveraged this as a means of securing what he viewed as his own birthright by inheritance of the Claudian house. Very few senators saw fit to oppose him, especially as his young brother Publius was the son-in-law of Gaius Primus. However, his intransigence set him in array against both of the Caesars, and at his brother’s instigation with the support of Milo, he stripped Messalla of his command and recalled him to Rome. Mummius induced the orator Labienus to bring him to trial for majestas under the auspices of Ulpius Trajanus, whom was himself a Spaniard and the victim of many abuses hurled by the ex-consul. The outcome of this trial was not in doubt, and Messalla committed suicide before its conclusion. His ominous last words were reported to the senate by one of his slaves, “The house of the Sabines will not be so easily snuffed out. So long as one of us remains, my kinsmen will surely be your masters.” Such was Labienus’ renown among the men of the senate, that Mummius arranged for his election as the next chief praetor. This move incurred fear from many, who were wary of his ambitions and vigor, which reminded many of the now-deceased Gaius Cassius — a man of passion and vengeance for whom loyalty held little stock.

    The children of the August house were many, and I shall now relay their number and statuses to you. The house of Drusus, the most prolific of the Divine Augustus’ descendants, had produced three sons and three daughters, all of which had sired still more children. Drusus Caesar, although he had lost his son Nero, had fathered two daughters by his wife Julia Augusta, Drusilla and Agrippina, whom were betrothed to Servius Caesar and Furius Camillus, the sons of men whom were close associates of the Divine Invictus. Vopiscus Caesar and his wife Lepida, the sister of the censor Paullus Lepidus, had only a single son, Tiberius Publicola, whom was married to the granddaughter of Cornelius Dolabella the censor by whom he would sire three sons and one daughter in the coming years. Gaius was the most prolific of the Drusillans, having fathered two sons and four daughters, all of whom were betrothed to the most aristocratic families of the senatorial nobility. Faustus and Marcus, his sons, were married to Claudia Gemella, the granddaughter of Drusus Nero the censor and to Cornelia Cossa, whose brother had been consul five years hence with Lollius. His daughters were married to men on the stature of Agrippa’s son, the paterfamilias of the Pulchri, Paullus Lepidus the censor, and the sole of the Asinii in good favor with the Caesars, Saloninus. Agrippina the younger had been with many husbands in recent years, with whom only the latter, Marcus Cato the former decemvir and consul, produced any children. Their daughter Porcia was married to Fabius Persicus the ex-consul and by this time, they had produced one daughter and Agrippina was pregnant with their son, named Fabius Macedonicus for his illustrious ancestors. Julia Livilla had likewise been betrothed to four men and by this time had birthed children by all of them. her first husband, Gaius Solus, the son of Lucius Vipsanianus, had been butchered in the palace with his father when Felix took Rome from Agrippa, and she had subsequently wed Cornelius Scipio, then Domitius Ahenobarbus, and finally Gnaeus Pompeius. She had produced three daughters and three sons, of whom only Gaius Solus did not have a male heir. The last of the Divine Invictus’ daughters, Drusilla, was married to the illustrious general Gaius Silius and had given him two sons, Gaius and Publius. Of these men, Servius and Publicola were the apparent heirs of the Caesars, although Servius' tenuous claim to the August office led many to suggest that one of Drusus Caesar’s many nephews might be more appropriate heirs. Although, none of his brothers-in-law would ever suggest such a thing openly, as to do so would be to court sedition and exile.

    The secondary house of the Julii, having fallen from favor with the rise of the Divine Invictus, had seen their number reduced considerably by the violence of the preceding year. Of their number, only one male heir remained, Lucius Pius, the son of Felix, and his son Octavius Pius, whom was to be born in the following year. Felix’s sister, Julia Augusta, was the wife of Drusus Caesar, and his nieces by the deceased Marcus Rufus had wed illustrious husbands of their own, Gaetulicus and Lollius, although none of them produced male heirs. The lesser Julii, descended from Lucius Vipsanianus, had intermarried with the Claudii. The sole surviving child of Lucius, Aurelia, was wed to Gemellus, the daughter of Nero the censor, and their son Gaius Nero had been betrothed to Domitia, the daughter of the general Corbulo. The collateral branch of the Julii, descended as they were from Julia the younger, included the elder censor Lepidus, whom had not yet fathered any children as his daughter Drusilla was too young, and Balbus Minor, the consul of eighteen years hence whom had married Vibia Postumia, the daughter of the disgraced ex-praetor Vibius Lamia and produced a son, Laelius Macer, and two daughters. However, the most prolific house of the August family was that of the Vipsanii. The children of Agrippa Postumus had been arranged to marry into the most illustrious families of their day. Aquileanus had married the daughter of Nerva the censor, Postumia had been wed to Gaius Cassius, and Antonius married Pompeia, also the daughter of a censor. Postumia’s children were four, of whom her sole daughter had married Lucius Antonius and then Blaesus the censor by whom she had a total of five children — Marcus Antonius Primus, Marcella Antonia, Jullus Antonius, Junia Popilia, and Blaesus the Younger. Longina’s three brothers were betrothed, as has been aforesaid, to the daughters of Gaius Primus, Crassus Dives, and Scipio by Livilla. Between the three of them would be born nine sons and five daughter, although only three of their sons would survive to adulthood. The elder Agrippa had one son and one daughter, whom had married the daughter of Primus and Quintus Labienus respectively, and he had adopted his nephew, Aquila, whom married the granddaughter of Torquatus the censor and borne three daughters. Of all these, the descendants of Livia, only one lineage, that of Tiberius the Elder, had not married into the descendants of Augustus, except for his daughter Antonia, whom had been the wife of Agrippa Postumus.

    The younger Caesar in that year saw fit to dispatch his son to Syria in order to assist with the administrative burden of that region during such a time of war. With him traveled a number of imperial administrators and freedmen, whom were tasked with the arduous process of securing the grain supply from Aegyptus to Syria and from there to the legions in Armenia. However, these agents had a secondary purpose, for they were all personally loyal to Vopiscus Caesar rather than to his elder brother. Their secondary mission was to undermine the commands of Drusus Caesar’s subordinates and to secure allies for their own patron, whom envisaged a grand command in the East in the aftermath of the war during which time he might secure control of the grain supply and the portoria as leverage against his brother to secure the succession for Publicola against Servius. However, in the interim, with the grain supply secure, the legions of Drusus Caesar set about in their work of reducing the Armenians.

    The siege of Artaxata by this time was in its final throes, and envoys from the city were sent to negotiate with the legions, whom were given the ultimatum of an unconditional surrender and an opportunity for flight from the doomed capital. The bulk of the army retired to rejoin Tigranes in the East, while the legions stormed the city and burned it. However, Drusus Caesar and his officers knew that the capture of the capital was meaningless so long as the usurper king was free to act as their sovereign, and thus, he set about in a pursuit of the Armenian army. They met the legions in battle with their Parthian reinforcements led by Vologases to the North of the Araxes River. The battle was slow, but ultimately decisive as the Parthian king fled the scene when his forces succumbed to a flanking maneuver by the forces of Incitatus whom had joined the main force the previous day. The bulk of the Armenian army fled into the country and the legions marched with impunity to join the siege of Tigranocerta which was still ongoing under the command of Felix.

