Augustus
(63 BC- AD 14), first emperor of Rome (27 BC-AD 14), who restored unity
and orderly government to the realm after nearly a century of civil
wars. He presided over an era of peace, prosperity, and cultural
achievement known as the Augustan Age.
The Divine Augustus
Augustus
was born Sept. 23, 63 BC in Nola, near Naples.
He was also called (until 27 BC) OCTAVIAN, original name GAIUS
OCTAVIUS, adopted name GAIUS JULIUS CAESAR OCTAVIANUS, first Roman
emperor, following the republic, which had been finally destroyed by the
dictatorship of Julius Caesar, his great-uncle and adoptive father. His
autocratic regime is known as the principate because he was the
princeps, the first citizen, at the head of that array of outwardly
revived republican institutions that alone made his autocracy palatable.
With unlimited patience, skill, and efficiency, he overhauled every
aspect of Roman life and brought durable peace and prosperity to the
Greco-Roman world.
Gaius
Octavius was born on September 23, 63 BC, of a prosperous family that
had long been settled at Velitrae (Velletri), southeast of Rome. His
father, who died in 59 BC, had been the first of the family to become a
Roman senator and was elected to the high annual office of the
praetorship, which ranked second in the political hierarchy to the
consulship. Gaius Octavius' mother, Atia, was the daughter of Julia, the
sister of Julius Caesar; and it was Caesar who launched the young
Octavius in Roman public life. At the age of 12 he made his debut by
delivering the funeral speech for his grandmother Julia. Three or four
years later he received the coveted membership of the board of priests
(pontifices). In 46 he accompanied Caesar, now dictator, in his
triumphal procession after his victory in Africa over his opponents in
the Civil War; and in the following year, in spite of ill health, he
joined the dictator in Spain. He was at Apollonia (now in Albania),
completing his academic and military studies when, in 44 BC, he learned
that Julius Caesar had been murdered.
Rise
to power
Returning
to Italy, he was told that in his will Caesar had adopted him as his son
and had made him his chief personal heir. He was only 18 when, against
the advice of his stepfather and others, he decided to take up this
perilous inheritance and proceeded to Rome. Mark Antony (Marcus
Antonius), Caesar's chief lieutenant, who had taken possession of his
papers and assets and had expected that he himself would be the
principal heir, refused to hand over any of Caesar's funds, forcing
Octavius to pay the late dictator's bequests to the Roman populace from
such resources as he could raise. Caesar's assassins, Brutus and
Cassius, ignored him and withdrew to the east. Cicero, the famous orator
who was one of Rome's principal elder statesmen, hoped to make use of
him but underestimated his abilities.
Celebrating
public games, instituted by Caesar, to ingratiate himself with the city
populace, Octavius succeeded in winning considerable numbers of the
dictator's troops to his own allegiance. The Senate, encouraged by
Cicero, broke with Antony, called upon Octavius for aid (granting him
the rank of senator in spite of his youth), and joined the campaign of
Mutina (Modena) against Antony, who was compelled to withdraw to Gaul.
When the consuls who commanded the Senate's forces lost their lives,
Octavius' soldiers compelled the Senate to confer a vacant consulship on
him. Under the name of Gaius Julius Caesar he next secured official
recognition as Caesar's adoptive son. Although it would have been normal
to add "Octavianus" (with reference to his original family
name), he preferred not to do so. Today, however, he is habitually
described as Octavian (until the date when he assumed the designation
Augustus).Octavian soon reached an agreement with Antony and with
another of Caesar's principal supporters, Lepidus, who had succeeded him
as chief priest. On November 27, 43 BC, the three men were formally
given a five-year dictatorial appointment as triumvirs for the
reconstitution of the state (the Second Triumvirate--the first having
been the informal compact between Pompey, Crassus, and Julius Caesar).
Brutus and Cassius occupied the east, but the triumvirs divided the west
among themselves. They drew up a list of "proscribed"
political enemies, and the consequent executions included 300 senators
(one of whom was Antony's enemy Cicero) and 2,000 members of the class
below the senators, the equites or knights. Julius Caesar's recognition
as a god of the Roman state in January 42 BC enhanced Octavian's
prestige as son of a god.
