<GetPassage xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns="http://chs.harvard.edu/xmlns/cts">
            <request>
                <requestName>GetPassage</requestName>
                <requestUrn>urn:cts:pdlrefwk:viaf88890045.003.perseus-eng1:T.tiberius_1</requestUrn>
            </request>
            <reply>
                <urn>urn:cts:pdlrefwk:viaf88890045.003.perseus-eng1:T.tiberius_1</urn>
                <passage>
                    <TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><text xml:base="urn:cts:pdlrefwk:viaf88890045.003.perseus-eng1"><body xml:lang="eng" n="urn:cts:pdlrefwk:viaf88890045.003.perseus-eng1"><div type="textpart" subtype="alphabetic_letter" n="T"><div type="textpart" subtype="entry" xml:id="tiberius-bio-1" n="tiberius_1"><head><persName xml:lang="la"><surname full="yes">Tibe'rius</surname></persName></head><p>1. emperor of Rome, <date when-custom="14">A. D. 14</date>-<date when-custom="37">37</date>. His full
      name was <hi rend="smallcaps">TIBERIUS</hi>
      <hi rend="smallcaps">CLAUDIUS</hi>
      <hi rend="smallcaps">NERO</hi>
      <hi rend="smallcaps">CAESAR</hi>. He was the son of T. Claudius Nero [<hi rend="smallcaps">NERO</hi>, No. 7] and of Livia, and was born on the 16th of November, <date when-custom="-42">B.
       C. 42</date>, before his mother married Augustus. Tiberius was tall and strongly made, and
      his health was very good. His face was handsome, and his eves were large. He was carefully
      educated according to the fashion of the day, and became well acquainted with Greek and Latin
      literature. He possessed talent both as a speaker and writer, but he was fond of employing
      himself on trivial subjects, such as at that time were comprehended under the term Grammar
      (grammatica). His master in rhetoric was Theodorus of Gadara. He was a great purist, and
      affected a wonderful precision about words, to which he often paid more attention than to the
      matter. Though not without military courage, as his life shows, he had a great timidity of
      character, and was of a jealous and suspicious temper; and these qualities rendered him cruel
      after he had acquired power. He had more penetration than decision of character, and he was
      often irresolute. (<bibl n="Tac. Ann. 1.80">Tac. Ann. 1.80</bibl>.) From his youth he was of
      an unsociable disposition, melancholy and reserved, and this character developed itself more
      as he grew older. He had no sympathies nor affections, was indifferent about pleasing or
      giving pain to others : he had all the elements of cruelty; suspicion nourished his implacable
      temper, and power gave him the opportunity of gratifying his long nourished schemes of
      vengeance. In the latter years of his life, particularly, life indulged his lustful
      propensities in every way that <pb n="1118"/> a depraved imagination could suggest : lust and
      cruelty are not strangers. It is said, too, that he was addicted to excess in wine : he was
      not originally avaricious, but he became so. He affected a regard to decency and to externals.
      He was the prince of hypocrites; and the events of his reign are little more than the
      exhibition of his detestable character. [<hi rend="smallcaps">TACITUS</hi>.]</p><p>Tiberius was about thirteen years of age when he accompanied Augustus in his triumphal entry
      into Rome (<date when-custom="-29">B. C. 29</date>) after the death of M. Antonius : Tiberius rode
      on the left of Augustus and Mareellus on his right. Augustus conferred on Tiberius and his
      brother Drusus titles of dignity, while his grandsons, Caius and Lucius, were still living :
      but besides Caius and Lucius, Marcellus, the nephew of Augustus had superior claims to the
      succession, and the prospect of Tiberius sueceeding to the power of his mother's husband
      seemed at one time very remote. The death of Agrippa made way for Tiberius being employed in
      public affairs, and Augustus compelled him, much against his will, to divorce his wife
      Vipsania Agrippina, the daughter of Agrippa, by whom he had one son, and who was then
      pregnant, and to marry Julia (<date when-custom="-11">B. C. 11</date>), the widow of Agrippa, and
      the emperor's daughter, with whom Tiberitius did not long live in harmony. He had one child by
      Julia, but it did not live.</p><p>He was employed on various military services during the lifetime of Augustus. He made his
      first campaign in the Cantabrian war as Tribunus Militum. In <date when-custom="-20">B. C. 20</date>
      he was sent by Augustus to restore Tigranes to the throne of Armenia. Artabazus, the occupant
      of the throne, was murdered before Tiberius reached Armenia, and Tiberius had no difficulty in
