Augustus First Among Equals

Improved Essays
It’s first important to note what the word ‘Princeps’ means. It comes from ‘Princeps Senatus’, meaning ‘First among equals’, which gave an individual the privilege of being the first to speak in the Senate and being the first name on the roster. This title was used officially by Augustus (then Octavian) because it had no royal connotations. In actuality, Augustus had auctoritas (‘authority’) far greater than that of merely a Princeps. He was an Emperor, but he did not explicitly say so, for his predecessor Julius Caesar had done similarly and as a consequence was assassinated by Senators for fear of his tyranny.

There have been many Roman generals in the past who have made the transition between oligarchy and autocracy seem seamless due to
…show more content…
His power depended not on constitutional legality, but on the support of the army and people. Firstly, he ensured the loyalty of his soldiers by making them swear an oath every year that they would be loyal solely to Rome and not military commanders. This was called the sacramentum. According to the Res Gestae, Augustus dismissed as many as 300,000 troops from active service. Augustus originally had upwards of 53 legions; he merged them to only 23-28 legions in order to make them easier to manage, less expensive, and in lieu of the fact that he had relinquished many senatorial provinces in exchange for only a few imperial provinces in the First Settlement. He allowed anybody who wished to retire the right to do so, while keeping the willing men from both his and Antony's troops as part of a new standing army. The remaining legions would be paid a salary directly by the emperor, ensuring loyalty to Augustus, but after 6 AD payments were to come from a new public treasury called the aerarium militare, since funding from the general revenue became too expensive. Augustus would still inject a massive amount of his personal wealth into the treasury, which impressed his soldiers. Men who had been retired from service were given the customary grants of land, but after 14 BC Augustus instituted a retirement pension for the legions, granting cash payments. Initially the cost of paying for these pensions was too high to keep up, but Augustus …show more content…
One notable incident was with the politician named Cornelius Gallus, who after his distinguished role in the Battle of Actium was appointed governor of Egypt. Gallus had subdued a revolt in Thebes, and feeling pretty proud of himself he erected a monument to glorify his achievements. Augustus felt great disdain at this and saw it as a threat to his own self-aggrandised image, so he took away Gallus’ governorship of Egypt, causing him to take his own life in shame. Another example is when Crassus the Younger had defended Thrace from barbarian tribes and even defeated the tribal King in battle. He was to receive the most prestigious distinction, the spolia opima, but Augustus disallowed him from claiming it, downplaying the achievements of the individual as it would take attention away from Augustus’ own military prowess. Marcus Agrippa needs a mention also, for him and other generals did an amazing job at winning many of Augustus’ battles for him. Not many men had comrades like Agrippa at their side, and the victories won by Agrippa may have been paramount in Augustus attaining his image as a

Related Documents

  • Decent Essays

    Augustus Caesar Dbq

    • 1517 Words
    • 7 Pages

    Augustus saw the threat posed by barbaric tribes in the annexed lands and thus created a standard military force which he charged with the responsibility of maintaining peace and providing protection for the people. Social reformations and the erection of structures such as aqueducts and roads were put into play.…

    • 1517 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Improved Essays

    First, Augustus reveals his first deeds that states: “At the age of nineteen, on my own initiative and at my own expense, I raised an army by means of which I liberated the Republic, which was oppressed by the tyranny of a faction” (pg 5). The first sentence of the first deed alone is the most important because it tells us so much information. Therefore, he tells us his age to show how much experience and how far he came to become one of the greatest emperors of all time and how independently brave he was as at nineteen years old. In addition to that, he raised an army independently with his own expenses and planning. Therefore, he is a man of action first and secondly a man of financial wealth.…

    • 631 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Rise To Power Dbq

    • 589 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Augustus' rise to power was a significant event that occurred towards the end of the republic. During his reign, he granted the peace of Rome that ended the 100 years of civil dispute, but it was at a certain price. Augustus' rise to power was a lamentable end to a virtuous republic because of his brutal ways towards treating his citizens and attaining his rank as well as changing the government by making his citizens obey him without question. In document one, it explains when Lucretia gets raped, that kings are not welcome in the government anymore and that they aren't loyal and they should not have them. Augustus was said to have a very difficult time during his rule, which is explained the document four.…

    • 589 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    These consuls were in charge of governmental decisions, choosing officials, and commanding the Roman army. The only things that had a higher authority that the consuls were the emperor’s commands, and the laws of the…

    • 859 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    SUMMARY Adrian Goldsworthy ’s book, Augustus First Emperor of Rome is an extensive biography examining the life and political dominance of Rome’s first emperor, Caesar Augustus. Goldsworthy states that he wrote this biography in an attempt to give a more detailed and accurate account of the life of Caesar Augustus. He believed that Caesar Augustus’ life was separated into three distinct time periods based on his given name at the time.…

