e Read over the sections of Suetonius's biography of Augustus
referenced
above.
Voices of Ancient Greece and Rome_nodrm
(1.
47-54.
).
Penguin Books, 1954.
Page numbers: 57, 58, 59, 60.
]
AFTERMATH
As Herodotus explains, "Croesus was overjoyed when he learned the answer which the oracles" gave, and so he make plans to attack the Persians, disregarding or forgetting the fact that Apollo's oracular responses were often ambiguous; by attacking the Persians, Croesus did destroy a great empire: his own! For Cyrus and his army ultimately besieged and occupied Sardis; Croesus was taken prisoner. According to the biographer Plutarch, Cyrus was about to have Croesus executed, when Croesus three times cried out the name "Solon," the famous Athenian legislator/philosopher/businessman. Solon had visited Croesus some time before and had tried to teach him that no one can be considered truly happy until death, because only then can an assessment be made of the quality of that person's life. Croesus had thought that that was ridiculous, and that money and possessions, temporal things, equate to happi- ness. But in the end, he had lost all of his fabulous wealth and was about to lose his life; too late, he saw the value of Solon's words. But Cyrus was so impressed with this idea, and with other things that Croesus told him, that he decided to spare the life of the Lydian king.
ASK YOURSELF
1. If the Oracle of Apollo at Delphi was the most prestigious Greek oracle, why do you suppose Croesus bothered also to send messengers to six other oracles?
King Croesus Consults--and Bribes? --the Delphic Oracle
? ? ? ? TWO NON-ORACULAR DELPHIC CLAIMS TO FAME
An uncertain number of maxims were carved into the columns and other portions of Apollo's temple at Delphi. Three of these sayings--often attributed to the Seven Sages--have achieved lasting fame: "Know yourself"; "Nothing in excess"; "Be a guarantor for debts (like a co-signer for a loan, in modern times), and ruin is at hand. "
Also, Delphi was famous for the quadrennial Pythian Games held within its precincts, an athletic competi- tion second only to the Olympics in fame and prestige. The stadium where the footraces were held is of particu- lar interest. It was carved into the side of a steep mountain in an area barely long enough to accommodate the stade race (about 220 yards). At the far end, where the finish line was located, there was very little space between that line and a solid wall of mountain rock, so sprinters must have had to put on the brakes very quickly at the end of the race to avoid slamming directly into the wall!
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2. Does Herodotus give us any indication of whether he believes in pronouncements from the Delphic Oracle, either on this occasion or any time?
3. Describe the contents of the "magnificent sacrifice" that Croesus ordered to be pre- pared in honor of Apollo. What does this tell us about the wealth of Croesus and his kingdom?
4. Why do you think Herodotus refers to "round silver basins," the golden statue of Croesus's bread baker, and the necklaces and girdles of Croesus's wife as "gifts of no importance"?
TOPICS TO CONSIDER
e Whatdoyousupposeaccountsfortheenduringlongevity,credibility,and popularity of the Oracle of Apollo at Delphi? After all, its often ambiguous responses could lead questioners astray, or even to ruin, as in the case of Croesus.
e When Croesus sent the messengers to the seven different oracles, with the test about his activities on the hundredth day, Herodotus tells us that the Oracle at Delphi was the only one to come up with the correct response. How could the priestesses, or the god, or whoever, possibly have known what Croesus had been doing on that day (boiling the turtle/lamb soup in a bronze cauldron)?
e HerodotusinformsusthatafterthemessengersreturnedfromDelphiwith the news that the oracle had correctly described Croesus's hundredth-day activities, Croesus immediately began busying himself with assembling "a magnificent sacrifice" in honor of Apollo. What do you suppose was his pur- pose in preparing such a treasure trove of expensive gifts? Could it have been a bribe for another favorable response? Or something else? Can you think of any modern examples or instances where a person might say a prayer to God or some other divine or supernatural being, along with an offer to perform some service, in exchange for the prayer being answered favorably?
Further Information
Broad, William J. The Oracle: Ancient Delphi and the Science Behind Its Lost Secrets. New York, 2006.
Burkert, Walter. Greek Religion (tr. into English by John Raffan. ) Cambridge, MA, 1985. Fontenrose, Joseph Eddy. The Delphic Oracle: Its Responses and Operations, with a Catalogue
of Responses. Berkeley, CA, 1978. Website
Delphi. www. delphi-site. com/mobile. html
Bibliography for Document
Blanco, Walter (tr. ). Herodotus: The Histories. New York, 1992.
de Selincourt, Aubrey (tr. ). Herodotus: The Histories. Baltimore, 1954.
Godley, A. D. (tr. ). Herodotus. Volume I. [LCL. ] Cambridge and London, 1920.
Matz, David. Ancient World Lists and Numbers: Numerical Phrases and Rosters in the Greco-
Roman World. Jefferson, NC, 1995.
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36. JULIUS CAESAR BECOMES A GOD
INTRODUCTION
The Roman poet Publius Ovidius Naso ("Ovid"; 43 BCE-17 CE) was the author of a wide variety of works, especially love poems. The document is excerpted from his long epic poem about Greek and Roman mythology: Metamorphoses.
KEEP IN MIND AS YOU READ
1. Ovid's Metamorphoses consists of a collection of many mythological stories, retold in poetic form. Their common theme: some kind of transformation. Most of the entries in the collection are focused on Greek mythology, but the final few selec- tions are purely Roman. The document relates Ovid's description of the deification of Julius Caesar. This is the final scene portrayed in his Metamorphoses.
2. In the opening lines of his Metamorphoses, Ovid describes the work as a poem which encompasses all of human history.
3. The ancient Romans could and did adopt adults into their families, especially as sons. Julius Caesar did this with his grand-nephew, whose original name was simply Gaius Octavius. When Caesar's will was read after his assassination, it was revealed that he had adopted young Octavius (he was about 18 years of age at the time) as his son. As a result, Octavius acquired his adoptive father's full name--Gaius Julius Caesar--along with his own family name, Octavius, appended in a slightly different form, Octavianus. So his full name became Gaius Julius Caesar Octavianus. The Roman Senate granted him the honorary title "Augustus" in 27 BCE, and it is by this name that he is probably most commonly known today.
Document: From Mortal to God
Caesar is a god in his own land. The first in wars and peace, he rose by wars, which closed in triumphs, and by civic deeds to glory quickly won, and even more his offspring's love exalted him as a new, a heavenly, sign and brightly flam- ing star. Of all the achievements of great Julius Caesar not one is more ennobling
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to his fame than being father of his glorious son. Was it more glorious for him to subdue the Britons . . . or lead his fleet victorious[ly in Egypt] . . . to have some triumphs and deserve far more, than to be the father of so great a man, with whom as ruler of the human race, O gods, you bless us past all reckoning?
And [to prevent that son from being considered a mere mortal], Julius Caesar must change and be a god. [Next, the goddess Venus appears; she fears that Caesar, a descendant of her son Aeneas, the long-ago founder of the Roman race, might fall victim to an assassination plot, and so she appeals to all the gods to prevent such a tragedy. The gods are sympathetic but helpless, because even they are not strong enough to alter the dictates of fate. The king of the gods, Jupiter, reassures her that Caesar's adopted son Augustus will avenge the inevitable assassination and usher in a Golden Age in Rome. Jupiter speaks]: "With peace established over all the lands, he then will turn his mind to civil rule and as a prudent legislator will enact wise laws. And he will regulate the manners of his people by his own example. Looking forward to the days of future time and of posterity, he will command the offspring born of his devoted wife, to assume the imperial name and the burden of his cares. Nor till his age shall equal Nestor's years will he ascend to heavenly dwellings and his kindred stars. Meanwhile transform the soul [i. e. , of Julius Caesar], which shall be reft from this doomed body, to a starry light, that always god-like Julius may look down in future from his heavenly residence upon our Forum and our Capitol. "
Jupiter had hardly pronounced these words, when kindly Venus, although seen by none, stood in the middle of the Senate-house, and caught from the dying limbs and trunk of her own Caesar his departing soul. She did not give it time so that it could dissolve in air,
but bore it quickly up, toward all the stars of heaven; and on the way, she saw it gleam and blaze and set it free. Above the moon it mounted into heaven, leaving behind a long and fiery trail, and as a star it glittered in the sky. There, wondering at the younger Caesar's [i. e. , Augustus's] deeds, Julius confessed that they were superior to all of his, and he rejoiced because his son was greater even than himself. [Tr. Brookes Otis. Ovid: Metamorphoses 15. http://www. theoi. com/Text/OvidMetamorphoses15. html]
AFTERMATH
"If the pronouncements of prophets contain any truth, I will live on in fame, throughout all the future generations. " These are the final words of Ovid's Metamorphoses, and they reflect
? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? glorious son: Julius Caesar had no bio- logical sons. The "glorious son" ref- erenced here is his son by adoption, Gaius Julius Caesar Octavianus, better known as Octavian and later as Augustus.
Nestor's years: Nestor was the prover- bially old chieftain who accompa- nied the Greeks to Troy during the Trojan War.
offspring born: Augustus and his wife Livia did not have any surviving sons, so Augustus was succeeded by his stepson Tiberius, Livia's son by a previous marriage. The phrase "offspring born" refers to Tiberius.
peace established: Augustus was widely credited with founding the Pax Romana, "Roman peace," a long period of relative tranquility after the bloody and destructive civil wars of the 40s and 30s BCE.
wise laws: As emperor, Augustus intro- duced many legal, political, mili- tary, and social reforms into Roman life. A full description of these enactments can be found in the Life of Deified Augustus, writ- ten by the Roman biographer Suetonius (ca. 70-140 CE), espe- cially in Chapters 29 through 56.
? ? ? ? ? 190
the notion shared by many Greek and Roman authors that their written works would last forever. In Ovid's case, at least, that prophecy still rings true.
ASK YOURSELF
1. What does Ovid mean by the phrase "he [Julius Caesar] rose by wars"?
2. What reason or justification does Ovid give for the deification of Julius Caesar?
3. The general theme of Ovid's Metamorphoses involves the concept of change, or
transformation. How does the deification of Caesar fit into this theme? Into what was he transformed?
TOPICS TO CONSIDER
e Lucius Annaeus Seneca (sometimes called the "Younger Seneca," 4 BCE- 65 CE) is generally thought to be the author of a parody of the deification process of emperors. Its title: Apocolocyntosis, a play on the for- mal word for deification--apotheosis--and roughly translated as "Pumpkinification. " Read Seneca's Apocolocyntosis (it is very short! ). What elements of satire and parody do you notice in it? Which Roman emperor's apotheosis is Seneca mocking? Are there any similarities between Seneca's satire and Ovid's account of Caesar's apotheosis? (A translation of the Apocolocyntosis may be found at http://ancienthistory . about. com/library/bl/bl_text_seneca_apocol. htm. )
e In our culture we seldom, if ever, hear of families adopting full-grown adults as their sons or daughters. Why do you suppose the ancient Romans did this? What would be the advantages?
e Several of the first-century CE Roman emperors were deified, including Augustus, Claudius, Vespasian, and Titus. Many subsequent emperors also received this honor. Still others demanded to be worshipped as gods while they lived but were never formally granted deification after their deaths. Research this issue. What seem to be the prime requirements for deifica- tion? What are the procedures involved in declaring an emperor a god? Can you think of any modern societies or nations in which the leader is regarded as a god, or almost a god?
e Inthedocumentexcerpt,Ovidclearlywritesaveryfavorable,evenflatter- ing, account of Augustus and his deeds. Yet early in the first century CE, Augustus decreed that Ovid be exiled from Rome for life. The poet was sent to live in the region of the Black Sea, a wild, uncultured place and an extremely hostile environment for a man of Ovid's sophistication and elegance. Although he begged on a number of occasions to be allowed to return to Rome, Augustus never relented. Find out why Augustus appa- rently decided that Ovid should receive such a terrifying punishment. (The true reason is uncertain, but it is quite easy to draw conclusions. ) Are there similar, modern examples of authors being forced to leave their homes and go into exile or hiding because of something they had written?
e Read over the sections of Suetonius's biography of Augustus referenced above. Do you agree with Ovid's assessment that he was a "prudent legisla- tor" who "enact[ed] wise laws"?
Julius Caesar Becomes a God
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Further Information
Boyle, A. J. and J. P. Sullivan (eds. ). Roman Poets of the Early Empire. London, 1991. Frankel, Herman. Ovid: A Poet between Two Worlds. Berkeley, CA, 1945.
Galinsky, G. K. Ovid's Metamorphoses: An Introduction to the Basic Aspects. Berkeley and
Los Angeles, 1975.
Otis, Brooks. Ovid as an Epic Poet. Cambridge, 1996.
Website
Extensive bibliography for Ovid: http://uts. cc. utexas. edu/~silver/Ovid/ovid-biblio. html
Bibliography for Document
Humphries, Rolfe (tr. ). Ovid: Metamorphoses. Bloomington, IN, 1955. http://www. theoi. com/Text/OvidMetamorphoses15. html
37. JOB DESCRIPTION FOR A VESTAL VIRGIN
INTRODUCTION
In its earliest days, Rome was ruled by a series of seven kings. The second of these was Numa Pompilius (traditional dates of his reign: 714-671 BCE). The document is excerpted from Plutarch's biography of Numa.
KEEP IN MIND AS YOU READ
1. At least some of the early Roman kings were considered semilegendary, but Numa seems to be fairly well attested. He is credited with a number of religious reforms and innovations, including the establishment of various cult of priests and priest- esses, religious rites, and the construction of temples.
2. One of the best known of the priestly cults that Numa reputedly founded was actually a cult of priestesses: the Vestal Virgins. Their job was to tend the temple of Vesta, the Roman goddess of home and hearth. There were six Vestals, each of whom was expected to serve a term of 30 years.
Document: A Vestal's Duties
To Numa is . . . ascribed the institution of that order of high priests who are called Pontifices, and he himself is said to have been the first of them . . . [Plutarch next embarks upon an interesting discussion of the etymology of the word Pontifices (sg. Pontifex). The word might be derived from the Latin word potens ("powerful"), given that these priests were serving powerful gods. Another explanation, which Plutarch considered spurious, is that it came from a combination of the Latin words pons ("bridge") and facere ("to build"), a "bridge-builder. " The pontifices numbered among their duties the performing of religious sacrifices at bridges over the Tiber River, and beyond that, they were also responsible for the maintenance of bridges. ]
The chief of the Pontifices, the Pontifex Maximus, had the duty of expounding and interpreting the divine will, or rather of directing sacred rites,
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not only being in charge of public ceremonies, but also watching over private sacrifices and preventing any depar- ture from established custom, as well as teaching whatever was requisite for the worship or propitiation of the gods. He was also overseer of the holy virgins called Vestals; for to Numa is ascribed the consecration of the Vestal Virgins, and in general the worship and care of the perpet- ual fire entrusted to their charge. It was either because he thought the nature of fire pure and uncorrupted, and there- fore entrusted it to chaste and undefiled persons, or because he thought of it as unfruitful and barren, and therefore associated it with virginity . . .
In the beginning, then, they say that Gegania and Verenia were consecrated to this office by Numa, who sub- sequently added to them Canuleia and Tarpeia; that at a later time two were added by Servius, making the number [six] which has continued to the present time. It was ordained by the king that the sacred virgins should vow themselves to chastity for thirty years; during the first de- cade they are to learn their duties, during the second to per- form the duties they have learned, and during the third to
teach others these duties. Then, the thirty years being now passed, any one [of the priestesses] who wishes has the liberty to marry and adopt a different mode of life, after laying down her sacred office. We are told, however, that few have welcomed the indulgence, and that those who did so were not happy, but were a prey to repentance and dejection for the rest of their lives, thereby inspiring the rest with superstitious fears, so that until old age and death they remained steadfast in their virginity.
But Numa bestowed great privileges upon them, such as the right to make a will during the lifetime of their fathers, and to transact and manage their other affairs . . . When they appear in public, the fasces are carried before them, and if they accidentally meet a criminal on his way to execution, his life is spared; but the virgin must make oath that the meeting was involuntary and fortuitous, and not of design. He who passes under the litter on which they are borne is put to death. For their minor offenses, the virgins are punished with stripes, the Pontifex Maximus [chief priest, as mentioned above] sometimes scourging the culprit on her bare flesh, in a dark place, with a curtain interposed. But she that has broken her vow of chastity is buried alive . . . [Tr. Bernadotte Perrin. Plutarch's Lives. Life of Numa (9, 10). Volume I. LCL, 1914. Page numbers: 337, 339, 341, 343. ]
AFTERMATH
Numa's long reign was characterized by an extended period of peace; Plutarch writes that "there is no record either of war, or faction, or political revolution while Numa was king. " There was a temple in Rome dedicated to the two-faced Roman god Janus. This temple had double doors, and when these doors were open, it signified that the Romans were at war; when closed, that peace was upon the land. (The open doors indicated that the god
? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? fasces: The fasces carried by security officers called lictors. The fasces were rods bound together by leather straps, a symbol of Roman authority and power. Usually, only high-ranking government officials enjoyed protection from lictors, so the fact that they also accompanied Vestal Virgins in public is another example of the esteem and respect accorded to the Vestals.
right to make a will: The right to make a will was generally reserved for the paterfamilias, the father of the family.
Servius: Rome's sixth king (full name: Servius Tullius), who reigned ca. 579-535 BCE.
? ? ? ? ? 194
had left his temple and the city, with the Roman army, to assist it in upcoming battles; the closed doors symbolized the opposite, that no wars were being fought. ) Plutarch reports that from the beginnings of Rome, down to his own lifetime (a period of some 800 years), the temple doors had been shut only three times: once in 235 BCE, shortly after the end of the First Punic War; again after Augustus had defeated the forces of Mark Antony at the Battle of Actium in 30 BCE; and for a third time during the reign of Numa, when the doors were closed not for a brief period of time, but for the entirety of his reign.
ASK YOURSELF
1. What were the chief duties of the pontifices?
2. What privileges did the Vestal Virgins enjoy? What were they supposed to learn
during each 3 of the 10-year increments of their terms as Vestals?
3. What punishment was prescribed for a Vestal Virgin who broke her vow of chastity?
TOPICS TO CONSIDER
e Plutarch generally wrote biographies in pairs--a famous Roman matched with a famous Greek. (Hence, the title Parallel Lives is sometimes given to his biographies. ) His prime criteria for selecting the two individuals to be paired in this way were the similarities that each displayed. The Greek leader with whom Plutarch linked Numa was the Spartan king Lycurgus. Research the life of Lycurgus, and determine the commonalities between
Job Description for a Vestal Virgin
? ? ? ? SAVED BY THE VESTALS
Plutarch writes that, should a Vestal Virgin have a chance encounter with a condemned criminal on his way to execution, the criminal's life would automatically be spared. Apparently, the Vestals' power to induce pardons went beyond the realm of mere chance. In his Life of Julius Caesar, the biographer Suetonius notes that when Caesar was a young man, he married a lady named Cornelia. This Cornelia hailed from a family who was at odds with the Roman dictator Sulla; Sulla pressured Caesar to divorce his new wife, but Caesar refused to com- ply. Accordingly, Caesar's name was placed on a hit list, with the result that he had to flee for his life. However, the Vestal Virgins, as well as some of Caesar's political allies, intervened on his behalf and prevailed upon Sulla to remove his name from the list. Sulla reluctantly did so.
? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? WANTED: APPLICANTS FOR THE POSITION OF VESTAL VIRGIN
Would-be Vestal Virgins were required to fulfill some fairly unique and stringent requirements, as the essayist Aulus Gellius explains: "[I]t is unlawful for a girl to be chosen who is less than six, or more than ten years old; she must also have both father and mother living. She must be free too from any impediment in her speech, must not have impaired hearing, or be marked by any other bodily defect. She must not herself be freed from paternal control . . . [N]either one nor both of her parents may have been slaves or engaged in mean occupations . . . [T]he daughter of a man without residence in Italy must not be chosen. " Aulus Gellius. Attic Nights 1. 12; tr. Rolfe. ]
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196
him and Numa that likely led to Plutarch's decision to pair the two of
them.
e Which of the two derivations of the word pontifex (potens, "powerful," or
pons/facere, "bridge-builder") seems more logical? Why do you suppose
Plutarch judged the second explanation to be ridiculously erroneous?
e Plutarch does not specify the kinds of duties the Vestal priestesses were required to perform. Find out what these duties were. Why did it take
the priestesses 10 years to learn these duties?
e Plutarch writes that few Vestal Virgins married after their 30-year term of
service was completed, even though it would have been permissible for them to do so. Why do you suppose most of them did not marry?
Further Information
Scheid, John. An Introduction to Roman Religion, translated by Janet Lloyd. Bloomington, IN, 2003.
Staples, Ariadne. From Good Goddess to Vestal Virgins: Sex and Category in Roman Religion. London, 1998.
Worsfold, T. Cato. History of the Vestal Virgins of Rome. Plymouth, UK, 1934. Websites
Six Vestal Virgins. http://ancienthistory. about. com/cs/rome/a/aa1114001. htm Vestal Virgins. http://www. unrv. com/culture/vestal-virgins. php
Bibliography for Document
Perrin, Bernadotte (tr. ). Plutarch's Lives. Volume I. [LCL. ] London and Cambridge, 1914. Rolfe, John C. (tr. ). The Attic Nights of Aulus Gellius. Volume I. [LCL. ] Cambridge and
London, 1927.
SAFETY
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38. A CASE OF ASSAULT AND BATTERY
INTRODUCTION
The public career of ancient Athens' most famous lawyer and orator, Demosthenes (384-322 BCE), spanned over 40 years. Some 58 extant orations are credited to his name, although contemporary scholars consider several of these to have been produced by other speakers of the time.
AFTERMATH
As Herodotus explains, "Croesus was overjoyed when he learned the answer which the oracles" gave, and so he make plans to attack the Persians, disregarding or forgetting the fact that Apollo's oracular responses were often ambiguous; by attacking the Persians, Croesus did destroy a great empire: his own! For Cyrus and his army ultimately besieged and occupied Sardis; Croesus was taken prisoner. According to the biographer Plutarch, Cyrus was about to have Croesus executed, when Croesus three times cried out the name "Solon," the famous Athenian legislator/philosopher/businessman. Solon had visited Croesus some time before and had tried to teach him that no one can be considered truly happy until death, because only then can an assessment be made of the quality of that person's life. Croesus had thought that that was ridiculous, and that money and possessions, temporal things, equate to happi- ness. But in the end, he had lost all of his fabulous wealth and was about to lose his life; too late, he saw the value of Solon's words. But Cyrus was so impressed with this idea, and with other things that Croesus told him, that he decided to spare the life of the Lydian king.
ASK YOURSELF
1. If the Oracle of Apollo at Delphi was the most prestigious Greek oracle, why do you suppose Croesus bothered also to send messengers to six other oracles?
King Croesus Consults--and Bribes? --the Delphic Oracle
? ? ? ? TWO NON-ORACULAR DELPHIC CLAIMS TO FAME
An uncertain number of maxims were carved into the columns and other portions of Apollo's temple at Delphi. Three of these sayings--often attributed to the Seven Sages--have achieved lasting fame: "Know yourself"; "Nothing in excess"; "Be a guarantor for debts (like a co-signer for a loan, in modern times), and ruin is at hand. "
Also, Delphi was famous for the quadrennial Pythian Games held within its precincts, an athletic competi- tion second only to the Olympics in fame and prestige. The stadium where the footraces were held is of particu- lar interest. It was carved into the side of a steep mountain in an area barely long enough to accommodate the stade race (about 220 yards). At the far end, where the finish line was located, there was very little space between that line and a solid wall of mountain rock, so sprinters must have had to put on the brakes very quickly at the end of the race to avoid slamming directly into the wall!
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2. Does Herodotus give us any indication of whether he believes in pronouncements from the Delphic Oracle, either on this occasion or any time?
3. Describe the contents of the "magnificent sacrifice" that Croesus ordered to be pre- pared in honor of Apollo. What does this tell us about the wealth of Croesus and his kingdom?
4. Why do you think Herodotus refers to "round silver basins," the golden statue of Croesus's bread baker, and the necklaces and girdles of Croesus's wife as "gifts of no importance"?
TOPICS TO CONSIDER
e Whatdoyousupposeaccountsfortheenduringlongevity,credibility,and popularity of the Oracle of Apollo at Delphi? After all, its often ambiguous responses could lead questioners astray, or even to ruin, as in the case of Croesus.
e When Croesus sent the messengers to the seven different oracles, with the test about his activities on the hundredth day, Herodotus tells us that the Oracle at Delphi was the only one to come up with the correct response. How could the priestesses, or the god, or whoever, possibly have known what Croesus had been doing on that day (boiling the turtle/lamb soup in a bronze cauldron)?
e HerodotusinformsusthatafterthemessengersreturnedfromDelphiwith the news that the oracle had correctly described Croesus's hundredth-day activities, Croesus immediately began busying himself with assembling "a magnificent sacrifice" in honor of Apollo. What do you suppose was his pur- pose in preparing such a treasure trove of expensive gifts? Could it have been a bribe for another favorable response? Or something else? Can you think of any modern examples or instances where a person might say a prayer to God or some other divine or supernatural being, along with an offer to perform some service, in exchange for the prayer being answered favorably?
Further Information
Broad, William J. The Oracle: Ancient Delphi and the Science Behind Its Lost Secrets. New York, 2006.
Burkert, Walter. Greek Religion (tr. into English by John Raffan. ) Cambridge, MA, 1985. Fontenrose, Joseph Eddy. The Delphic Oracle: Its Responses and Operations, with a Catalogue
of Responses. Berkeley, CA, 1978. Website
Delphi. www. delphi-site. com/mobile. html
Bibliography for Document
Blanco, Walter (tr. ). Herodotus: The Histories. New York, 1992.
de Selincourt, Aubrey (tr. ). Herodotus: The Histories. Baltimore, 1954.
Godley, A. D. (tr. ). Herodotus. Volume I. [LCL. ] Cambridge and London, 1920.
Matz, David. Ancient World Lists and Numbers: Numerical Phrases and Rosters in the Greco-
Roman World. Jefferson, NC, 1995.
? ? 188
36. JULIUS CAESAR BECOMES A GOD
INTRODUCTION
The Roman poet Publius Ovidius Naso ("Ovid"; 43 BCE-17 CE) was the author of a wide variety of works, especially love poems. The document is excerpted from his long epic poem about Greek and Roman mythology: Metamorphoses.
KEEP IN MIND AS YOU READ
1. Ovid's Metamorphoses consists of a collection of many mythological stories, retold in poetic form. Their common theme: some kind of transformation. Most of the entries in the collection are focused on Greek mythology, but the final few selec- tions are purely Roman. The document relates Ovid's description of the deification of Julius Caesar. This is the final scene portrayed in his Metamorphoses.
2. In the opening lines of his Metamorphoses, Ovid describes the work as a poem which encompasses all of human history.
3. The ancient Romans could and did adopt adults into their families, especially as sons. Julius Caesar did this with his grand-nephew, whose original name was simply Gaius Octavius. When Caesar's will was read after his assassination, it was revealed that he had adopted young Octavius (he was about 18 years of age at the time) as his son. As a result, Octavius acquired his adoptive father's full name--Gaius Julius Caesar--along with his own family name, Octavius, appended in a slightly different form, Octavianus. So his full name became Gaius Julius Caesar Octavianus. The Roman Senate granted him the honorary title "Augustus" in 27 BCE, and it is by this name that he is probably most commonly known today.
Document: From Mortal to God
Caesar is a god in his own land. The first in wars and peace, he rose by wars, which closed in triumphs, and by civic deeds to glory quickly won, and even more his offspring's love exalted him as a new, a heavenly, sign and brightly flam- ing star. Of all the achievements of great Julius Caesar not one is more ennobling
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to his fame than being father of his glorious son. Was it more glorious for him to subdue the Britons . . . or lead his fleet victorious[ly in Egypt] . . . to have some triumphs and deserve far more, than to be the father of so great a man, with whom as ruler of the human race, O gods, you bless us past all reckoning?
And [to prevent that son from being considered a mere mortal], Julius Caesar must change and be a god. [Next, the goddess Venus appears; she fears that Caesar, a descendant of her son Aeneas, the long-ago founder of the Roman race, might fall victim to an assassination plot, and so she appeals to all the gods to prevent such a tragedy. The gods are sympathetic but helpless, because even they are not strong enough to alter the dictates of fate. The king of the gods, Jupiter, reassures her that Caesar's adopted son Augustus will avenge the inevitable assassination and usher in a Golden Age in Rome. Jupiter speaks]: "With peace established over all the lands, he then will turn his mind to civil rule and as a prudent legislator will enact wise laws. And he will regulate the manners of his people by his own example. Looking forward to the days of future time and of posterity, he will command the offspring born of his devoted wife, to assume the imperial name and the burden of his cares. Nor till his age shall equal Nestor's years will he ascend to heavenly dwellings and his kindred stars. Meanwhile transform the soul [i. e. , of Julius Caesar], which shall be reft from this doomed body, to a starry light, that always god-like Julius may look down in future from his heavenly residence upon our Forum and our Capitol. "
Jupiter had hardly pronounced these words, when kindly Venus, although seen by none, stood in the middle of the Senate-house, and caught from the dying limbs and trunk of her own Caesar his departing soul. She did not give it time so that it could dissolve in air,
but bore it quickly up, toward all the stars of heaven; and on the way, she saw it gleam and blaze and set it free. Above the moon it mounted into heaven, leaving behind a long and fiery trail, and as a star it glittered in the sky. There, wondering at the younger Caesar's [i. e. , Augustus's] deeds, Julius confessed that they were superior to all of his, and he rejoiced because his son was greater even than himself. [Tr. Brookes Otis. Ovid: Metamorphoses 15. http://www. theoi. com/Text/OvidMetamorphoses15. html]
AFTERMATH
"If the pronouncements of prophets contain any truth, I will live on in fame, throughout all the future generations. " These are the final words of Ovid's Metamorphoses, and they reflect
? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? glorious son: Julius Caesar had no bio- logical sons. The "glorious son" ref- erenced here is his son by adoption, Gaius Julius Caesar Octavianus, better known as Octavian and later as Augustus.
Nestor's years: Nestor was the prover- bially old chieftain who accompa- nied the Greeks to Troy during the Trojan War.
offspring born: Augustus and his wife Livia did not have any surviving sons, so Augustus was succeeded by his stepson Tiberius, Livia's son by a previous marriage. The phrase "offspring born" refers to Tiberius.
peace established: Augustus was widely credited with founding the Pax Romana, "Roman peace," a long period of relative tranquility after the bloody and destructive civil wars of the 40s and 30s BCE.
wise laws: As emperor, Augustus intro- duced many legal, political, mili- tary, and social reforms into Roman life. A full description of these enactments can be found in the Life of Deified Augustus, writ- ten by the Roman biographer Suetonius (ca. 70-140 CE), espe- cially in Chapters 29 through 56.
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the notion shared by many Greek and Roman authors that their written works would last forever. In Ovid's case, at least, that prophecy still rings true.
ASK YOURSELF
1. What does Ovid mean by the phrase "he [Julius Caesar] rose by wars"?
2. What reason or justification does Ovid give for the deification of Julius Caesar?
3. The general theme of Ovid's Metamorphoses involves the concept of change, or
transformation. How does the deification of Caesar fit into this theme? Into what was he transformed?
TOPICS TO CONSIDER
e Lucius Annaeus Seneca (sometimes called the "Younger Seneca," 4 BCE- 65 CE) is generally thought to be the author of a parody of the deification process of emperors. Its title: Apocolocyntosis, a play on the for- mal word for deification--apotheosis--and roughly translated as "Pumpkinification. " Read Seneca's Apocolocyntosis (it is very short! ). What elements of satire and parody do you notice in it? Which Roman emperor's apotheosis is Seneca mocking? Are there any similarities between Seneca's satire and Ovid's account of Caesar's apotheosis? (A translation of the Apocolocyntosis may be found at http://ancienthistory . about. com/library/bl/bl_text_seneca_apocol. htm. )
e In our culture we seldom, if ever, hear of families adopting full-grown adults as their sons or daughters. Why do you suppose the ancient Romans did this? What would be the advantages?
e Several of the first-century CE Roman emperors were deified, including Augustus, Claudius, Vespasian, and Titus. Many subsequent emperors also received this honor. Still others demanded to be worshipped as gods while they lived but were never formally granted deification after their deaths. Research this issue. What seem to be the prime requirements for deifica- tion? What are the procedures involved in declaring an emperor a god? Can you think of any modern societies or nations in which the leader is regarded as a god, or almost a god?
e Inthedocumentexcerpt,Ovidclearlywritesaveryfavorable,evenflatter- ing, account of Augustus and his deeds. Yet early in the first century CE, Augustus decreed that Ovid be exiled from Rome for life. The poet was sent to live in the region of the Black Sea, a wild, uncultured place and an extremely hostile environment for a man of Ovid's sophistication and elegance. Although he begged on a number of occasions to be allowed to return to Rome, Augustus never relented. Find out why Augustus appa- rently decided that Ovid should receive such a terrifying punishment. (The true reason is uncertain, but it is quite easy to draw conclusions. ) Are there similar, modern examples of authors being forced to leave their homes and go into exile or hiding because of something they had written?
e Read over the sections of Suetonius's biography of Augustus referenced above. Do you agree with Ovid's assessment that he was a "prudent legisla- tor" who "enact[ed] wise laws"?
Julius Caesar Becomes a God
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Further Information
Boyle, A. J. and J. P. Sullivan (eds. ). Roman Poets of the Early Empire. London, 1991. Frankel, Herman. Ovid: A Poet between Two Worlds. Berkeley, CA, 1945.
Galinsky, G. K. Ovid's Metamorphoses: An Introduction to the Basic Aspects. Berkeley and
Los Angeles, 1975.
Otis, Brooks. Ovid as an Epic Poet. Cambridge, 1996.
Website
Extensive bibliography for Ovid: http://uts. cc. utexas. edu/~silver/Ovid/ovid-biblio. html
Bibliography for Document
Humphries, Rolfe (tr. ). Ovid: Metamorphoses. Bloomington, IN, 1955. http://www. theoi. com/Text/OvidMetamorphoses15. html
37. JOB DESCRIPTION FOR A VESTAL VIRGIN
INTRODUCTION
In its earliest days, Rome was ruled by a series of seven kings. The second of these was Numa Pompilius (traditional dates of his reign: 714-671 BCE). The document is excerpted from Plutarch's biography of Numa.