      accomplishing his mission. (<bibl n="D. C. 54.9">D. C. 54.9</bibl>.) It was during this
      campaign that Horace addressed one of his epistles to Julius Florus (<bibl n="Flor. 1.12">1.12</bibl>), who was serving under Tiberius. In <date when-custom="-15">B. C. 15</date>, Drusus
      and his brother Tiberius were engaged in warfare with the Rhaeti, who occupied the Alps of
      Tridentum (Trento), and the exploits of the two brothers were sung by Horace (<bibl n="Hor. Carm. 4.4">Hor. Carm. 4.4</bibl>, 14; <bibl n="D. C. 54.22">D. C. 54.22</bibl>.) In
       <date when-custom="-13">B. C. 13</date> Tiberius was consul with P. Quintilius Varus. In <date when-custom="-11">B. C. 11</date>, the same year in which he married Julia, and while his brother
      Drusus was fighting against the Germans, Tiberius left his new wife to conduct, by the order
      of Augustus, the war against the Dalmatians who had revolted, and against the Pannonians. (Dio
      Cass 54.31.) Drusus died (<date when-custom="-9">B. C. 9</date>) owing to a fall from his horse,
      after a campaign against the Germans between the Weser and the Elbe. On the news of the
      accident, Tiberius was sent by Augustus, who was then at Pavia, to Drusus, whom he found just
      alive. (<bibl n="D. C. 55.2">D. C. 55.2</bibl>.) He conveyed the body to Rome from the banks
      of the Rhine, walking all the way before it on foot (Sueton. <hi rend="ital">Tiber. 7</hi>),
      and he pronounced a funeral oration over his brother in the forum. Tiberius returned to the
      war in Germany, and crossed the Rhine. In <date when-custom="-7">B. C. 7</date> he was again in
      Rome, was made consul a second time, and celebrated his second triumph. (<bibl n="Vell. 2.97">Vell. 2.97</bibl>.)</p><p>In <date when-custom="-6">B. C. 6</date> he obtained the tribunitia potestas for five years, but
      during this year he retired with the emperor's permission to Rhodes, where he spent the next
      seven years. Tacitus (<bibl n="Tac. Ann. 1.53">Tac. Ann. 1.53</bibl>) says that his chief
      reason for leaving Rome was to get away from his wife, who treated him with contempt, and
      whose licentious life was no secret to her husband : probably, too, he was unwilling to stay
      at Rome when the grandsons of Augustus were attaining years of maturity, for there was mutual
      jealousy between them and Tiberius. During his residence at Rhodes, Tiberius, among other
      things, employed himself on astrology, and he was one of the dupes of this supposed science.
      His chief master in this art was Thrasyllus, who predicted that he would be emperor. (<bibl n="Tac. Ann. 6.21">Tac. Ann. 6.21</bibl>.) Augustus had not been very ready to allow Tiberius
      to retire to Rhodes, and he was not willing to let him come back; but, at the instance of
      Caius Caesar, Tiberius was allowed to return, <date when-custom="2">A. D. 2</date>. He was relieved
      from one trouble during his absence, for his wife Julia was banished to the island of
      Pandataria (<date when-custom="-2">B. C. 2</date>), and he never saw her again. (<bibl n="D. C. 55.10">D. C. 55.10</bibl>.) Suetonius says that Tiberius, by letter, entreated the
      emperor to let Julia keep whatever he had given her.</p><p>Tiberius was employed in public affairs until the death of L. Caesar (<date when-custom="2">A. D.
       2</date>). which was followed by the death of C. Caesar (<date when-custom="4">A. D. 4</date>).
      Augustus, now being without a successor of his own blood, adopted Tiberius, the son of his
      wife Livia, with the view of leaving to him the power that he had himself acquired; and at the
      same time he required Tiberius to adopt Germanicus, the son of his brother Drusus, though
      Tiberius had a son Drusus by his wife Vipsania. (Sueton. <hi rend="ital">Tiber. 15 ;</hi>
      <bibl n="Vell. 2.103">Vell. 2.103</bibl>.) Augustus was not ignorant of the character of
      Tiberius, but, like others in power, he left it to a man whom he did not like, and could not
      esteem, rather than allow it to go out of his family. Augustus had indeed adopted Postumus
      Agrippa, the brother of C. and L. Caesares, but there was nothing to hope for from him; and
      Germanicus was too young to be adopted by Augustus with a view to the direct succession.</p><p>From the year of his adoption to the death of Augustus, <date when-custom="14">A. D. 14</date>,
      Tiberius was in command of the Roman armies, though he visited Rome several times. He was sent
      into Germany <date when-custom="4">A. D. 4</date>, and the historian Velleius Paterculus accompanied
      him as praefectus equitum. Tiberius reduced all Illyricumn to subjection <date when-custom="9">A. D.