    • 2002 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Due to Rome’s historical, deep-seated hatred of one-man rule, it was imperative that Augustus did not give the impression that he was establishing a monarchy. It is likely that Augustus would have learned from Julius Caesar’s mistakes– his adoptive father– and realized how dangerous it was to exhibit brazen displays of tyrannical authority. To prevent the Roman people from viewing him as a dictator, or even worse, a rex, Augustus capitalized on Republican terminology and rhetoric to counterbalance the astonishingly un-Republican nature of his regime. By describing the history of his leadership with traditional Republican idioms, Augustus was able to satisfy the people by assuring them of the continuity of a classic Republican framework, “even though important elements of this discourse had been rendered null and void by the time the Res Gestae was published” (Hodgson 263). In the sixth paragraph of the document Augustus claims, “The Senate and the Roman people agreed that I should be appointed sole guardian of laws and morals with supreme power, but I refused any office offered to me that was contrary to the customs of our ancestors” (Mellor 256).…

    • 1245 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The new and the old provinces were required to affirm their allegiance to Rome and recognize the Roman authority (ancient.eu). After Augustus conquered Spain and Gaul he was considered to be a hero. He was continually conquering more land and expanding Rome. However, Augustus did utilize all of the power he was given. He had an extremely large army that followed him everywhere he went and each soldier had to vow to protect and support Augustus no matter what.…

    • 518 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Decent Essays

    Why Is Augustus Important

    • 489 Words
    • 2 Pages

    During Augustus's reign he also remade a new forum as well as police and fire departments. Augustus 'led Rome's transformation from republic to empire during the tumultuous years following the assassination of his great-uncle…

    • 489 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The Fall of the Republic was caused not only by one individual’s actions or one event but a culmination of several actions from different individuals and events. Unfortunately, some influenced massively in the Roman society. There Large and quick expansions from Rome’s foundation as an underdeveloped city; creating enormous holes in the governing and political ability in the Senate. While the powerful individuals of Roman mob like the general were jockeyed for position. The Roman life was facing differences far more rapidly than the governing body could manage.…

    • 517 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    His role in the court has been mentioned before, once by Claudius himself, but it is once again Augustus who fully explains the reality of his actions: quare quemquam ex his, quos quasque occidisti, antequam de causa cognosceres, antequam audires, damnasti? (Seneca 10.19-21)? This revelation of Claudius’ ignorance fits nicely into Augustus’ argument against his deification. Augustus follows up the previous quote with hoc ubi fieri solet? in caelo non fit (Seneca 10.21)?…

    • 1284 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Great Essays

    Vavius Livy Analysis

    • 1667 Words
    • 7 Pages

    Throughout antiquity, monarchs attempted to legitimize their governance in ways that prescribed to societal ways of thinking, the historian Titus Livius, Livy, writes on a period in which this is quite apparent. Livy’s writings suggest that early Rome was a sort of meritocracy; the monarchs were generally selected by the people based on their piety and virtue, their ancestors’ piety or virtue, or their own actions and successes in war. The kings of Rome were not uniform in nature, some kings were Romans, others foreigners; some kings were great conquerors, others pious administrators. However, what the Roman kings did have in common was the justification for their rule stemming from merit, rather than royal lineages. To qualify that, merit…

    • 1667 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Great Essays
  • Great Essays

    Throughout history, there have been many great leaders with very different styles of commanding. Some of these methods, while unorthodox, benefited the land’s people, the land’s economy, and people’s spirituality. In Rome, there were two powerful leaders who approached the throne differently: Gaius Octavius, “Augustus” and Flavius Valerius Aurelius Constantinus Augustus, “Constantine”. Both of these men inspired changes for the Roman Empire, such as: political reforms, spiritual reforms, and social reforms. This paper will discuss which of the two men should have been deemed the true “Augusti”.…

    • 1034 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Great Essays
  • Superior Essays

    The Roman Republic was built on the traditional policy of compromise, devoted to ensure the welfare of the people. In time, the struggle for authority brought fundamental changes to the traditional sentiments of the Republic. As territory expansions brought great wealth into the country, power hungry senators and government officials harbored political ambitions and competed for power. Political treachery and self-interest within the senate and the assemblies gave way to economic turmoil and social unrest. The fight for control under the existing Republic ultimately demanded a conversion toward Empire, but before the transition could take place Rome would have to go through a series of civil war, mob violence and murder.…

    • 1796 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Superior Essays

    (SOURCE) After gaining the approval of the common man, Augustus turned his attention to his father’s political rivals. Augustus skillfully attacked the Senate for murdering Caesar, and blamed Antony for failing to protect Caesar. (SOURCE) Augustus’s powerful rhetoric made the Senate fear an uprising.…

    • 1606 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    This resulted in the Roman Republic no longer standing as a democratic…

    • 736 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays