CHAPTER XXI
THE LAST EMPRESSES OF THE WEST
The course of our inquiry has led us through five centuries of change. We have passed from the sober and virile integrity of the first Imperial pair, the golden age of Roman life and letters, to the successive depths of the Cæsars. We have then seen the decrepit and corrupt city refreshed with an inflow of sound provincial blood, the enervated patrician families replaced on the throne by vigorous soldiers, and a new period of sobriety and prosperity open under the Stoics, to sink again under the burden of vice and luxury. Diocletian restores its strength, and then a singular and momentous change comes over the face of the Empire. The white homes of the gods perish or decay, the gay processions no longer enliven the streets, the cross of Christ heads the legions and towers austerely above the public buildings and monuments. The ante-chambers of the Emperors are filled with Christian bishops, and the rulers of the world bend meekly before the ragged figures of monks and tremble at the threats of lowly priests.
We return to the Western world to find another and a greater change. Rome has fallen, the frontiers are obliterated, the provinces, even to Africa, are cowering under the armies of the barbarians. Poverty, misery, and violence are scattered over the Empire, as if the departing gods had sown its fields with salt or with dragons’ teeth as they retired to Olympus. Civilization, law, culture, art, seem to be doomed, and the end of the world is confidently expected. But amid the crumbling frame of the vast Empire a few shades of Emperors and Empresses linger for a generation, and we may glance briefly at their sobered features and adventurous experiences.
The chief figure of interest is Ælia Galla Placidia, the sister of Honorius, whom we found visiting Constantinople in 423. Her adventures began when the Goths invested Rome in 408. She is then mentioned as concurring with the Senate in the pitiful execution of her cousin, the widow of Stilicho. Placidia was then in her eighteenth year. Bearing a heavy ransom, the Gothic army went away to harass her useless and trembling brother at Ravenna, and Placidia thought fit to remain at Rome. It still contained wealth enough to capitulate to barbarians on fair terms. But the Goths returned in 410. Rome was awakened in the dead of night by the blare of their trumpets, and looked out to find palaces in flames, the streets filled with the terrible Goths, and the work of looting already begun. After six days of pillage they retreated northward, taking Placidia with them. We cannot follow her closely in that extraordinary march. She was treated as a princess, however, and two years later was sought in marriage by the new king of the Goths, Ataulph. Ataulph was a barbarian only in name; a large, handsome man, princely, intelligent, and amiable. He aspired to be a Roman Emperor. Honorius weakly resented the proposal, and demanded that he should prove the friendship he offered to Rome by returning Placidia. For two years she had wandered over Italy in the Gothic army.
It appears that Placidia was attracted to the graceful and courtly Goth, and they were married at Narbonne--the Goths having now returned to Gaul--in 414. When she reflected on the splendour of the wedding gifts, she may have thought that even an alliance with a Roman prince could not be more magnificent. Fifty beautiful youths, clothed in silk, brought to her one hundred dishes laden with the gold and jewels which the Goths had brought from Rome. But Ataulph was assassinated in the following year, and Placidia sank again to the position of captive. She had to walk twelve miles on foot, amid a crowd of captives, before the victorious barbarian who had slain her husband. Within another year her persecutor was slain, and his more humane successor restored her--or sold her--to the court at Ravenna.
The Roman commander Constantius, into whose hands she was committed, at once claimed her in marriage. Honorius had promised that he should marry her if, by whatever means, he recovered her from the Goths. Placidia shrank resentfully from his embraces, and found his coarse, large, surly person a poor exchange for her handsome Gothic husband. The wedding took place, however, in 417, and Placidia settled down to the prosy duties of a matron, giving birth, in succession, to the princess Honoria and the future Emperor Valentinian III. In 421 her husband compelled the weak-minded Honorius to clothe him with the purple. Placidia received the title of Augusta, and a better prospect seemed to open before her. But Constantius died within a few months, and it was not long before she fell into a violent quarrel with Honorius. The cause of the quarrel is, as usual, obscure. Some of the later writers suggest that Honorius became enamoured of his sister in her young widowhood. We know only that the palace at Ravenna was filled with bitter recriminations, its courts were stained with the blood of their followers, and Placidia fled to Constantinople with her children.
Honorius died a few months later (August 423), and Placidia, confirmed in her title of Augusta by Theodosius, was sent in the following year to claim the throne for Theodosius, at the head of a considerable force. A secretary had usurped the vacant throne during her absence. It was the spring of 425 before they set out from Thessalonica for Italy; Placidia was with the cavalry, which reached and took Aquileia with great speed. There, after a short time, she received the captive usurper. His hand was cut off in the public Circus, he was placed on an ass and conducted round the town, amid the jeers of the crowd and the actors of the Circus, and was finally beheaded. They then proceeded to Ravenna. Valentinian, a boy of six years, was created Emperor of the West, and Placidia settled down to a long period of government in his name.
As the legislation which followed, bearing the name of Valentinian but breathing the spirit of Placidia, was mainly of an ecclesiastical character, we will not linger over it. She fell ruthlessly upon Pagans, Jews, Pelagians, Manichæans, and every other class who were obnoxious to her clergy. As in the case of most of the later Empresses, her piety so impressed the writers of the time that her personality is almost entirely hidden from us. Apart from her decrees of religious coercion, we know her only as experiencing, not doing, things. Procopius, not a biased historian, severely complains that she reared her son in a luxurious softness that led inevitably to his later vices and his violent death; and it is frequently suspected that she had no eagerness to see him fitly educated in the duties of a prince. Cassiodorus pronounces that she conducted the affairs of the State with wavering and incompetent counsel, just at the time when Rome most urgently needed a firm and enlightened ruler. Tillemont, after praising her piety, admits sadly that she brought great evils upon her afflicted Empire.