    The legions thereafter quickly secured the surrender of the city once the defenders heard of the defeat of Tigranes and Vologases, and the city was spared the fates of Volandum and Artaxata. However, word quickly reached the legions, now in a combined force of nearly sixty-thousand, that the Parthians were massing a fuller counterattack in Mesopotamia from the South. The legions were quickly marched to Nisibis, the nearest major city in Mesopotamia, where they engaged several parties of scouts from the Parthian camp, but were otherwise unimpeded in their seizure of the city. They remained there for the rest of the year as a pestilence settled in their camp. Many legionaries accused the locals of treachery and many were butchered, justly or unjustly, as recompense for this loss. However, the gravest victim of this plague was Drusus Caesar himself. His constant activity in the castrum and his attendance to the sick and wounded soldiers under his command saw him fall ill, and within a month, he lay dead in his tent, attended by his son, his trusted freedman Fronto, and his friend and brother-in-law Silius. The legions mourned the death of their imperator, and they rallied in attendance to his reported last words, “Fear not, dear soldiers, for victory is still yours. The death of one man is no great loss for the Republic.” He was forty-two years old and had ruled the empire with his brother for five years.

    His officers gathered together in a consilium to face the gravity of these events. Lollius, the highest ranked of them, assured the others that the transfer of sole power to the younger Caesar was a cause for joy rather than dread, for this tragedy need not plunge the Empire into war. The princeps was alive and well and his son was in good health and of capable administrative ability. However, Corbulo and Silius were wary of this assurance. Lollius had been arranged to marry the daughter of Marcus Rufus by Gaius Primus and thus enjoyed the favor of Caesar’s brother. They had no such favor, and indeed had been staunch proponents of the adoption of Servius into Caesar’s house because of their friendship with Galba. Now, Galba was in exile, the paterfamilias of the Claudii was dead, and Gaius Aviola had succumbed to his age. What remained in Rome of the faction of Drusus were the ex-consuls Mummius, Milo, and Paulinus, and these men were not of sufficient rank or status to lead them through the gauntlet of certain tribulations that Caesar was awaiting to foist upon them. Caesar’s hostility to the faction of his dead brother need no longer be concealed behind the facade of criminal trials that had been employed in the previous years. Corbulo, the bravest of these men, resolved to return to Rome alone, leaving Felix in his place to serve as the magister consilium, and beg for the clemency of Caesar, appealing his long history of service and statesmanship to be made to account for any hostilities at which the new Caesar might direct him. The officers thus resolved to administer an oath of loyalty to the new Caesar to their legions and continue the campaign unimpeded under the command of Lollius, and they prayed for good fortune and awaited news from Rome.
     
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    Book 32: 53-54 CE
  • Book Thirty Two - Destabilization of the East and Rome

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    News of Drusus' death reaches his wife Julia Augusta, whom is comforted in this news by Lepida Augusta, the wife of Vopiscus Caesar

    —In the consulship of Antonius Vipsanius Agrippa Postumus for the Second Time and Decimus Junius Silanus…

    The urban prefect Agrippa stepped into the consulship designated for Drusus before his untimely death and held a session of the senate to award posthumous honors upon the son of the Divine Invictus. However, there was business to which the senate must attend at that juncture. The consilium of the princeps, which had been gathering annually from all the colleges of magistrates, had nominated the candidates for consuls and censors for the next five years, however these nominations were made at the suggestion of Drusus, who now vacated sole power to his brother. However vengeful he may have felt towards the faction of his brother, Gaius counseled Caesar that he should not overturn the majority of these designations for fear of a revolt in the legions loyal to the memory of Drusus. Ergo, the elections for censors went unabated and, to his surprise, Corbulo was elected censor upon his entry to Rome. His colleague was Glabrio, with whom he had been close during the Italian campaign against Agrippa Postumus, and although he was a powerful man with considerable power in the senate, Corbulo heartily parlayed to his eastern colleagues that the graciousness of Caesar knew no prejudices. However, not all such men were accepting of such incautious formalities. Mummius and Milo, together with Suetonius Paulinus, left Rome to assume command of the legions in Illyricum, to which they had been nominated by Drusus, and Caesar did not learn of this until they had already made contact with the soldiers, who at that time were mourning their former patron, and thus he was disinclined to recall them.

    Caesar saw fit, however, to recall his son, whom at that time was in Cilicia, such that he may remain close and protected from the might of Drusus’ faction in the provinces. Publicola entered Rome on the third day before the Kalends of Martius, and was ordered by his father to divorce his wife, Cornelia. In order to strengthen his dynastic potential in comparison with the young Servius, whom was still the heir to the principate at this time, Publicola was arranged to marry Agrippina, the recently widowed daughter of Gaius. Her husband, Asinius Saloninus, was compensated by a marriage to Vibia Sabina, the granddaughter of Julia the Younger and daughter of the ex-consul Laelius Balbus, whose husband Habitus had recently and unexpectedly died while in Germania commanding a legion. In addition to this, the senate passed a decree formally granting to Gaius the tribunician authority he had thus far been denied. Although he did not receive a grant of imperium, this elevation was of crucial importance, as it placed him as the direct heir to Caesar in Rome. Servius, although he did have proconsular imperium, was far from Rome, and Publicola had not even been granted the authority of a tribune at this juncture. This, combined with the urban praetorship of Tiberius the Elder in that year, placed Gaius at the center of the August family, connected as he was by marriage to the clans of the Sullae, the Claudii, Agrippa, and the Cassii, as well as the brother-in-law of the princeps himself.

    On Publicola’s return to Rome, Caesar dismissed Hosidius Geta as praetorian prefect and replaced him with Antonius Saturninus, an equite whose family had enjoyed close relations with the Julii since the time of the Divine Invictus. Saturninus was a man of naked ambition and ruthless in his pursuits. Rumors report that when he was a tribune of the guard for the city of Volsinii, he had one of his superiors poisoned and then tortured and executed the slave whom administered the poison. His ire was unmatched and he was a close associate of Glabrio, as the grandfather of Glabrio, Salvius Aper, had been the prefect under whom Saturninus had been a young protege. This move alarmed the patroness of Geta, Julia Drusilla Augusta herself, the widow of Drusus. She had spent little time in the public eye during the reign of her husband, and on his death, she assumed the head of their household as Servius was too young and far away for such a burden. Her influence ran deep within the city of Rome, and she counted among her friends many of the noble houses of Rome, including those of the men commanding legions in the provinces. Caesar came to fear her influence, especially as she made open overtures for her son Servius to be recalled to Rome and imbibed with greater imperium as the eldest heir of Caesar. Gaius and his elder brother Caesar became wary of her and they made efforts to diminish her influence in the city.

    In order to seize greater control of Rome, Caesar induced his uncle, Tiberius the Elder, whom was the urban praetor in that year, to introduce a law forbidding the inheritance of a man to pass to his wife if she remained unmarried upon his death after the appropriate mourning period. This was aimed directly at Augusta, whom had made it abundantly clear that she did not wish to remarry and preferred the company of her brother Felix and his entourage, with whom she had grown close in the aftermath of her father’s fall from power. Caesar was thusly able to defer the inheritance of Drusus from her to his brother Gaius, whom was the second heir. This alarmed many in Rome, as there appeared to be, either by fraud or by contempt of his father, no substantial inheritance for Servius, leaving some to believe that he intended to adopt one or both of Gaius’ sons on his return to Rome, as Servius’ biological father Galba, remained deeply unpopular in Rome and in the legions. This massive wealth was used by Gaius to pay a generous donative to the praetorians whom had accompanied Drusus to Syria, and this legacy’s arrival in Syria came with it new orders for the legions therein.

