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Loyola University Chicago
Loyola eCommons
Master's Teses Teses and Dissertations
1935
A Study of the Caesar Cult with Reference to thePolitical Aims of Augustus
Victor B. Nieporte Loyola University Chicago
Tis Tesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Teses and Dissertations at Loyola eCommons. It has been accepted for inclusion in
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Tis work is licensed under a Creative Commons Aribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 License.
Copyright © 1935 Victor B. Nieporte
Recommended CitationNieporte, Victor B., "A Study of the Caesar Cult with Reference to the Political Aims of Augustus" (1935). Master's Teses. Paper 462.hp://ecommons.luc.edu/luc_theses/462
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A STUDY OF THE CAESAR CULT WITH REFERENCE
TO THE POLITICAL AIMS OF A U G U ~ T U S
VICTOR B. NIEPORTE, S. J .
June, 1935
A thesis submitted in part ia l fulfi l lment
of the requirements for the degree of
Master of Arts in Loyola University.
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i
Vita Auctoris
Victor Bernard Nieporte was born at Norwood, Ohio,
Feb. 19, 1909. He received his elementary education a t Saint
Elizabeth School, Norwood, Ohio. He graduated from Saint
Xavier High School, Cincinnati , in June, 1927. In september
of the same year he entered xavier University, Cincinnati.
In September, 1928 he entered the Jesuit Novitiate of the
Sacred Heart, Milford, Ohio. He received the degree of Lit t .
B. from xavier University in June, 1932. In september of
that year he entered the Graduate School of s t . Louis Uni-
versity in which insti tution he spent two years. In the
Fall of 1934 he entered Loyola University, Chicago to pur-
sue graduate work in the Classics and in philosophy.
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION
CHAPTER
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
PAGE
1
I . AUGUSTUS AND THE DEIFICATION OF CAESAR • • •
Poli t ical character of Roman r e l ig ion . • •
Julius Caesar and absolute, divine mon-
9
9
archy • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• 11
Octavian and Antony struggle for Caesar's
position; their recognition of the cult
as a poli t ical instrument • • • • • • • •• 14
Octavian is victorious. • • • • • • • • •• 21
I I . AUGUSTUS' CONDUCT AFTER ACTIUM • • • • • • •• 23
Conditions of the empire after Actium • •• 24
I I I .
Augustus and the remedy for these evils
AUGUSTUS AND THE ROMAN RELIGION. • • • • •
Octavian and the restoration of the tem-
• •
• •
pIes. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
Octavian and the various cul ts . • •
Octavian and Apollo • • • • • • • •
The Ludi Saeculares • • • • • • • •
• • • •
• • • •
• • • •
30
35
35
.35
37
39
i i
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i i i
CHAPTER PAGE
IV.
V.
Horaoe's Carmen Saeoulare •••• • • • • •
Ootavian and the name Augustus. • • • • • •Augustus and the two great powers, the
potestas tr ibunioia and the prooonsulare
42
43
imperium ••••• • • • • • • • • • • •• 45
Augustus as Pontifex Maximus. • • • • • • • 46
Augustus and the munioipal reforms of
7 B. c. • • • • • • • • • ••
• • • • • • • 48
Worship of the Genius Augusti • • • • • •• 49
AUGUSTUS IN LITERATURE • • • • • • • • • • • • 53
General oharaoter of Augustan l i t e r a tu re . . 53
Augustus and Virgil • • • • • • • • • • •• 54
Augustus and Horaoe • • • • • • • • • • •• 57
Augustus and Tibullus • • • • • • • • • • •
AUGUSTUS' POLITICAL SAGACITY •• • • • • • • •Idea of a man-god in early Rome • • • • • •The Monarohy of Alexander • • • • • • • • •
The oonduot of the eastern provinoes to-
60
62
62
64
wards Roman oonquerors. • • • • • • • • •• 67
The man-god oonoept in Republioan and
Imperial Rome • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• 68
The Roman Genius•• • • • • • • • • • • • • 70
Augustus and the provinoes. • • • • • • •• 72
Augustus and Rome • • • • • • • • • • • •• 74
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1v
PAGE.,
CONCLUSION • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 76
NOTES. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 82
BIBLIOGRAPHY • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 87
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I
INTRODUOTION
The Oaesar Cult, to put 1t b r 1 e ~ l y , was the worsh1p
o ~ the dead Caesar. I t was the worship or Caesar to whom
apotheos1s had come at ter his death. For us, however, th1s
worship ot the dead Caesar 1s ot no great 1mportance, nor
was 1t common 1n the western prov1nces. There 1s another as
pect ot the Caesar Cult wh1ch perta1ns rather to the Gen1us
or Rumen August1 s1gnity1ng the Genius or Numen ot the 11v-
1ng Oaesar.
"The worsh1p ot dead Caesars here1s not ot 1mportance to us, nor was
1 t common 1n the western prov1nces:but that ot the Gen1us or NumenAugust1, whether comb1ned or not w1thDea Roma, or (as was trequently thecase) 1n quaint juxtapos1t10n w1thlocal de1t1es, taken, as I th1nk 1tshould be, as s1gn1ty1ng the Gen1usor Numen ot the 11v1ng Caesar, 1sshown by the 1nscr1pt10ns to have beena very real torce 1n the west." I
I t 1s th1s second aspect ot the Oaesar Cult wh1ch 1s
ot 1mportance to us s1nce 1 t was th1s aspect 1n part1cular
wh1ch Augustus employed 1n further1ng h1s plans. There 1s
no 1ntent1on here to deny that Augustus ever used the apo
theos1s ot Jul1us as a means ot strenthen1ng h1s own pos1t1on.
Indeed, 1 t 1s 1n th1s sense that the Oult 1s taken 1n the
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2
f i rs t chapter, which concerns i t se l t with the s t r u g g l e ~ -tween Octavian and Antony for the leadership ot Rome and the
Empire.
Betore continuing with the subject to hand i t wouldbe well to answer a ditf iculty that may arise. Fowler, in
treating of the r ise and growth of Oaesar worship in the pro-
vinces, makes this statement:
"In this way i t has been made ex-tremely probable that the growth of
Oaesar worship in the provincesi s
sogreatly varied in form that i t canhardly have been the result of imper-ia l organisation, but must rather havearisen independently in each locali ty •an important point for us. I t was nota religion imposed from without, but asubjective expression ot confidence( t ides we may call i t in the West)by the Roman1zing provincials andItalian residents." 2
At f i rs t meeting this statement seems to contradict
the problem of the theSis. This, however, i s not t rue. The
thesis does not stand or fa l lon the truth or falsi ty ot the
statement: "Oaesar worship in the provinces was not the re-
sult of Imperial organization." In s t r ic t t ruth, the thesis
is somewhat strengthened by Fowler's remark, for nowhere is
i t maintained that the Oaesar Oult was the result of Imperial
organization. The point of the thesis i s not to show that
Augustus was the founder of the Oaesar Oult; rather it i s to
show to what use Augustus put the instrument, the worship of
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3
tbe Caesars, which lay to hand.
I t may be further objected that In chapter V, when
deallng with the Compltal1a the author surely means that
Augustus was the organizer or reorganlzer of these f raternlt ies which grew up around the shrlnes. This i s another ques
t ion entirely. The f i r s t deals wIth the worshlp of the dead
Caesar in the provlnces; the second Is concerned with the
worship of the Lares amongst whlch Augustus placed the Genius
or Numen August!. Thls worshIp was establlshed long ago a t
Rome and was merely revlved by Augustus and made to serve as
a means for municlpal government.
The problem before us, therefore, Is to show that
Augustus employed the Oaesar Cult and the Cult of the l lv-
ing Oaesar, and by this i s meant the worship of the Numen or
Genius, as a foundation for Augustus' positlon as head ot the
Roman Empire and as a means ot unlfylng and governlng the pro
vlnces both in the East and west.
Rome In the years precedlng the advent of Jesus
Chrlst was passing through a cr is ls . The Republlc had de
generated and had glven way to the domlnant character of
Jullus Caesar. Julius, In turn, ylelded to the daggers o t
enemles. Hls death once again plunged Rome Into a quarter of
a century ot bloodshed, Internal st!-lfe, and moral decadence,
unt i l Octavlan flnally became master ot the Roman world and
the restorer ot peace and prosperity_
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The struggle between the youthful Octavlan and An-~tony for the place le f t vacant by the death of Jullus was the
occaslon of Octavlan's recognltlon of the value to hlm of the
delflcatlon of Jullus whose helr he was. Antony, too, waspalnfully aware of the abnormal lntluence Oaesar's godhead
lent Octavlan and we see Antony lmmedlately opposed to a l l
of Octavlan's plans furtherlng the recognitlon of Caesar's
apotheosis.
D u r ~ n g this struggle between the two aspirants to the
throne, an event occurred the importance of which cannot be
too greatly emphasized. During the games glven by Octavlan
in honor of Jullus, a comet appeared in the skies. Thls
event greatly bolstered Octavlan's bellef in the efficacy of
Julius ' apotheos1s as an aid 1n the attalnment of the honors
he deSired, and of which Jul1us himself had made him heir .
We shall see la ter on to what clever use Octavlan put the ap-
pearance of this comet, which was looked upon a t Rome as
Caesar's spi r i t ascending to take 1ts place amongst the gods.
After the batt le of Aot1um, Ootavian found himself
master of Rome and the Emp1re. I t was not an envious posi-
tion for the task confronting Octavian was gigantic. Re
form was needed ln every stratum of soo1ety. Ootavian was
face to face with that common perplexity - you can lead a
horse to the trough but you cannot make him drink. Octavlan
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-bad forced Rome, as i t were, to the trough but he was help-
.,
lesS, for Rome refused to drink. Arms and physioal force
were impotent against the complete loss of a l l spir i tual
values which would l i f t Rome out of her decadent oonditionand bring her to happier days. Some strong remedy was re
quired to heal the hurt from which Rome was suffering.
I t i s patent that a l l reform must ultimately come
5
from within. In vain do leaders attempt reform through mere
external disoipline. I t i s useless to gild the outside i f the
inside is fu l l of rottenness and a l l forms of death. This
is an universal truth. I t i s true today; it was true a t
the time of Augustus. All true statesmen sooner or l a te r re
oognize this faot. I t was Augustus' good fortune to recog
nize i t immediately. That i s why he rebui l t so many temples
and oonstruoted numerous shrines, sanctuaries and places of
worship. That i s why he attempted his great religious re
vival . But we must not forget that in a ll this activity
Augustus had a twofold purpose. They were; f i rs t , the re
furbishing, or, in some cases, the oomplete renewal of spir i t -
ual values, and, seoondly, the oonsolidation of his own posi
t ion and the unification of the Empire by closely conneoting
himself with the gods by emphasizing his divine origin, and
the complete union of authority, religious as well as se
cular, in the person of the princeps.
This intimate connection between Augustus and the
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6
godS l s well brought out ln Augustus' adopting, 80 to speak,~
Apollo as hls own speclal delty. Augustus was t l re less in
h1s efforts to brlng this home to Rome and the provlnces.
The erection of themagnlficent temple
ofApollo
on the Palat1ne close to the palace of Augustus, the Lud1 Saeoulares,
and Horace's great hymn, the Carmen Saeculare are examples
of Augustus' zeal ln this regard.
Another important phase of Augustus' policy l s the
worshlp that grew up around the Genius or Numen Augusti.
As shall be discussed la ter in the paper, Augustus could not
demand worship as a man-god. The idea of the man-god was of
eastern orlgln and had not yet made i t se l f fe l t ln Rome and
I ta ly. Alexander could pose as such and not incur the odium
whlch the western Mlnd heaped on such a concept. Instead of
followlng this l ine of conduct, by substltuting his Genius
or Numen in place of his own person, Augustus got the same
results minus the 111 repute and positive hosti l i ty whioh de-
1fication and worship would certainly have brought him. This
oult ls , perhaps, the crowning point of Augustus' pol i t lca l
sagaclty.
In proving a polnt of this kind, namely, the use of
the Caesar Cult as a poli t ioal instrument, there are, gen
eral ly, two courses open. The f i r s t , and wlthout doubt the
better of the two, would be to f u ~ s h dlrect quotatlons from
the prlncipals or contemporaries, whloh would show conclu-
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7
sively that they thus looked upon the Cult. This t i r s ~course, however, is denied us in this part icular problem for
nowhere are such statements found. Consequently, we must
follow the second course, which i s indirect in i t s procedure.
An attempt must somehow be made to gather together material
by recalling the history of the times, the circumstances, the
characters of the principals, and especially the sum to ta l
of a l l those important intangibles to which the Germans a t-
tach the name~
Geist and Sit t l ichkei t , a l l of which enterthe problem and add, as they do, each i t s own part icular and
specific formula. Oonsequently, it was neoessarY to approach
the problem from various angles, and to explain, in some de-
ta l l , concepts, which at f i r s t acquaintance, seem not to bear
upon the problem, but which in their numerous ramifications
do play an important part in altering the situation.
Str ic t logical sequence, therefore, i s not to be
found in the essay. Instead, the various sections of the
essay have been linked together in a more or less loose his
tor ical order. At times even this order has been interrupted
in an effor t to t ie together events related in kind but not
in time. Thus, the essay opens with the struggle between
Octavian and Antony for the throne of Julius. This naturally
leads us to the f i r s t triumvirate; i t s subsequent dissolu
tion; the thir teen years o t bloody s t r i fe which intervened;
the batt le of Actium, which, at long l a s t , made Octavian mas-
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8
tar of the Empire... The second section concerns 1tself J i th
conditions at Rome and in the provinces at the e n ~ of the
Republic. The third section deals with Octavian's conduct
towards the old Roman Religion; his own religious revival,
and the concept1on of a plan, which was to find i t s culmina-
tion in the complete unifioation of sta te , Religion, and
Emperor. The fourth seotion departs somewhat from Augustus
himself, since i t shows Augustus in a passive way in the l i t -
erature of the Augustan poets. The olosing section, however,again returns to deal directly with Augustus, and takes up
the interesting study of Augustus' poli t ioal wisdom as shown
in his dealings with Rome, I ta ly, and the provinces.