       9</date>; and in <date when-custom="12">A. D. 12</date> he had the honour of a triumph at Rome for
      his German and Dalmatian victories. Tiberius displayed military talent during his transalpine
      campaigns ; he maintained discipline in his army, and took care of the comforts of his
      soldiers. In A. D. 14 Augustius held his last census, in which he had Tiberius for his
      colleague.</p><p>Tiberius being sent to settle the affairs of Illyricum, Augustus accompanied him as far as
      Beneventum, but as the emperor was on his way back to Rome he died at Nola. on the 19th of
      August, <date when-custom="14">A. D. 14</date>. Tiberius was immediately summoned home by his mother
      Livia, who managed affairs so as to secure the power to her son, so far as such precaution was
      necessary. If nothing more had been known of Tiberius than his conduct during the lifetime of
      the emperor, he might have descended to posterity with no worse character than many other
      Romans. His accession to power developed all the qualities which were not unknown to those who
      were acquainted with him, but which hitherto had not been allowed their full play. He took the
      power which nobody was prepared to dispute with him, affecting all the while a great
      reluctance; and lite declined the name of Pater <pb n="1119"/> Patriae, and only took that of
      Augustus when he wrote to foreign princes. He began his reign by putting Postumus Agrippa to
      death, and he alleged that it was done pursuant to the command of Augustus (<bibl n="Tac. Ann. 1.6">Tac. Ann. 1.6</bibl>.)</p><p>His conduct in other respects was marked by moderation and prudence; he rejected all
      flattery from the senate; he conferred offices according to merit, and he allowed persons to
      grow old in them. He endeavored to relieve the scarcity of bread, a kind of complaint at Rome,
      which occurred at intervals, notwithstanding, and perhaps, in consequence of, the efforts of
      the government to secure a supply of food for the city. His mode of life was frugal, and
      without ostentatious display, and there was little to find fault with in him. (<bibl n="D. C. 57.2">D. C. 57.2</bibl>, &amp;c.) He had got rid of Agrippa, who was the nearest
      rival, and who, if he had possessed merit, would have seemed to have a better title to the
      imperial power than Tiberius, for he was the son of Julia. Germanicus was the son of his
      younger brother, and had a less direct claim than Tiberius ; but Tiberius feared the virtues
      and the popularity of Germanicus, and so long as he felt that Germanicus might be a rival, his
      conduct was exceedingly circumspect. (<bibl n="Tac. Ann. 1.14">Tac. Ann. 1.14</bibl>, <bibl n="Tac. Ann. 1.15">15</bibl>.) When he felt himself sure in his place, he began to exercise
      his craft. He took from the popular assembly the election of the magistrates, and transferred
      it to the senate, for this is what Tacitus means in the passage of the Annals just referred to
      : the popular assembly still enacted laws, though the consulta of the senate were the ordinary
      form of legislation front the time of the accession of Tiberius. The emperor limited himself
      to the recommendation of four candidates annually to the senate, who of course were elected;
      and he allowed the senate to choose the rest. He also nominated the consuls.</p><p>The news of the death of Augustus roused a mutiny among the legions in Pannonia, which was
      quelled by Drusus, the son of Tiberius, aided by the terrors of an eclipse which happened very
      opportunely (27th September, <date when-custom="14">A. D. 14</date>). The armies on the Rhine under
      Germanicus showed a disposition to reject Tiberius, and a mutinous spirit, and if Germanicus
      had been inclined to try the fortune of a campaign, he might have had the assistance of the
      German armies against his uncle. But Germanicus restored discipline to the army by his
      firmness, and maintained his fidelity to the new emperor. Tiberius, however, was not yet free
      from his fears, and he looked with suspicion on Germanicus and his high-spirited wife
      Agrippina, who was also disliked by Livia, the mother of Tiberius. The first year of his reign
      was marked by the death of Julia, whom Augustus had removed from Pandataria to Rhegisum; her
      husband deprived her of the allowance that she had from her father, and allowed her to pine
      away in destitution. One of her lovers, Semipronius Gracchus, who was living in exile in a
      small island on the coast of Africa, was by the order of Tiberius put to death. (<bibl n="Tac. Ann. 1.53">Tac. Ann. 1.53</bibl>.)</p><p>Germanicus (<date when-custom="15">A. D. 15</date>) continued the Germanic war, though with no
      important results, but Agrippina's courage on a trying occasion aroused the emperor's fears,
      and he had now a man about him, Sejanus, who worked on the emperor's suspicious temper for his
      own sinister purposes [<hi rend="smallcaps">SEJANUS</hi>.] It became common at this time to
      listen to informations of treason or laesa majestas against the emperor; and persons were
      accused not of acts only, but words, and even the most indifferent matters were made the
      ground of such charges. Thus was established a pestilent class of men, under the name of
      Delatores, who became a terrible means of injustice and oppression (<bibl n="Tac. Ann. 1.73">Tac. Ann. 1.73</bibl>), and enriched themselves at the expense of their victims by
      encouraging the cruel suspicions of the emperor. In the lifetime of Augustus, Tiberius had
      urged the emperor to punish those who spoke disrespectfully of the emperor, but his more
      prudent step-father, content with real power and security, allowed the Romans to indulge their
      taste for satire and pasquinades. (Sueton. <hi rend="ital">Aug.</hi> 100.51.) Tiberius
      followed this wise advice for a time, and made great profession of allowing liberty of speech,
      but his real temper at last prevailed, and the slightest pretence was sufficient to found a
      charge of laesa majestas (Sueton. <hi rend="ital">Tiber.</hi> 100.28). He paid unwillingly and
      tardily the legacies left by Augustus to the people, and he began his payment with an act of
