May have been murdered by his wife
Excellent administrator
Divided the government into bureaus
Formed professional civil service
Slide 33
Julio-Claudians
Nero (54-68 AD)
Married Claudius’s daughter
Initially permitted two advisors (Seneca, Burrus)
Assumed total power in 62 AD
Killed mother
Burrus died
Seneca retired
Divorced wife
Burning of Rome
Revolt in 56 AD and Nero killed many conspirators
Peter and Paul killed 54 AD
68 AD Nero committed suicide
Slide 34
"What does it matter to know what a straight line is if one has no notion of rectitude?"
– Seneca
“Anyone entering our homes should admire us rather than our furnishings.”
– Seneca
Slide 35
“Wild animals run from the dangers they actually see, and once they have escaped them, worry no more. We, however, are tormented alike by what is past and what is to come.”
– Seneca
Slide 36
“A person adopted as a friend solely for the sake of his commercial usefulness will be cultivated only so long as he is thus useful. This explains the crowd of people who cluster about successful men, and the lonely atmosphere about the ruined. To procure friendship only for the better and not for the worse is to rob it of all its dignity.”
– Seneca
Slide 37
Julio-Claudians
Four Claimants (69 AD)
Galba, Otho, Vitellius, Vespasian
All generals
Vespasian defeated the others and became emperor
Vespasian founded the Flavian Dynasty
Turned into monarchy
Slide 38
69-96 AD
Vespasian, Titus, Domitian
Reasonably good administrators
First non-Patrician Caesar
Suppression of the Jewish revolt
Destruction of Jerusalem
Masada
Timing—70 AD
Slide 39
96-193 AD
The Golden Age of Rome
5 good and 1 bad emperor
Nerva, Trajan, Hadrian, Antoninus Pous, Marcus Aurelius, Commodus
None were power hungry except Commodus
Façade of constitutionality
Hadrian separated the civil services from the army
Army changed from greater mobility to maintenance
Slide 40
Spartacus
(Kirk Douglas)
Gladiator
(Russell Crowe)