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CHAPTER I
AUGUSTUS AND THE
DEIFICATION OF CAESAR.
9
s t . Augustine has preserved for us a profound saying
of that eloquent lawyer, Mucius Scaevola, concerning the three
kinds of gods; one introduced by the poets, another by the
philosophers, another by the statesmen.
ttRelatum est In l i t t e r i s doctis-simum pontificem Scaevolam disputassegenera t radita deorum: unum a poetis,alterum a PhllosOWhls, tertIum a prin-cIp1bus civi tate . 1
The f i r s t kind he declares to be t r i f l ing, because many un-
worthy things have been invented by the poets concerning the
gods; the second does not suit the state , because 1 t con-
ta1ns some things that are superfluous, and some, too, which
i t would be prejudic1al for the people to know. Only the
third can be accepted.
tlPrlmum genus nugatorlum d1cltesse, quod multa de dlls flngantur In-digna; secundum non congruere civl-tat ibus, quod habent allqua super-
vacua, allqua etlam quae obslt pop.ulls nosse." 2
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10
Here we have a perfeot expression of the Roman l radi-
tion in respeot to religion. The gods, the i r worship, were
made to serve the sta te . I t was in this sense that Augustus
understood religion and the worship of the Roman gods and the
various native and foreign oults whioh found their way into
Italy and Rome.
The religious restoration which Augustus strove so
earnestly to bring about was essentially poli t ioal . For, the
introduction of the new form of government through whioh
Augustus strove to save the Roman civil izat ion needed some
kind of oonneoting l ink whioh would bind olosely to Caesar
not only Rome but I ta ly and the many provinoes oonquered by
the Roman Eagles. M. Grenier, speaking of the religious res-
toration and oommenting on the two exoerpts from the 2! ~ -~ Q!! oited above, says:
"Here we have a perfeot expressionof the Roman poli t ioal t radit ion inrespeot of religion. The gods weremade to serve the s ta te . This was oer-tainly how Augustus understood i t . Thereligious restoration whioh he stroveto bring about was essentially poli t -
ioal .1t
:3
Further on but in the same ohapter M. Grenier oontinues:
"True to the aristocratio t radi-t i ono f the Pontifioes, Soaevola for-gets just one thing - the religiousneeds of the people. poets, philoso-phers, and even statesmen only repre-
sent the small minority who oan ex-press their thoughts and try to sui t
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-thelr acts and att l tudes to them.The people, ln respect of religlon,was not only the l111terate mass ofthe p1eblans, but also a ll the halfeduoated classes and a l l for whom abs t rac t speculatlon was not more than
an accessory ln l i fe , from the slaveto the Knlght who dld buslness a l lover the Medlterranean, from the pr l -vate soldler to the general, from thepeasant to the Senator who looked afterhls property and was engaged ln po11-t lcs . All had henceforward other Interests than those of the State, Interes ts for whlch they fe l t the needof divlne protectlon. No doubt theyprayed to the gods from abroad, whowere so ful l of promises. But theyalso had at home, ln thelr houses andin their fields gods whom they knew,invoked, feared, or loved. Betweenthe indlvldua1 religlon of the thinkers and the offioia1 worship there wasa popular religion made up of the slmp1e fancies, the pious t radit ions, theearnestness, and the emotion naturalto man in the presence of the unknown.
I t formed the deep stratum whlch, evenamong the most highly cult lvated, wasalways cropping up a t some polnt. Onthls popular religion Augustus based,at leas t in part , his natlonal restoration." 4
11
We shall see in a following chapter how ingenlously
Augustus employed this popular religlon in forwardlng hls
poli t ical schemes and ambitlons; how by 11nking this popular
rellgion to the worship of hls own Genius he bound closely
to hls own person the whole Roman world.
During the l as t years of Julius Caesar, Antony had.
made mlghty efforts for Julius ' deif ication. Whether or not
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13
> '
, J' ,J ,
j ' ~ VV>-r r::t n K ~ c. f fT7TD t n tTn Z"oI'! t ,
~ ? r . t [ ? E ~ ~ 71'0 J E { t & ; y ' ~ t ~ f / ~ ) t ' ( ; ' ~ v z - o . 6
BUt the thlng that Caesar deslred abovea l l
else, as Mlss
Taylor s tates , was to set up a t Rome, or, l f thlngs went cor-
rectly, a t Alexandria, an hereditary, divine monarchy as l t
had survlved ln the East and as he hlmself had seen it func-
tlon ln Egypt. To this effeot Suetonlus ln the 79th ohap-
te r of his Jullus says:
"Quln etlam varla fama perorebrultmlgraturum Alexandrean vel Il l lum,t ranslat ls slmul oplbus imperii ex-haustaque I ta l la dlleotlbus e t pro.ouratlone urbls amiols permlssa, prox-lmo autem senatu Luolum Cottam quln-deolmvlrum sententlam dloturam, utquonlam fatallbus l lbr ls oontlneretur,Parthos nls l a rege non posse vlnol,
Caesar rex appellaretur." 7
Alexander and hls example were always before Caesar.
Though the dellghtful oompanlonship of Cleopatra had kept
Caesar ln Egypt, l t was not mere pleasure that Caesar had
derlved from hls stay. Caesar had seen the remalns of the
long l lne of Ptolemles and their divlne worshlp. He had seen
ln hls travels wlth Cleopatra wlth what reverence her oom-
mands were obeyed. He had been taught a t f i r s t hand that
godhead was a neoessary part of a type of monaroh1 that had
funotloned for so many hundreds of years ln the East.I t
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14
.as this type of monarohy that Oaesar was thinking ot estab-•
11shing. His plans, however, were cut short by the daggers
of the assassins, not because he had become a god, but be
cause he attempted the assumptionot
the kingly pomp and
splendor which went with the divinity. Suetonius says that
from the time that the tribunes ot the commons gave orders
that the f i l l e t which had been placed in the statue ot Oaesar
during the Lat1n Festival should be taken down and were sharp
ly rebuked by Oaesar, the conspirators hastened in carrying
out their designs.
"Quae causa conjuratis maturanditu i t destinata negotia, ne assentirinecesse esset ." 8
During the l i t e time ot Oaesar it was the consul
Antony who was most energetic and zealous in carrying to ex
ecution the plans on toot to r Oaesar's godhead. From th i s ,
one would think that he, too, at ter Oaesar's death, would
carryon the same zealous campaign. The will ot Oaesar, how-
ever, gave Antony cause for hesitation. Oaesar had made
Octavian heir to his name and the beneficiary ot the major
portion ot his estate . Nevertheless, Oetavian was s t i l l very
young and his popularity was ta r overshadowed by Antony's own.
This tac t freed Antony from any really great concern about
his own tuture. And yet, trom the very f i r s t he realized
that it Oaesar was made a god, his testament as the will ot
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15
a god would oarry far greater welght, and, as a o o n s e q ~ e n c e ,oct&vian, as the heir of a god, would have a position both
with the senate and the people that would be well nigh un
assailable. Consequently, he made every effor t to hinderoctavian's inheritanoe. Firs t he abolished by senatorial
decree the dictatorship whioh Caesar had set up, and, seo
ondly, he seoured the election ot Marous Aemllius Lepidus as
Bontitex maximus. This was aooompllshed, aooording to Dio
Casslus, by transferrlng the oholoe trom the people baok to
the pontltloes, from whose hands it had been taken just be
fore the electlon ot Caesar in 63. Nor was the election ot
Lepidus oompletely honest, tor Vellelus Pateroulus says that
Lapldus was fur tooreatus . In this oonneotion Miss Taylor
says:
"But the oonsul Antony was the person who would most naturally have oarried to exeoution the plans on tootfor Caesar's godhead, and Caesar's willhad given Antony a reason to r hesi ta tlng. Oaesar had made h i . great-nephew,the young Octavlus, helr to hls nameand the major portion of hls wealth.Ootavlus was oomparatlvely unknown and
Antony may not have teared hlm seriously . And yet he must have realized thatthe youth mlght eventually be the heirto Caesar's power as well as to hisname. From the f i r s t Antony seems tohave seen that lt he made Oaesar a god,his testament as the wlll ot a godwould have superlegal standing, andhls heir as the son ot a god would havean unassailable posltion with the men
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who had deified his father. And soimmediately after the funeral wefind Antony setting himself firmlyagainst Caesar's deifioation. Atonoe he sponsored two measures thatwere caloulated to curtai l Octavian's
inheritance. Thef i r s t
was the abolit ion for a l l time of the dictatorship, which Antony acoomplished bysenatorial decree. The second was theelection of Marcus Aemilius Lepidusas pontifex maximus, an office whichthe senate had voted should be passedon from Caesar to his heir . t 9
we shall see la te r that it was not t i l l 12 A.D., a t the
death of Lapidus, that Octavian final ly became pontifex
maximus and thereby became head of the Roman religion.
16
Antony's efforts to thwart the plans for Caesar's
godhead were second only to Octavian'. industrious oampaign
in behalf of the divinization. On his arrival in Rome, the
city was as t i r with the kil l ing of Amatius who had ereoted
an al ta r on the si te of Qaesar's funeral pyre and made pre
parations to establish sacrifioes on it to Caesar as to a
god. Suetonius relates for us that the commons set up in the
forum a column of Numidian marble a t whose base they con
tinued to saorifioe, make vows, and set t le some of the dis
putes by an oath 1n the name of Caesar.
"Postea solidam oolumnam prope v1-s in t i pedum lap1dis Numidiai 1n Foros ta tu i t insoripsitque PARENTI PATRIAE.Apud eam longo tempore sacrificare,
vota suscipere, aontroversias quasdam
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lnterposlto per Caesarem jure jur-ando dlstrahere perseveravlt." 10
17
They demanded. too. that the maglstrates should offer sac-
r if ices on the al tar of the false Marlus. thus maklng the
.orshlp of Caesar bear the stamp of offlclal approval. Oc-
tavian lmmediately recognlzed the worth of thls agltatlon
for hls cause. so he set hlmsel t the task of havlng the de-
crees for Caesar's divlnlty put lnto force.
Durlng the ~ Cerlales Octavlan made preparatlons
to have Caesar's gllded throne and garland shown ln the
theatre. Thls throne and garland the senate had voted should
be shown a t every theatrlcal performance. The aedlle Crl-
tonlus. however. forbade Octavlan and Octavlan took the mat-
te r to Antony. Antony replled that the matter should be
lald before the senate. To thls Octavlan replled that as
long as the decree was on the books he would exhlblt the
throne. Antony prevented th ls act . Now. a l l thls we learn
from Applan who says:
.. KOt; 0 ~ . e V / ~ E )..), t/ C r /
7JO''J(iE-Y ws 7TPo(J"!. TE Z"17t I ( '0 & E ~ (f ' , f ~ o . Y J ~ ~ ~ f " r t . t i v ~ " . s ' ; ' y o P f l t V ( ) P ~ Y ,J/ / '( " '"E ~ E ) " A ~ r f ~ t f T e ~ y ~ V(o./ 0, ffC:1rTCAf
t.5 T ~ . j St.(i\.s r ~ 1(o.l,PL Tov TEI' , ,/
- f ( / (Tl y t7fJoPOY' 6(01' fTZE¢(A Vt? V
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, <, I... '7 r ~ p E ~ ~ [ ~ a ? ~ v / Oti'T)p , : l / ~ t : ' K o t r ~e ~ ~ S lr.Jtc.plCTClYCO " ' I ' 0 T / o l ( / " o ~ { I Ta v
J ( f "U lY /O( / fF ' E ~ J 7 o ; " T O S " ~ h ~ Y / ~ ! f T & ~ t, ,..... I ~ . . : : > , .....
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AV rWV l O Y 71y't v w.s ol7o. T()V, / 1 Y ' Z " ~ v t O ( /(" ' I, • ' ( 3 ,.I '"I ~ ( I l ~ 7 / Z : ( l S l.oS ,1'}v ()UA,)p/ fl1o. 7 /0 l.o;..tt v"
Xo.)..tll"J7I'0\,$ ; J{o.'7(7().P " ~ V d P t , f f , " f ~ l i l v )J " " J I t ' "'j"
"t?,w rt' rov ~ f ' 0 v:,o -v I : " ' ~ V !1, TO
60Y,P li,Pot9n fTuJ, K (It loA Y' Z"'wr t ()j
ko.. ).£71" yp>..slK ttl ), l ifT!' Y, / K tiJ)... vfT [ Jt' t< 0. ;
L;" r Of { j is S e , S /-z i 7T o.,P 0.. ).. 0 y rE U ) v;~ ( ~ &vro.J 0 K ~ ? ( T o . ? tZ-l)..!t.,o..Vo.KEI,ulvP>.5
E ~ ~ Z'ou 1 1 ~ Z ' ' p ~ . 5 1 ~ f o ! / ~ 1 1 r t ~ ( , t ' ~ ~ JO iE iTlp tlIClZ"n Clty·OpO! ot.YCA,Z"tStt., ( .O ' t ,
iiz I A ~ ; pdA'SCo. M,((TO$ ';'J"Y( o-o .¢ t$J , J"'" " /
£ k 7T 0. y r w V' t..$ lO v /f v z-w "7/( 0 Y f Y Y r 0 ,
w ~ od k £:$ rov V't/JI' 1(0. c',,",CIt? 0. ¢ t ) . 0 vi -""'" _ .I ') \ I
K o l l v , ~ ftD..>')...OY "1 l,..5 lOY ' 71poZ ' fpOi /
J(3'p t ~ o r? 0.. Ct . t ~ ? £ C rw.s. " 11
18
This incident is very important ~ o r us since it
shows clearly that both Antony and Octav1an recognized that
1n the g o d h e a d o ~ Caesar, Octavian had in his hand the means
to accomplish his m o ~ t cherished plans. The decision on the
godhead of Caesar was, however, taken out of the i r hands by
the appearance o ~ the comet during the games wh1ch Octavian
gave in honor of Caesar's apotheosis. Suetonius says:
"Peri1t Julius sexto e t quinqua
gesimo aetat is anno atque in deorumnumerum relatus es t , non ore modo de-
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cernentlum sed persuasione vulgi. 8 iquidem ludis , quos primos consecrato eiheres Augustus edebat, s te l la crini taper septem continuos dies fulsl t exorlens circa undecimam horam, creditumque est animam esse Caesarls in cae
lum recepti;e t hac de causa simul-
19
&.cro ejus in vertice additur s te l la .ft 12
The effect which this comet had on the people ls told us by
Octavian himself.