      cruelty, which was not the better for being seasoned with humour (Sueton. <hi rend="ital">Tiber.</hi> 100.57; <bibl n="D. C. 57.14">D. C. 57.14</bibl>, tells the same story).</p><p>Vonones, the son of Phraates, once a hostage at Rome, had been invited back to his Parthian
      kingdom in the time of Augustus, but Artabanus of the royal house of the Arsacidae drove him
      out (A. D. 16), and he sought refuge in Armenia, which being then without a king accepted
      Vonones. The new king however was unable to maintain himself against a threatened attack of
      Artabanus. Tiberius did not wish to get into a quarrel with Artabanus, by giving Vonones aid,
      and the exiled king took refuge with Creticus Silanus, governor of Syria. (<bibl n="Tac. Ann. 2.12">Tac. Ann. 2.12</bibl>.) Germanicus was carrying on the war with success in
      Germany, and Tiberius, who had long been jealous of his rising fame, recalled him to Rome
      under the pretext of giving him a triumph. It seems somewhat inconsistent that Tiberius who
      was addicted to astrology and divination should have allowed this class of imposters to be
      banished from Italy (Tacit. <hi rend="ital">Ann.</hi> ii 32); this, however, was one of the
      events of this year.</p><p>Germanicus enjoyed (26th of May <date when-custom="17">A. D. 17</date>) the triumph which had been
      decreed. Tiberius added to the Roman empire the kingdom of Cappadocia, the last king of which,
      Archelaus, had been summoned to Rome, and died there, probably of old age and grief combined,
      after being accused of some frivolous matters before the senate. Tiberius was enabled by the
      produce of the new province to reduce the tax of one per cent. on auctions to one half per
      cent. (<bibl n="Tac. Ann. 2.42">Tac. Ann. 2.42</bibl>.) The state of affairs in the East,
      where the kingdoms of Commagene and Cilicia were disturbed by civil dissensions and Syria and
      Judaea were uneasy at the weight of taxation, gave Tiberius an opportunity of removing
      Germnanicus from Rome by conferring on him by a decree of the senate the government of the
      East. Drusus, the son of Tiberius, was sent into Illyricum. This year is memorable for the
      great earthquake in Asia, the greatest on record at the time when it happened, and the more
      destructive from having happened by night. Twelve cities were damaged or destroyed, the earth
      opened and swallowed up the living, and even southern Italy and Sicily felt the terrific
      shock. Sardes suffered the most of the twelve cities. The emperor alleviated the calamity by
      his bounty, and in the <pb n="1120"/> case of Sardes by a remission of all payment to the
      aerarium or fiscus for five years. It is just to commemorate his refusal to take testamentary
      bequests, when not made by persons who were on terms of intimacy with him; but the emperor did
      not want money, nor yet prudence; and it was not prudent to be taking money from every body,
      even those of no character. In this year died Titus Livius, the historian, and Ovid in his
      exile at Tomi.</p><p>Germanicus restored quiet to Armenia (<date when-custom="18">A. D. 18</date>) by crowning with his
      own hands Artaxias as king in the city of Artaxata. His administration of the East was prudent
      and successful, hut he died in Syria <date when-custom="19">A. D. 19</date>, and the dislike of
      Tiberius and the enmity of Cn. Piso, the governor of Syria, gave credibility to the report
      that Germanicus was poisoned. About this time Maroboduus, king of the Suevi, being driven
      front his states by Roman intrigues, crossed the Danube, came to Italy and settled at Ravenna.
      A Thracian king Rhescuporis, who had murdered his nephew Cotys, who was king of part of
      Thrace, wrote to Tiberius to inform him that Cotys had been punished for his treachery.
      Tiberius artfully got Rhescuporis into his power, and had him brought to Rome, where he was
      convicted by the senate, and Thrace was divided between the son of Rhescuporis and the
      children of Cotys. (<bibl n="Tac. Ann. 2.64">Tac. Ann. 2.64</bibl>.)</p><p>A regard to external decency was one of the characteristics of the reign of Tiberius, and a
      decree of the senate was made against certain classes of women who professed the occupation of
      courtezans. (Sueton. <hi rend="ital">Tiber.</hi> 100.35; <bibl n="Tac. Ann. 2.85">Tac. Ann.
       2.85</bibl>.) But religious tolerance was not one of the merits of the time of Tiberius; a
      senatus consultum imposed penalties on those who practised the ceremonial of the Egyptian or
      Jewish worship, though this was not the first example of the kind of intolerance at Rome.
       (<bibl n="Tac. Ann. 2.85">Tac. Ann. 2.85</bibl>; compare Seneca, <hi rend="ital">Ep.
       108.</hi>) This year was memorable for the appearance of a new island above the sea near
      Delos. (Plin. <hi rend="ital">Hist. Nat.</hi> 2.87.)</p><p>In the spring of <date when-custom="20">A. D. 20</date> Agrippina landed at Brundisium with the
      ashes of her husband. The remains of Germanicus received a public interment, but Tiberius and
      Livia did not show themselves, for which Tacitus assigns a reason, which may be true or false.
       (<hi rend="ital">Ann.</hi> 3.3.) Piso, who came to Rome, was accused before the senate of
      having taken the life of Germanicus. There was strong suspicion, but little or no proof; yet
      Piso, seeing that Tiberius gave him no support, released himself by a voluntary death, or was
      put to death by order of Tiberius. His wife Plancina, who was guilty if her husband was,
      escaped through the influence of Livia. There is certainly strong reason to believe that in
      this matter of the death of Germanicus as well as of Piso, Tiberius was guilty (<bibl n="Tac. Ann. 3.16">Tac. Ann. 3.16</bibl>), though Tacitus does not pronounce a positive
      opinion. Tiberius gave Julia, the daughter of his son Drusus, in marriage to Nero, the eldest
      son of Germanicus, which was a popular measure. He also moderated the penalties which the Lex
      Papia, passed in the time of Augustus, imposed on unmarried persons, with the double purpose
      of encouraging matrimony and filling the aerarium. (<bibl n="Tac. Ann. 3.25">Tac. Ann.
       3.25</bibl>.)</p><p>The year <date when-custom="21">A. D. 21</date> was the fourth consulship of Tiberius, and the
      second of his son Drusus Caesar, but it was considered a bad omen for Drusus, because all
      those who had been his father's colleagues in the consulship had come to a violent death. A
      great revolt broke out this year headed by Julius Florus, at Treves on the Mosel, and by
      Julius Sacrovir, among the Aedui. The alleged grounds of the revolt were the heavy taxation,
      and the oppression of the Roman governors. Sacrovir mustered forty thousand men at Autun
      (Augustodunum), eight thousand of whom were furnished with the arms of the legionary soldiers,
      which had been secretly fabricated. and the rest had staves, knives, and other implements of
      the huntsman. The rising was not unlike the style of insurrection that has often shown itself
      in France since 1789. The rebellion was put down; and Florus and Sacrovir only escaped from
      the Romans by dying by their own hands. (<bibl n="Tac. Ann. 3.40">Tac. Ann. 3.40</bibl>.)</p><p>The principle of treason against the princeps (laesa majestas) was already established under
      Tiberius in its utmost extent, for C. Lutorius Priscus was condemned by the senate for having
      written a poem upon the death of Drusus, in anticipation of the event, Drusus being then very
      ill. The senate seem to have proceeded in the mode of a bill of pains and penalties, for there
      does not appear to have been any law applicable to such a case. Priscus was executed, and
      Tiberius, in his usual perplexed mode of expression, blamed the senate; he praised their
      affectionate zeal in avenging insults to the princeps, but he disapproved of such hasty
      penalties being inflicted for words only. (<bibl n="Tac. Ann. 3.49">Tac. Ann. 3.49</bibl>.) It
      was on this occasion that a senatus consultum was enacted, that no decree of the senate should
      be carried to the Aerarium before the tenth day, and thus a reprieve of so many days would be
      allowed to the condemned (<bibl n="Tac. Ann. 3.51">Tac. Ann. 3.51</bibl>; <bibl n="D. C. 57.20">D. C. 57.20</bibl>). In the vear <date when-custom="22">A. D. 22</date> the senate
      conferred on Drusus, at the request of Tiberius, the Tribunitia Potestas, the highest title of
      dignity, and an intimation that Drusus was to be the successor of Tiberius. Though the senate
      had conferred the honour in terms of great adulation, Drusus. who appears to have been in
      Campania at the time, did not think it worth while to come to Rome to thank them. (<bibl n="Tac. Ann. 3.59">Tac. Ann. 3.59</bibl>.) Tacfarinas, an African chieftain, had long
      troubled the province of Africa, and Junins Blaesas was sent as proconsul, with orders to
      catch him ; but it was no easy thing to take this wandering robber, and Blaesus only seized
      his brother. Tiberius allowed the soldiers to salute Blaesus with the title of Imperator, and
      he was the last Roman citizen, except the emperors, who enjoyed this ancient distinction.
       (<bibl n="Tac. Ann. 3.74">Tac. Ann. 3.74</bibl>.)</p><p>In <date when-custom="23">A. D. 23</date> Drusus, the son of Tiberius, died, Being poisoned by the
      contrivance of Sejanus [<hi rend="smallcaps">SEJANUS</hi>]. His death was no loss to the
      state, for he gave indications of a character in no respect better than that of his father;
      yet he had lived on good terms with Germanicus, and after his death he had behaved well to his
      children, or at least had not displayed any hostility towards them. The emperor either did not
      feel much sorrow for the death of his son or he concealed it; and when the people of Ilium
      some time after sent him a message of condolence, he returned the compliment by condoling with
      them on the death of their fellowcitizen Hector (Sueton. <hi rend="ital">Tiber.</hi> 100.52).
      It was remarked that the influence of Sejanus over Tiberius increased after the death of
      Drusus, and Tiherius began to display the vices of his character more and more. The same was
      remarked also after the <pb n="1121"/> death of Germanicus, and again when his mother Livia
      died. Tiberius allowed the cities of Asia to erect a temple to himself and his mother at
      Smyrna, the first instance of this flattery which he had permitted. But when the province of
      Hispania Ulterior asked permission to do the same thing, the emperor refused, and stated his
      reason in an oration to the senate, which is characterised by modesty and good sense. This
      singular man had a sound judgment, and if we formed our opinion of him from his words only, we
      should place him among the wisest and best of the Roman emperors. His measures too were often
      prudent and beneficial ; and yet such was his insincerity, that we can hardly know when to
      give him credit even for a good action.</p><p>Tacfarinas, who had given the Romans so much trouble, was at last defeated and killed by the
      proconsul P. Cornelius Dolabella (<date when-custom="24">A. D. 24</date>); but Dolabella did not
      obtain the triumphal honours, though with inferior forces he had accomplished that which his
      predecessors had in vain attempted : this was owing to the influence of Sejanus, who was
      unwilling that the glories of his uncle Blaesus should be eclipsed by honours conferred on
      Dolabella. The system of delations was now in full activity, and Rome witnessed the scandalous
      spectacle of a son accusing his father, Q. Vibius Serenus, of a conspiracy against the
      emperor, without being able to prove any thing against him. The abject senate condemned