He
and Antony crossed the Adriatic and under Antony's leadership (Octavian
being ill) won the two battles of Philippi against Brutus and Cassius,
both of who committed suicide. Antony, the senior partner, was allotted
the east (and Gaul); and Octavian returned to Italy, where difficulties
caused by the settlement of his veterans involved him in the Perusine
War (decided in his favor at Perusia, the modern Perugia) against
Antony's brother and wife. In order to appease another potential enemy,
Sextus Pompeius (Pompey the Great's son), who had seized Sicily and the
sea routes, Octavian married Sextus' relative Scribonia (though before
long he divorced her for personal incompatibility). These ties of
kinship did not deter Sextus, after the Perusine War, from making
overtures to Antony; but Antony rejected them and reached a fresh
understanding with Octavian at the treaty of Brundisium, under the terms
of which Octavian was to have the whole west (except for Africa, which
Lepidus was allowed to keep) and Italy, which, though supposedly neutral
ground, was in fact controlled by Octavian. The east was again to go to
Antony, and it was arranged that Antony, who had spent the previous
winter with Queen Cleopatra in Egypt, should marry Octavian's sister
Octavia. The peoples of the empire were overjoyed by the treaty, which
seemed to promise an end to so many years of civil war. In 38 BC
Octavian formed a significant new link with the aristocracy by his
marriage to Livia Drusilla.
But
reconciliation with Sextus Pompeius proved abortive, and Octavian was
soon plunged into serious warfare against him. When his first operations
against Sextus' Sicilian bases proved disastrous, he felt obliged to
make a new compact with Antony at Tarentum (Taranto) in 37 BC. Antony
was to provide Octavian with ships, in return for troops Antony needed
for his forthcoming war against the empire's eastern neighbor Parthia
and its Median allies. Antony handed over the ships, but Octavian never
sent the troops. The treaty also provided for renewal of the Second
Triumvirate for five years, until the end of 33 BC.
Military
successes
In
the following year the balance of power began to change: whereas
Antony's eastern expedition failed, Octavian's fleet, commanded by his
former schoolmate, Marcus Agrippa, who, although unpopular with the
influential nobles, was an admiral of genius, totally defeated Sextus
Pompeius off Cape Naulochus (Venetico) in Sicily. At this point the
third triumvir, Lepidus, seeking to contest Octavian's supremacy in the
west by force, was disarmed by Octavian, deprived of his triumviral
office, and forced into retirement. Ignoring Antony's right to settle
his own veterans in Italy and recruit fresh troops, Octavian discharged
many legionaries and founded settlements for them. His deliberate
rivalry with Antony for the eventual mastership of the Roman world
became increasingly apparent. Octavian's marriage two years earlier had
begun to win over some of the nobles who had previously been Antony's
supporters. Octavian also launched elaborate religious and patriotic
publicity, centering on the classical god of order, Apollo, in contrast
to Antony's more un-Roman patron, Dionysus (Bacchus). In addition,
Octavian had started to prefix his name with the designation
"Imperator," to suggest that he was the commander par
excellence; and now, although he continued to use his triumviral powers,
he omitted all reference to them from his coins, gradually concentrating
on the plain, emotive name "Caesar Son of a God."
But,
if Octavian was to compete with Antony's military seniority, successes
in a foreign war were necessary; and so Octavian between 35 and 33 BC
fought three successive campaigns in Illyricum and Dalmatia (parts of
modern Slovenia and Croatia) in order to protect the northeastern
approaches of Italy. With the help of Agrippa, he also lavished large
sums on the adornment of Rome. When Octavian fomented public clamor
against Antony's territorial gifts to Cleopatra, it was clear that a
clash between the two men was imminent.
In
32 BC the triumvirate had officially ended, and Octavian, unlike Antony,
professed no longer to be employing its powers. Amid a virulent exchange
of propaganda, Antony divorced Octavia, whereupon her brother Octavian
seized Antony's will and claimed to find in it damaging proofs of
Cleopatra's power over him. Each leader induced the populations under
his control to swear formal oaths of allegiance to his own cause. Then,
in spite of grave discontent aroused by his exactions in Italy, Octavian
declared war--not against Antony but against Cleopatra.