"During the very time of my gamesa comet was seen for seven days ln thenothern skles. I t would r ise about theeleventh hour and was very bright ina l l the lands. This comet, the peoplethought, indicated that Caesar's soulhad been recelved among the immortalgods. For that reason this symbol wasplaced above the head of the statueof Caesar which I consecrated in theforum soon afterwards." 13
The s t r i fe between these two men, however, contlnued
during the years of war that f inal ly led to the alliance be
tween them and Lapldus and which was known as the second
triumvirate.
One of the f l r s t acts of the trlumvlrate was the de
i f icat ion of Jullus Caesar. By doing so the Roman triumvirsstrengthened the l r authorlty by referr1ng i t to a god and
by giving honor to that god by worsh1p of the state cult .
The final deification of Julius represented without
doubt the Victory of Octavian over Antony and was but a
breath of wind showing the direction which la te r events would
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- 20
take. Faith and confidence in the apotheosis of Caesar wereIII
greatly strengthened by the appearance of the comet. Octav-
ian himself made very ski l ful use of the idea prevalent a t
the time that 'the souls of great men were translated to thestars . In order that men might not easily forget this fact ,
octavian attached the s tar to every statue of Caesar that
was set up. By this time Caesar had become a potent god and
octavian, styling himself ~ f i l ius , was fully aware of the
power which Caesar's godhead brought him. Miss Taylor b r i e f ~ly sums up the deifioation of Caesar and i t s effeots a t Rome.
, "Undoubtedly then the triumvirs ' .in deifying Caesar were doing no morethan putting into force the godheadthat was Caesar's before he died. Thespeoial distinotions, offered were ofoourse modified by the fact that Caesarwas dead and were materially affeoted by
the ciroumstanoes under whioh he met hisdeath. Nevertheless they representedthe viotory of Ootavian in his longstruggle to establish his adoptivefather in the pOSition that was Caesar'sby legal right a t the moment of hisassassination. The new honors were farmore effeotive than the ear l ier attemptsa t deifioation had been. Caesar was nowremoved from envy and hatred, and his
tame had been enhanoed by the faot thathe had died a martyr's death. Moreover,fai th in his apotheosis had been strengthened by the appearance of the oomet,whioh oould readily be assooiated withthe popular idea that the souls of greatmen were translated to the s tars . Oc-tavian had made ski l l ful use of the idea,and men were reminded of i t by the s tarplaoed on a l l the myriads of statues of
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Caesar. Divus Julius was now a potentgod. Nowhere is his potenoy more apparent than in i t s effeots on the pow-er of the adopted son who henoeforthstyled himself divi f i l ius ." 14
The allianoe between Antony and Ootavian whioh had
21
been made for no other purpose than to revenge the death of
Caesar, was, now that the assassins had been duly punished,
of no more use. Both men had designs on the throne and had
plans of establishing himself as a god-king. But such plans
could not be carried out as long as there were two claimants.
Consequently, Ootavian dissolved the all iance. Antony, on
the other hand, recognizing the power and prestige which the
divinity of Caesar had given Octavian, lost no time in mak-
ing his own divine connections known. He claimed a lineage
for himself which r ival led the desoent ot Caesar and gene
alogists traoed the Antonii back to Anton, the son ot Heroules.
ot the two men Antony was the f i r s t to pose as a god
king. His victory in the East was accompanied by a triumphal
march through Asia. Plutarch t e l l s us that the whole ot Asia
was l ike the city in Sophooles, loaded at one time
"---with incense in the air ,Jubilant songs, and outories ot
despair. rt 15
Paterculus t e l l s us that
"having returned into Armenia, Antony
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got i t s king Artavasdes into his power,he threw him into prison. But his passion for Cleopatra daily increasing aswell as the strength of those vices whichare ever nourished by wealth, licence andf la t tery, he determined to make war upon
his country. Previously, however, he hadgiven orders that he should be calledFather Bacohus; after riding in his chario t in the character of Baoohus, throughthe ci ty of Alexandria with a chapleton his head, a golden colored robe, athyrsus in his hand, and buskins on hisfeet . All this oriental display provedtoo much for the charaoter of Antony andwe find him finally ohoosing to throw inhis a l l with Cleopatra, to r was not her
inheritanoe the throne that went baokto Alexander the Great? was she not olosely oonnected with Julius Caesar? and wasthere not the possibi l i ty for Antony toseoure a share of the inheritance ofCaesar?" 16
By this act Antony forfeited any possible alliance with
Octavian and started the journey that was to come to a sad
end a t Aotium.
Thus, we see that the divinity played an important
part in the struggle for the inheritance of Caesar. From
22
the very f i r s t both Antony and Ootavian recognized the in
fluenoe of the god-head of Caesar. At f i r s t , Antony attempt
ed to hinder the deification of Caesar and thereby lessen
the prestige of his r ival . OUtwitted by his younger competi
to r he finally staked his a l l on having himself raised to the
divine honors. With what d ~ a s t e r o u s results to himself we
know.
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CHAPTER I I
AUGUSTUS' CONDUCT
AFTER AC TIUM.
23
After his decisive victory a t Actium, Augustus found
himself complete master of the world. Antony, the l as t olai-
mant to the imperial throne of Julius Caesar, was no more.
Danger from Egypt in the form of an intrigue of Cleopatra
was averted by the death of this celebrated queen of the
Nile.
Although master, Augustus was confronted with many
problems and a maze of situations which called forth a l l the
ingenuity and resouroefulness of the new sucoessor of Julius
Caesar. Augustus was not, indeed, another Julius. He pos-
sessed neither the military abi l i ty nor the stateoraft of
his uncle. Therefore, he had to follow a different polioy
from that of his great predeoessor. Acoordingly, he aban-
doned a l l foreign conquest; he had the courage to "haul
down the flag l t in Numidia in order to save the expense of
occupation. In only two directions were advances made: to
wit, the acquisition of Egypt, and of the northern boundary,
of Rome along the Danube. This was aocomplished in order to
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bring peace to the frontier t r ibes . Augustus adopted his·.,
24
conservative policy despite the opposition of the populace
.hich was ever ready for foreign conquest and craved spec
tacular deeds and aggressive wars. Mr. Tenney Frank, speaking of the difference between Caesar and Augustus and com
menting on the rather pacif is t policy of Augustus, says:
We cannot now t e l l whether this general militar1sm of the populace actually affected the emperor's course in deedsas well as in words. We may well doubti t , for 1n the very days when the cal lseemed loudest that he should w1p$ outthe d1sgrace of Carrhae and follow upCaesar's work in Britain, he set himse l f the far less spectacular tasks oforganizing Gaul and subduing the las tresistance of Spain. He knew by experience that he was neither a magneticleader of men nor a br1ll iant s t ra te-
g1st. He rea11zed that wars ot conquest which would have cost the incom
parable Caesar few men and l i t t l e timewould, under his generalship, requirereSQurces quite beyond his command. Sohe disregarded Britain entirely and postponed the Parthian affair to await theeffects of secret d1plomacy. 1
Augustus' pOSition in the history of the world was to
bring peace to the Roman Empire. With the establishment ot
the l!! Romana ended not only the ravages of civi l wars and
internal s t r i fe of part1san leaders, but also the extortion
of governors of the provinces and the tax-gatherers. In as
much as the governors of the provinces and the tax-gatherers
had to render a s t r ic t aocount of a l l transactions to Augus-
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tUS, who was a jealous and watchful master and also deeply~concerned for the welfare of the provinces, the old evils
gave way and something l ike honest government took their
place. Mr. Showerman says:The senate was not the only authority
to be lost in the emperor. The consulswere s t i l l elected, but not with thefierce partisanship of the olden days.The emperor himself was really the consulship. The scandals of mal-administrationby pro-consul and praetor and pro-prae-to r came to an end. The provincial governors were responsible directly to theemperor or to the senate that knew hiswill . The emperor was real ly the gov-ernor of the provinoes, and in case ofabuse the oourt that awarded punishment. 2
I f foreign relations offered Augustus a great field
1n whioh to display his ingenuity, what must we say of the
problem which Rome i t se l f presented him? 3 Wealth with a l l
25
i t s destructive influenoes and numberless ramifications, ex
aggerated individualism, a duality in the l ives of most of
the higher classes, the loss of religious-mlndedness, the
discontinuance of the old cults and the introduction of new
oults, a l l these oonspired to threaten the complete over
throw of good government.
The reaction at Rome af ter the Punic wars was equal
to the gigantiC stress and strain ot the long years ot des
perate warfare. Wherever the government had exerted i t s
authority in the ourtailment of the commodities of l i fe dur-
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26
lng the oonflict , there was to be found af ter the war a.com
plete about-face and consequent l icense and mad abandonment.
The times were ripe for poli t ical corruption. Government
positions, acquired through bribery, opened the door toa l l
sorts of dishonest methods, not only in private business,
but also in the business of government. The governors plun
dered the provinces. Of them as a class might well be said
what was said of Varus, the victim of Arminius, who nas a
poor man entered a rioh country, as a r ich man le f t the coun
try poor. I
Foreign conquest brought a great increase in commerce
and trade. As a result private fortunes reached unheard of
heights. Millionaires and multi-millionaires were not un
common. This great wealth concentrated for the most part at
Rome, had of necessity to find means of expressing i t se l f .
I t did, indeed, and in a very unpleasant manner. Dress, the
nourishment of the body, and a l l the other conventions of
l i fe ceased to be means to an end and became the end of a l l
l iving. Slaves, whose number the wars had made legion, per
formed every duty which one man could possibly perform for
another. The evils consequent upon leisure, along with the
complete domination of one man over the body and soul of an
other, beoame prevalent at Rome. All these evils are the
stuff which Juvenal used in his scathing sat ires . The eman-
Cipation of women, which, indeed, can trace i t s origin to the
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27
laws passed during the Punio Wars, ooupled with large p ~ i -yate fortunes and inoomes, and the shadowy relat ions exis t -
lng between mistress and the slaves of the household, reaped
a rich harvest in motivated marriages, innumerable divoroes
and consequent ohildlessness. The Roman's att i tude towards
this ohildlessness is well brought out in a passage taken
from Plautus and quoted by Davis. He says:
One of Plautus' oharaoters in theMiles Gloriosus puts the oase as agood many of the middle olass saw i t ,and Plautus - be i t remembered - wrotebefore the days of the Empire. He saysthat without ohildren he oan l ive hap-pily , surrounded by at tent ive friends;"before daybreak they are a t the door,asking i f I have slept well." He knowsthey only want his money. What matter?What matters i t , who gets his money whenl i fe i s over? And i s the ehildless manwere passing r ich, a l l manner of good
things flowed his way. He had more in-vitat ions than he oould aocept. Finemorsels and f iner gif t s oame to himfrom everybody. The ladies went to a l llengths to please him. The older andfeebler he was, the greater the i r as-siduity - so muoh sooner would oome theopening of the w i l l ~ Mothers thrustthe i r daughters on him; unsorupulousmen the i r wives. 4
Perhaps one of the greatest evi ls exist ing at th is
time was what one might oal l the dual l i fe of the Roman.
M. Doissier, oommenting on an unoertain fragment from Luoia:-
ius, in whioh he says persons in private l i fe respeot neither
the laws, nor rel igion, nor the gods, says:
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Evidement leur r$le es t double e tleurs sentiments changent suivant lasi tuation quli ls prennent; commecitoyens l l s se trouvent portes a de-fendre les inst i tut ions que comme hommesi l s attaquent sans scrupule. 5
NOW, th is complete separation existing between sentiments
28
shown in private and in publio l i fe i s always aocompanied by
a wave of hypoorisy whioh finally ends in a smug oomplacency
in the violation' of a l l laws and disrespect for the conven-
tions of right l iving. As a oonsequence of this separation
at Rome, Roman society was aff l ic ted with a l l the evils re-
sulting from the oonsciousness of faultlessness. Cynicism
and loss of the religious s e ~ s e , formalism, and the discon-
tinuance of the old religious cults , and the subsequent in -
troduction of new oults espeoially from Egypt, a l l these
were widespread at the end of the Republio. Religion was
effectually divorced from morality and morality from re-
l igion. Now, such a separation means the corruption and dis-
integration of a l l religion and, consequently, a l l morality
and society. Cicero in the ~ Natura De 0 rum and the ~ Dlv-
inatione ra i ls at empty formalism in religious ceremonies
and scolds Rome for her moral skepticism. Already new cults
were being brought In to stimulate onoe again the old sp i r i t
of religion, but, for the most part , these new oults became
nothing but an exouse for violent moral lapses.