    Caesar was fearful of Felix and his relationship to the family of Drusus, and he thusly resolved that the war in Parthia be forgone for the time being while he re-evaluated the capabilities of the incumbent command staff and saw to it that the war be prosecuted by his own allies. His father’s own seizure of power from Vipsanianus taught Caesar the value of commanding the eastern legions, and he did not wish for Felix, who enjoyed the companionship of many of the legates in Syria, to be realized with designs upon the Empire. The legions, whom had been encamped near Edessa and engaged in sporadic skirmishes with the recuperating Parthian army, begrudgingly accepted the order to retreat, and ironically it was Felix whom reminded them that they had sworn an oath to obey Caesar, in spite of many among their number wishing to see Felix or even young Servius usurp power from the hated brother of their beloved imperator. The Parthians rapidly capitalized on this, invading and seizing considerable wealth from Commagena and Sophene. The legions were thusly employed to exact further levies of troops and tribute from the desert oasis towns of Syria. The losses sustained by the legions to the plague in Parthia were considerable, and Caesar had thusly ordered the replenishment of their force in addition to ensuring the loyalty of the local Syrian provincials.

    These transgressions incensed the fury of the Syrians, and they quickly rallied behind a man claiming descent from Tigranes Magnus and Mithridates VI named Alexander Eumenes who had levied an armed force from the towns of Heriopolis and Palmyra. He railed against the unjust subjections of the governor of Syria, whom at that time was Lentulus Scipio, the consul of seventeen years hence and an ally of Caesar from the time of Agrippa’s revolution and a close associate of Cato and Scribonianus, whom in that year were the urban prefect and the princeps senatus, respectively. The small militia of Eumenes had received additional help from the Parthians and the Arabs of Osrhoene, who supplied the cavalry for this desert army. The advantage of swiftness they enjoyed over their legionary pursuers was considerable, and thus, they avoided capture in this year and spent months raiding the settlements of the Euphrates with impunity, even reaching as far West as Nicopolis and Germanicia. In the vacuum that this created in Armenia, Tigranes was able to return to his capital and levy a second army from among the displaced peasants whom had seen their homes destroyed by the legions in addition to mercenaries sent by the kings of the Albanians and the Medians. The legions were thusly furious with their commanders, especially with Lollius, as he seemed to be provoked little by the indignities under which they had suffered. This was further exacerbated by the officers whom arrived in that year to replace their legati. Licinius Mucianus and Felix in particular had been in good standing with their soldiers, and their replacements, among whom were the former urban prefect Vettius Rufus and his brother-in-law Rubellius Blandus, neither of whom were well-respected in Rome or in the legions. However, the parting words of Felix served to quiet their nerves. On departing their castrum near the town of Sura, Felix bade the following farewell, “Comrades and countrymen, fear not these brief reverses, for no barbarians have withstood the cudgel of a steadfast legion.” As Felix returned to Rome, he was embraced by Caesar and given the corona civica by vote of the senate. However, he was not awarded with any further offices, and remained at Rome as a private citizen for the remainder of the year.

    As the situation in Parthia deteriorated further, the partisans of Caesar were active in Rome. Tiberius had seen the passage of two laws through the senate. These, which would become known as the Vipsanian laws on the courts and the equites, saw the crucial transfer of all jury courts to the senate, robbing the equites of their position as jurors in all cases, whereas before the majority of the criminal quaestiones had seen their membership as half of the judges. However, the second of these laws, which was supposed to have been written by Tiberius himself, established a coherent series of offices in which equites might serve for any length of term and be awarded greater honors in parallel with those of senators on their cursus honorum. The equites, which would begin their careers as centurions or as commanders of auxiliary cohors, would see promotion through a variety of posts as legionary tribunes, provincial tax collectors, and if they reached such heights, prefects of the praetorian guard or of entire provinces. The senatorial and equestrian orders both heartily lauded Tiberius for what each saw as a diminution of the other and an elevation of their own. Tiberius himself had been an eques for many years before his reinstatement into the senate in the consulship of Drusus and Vopiscus Augustus for the third times, and thus he was beloved by their order as well as by the senate, as he was the brother of the Divine Invictus and one of the eldest among their number, in spite of serving numerous offices very late in his career.

    The remainder of the senate was quiescent in this year, following the lead of the consuls, as the censors were wary of their own positions, especially Corbulo, whose family connections made him closely aligned with Tiberius Gemellus, another eques of the imperial family whose son, Gaius Nero, was engaged to Corbulo’s daughter. All applauded Tiberius and Agrippa for their legislative accomplishments and Caesar for his prudent temporary halt on the war in Armenia — although many senators silently resented this choice — and awaited Caesar’s next move, uncertain of the loyalties of any other their fellows in the developing new regime.

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    Many elder senators stand at the entrance to the Curia to vocally oppose the political trials undertaken in these years

    —In the consulship of Publius Licinius Crassus Dives and Gaius Cornelius Cinna…
    The vivacious Labienus assumed the office of praetor patriae and he assumed the reigns of the senate with haste. He arranged for the election of Tiberius the Elder to the urban prefecture, in spite that he had never served as consul. This special exemption was not commented on by Caesar, and Labienus took this as a signal that pursuits of his own agenda were permissible. The consuls for that year were both kinsmen of Labienus — Crassus was his cousin-in-law by their mutual marriages into the extended family of the Vipsanii and the Cassii, and Cinna was the son-in-law of his patron Sulla Felix — and he sought this as leverage towards his own ends. Caesar himself spent the bulk of the year in Campania, and by his absence, Labienus had seized effective control of the government. Only Gaius remained in the city with any authority to oppose his designs, and this did not appear likely given Gaius’ kinship with Agrippa, whom was himself a close friend of Labienus.

    With control of the jury courts now under the full control of the senate, Labienus saw fit to deliver a series of speeches denouncing the flight of Milo from Rome as potential for treason against Caesar. He likewise bade foul omens for Felix in his apparent failure to prosecute the Armenian War fully in the absence of direct orders from Rome. He accused Felix of collusion with the Parthians to murder Drusus and seize his offices. Although many senators respected Felix, they were unable to vocally oppose Labienus for fear of provoking the wrath of Caesar himself. When he was summoned to the court of Labienus, he brought for his defense a number of elder statesmen on the stature of Otho, the consul of fifteen years hence, Blaesus the former censor, and Vitellius, the consul of five years hence, all of whom were well-respected men whom were friends of Drusus while he was alive. Labienus himself quickly became realized that he miscalculated the magnitude of support for Felix among the senators, many of whom owed their careers to his father, and he found himself unable to secure a conviction for such a well-liked man and great-grandson of the Divine Augustus. Labienus thereafter was humbled for his inability to secure such convictions and bore greater discretion for the remainder of the year. His brother-in-law Lucceius assumed the lead in the remainder of the prosecutions that year. For it was in this year that the law of treason saw itself abused to a remarkable extent as agents of Caesar sought to marginalize his political enemies and groveling sycophants informed on allegations in the same way such that they might gain favors or goodwill in the future.

    Apronius Caesennius, the son of the disgraced princeps senatus whom had served as one of Agrippa’s lackeys during his attempt at usurpation, was the praetor of the bribery court in that year, in spite of his relatively advanced age for a lesser office, and he collaborated with Lucceius in that year in order to exact vengeance upon the men whom had ousted his father from his honorable service. Although they had played little direct part in Felix’s seizure of Rome from Agrippa, all three of the defenders of Felix were serving in the legions concurrently and Apronius and Lucceius seized upon this relationship to the part they played in securing Felix’s acquittal as the primary implicating factor in their own trial against these men for bribery. Lucceius argued before the senate that these men, whom were close associates of the disgraced and exiled Galba — with Blaesus even having served with him as consul — to undermine their own standings in the senate. Blaesus was completely unprepared for this sudden and rigorous attack on his dignity, especially coming from his stepson-in-law Apronius, whom was married to his step-daughter, Marcella Antonia. The three ex-consuls appealed to Caesar to impose his tribunician authority on what was evidently a fraudulent trial, but Caesar responded enigmatically, “Men who would wield their powers against the law are precisely those whom the courts exist to contain, for the law is the master of Rome, not I.” Blaesus was struck with fear when Caesar said this, and he fled into exile before the trial was complete. He was retroactively condemned for bribery, and his own flight helped secure the convictions of Otho and Vitellius as well. The sons of these men were married to the granddaughters of the deceased Marcus Rufus, and they were stripped of senatorial rank and likewise had their sons’ marriages annulled and their wives were remarried.

    Corbulo watched all of this with apprehension. As a censor, he was not able to be subjected to these same indignities irrespective of the praetors’ designs upon him. However, to see his mentor Blaesus, under whom he had served at great length in Germania, and one of his close friends Otho, disgraced in such a way saw him realized with fear. He was the father-in-law of Gaius Nero, and his father Tiberius Gemellus had not been active in political life since his praetorship in the consulship of Silius and Plautius, and in spite of his lofty ancestry — his father was a censor and his grandfather was consul and now deified — he had not leveraged this in any apparent means to establish himself as a man of any influence, except for as a patron of the arts. He could likewise not rely on his colleague in the censorship or any of the consuls for the next several years, as they were largely allies and clients of Caesar, and he thus turned to the only two persons in Rome able to stand independently of Caesar: his brother Gaius and his widowed sister-in-law Julia. He firstly arranged for his daughter to divorce Nero and marry Marcus, the younger son of Gaius, and began meeting with Julia in private. Nero was compensated for this arrangement by being arranged to marry Otho’s divorced wife, Julia Paulina. She had retained her title of Augusta, and her close consular allies, Aemilius Scaurus and Furius Camillus, were also in good standing with Caesar — Caesar had even been the one to advocate for Scaurus’ consulship in the consilium that nominated such officeholders. Corbulo confided secretly with one of his few army comrades left in the senate, the princeps senatus, Scribonianus. Scribonianus had commanded an army of recruits from Italia with distinction during the Marcomannic war, and was honored with triumphal distinctions. However, the other legati and officers from that war — Drusus, Scapula, Otho, Gaius and Lucius Silanus, Sutorius Macro, Octavius Laenas, and many others — had each been killed or exiled in the many years of strife which had followed. In addition to the two of these men, only Milo and Silius remained in good standing with the regime, and even so their standing relied heavily on their own marriage ties to Caesar as well as their absence from Rome and clear self-subordination to their new master.

    However, in that year, the war in the East bade further calamities for the enemies of Caesar. As Eumenes was fleeing to the North into Comagena, the legion of Gaius Caetronius was ordered by Lollius to lay down much of their equipment and pursue quickly the insurgents in flight. The cavalry of this force, led by Servius Caesar, found a group of encamped Syrians unprepared for an engagement in the outskirts of the town of Samosata, and he rapidly encircled them and captured several before they were able to form into a defensive formation. However, as the legionaries of Servius began to send for reinforcements by the legion of Caetronius, a multitude of Syrian cavalry and archers set upon them from an encamped position between two hills to the North of their small force. Servius immediately recognized this as a trap, but as he ordered his men to retreat, the superior numbers of the Syrians overwhelmed his minimal force, and they were slaughtered to a man. When Caetronius arrived, he is reported to have wept openly at the corpse of Servius, and immediately ordered an altar be built to him at the site of his death and offerings made to the Divine Invictus.

    The news of Servius’ death was met with equal parts despair and fury by the legions. Vettius Rufus saw this opportunity not simply to gain favor for himself with the legions, but also capitalize on their inflamed passions. He produced a will that was alleged to be that of the now-dead Servius, which named the legions as his only heirs, and Vettius showered sesterces upon the legionaries and made promises of greater rewards once the marauding Syrians had been dealt with. Thus inspired, the legions marched on numerous desert towns and razed them to the ground, crucifying women and despoiling oases with impunity, knowing that the Syrians would not stand for such indignities. As the legions were marched towards the hometown of Hieropolis with the vocal aim of reducing the city in the same manner as they had done others, a number of free cities announced their defection from the cause of the revolutionaries. Chief among these was Palmyra, whom had never officially endorsed these mutineers, but now took the additional step of retroactively condemning and exiling any man whom had lent aid and comfort to Eumenes and his army. The Syrian army, quickly draining their own supplies and losing still greater support from the broader Syrian population, sought one last gamble in the support of the Parthians. Vologases refused to send any coherent force to aid Eumenes, and thus the Syrian “king” was forced into an attempt to defeat the legions in open battle. This predictably failed, and the few rebels who did not defect were crucified, and the revolt in Syria was over. Lollius, whom had overseen this entire operation announced great clemency to those whom had defected, but imposed harsh penalties on those whom had stood in array against his army. He seized many and sold them as slaves and extorted exorbitant portoriae against the merchants whom had been complicit in their treacheries. The Syrians did not repeat this transgression, and the army of the East was once again freed from domestic commitments. The Parthians were now in their focus once more, and the retributive instincts of the legions still unsatisfied. The war in Parthia was far from over.

    However, Caesar at this moment took the chance to order his forces in Syria to reconsolidate their control over that region, collect taxes as they were traditionally levied, and construct new roads and aqueducts to reward the bulk of Syrians for their loyalty and compliant subordination. Caesar furthermore saw the transfer of numerous provinces to the control of the senate. All of Hispania and much of Gaul were now their purview, with Caesar retaining control only over Germania, Illyricum, Syria, Aegyptus, and the Alpine passes. This did not diminish the command authority of Caesar, as his father and brother had done much to secure the command apparatus of the legions as being wholly distinct from the governorship of the provinces, thus the senate was only retained with control of the African legions, although in practice even these were under the auspices of the Magister Occidens, whom was an officer elected by Caesar’s consilium. Thus ended the year with the senate relishing in their new authority as governors but simultaneously in terror of the ascendant men in Rome — Labienus, Lucceius, Agrippa, Tiberius the Elder, and of course Caesar himself. The commanders of the legions obeyed Caesar dutifully, although the men under their commands would grow increasingly dissatisfied in the forthcoming years. Corbulo and Augusta were patient and cautious with their own maneuvers, although the exile at the end of the year of Papinius Allenius, the consul of twelve years hence for an alleged conspiracy against Caesar saw even his own allies grow in their suspicions. Men as powerful as Sulla and Glabrio knew that their own positions were contingent on the maintenance of Caesar’s goodwill, and the growing power of the freedman Claudius Primus in Caesar’s regime bade foul omens for all whom the regime touched.
     