Accompanied
by her, Antony had brought up his fleet and army to guard strong points
along the coast of western Greece; but in 31 BC Octavian dispatched
Agrippa very early in the year to capture Methone, at the country's
southwestern tip. His enemies were taken by surprise; and after Octavian
himself arrived--leaving his Etruscan friend and adviser Maecenas in
charge of Italy--he and Agrippa soon shut Antony's fleet inside the Gulf
of Ambracia (Arta). At the Battle of Actium Antony tried to extricate
his ships in the hope of continuing the fight elsewhere. Though
Cleopatra and then Antony succeeded in getting away, only a quarter of
their fleet was able to follow them. She and Antony fled to Egypt and
committed suicide when Octavian captured the country in the following
year. Executing Cleopatra's son Ptolemy XV Caesar (Caesarion)--whose
father she had claimed was Caesar--he annexed Egypt and retained it
under his direct control.
The
seizure of Cleopatra's treasure enabled him to pay off his veterans and
made him finally master of the entire Greco-Roman world. From this point
on, by a long and gradual series of tentative, patient measures, he
established the Roman principate, a system of government that enabled
him to maintain, in all essentials, absolute control. Gradually reducing
his 60 legions to 28, he retained approximately 150,000 legionaries,
mostly Italian, and supplemented them by about the same number of
auxiliaries drawn from the provinces. A permanent bodyguard (the
Praetorians), based on the bodyguards maintained by earlier generals,
was stationed partly in Rome and partly in other Italian towns. A superb
network of roads was created to maintain internal order and facilitate
trade; and an efficient fleet was organized to police the Mediterranean.
In 28 BC Octavian and Agrippa held a census of the civil population, the
first of three during the reign. They also reduced the Senate from about
1,000 to 800 (later 600) compliant members; and Octavian was appointed
its president.
Government
and administration
Remembering,
however, that Caesar had been assassinated because of his resort to
naked power, Octavian realized that the governing class would welcome
him as the terminator of civil war only if he concealed his autocracy
beneath provisions avowedly harking back to republican traditions. From
31 until 23 BC the constitutional basis of his power remained a
continuous succession of consulships, but in January 27 BC he ostensibly
"transferred the State to the free disposal of the Senate and
people," earning the misleading, though outwardly plausible,
tribute that he had restored the republic. At the same time, he was
granted a 10-year tenure of an area of government (provincia) comprising
Spain, Gaul, and Syria, the three regions containing the bulk of the
army. The remaining provinces were to be governed by proconsuls
appointed by the Senate in the old republican fashion. Octavian,
however, believed that his supreme prestige--crystallized in the
meaningful term auctoritas--safeguarded him against any defiance by
these personages; and he was indeed able, more or less indirectly, to
influence their appointments, just as he was able (on the rare occasions
when he regarded it as desirable) to influence the appointments to the
consulships and other metropolitan offices that continued to exist in
"republican" fashion.
Four
days after these measures, his name Caesar, acquired through adoption in
Julius' will, was supplemented by "Augustus," an appellation
with an antique religious ring, believed to be linked etymologically
with auctoritas and with the ancient practice of augury. The word
augustus was often contrasted with humanus; its adoption as the title
representing the new order cleverly indicated, in an extra
constitutional fashion, his superiority over the rest of mankind. With
the aid of writers such as Virgil, Livy, and Horace, all of whom in
their different ways shared the same ideas, he showed his patriotic
veneration of the Old Italian faith by reviving many of its ceremonials
and repairing numerous temples.
Military
operations continued in many frontier areas. In 25, recalcitrant Alpine
tribes were reduced, and Galatia (central Asia Minor) was annexed.
Mauretania, on the other hand, was transferred from Roman provincial
status to that of a client-kingdom, for such dependent monarchies, as in
the later republic, bore a considerable part of the burden of imperial
defense. Augustus himself visited Gaul and directed part of a campaign
in Spain until his health gave out; in 23 he fell ill again and seemed
on the point of death. Feeling, amid reports of conspiracies, that new
constitutional steps were necessary, he proceeded to terminate his
series of consulships in favor of a power (imperium majus) that was
separated altogether from office and its practical inconveniences. This
power raised him above the proconsuls; it was never referred to on the
official coinage or in Augustus' political testament but was intended to
be exercised mainly in emergencies and on personal visits. He was also
awarded the power of a tribune (tribunicia potestas) for life. Earlier,
he had accepted certain privileges of a tribune. The full power he now
assumed carried with it practical advantages, notably the right to
convene the Senate. But, more particularly, the office of a tribune,
because of the ancient character of the annually elected tribunes of the
people as defenders of the plebs, surrounded him with a
"democratic" aura. This was, perhaps, needed all the more
because Augustus himself--while admittedly supporting the interests of
poorer people by a great extension of the right of judicial
appeal--tended to back the established classes as the keystone of his
system.
Agrippa,
too, was granted superiority over proconsuls, presumably in order to
ensure that the armies would be in safe hands in case one of Augustus'
recurrent illnesses proved fatal. The next to die, however, was the
emperor's young nephew Marcellus, who had been married to his daughter
Julia and might eventually have been envisaged as his successor. In the
same year, 23 BC, Agrippa was sent out to the east as deputy princeps;
two years later he became Julia's second husband. Meanwhile Augustus
himself traveled in Sicily, Greece, and Asia (22-19). Important
reorganizations were put into effect wherever he went; and immense
satisfaction was caused by an agreement in 20 BC with Parthia, under
which the Parthians recognized Rome's protectorate over Armenia and
returned the legionary standards captured from Crassus 33 years earlier.
In 19 Agrippa completed the subjugation of Spain. In this year there was
some adjustment of Octavian's powers to allow him to exercise them more
freely in Italy, and the two following years witnessed social
legislation attempting to encourage marriage, regulate penalties for
adultery, and reduce extravagance. In 17 there were resplendent
celebrations of ancient ritual, known as the Secular Games, to purify
the Roman people of their past sins and provide full religious
inauguration of the new age.
Although
the principate was not an office which could be automatically handed on,
Augustus seemed to be indicating his views regarding his ultimate
successor when he adopted the two sons of his daughter Julia, boys aged
three and one who were henceforward known as Gaius Caesar and Lucius
Caesar. Their father Agrippa, whose powers had been renewed along with
his master's, returned to the east. But now Augustus also gave important
employment to his stepsons--his wife Livia's sons by her former
marriage--Tiberius and Drusus the elder. Proceeding across the Alps,
they annexed Noricum and Raetia, comprising large parts of what are now
Switzerland, Austria, and Bavaria, and extended the imperial frontier
from Italy to the upper Danube (16-15). It was probably during these years that an executive, or
drafting, committee (consilium) of the Senate was established in order
to help Augustus to prepare senatorial business. His administrative
burden was also lightened by the expansion of his own staff (knights,
who could also now rise to a number of key posts, and freedmen) to form
the beginnings of a civil service, which had never existed before but
was destined to become an essential feature of the imperial system.
Gradually, too, a completely reformed administrative structure of Rome,
Italy, and the whole empire was evolved. The financial system that made
this possible was evidently far more effective than anything the empire
had ever seen until then. The system was based on the central treasury
(aerarium), but the details of its relationship with the treasuries of
the provinces, and particularly the provincia of Augustus, are still
imperfectly understood, partly because, although the emperor proudly
recorded his gifts to the central treasury, he did not report what funds
passed in the opposite direction.
The
taxation providing these resources apparently included two main direct
taxes: a poll tax (tributum capitis), paid in some provinces by all
adults and in others by adult males only, and a land tax (tributum
soli). There were also indirect taxes, which (as in the past) were
farmed out to contractors because their yield was unpredictable and the
embryonic civil service lacked the resources to handle them. The
republican customs dues continued; but its rates were low enough not to
hamper trade, which, in the peaceful conditions created by Augustus,
flourished in wholly unprecedented fashion. Industries did not exist on
a very large scale, but commerce was greatly stimulated by a sweeping
reform and expansion of the Roman coinage. Gold and silver pieces, their
designs reflecting many facets of imperial publicity, were issued in
great quantities at a number of widely distributed mints. The Rome mint
was reopened for this purpose from c. 20 BC. The absence of bronze token
coinage, which had been sparse for many decades, was remedied by the
creation of abundant mintages in yellow orichalcum and red copper. In
the West the principal mint for these pieces, besides Rome, was Lugdunum
(Lyon), whose coins displayed a view of the Altar of Rome and Augustus
that formed a model for other provincial capitals. The Roman citizen
colonies of the West, many of them established by Augustus to settle his
veterans, supplemented this output by their own local coinages, and in
the East, particularly Asia Minor and Syria, numerous Greek cities were
also allowed to issue small change.
Expansion
of the empire
The
death in 12 BC of Lepidus enabled Augustus finally to succeed him as the
official head of the Roman religion, the chief priest (pontifex
maximus). In the same year, Agrippa, too, died. Augustus compelled his
widow, Julia, to marry Tiberius against both their wishes. During the
next three years, however, Tiberius was away in the field, reducing
Pannonia (Yugoslavia and Hungary) up to the middle Danube, while his
brother Drusus crossed the Rhine frontier and invaded Germany as far as
the Elbe, where he died in 9 BC. In the following year, Augustus lost
another of his intimates, Maecenas, who had been the adviser of his
early days and was an outstanding patron of letters.
