Augustus Caesar
(23 September62 BC - 19
August AD 14), known earlier in
his life as Octavian, was the first Roman
Emperor. Although he preserved the outward forms of the Roman
Republic, he ruled as an autocrat for more than 40 years. He ended a century
of civil wars and gave Rome an era of peace, prosperity and imperial greatness.
He is generally known to historians by the title "Augustus" (revered one), which
he acquired in 27 BC.
Augustus was born at Rome
with the name Gaius Octavius Thurinus. His father , also Gaius
Octavius, came from a respectable but undistinguished family of the equestrian
order and was governor of Macedonia
before his death in 58 BC. More
importantly, his mother Atia was the niece of Rome's greatest soldier and de
facto ruler, Julius
Caesar. In 46 BC Caesar,
who had no legitimate children, took his grand-nephew soldiering in Spain, and
adopted him as his heir (see also adoption
in Rome). He then took the name Gaius Julius Caesar Octavianus.
When Caesar was assassinated in March 44
BC, his young heir was with the army at Apollonia, in what is now Albania.
He crossed over to Italy and
recruited an army from among Caesar's veterans. At Rome he found Caesar's republican
assassins, Marcus
Junius Brutus and Gaius
Cassius, in control. After a tense standoff, he formed an uneasy alliance
with Marcus Antonius
and Marcus
Lepidus, Caesar's principal colleagues. The three formed a junta called the
Second
Triumvirate, and launched a purge of those allied with the assassins.
Antonius and Octavianus
then marched against Brutus and Cassius, who had fled to the east. At Philippi
in Macedonia the Caesarian army was victorious and Brutus and Cassius committed
suicide (42 BC). Octavianus
then returned to Rome, while Antonius went to Egypt.
Here he allied himself with Queen Cleopatra,
the ex-lover of Julius Caesar and mother of Caesar's infant son Caesarion.
The Roman dominions were now divided between Ovtavianus in the west and Antonius
in the east. At a naval battle off Actium
in Greece in 31
BC Octavianus defeated his rivals, who then fled to Egypt. He pursued them
there, and after another defeat they committed suicide.
By 29 BC, at the age of 34,
Octavianus was sole ruler of Rome, and the Senate
granted him a string of titles, including Tribune,
Consul, Pontifex
Maximus (chief priest) and Augustus, by which title he became generally known.
He was also Princeps (first
citizen) and Imperator (commander-in-chief). From this latter title Augustus's
regime came to be called an Empire, although the title was not hereditary and
Augustus was careful to preserve the ancient facade of Roman republican government.
Augustus, having
gained power by means of great audacity, ruled with great prudence. In exchange
for near absolute power, he gave Rome 40 years of civic peace and increasing prosperity.
He created Rome's first permanent army and stationed the legions
along the Empire's borders, where they could not meddle in politics. A special
unit, the Praetorian
Guard, garrisoned Rome and protected the Emperor's person.
Augustus waged no major wars, instead merely advancing Rome's northern border
to the natural frontier of the Danube.
Further west, an attempt to advance into Germany
ended in defeat at the Battle
of the Teutoburg Forest in AD 9.
Thereafter he accepted the Rhine
as the Empire's permanent border. In the east he satisfied himself with establishing
Roman control over Armenia
and the Transcaucasus.
He left the Parthian Empire
alone.
In domestic
matters, Augustus channelled the enormous wealth brought in from the Empire to
keeping the army happy with generous payments, and keeping the Romans happy by
beautifying the capital and staging magnificent games. He famously boasted that
he "found Rome brick and left it marble." He built the Senate a new home, the
Curia, and built temples to
Apollo and to the Divine Julius.
He also built a shrine near the Circus
Maximus. It is recorded that he built both the Capitoline Temple and the Theater
of Pompey without putting
his name on them.
Roman rulers understood little about economics, and Augustus was no exception.
Like all the Emperors, he over-taxed agriculture and spent the revenue on armies,
temples and games. Once the Empire stopped expanding, and had no more loot coming
in from conquests, its economy began to stagnate and eventually decline. The reign
of Augustus is thus seen in some ways as the high point of Rome's power and prosperity.
Augustus settled retired soldiers on the land in an effort to revive agriculture,
but the capital remained dependent on grain imports from Egypt.
A patron of the arts, Augustus showered favours on poets, artists, sculptors and
architects. Horace, Livy,
Ovid and Vergil
flourished under his protection, but in return they had to pay due tribute to
his genius. He eventually won over most of the Roman intellectual class, although
many still pined in private for the Republic. But by the time Augustus died, it
was impossible to imagine a return to the old system. The only question was who
would succeed him as sole ruler.
Like Caesar, Augustus had no legitimate son, although he married three times.
By his second wife Scribonia he had a daughter, Julia,
who had children by her marriage to Marcus
Vipsanius Agrippa, but Julia's sons Gaius and Lucius died before he did. Finally
he married Livia, a member of
the powerful Claudian family, and adopted her son Tiberius
Claudius. Tiberius succeeded peacefully in AD 14
when Augustus died, aged 76, in his bed: a feat few of his successors were to
manage.
Augustus
was deified soon after his death, and both his borrowed surname, Caesar, and his
title, Augustus, became the permanent titles of the rulers of Rome for the next
400 years, and were still in use at Constantinople
fourteen centuries after his death. The cult of the Divine Augustus continued
until the Empire was converted to Christianity
by Constantine in
the 4th century. As a result we have many excellent statues and busts of the first,
and in some ways the greatest, of the Emperors.