Though Rome had been looted by the Goths at their leisure, and barbaric armies commanded every province, the cause of the Empire was not yet lost. A judicious policy might have utilized the mutual hatreds of the various tribes, and have put the able commanders, who were still in the service of Rome, at the head of formidable armies. But the weakness and obtuseness of Placidia led, on the contrary, to the loss of her finest general, her last free province, and a large proportion of her troops. Listening injudiciously to the malignant persuasions of one general, Ætius, she commanded the other, Count Boniface, to relinquish his post in Africa, under the impression that he meditated treachery. Ætius at the same time warned Boniface that the recall was due to suspicion, and the gallant officer was driven into rebellion. He invited the Vandals to Africa, and soon twenty thousand of the tall, fair-haired northerners, with a vast crowd of dependents and followers, spread over the province. Placidia discovered too late the deceit of Ætius. She was induced to send a friendly ambassador to Boniface, and the fraud was at once detected. But the Vandals could not be dislodged. Boniface was slain (432) in his struggle with them, Ætius was driven to the camp of the Huns, and Africa, the granary of Rome, was irretrievably lost.
The next blow that threatened the distracted Empire was an invasion of the Huns. Placidia cannot be held responsible for the subsequent calamities, for Ætius, strong in his alliance with the Huns, had forced his way back into power, and was the real governor of the Empire. But the formidable task he undertook was made more difficult by a romantic and unhappy occurrence within Placidia’s domestic circle. We have already spoken of her daughter Honoria, who came in disgrace to Constantinople in 434. The great distinction of the Constantinopolitan court, the possession of three royal virgins, seems to have excited the pious jealousy of Placidia, and she apparently designed that her court should not lack its Vestal Virgin. We are not told that any vow was imposed on the young Honoria, but she was reared with the discipline of a conventual novice, and given to understand that the exalted state of virginity was assigned to her. In 433 the title of Augusta was bestowed on her, in some compensation of her sacrifice. But the daughter of Constantius had thicker blood in her veins than the daughters of Arcadius, and the claustral regime--the restriction of attendance to eunuchs and women--does not seem to have been rigorously enforced at Ravenna. In 434 the seventeen-year-old princess was discovered to be in a painful condition, and was dispatched to Constantinople, and incarcerated in a nunnery by the indignant Pulcheria.
But the young girl had a spirit beyond her years. She had heard of the formidable nation of the Huns, which awaited, in the neighbourhood of the Danube and the Volga, its turn to fill the Imperial stage; she had heard that the young and powerful Attila had recently acceded to the throne of that nation. In some way she secured a messenger who took from her a letter and a ring to Attila, offering him her heart and her dowry if he would release her. The girlish freak was destined to have terrible consequences for the Empire. The lady herself we may dismiss in a word. She seems to have been kept in close confinement in the East until about 450, sending fruitless messages, from time to time, to her romantic lover. Attila had sufficient occupation during those fifteen years, and was content to put her name on the lengthy list of his wives. When, in 450, he formally demanded her person, he was assured that she was married. It is not impossible that she was released on condition that she accepted a husband chosen for her. But her end is obscure, and one is disposed to doubt if she would ever have resumed her liberty without joining the victorious Hun.
Placidia died in the year 450, leaving the astute Ætius to avert the oncoming disaster by an alliance with the Ostrogoths against the Huns. For a quarter of a century she had had supreme power over the Western Empire. It is, perhaps, only an indication of mediocrity on her part that she could not avert the blows that fell upon it during that period, but it was a calamity for Rome. Her memory survived, in a singular way, for more than a thousand years. The pagan habit of cremating the bodies of Emperors and Empresses had been replaced by the Egyptian process of embalming, and Placidia had built a chapel at Ravenna for the reception of her body. There it sat, in a chair of cedar-wood, until the year 1577, when some children, thrusting a lighted taper into the tomb to see it better, set it aflame and reduced it to ashes.
Meantime, another Empress of the West had appeared. In 437 Valentinian had married Licinia Eudoxia, the fourteen-year-old daughter of Eudocia, at Constantinople, and brought her to Italy. He had parted with a large slice of his Empire to Pulcheria and Theodosius for the honour, and is said to have held it lightly. The sequel will dispose us to believe his irregularities. A youth of eighteen at the time, frivolous, luxurious, and light-headed, he was content to enjoy the palace, and leave his mother, and then Ætius, to discharge his duties. Eudoxia could but idly follow the momentous movements of the nations, and appreciate the defeat of the Huns in the terrible battle of Chalons in 451; or shudder when, in the following year, Attila marched to the gates of Rome, demanding half the Empire as the dowry of his distant bride, Honoria; or when, in 453, the profligate Valentinian plunged his sword in the breast of his great minister Ætius. A grave personal tragedy was upon her.
The court resided generally at Rome, where Valentinian enjoyed the larger and faster amusements of a metropolis. Here, in the year 455, he was stabbed by his soldiers, and a romantic story is told in connexion with his death. The story is rejected by a recent historical writer, Mr. Hodgkin (“Italy and her Invaders”), but Professor Bury has shown that it is probably true in substance. The full story, to which fictitious details may have been added before it reached Procopius, is that Valentinian, gambling heavily with the distinguished Senator Petronius Maximus, obtained his ring as a security for the money he had won. Maximus had a beautiful wife whom the Emperor desired, and he sent the ring to her with a summons to the palace. The unsuspecting lady was conducted to Valentinian’s apartments, and outraged by him. For this crime, and in virtue of the general discontent, Maximus had him slain and occupied his throne.
Maximus was a wealthy Roman, of illustrious family, and peaceful and luxurious ways, so that we have little reason to doubt that an outrage on his wife inspired him with the thought of assassination. The further course of events adds authority to the narrative. His wife died very closely after the death of Valentinian, and he invited or compelled Eudoxia to marry him. In the obscurity and uncertainty of the records we are unable to understand the consent of Eudoxia, even under pressure. Some of the later Greeks affirm that he violated her. It is certain, at least, that she married him within a month or two of her husband’s tragic death, and almost immediately afterwards sought to destroy him. Our authorities, late and uncertain as they are, do not lack plausibility when they affirm that he one day confessed that, out of love for her, he had directed the assassination of her husband. Rome had returned to evil days, and tragedy was brooding over its very ruins.