Tiberius,
who replaced Drusus in Germany, was elevated in 6 BC to a share in his
stepfather's tribunician power. But shortly afterward he went into
retirement on the island of Rhodes. This was attributed to jealousy of
his step nephew Gaius Caesar, who was introduced to public life with a
great fanfare in the following year; and the same compliments were paid
to his brother Lucius in 2 BC, the year in which Augustus received his
climactic title "father of the country" (pater patriae). Gaius
was sent to the East and Lucius to the West. Both, however, soon died.
Tiberius returned home in 2, and in 4 Augustus adopted him as his son,
who in turn was required to adopt Germanicus, the son of his brother
Drusus. The powers conferred upon Tiberius made him almost Augustus' own
equal in everything except prestige.
Tiberius'
next task was to consolidate the invasion and provincial organization of
Germany (4-5). An invasion of Bohemia was planned and had already been
launched from two directions when news came in 6 that Pannonia and
Illyricum had revolted. It took three years for the rebellion to be put
down; and this had only just been completed when Arminius raised the
Germans against their Roman governor Varus and destroyed him and his
three legions. As Augustus could not readily replace the troops, the
annexation of western Germany and Bohemia was postponed indefinitely;
Tiberius and Germanicus were sent to consolidate the Rhine frontier.
Although
Augustus was now feeling his age, these years in association with
Tiberius were marked by administrative innovations: the annexation of
Judaea in AD 6 (its client king Herod the Great had died 10 years
previously); the establishment at Rome (in the same year) of a fire
brigade with police duties, supplemented seven years later by a regular
police force (cohortes urbanae); the creation of a military treasury
(aerarium militare) to defray soldiers' retirement bounties from taxes;
and the conversion of the hitherto occasional appointment of prefect of
the city (praefectus urbi) into a permanent office (AD 13). When, in the
same year, the powers of Augustus were renewed for 10 years--such
renewals had been granted at intervals throughout the reign--Tiberius
was made his equal in every constitutional respect. In April, Augustus
deposited his will at the House of the Vestals in Rome. It included a
summary of the military and financial resources of the empire
(breviarium totius imperii) and his political testament known as the
"Res Gestae Divi Augusti" ("Achievements of the Divine
Augustus"). The best-preserved copy of the latter document is on
the walls of the Temple of Rome and Augustus at Ankara, Turkey (the
Monumentum Ancyranum). In 14 Tiberius was due to leave for Illyricum but
was recalled by the news that Augustus was gravely ill. He died on
August 19, and on September 17 the Senate enrolled him among the gods of
the Roman state. By that time Tiberius had succeeded him as the second
Roman emperor, though the formalities involved in the succession proved
embarrassing both to him and to the Senate because the
"principate" of Augustus had not, constitutionally speaking,
been heritable or continuous. Like other emperors, Tiberius assumed the
designation "Augustus" as an additional title of his own.
Agrippa Postumus, who had been named his co-heir but was later banished,
was put to death. The order to kill him may already have been given by
Augustus, but this is not certain.
Personality
and achievement
Augustus
was one of the great administrative geniuses of history. The gigantic
work of reorganization that he carried out in every field of Roman life
and throughout the entire empire not only transformed the decaying
republic into a new, monarchic regime with many centuries of life ahead
of it but also created a durable Roman peace, based on easy
communications and flourishing trade. It was this Pax Romana that
ensured the survival and eventual transmission of the classical
heritage, Greek and Roman alike, and provided the means for the
diffusion of Judaism and Christianity. Although his regime was an
autocracy, Augustus, being a tactful and imaginative master of
propaganda of many kinds, knew how to cloak that autocracy in
traditionalist forms that would satisfy a war worn generation--perhaps,
most of all, the upper bourgeoisie immediately below the leading
nobility, since it was they who benefited from the new order more than
anyone. He was also able to win the approbation, through the patronage
of Maecenas, of some of the greatest writers the world has ever known,
including Virgil, Horace, and Livy.