    Book 33: 55-56 CE
  • Book Thirty Three - The Drusillan Reunification

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    Vopiscus Caesar's joint-heirs and co-consuls for the year, Publicola (left) and Gaius (right)
    —In the consulship of Tiberius Julius Caesar Vopiscus Germanicus Publicola and Gaius Julius Caesar Germanicus Primus…
    The freedman Claudius Primus induced Caesar to dismiss Fabius Corvus as the secretary of the treasury and appoint in his place Primus’ friend, Didius Aper. They knew, as Caesar did, that the public treasuries had descended into a state of disarray when the new senatorial provinces, now staffed by the personal entourages of the senators therein, attempted to reconfigure the financial statuses of their domains. The treasury of the empire thusfar had consisted of three principle sums of money. The first was the traditional public treasury which consisted of the incomes collected in the senatorial provinces in addition to the portoriae at the Empire’s borders. The second was the military treasury, established by Augustus, and filled by the indirect taxes on the manumission of slaves, the purchase of goods at auction, and the inheritances on Italian estates which was used exclusively to fund the Empire’s legions on the frontiers. The third of these was the personal discus of the princeps himself. This consisted of the vast largess of the personal estates of Caesar upon which rents were collected and produces sold at market. Included within this fiscus was the vast sum of wealth produced by Aegyptus, which had been organized to collect a variety of licenses, levies, and tributes from its peoples by the Greek kings whom had once reigned in that country. The public treasuries, which were at that time divided into discrete sums from each of the numerous provinces were brought into the auspices of the imperial household, from whence the quaestors would administer them in confluence with the triumvirs of finance and the treasury secretary. Each of these offices would themselves report to the urban prefect whom would assume this charge from the princeps. These six men, the would allow Caesar to monitor more closely the empire’s finances, as the various prefects and procurators of the numerous provinces would deposit a portion of their own state incomes into the military treasury at the end of their tenure in office.

    Agrippa, whom was now serving as the prefect of Italy after his consulship, arranged for the elections of his kinsmen to still higher offices. Agrippa’s own nephews-in-law, Vipstanius and Apronius had been awarded numerous honors, and now served as the legati of the Italian legions. These prestigious postings ennobled their standing further, and Agrippa would wield considerable influence in the consilium for that year, arranging for the appointment of many of his kinsmen and allies to consulships in the coming years. Gaius likewise, as the closest advisor to Caesar, cautioned him against allowing Silius and Milo to remain in command of the legions along the Ister. However, their popularity with the senate and the legions made their execution and exile problematic, thus Caesar resolved these by appointing them to the governorships of Haspania and Narbo, from whence they would command no legions. This alarmed Felix, whom was a close friend of both men, and he took his family with him and departed for Syria, fearing that a reprisal from Caesar was imminent.

    However, as Caesar’s new legati — two former praetors named Titus Tatianus and Pettius Cerealis — arrived at Sirmium and ordered them to exact levies on the local towns whom had been judged to have underpaid their taxes in the previous years, the legions refused. Many of them had been Illyrians by birth whose fathers had served in the auxilia, and these men would, by law, gain citizenship upon their discharge. These career soldiers of the second and third generations had participated in the wars against Dacia in the reign of the Divine Drusus, as well as the wars against the Thracians and Sarmatians in recent years, and many of them had defected to the cause of the Divine Invictus when they had been induced to rebellion by Naevius Surdinus. They considered themselves loyal legions, in spite of their origin among the provincials, and those from whom they were ordered to exact tribute were their families and compatriots. Cerealis was worked into such a fury that he ordered a cohort of the Legio I Germanica be decimated. This affront was too great for the prefect Marcus Umbrius, whom was a veteran officer of that legion, and he induced his men into a mutinous fervor, killing Cerealis and forcing Tatianus to flee the province. When he reached Rome and reported this to Caesar, he ordered his son Publicola to travel to the Ister and appeal to their love of country. The crisis remained unresolved for that year, as Publicola answered numerous petitions of the Macedonians and the Dalmatians on his route to Sirmium, which took considerable time and lengthened his journey by many months.

    Meanwhile in the East, the Parthians had mustered their considerable strength in order to recover their losses in Armenia and Mesopotamia. Their armies ravaged the country of Commagena and its neighbors, and in response their king Alexander appealed to the Roman ambassador in their country, whom relayed this message to Lollius. Lollius, by this point, was engaged in a tour of Syrian towns in order to ensure their loyalty in the aftermath of Philopator’s revolt, and this news quickly filtered down to the contubernia of his legions. The centurions were wary of this discontent and they communicated their concerns with Lollius and his fellow officers. The commander sought to assuage these concerns, but re-emphasized the importance of their supply lines in Syria as a prerequisite to any war in Parthia, and reneged on his prior promises to return to the campaign in that year. The troops became restive, and as news of the indignities suffered by Roman citizens in Commagena and Cappadocia reached their ears, their furies at the exactions of the Parthians grew in magnitude. When word of the mutiny in Dalmatia reached their marching camp, the troops in Syria likewise raised up their arms in disobedience of their officers. A freedman of Lollius was undertaking an inventory of the legionaries’ equipment when he was set upon and lynched by the irreverent soldiers. Lollius and the rest of his advisors feared for their own safety, and they fled Syria under the cover of darkness rather than face the consequences which had befallen Caesar’s officers in Illyricum. On their departure, the legions hailed Felix as the new Augustus when he arrived in Syria with his family in the latter days of Sextilis.

    When Caesar heard of these developments, he was spun into a murderous fervor. He had watched the departure of Felix with considerable suspicion, and had allowed it in spite of this, but he could not abide this attempt at the usurpation of his office. He at once arrested Cotta and several of his comrades and had them all executed. Their allies in the senate were cowed and sought merely to preserve their own lives. Caesar resolved that he would send a group of praetorian guardsmen with his cousin Tiberius Gemellus in order to regain the loyalty of the Syrian legions. In return, he was promised a consulship for himself and his son Nero in the forthcoming years. Lepidus, Caesar’s brother-in-law, sought at this juncture to demonstrate his loyalty to Caesar by amassing his considerable wealth and departing for Syria with Gemellus, and Gaius supported this motion heartily. They departed the city quickly at the end of September and would arrive early in the next year.

    Corbulo fell ill at this time, and Glabrio seized upon his colleagues’ absence to expel numerous men from the senate and confiscate their estates on Caesar’s behalf. The ex-consuls Gaetulicus and Balbus Minor, whom were kinsmen of Felix fled Rome with their families to Macedonia, as did the ex-praetor Haterius Antoninus. The latter of these affronted Labienus, whom remained very active in the senate and urbis, as Antoninus was his cousin-in-law and had been his ally in the prosecutions which took place in his court in the consulship of Drusus and Vopiscus Augusti for the third times, and Labienus was vocal in his opposition. Labienus estimated that his familial and personal connections to Agrippa and Gaius would protect him from Caesar, but Glabrio did not hesitate is stripping him of his rank and banishing him from Rome after his praetorship expired at the end of Sextilis. While he expected support from the most powerful men in Rome, none of them interceded and without indications of their intentions, the multitude of the senate was perfectly satisfied in leaving Labienus to his fate. However, while in exile, Labienus sent a multitude of letters to Gaius and Agrippa, begging their intercession on his behalf, as he was filled with passion for the city of Rome and her political life. However, neither Gaius nor Agrippa felt compelled to openly denounce the actions of Caesar’s most powerful lieutenant in the senate. However in the latter months of the year, as Glabrio prepared to expel still more men from the senate, Corbulo strode into the Curia, still recovering from his illness, and openly challenged the actions of Glabrio. The Caecilian law on the censors stipulated that both censors must concur for any man to be formally censured, and this fact was confirmed by the Poppaean and Julian laws passed under the auspices of the Divine Augustus, and in Corbulo’s absence, no senator saw fit to challenge this. However, Camillus Scribonianus, the princeps senatus, announced that with Corbulo returning to the senate, any further censures would be illegal. He felt uncomfortable challenging Glabrio directly, and thus declined to advocate for the revival of all the censures passed up to that point, but for the time being, Glabrio’s efforts had been curbed.

    On the Ides of November, Caesar was set upon by an armed assassin as he passed along the path from the Domus Tiberiana into the Forum. He was lightly injured, but a group of the praetorians were able to come to his aid and killed the primary assailant, arresting the others. Under torture, the would-be assassin confessed that he had been paid by the freedman Paullus Fronto, whom had recently been forced in disgrace to retire. Caesar accordingly had him arrested and executed publicly and delivered a chilling speech on the floor of the senate, the text of which has been lost, but which the contemporary historian and later consul, Vibius Fronto commented that this oration, “Delivered adequately upon the collective fears of all innocent men in that emasculated chamber.” In the aftermath of this unadulterated threat, Gaius and Glabrio came forward, without the urging of Caesar and offered to hear any senatorial petition before Caesar, as it was widely known that Caesar had grown tired of the senate in recent months and saw more urgently the need to satiate the army, and had thus neglected to attend his consilium, instead spending the bulk of his days with his close advisors in the palace. When Gaius took this action, Caesar became even more cautious, and he did not wish for his young brother to control his awareness of the developing situation in the senate. However, he had long come to trust Gaius, as they had been close since their childhoods, and in the rest of that year, Caesar never left the Palatine Hill.​

    Consul-leaves-Rome.jpg

    The elderly Paullus Lepidus leaves Rome, accompanied by his own personal guard

    —In the consulship of Lucius Gellius Publicola Vinicianus and Sextus Marius…
    The flood of senatorial petitions to Caesar was stymied as a result of the intercession of Glabrio, and the princeps met this trend with fury and alarm. Caesar returned once more before the assembled senate and announced that no senator would be allowed to stand between him and any petitioner, and furthermore that Glabrio was to be stripped of his censorship. In spite of Glabrio’s protests, the consuls arranged for a special election to select his replacement and elected their most senior member, who although he had not yet served as consul, was granted a special exemption by the consuls — Tiberius the Elder, whom had likewise received a similar exemption on assuming the urban prefecture. Glabrio was harangued by the senior tribune and praetor-elect, Marcius Censorinus and hauled before the majestas court — which at that juncture was serving as the interim court for all treasonable offenses since the exile of Labienus had vacated the chief praetorship. The praetor, a provincial man named Julius Frontinius was not well disposed to the haughty Italian stock of Glabrio, and delivered a scathing indictment before the assembled senate. This trial was unusual in that Caesar himself was in attendance, although he fervently denied the depraved bargaining of Glabrio on his behalf and contented himself as merely a witness to the proceedings. Glabrio was found guilty by the senate, whom were sufficiently cowed by the presence of Caesar to fear opposing his evident wishes. Glabrio was thusly convicted, stripped of his rank, and condemned to death for treason. The suddenness of his downfall left many of Caesar’s erstwhile allies cautious for their own safety, as Glabrio had been one of Caesar’s most vocal advocates. Even allies of Caesar’s family, such as Fabius Persicus, Sulla Felix, and Cato were apprehensive at these developments, for the fall of Glabrio heralded a new chapter of Caesar’s relationship with the senate wherein even his staunchest allies were wary of his capricious retributions.

    The legions in the provinces were induced into open fury on all quarters. On Publicola’s arrival in Sirmium, the mutinous legions embraced him. He was brought before the combined forces of infantry and auxiliae and was vaulted upon the shields of the aquiliferes and hailed as Augustus. He protested mightily at this, attempting to administer an oath of loyalty to his father to the rapturous legions, but it was to no avail. The surviving officers of those legions assured Publicola that there would be no other way to end the mutiny than for him to accept their acclamations. He reluctantly accepted and sullenly began to consider his options for further action. Likewise in Syria, as Lepidus and Gemellus arrived in Syria they were well-received by the legions, whom had already been host of Felix and his family, although Felix refused to administer a loyalty oath for himself. As Gemellus consulted with Felix, Lepidus presented his massive fortune before the soldiers and delivered a speech denouncing Caesar and suggesting his younger brother Gaius would be more fit to rule Rome and her Empire as the true heir to the memory of Drusus. Gemellus, upon hearing this, was alarmed and feared for his own life, as it was widely known that he had come to Syria as an agent of Caesar. He was induced to concede this to the legions and did not oppose them when their officers administered an oath of loyalty to Felix and Gaius as brothers in arms and co-rulers. Lepidus busied about readying the legions for an expedition, although it remained to be seen what their destinations and ends would be.

    It was not long before Caesar became learned of the treacheries by his own son, although news from the East would take considerably more time to become known. His court was induced to a panic as they knew of the popularity of Publicola with the legions. They at once set about the systematic destruction of any man of influence whom may serve as a potential agent of the young potentate at Rome. Many ex-consuls were tried and exiled, with several being executed. These included Flavius Sabinus, the consul of sixteen years hence, Nonius Asprenas, the consul of fifteen years hence, and Messalla Corvinus, the consul of fourteen years hence. The sons of these men likewise fled into exile, and the number of the senate was reduced by half as the wary nobiles sought the preservation of their own safety in the Italian countryside and abroad. The most violent and unjust death at this time was that of the freedman Julius Carbo. He had lawfully served the father of Caesar as well as his brother, and upon the new Caesar’s assumption of sole rulership, he had likewise loyally served him as an administrator of justice and a consultant with Caesar’s consilium. However, all of these did not endow Caesar with any clemency, and his praenomen, Drusus, was sufficient to condemn him to death at the Tarpeian Rock. As these men were tried, and many of their slaves and freedmen tortured, the name of the prefect Vedius Pollio was given as one of the covert insubordinate agents of Publicola. In the dead of night as he slept, unaware of what ill fortunes had befallen him, he was butchered by the praetorian guardsmen whom he had so recently called his own. In his place, Gaius suggested Cornelius Atticus, a man well-known for his contempt of the senatorial order and whom had been a childhood friend of both Caesar and Gaius.

    In his first act as prefect of the guard, Atticus brought charges upon the princeps senatus himself, Camillus Scribonianus. Camillus was an honest man well-renowned for his personal vigor and steadfastness of loyalty. During the rebellion of Surdinus, it was well known that he had personally been invited to join with Surdinus in the consulship they might share after deposing and killing the Divine Invictus, but he refused publicly, even offering his own son as a sacrifice for the Divine Invictus to test his loyalty. The senate was incensed. The leading prosecutor at that time was Marcus Lucceius, whom was also the consul-elect. He and his colleague, Vindex brought charges of corruption, treason, and bribery against Camillus for his conduct during the consular elections in that year. It was widely known prior to these elections that Lucceius and Vindex would be candidates, and their opponent was the young Gaius Cassius, whom was only twenty at that time. In the first assemblage of the electors, the senate overwhelmingly voted for Cassius to serve as consul, with some even suggesting that he begin the year as sole consul. However, Corbulo at that time dissolved the assembly and summoned them several days later once another quorum could be reached for the elections. Lucceius and Vindex were elected, and they subsequently accused Camillus of having bribed the numerous junior senators to support Cassius’ candidacy. This accusation was intractable as it had been levied against a man of such stature and for Lucceius to concede would be too great a submission to bear the weight of his failure, thus he prosecuted Camillus with furious vigor and vile rapacity. However, as many of the senate knew his innocence, they were unmoved by Lucceius’ impassioned addresses, and intended to acquit Camillus. It was not to be. On the day of the judgement, a century of the praetorian guard under the personal command of Atticus stood guard in the curia, and no senator was willing to expose himself as being of sympathy to the accused. As the judgement was delivered by Julius Frontinius, Camillus stood from his seat, pulled his toga over his head, and without speaking, walked out of the Curia. He was at once cut down by the praetorians, and in his feeble age, he did not see fit to combat this injustice. He would be the martyr for all of Rome to laud.

    On the delivery of this news to the extended imperial family, the news of Gaius’ elevation by the Syrian legions became known in the city. Julia Augusta and Lepida Augusta, Caesar’s own wife, made known that they supported the accession of Gaius to the principate. The consuls were swift in their likewise acknowledgement, as were the censors. Only the elder prefect of the guard, Antonius Saturninus, was steadfast in his loyalty to Caesar. When he became learned of these developments, Caesar was furious. He at once ordered the death of his brother, but when the tribune whom had received this order reported it to the prefect Atticus, he refused to carry it out, and even swore fealty to Gaius himself. However, even as the praetorian cohorts abandoned their posts and congregated near the house of Gaius to protect him, Caesar and Saturninus fled the city. They were secure in the knowledge that a force of four legions awaited them in Italia that would make short work of whatever minimal efforts the praetorian guard might undertake within the city of Rome. However, when they reached Corfinium, where Agrippa and one of his legions were stationed at that time, they were refused entrance. The tesserarius whom refused them bade the following message, “The soldiers are awaiting orders from their imperator, Gaius Caesar Divi Filius, and by order of the prefect and consul Antonius Agrippa, will stand by until his own arrival.”

    Saturninus and Caesar, accompanied by only a small retinue of minor magistrates and vigiles, were aghast when the cavalry of Gaius was reported to have been spotted in the distance. Caesar, that he might not be disgraced by his own younger brother, spat on the ground and with his dying breath, bore this curse upon his own lineage, “May the house of Caesar be consumed by the pit of snakes it has brought forth upon Rome.” He fell upon his sword, and Saturninus was quick to follow. Vopiscus Caesar was forty-five years old and had ruled the Empire first with his brother for five years and then in his own right for four years.

    Gaius Caesar was thusly shepherded out of his home by the praetorians and on his entry to the Curia, he was granted the formal powers of maius imperium, consular imperium in Italia, and proconsular imperium in the provinces of his brother. The consuls, in an act of deference, resigned their offices as having wrought the dishonor of Caesar’s death during their tenure. In their place, two of their colleagues in the Decemvirate were nominated by the new Caesar, Tarius Gratianus and Domitius Afer, whom were both well-liked and well-respected. With many senators at that time returning to Rome, Caesar declared a general pardon, as the many expulsions and trials undertaken by Vopiscus in the latter part of his reign had been conducted without a legal quorum of senators — as many of their number had fled in fear — and the Julian laws of the Divine Augustus stipulated that a quorum need be reached before the passage of any consulta, which by the time of the Julian laws of the Divine Drusus, applied to jury trials as well. This furthermore meant that the consular elections of Lucceius and Vindex were invalid, and the new consuls summoned the senate for another election — the fourth consular election to take place in that year. The consuls elected were Caesar himself as well as Tiberius the Elder. In the following year, he would serve a concurring term as consul, suffect censor, and urban prefect, giving him unprecedented powers for a man not personally claiming the imperial dignity. Marius and Gellius Publicola, for their deference and patriotism, were dispatched to Syria to recall Lepidus and Felix to Rome and take command of the Syrian army to prosecute the unfinished war with the Parthians. There was much work to be done, and the new Caesar did not see fit to remain idle even in times of uncertainty.
     
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    Volume Eight -- The House of Drusus
  • Volume Eight - The House of Drusus
    Translated by Porcius Valentinianus Caecina MDXLVIII for the Theodoricine memorial library in Alexandria

    As I'm sure you all have heard, the man who began this great project of translating the Annals, Clodius Theodoricus Alexander, has recently passed away amid his work on the translation of volume eight of this work. I have had the pleasure of studying under Alexander for nearly a decade since we met at a conference in Byzantium several years ago, and I have been one of his collaborators on this project for several years. I will do my utmost to maintain the integrity of the annals, as did he, while I continue to make them available for a wider audience. The new memorial library in Alexandria will not only house the most comprehensive collection of ancient works in the world from Rome, Greece, Aegyptus, and Mesopotamia, but also the transcripts of the capitoline fasti, the imperial archives, the acts of the senate, and the massive corpus of the institutes, and I am proud to have been asked to complete the seminal work of translating the Aelian Annals. One of the major flaws that modern scholars have found within the Annals are the frequency with which the author attempts to untangle the genealogical mess of the Julian family, often to frustrating avail. To rectify this end, I have compiled a comprehensive family tree of the Julians to date. For the convenience of the reader, I have annotated the various decorations on the very numerous descendants of Augustus.

    G. Julius Caesar (praetor) (140 BCE—85 BCE) = Aurelia
    —>
    G. Julius Caesar (dictator) (a.k.a. Divus Julius) (100 BCE—44 BCE)= Cornelia/Pompeia/Calpurnia
    Julia Prima (before 101 BCE—???) = Q. Pedius/L. Pinarius
    Julia Secunda (101 BCE—51 BCE) = M. Atius Balbus
    —>
    Atia Balba Caesonia = G. Octavius Thurinus
    —>
    Octavia (69 BCE—11 BCE) = M. Claudius Marcellus/M. Antonius (triumvir)
    Imp. Caesar Divi. f. Augustus (63 BCE—4 CE) = Scribonia/Livia Augusta
    —>
    Julia The Elder (39 BCE—8 CE) = Marcellus/Agrippa/Tiberius Nero/Jullus Antonius/Marcellus Aeserninus/Piso Caesoninus
    —>
    The Julian family is divided into five branches - each one descended from a different one of Julia and Agrippa's children. They are displayed in the following order: male-line Julians, Julian collaterals, minor Julians and major Claudians, Drusillans (children of Agrippina and Germanicus), and the extended Vipsanio-Cassii family.

    Imp. G. Julius Divi. f. Divi. n. Caesar Augustus (Vipsanianus) (20 BCE-38 CE) = Julia Livilla (d. of Drusus Augustus)
    1. L. Julius G. f. Divi. n. Caesar Felix Pius (11-61 CE) = Claudia Gemella Maior (d. of Nero the censor)
      1. L. Julius L. f. G. n. Caesar Pius (32-61 CE) = Pomponia (d. of Milo, cos. 51 CE)
        1. Oct. Julius L. f. L. n. Caesar Pius (53 CE-)
    2. Julia Augusta = Drusus Germanicus (for their children, see [1])
    3. M. Julius G. f. Divi. n. Caesar Rufus (15-41 CE) = Licinia Divilla (d. of Crassus Dives, cos. 29 CE)
      1. Julia Livilla (27 CE-) = Cossus Cornelius Lentulus Gaetulicus (cos. 47 CE)
        1. Cornelia Gaetulicia (46 CE-) = G. Sentius Saturninus (s. of cos. 33 CE)
      2. Julia Rufinia (28 CE-) = G. Lollius (cos. 47 CE)
        1. Lollia (46 CE-) = A. Vitellius (s. of cos. 49 CE)
        2. Julia Paulina Rufina (48 CE-) = M. Salvius Otho (s. of cos. suff. 39 CE)

    Julia the Younger (19 BCE-18 CE) = L. Aemilius Paullus (cos. 1 CE)/D. Laelius Balbus (cos. 6 BCE)
    1. Aemilia Lepida Augusta (5 BCE-) = Vopiscus Augustus (for their children, see [2])
    2. L. Aemilius L. f. Paulli. n. Paullus Lepidus (6-67 CE) = Drusilla (d. of Gaius Augustus II)
    3. D. Laelius D. f. M. n. Balbus (14-61 CE) = Julia Domitia (d. of Tiberius the cens.)/Vibia Postumia (d. of Vibius Lamia, pr. 37 CE)
      1. D. Laelius D. f. D. n. Domitianus (38 CE-) = Cornelia Marcia (d. of Sulla, cos. suff. 26 CE)
        1. Laelia Balbina (55 CE-)
        2. D. Laelius D. f. D. n. Geminus (56 CE-)
      2. Laelia Balba (41 CE-) = D. Haterius Antoninus (s. of Haterius Agrippa, cos. 43 CE)
      3. Vibia Sabinia (45 CE-) = A. Vibius Habitus (gs. of cos. suff. 10 CE)/Asinius Saloninus (gs. of cos. 8 BCE)

    L. Julius Divi. f. Divi. n. Caesar (Vipsanianus) (17 BCE-38 CE) = Aurelia Cotta (d. of cos. 20 & 23 CE)
    1. Julia Aurelia (9 CE-) = Ti. Claudius Nero Gemellus (d. of Nero the censor)
      1. G. Claudius Ti. f. Dr. n. Nero (41 CE-) = Domitia Longina (d. of Corbulo)/Julia Paulina
      2. Claudia Gemella Minor (44-62 CE) = F. Julius Caesar (s. of Gaius Augustus II)
    2. G. Julius L. f. Divi. n. Caesar Solus (17-38 CE) = Julia Livilla (d. of Germanicus) (for their children, see [3])

    Agrippina the Elder (14 BCE-46 CE) = Imp. Ger. Julius Divi. f. Divi. n. Caesar Augustus Invictus
    1. Imp. Dr. Julius Divi. f. Divi. n. Caesar Augustus Germanicus = Julia Augusta [1]
      1. Ner. Julius Dr. f. Divi. n. Caesar (31-44 CE) = Julia Prima (d. of Gaius Augustus II)
      2. Julia Drusilla (33 CE-) = Ser. Sulpicius Galba (later Ser. Julius Caesar)/Paullus Aemilius Scaurus (cos. suff. 48 CE)
        1. Aemilia Drusilla (54 CE-)
      3. Agrippina (34 CE-) = M. Furius Camillus (s. of cos. 31 CE and pr. sen.)
        1. M. Furius M. f. L. n. Camillus Agrippa (51 CE-)
        2. Furia (53 CE-)
      4. Ser. Julius Dr. f. Divi. n. Caesar Sulpicianus (27-54 CE) (adopted)
    2. Imp. Ti. Julius Divi. f. Divi. n. Caesar Vopiscus Germanicus Augustus = Lepida Augusta [2]
      1. Ti. Julius G. f. Divi. n. Caesar Vopiscus Germanicus Publicola (33 CE-) (adopted by Gaius Augustus II) = Junia Torquata (gd. of cens.)/Agrippina Prima
        1. Ti. Julius Ti. f. G. n. Caesar Vopiscus Germanicus Publicola Silanus (54 CE-)
    3. Imp. G. Julius Divi. f. Divi. n. Caesar Germanicus Primus Augustus = Cornelia Faustina (d. of cos. 26 CE)
      1. F. Julius G. f. Divi. n. Caesar (39-60 CE) = Claudia Gemella Minor/Pompeia Junilla
      2. Julia Prima (41 CE-) = Ner. Julius Caesar/Ant. Vipsanius Agrippa Maximus
      3. M. Julius G. f. Divi. n. Caesar (42 CE-) = Cornelia Dolabellina/Domitia Longina/Pompeia Junilla
      4. Cornelia Faustina (44 CE-) = P. Claudius Pulcher
      5. Agrippina Prima (45 CE-) = L. Claudius Marcellus (cos. 39 CE)/Ti. Julius Caesar Publicola
      6. Drusilla Prima (48 CE-) = L. Aemilius Paullus Lepidus
    4. Agrippina the Younger (15-63 CE) = D. Valerius Asiaticus (cos. 32 CE)/G. Sallustius Passienus Crispus (cos. suff. 29 CE)/M. Porcius Cato (cos. 36 CE)
      1. Porcia (33 CE-) = Paullus Fabius Persicus (cos. 37 CE)
        1. Fabia Maximina (50 CE-)
        2. Paullus Fabius Paulli f. Paulli. n. Macedonicus Maximus (53 CE-)
    5. Livilla (18 CE-) = G. Julius Caesar Solus/P. Cornelius Scipio (cos. 49 CE)/Gn. Domitius Ahenobarbus (cos. suff. 29 CE)/Gn. Pompeius (cos. suff. 59 CE)
      1. Julia Livilla (37 CE-) = P. Quinctilius Varus (cos. suff. 34 CE) [3]
      2. Cornelia Germanica (40 CE-) = Q. Cassius Longinus (s. of Cassius cens.)
      3. P. Cornelius P. f. P. n. Scipio (41 CE-)
      4. L. Domitius Gn. f. L. n. Ahenobarbus (44 CE-) = Poppaea Sabina
      5. Pompeia Junilla (49 CE-) = F. Julius Caesar/M. Julius Caesar
      6. Gn. Pompeius Gn. f. Sex. n. Magnus (51 CE-)
    6. Sex. Julius Divi. f. Divi. n. Caesar Germanicus (19-34 CE) (no issue)
    7. Drusilla (21 CE-) = G. Galerius Macedonicus (cos. 20 & 35 CE)/G. Silius (cos. 46 CE)
      1. G. Silius G. f. G. n. (46 CE-)
      2. P. Silius G. f. G. n. (47 CE-)
    8. M. Julius Divi. f. Divi. n. Caesar Germanicus (22-43 CE) = Calpurnia (d. of cens.) (no issue)

    M. Vipsanius M. f. L. n. Agrippa Postumus (12 BCE-38 CE) = Plautia Silvia/Antonia (d. of Tiberius)
    1. M. Vipsanius M. f. M. n. Agrippa Postumus Aquileanus (10-38 CE) = Cocceia Nervilla (d. of cens.) (for their children, who were adopted by Aquileanus' brother, see below [4])
    2. Vipsania Postumia (11-60 CE) = G. Cassius Longinus (cos. suff. 27 CE and cens.)
      1. Cassia Longina = L. Antonius (cos. suff. 28 CE)/Q. Junius Blaesus (cos. suff. 29 CE)/L. Vipstanius (s. of cos. 19 CE)
        1. M. Antonius L. f. Julii. n. Primus (45 CE-)
        2. Marcella Antonia (45 CE-)
        3. Junia Popilia (48 CE-)
        4. L. Vipstanius L. f. M. n Junius Blaesus (51 CE-)
      2. G. Cassius G. f. G. n. Longinus (33 CE-) = Cornelia Gaetulicia (sis. of cos. 47 CE)
      3. L. Cassius G. f. G. n. Longinus (38 CE-) = Licinia Divilla (w. of M. Rufus)
      4. Q. Cassius G. f. G. n. Longinus (41 CE-) = Cornelia Germanica (d. of Scipio, cos. 49 CE)
    3. Ant. Vipsanius M. f. M. n. Agrippa Postumus = Pompeia (d. of cens.)/Claudia Gemella Maior (d. of Nero the cens.)
      1. Ant. Vipsanius Ant. f. M. n. Agrippa Maximus (39 CE-) = Julia Prima (d. of Gaius Augustus II)
      2. Vipsania Antonia (40 CE-) = Q. Labienus (cos. suff. 58 CE)
      3. M. Vipsanius Ant. f. M. n. Aquila Postumus (adopted) (29-58 CE) = Junia Torquata

    Chronicle of Volume Eight (810 - 819 AUC)
    Coming whenever I write it... I'm a little behind on the summaries
     
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