The thirteen years between the murder of Caesar and
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29
tbe batt le of Actium were only a part of that continuous dis-~
1ntegration of state which had been going on for over a cen-
tury. The empire, indeed, had increased, but the imperial
people had declined. Before the advent of Julius Caesar,everyone fe l t that a profound change had come over Rome.
variouS attempts had been made to r ight the situation: laws
bad been passed; cit izens had been banished and murdered;
arm1es had been called in to restore ancient principles; but
all had resulted in fai lure. The hope which had came with
the restoration of Julius Caesar was destroyed almost imme
d1ately by the daggers of the assassins. The thirteen years
1ntervening proved one th1ng, that there was no alternative
to the rule of the emperor. In speaking of these thirteen
1ntervening years Mr. Glover says:
The thirteen years between the murder of Caesar and the bat t le of Actiumwere only a part of that experience;for a century there had been continuousdisintegration of sta te . - - - - There hadbeen civi l war in Rome over and over again -murder employed as a common resource ofpoli t ics , reckless disregard of l i fe andproperty, and thorough carelessness of
thes ta te .
The impression that Englandmade upon the mind of Wordsworth in 1802was precisely that l e f t upon the mind ofthe serious Roman when he reflected uponhis country. All was'rapine, avarice,expense.'
Plain l iving and high thinking are no more:The homely beauty of the good old causeIs gone; our peace, our fearful innocence,And pure religion breathing household laws.
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Such complaints, real or conventional,are familiar to the readers of 11terature of the las t century before Christ .Finally a gleam of restoration was seenwhen Julius Caesar began to set things inorder, when he "correoted the year by the
Sun" and gave promise of as true and deepgOing a correction of everything else.His murder put an end to a l l this at thetime, and i t took thirteen years to rega1nthe lost opportunity - and the years werenot altogether loss for they proved conclusively that there was now no alternat ive to the rule of the "Prince". 6
30
Accordingly, the emperor, Augustus, set himself to
discover what was to be done to heal the hurt of h1s people,
and to heal i t thoroughly. What was the real disease? was
the question that most men asked; where was the root of the
evil? why was 1t that in old days men were honest, governed
themselves r1ghtly, knew how to obey, and serve the state?
Two centuries before Ennius had written:
UMoribus antiquis s ta t res Romana virisque."
NOW, however, during the las t days of the Republic, both
these bases of the national l i fe seemed los t . Were they be
yond recall? Could they be restored? Just what precisely
was the ultimate difference between the old Roman and the
Roman of the days of Antony and Augustus? Ovid, I th1nk,
gives us the best answer, when, congratulating himself, much
in the manner of some modern upstart , on the perfect congru-
1ty of the age and h1s personal character, says:
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31
"haec aetas moribus apta meis."•
NOW, in making this statement he was quite r ight. And i t was
precisely in the measure that Ovid was r ight in finding the
age and his own character in agreement, that the age and thenational character at Rome were demonstrably degenerate. The
question before the nation - why was i t that two hundred
years had brought such a change - was answered indirectly by
the great Greek thinker of the second century B.C. when writ-
ing of the greatness that was to be Rome's. Explaining Rome'S
actual and future greatness he says:
The most important difference forthe bet ter , which the Roman Common-wealth appears to me to display, i s
their religious beliefs, for I conceivethat what in other nations i s lookedupon as a reproach, I mean a scrupulousfear of the gods, i s the very thing which
keeps the Roman Commonwealth together. Tosuch. an extraordinary height is this car-ried among them both in private and pub-l ic business, that nothing could exceedi t . Many people might think th i s unac-countable, but in my opinion their ob-ject i s to use it as a check on the common people. I f i t were possible to forma state wholly of philosophers, such acustom would perhaps be unnecessary. But
seeing that every multitudei s
fickleand fu l l of lawless deSires, unreasoninganger and violent paSSions, the only re-cource i s to keep them in check by mysterious terrors and scenic effect of thissort . Wherefore, to my mind, the ancientswere not acting without purpose or at ran-dom, when they brought in among the vul-gar those opinions about the gods and thebeliefs in the punishment of Hades: muchrather do I think that men nowadays areacting rashly and foolishly in rejecting
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them. This i s the reason why, apartfrom anything else , Greek statesmen,i f entrusted with a single ta lent ,though protected by ten counting-clerks,as many seals and twice as many witnesses,yet cannot be induced to keep faith;
whereas among the Romans, inthe i r
mag-is t racies and embaSSies, men have thehandling of a great sum of money, andyet from pure respect to the i r oath keepthe fai th intact . 7
32
So, the great question before Augustus narrowed i t -
self to th is : had he anything at hand that would serve as a
foundation for the new government he oontemplated building;
had he something which would serve as a unifying prinoiple
both for Italy and the provinces? Augustus thought he had
just what he needed in religio but espeoially in a part ioular
form of re l ig io , namely, that form of religion whioh was
bound up with the emperor.
The aff ini t ies WhiCh the old Roman religion had with
the charaoter of Augustus did, no doubt, aid him immensely
in reoognizing the servioes whioh i t oould render his polioy.
Even as a young man he was grave and reserved, taking the
greatest preoaution against random statements. A u g u s ~ u s was
always a lover of regularity. Indeed, he was sorupulous in
regard to appearances. Suoh a nature should find i t se l f drawn
to a oult whioh oontented i t se l f with exter ior praotioes of
devotion an'd worship. As we have seen ear l ie r in the ohapter,
the Roman religion had degenerated into empty formalism but
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- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ~ 3 ~ 3 ~ - '
thiS did not argue the complete loss of rel igious persua-41
sions. We should rather say that the s ta te religion was hyp-
notized or paralyzed, meaning that bel ief in the efficacy of
the old cults had passed away among the educated classes,that the rabble of Rome had been accustomed to scoff a t the
old dei t ies , and tha t the outward practice of rel igion had
been allowed to decay.
Once convinced of the efficacy of his plan Augustus
immediately set about putting it into pract ice. In his
struggle to revenge the death of Julius and his subsequent
fal l ing out with Antony, Augustus had learnt what a te l l ing
weapon he had in the godhead of Caesar. All th is we have
seen in the f i r s t chapter. Now:, that Augustus found himself
master of Rome he once again fe l l back upon the help Which
the godhead of Jul ius , h is own divine origin, and a rel igious
revival could give him.
As we shal l see in the following chapters Augustus'
plan met with remarkable success • . Util ising, as he did, the
past to encourage the present age, and that by f i l l ing up
old forms and names with new meaning, Augustus set men's minds
upon thinking of the future. He succeeded in making both the
pax deorum and .lus di vinum terms of force and meaning, and,
by l inking his own name more or less closely to those of the
gods, he succeeded in giving to his government a force and
power new to the pol i t i ca l and economic history or Rome. A
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- 34
glimpse of the stabil i ty of this inst i tu t ion oreated by Aug-•
ustus may be got from a passage in Dill:
We may think that his <Augustus)religious revival was not inspired by
any real religious feeling. yet i t iswell to remind ourselves that old Romanrel igion, while i t oonseorated and solemnized the soenes and aots of human l i fe ,was essential ly a formal religion; theopus operatum was the important thing.I ts business was to avert the anger orwin the favour of dim earthly powers; it
was not primarily to purify or elevatethe soul. Above a l l , i t was interwovenfrom the beginning with the whole fab-
rio of sooiety and the s ta te . Four oentur ies af ter Augustus was in his grave,it was only by a violent wrenoh, whiohinfl ioted inf ini te tor ture even on pag-an mystics of the Neo-platonist sohool,that Rome was severed from the gods whohad been the guardians and partners ofher career for twelve hundred years.The a l ta r of Viotory which Augustushad plaoed in the Senate-house, and be-
fore which twelve generations of sena-tors af ter him offered the i r prayers forthe chief of the s ta te , the most saoredsymbol of the pagan Empire, was only removed af ter a fieroe, obstinate struggle. 8
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CHAPTER III
AUGUSTUS
~ D T ~OLD ROMAN RELIGION.
35
On his return from Egypt after the defeat of Antony
and Cleopatra, Octavian inaugurated a plan which was to cul-
minate in the complete unification of State, Religion and
Emperor. In other words, the emperor finally became the
state and Religion. Octavian's f i r s t oonoern was with the
restoration of the temples and oeremonies connected with the
various forms of worship. In his own Monumentum Anoyranum
he te l l s us,
Duo e t octinginta templa deum inurbe ex decreto senatus refeci . I
But whatis
of more importance to us than a mere res-torationof the temples and shrines was that Octavian at the
same time continued the dedication of shrines and monuments
that had a partioular association with his own achievements.
In the newly finished Curia, for instance, he placed an al ta r
of the goddess Victory to whom he owed his supremacy, and set
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: eside
36
it an ancient statue of the goddess which he had.,
brought back from.Tarentum and decked with the spoils of
Egypt. Victory thus became the f i r s t of a long l ine of de
ified abstractions whose cults were especially associatedwith the emperor. M. Grenier might well be quoted here. He
says:
Own the gods for your masters, Hor-ace proclaims, and you establish the dominion of Rome - ~ ~ minorem guod gerls ,imperas. The same reverence will establishthe power of the i r restorer. So Augustus
was careful to consecrate every stage ofhis poli t ical career by a gi f t to the gods.As the avenger of Caesar he bui l t a temple to Mars Ultor. After the Victory ofActium, he placed the new order of thingsunder the protection of Apollo, who wasgiven a temple on the Palatlne beslde thepalace which the emperor was bul1dlng forhimself. Thus, opposlte.the Capitol, thehi l l of Romulus became 11ke a new acrop
oIls of Imperlal Rome. I t always remalned the hl11 of the Emperors. 2
By following this plan Octavlan reanimated the old
Roman rellglon with new stlmulants; nor dld he hesltate to
lnst l tute new devotions. How Octavlan accomplished this task
M. Bolssler te l l s us:
Cette partle de sa tache lu l ~ h a l tassez faci le: 11 n'y avalt rlen de plusalse que d'augmenter autant qu'on Ievoulalt Ie nombre deja s l grand des dleuxdans les rellglons antlques. Une quallflcatlon nouvelle donnee a une anclennedlvlnlte suff lsa l t pour en faire un dieunouveau. C'est par ce moyen qu'Auguste
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,crea ou renouvela t rois cultes importants, qui se rattachaient tous a sadynastie, celui de Venus Mere (VenusGenetrix >, celui de Mars vengeur <MarsUltor> , e t celui d' Apollon Palatin(Apollo Palatinus). 3
37
The temple and the cul t of Venus Mother owed i t s ori
gin to the batt le of Pharsalus. Caesar promised the ereotion
of a temple to this goddess i f he were viotorious. The tem
ple was dedioated in great haste two years before his death.
The work, however, was not entirely oompleted before the
Ides of Maroh so i t was le f t to Ootavian to bring i t to com-
pletion. Octavian became very proud of that i l lustr ious
birth, and, during the f i r s t years of his reign, the image
of Venus Mother appeared on a l l his coins.
Although the Venus Cult and the Cult of ~ Ultor
were very important instruments 1n the hand of Octavian, yet,
as M. Boissier says,
La culte d'Apollon Palatin eta i t
personnel a l 'empereur que les deuxautres. 4
The temple for this cult was dedicated by Octavian in the
year 28. The temple i t se l f was buil t on the Palatine on the
s i te onoe planned for Octavian's own house. Suetonius says:
Templum Apollonis in ea parte Pala-tinae domus eXCitav1t, quam fulmine 1ctamdesiderari a deo haruspioes pronunt1arant. 5
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__--------------------------------------------------------------138
There was a story extant a t Rome at this time whioh~
found favor espeoially among the Asiatio Greeks, who were
aooustomed to suoh legends in their eastern homes. The story
was that Ootavian was the son of Apollo. Ootavian gave en-
oouragment to this legend by allowing a oolossal bronze statue
of Apollo with his own features to be ereoted in one of the
Gportiooes a t t ~ h e d to the temple. But in the oult he had no
share. The temple enshrined for publio worship not Ootavian
himself or his well authentioated divine anoestors, but his
own patron god, a divinity of his private household, Phoebus
domestious, as Ovid oalls him. Ootavian subordinated his
own honors to those of the god to suoh an extent that he had
some eighty golden statues of himself melted down to inorease
the rioh treasure of the new temple. This we learn from
Suetonius:
- - atque etiam argenteas statuasolim sibi positas oonflavit omnis ex-que i i s aureas oortinas Apollini Pala-tino dedioavit. 6
By thus subordinating his own honors to those of thegod, Octavian adhered olosely to his determined polioy, that
namely, of keeping in the background b ~ t always closely con-
neoted with the worship and honor paid the new cul ts . In
this way he escaped the odium of posing as a god, whioh was
heaped upon Antony, yet reaped a l l the advantages of divine
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39
origin and destiny.
The celebration that took place on the Palatine in
honor of Apollo brings out clearly Octavian's policy. Con-
sequently, a rather thorough description ofth is
celebrationwill be in place. By way of introduction, we shall say a
few words about the Ludi Saeculares.
The Ludi Saeculares take thei r name from the word
saeculum; and the old Ital ian idea of a saeculum seems to
have' been a period stretching from any given moment to the
death of the oldest person born at that moment, - - a hundred
years being the natural period so conceived. Thus a new
saeculum might begin a t any time, and might be endowed with
special rel igious significance by certain solemn ceremonies;
in th is way the people might be persuaded that a new leaf ,
so to speak, had been t ~ r n e d over in the i r history; that a l l
past evi l , material and moral, had been put away and a new
period entered upon, a period of innocence and prosperity.