      Serenus to death, but Tiberius used his tribunitian power to prevent the execution of the
      capital sentence, and the man against whom nothing could be proved even by putting his slaves
      to the torture, was banished to the island of Amorgus. Caecilius Cornutus, who had been
      charged with being an accomplice of Serenus, committed suicide. On this occasion a motion was
      made in the senate for giving no reward to informers, if the person accused of treason should
      die by his own hand before sentence was pronounced ; but Tiberius, seeing that this would
      weaken one of his engines of state-craft, in harsh terms, and contrary to his practice, openly
      maintained the cause of the informers; such a measure as the senate proposed would, he said,
      render the laws ineffectual and put the state in jeopardy ; they had better subvert all law
      than deprive the law of its guardians. Tiberius, always fearing enemies, thought his safety
      consisted in encouraging informers; here he spoke out fairly. and revealed one of his secrets
      of governing. Cremutius Cordus had written Annals, in which he had commended Brutus and
      Cassius : he was accused, and as he had made up his mind to die, he spoke boldly in his
      defence. After going out of the senate house he starved himself to death; the senate ordered
      the aediles to search for his works and burn them, but all the copies were not discovered, and
      his Annals were extant when Tacitus wrote (<hi rend="ital">Ann.</hi> 4.35).</p><p>In the year <date when-custom="26">A. D. 26</date> Tiberius left Rome, and never returned, though
      he care sometimes close to the walls of the city. He left on the pretext of dedicating temples
      in Campania, but his real motives were his dislike to Rome, where he heard a great deal that
      was disagreeable to him, and his wish to indulge his sensual propensities in private. Sejanus
      may have contributed to this resolution of leaving Rome, as it is said. but Tiberius still
      continued to reside out of Rome for six years after the death of Sejanus. (<bibl n="Tac. Ann. 4.57">Tac. Ann. 4.57</bibl>.) A great accident happened at Fidenae in the
      following year : a man named Atilius built a temporary amphitheatre, for the exhibition of a
      show of gladiators, but being ill-constructed, it fell down during the games, and twenty
      thousand people, it is said, were killed (<bibl n="Tac. Ann. 4.62">Tac. Ann. 4.62</bibl>;
      compare Sueton. <hi rend="ital">Tiber. 40</hi>). Atilius was banished. About this time a great
      conflagration destroyed all the buildings on the Mons Caelius, and the emperor liberally
      relieved the sufferers in proportion to their losses, a measure which procured him the
      good-will of the people. His dislike of publicity was shown during his residence in Campania,
      by an edict which commanded the people not to disturb his retirement, and he prevented all
      assemblages of people by placing soldiers in various posts. In order, however, to secure the
      retirement which he loved, he went (A. D. 27) to the island of Capri (Capreae), which is about
      three miles from the promontory of Surrento. This retreat was further recommended by having an
      almost inaccessible coast. A poor fisherman, who had caught a large mullet, with difficulty
      made his way up the rocks to present it to the emperor, who rewarded him by ordering his face
      to be well rubbed with the fish. (Sueton. <hi rend="ital">Tiber.</hi> 100.60.)</p><p>The new year (<date when-custom="28">A. D. 28</date>) was opened with the death of Titus Sabinus,
      a friend of Germanicus, whom Latinius Latiaris bad inveigled into very strong expressions
      against Sejanus and Tiberius, while he had placed persons in secret to be witnesses. The
      villains informed Tiberius of the words of Sabinus, and at the same time of their own
      treachery. The emperor let the senate know his wishes, and this servile body immediately put
      Sabinus to death, for which they received the thanks of Tiberius. (<bibl n="Tac. Ann. 4.68">Tac. Ann. 4.68</bibl>.) In this year Tiberius married Agrippina, a daughter of Germanicus,
      to Cn. Domitius Ahenobarbus, and the result of this union was the emperor Nero [<hi rend="smallcaps">NERO</hi>]. The death of Livia (<date when-custom="29">A. D. 29</date>). the
      emperor's mother, released Tiberius from one cause of anxiety. He had long been tired of her,
      because she wished to exercise authority, and one object in leaving Rome was to be out of her
      way. He did not visit her in her last illness, nor come to the funeral, being, as he said,
      overwhelmed with public affairs, he who neglected all important affairs, and devoted himself
      to his solitary pleasures. (<bibl n="Tac. Ann. 5.2">Tac. Ann. 5.2</bibl>; <bibl n="D. C. 58.2">D. C. 58.2</bibl>.) Livia's death gave Sejanus and Tiberius free scope, for Tiberius never
      entirely released himself from a kind of subjection to his mother, and Sejanus did not venture
      to attempt the overthrow of Livia's influence. The destruction of Agrippina and her children
      was now the chief purpose of Sejanus, who had his own ambitious projects to serve, as it is
      shown in his life [<hi rend="smallcaps">SEJANUS</hi>; <hi rend="smallcaps">AGRIPPINA</hi>]; he
      finally got from the tyrant the reward that was his just desert, an ignominious death.</p><p>In <date when-custom="32">A. D. 32</date> Latinius Latiaris, the infamous accuser of Sabinus, was
      executed. Cotta Messalinus, a notorious scoundrel, was accused before the senate. but Tiberius
      wrote to them in his favour. This memorable letter (<bibl n="Tac. Ann. 4.6">Tac. Ann.