In a fit of repulsion Eudoxia secretly invited the Vandals to cross the Mediterranean and avenge her. Historians too lightly admit, in extenuation of her criminal act, that she had no hope of help from the East. The aged and upright Marcian was, it is true, intent upon the internal prosperity of his Empire, but it is extremely doubtful, as the sequel will show, whether the deposition of Maximus would have offered much difficulty, and Eudoxia was the niece of Pulcheria. Her vindictive act hastened the end of the Empire. Genseric speedily landed his fierce troops on Italian soil, and the Romans at once slew the sullen or remorseful Maximus and cast his mangled body in the Tiber. The further adventures of Eudoxia, interesting as they must have been, are compressed in a few lines. After fourteen days’ pillage, the Vandals retreated once more from the stricken city of Octavian, laden with gold, silver, women, and all kinds of valuables. Genseric compelled Eudoxia and her two young daughters to accompany him. They were detained at Carthage for seven years. The Eastern court repeatedly asked for their release, but it was refused until, in 462, the elder daughter, Eudocia, was married to Genseric’s son. Eudoxia and the second daughter, Placidia, were then sent to Constantinople. Years afterwards--in one of the legends--we catch a last glimpse of Eudoxia, the last prominent Empress of the West. She is standing before the column of Simeon Stylites, asking him to come and live somewhere on her ample estate. Eudocia lived for sixteen years at Carthage, then escaped to the East, and ended her life in Palestine. Placidia we shall meet again for a moment.
We turn back to the shrinking Empire of the West, to dismiss the last four Imperial shadows that flit about its ruins. The vacant throne was occupied by the commander of the Roman forces in Gaul, Avitus. He had married, since we know that Sidonius Apollinaris was married to his daughter Papianilla, but his wife was dead, and we need only say that, after he had enjoyed the Imperial banquets for a few months, he was degraded to the rank of a bishopric by the commander of the barbaric troops, with the consent of the disgusted Romans, and he died soon afterwards. He was followed by a worthy and able officer, whose rule might have illumined a more propitious age; but we find no Empress in association with him, and must pass over the four years of his earnest effort to redeem the Empire. After his death Libius Severus had a nominal and obscure reign of four years (461–5), and again we find no Empress in the scanty records.
The throne remained vacant for nearly two years, during which the Vandals harassed the miserable remnant of the great Empire. At length the chief commander in Italy, Ricimer, sought the aid of the Eastern Empire, and the alliance was sealed by the Eastern court sending one of its wealthiest and, by birth, most illustrious nobles, Anthemius, to occupy the throne. His Empress was Euphemia, daughter of the Emperor Marcian by his first wife. But her name, and the names of her father and her children, are all that we find recorded concerning her, and we need not dwell on the failures and quarrels, or the last faint flicker of Roman paganism, which characterized his inauspicious reign. Within four years he quarrelled with Ricimer, and his life was trodden out on the streets of Rome.
For a few months Placidia, the daughter of Eudoxia, then occupies the throne. At Constantinople, to which she went with her mother from her Vandal captivity, she married the wealthy noble Olybrius. He had fled from Rome when it was looted by the Vandals, and had little mind to exchange the safe luxury of Constantinople for its uneasy throne when Ricimer offered it to him. It is said that Placidia impelled him. It was a fatal adventure. They entered Rome in the train of Ricimer’s troops, but Olybrius succumbed to that atmosphere of death in a few months, and we have not time to discern the features of Eudoxia’s daughter before she sinks into the large category of obscure Imperial widows. His successor, Glycerius, a puppet of the chief commander, seems to have had no wife. A competitor appeared immediately, and he exchanged the uncertain sceptre of the Western Empire for the solid crozier of a bishop.
One faint and shadowy Empress crosses the scene before the curtain falls. Once more the Eastern court had provided Italy--which was now the Western Roman Empire--with a ruler. Julius Nepos set up his court at Ravenna, and had for Empress a niece of Verina, the Empress of the East. But the barbarian leaders of the barbarian army--the only army that remained in the service of Rome--resented the Eastern intruder, and marched on Ravenna. Nepos fled ignominiously; and one reads with interest, though not without reserve, that he was put to death by his predecessor, Bishop Glycerius. The fate of his wife is unknown, and the last Empress of the Western provinces entirely escapes our search.
The tattered purple was offered to the commander Orestes. He refused it, and allowed them to place it on the shoulders of his young son (476). The name of this pretty and innocuous boy united, as if in mockery, the names of Romulus and Augustus. To later times his pathetic figure is known as Augustulus. His father was slain by the troops immediately afterwards, because he refused to distribute one-third of the soil of Italy between them. The Empire was now a mere phrase; Rome a plaything of the barbarians whom it had cowed for five or six hundred years. Odoacer, the latest leader of the troops, bade the child put off his purple mantle and begone, and some time afterwards--so low had Rome fallen that the year of this impressive consummation cannot accurately be determined--forced the Senate to abolish the Imperial succession in the West. Italy became the kingdom of a barbarian. Britain, Gaul, Germany, and Spain were turned into the battle-grounds of those fierce tribes who, after the violence and darkness of the Middle Ages, would in their turn scatter the seed of civilization over the earth. The gallery of Western Empresses was closed by the irrevocable hand of fate, and the long, quaint gallery of the Byzantine Empresses was thrown open.
FOOTNOTES
[1] The title “Empress” was unknown to the Romans. “Imperator” was a name of military command. The special use of it in connexion with Octavian and his successors was that it was given for life. The more novel title “Augustus” was extended to Livia, who later became “Augusta.”