According to Fowler this r i te can be looked on in a twofold
manner. He says:
The subterranean al tar and the useof the word condere ( to put away ) ( theal tar and the word condere were used inthe games of the year 249 ) might suggestthat this r i te may have had something incommon with those well-known quasi-dramatic ones in which objects are buriedor thrown into the water, to representthe cessation of one period of vegeta-
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t lon and the beglnnlng ot another. Orwe may look on l t ln the l ight of oneof those r i tes ~ passageln whioh atransit lon ls made from one state ofthings to another, without any defln-l te rellgious ldea belng attached to I t .
Therels
no doubt some mystlcal elementln the prlmltlve ldea ot the beglnningand endlng of perlods ot tlme, whlchhas not as yet been thoroughly lnves-t igated. 7
NOW, i t ls easy to see how exactly a r l te of this
kind with sultable modlflcations would f l t ln with Octavian's
purpose. M. Boissier glves a very short desorlptlon of the
oeremony.
A l 'epoque flxee, devant un immenseoonoours de peuple, des oeremonlespompeuses furent aooomplles durant t roisjours e t trols nUits, au ohamp de Mars,pres de l 'antique emplacement du Teren-
tum, ou dans les prlnolpaux temples deRome. Clest Ie dernier Jour des jeux,dans Ie temple d'Apollon Palatln, quefut execute par t rols fols neuf f i l les
e t trols tols neuf jeunes gargons Iechant seculaire d'Horaoe. 8
But le t us venture to a more detalled descrlption of this
important event. On May 26, 17 A.D., an elaborate program
was drawn up. On the same day and the two followlng days
the means ot purificatlon, torohes, sulphur and bltumen, were
distributed to the people by the prlests . All free persons,
whether cit lzens or not, even baohelors, though they were
forbldden under the reoent law, de marltandls ordinibus, were
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- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ~ 4 - 1 - - - 1admitted to the ceremony on this occasion. During the next
•three days the people came to the Quindecemviri at certain
stated places, and made offerings of fruges,the products of
the earth.On the night before June 1, Ootavian himself sacrifioed
to the Greek Moira, the Parcae of Horaoe's hymn; on the sec-
ond night to Eil i thyia , the Greek deity of ohildbirth; and
on the third night to the Mother Tellus. Octavian prayed a l-
so for the safety and prosperity of the state in every way,
and also for himself, his house and his family. Along with
these nightly ceremonies, each day had i t s own r i tua l . Daily
Octavian offered the proper victims to Jupiter and Juno on
the Capitol on the Palatine. Thus the great Capitoline tem
ple and i t s deit ies had a fu l l share of attention. But on
the third day, the scene changes from the Capitol to the Pala
t ine, the residenoe of Octavian, where he had bui l t his great
temple of Apollo; here for the f i r s t time in the ceremony
is sung Horace's great hymn, the Carmen Saeculare.
Octavian himself had instructed Horace to write this
hymn. The poet was to include the ideas which Octavian want
ed revived, and to make resonant ideas of rel igion, morality,
and the fer t i l i ty of man, beast , and crop. He was also to
include a l l the deit ies who had been addressed both by day
and night and to give the most important place to those, who,
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42
on the l a s t day, were worshipped on the Palatine; to Apollo.,
for whom Octavian had bui l t a great temple close to his own
house as his own special protecting deity since Actium, and
Diana, who, as the equivalent to Artemis, could not but be
associated with Apollo.
The Carmen Saeculare was sung twioe during the cele
bration. Once before the Capitol and again before the Pala-
t ine, thus uniting in one performance the old religion of
republioan Rome with the new Imperial cul t of Apollo. Here
le t us turn to Fowler's description of the scene before the
Palatine.
The temple of Apollo was bui l t upona large and lof ty area a t the north-aastend of the Palatine. - - - - On th is areathe choirs of boys and gir ls took thei rs ta t ion, facing the marble temple, on
the fastigium of which was representedthe Sun driving his four-horse chariot.After singing, probably together, thef i r s t two stanzas or exordium of thehymn, they addressed this Sol:
.alme Sol, curru nitido diem quipromis e t celas, aliusque e t idemnasceris , p o ~ s i s nihi l urbe Roma
viaere maius.
As they sang these l a s t words, they turntowards the city that lay behind them,and look over it to the Tiber and thescene of the nightly sacrif ices of theTarentum;- - - - At the sixteenth stanza the choirsagain face about to the temple of Apollo,and with him and Diana again the next twostanzas have to do. Only one remains,in which as an exodus we may be sure
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- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ~ 4 ~ 3 ~ 1the two cholrs of boys and glr ls jolned;l t sums up the whole body of del t les ,but wlth Apollo and Dlana as the speclalobjects of the day's worshlp:
haec Jovem sentlre deosque cunctos
spem bonamcertamque
domum reporto,doctus et Phoebl chorus e t Dlanaedlcere laudes. 9
Perhaps the most slgniflcant stanzas of the entlre
hymn are the ones beglnnlng, guaegue !2 ! bobus veneratur
albls, and jam Fldes !! !! Honor Pudorque. Hereln Hor
ace has cleverly made Octavlan hlmself the leadlng flgure.
The 11steners forget the vel1ed alluslon to Juplter and Juno,
forget, too, the Capltollne gods as they note the alluslon
to Venus, the ancestress of the Jul l l , the prestlge of Oc
tavlan that has brought envoys from a l love r the world and
recognlze the publlc vlrtues presented here as delt les -
Fldes, ~ , Honos, Pudor, Vlrtus - on whose ald and worship
the new reglme l s based.
In the year 27 B.C. the Senate conferred upon Octavlan
the surname Augustus. Thls b lt of lnformatlon we learn from
Suetonlus, who says:
postea Gal Caesarls e t delnde Augustl cognomen assumpslt, alterum testa-mento majorls avuncull, alterum MunatlPlancl sententla, cum qulbusdam consen-t lbus Romulum appellar1 oppetere quas1e t 1psum condltorem urbls, praevalulsset,ut Augustus potlus vocaretur, non tantumnovo se sed etlam ampllore cognomlne,
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-- quod loca quoque religiosa et in qui-bus augurato quid consecratur augustadicantur, ab auctu vel an avium gestugustuve, sicut etiam Ennius dicet scri-bens:
Augusto auguriopostquam inclutacondita Roma est . 10
In his treatment of this name M. Boissier says:
Rien ne fa i t mieux comprehendrele caractere qu ' i l souhaitait donnera son pouvoir que le nom qui lu i futdecerne par le senat en 727 e t qu ' i lparut accuei l l i r avec tant de recon-naissance. 11
44
Octavian especially favored this name because of i t s
association in the popular mind with Romulus, who was fampus
for the augury by which he had established his rights as
founder of the ci ty . I t will be remembered that Octavian
had, l ike Romulus, seen twelve vultures as a sign that heaven
favored his power.
Primo autem consulatu e t auguriumcapienti duodecim se vultures ut Romulo
ostenderunt. 12
The occasion was his entry into Rome for his f i rs t consul-
ship in 43. The Romans, who knew the l ine from the poem that
was s t i l l the national epic of Rome, the l ine which Suetonius
quotes from the Annales of Ennius, Augusto augurio postquam
1ncluta condlta B£!! ~ , would think of Romulus when they
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45
heard the name of Augustus. The t i t l e suggested in a veiled41
form the name which the emperor had desired but had not dared
to take. I t marked him as the new founder of Rome.
According to the ancient belief thata benefactor had founded the oity afresh,Ootavian viewed himself as the secondfounder of Rome and he wished to take thename of the original founder Romulus.- - - But, though the name was aotually pro-posed for him in the senate, Octavian,who was avoiding monarohy, naturallyhesitated to take the name of Rome's f i r s t
king. 13
The word augustus, moreover, was related in origin
through augere to auotoritas, the peculiar quality of the
Roman senate in which Augustus as prinoeps senatus excelled
a l l other senators. I t was this quality that depended for
i ts potency on t radit ion rather than on any magisterial pow-er. The emphasis that the emperor placed on the auotoritas
suggested by the new name is clear from the passage in the
E!! Gestae:
After this time I surpassed a l l othersin auotoritas, but of potestas I had nomore than did those who were my oolleaguesin office. 14
In s t r io t point of time, Augustus aoquired the potes-
tas tr ibunicia and the proconsular imperium before he f in-
ally became pontifex maximus, but I shall now take up this
l as t position a t t ~ i n e d by Augustus because it is more dir-
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46
eotly oonneoted with the subjeots thus far touohed upon in•
this ohapter.
Before 12 A.D. Augustus had been a member of the four
great priesthoods and held many other other lesser positions.M. Boissier sums up thus:
Elle le revet i t d'abord de toutes sesdignites: jeune enoore, i l avait etenomae pontife par le peuple a 1& plaoede L. Domitius, mort a Pharsale. 11 ru tensuite assooie au oollege des Augures,a oelui des Quindeoimvirs e t &oelui desseptemviri epulones; o'etaient les quatre~ r a n d e s assooiations relig1euses de Rome( quattuor amplissima collegia). 11 f i tpartie aussi des oorporations des Feciaux,des Tit i i , des Arvales. 15
Now, on the death of Lapidus, Augustus became pontifex ! ! ! -
imus. As soon as he was elected he revived the t radit ion
of the oollege in a l l i t s vigor. With th is intent , he hunt
ed down a l l the collections o t propheoies and books of r i tual
not authorized by the state as ~ e had been done after the
Punic wars. We are told that he collected over two thousand
which he caused to be solemnly burned. But he carefully
saved the Sibylline Books, making,it
is t rue, a selectionfrom the i r oracles. Those which he preserved he had deposit
ed in the pedestal of the statue of Palatine Apollo.
postquam vero pontificatum maximumquem numquam vivo Lepido auferre sust1nuerat, mortuo demum suscep1t, quidquid fatidicorum librorum Graeoi Latini
que generis nullis vel earum 1doneis aou-
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toribus vulgo ferebatur, supra duo miliacontracta undique cremavit ao solos ret inui t Sibyllinos, hos quoque dilectu habi to ; oondiditque duobus forulis auratissub Palatini Apollonis. 16
47
The influence and example of the head of the state
oertainly brought about a return to the old praotice of the
national worship, at leas t , in the middle classes, who, as a
rule, hardly pretended to l iberty of religious thought, and
were more or less disposed to follow the prevailing fashion
in this matter. To do so was a manifestation of loyalty to
the poli t ical system which insured peace, security and pros
peri ty. This new piety was also a reaction against rational
ism and philosophical conceptions regarding the gods. Horaoe
shows these oonceptions very clearly:
Parous deorum cultor e t infrequens,Insanientis dum sapientiae
Consultus erro, nunc retrorsumVela dare atque i terare cursus
Cogor reliotus: 17
In this connection Augustus made a move the wisdom of
which was far-reaching and subtle. He was careful not to
neglect the forms of religious sentiment s t i l l l iving. The
reason for this is given by M. Grenier, who says:
I t was a paradoxical undertaking onthe part of Augustus, to revive piety to wards an essentially poli t ical religionin the people which he excluded from po-
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- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ~ 4 8 ~ - - - 1l i t i ca l l i f e . He was astute enough tosee th is . So it was not only in thepast that he sought his means of action.
~18
By the aid o t the off ic ia l cul ts , he strove to give an of t i -
cial constitution to the popular cults and to associate them
with the state religion. His restoration was accompanied by
innovations intended to bring t radit ion into harmony with
the present. Thus in part icular, he brought back into l i te
the religious associations of the cross-roads, which had been
broken up as faotors o t disorder. , With his passion for order
and organization, he wanted to concentrate the i r scattered
forces and make use of them. He made the i r old independence
subject to the favor and obligations of a regular inst i tut ion.
This important reform came as a consequence of the
municipal reorganization o t Rome. In 7 B.C. Augustus divided
the city into fourteen dis t r ic ts , or regions, and each dis
t r i c t into wards. He gave each for a center an al tar of the
Lares round which he reorganized one of the colleges which
in old days had formed spontaneously. But to the Lares of
the vicus or ward he added the Genius of the sovereign, the
common head and father o t the whole people of the City. This
official admission of the Genius of a man, and a l iving man,
among the Lares was in no way new or alien to Roman religious
conceptions. At Delos and Pompeii we commonly find the Genius
of the paterfamilias and the ~ ot the mistress of the
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- 49
bouse associated with the Penates and Lares about the family41
al tar . I t was the usual expresSion of the devotion and g r a ~t i tude of the members of the family, servants, and clients
to the patron who kept them alive. I t was natural that out-side the house in the streets of the ci ty , the craftsmen,
whether freedmen or slaves, should honor as the father of
that immense family, the people, the ruler who gave them the i r
prosperity, and, moreover, heaped gif ts on their associations.
Horace mentions this fact in one of his odes.
Te multa prece, te prosequitur meroDefuso pateris , et Laribus tuumMiscet numen, uti Graecia Castoris
Et magni memor Hereulis. 19
The worship of the Genius of Augustus at the al tar
of the Lares was simply the religious form of the people ' ,
affection for the person of the emperor. Indeed, the popu-
la r worship of the Lares thus became an administrative in -
at i tut ion.
The presidents of the colleges henceforward appeared with the prerogatives
and costume of priest ly and municipaloffic1als; they were the official headsof the i r wards and were proud of i t .The1r office consisted not only 1n organiz1ng religious feasts a t the al ta rof the v1cus , but also in help1ng w1ththe census, d01ng police work, and putt1ng out f1res. The many monuments, 1nthe form of carved altars and 1nscript ions, wh1ch rema1n ot the cul t of theLares Augustales or ot the Lares and
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--of the Genius of Augustus show us howflourishing i t was. 20
50
Among the many problems Which presented themselves to
Augustus for settlement was how to retain his position as mas-
te r of the s tate yet at the same time to keep intaot the forms
of the oonsti tution. Various methods of aooomplishing this
object seem to have ooourred to him, and to have been t r ied,
before he established his authority on the basis on whioh i t
finally rested. A third and las t attempt was made in 27 B.C.
