A.D. 37
Roman country seats. Antium. Situation
of the promontory of Antium. Account of
Nero’s parentage. Brazenbeard. Nero’s
father. Agrippina his mother. Agrippina’s
brother Caligula. Roman emperors. Regulations
in respect to the Roman armies. Description
of the Roman armies. Encampments of the
legions. Their stations. Useful
functions of the Roman armies. Effects
produced. Mode of producing them. The
civil authorities. The progress of the
military power. Disposition of men to submit
to established power. Great capacity of
the early emperors. Roman armies. Character
of Caligula. His desperate malignity. Examples
of his cruelty. Feeding wild beasts with
men. Branding. Agrippina is
implicated in a conspiracy. She is banished
with her sister to Pontia.
In ancient times, when the city of
Rome was at the height of its power and splendor,
it was the custom, as it is in fact now with the inhabitants
of wealthy capitals, for the principal families to
possess, in addition to their city residences, rural
villas for summer retreats, which they built in picturesque
situations, at a little distance from the city, sometimes
in the interior of the country, and sometimes upon
the sea-shore. There were many attractive places
of resort of this nature in the neighborhood of Rome.
Among them was Antium.
Antium was situated on the sea-coast
about thirty miles south of the Tiber. A bold
promontory here projects into the sea, affording from
its declivities the most extended and magnificent views
on every side. On the north, looking from the
promontory of Antium, the eye follows the line of
the coast away to the mouth of the Tiber; while, on
the south, the view is terminated, at about the same
distance, by the promontory of Circe, which is the
second cape, or promontory, that marks the shore of
Italy in going southward from Rome. Toward the
interior, from Antium, there extends a broad and beautiful
plain, bounded by wooded hills toward the shore, and
by ranges of mountains in the distance beyond.
On the southern side of the cape, and sheltered by
it, was a small harbor where vessels from all the
neighboring seas had been accustomed to bring in their
cargoes, or to seek shelter in storms, from time immemorial.
In fact, Antium, in point of antiquity, takes precedence,
probably, even of Rome.
The beauty and the salubrity of Antium
made it a very attractive place of summer resort for
the people of Rome; and in process of time, when the
city attained to an advanced stage of opulence and
luxury, the Roman noblemen built villas there, choosing
situations, in some instances, upon the natural terraces
and esplanades of the promontory, which looked
off over the sea, and in others cool and secluded
retreats in the valleys, on the land. It was in
one of these villas that Nero was born.
Nero’s father belonged to a
family which had enjoyed for several generations a
considerable degree of distinction among the Roman
nobility, though known by a somewhat whimsical name.
The family name was Brazenbeard, or, to speak more
exactly, it was Ahenobarbus, which is the Latin equivalent
for that word. It is a question somewhat difficult
to decide, whether in speaking of Nero’s father
at the present time, and in the English tongue, we
should make use of the actual Latin name, or translate
the word and employ the English representative of
it; that is, whether we shall call him Ahenobarbus
or Brazenbeard. The former seems to be more in
harmony with our ideas of the dignity of Roman history;
while the latter, though less elegant, conveys probably
to our minds a more exact idea of the import and expression
of the name as it sounded in the ears of the Roman
community. The name certainly was not an attractive
one, though the family had contrived to dignify it
some degree by assigning to it a preternatural origin.
There was a tradition that in ancient times a prophet
appeared to one of the ancestors of the line, and
after foretelling certain extraordinary events which
were to occur at some future period, stroked down
the beard of his auditor with his hand, and changed
it to the color of brass, in miraculous attestation
of the divine authority of the message. The man
received the name of Brazenbeard in consequence, and
he and his descendants ever afterward retained it.
The family of the Brazenbeards was
one of high rank and distinction, though at the time
of Nero’s birth it was, like most of the other
prominent Roman families, extremely profligate and
corrupt. Nero’s father, especially, was
a very bad man. He was accused of the very worst
of crimes, and he led a life of constant remorse and
terror. His wife, Agrippina, Nero’s mother,
was as wicked as he; and it is said that when the
messenger came to him to announce the birth of his
child, the hero of this narrative, he uttered some
exclamation of ill-humor and contempt, and said that
whatever came from him and Agrippina could not but
be fraught with ruin to Rome.
The rank and station of Agrippina
in Roman society was even higher than that of her
husband. She was the sister of the emperor.