[2] Pliny places her birth in the year 54 B.C., but Dio says 57 B.C., and this date is confirmed by Tacitus.
[3] Improperly, because it is not a distinctive name, but common to the emperors. Livia and Octavia received the title of “Augusta” a few years later, yet even Livia is rarely known by it.
[4] “Non nisi plena nave tollo vectorem.”
[5] Writers often convey the impression that Julia indulged even her most vicious inclinations in the Rostra, but Dio merely speaks of “revelling” and “carousing”: ὥστε καὶ ἐν τῇ ἀγορᾷ καὶ ἐπ’ αὐτοῦ γε τοῦ βήματος κωμάζειν νύκτως καὶ συμπίνειν. The emptying of a cup of Falernian wine in the Rostra, on some occasion of especial devilry or intoxication, may be all that is meant.
[6] Vol. V, p. 353.
[7] “Annals,” v. 3.
[8] An apology should be made for retaining the nickname of the third Emperor, but it seems to be ineradicably fixed in history.
[9] Tacitus, who is followed by Merivale and other historians, makes Claudius also retire to Sinuessa. This is probably an error, as the Emperor fell ill and died at Rome.
[10] “The Life and Principate of the Emperor Nero,” 1903.
[11] καὶ οὕτω γε ἑαυτὴν διὰ πάσης τῆς ἀρχῆς διήγαγεν ὥστε μηδεμίαν ἐπηγορίαν σχεῖν: lxviii, 5.
[12] Duruy quotes Aurelius Victor (“Epitome,” xiv) as saying: “It is impossible to say how much Plotina enhanced the glory of Trajan.” The passage is really found in c. xxxix of the “Epitome.”
[13] Gregorovius points out that the incident may have occurred at Rome, and that we have no positive proof that Sabina accompanied him on this journey. But the narrative of Spartianus seems to imply that she was in Britain, and we shall see that she accompanied him on his longer journey to the East. Duruy and other writers hold that the officers were dismissed for lack, not excess, of respect for Sabina, but the word “familiarius,” coupled with a threat of divorce, seems to demand the interpretation I have put on it.
[14] See Dr. Bassani’s little work, “Commodo e Marcia.”
[15] The references on coins and inscriptions to Julia Domna have been industriously collected by Mary Gilmore Wilkins, _American Journal of Archæology_, 2nd series, vol. vi. They do not add materially to our knowledge of her, but are so abundant that they show her to have been an Empress of exceptional prominence and influence. She became Augusta in the first year.
[16] I conclude that they had already come to Rome because Elagabalus, the son of Soæmias, was given serious consideration in his later claim that he was the son of Bassianus. He was born in 204, and, unless his mother had been in the palace before that date, the claim could not have been made.
[17] It is difficult to imagine Elagabalus beginning his appalling career at such an age, and Gibbon, calculating from the age given to Alexander Severus in the “Historia Augusta” at the time of his death, changes the age to seventeen. But the “Historia Augusta” is very commonly wrong in the ages it ascribes to Emperors at their death. Professor Bury admits that Gibbon is probably wrong, and we may follow Herodian.
[18] Ammianus Marcellinus tells us the one fact, Zosimus the other. Neither mentions her name, but we learn it from coins.
[19] Some writers have conjectured, from the fact that the legend “In Pace” occurs on the coins of Salonina after her death, that she became a Christian. The phrase is not found otherwise except on Christian monuments. Duruy does not admit the inference, and points out that she built a temple to the goddess of the seasons.
[20] Her name is variously given as Vitruvia, Victoria, or Victorina. Since it appears as Vitruvia where the “Augustan History” copies from the Acts of the Senate, and no Roman would corrupt Victoria into Vitruvia, I take it that it was originally Vitruvia, and was Latinized, or changed by her when she became Empress, into Victoria.
[21] It has been suggested that the fifteen months of Lactantius may date from their expulsion from the court of Maximin. This is hardly possible. Galerius died in May, 311, and Valeria was still in mourning for him, and pleaded his recent death, when Maximin sought to wed her. Maximin died in April, 313, so that the deaths of Prisca and Valeria cannot have been earlier than the summer of that year.
[22] The Greek original of the “Chronicle” is lost, and Jerome informs us that he has added many details in the Latin version which we now have.
[23] One of the most authoritative works on Roman institutions, Marquardt and Mommsen’s “Handbuch,” says this emphatically: “Ehen, bei welchen der eine Theil der Römischen Bürgerschaft, der Andere den Latinern jüngeren Rechtes oder den Peregrinen angehörte, sind nach Römischen Recht nicht gültig” (vii. 29). Göteke, in a special study of the subject (“Constantinum honeste et ex legitimo matrimonio natum”), says that special edicts made it impossible for an officer to marry in the province in which he served. He believes that the effect of these would not be permanent, but he fails to consider Helena’s disability as a _peregrina_.
[24] The question may be raised whether St. Augustine had not the case of Constantine in mind when, in his moral treatise “De Bono Conjugali,” he refuses to condemn a man who, having a barren wife, takes a concubine in addition, to provide a family. It is clear, at least, that early Christian opinion was not fixed. Gibbon again improves upon Christian writers by holding that Minervina was an earlier wife, not a concubine, of Constantine; but, as Professor Bury points out, the document on which he relies does not apply to that Emperor.
[25] It is from the confusion of dates that I ascribe the words confidently to Jerome, and not Eusebius The words “ninth year” can only refer to the ninth year of the Cæsarate of Crispus, or 326. The interval of three years has no significance in view of the confusion of dates.
[26] Gibbon, Professor Bury, and Mr. Firth make Zosimus coincide with Zonaras. The reader will see from my literal translation of his words that he differs very materially. He does not suggest that Fausta accused Crispus, or that she was really guilty of any misconduct; but he pointedly accuses Helena.
[27] Miss Gardner observes, in her life of Julian, that we do not know if Helena was older than Julian, But, while Julian is known to have been born in 331 or 332, since he was in his sixth year at the time of the massacre of 337, and died at thirty-two, Helena’s mother had been murdered in 326.
[28] Philostorgius says that, as she lay ill with her malady, Constantius recalled Bishop Theophilus from exile, and he cured her. But Zonaras makes her die of this very malady, scouting the Arian miracle.
[29] The Alexandrian Chronicle repeatedly calls her Marina, and we have no coins to determine the full and accurate name. Cohen, at least, gives no coins, though Tillemont refers to them.
[30] Lib. xxviii. 1: He says that Gratian put a certain man to death “on the advice of his mother.” Zonaras says that Severa still lived at the time of the second marriage.
[31] Gratian, the youthful son of Severa, had been clothed with the purple by Valentinian, “at the instigation of his wife and father-in-law,” says the epitomist of Aurelius Victor, in the autumn of 367. On the other hand, Justina’s brother was killed, in the service of Valentinian, in 369, The second marriage falls most naturally in 368.
[32] Yet St. Augustine, who was in Rome the year after the death of Gratian, says in his “Confessions” (viii. 2) that “nearly the whole nobility of Rome” still clung to the old religion.
[33] Hence Tillemont and others, who give these dates, must be wrong in placing the quarrel with Eutropius in 399. Philostorgius expressly says that she had two daughters in her arms when she appealed to Arcadius.
[34] See Professor Puech’s “Saint Jean Chrysostome,” 1891.
[35] The curious reader will find Chrysostom’s surprising strictures of the clergy more than confirmed in the letters of Jerome, and his fierce denunciation of the monks borne out in Augustine’s treatise on them.
[36] Gibbon makes her survive Chrysostom, and die in 408. But Tillemont has pointed out that the “Life of Chrysostom” by George of Alexandria, on which he seems to have relied, forges letters, and is quite unreliable. The earlier writers put the death of Eudoxia in 404.
INDEX
Ablabius, 283
Acerronia Pollia, 102
Acholius, 318
Acte, 95, 105, 121
Actium, 19
Adultery at Rome, 26, 200
Ælia Capitolina, 160
-- Pætina, 62, 80
Æmilianus, L. A. L., 130, 131
Ætius, 344, 345, 346
Afer, 253
Agrippa, M. V., 25, 26, 27
-- son of Julia, 33, 35–6
Agrippina, the elder, 33, 37, 41, 42, 46
-- the younger, 54, 65, 67, 80, 81, 82–104
-- memoirs of, 14, 44, 64, 73, 80
Ahenobarbus, C. D., 81
Albinus, 196, 197, 198
Alexander Severus, 212, 219–21, 222–31
Alexandra, St., 256
Alexandria, 159, 207
Alexandrian Chronicle, the, 307, 311
Alexianus. _See_ Alexander
Ambrose, St., 266, 314, 315, 318, 319
Anastasia, 288
Anicetus, 100, 102, 103, 111
Annius Verus, 164
“Anonymus Valesii,” 267
Antinous, 157, 159
Antioch, 27, 145, 171
Antonia, 81
Antoninus Pius, 162, 163, 165–8, 169
Apollodorus, 153
Appian, 202
Appius Silanus, 68
Appuleia Varilia, 42
Arcadia, 328
Arcadius, 320, 321, 323, 325, 326–32
Argentocoxus, 203
Argobastes, 321
Arintheus, 325
Arsenius, 320
Asiaticus, Valerius, 71–2
Astrology at Rome, 85
Ataulph, 341, 342
Athanasius, 295, 296
Athenais, 333, 334
Athens, 158
Attalus, 239
Attianus, 142, 147, 149, 153
Attila, 345, 346
Auctions of Caligula, the, 54, 57
Augustans, the, 119, 120
Augustine, St., 274, 314
Augustulus, 350
Augustus, title of, 19
Aurelian, 241, 245–51
Avitus, 348
Bacchanalia, the, 74
Baiæ, 53, 101
Balbinus, 235, 236
_Barbatoria_, 14
Baring-Gould, Mr., 3, 90, 91, 100, 103, 118
Baronius, 256, 311
Basil, St., 310
Bassani, 186
Bassianus, the elder, 195
-- the younger. _See_ Caracalla
Bassianus, Senator, 273
-- V. A. _See_ Elagabalus
Bassus, Pomponius, 217
Bauto, 326
Berenice, 130
Boissier, M., 136
Boniface, Count, 344
Britannicus, 65, 76, 83, 86, 92, 96
Bruttius Præsens, 182
Burrus, 85, 92, 95, 103, 107, 108
Bury, Prof., 211, 273, 277, 280, 346
Cænis, 128–9
Cæsar, Julius, 6, 10
Cæsonia, Milonia, 55, 56, 59, 130
Caius Cæsar = Caligula
Caius, son of Julia, 32–3
Caledonians, the, 203
Caligula, 37, 49–59
Callistus, 80