       4.6</bibl>) began with an admission, the truth of which will not surprise any one; but it is
      somewhat singular, that so profound a dissembler as Tiberius could not keep to himself the
      consciousness of his own wretchedness : "What to write to you, P. C., or how to write, I know
      not; and what not to write at <pb n="1122"/> this time, may all the gods and goddesses torment
      me more, than I daily feel that I am suffering, if I do know." This artful tyrant knew how to
      submit to what he could not help : M. Terentius was charged before the senate with being a
      friend of Sejanus, and he boldly avowed it. His courage saved him from death, his accusers
      were punished, and Tiberius approved of the acquittal of Terentius (<bibl n="D. C. 58.19">D.
       C. 58.19</bibl>). The emperor also prudently took no notice of an insult of the praetor L.
      Sejanus, the object of which was to ridicule the emperor's person. [<hi rend="smallcaps">SEJANUS</hi>, L.] Tiberius now left his retreat for Campania, and he came as far as his
      gardens on the Vatican; but he did not enter the city, and he placed soldiers to prevent any
      one coming near him. Old age and debauchery had bent his body, and covered his face with ugly
      blotches, which made him still more unwilling to show himself; and his taste for obscene
      pleasures, which grew upon him, made him court solitude still more.</p><p>One of the consuls of the year <date when-custom="33">A. D. 33</date> was Serv. Sulpicius Galba,
      afterwards emperor. A great number of informers in this year pressed for the prosecution of
      those who had lent money contrary to a law of the dictator Caesar. The Romans never could
      understand that money must be treated as a commodity, and from the time of the Twelve Tables
      they had always interfered with the free trade in money, and without success. The law of
      Caesar was enforced, but as many of the senators had violated it, eighteen months were allowed
      to persons to settle their affairs, so as to bring them clear of the penalties of the lex. The
      consequence was great confusion in the money market, as every creditor was pressing for
      payment, and people were threatened with ruin by a forced sale of their property, to meet
      their engagements. The emperor relieved this distress by loans of public money, on security of
      land, and without interest. (<bibl n="Tac. Ann. 6.17">Tac. Ann. 6.17</bibl>.)</p><p>The death of Sex. Marius, once a friend of Tiberius, is given by Dio Cassius (58.22), as an
      example of the emperor's cruelty. Marius had a handsome daughter, whom he removed to a
      distance, to save her from the lust of his imperial friend. Upon this he was accused of
      incestuous commerce with his own daughter, and put to death; and the emperor took possession
      of his gold mines, though they had been declared public property. The prisons, which were
      filled with the friends or supposed friends of Sejanus, were emptied by a general massacre of
      men, women, and children, whose bodies were thrown into the Tiber.</p><p>About this time, when the emperor was returning to Capreae, he married Claudia, the daughter
      of M. Silanus, to C. Caesar, the son of Germanicus, a youth whose early years gave ample
      promise of what he would be and what he was, as the emperor Caligula. Asinius Gallus, the son
      of Asinius Pollio, and the husband of Vipsania, the divorced wife of Tiberius, died this year
      of hunger, either voluntarily or by constraint. Drusus, the son of Germanicus, and his mother
      Agrippina, also died at this time. The death of Agrippina brought on the death of Plancina,
      the wife of Cn. Piso, for Livia being dead, who protected her, and Agrippina, who was her
      enemy, there was now no reason why justice should not have its course; yet it does not appear
      what evidence there was against her. Plancina escaped a public execution by voluntary death.
       (<bibl n="Tac. Ann. 6.26">Tac. Ann. 6.26</bibl>.)</p><p>In the year <date when-custom="33">A. D. 33</date> Jesus Christ suffered under Pontius Pilatus, in
      Judaea. [<hi rend="smallcaps">PONTIUS</hi>
      <hi rend="smallcaps">PILATUS</hi>.]</p><p>It became the fashion in the time of Tiberius either for the accused or the accuser to be
      punished ; and there was perhaps justice in it at such a time. Abudius Rufo made it a charge
      against L. Gaetulicus, under whom he had served, that Gaetulicus had designed to give his
      daughter to the son of Sejanus, and Abudius was banished from the city. Gaetulicus was at that
      time in command of the legions in Upper Germany, and he is said to have written a letter to
      Tiberius, from which the emperor might learn that a general at the head of an army, by whom he
      was beloved, was not to be treated like a man who was within the walls of Rome.</p><p>Artaxias, whom Germanicus had placed on the throne of Armenia, was now dead, and Artabanus,
      king of the Parthians, had put his eldest son, Arsaces, on the throne. But Artabanus had
      enemies around him, who sent a secret message to Rome to ask the emperor to send them Phraates
      for their king, whom his father Phraates had given as a hostage to Augustus. Phraates was
      sent, but he died in Syria, upon which Tiberius nominated Tiridates, who was of the same
      family, and he sent L. Vitellius to direct affairs in the East (<date when-custom="35">A. D.