The name of the emperor, her brother, was Caligula.
He was the third in the series of Roman emperors,
Augustus Cæsar, the successor of Julius Cæsar, having
been the first. The term emperor, however, had
a very different meaning in those days, from its present
import. It seems to denote now a sovereign ruler,
who exercises officially a general jurisdiction which
extends over the whole government of the state.
In the days of the Romans it included, in theory at
least, only military command. The word
was imperator, which meant commander;
and the station which it denoted was simply that of
general-in-chief over the military forces of the republic.
In the early periods of the Roman
history, every possible precaution was taken to keep
the military power in a condition of very strict subordination
to the authority of the civil magistrate and of law.
Very stringent regulations were adopted to secure this
end. No portion of the army, except such small
detachments as were required for preserving order
within the walls, was allowed to approach the city.
Great commanders, in returning from their victorious
campaigns, were obliged to halt and encamp at some
distance from the gates, and there await the orders
of the Roman Senate. The Senate was, in
theory, the great repository of political power.
This Senate was not, however, as the word might seem
in modern times to denote, a well-defined and compact
body of legislators, designated individually to the
office, but rather a class of hereditary nobles, very
numerous, and deriving their power from immemorial
usage, and from that strange and unaccountable feeling
of deference and awe with which the mass of mankind
always look up to an established, and especially an
ancient, aristocracy. The Senate were accustomed
to convene at stated times, in assemblages which were,
sometimes, conducted with a proper degree of formality
and order, and sometimes on the other hand, exhibited
scenes of great tumult and confusion. Their power,
however, whether regularly or irregularly exercised,
was supreme. They issued edicts, they enacted
laws, they allotted provinces, they made peace, and
they declared war. The armies, and the generals
who commanded them, were the agents employed
to do their bidding.
The Roman armies consisted of vast
bodies of men which, when not in actual service, were
established in permanent encampments in various parts
of the empire, wherever it was deemed necessary that
troops should be stationed. These great bodies
of troops were the celebrated Roman legions, and they
were renowned throughout the world for their discipline,
their admirable organization, the celerity of their
movements, and for the indomitable courage and energy
of the men. Each legion constituted, in fact,
a separate and independent community. Its camp
was its city. Its general was its king.
In time of war it moved, of course, from place to place,
as the exigencies of the service required; but in
time of peace it established itself with great formality
in a spacious and permanent encampment, which was
laid out with great regularity, and fortified with
ramparts and fossés. Within the confines
of the camp the tents were arranged in rows, with
broad spaces for streets between them; and in a central
position, before a space which served the purpose
of a public square, the rich and ornamented pavilions
of the commander and chief, and of the other generals,
rose above the rest, like the public edifices of a
city. The encampment of a Roman legion was, in
fact, an extended and populous city, only that the
dwellings consisted of tents instead of being formed
of solid and permanent structures of wood or stone.
Roman legions were encamped in this
way in various places throughout the empire, wherever
the Senate thought proper to station them. There
were some in Syria and the East; some in Italy; some
on the banks of the Rhine; and it was through the
instrumentality of the vast force thus organized,
that the Romans held the whole European world under
their sway. The troops were satisfied to yield
submission to the orders of their commanders, since
they received through them in return, an abundant
supply of food and clothing, and lived, ordinarily,
lives of ease and indulgence. In consideration
of this, they were willing to march from place to
place wherever they were ordered, and to fight any
enemy when brought into the field. The commanders
obtained food and clothing for them by means of the
tribute which they exacted from conquered provinces,
and from the plunder of sacked cities, in times of
actual war. These armies were naturally interested
in preserving order and maintaining in general the
authority of law, throughout the communities which
they controlled; for without law and order the industrial
pursuits of men could not go on, and of course they
were well aware that if in any country production
were to cease, tribute must soon cease too. In
reading history we find, indeed, it must be confessed,
that a fearful proportion of the narrative which describes
the achievements of ancient armies, is occupied with
detailing deeds of violence, rapine, and crime; but
we must not infer from this that the influence of
these vast organizations was wholly evil. Such
extended and heterogeneous masses of population as
those which were spread over Europe and Asia, in the
days of the Romans, could be kept subject to the necessary
restraints of social order only by some very powerful
instrumentality. The legions organized by the
Roman Senate, and stationed here and there throughout
the extended territory, constituted this instrumentality.
But still, during far the greater portion of the time
the power which a legion wielded was power in repose.
It accomplished its end by its simple presence, and
by the sentiment of awe which its presence inspired;
and the nations and tribes within the circle of its
influence lived in peace, and pursued their industrial
occupations without molestation, protected by the
consciousness which everywhere pervaded the minds of
men, that the Roman power was at hand. The legion
hovered, as it were, like a dark cloud in their horizon,
silent and in repose; but containing, as they well
knew, the latent elements of thunder, which might
at any time burst upon their heads. Thus, in its
ordinary operation, its influence was good. Occasionally
and incidentally periods of commotion would occur,
when its action was violent, cruel, and mercilessly
evil. Unfortunately, however, for the credit
of the system in the opinion of mankind in subsequent
ages, there was in the good which it effected nothing
to narrate; while every deed of violence and crime
which was perpetrated by its agency, furnished materials
for an entertaining and exciting story. The good
which was accomplished extended perhaps through a long,
but monotonous period of quiescence and repose.
The evil was brief, but was attended with a rapid
succession of events, and varied by innumerable incidents;
so that the historian was accustomed to pass lightly
over the one, with a few indifferent words of cold
description, while he employed all the force of his
genius in amplifying and adorning the narratives which
commemorated the other. Thus, violent and oppressive
as the military rulers were, by whom in ancient times
the world was governed, they were less essentially
and continuously violent and oppressive than the general
tenor of history makes them seem; and their crimes
were, in some degree at least, compensated for and
redeemed, by the really useful function which they
generally fulfilled, of restraining and repressing
all disorder and violence except their own.
The Roman legions, in particular,
were for many centuries kept in tolerable subjection
to the civil authorities of the capitol; but they
were growing stronger and stronger all the time, and
becoming more and more conscious of their strength.
Every new commander who acquired renown by his victories,
added greatly to the importance and influence of the
army in its political relations. The great Julius
Cæsar, in the course of his foreign conquests, and
of his protracted and terrible wars with Pompey, and
with his other rivals, made enormous strides in this
direction. Every time that he returned to Rome
at the head of his victorious legions, he overawed
the capitol more and more. Octavius Cæsar, the
successor of Julius, known generally in history by
the name of Augustus, completed what his uncle had
begun. He made the military authority, though
still nominally and in form subordinate, in reality
paramount and supreme. The Senate, indeed, continued
to assemble, and to exercise its usual functions.
Consuls and other civil magistrates were chosen, and
invested with the insignia of supreme command; and
the customary forms and usages of civil administration,
in which the subordination of the military to the
civil power was fully recognized, were all continued.
Still, the actual authority of the civil government
was wholly overawed and overpowered; and the haughty
imperator dictated to the Senate, and directed
the administration, just as he pleased.
It required great genius in the commanders
to bring up the army to this position of ascendency
and power; but once up, it sustained itself there,
without the necessity of ability of any kind, or of
any lofty qualities whatever, in those subsequently
placed at the head. In fact, the reader of history
has often occasion to be perfectly amazed at the lengths
to which human endurance will go, when a governmental
power of any kind is once established, in tolerating
imbecility and folly in the individual representatives
of it. It seems to be immaterial whether the
dominant power assumes the form of a dynasty of kings,
a class of hereditary nobles, or a line of military
generals. It requires genius and statesmanship
to instate it, but, once instated, no degree of stupidity,
folly or crime in those who wield it, seems sufficient
to exhaust the spirit of submission with which man
always bows to established power a spirit
of submission which is so universal, and so patient
and enduring, and which so transcends all the bounds
of expediency and of reason, as to seem like a blind
instinct implanted in the very soul of man by the
Author of his being a constituent and essential
part of his nature as a gregarious animal. In
fact, without some such instinct, it would seem impossible
that those extended communities could be formed and
sustained, without which man, if he could exist at
all, could certainly never fully develop his capacities
and powers.
However this may be in theory, it
is certain in fact, that the work of bringing up the
military power of ancient Rome to its condition of
supremacy over all the civil functions of government,
was the work of men of the most exalted capacities
and powers. Marius and Sylla, Pompey and Cæsar,
Antony and Augustus, evinced, in all their deeds,
a high degree of sagacity, energy, and greatness of
soul. Mankind, though they may condemn their
vices and crimes, will never cease to admire the grandeur
of their ambition, and the magnificence, comprehensiveness,
and efficiency of their plans of action. The
whole known world was the theater of their contests,
and the armies which they organized and disciplined,
and which they succeeded at length in bringing under
the control of one central and consolidated command,
formed the most extended and imposing military power
that the world had ever seen. It was not only
vast in extent, but permanent and self-sustaining
in character. A wide and complicated, but most
effectual system was adopted for maintaining it.