At a meeting of the senate held on January 13 in that year,
he transferred the oontrol of the state to the senate and the
people. As he himself puts i t in the Monumentum Anoyranum:
Rem pub110am ex mea potestate 1nsenat [us populique Roman1 a] r -
bi trium t ranstul i . 21
This t ransfer of authority was only a t e m p ~ p a r y one
and anoient as well as modern historians have not hesitated
to oharaoterize i t as a poli t ical manoeuvre, sinoe he retained
the consulship and the tr ibunician power, and the senate im-mediately conferred on him the imper1um prooonsulare for a
period of ten years with the t i t l e of Augustus. I t i s quite
possible that he wished to make the Roman people feel the
need of his d1recting hand by bringing them faoe to face with
the possibi l i ty of his withdrawal from public l i f e , and to
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-------------------------------------------------------------------.51
make the extraordinary powers whioh he reoeived afresh from~them seem the i r free gif t to him.
As oonsul, and in the exeroise of the potestas t r ibu-
nioia, whioh had been oonferred on him ln the year 36, theprinoiple of oollegial i ty was observed and,his inoumbenoy of
the oonsulship, l ike that of his oolleagues in the offioe,
depended upon an eleotion in the popular assembly. I t i s evi-
dent tha t the forms of the old oonst i tut ion had been preserved
with great suooess. At the same time Augustus had seoured
the supreme power whioh he wished. The prooonsulare imperium
over the unsett led provinoes gave him oommand of the army and
the navy and the power of appointing, indireot ly, a l l the
governors of thenprovinoes where legions were stationed.
Henoeforth, too, he would have no oooasion to fear a r ival .
In his exeroise of the tr ibunioian power he was assooiated
with oolleagues of nominally equal rank, but he was raised
so fa r above them in the eyes of the people that independent
aotion on the i r part was soaroely oonoeivable.
Thus i t was that Augustus, step by s tep, suooeeded
in gathering supreme power into his own hands unt i l he was
looked upon as the saviour and seoond founder of Rome. So
well did he suooeed in welding into one, s ta te , rel igion,
and emperor that the people real ly looked upon him as ,a des-
cendant of the divine Julius who would himself, after h is
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54
formed a select circle of gifted authors, chiefly poets, whom•
he endeavored to a n i m ~ t e with the enthusiasm of succouring
the state . In this regard M. Grenier writes:
The national reaction had begun witherudition. We see i t s origin in thework of Varro. Litt le by l i t t l e i t waspropagated in intellectual circles, inthe middle classes of the city, and amongthe people of the country. But poetry,above al l , lent i t s lustre to the newpatriotism ana ensured i t s diffusion.The Muse defined Ootavian's policy andplaced herself at his servioe. Horaceand Virgil were the heralds of this nat-
. ional reaction. 2
Although the writings ot the Augustan poets are re
plete with references to Augustus and his work, I shall l imit
myself to only a few thoughts which, to my mind, are the
most signifioant in their writings when viewed from a re l i -
gious and poli t ical standpoint.
Earlier in the paper I mentioned the fact that Augus-
tus, uti l is ing the past to encourage the present age, and
f i l l ing up the old forms and names with new meanings, set
men's minds upon thinking of the future. NOW, one of themost powerful means at hand to do this was the Aeneid of
Virgil . I f one but take the time to run through the twelve
books of this great epiC, one will find that throughout the
f i r s t six books Aeneas' oonduot i s characterized by a ' look
ing back', while in the second half of the work he is oon-
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___----------------------------------------------------------------155
t inually l o ~ k i n g into the ruture. Not only does he rocus his•
attention on the future but he i s sure that the future wil l
bring peace and prosperity. He i s sure of himself and confi-
dent in his power to rule the world.During the time of the fa l l of the Republic and the
r ise of the Empire, Rome herself was beginning to doubt
whether she was capable of performing the task she had imposed
upon herself . Much in the manner of Aeneas, Rome delighted
to look back upon the past and res t on her laurels in a vain
effor t to escape the dis tas teful ~ a s k before her. Virgi l ,
by showing the diff icul t ies and t r ia l s of Aeneas; how he
longed to remain in Troy, how he desired to l inger with Dido,
how, throughout the long journey to I ta ly, he had to f ight
continually torn as he was between pietas , duty, and his own
self ish sat isfact ion, brought before the minds of the Romans
that they must stand by pietas. and, following the example
of the i r Aeneas, Augustus, found, as i t were, a new Rome.
Rome, mindful of her duty and her destiny, must not
encourage the world with pretended hope as did Aeneas in those
words:
t a l i s voce refer t curisque ingentibus aegerspem voltu simulat, premit alto corde dolorem., 3
but rather lead the world on as Aeneas led his comrades in
the twelfth book:
a t pius Aeneas dextrum tendebat inermemnUdato capite atque suos clamore vocabat:
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"quo rui t is? quove i s ta repens discordia surgit?a cohlbete i ras i ictum iam foedus e t omnes •composltae leges: mihi jus concurrere soll ." 4
Rome must notbe
beguiled by the charms of a Cleopatra or
56
the deceits of soft and pampered l iving; she must not give
ear to the voice of a Dido as she t r ies to t r ick her guest in -
to a complacent selfishness:
necnon e t vario noctem sermone trahebatinfel ix Dido, longumque bibebat amoremmulta super Priamo rogitans, super Hectore multa. , 5
rather she must gaze upon the shield that her mother gave her
f i l led with scenes of the future not of the past .
ta l ia per clipeum Volcani, dona parentis,miratur rerumque ignarus imagine gaudetattollens umero famamque e t fata nepotum. 6
Thus Virgil , painting the character and career of Ae
neas, shows the Romans how they too must follow pietas , and,
under the leadership of Augustus, the descendant of Aeneas,
bring peace and prosperity to the Roman world. The intention
of Virgil in writing may well be given in the words of Fow-
ler .
The character of Aeneas, then, though notpainted in such strong l ight as we mod-erns might expect or desire, i s intentionally developed into a heroic type in thecourse of the story - a type which everyRoman would recognize as his own naturalideal . And th is growth i s the direct resu l t of religious influence. I t i s part-
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11 the resul t of the hero's own naturalpietas , innate within him from the f i r s t ,as it was in the breast of every nobleRoman; partly the resul t of a graduallyenlarged recognition of the wil l of God,and part ly of the strengthening and a l-
most sacramental process of the journeyto Hades, of the revelation there madeof the mysteries of l i fe and death, andof the great future which Jupiter andthe Fates have reserved for the Romanpeople. In these. three influences Virg i l summed up a l l the best rel igious factors of his day: the ins t inct of theRoman for rel igious observance with a l li t s natural effect on conduct; the elevating Stoic doctrine which brought maninto immediate relat ion with the universal; and, las t ly , the tendency tomysticism, Orphic or Pythagorean, whicht e l l s of a yearning in the soul of manto hope for a l i fe beyond thiS, and tomake of this l i fe a meet preparationfor that other. 7
We may now pass on to those other Augustan Poets,
57
Horace, Propertius and Tibullus, who, though lacking the deep
ly rel igious nature that was Virgi l ' s and also without his
consummate ar t , s t i l l , in the i r way, greatly aided Augustus
in his plan of unif icat ion and in strengthening his own posi
tion as leader of the Roman world. Their manner of accom-plishing th is task differed greatly from the mode Virgil used
in the Aeneid. I t was more direct , less conceal,ed, and for
that reason, merited quicker, though less las t ing resul ts
than the work of Virgi l .
Horace, though himself rather indifferent towards re -
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conceded enough to the popular mind to address A u g ~ 8-stus as Soter and Euergetes. Miss Taylor in th is connection
says of Horace:
The idea that Augustus was aman
onearth, destined af ter his death, l ikehis father , to become a god, took firmhold on the popular fancy. We can seeit most clearly in the odes of Horace,the expression of a man who unt i l the defeat of Antony had in general refrainedfrom mention Qr public affa i rs in hisverse. Now we find him voicing with unquestioned sinceri ty a feeling for theemperor which can hardly fa i l to be areal indication of the sentiment of manyothers who, l ike Horace, were weary ofthe storm of civ i l war and saw in Augustusthe only hope for peace and prosperity. 8
In the well-known ode beginning Jam sa t is te r r i s
nivis atque dirae Horace mentions a l l the chief divini t ies
of Augustus' regime, Vesta, Jupiter , Apollo, Venus and ~ ,and then to the group he adds the emperor himself whom he
imagines in the guise of Mercury:
sive mutata iuvenem figuraales in te r r i s imitaris almaef i l ius Maiae, patiens vocari
Caesarisul tor .
9
But more signif icant than these l ines are the stanzas that
follow in which the poet recognizes the emperor as one, who,
though destined to find his place in heaven, is l ingering for
a While among men as the foremost among them, the father of
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-in behalf of Rome by a place with the gods, th is was some_
60
«thing that was very useful to Augustus' policy both regard
ing the betterment of conditions throughout the empire and the
consolidation of hisown
posit ion.The muse of Tibullus emphasized s t i l l another aspect
in the policy of Augustus, that namely, which was in close
connection with the worship of the Genius of the emperor and
the Lares of the House of Augustus. Nowhere i s the muse of
Tibullus more felici tous than in describing the merrymaking
of the farmers and the rust ics as t h ~ gather round to hon
or the Lares of the i r fathers, propit iate the Pales that
theY,may care for the i r f ields .
Vos quoque felices quondam nunc pauperis agrisCustodes, fer t i s munera vestra, Lares. 13
We have seen ear l ier in the paper the poli t ical use
which Augustus made of the associations which grew up round
the Compitalia , that i s , by absorbing them in his municipal
system. These compitalia had been supressed during the Re
public but had been reinst i tuted by Augustus. Of this reins t i tut ton of the shrines and the use to which they were put
Miss Taylor says:
And so Augustus at this time returnsto his work of restoring the shrines andrenewed a l l these sanctuaries a t the com-pi ta . In them he placed fresh statues of
the Lares,now
known as Lares Augusti, not
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vague spi r i t s of the dead but the ancestors of his own house. Between thestatues of the Lares he set up a newimage in which we may recognize a godakin to the ancient L1ber Pater of thecross-roads - his own Genius. 14
NOW, Tibullus by a constant repetit ion of the joys
61
and quiet of country l i f e , by frequently harking back to the
scene in which the paterfamilias gathers round him the en
t i re household, by using as ~ theme for his work the rust ic
celebrations o.f the farmers, by doing a l l this he kept before
the eyes of the Romans a lesson which Augustus was doing his
utmost to teach Rome and the Roman world, that i s , to ins t i l
once more a sp i r i t of religion and make the Roman once more
come to realize that a l l the good things he possessed came
from the gods through the hands of Augustus, who had been
chosen by the gods to rule the world. I t i s hard to find
in Latin l i terature a more characteris t ic t ra i t of the I ta l -
ians and one which was more gratifying to Augustus than this
one found in Tibullus:
Cern1te, fulgentes ut eat sacer agnus ad arasVinctaque post olea candida turba comas.Di pat r i i , purgamus agros, purgamus agrestes:
Vos mala de n o s t ~ i s pel l i te l imitibus,Neu seges eludat messem fallacibus herbis,
Neu timeat celeres tardior agna lUpos.Tunc nitldus plenis confisus rusticus agris
Ingeret ardenti grandis l igna foco,Turbaque vernarum, saturl bona signa colonl,
Ludet e t exstruet ante casas. 15
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62
CHAPTER V
AUGUSTUS' POLITICAL SAGACITY.
National t radit ions and the rel igious temperament of
the people in the provinces and Rome i t se l f differed. Con
sequently, the provinces and Rome demanded of the one who
would rule them and at ta in some degree of unity between them
separate treatment. As we have seen ear l ie r in the paper,
Antony claimed for himself divine origin from Bacchus and,
as a descendant of th is god, accompanied by Cleopatra, had
t ravel led through Asia and Egypt where the people proclaimed
him a god. Pompey, too, had been affected by th is idea of
divine origin and had looked to Neptune as his ancestor. But
alas! his divinized origin was scutt led along with his f lee t .
Augustus, on the other hand, followed another plan of action
which turned out very successfully.
The idea of a man-god was not prevalent a t Rome. In-
deed, it was quite foreign to the Roman and I ta l ian mind nev-
ertheless , the I ta l ian soi l was a t th is time rather well pre-
pared to receive the seed of such a concept, nourish it unt i l
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63
l t would, as lt really dld, blossom forth lnto a very real•
form of worshlp. The soldler-hlstorlan was very much ln ear-
ne. t when he t e l l s us that Tlberius,
sacravitparentem
suumnon imperio
sed rellglone, non appellavit eum sedfec i t deum; I
and from this point of vlew, rightly so; the deification of
the dead Augustus was not merely an off lc ia l or poll t ical act,
but a genuine confession of devotion towards one who had
wrought great things for the world and proclaimed a gospel of
peace and prosperity. Throughout Greece, Asia, and Egypt
many inscriptions have been found bearing the words Soter,
Euergetes applied to Augustus. In Ilium, for example, one
such was found bearing the following:
of the man-god conception.
The real successors of Alexander were Caesar and Aug-
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ustus. Now, to understand the basis of the power which Aug-~ustus acquired, i t is essential to go back to the monarchy
64
of Alexander and to consider both his position as a theocratic
monarch and the t radit ion that he passed on to his successors.The monarchy that Alexander established was a combina-
t i ono f the oriental absolute rule with Greek and"Macedonian
t radit ions. While conquering the Persians, Alexander encoun-
tered the oriental conception of the king as the absolute
ruler in every secular and religious office. The worship of
the Persian king was given him through veneration offered his
fravashi and the concrete expression of the glory, hvareno.
I f scholars are r ight in believingthat the fravashi represents an old Per-sian religious conception, we can inter-pret the cul t of the l iving king's spir i tas the worship of the fravashi. The fire
that was borne before the king accordswith another Persian religious conception,the idea of the hvareno, kingly glory,described in the Avesta as l ike a flame.The king's spi r i t and his glory were bothsymbols of the supernatural power whichraised the king far above the ordinarymortal. yet the king himself was nevernamed with Auramazda or even with theother gods, Mithra and Anahitis, who in
la ter times had their place in prayer be-side the great god of the Persians. 3
The Egyptians, too, had a conception that was very
muoh akin to that of the fravashi of the Persians, though the
type of the cul t differed.
I f the Persian king in the days of
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Aleaander was venerated more as a saintthan a god in his own realm, suoh wasnot the cult accorded the king of theancient kingdom of Egypt which Persiahad conquered. There the idea of theabsolute divine monarch was rooted in
immutable t radit ion.On
earth the kingwas the incarnation of the majesty ofthe gods. - -- At his death ·the king wasthought of as joining the gods in heaven. - - - I t was by virtue of bis divinitythat the king ruled, and the foreign conqueror could only maintain his power bytaking over ,the forms of deity that hadbelonged to the ancient Egyptians kings. 4
Again, the Egyptians believed in a divine double or guardian
sp i r i t called a ~ . For the king's k! there existed a special
cul t , but this merged with the worship of the king as an in-
carnate god.
NOW, when in 332 Alexander marched 1nto Egypt, the
Egyptians not only offered him no resistance but received and
recognized him as a god l ike the Pharaohs of old. Perhaps
the most signif icant thing that happened to .Alexander in Egypt
was the establishment of the city Alexandria and the worship
there of his agathos daimon.
There was another act of Alexander's
in Egypt which was of great importancefor his cul t . At one of the mouths ofthe Nile he founded the city of Alexandria,the f i r s t of a long series of towns tobear his name. There he must have received a cult as founder according to the regular tradit ions of the Greek ci ty . I f ourinterpretation of such a cul t is correct,we should expect i t to be directed towards
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His (Alexander's) death was describednot as a termination of his l i fe but asa change. He had exchanged the l i fe a-mong men for a l i fe with the gods. Likethe Egyptian Pharaohs who had precededhim, he had as a god "departed into his
horizon.- --
His limbs had mingled withthe god that had begat him." He was nolonger incarnate among men but continuedto exercise his d1vine power with thegods. I t was not yet the custom, as it
had been in Egypt, to emphasize the translat ion of the deified man to heaven, but theway was prepared for the idea to develope. 7
67
By the time Rome had extended her power to the East,
divine honors for the ruler had become a fundamental charao-
ter is t ic of the rule that prevailed in Greek lands. Divinity
established the binding authority of the king's command and
as such was more a matter of praotioal poli t ios than of re -
l igion. Hence i t was readily offered by Greek peoples to the
representatives of the Roman power.
Marcellus, who in 212 sucoeeded in the oapture of Sy-
raouse, and Titus Flamininus were welcomed as saviors.
The f i rs t plaoe where the Romans encountered the eastern Greek oonception
of the ruleras divine
was in Sioily whereMaroellus in 212 suoceeded in the oaptureof Syraouse and the overthrow of the Carthaginian government there. The Syraousianswelcomed him as a saviour and establish-ed a great fest ival in his honor, presumably on his birthday. 8
Plutarch relates that the Chalcidians created a priesthood
of Flamin1nus and that they oomposed a paean whioh oelebrated
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69
forms of the oriental kingdoms. Romans could even read in41
Latin Euhemerus' romance in which he gave support to the div-
ini ty of the ruler by showing that a l l the gods had once been
men.Euhemerus simply denied the i r exis
tence as a species ( so to speak ) dist inct from Man, and that is the point forus. I need not here go into his historyor dilate upon his theory, of which thecentrepoint was the Cretan legend thatZeus was born and also died there. Hetreated divine history l ike human, giving accounts of reigns; Zeus, for example, had played much the same part asthat which so astonished the world inAlexander. 10
The concept of the man-god, however, was foreign to
Roman t radit ion. Only one such cult was given much promin
ence at Rome and that was the cult of her founder King Romulus.
On the whole, then, we may agree with Fowler that
there was l i t t l e or nothing in theold Roman religious consciousness tobring Man into close relation to deity,and the same may probably be said ofthe old Italian religion generally. We
may even guess that the idea of a man-god
was repugnant to the Sit t l ichkei t of theRoman, apart from his Etruscan. inheritance; and this would be quite enoughto explain why Augustus, who knew hispeople well, was so extremely cautiousin handling the policy of Imperial apotheosis . 11
The idea of the man-god did, nevertheless, slowly find
a way into Rome.
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Thus we arrive at las t at the actualdeification of man in the period I amdealing with. In Rome and I ta ly, as wehave seen, this was not a natural growthof religion, as Boissier and others fancied long ago; for there the deit ies were
not thought of personally, and human ind1vidualism took long in developing. Butelsewhere i t was really natural, and theforce with which i t worked came graduallyto react on Rome and I taly. In the greatand good man, helping his subjects or hisfellows, divinity revealed i t se l f - - 30
they ~ h o u g h t in those days. Even the l iv
ing king may be a ' saviour ' , i f he havewrought good works for the-mass of mankind.To antioipate for a moment, Virgil never
seems to speak of Augustus as divine unless he is thinking of him "as doing goodservioe for men, as giving peaoe to theworld af ter a century of anarchy." 12
70
The great and good man, or the great and powerful without the
goodness, might be reoognized as bearing the stamp of divinity,
as having the divine spark within him; to such an one the old
forms of cul t might reasonably be transferred. This prooess
was slow and gradual, but with the aid of Graeco-Etruscan
ideas of the gods, and also of the true Roman dootrine of
Genius , the idea of the man-god made i t s way into the I ta l ian
cit ies in spite of i t s incompatibility with the old I ta l ian
ideas of deity.
I t Was this idea of Genius whioh gave Augustus a very
adequate instrument of government due to i t s foroe through
out the west.
The worship of dead Caesars here is
not of importanoe for us, nor was it oom-mon in the western provinces; but that
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of the Genius or Numen Augusti, whethercombined or not with Dea Roma, or ( aswas frequently the case ) in quaint juxta-position with local dei t ies , taken, as Ithink i t should be taken, as signifyingthe Genius or Numen of the l iving Caesar,
is shown to have been a very real forcein the West. 13
71
The Genius of the paterfamilias was the center of family wor-
ship, and, along with the worship of the Lar,es, was very dear
to the hearts of a l l I tal ians . The Lares were such to Virgil
who loved the detai ls of the i r cults , who fe l t the beauty
and real i ty of thei r worship and who did much to make the i r
real i ty fe l t by the multitude by throwing a soft veil of ~ -l igio over their worship. Tibullus, too, may be taken as a
real lover and believer in the di agrestes and from his poems
we learn much concerning the large part such ~ cul t played
in the l ives of the countryfolk of I ta ly . Now, Augustus, by
a stroke of policy, avoided apotheosis, but, by a clever use
of his Genius, gave the people a convenient peg on which they
could hang the i r fai th. I t gave to the people a feeling of
confidence in and reverence for the great system of govern-ment and civil izat ion of which they were a part .
Incidentally i t ( the Numen AUgusti)i s useful guarantee for the govern-ment that this fai th i s held and kept;but among the people who thus hold andkeep it it i s a spontaneous expressionof bel ief , not in a deity, but in some-thing which you can t rea t as such. I ti s based on the same principle as the
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application of Genius, Numen, Fortuna,Tutela, Virtus, and other such abstrac-t ions, to part icular parts or ins t i tu
t ions of the empire. These a l l seemto signify the permanent force of someinevitable inst i tu t ion deserving of the
deepest respectand reverence,
which oanbe expressed in terms of rel igion. 14
Concerning the worship of the Genius or NumenAu6usti Miss
Taylor writes:
The Genius Augusti speedily becamefor Roman citizens the object of a great
sta te cul t . I t provided for the Roman em-peror under veiled form a worship whiohwas no less a ruler cult than was the moredeolared worship of the Hellenistic kingas a revealed god on earth. As was trueof the oriental ruler cult , the new wor-ship became a symbol of the state and theobservance of it an expression of loyaltyto the state . 15
12
The policy adopted towards the eastern provinces dif-
fered from that espoused in I ta ly . After the batt le of Actium,
Augustus, accompanied by his victorious legions, traversed the
Orient where, as we have seen, adoration of the sovereign was
the ordinary form of obedience. All along the l ine of marchthe people were insistent that they be allowed to erect a l-
tars to one who was such a great benefactor. They clamored
for the r ight to adore the emperor. This was given them,
but with rest r ic t ions. Augustus was unwilling to be adored
except in company with the g o d d e s s ~ . A second restr iction
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73
was the prohibition of Romans taking part in the cul t . As a
consequence of this M. Boissier states:
Sous ces reserves, i l la issa la province d'Asie lu i ba t i r un temple a Pergame, e t celle de Bithynle a Nicomedie.
L'example e ta i t donne, e t peu a peu fetesfurent ins t i tuees , des temples s 'eleverentdans toutes les grandes vil les de l 'Orienten l 'honneur de Rome e t d'Augusta. L'Occident ne c o m m e n ~ a qu'on peu plus tardeLes habitants de Terragone, chez lesquelsAuguste avait fa i t un assez long sejourpendant la guerre des Cantabres en 728,e t qui sans doute avaient re9u de ~ u iquelque faveurs, demanderent et obtin-
rent la permission de lu i dedier un autel . 16
Augustus la ter adopted this same policy towards the
Gauls. In 742 many peoples of Gaul united at Lyons and de
Cided, in order the better to show the i r loyalty to Rome, to
erect an al tar to Rome and Augustus a t the confluence of theSaone and the Rhone.
En 742, a la suite d'un mouvementdes Sicambres qu'on disai t secramentencourages par les Gaulois, soixante, ,peuples de la Gaule reunis a Lyon de-ciderent, p'our mieux prouver leur f i -del i te , d'elever un autel a Rome e t aAuguste au confluent de la Saone e t
du Rhone. 17
Herein we see a clever b it of policy on the part of
Augustus, a policy, indeed, which was very frui tful of re
sul ts . By ski l l ful ly l inking his name with the name of Rome
and by permitting the provinces to pay a kind of worship to
him he knit them closely to Rome and himself. In th is way
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73
was the prohibition of Romans taking part in the cul t . As a.,
consequence of this M. Boissier states:
Sous ces reserves, i l la issa la province d'Asie lu i bat i r un temple a Per
game, e t celle de Bithynie a Nicomedie.L'example eta i t donne, e t peu a peu fetesfurent ins t i tuees , des temples s 'eleverentdans toutes les grandes vil les de l 'Orienten l 'honneur de Rome et d'Augusta. L'Occident ne comrnenga qu'on peu plus tardeLes habitants de Terragone, chez lesquelsAuguste avait fa i t un assez long sejourpendant la guerre des Cantabres en 728,e t qui sans doute avaient re9u de ~ u iquelque faveurs, demanderent e t obtin-rent la permission de lu i dedier un autel . 16
Augustus la ter adopted this same policy towards the
Gauls. In 1.42 many peoples of Gaul united at Lyons and de
Cided, in order the bet ter to show the i r loyalty to Rome, to
erect an al tar to Rome and Augustus at the confluence of the
Saone and the Rhone.
En 742, a la suite d'un mouvementdes Sicambres qu'on disai t secrementencourages par les Gaulois, soixantepeuples de la Gaule reunis a o n deciderent, p'our mieux prouver leur f i -del i te , d'elever un autel a Rome e t aAuguste au confluent de la Saone e tdu Rhone. 17
Herein we see a clever b it of policy on the part of
Augustus, a policy, indeed, which was very f rui t ful of re
sul ts . By ski l l ful ly l inking his name with the name of Rome
and by permitting the provinces to pay a kind of worship to
him he knit them closely to Rome and himself. In .this way
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74he succeeded in getting a certain amount of unity within his~wide empire. Loyalty to thei r savior demanded the obedience
of the provinces. That the ruler a t Rome be considered a god
strengthened thei r fa i th in the ru ler ' s good wil l towards
them, and th i s , in turn, brought confidence once more into a
world which had lost i t . I t was th is confidence which Aug-
ustus wanted to restore to the empire, a confidence, which,
as we have seen, had been wreoked by the corruption of the
Roman off ioia ls .
At Rome, however, though it was impossible not to know
what was going on in the provinoes, a difrerent oourse was
followed. Augustus forbade a l l expressions that would make
him a god and forbade a l l worship. The time was not yet ripe
for the Romans to receive wholeheartedly a man-ged. Well a
ware of th is , Augustus cleverly linked his name with the re-
l igious c e r e m o ~ i e s of the Lares and the Genius. This com
bination offered the same suocess as did the outward and ex-
pl ic i t worship of the Orient. I t , too, restored confidenoe;
it made the I ta l ians happy to obey a great benefaotor. The
songs of Tibullus oome readily to mind and the scenes depict
ed therein are before our eyes presenting the rust ic I ta l ians
once again the happy, contented, and, above a l l , the rel igious
folk they were. We may sum up Augustus' policy towards I ta ly
in the words of Fowler:
We may take it as certain that during
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his long reign Augustus enforoed the prinoiple that the worship of a l iving man was ~a thing impossible in Roman rel igious law;and that he wished to be honoured as a sovereign ( to quote Professor Pelham ) , butnot as a god. However olosely he might a l-
low himself to be brought into relat ion withthe gods of the s ta te , however frequentlyhe might use the maohinery of the staterel igion for l i f t ing himself into an abnormal in the eyes of the plebs as theirsupporter and benefaotor, he never gaveway to that oriental idea of man-worshipwhioh had perhaps possessed the mind ofthe more voluptuous Antony. 18
75
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CONCLUSION
Although Augustus himself nowhere explicit ly states
that he used the cult as a poli t ical instrument, nor does
76
any ~ a t i n authority make such a statement, yet, from the data
suppliedin
the preceding chaptersi t may be
safelystated
that Augustus considered the cult not only a poli t ical in
strument but an extremely efficient one.