Calpurnia, 75, 79, 84
Calpurnius Piso, 52
Candidian, 263
Capitolinus, Julius, 166, 172, 173
Capreæ, 34, 48
Caracalla, 196, 199, 202, 203, 204–9
Caractacus, 84
Carinus, 252–4
Carnuntum, 261
Carus, 251
Cassianus Postumus, 242
Cassiodorus, 267
Cassius, Avidius, 175, 177
Castricia, 330
Ceionia, 170
Celsa, Nonia, 210, 213
Celsus, 153
Centumcellæ, 182
Charito, 306
Christians, persecution of the, 257–9
Chrysaphius, 336, 337
Chrysostom, John, 327, 328, 329, 330–2
Cinna, 20
Circus, the, 7
-- factions of the, 56, 109, 124
Claudii, the, 9
Claudius, 60, 61, 62, 64–76, 79–82, 141
-- II, 244
Cleander, 187
Cleopatra, 8, 10, 13, 18, 19
-- servant of Claudius, 73, 79
Clodia, 12
Cohen, 238, 253, 307
Cologne, 84, 138
Commodus, L. C., 157, 162
-- L. V., 169, 170, 172, 175, 180
-- son of Marcus, 172, 181, 182–9
Constans, 286, 289
Constantia, 273, 275, 276, 283
-- wife of Gratian, 313
Constantina, F. J., 288, 289, 290–3
Constantine, 260, 271–85
-- the younger, 286, 287
Constantinople, founding of, 283, 284
Constantius, 254, 260, 266–71
-- the younger, 286, 287, 289, 290, 292–304
-- General, 342
_Contubernium_, 129
Corbulo, Domitius, 130
Cornificia, 205
Corruption at Rome, 21, 34, 136–7
Crepereius Gallus, 102
Crinitus, Ulpius, 250
Crispilla, Quintia, 236
Crispina, 183, 184
Crispus, 274, 278–82
-- Passienus, 67
_Curia mulierum_, 6, 202
Daza, 259
“Deaths of the Persecutors,” 256, 258
Decius, 237
Delmatius, 286, 287
Dexippus, 225
Diadumenianus, 210
Didia Clara, 192, 193
Dill, Dr. S., 136
Dio, 9, 15, 16, 26, 29, 43, 45, 51, 64, 73, 84, 95, 99, 114, 129, 131, 133, 142, 146, 169, 176, 188, 200, 202, 207, 228
Diocletian, 253–60, 261, 262
Divination at Rome, 85
Dominica, Albia, 307, 308, 310
Domitia Lepida, 68, 89
-- Longina, 130, 131–5
Domitian, 130–4
Domitian, Prefect, 292
Domitilla, Flavia, 128, 130
Domna, Julia, 194, 195, 196–209
Domus Vectiliana, 190
Drepanum, 266
Drusilla, daughter of Agrippina, 51
-- daughter of Cæsonia, 55, 59
Drusus Nero, 15
-- son of Agrippina, 47
-- son of Livia, 24, 31, 37, 41, 61
Duruy, 148, 156, 161, 172, 239
Eboracum, 155, 203
Eclectus, 188, 193
Elagabal, 195, 215
Elagabalus, 200, 211–21
Eleuthera, St., 256
Emesa, 195, 209, 212
Empress, the title, 9
Ennia, 50–1
Ephesus, 158
Epicureanism, 164
Etruscilla, Herennia, 237
Eucer, 110
Eudocia, 334–8
Eudoxia, 325, 326, 327–31
-- Licinia, 335, 346, 347
Euphemia, 348
Eusebia, Aurelia, 294, 296–301, 303
Eusebius, Bishop, 249, 257, 262, 267, 275, 279, 287, 296
-- eunuch, 295
Eutropia, Galeria Valeria, 254, 270, 283
Eutropius, 325, 326, 327, 328
-- historian, 200, 206, 257, 268, 272, 275, 279
Fabia, 180, 181
Fadilla, 187
-- Julia, 158
-- Junia, 230
Falco, 190
Fausta, 271, 272, 277, 278–82
Faustina, the elder, 163, 164–8
-- the younger, 169, 170–8
-- Maxima, 304, 308
-- Rupilia, 164
Faustinopolis, 177
Felix, 112
Firth, Mr., 267, 277, 280
Flaccilla, Ælia, 317, 318
Flaminian Circus, 30
Flavian, Archbishop, 336, 337
Forum, the, 7, 19
-- of Trajan, the, 143
Freedmen at Rome, 62, 63, 68
Fronto, 166, 172
Fucine Lake, 87
Fulvia, 10, 12, 13
Fundana, Galeria, 123, 124, 125, 126–8
Furnilla, Marcia, 129, 130
Gainas, 329
Galba, Sulpicius, 67, 120, 123
Galerius, 254, 256, 258, 260, 261
Galla, 317, 318, 319, 320, 321
Gallienus, 238, 239, 242, 244
Gallus, 237, 290–4
Gannys, 212
Gardner, A., 299
Genseric, 347
Germanicus, 37–8
Geta, 196, 201, 202, 204, 205
Gibbon, 2, 45, 131, 136, 141, 169, 211, 224, 225, 228, 239, 245, 247, 248, 267, 274, 278, 301, 331, 337
Glycerius, 349
Golden House of Nero, 115, 129
Gordianus, 234
-- the younger, 236
Görres, Dr., 279
Göteke, 270
Gratian, 307, 312, 313, 314
Greece, Nero in, 119
Gregorovius, 151, 156, 161
Güldenpenning, 317
Hadrian, 139, 141, 142, 145, 147, 149–63, 169
Hannibalian, 286, 287, 288
Helena, 265, 266–70, 277, 278, 282–3
-- wife of Julian, 297, 298, 299–304
Henderson, Mr., 90, 109
Herennianus, 241
Herod, 27
-- Agrippa, 49, 59
Herodes, 241
Herodian, 200, 201, 206, 225
“Historia Augusta,” the, 45, 142, 146, 150, 152, 166, 172, 175, 188, 205, 206, 211, 217, 249, 257
Hodgkin, Mr., 346
Honoria, 335, 342, 344, 345
Honorius, 317, 321, 323, 324, 341, 342
Hortensius, 19