Its discipline was perfect. Its organization was
complete. It was equally trained to remain quietly
at home in its city-like encampments, in time of peace,
or to march, or bivouac, or fight, in time of war.
Such a system could be formed only by men possessed
of mental powers of the highest character; but, once
formed, it could afterward sustain itself; and not
only so, but it was found capable of holding up, by
its own inherent power, the most imbecile and incompetent
men, as the nominal rulers of it.
Caligula, for example, the brother
of Agrippina, and the reigning emperor at the time
of Nero’s birth, was a man wholly unfit to exercise
any high command. He was elevated to the post
by the influence of the army, simply because he was
the most prominent man among those who had hereditary
claims to the succession, and was thus the man whom
the army could most easily place in the office of
chieftain, and retain most securely there. His
life, however, in the lofty station to which accident
thus raised him, was one of continual folly, vice
and crime. He lived generally at Rome, where
he expended the immense revenues that were at his command
in the most wanton and senseless extravagance.
In the earlier part of his career the object of much
of his extravagance was the gratification of the people;
but after a time he began to seek only gratifications
for himself, and at length he evinced the most wanton
spirit of malignity and cruelty toward others.
He seemed at last actually to hate the whole human
species, and to take pleasure in teasing and tormenting
men, whenever an occasion of any kind occurred to afford
him the opportunity. They were accustomed in those
days to have spectacles and shows in vast amphitheaters
which were covered, when the sun was hot, with awnings.
Sometimes when an amphitheater was crowded with spectators,
and the heat of the sun was unusually powerful, Caligula
would order the awnings to be removed and the doors
to be kept closed so as to prevent the egress of the
people; and then he would amuse himself with the indications
of discomfort and suffering which so crowded a concourse
in such an exposure would necessarily exhibit.
He kept wild animals for the combats which took place
in these amphitheaters, and when it was difficult to
procure the flesh of sheep and oxen for them, he would
feed them with men, throwing into their dens for this
purpose criminals and captives. Some persons
who offended him, he ordered to be branded in the face
with hot irons, by which means they were not only subjected
to cruel torture at the time, but were frightfully
disfigured for life. Sometimes when the sons
of noble or distinguished men displeased him, or when
under the influence of his caprice or malignity he
conceived some feeling of hatred toward them, he would
order them to be publicly executed, and he would require
their parents to be present and witness the scene.
At one time after such an execution he required the
wretched father of his victim to come and sup with
him at his palace; and while at supper he talked with
his guest all the time, in a light, and jocular, and
mirthful manner, in order to trifle with and insult
the mental anguish of the sufferer. At another
time when he had commanded a distinguished senator
to be present at the execution of his son, the senator
said that he would go, in obedience to the emperor’s
orders, but humbly asked permission to shut his eyes
at the moment of the execution, that he might be spared
the dreadful anguish of witnessing the dying struggles
of his son. The emperor in reply immediately condemned
the father to death for daring to make so audacious
a proposal.
Of course the connection of Agrippina,
the mother of Nero, with such a sovereign as this,
while it gave her a very high social position in the
Roman community, could not contribute much to her happiness.
In fact all who were connected with Caligula in any
way lived in continual terror, for so wanton and capricious
was his cruelty, that all who were liable to come
under his notice at all were in constant danger.
Agrippina herself at one time incurred her brother’s
displeasure, though she was fortunate enough to escape
with her life. Caligula discovered, or pretended
to discover, a conspiracy against him, and he accused
Agrippina and another of his sisters named Livilla
of being implicated in it. Caligula sent a soldier
to the leader of the conspiracy to cut off his head,
and then he banished his sisters from Rome and shut
them up in the island of Pontia, telling them
when they went away, to beware, for he had swords
for them as well as islands, in case of need.
At length Caligula’s terrible
tyranny was brought to a sudden end by his assassination;
and Agrippina, in consequence of this event was not
only released from her thraldom but raised to a still
higher eminence than she had enjoyed before.
The circumstances connected with these events will
be related in the next chapter.