Their
enthusiasm was partly due to Augustus' conviction that the Roman peace
must be under Occidental, Italian control. This was in contrast to the
views of Antony and Cleopatra, who had envisaged some sort of
Greco-Roman partnership such as began to prevail only three or four
centuries later. Augustus' narrower view, although modified by an
informed admiration of Greek civilization, was based on his small-town
Italian origins. These were also partly responsible for his patriotic,
antiquarian attachment to the ancient religion and for his puritanical
social policy.
Augustus
was a cultured man, the author of a number of works (all lost): a
pamphlet against Brutus, an exhortation to philosophy, an account of his
own early life, a biography of Drusus, poems, and epigrams. The
conventional view of his character distinguishes between his cruelty in
early years and his mildness in later life. But there was not so much
need for cruelty later on, and, when it was needed (notably in the
suppression of alleged plots), he was still ready to apply it. It is
probable that nothing short of this degree of political ruthlessness
could have achieved such enormous results. His domestic life, however,
was simple and homespun. Within his family, the successive deaths of
those he had earmarked as his successors or helpers caused him much
sadness and disappointment. His devotion to his wife Livia Drusilla
remained constant, though, like other Romans, he was unfaithful. His
surviving letters show kindliness to his relations. Yet he exiled his
daughter Julia for offending against his public moral attitudes, and he
exiled her daughter by Agrippa for the same reason; he also exiled the
son of Agrippa and Julia, Agrippa Postumus, though the suspicion that he
later had him killed is unproved. As for Augustus' male relatives who
were his helpers, he was loyal to them but drove them as hard as he
drove himself. He needed them because the burden was so heavy, and he
especially needed them in the military sphere because he was not a great
commander. In Agrippa and Tiberius and a number of others he had men who
supplied this deficiency, and although, on his deathbed, he is said to
have advised against the further expansion of the empire, he himself,
with their assistance, had expanded its frontiers in many directions.
His
physical condition was subject to a host of ills and weaknesses, many of
them recurrent. Indeed, in his early life, particularly, it was only his
indomitable will that enabled him to survive--a strange preliminary to
an unprecedented and unequalled life's work. His appearance is described
by the biographer Suetonius.
He
was unusually handsome and exceedingly graceful at all periods of his
life, though he cared nothing for personal adornment. His expression,
whether in conversation or when he was silent, was calm and mild . . ..
He had clear, bright eyes, in which he liked to have it thought that
there was a kind of divine power, and it greatly pleased him, whenever
he looked keenly at anyone, if he let his face fall as if before the
radiance of the sun. His teeth were wide apart, small and ill kept; his
hair was slightly curly and inclining to golden; his eyebrows met . . ..
His complexion was between dark and fair. He was short of stature, but
this was concealed by the fine proportion and symmetry of his figure,
and was noticeable only by comparison with some taller person standing
beside him.
Augustus'
countenance proved a godsend to the Greeks and Hellenized easterners,
who were the best sculptors of the time, for they elevated his features
into a moving, never-to-be-forgotten imperial type, which Napoleon's
artists, among others, keenly emulated. The contemporary portrait busts
of Augustus, echoed on his coins, formed part of a significant
renaissance of the arts in which Italic and Hellenic styles were
discreetly and brilliantly blended. Still extant at Rome are the severe
yet delicate reliefs of the Ara Pacis ("Altar of Peace"),
depicting a religious procession in which the national leaders are
taking part; there are also scenes from the Roman mythology. The altar
was dedicated by the Senate and people of Rome in 13 BC to commemorate
the pacification of Gaul and Spain.
The
architectural masterpieces of the time were also numerous; and something
of their monumental grandeur and classical purity can be seen today in
the remains of the Theatre of Marcellus at Rome and of the massive Forum
of Augustus, flanked by colonnades and culminating in the Temple of Mars
the Avenger--the Avenger of Julius Caesar. Outside Rome, too, there are
abundant memorials of the Augustan Age; on either side of the Alps, for
example, there are monuments to celebrate the submission and loyalty of
the local tribes, an elegant arch at Segusio (Susa) and a square stone
trophy, topped by a cylindrical drum, at La Turbie. From Livia's mansion
on the outskirts of Rome, at Prima Porta, comes a reminder that not all
the art of the day was formal and grand. For one of the rooms is adorned
with wall paintings representing an enchanted garden; beyond a trellis
are orchards and flower beds, in which birds and insects perch among the
foliage. Augustus himself had no interest in personal luxury. Yet if
ever he or his associates had any spare time, such were the rooms in
which they spent it.