Hostilianus, 237
Huns, the, 344
Ifland, Dr., 317
Imperator, the title, 9
Jerome, St., 267, 279
Jerusalem, 159, 160
Josephus, 112, 130, 132
Jovian, 306, 307
Julia, daughter of Octavian, 23–30
-- the younger, 33–4
-- daughter of Drusus, 66–7
-- daughter of Titus, 131
-- Livilla, 65
Julian, the Emperor, 140, 166, 172, 227, 282, 284, 288, 290, 296–305
Julianus, Didius, 192, 193
Julius, son of Julia, 32–3
Junia Claudilla, 49
-- Silana, 98
Junius Silanus, 49, 50
Justina, Aviana, 311, 312–17, 318, 319
Juvenal, 137
Kornemann, Professor, 45
Lactantius, 258, 261, 272
Læta, 313
Lætus, 188, 190, 193
Lake Agrippa, 114
Lampridius, 200, 203, 224, 225
Leontius, 296
Lepida, Domitia, 68, 89
-- wife of Galba, 123
Lepidus, 54
-- the Triumvir, 6, 8, 17
Libanius, 296
Liberius, 296
Licinius, 262, 263, 273–5
-- the younger, 276, 278
Livia, 6, 8, 9, 10, 15–17, 19–21, 24–44
-- Medullina Camilla, 61
-- Orestilla, 52
Liviada, 20
Livilla, 41, 47, 54
Livius Drusus Claudianus, 9
Locusta, 90, 96
Lollia Paulina, 52, 55, 80, 83–4
Lollius, 32
Londinium, 155
Lucilla, 175, 179, 183, 184
Lucius Domitius = Nero
Lucullan Gardens, the, 71, 72, 75
Lugdunum, 54
Lutetia, 154
Luxury at Rome, 16, 34, 54
Lycisca, 69
Macellum, 290
Macrinus, Opilius, 208, 209–12
-- Sallustius, 225
Macro, 50–1
Macrobius, 27
Mæcenas, 12, 18
Mæonius, 241, 242
Mæsa, Julia, 200, 202, 211–19
Magnentius, 289, 290, 292
Malala, John, 337
Mamæa, Julia, 211, 219, 222–31
Marcella, 24, 25, 26
Marcellinus, Ammianus, 234, 284, 291, 294, 299, 300, 311
-- Chronicle of, 319, 337
Marcellus, 24, 25
Marcia, 185–9, 193
Marcian, 339, 347
Marciana, 139, 140, 144
-- Paccia, 196
Marcus Aurelius, 162, 164, 167, 169–78
Mardonius, 296
Maria, 324
Marina, 307
-- daughter of Eudoxia, 331
Mariniana, 238
Marius, 243
-- Maximus, 173, 175, 176
Mark Antony, 6, 8, 10, 12, 13, 18, 19
Marriage, Roman, 268–9
Marsa, 330
Matidia, the elder, 139, 144, 148
-- the younger, 139
Maxentius, 261, 273
Maximian, 254, 261, 271–2
Maximin, 261, 262, 263
Maximinus, 229, 230, 232–5
Maximus, 314, 315, 316, 318
-- Petronius, 346–7
-- Pupienus, 235, 236
Memnia, 226
Mercurius, 295
Merivale, 2, 32, 37, 41, 43, 73, 90, 141, 147, 172
Messalina, Statilia, 118, 119, 121, 123
-- Valeria, 60, 61, 62, 63–78, 141
Metaphrastes, 320
Milvian Bridge, 29
Minervina, 274
Mnester, 70, 76
Montius, 292
Naissos, 266
Narcissus, 63, 68, 75, 76, 79, 87, 92
Negri, Gaetano, 298
Nepos, Julius, 349
Nepotian, 290
Nero, son of Agrippina the elder, 47
-- the Emperor, 80, 81, 85, 86, 89, 93, 95, 96–121
Nerva, M. C., 135
Nicæa, Council of, 277
Nicomedia, palace of, 255
Niger, 196, 197
Nigrinus, 153
Nîmes, mausoleum at, 148
Numerianus, 252, 253
Octavia, 13, 18, 24, 26, 33
-- daughter of Messalina, 65, 76, 80, 86, 95, 96, 97, 99, 105, 108–11
Octavian, 6, 7, 8, 9, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17–21, 24–36
Odenathus, 240–2
Odoacer, 350
Olybrius, 349
Oppian Law, the, 5
Orbiana, Sallustia Barbia, 225
Orestes, 349
Orosius, 267, 279
Orphanages, 144, 168, 177
Ostia, 74
Otho, Salvius, 101, 106, 108, 110, 123
Paganism, insincerity of, 216
Pagans, origin of name, 314
Pagi, 256
Palatine Hill, the, 7, 10, 19
Palladium, the, 216
Pallas, 63, 80, 83, 85, 96
Palma, 153
Palmyra, 240, 241, 246
Pandateria, 30, 47, 111
Papianilla, 348
Paris in the fourth century, 302
Paris, the actor, 98, 132
Paula, Julia Cornelia, 216
Paulina, 234
Paulinus, 333, 334, 336
Paulus, 295
Perennis, 185
Pertinax, 189–91
Petronia, 124
Petronius, 307
Philanthropy in the Roman world, 144, 168, 177
Philip, the Emperor, 236, 237
Philostorgius, 280, 287, 293
Philostratus, 202
Pipara, 239
Piso, C. C., 38, 39
Pissamena, 313
Placidia, Ælia Galla, 324, 334, 341, 342–5
-- the younger, 349
Planasia, 35
Plancina, 38, 39
Plautia Urgulanilla, 61
Plautianus, 199–201
Plautilla, 199, 201
Pliny, 9, 42, 139
Plotina, 138–48
Polemo, 166, 167
Pollio, Trebellius, 240, 247
Polybius, 63
Pompeianus, Claudius, 181, 184, 205
Pompeius Planta, 138
Pompey, 8
Poppæa, 99, 107, 108, 110–17
-- Sabina, 72, 107
Poppæus Sabinus, 107
Porphyry of Gaza, 329
Prætorian Guards, the, 50, 58, 61, 119, 227
Prisca, 256, 257, 259, 260, 261–4
Probus, 251
Procopius, 308–9