There i s no doubt that the times of Augustus were t ru
ly times af a great cr is i s . A mighty civil izat ion was groan
ing at the approach of dissolution. Before i t s f inal depar
ture from the pages of history, however, that civil izat ion
must prepare i t se l f for one more gigantic effor t . The world
must be united and a t peace for the reception of Jesus Christ
and the dissemination of His Doctrine. The great Graeco
Roman civil izat ion had but this one more task to perform after
which i t would crumble and fa l l to p ieces . From i t s remains
would spring that other s t i l l more powerful civil izat ion of
Christianity. To begin this work was the task of Augustus.
Ever since her conception, Rome had employed war as
a means of subjugation and expaasion. When not fighting for
eign foes she was torn by internal s t r i fe , which was frequent-
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ly more disastrous than external warfare.
77
From 510 B.C. down•
to the days when Augustus finally defeated Antony, war reign
ed supreme. During these years Rome herself suffered or en-
Joyed the frui ts bi t te r and sweet which war infal l ibly bears,-
economic independence breeding soon economic distress, re l i -
gious fervor quickly followed by i r rel igiosi ty , morality swift
ly running the whole gamut of decay from purity of home and
SOCial l i fe to moral indifferentism; from moral indifferentism
toan
appalling lack of a ll moral restraint and aconsequent
plunge into materialism by throwing into utter oblivion a l l
spir i tual values, which, for the Roman and pagan world, were
those abstractions represented by such terms as ~ , Virtus,
Pudor. Into this welter of decadent society and hopeless des-
pair came Augustus.
I t was natural for one of Augustus' temperament and
natural abi l i t ies to look for some other cure than war. He
was by nature inclined towards, I will not say religion in the
s t r ic t sense of the word, but rather towards a superstit ious
formalism. Throughout his l i fe he was a s t ickler for formal-
i ty . Judging from his character, then, one can very well see
that reform and progress would be soue1J. t for through the me-
dium of a religious and moral revival. There i s one point,
however, which we must not overlook. Augustus' f i r s t impor-
tant task was the establishment of his own position. This
task he performed without doubt through the aid of the god-
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78
head of Caesar. As we have seen in the paper both Octavian4J
and Antony recognized the increased position given Octavian
through the deification of Julius Caesar.
Once established supreme in government, Augustus had
next to straighten out conditions a t Rome and in the provinces.
Here again, Augustus succeeded in restoring something l ike
honest government, succeeded, too, in bringing Rome and the
provinces into a rather close unity. He accomplished this ,
as we have seen, through a clever use of the worship of the
Numen or Genius Augusti in close connection with the worship
of ~ , Victory, Fides and other useful abstractions.
In the restoration of the temples and other shrines
of worship we have seen that AUgustus had other aims than the
mere revival of religious act ivi ty. The importance given the
cult of Apollo, the emphasis laid on the connection existing
between this cult and the various episodes of Augustus' own
l i fe along with the adoption of Apollo as Augustus' own spec
ia l deity, the employment of the Compitalia as a means of
municipal government, the placing of the Genius Augusti
amongst the Lares of the cross-roads, a l l these were bits of
cle .er poli t ics which Augustus used to strengthen his posi
t ion as head of the state .
Nowhere, perhaps,was Augustus' poli t ical sagacity so
well put to use than in the different treatment aocorded
the provinoes, Rome, and I ta ly. In Chapter V this difference
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79
has been sufficiently brought out to show the wisdom of this•
separate oonduot towards Rome and the res t of the empire, es-
pecially the Orient. While the idea of the man-god was suf
ficiently known and reoognized in the East, yetRome
and the
west were not suffioiently acquainted with this concept to
a40pt i t into their ins t i tut ions . At the time of Augustus
Rome would not oonsent to plaoe among the gods a l iving man.
The thought was repugnant. Augustus, however, attained, as
we have seen, the very same results through the medium of the
Numen Augusti without at the same time inourring the odium
of posing as a man-god and demanding the worship due to the
gods alone.
Just how far the words of the great Augustan poets
were diotated by the head of the state is problematic. Yet
it is permissible to hold that muoh of the theme-oontent of
these writers was diotated by Augustus himself, or, what i s
s t i l l more probable, by his great minister of s tate , Maeoenas.
We have already seen that the Augustan poets sympathized with
the Augustan polioy and greatly advanoed the idea that Aug
ustus was ohosen by the gods to restore to the world peaoe
and prosperity.
I f proof were laoking to show the poli t ioal wisdom of
Augustus in thus employing the oult in the furtheranoe of his
£designs one oould always p r o ~ e r the folly of his immediate
suooessors. With the exoeption of Tiberius, who olosely fol-
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80
lowed the plan of Augustus, the rest , Caligula, Claudiusj
Nero, forsook the safe path trod by Augustus to follow that
of Antony by posing as a god. Instead of realizing the ad
vantage of rel igion, these emperors oould on the i r deathbeds
make the Joke that they fe l t themselves beooming gods. What
a departure from the wisdom of A u g u s t u s ~ Their laok of suo-
oess, however, was in proportion to their dismissal or olumsy
use of the oul t as a poli t ioal instrument.
Hereone might ask oneself whether or not there exists
in the very oonoept of religion the elements neoessary for
good government. I t i s a plain faot of history that whenever
spir i tual values lose their hold on the minds and hearts of
men, the plagues of sooial l i fe desoend and reap a terr ible
harvest . Perhaps no other age sinoe the time of Augustus
oan bet ter appreOiate suoh a statement than our own. The times
in whioh we are now l iving are singularly l ike the age of Aug-
ustus. We, too, have disregarded things spir i tual and have
followed in the wake of matter; we, too, are enjoying the
deoadenoe of a spent oivil ization and have not yet realized
that the only hope for a brighter future l ies in the revival
of those intangibles whioh make or break SOCiety. Religion,
for the most part , consists in just these intangibles and the
sooner these spir i tual values become prominent and permanent
forces in our l ives the sooner will come the dawn of a hap·
pier day. Augustus realized what modern pagans fa i l to rea-
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81
l ize . Through this realization Augustus restored peace.and
p r o s p e ~ l t y to his world which was clamoring for i t .
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82
NOTES
INTRODUCTION
1 W. Warde Fowler, Roman Ideas 2! Delty ( London: TheMacmlllan Co., 1914 ) , p. 132.
2~ .
Clt .
CHAPTER I
1 B. Dombart, De Clvltate Del, Sanctl Aurelll ( Lipslae: In Aedlbus B. G:-Teubnerl, 1875 ) , Bk. IV, c. 27.
2 Loc. Clt .
3 A. Grenier, The Roman Spiri t , ln Religion, Thought~ Art ( New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1920 ) , p. 365.
4 ~ . , pp. 366,7.
5 Lily Ross Taylor, The Divin1ty of the Roman Emperor( Middletown, Conn.: American Phllological Association, 1931),p . 73.
6 E. Cary, Dlo's Roman Hlstory ( London: Willlam Heinemann, 1914 ) , XLIV, 5, 3.
7 J . C. Rolfe, Suetonius ( London: William Helnemann,1928 ) , Divos Julius, c. LXXIX.
8 ~ . , c . LXXX.
9 Lily Ross Taylor, £F. c i t . , pp. 81,2.
10 J . O. Rolfe, £F. i l l . , c. LXXXV.
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11 Appius, Bellum Civile, Bk. I I I , 28.
12 J . o. Rolfe, 2,2. i l l . , o. LXXXXVIII.
13 Lily Ross Taylor, 2,2. ~ . , p. 90.
14 ~ . , p. 99.
83
15 A. H. Clough, Plutaroh's Lives ( New York: Bigelow,Co., Ltd. , n.d. ) Vol. V, p . 186.
16 Pateroulus, ~ Gestae, Bk. I I , LXXXII.
CHAPTER I I
1 Tenney Frank, Roman Imperialism ( New York: The MaoCo., 1929 ) , p. 349.
2 Grant Showerman, Eternal Rome ( New Haven: Yale Uni-Press, 1925 ) , p. 120. - - - -
3 Ibid . , p. 115.
4 William Stearns Davis, Inf1uenoe of Wealth in Imper~ (New York: The Maomil1an Co., 19101, p. 297.
5 G. Boissier, ~ Religion Romaine ( Paris: Librairen.d. ) , Vol. I , p. 52.
6 T. R. Glover, lh! Confliot Q! Religions !n the Ear-I Roman Empire ( London: Methuen-& Co., Ltd., 1927 r ; -p . 2.
7 Ibid. , pp. 3,4.
8 S. Dill , Roman Sooiety from N!!2 !Q Marcus Aurelius( London: The Macmillan Co., 1 9 0 ~ pp. 532,3.
CHAPTER I I I
1 W. Fairley, Editor, Monumentum Anoyranum ( Philadel-
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84
phla, 1898 ) , lv , 17.
2 A. Grenler, The Roman Splr l t , ln Rellglon, Thought.!ill!: ~ ( New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 192b ) , p. 374.
3 G. Bolssler, La Rellglon Romalne ( Paris: Llbraire
Hachette, n.d. ) , Vol. I , p. 78.
4 ~ . , p . 80.
5 J . C. Rolfe, Suetonius ( London: William Heinemann,1928 ) , Divos Augustus, c. XXIX.
6 Ibid . , c. LII.
7 W. Warde Fowler, Religious Experience of the RomanPeople (London: The Macmillan Co., 1922 ) , pp. 440,1.
8 G. Boissier, QR. i l l . , p. 90.
9 w. Warde Fowler, QR. i l l · , pp. 445,6.
10 J . C. Rolfe, 2l2. i l l · , c. VII.
11 G. Boissier, QE. c i t . , p. 72.
12 J . C. Rolfe, QE. i l l · , c. XCV.
13 Ll1y Ross Taylor, The Dlvinity of ~ Roman Emperor,p. 158.
14 w. Falrley, Editor, Monumentum Ancyranum, c. 34, 11.21,2,3.
Post id tem [pus praesti t i omnibus d1gni tatepotes -t ] at1 s au [tem n ] ihllo ampliu [ s habul quam.qui fuerunt m] ih i quo -
que in ma [gls ] t ra [t] u conlegae.
15 G. B01ssier, £Q. i l l . , p. 93.
16 J . C. Rolfe, QE. i l l . , c . XXXI.
17 T. Chase, Selections from Horace ( New York: Hinds,Noble and Eldredge, 1907 ) , Odes, Bk. I , xxxiv.
18 A. Grenier, 2£. £!1., p. 375.
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19 T. Chase, 22. c i t . , Odes, Bk. IV, v.
20 A. Grenier, 2Q. c i t . , p . 377.
21 W. Fairley, 22. c i t . , c. 34, 15.
CHAPTER IV
85
1. T. Cruttwell, A History of Roman Literature ( Lon-don: Charles Griffin & Co., Ltd., 1910 ), p . 244.
2 A. Grenier, ~ Roman Spir i t , in Religion, Thought~ ~ , pp. 292,3.
3 Virgil, Aeneid, Ek. I,ll. 198,9.
4 ~ . , Bk. XII, 11. 311,15.
5 ~ . , Ek. I,ll. 748,50.
6 Ibid. , Ek. VIII, 11. 729, 31.
7. w. Warde Fowler, The Religious Experience of the
Roman People, p. 424.
8 Lily Ross Taylor, The Divinity of ~ Roman Emperor,p. 162.
9 T. Chase, Selections f!2m Horace, Odes, Bk. I , i i .
10 Ibid. , Odes, Bk. I, ' i i .
11 Ibid. , Bk. I I I , i i i .
12 Ibid. , Bk. I I I , i i .
13 Tibullus, Bk. I , i , 19,20.
14 Lily Ross Taylor, ~ . c i t . , p. 185.
15 Tibullus, Bk. II , i , 15-24.
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86
CHAPTER V
1 Pateroulus, Res Gestae, I I , 126.
2 Lily Ross Taylor, The Divinity 2! the Roman Emperor,p. 275, Appendix I I I .
3 Ibid. , p. 3.
4 Ibid. , p. 4.
5 .ill.9:., pp. 17,8.
6 .ill.9:. , p. 21 •
7 Ibid. , p. 25.
8 .ill.9:., p . 35.
9 A. H. Clough, Plutaroh's Lives, Vol. I I , ~ p . 444,5.
10 W. Warde Fowler, Roman Ideas of Deity, pp. 100,1.
11 Ibid. , p. 98.
12 .ill.9:., p . 104.
13 .ill.9:., p . 134.
14 .ill.9:., p . 133.
15 Lily Ross Taylor, QE. £!1., p. 190.
16 G. Boissier, La Religion Romaine, Vol. I , p. 131.
17 Loo. oi t .
18 w. Warde Fowler, ~ . £!1., p. 126.
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Abbott, Frank F.,
BOissier, Gaston.,
Cary, Earnest.,
Chase, Thomas.,
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Cruttwell, Charles
Davis, William S.,
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The Thesis "A Study of the Caesar Cult with Reference
to the Political Aims of Augustus," written by Victor B.
Nieporte, S.J. , has been approved by the Graduate School of
Loyola University, with reference to form, and by the readers
whose names appear below, with reference to content. I t i s ,
therefore, accepted in partial fulfilment of the requirements
for the degree of N ~ s t e r of Arts.
Rev. A.G. Brickel, S.J.
Rev. Allan p. Farrell , S.J.
Rev. W.I. Bundschuh, S.J.