       35</date>). It was the policy of Tiberius to give employment to Artabanus by raising up
      enemies against him at home, rather than by employing the arms of Rome against him. [<hi rend="smallcaps">TIRIDATES</hi>; <hi rend="smallcaps">ARTABANUS</hi>.]</p><p>Rome was still the scene of tragic occurrences. Vibulenus Agrippa, who was accused before
      the senate, after his accusers had finished their charge against him took poison in the
      senate-house, and fell down in the agonies of death; yet he was dragged off to prison, and
      strangled though life was already extinct. Tigranes, once king of Armenia, who was then at
      Rome, was also accused and put to death. In the same year (<date when-custom="36">A. D. 36</date>) a
      conflagration at Rome destroyed a part of the Circus contiguous to the Aventine hill, and the
      houses on the Aventine also; but the emperor paid the owners of property to the full amount of
      their losses.</p><p>Tiberius, now in his seventy-eighth year, had hitherto enjoyed good health; and he was
      accustomed to laugh at physicians, and to ridicule those who, after reaching the age of
      thirty, required the advice of a doctor to tell them what was useful or injurious to their
      health. (<bibl n="Tac. Ann. 6.46">Tac. Ann. 6.46</bibl>.) But he was now attacked with a slow
      disease, which seized him at Astura, whence he travelled to Circeii, and thence to Misenum, to
      end his life in the villa of Lucullus. He concealed his sufferings as much as he could, and
      went on eating and indulging himself as usual. But Charicles, his physician, took the
      opportunity of feeling the old man's pulse, and told those about him that he would not last
      two days. No successor was yet appointed. Tiberius had a grandson, Tiberius Nero Gemellus, who
      was only seventeen, and too young to direct affairs. Caius, the son of Germanicus, was older
      and beloved by the people; but Tiberius did not like him. He thought of Claudius, the brother
      of Germanicus, as a successor, but Claudius was too weak of understanding. Accordingly, says
      Tacitus, he made no declaration of his will, but left it to fate to determine his successor.
      Dio Cassius says (58.23) that he named C. Caligula, because he knew his bad disposition; but
      this <pb n="1123"/> is always Dion's fashion. Suetonius (<bibl n="Suet. Tib. 100.76">Suet.
       Tib. 100.76</bibl>) says that he made a will two years before his death, in which he
      instituted Caius and Tiberius Gemellus his coheredes, with mutual substitution; and this will
      might be a disposition of the empire as well as of his private property. Caius had for some
      time employed all his artifices to win the favour of the emperor, and also that of Macro, who
      was now allpowerful with the emperor. It seems that Tiberius certainly did not like Caius, and
      if he had lived longer, he would probably have put him to death, and given the empire to his
      grandson.</p><p>On the sixteenth of March <date when-custom="37">A. D. 37</date>, Tiberius had a fainting fit, and
      was supposed to be dead, on which Caius came forth and was saluted as emperor ; but he was
      alarmed by the intelligence that Tiberius had recovered and called for something to eat. Caius
      was so frightened that he did not know what to do, and was every moment expecting to be put to
      death; but Macro, with more presence of mind, gave orders that a quantity of clothes should be
      thrown on Tiberius, and that he should be left alone. Thus Tiberius ended his life. Suetonius,
      quoting Seneca, gives a somewhat different account of his death. Tiberius reigned twenty-two
      years, six months, and twenty-six days. His body was taken to Rome, and his funeral ceremony
      was conducted with the usual pomp. His successor Caligula pronounced the oration, but he spoke
      less of Tiberius than of Augustus, Germanicus, and himself. Tiberius did not receive divine
      honours, like Augustus. Tacitus (<bibl n="Tac. Ann. 6.51">Tac. Ann. 6.51</bibl>) has given, in
      a few words, his character, the true nature of which was not fully shown till he was released
      from all restraint. He was probably one of those men who, in a private station, might have
      been as good as most men are, for it is fortunate for mankind that few have the opportunity
      and the temptation which unlimited power gives.</p><p>In the time of Tiberius lived Valerius Maximus, Velleius Paterculus, Phaedrus, Fenestella,
      and Strabo; also the jurist Massurius Sabinus, M. Cocceius Nerva, and others.</p><p>Tiberius wrote a brief commentary of his own life (Sueton. <hi rend="ital">Tiber.</hi>
      100.61), the only book that the emperor Domitian studied : Suetonius made use of it for his
      life of Tiberius. Suetonius also made use of various letters of Tiberius to princes and
      others, and his Orationes to the senate. Tiberius made several public orations, such as that
      on his father, delivered when he was nine years old, but this we must assume to have been
      written by somebody else; the funeral oration of Augustus; that on Maroboduus, delivered
      before the senate <date when-custom="19">A. D. 19</date>, was extant when Tacitus wrote (<hi rend="ital">Ann</hi>. 2.63). Tiberius also wrote Greek poems, and a lyric poem on the Death
      of L. Caesar. <figure/> (<bibl n="Vell. 2.94">Vell. 2.94</bibl>; Tacitus, <hi rend="ital">Annales,</hi> i.-vi. ; Dio Cassius, lvii. lviii.; Suetonius, <hi rend="ital">Tiberius ;</hi>
      Tillemont, <hi rend="ital">Histoire des Empereurs,</hi> vol. i.; <hi rend="ital">Dc C.
       Suetonii Tranquilli Fontibus et Auctoritate,</hi> Scripsit A. Krause, Berlin, 1831; <hi rend="ital">Oratorum Romanorum Fragmenta,</hi> H. Meyer, 2d ed.) </p><byline>[<ref target="author.G.L">G.L</ref>]</byline></div></div></body></text></TEI>
                </passage>
            </reply>
            </GetPassage>