Puech, Professor, 329, 332
Puellæ Faustinianæ, 168, 177
Pulcheria, 317, 328, 332–9
Puteoli, 53
Pyrallis, 55
Pythagoras, 114
Quadratus, 184, 185
Quietus, Lusius, 152, 153
Quintilius, 245
Religion at Rome, 216
Renan, 136, 172
Ricimer, 348, 349
Rome, burning of, 114
Romula, 256, 258
Rostra, the, 29
Rubellius Plautus, 98
Rufinus, 325, 326, 327
Rufus Crispinus, 108
Sabina, 139, 144, 148, 149–61, 202
Sabinus, 131
Sacred Way, the, 8
Sallustius, 307
Salona, 260
Salonina, Cornelia, 239, 244
Saloninus, 242
Sapor, 240, 247
Saturninus, 337
Scantilla, Manlia, 192, 193
Schultz, O., 45
Scotland, 203
Scribonia, 12, 13, 14, 22
Seeck, Dr., 279
Sejanus, 41, 42, 47
Selinus, 146
Senaculum, 214
Senate, the Roman, 43, 93, 103, 111, 119, 153
Seneca, 31, 66, 77, 85, 93, 95, 96, 97, 107, 108, 110, 115
Serena, 324
-- St., 256
Servianus, Ursus, 149, 162
Serviez, Roergas de, 3, 4, 32, 33, 67, 87, 90, 112, 146, 153, 166, 207
Servilia, 11
Severa, Julia Aquilia, 216
-- Marcia Otacilia, 237
-- Valeria, 307, 311, 312
Severian, 263
-- Bishop, 330
Severina, Ulpia, 250
Severus, 261
-- deacon, 337
-- Livius, 348
-- Septimus, 193, 194–204
Sextilia, 124, 125, 126, 127
Sextus Pompeius, 10, 12, 17
Sidonius Apollinaris, 280, 348
Silanus, Junius, 95
-- Lucius, 95
Silius, Caius, 72, 73, 74, 76
Silvagni, V., 3
Simeon Stylites, 338, 348
Sinuessa, 90
Smyrna, 158
Soæmias, Julia, 200, 203, 211, 212, 213, 214–21
Socrates, the historian, 312
Sosibius, 71, 72
Sozomen, 276
Spartianus, 146, 155, 157, 160
Sporus, 118, 121
Stahr, A., 3
Stilicho, 324, 325
Stoicism, 66, 135, 144, 162, 164, 168
Subura, 6, 9, 21, 29
Suetonius, 31, 40, 42, 45, 48, 53, 55, 64, 88, 90, 134, 155
Suidas, 296
Suillius, 71
Sulpicianus, 192
Sura, 142, 150
Syria and Rome, 222
Tacitus, 9, 14, 31, 41, 43, 44, 45, 46, 64, 72, 79, 80, 83, 90, 95, 99, 111, 125
-- the Emperor, 251
Tarvey, Mr., 32
Tertulla, Arricidia, 129
Tertullus, 171
Tetricus, 243, 249
Theatre, the Roman, 58, 109
Thebes, 159, 160
Theoclea, 230
Theodora, Flavia Maximiana, 270, 283
Theodoret, 310, 316
Theodosius, 313, 314, 316, 317–21
-- II, 328, 332–8
Theophanes, 336, 337
Theophilus, 304, 330
Thermantia, A. M., 324
Thessalonica, massacre of, 319
Thirty Tyrants, the, 239
Tiberius Claudius Germanicus, 65
-- -- Nero, 10, 11, 14, 15, 40
-- the Emperor, 10, 24, 25, 28, 31, 32, 34, 35, 36–42, 46–9
Tigellinus, 110, 116
Tillemont, 307, 312, 324, 326, 330, 331
Timesitheus, 236
Timolaus, 241
Titiana, Flavia, 190, 191
Titus, 129, 131
-- Ollius, 107
Tivoli, 156, 160
Toledo, Council of, 269
Trajan, 135, 138, 139–46
Tranquillina, Furia Sabina, 236
Triaria, 127
Triumphal procession, 7
Ulpianus, Domitius, 227, 228
Urbica, Magnia, 253
Urgulania, 40, 61
Vaballath, 241, 242
Valens, 307, 308, 309, 310
Valentinian, 307, 311–13
-- II, 313, 318, 319, 321
-- III, 335, 342, 343, 346
Valeria, 256, 257, 259, 260, 261–4
Valerianus, 238
Valerius Messala Barbatus, 62
Vandals, the, 344, 347
Velabrum, 6, 7, 9
Verina, 349
Vespasian, 127, 128–9, 138
Vestal Virgins, 132
Vestinus, Atticus, 118
Vetranio, 289
Vettius Valens, 74, 76
Vibidia, 75
Vice in the Roman Empire, 136–7, 144
Victor, Aurelius, 161, 165, 200, 207, 257, 268, 279, 284
-- -- “Epitome,” 148, 206, 280, 312
Victoria, 242–4
Victorinus, 243
Vindex, 120
Vipsania, 28
Vitellius, the elder, 56, 71, 75, 80, 82, 124
-- the Emperor, 124–8
Volusianus, 237
Vopiscus, 245, 247
Wilkins, M. G., 197, 207
Woman, position of, at Rome, 4–6
Xenophon, 91
Zabda, 246
Zenobia, 240, 241, 242, 244–50
Zonaras, 268, 272, 276, 303
Zosimus, 234, 245, 248, 249, 257, 267, 272, 276, 280, 284, 298, 316, 320
PRINTED BY HAZELL, WATSON AND VINEY, LD., LONDON AND AYLESBURY.
* * * * * *
Transcriber’s note:
Punctuation, hyphenation, and spelling were made consistent when a predominant preference was found in the original book; otherwise they were not changed.
Simple typographical errors were corrected; unpaired quotation marks were remedied when the change was obvious, and otherwise left unpaired.
Footnotes, originally at the bottoms of pages, have been collected and moved to precede the Index.
The index was not checked for proper alphabetization or correct page references.