KEEP IN MIND AS YOU READ
1. At least some of the early Roman kings were considered semilegendary, but Numa seems to be fairly well attested. He is credited with a number of religious reforms and innovations, including the establishment of various cult of priests and priest- esses, religious rites, and the construction of temples.
2. One of the best known of the priestly cults that Numa reputedly founded was actually a cult of priestesses: the Vestal Virgins. Their job was to tend the temple of Vesta, the Roman goddess of home and hearth. There were six Vestals, each of whom was expected to serve a term of 30 years.
Document: A Vestal's Duties
To Numa is . . . ascribed the institution of that order of high priests who are called Pontifices, and he himself is said to have been the first of them . . . [Plutarch next embarks upon an interesting discussion of the etymology of the word Pontifices (sg. Pontifex). The word might be derived from the Latin word potens ("powerful"), given that these priests were serving powerful gods. Another explanation, which Plutarch considered spurious, is that it came from a combination of the Latin words pons ("bridge") and facere ("to build"), a "bridge-builder. " The pontifices numbered among their duties the performing of religious sacrifices at bridges over the Tiber River, and beyond that, they were also responsible for the maintenance of bridges. ]
The chief of the Pontifices, the Pontifex Maximus, had the duty of expounding and interpreting the divine will, or rather of directing sacred rites,
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Voices of Ancient Greece and Rome
not only being in charge of public ceremonies, but also watching over private sacrifices and preventing any depar- ture from established custom, as well as teaching whatever was requisite for the worship or propitiation of the gods. He was also overseer of the holy virgins called Vestals; for to Numa is ascribed the consecration of the Vestal Virgins, and in general the worship and care of the perpet- ual fire entrusted to their charge. It was either because he thought the nature of fire pure and uncorrupted, and there- fore entrusted it to chaste and undefiled persons, or because he thought of it as unfruitful and barren, and therefore associated it with virginity . . .
In the beginning, then, they say that Gegania and Verenia were consecrated to this office by Numa, who sub- sequently added to them Canuleia and Tarpeia; that at a later time two were added by Servius, making the number [six] which has continued to the present time. It was ordained by the king that the sacred virgins should vow themselves to chastity for thirty years; during the first de- cade they are to learn their duties, during the second to per- form the duties they have learned, and during the third to
teach others these duties. Then, the thirty years being now passed, any one [of the priestesses] who wishes has the liberty to marry and adopt a different mode of life, after laying down her sacred office. We are told, however, that few have welcomed the indulgence, and that those who did so were not happy, but were a prey to repentance and dejection for the rest of their lives, thereby inspiring the rest with superstitious fears, so that until old age and death they remained steadfast in their virginity.
But Numa bestowed great privileges upon them, such as the right to make a will during the lifetime of their fathers, and to transact and manage their other affairs . . . When they appear in public, the fasces are carried before them, and if they accidentally meet a criminal on his way to execution, his life is spared; but the virgin must make oath that the meeting was involuntary and fortuitous, and not of design. He who passes under the litter on which they are borne is put to death. For their minor offenses, the virgins are punished with stripes, the Pontifex Maximus [chief priest, as mentioned above] sometimes scourging the culprit on her bare flesh, in a dark place, with a curtain interposed. But she that has broken her vow of chastity is buried alive . . . [Tr. Bernadotte Perrin. Plutarch's Lives. Life of Numa (9, 10). Volume I. LCL, 1914. Page numbers: 337, 339, 341, 343. ]
AFTERMATH
Numa's long reign was characterized by an extended period of peace; Plutarch writes that "there is no record either of war, or faction, or political revolution while Numa was king. " There was a temple in Rome dedicated to the two-faced Roman god Janus. This temple had double doors, and when these doors were open, it signified that the Romans were at war; when closed, that peace was upon the land. (The open doors indicated that the god
? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? fasces: The fasces carried by security officers called lictors. The fasces were rods bound together by leather straps, a symbol of Roman authority and power. Usually, only high-ranking government officials enjoyed protection from lictors, so the fact that they also accompanied Vestal Virgins in public is another example of the esteem and respect accorded to the Vestals.
right to make a will: The right to make a will was generally reserved for the paterfamilias, the father of the family.
Servius: Rome's sixth king (full name: Servius Tullius), who reigned ca. 579-535 BCE.
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had left his temple and the city, with the Roman army, to assist it in upcoming battles; the closed doors symbolized the opposite, that no wars were being fought. ) Plutarch reports that from the beginnings of Rome, down to his own lifetime (a period of some 800 years), the temple doors had been shut only three times: once in 235 BCE, shortly after the end of the First Punic War; again after Augustus had defeated the forces of Mark Antony at the Battle of Actium in 30 BCE; and for a third time during the reign of Numa, when the doors were closed not for a brief period of time, but for the entirety of his reign.
ASK YOURSELF
1. What were the chief duties of the pontifices?
2. What privileges did the Vestal Virgins enjoy? What were they supposed to learn
during each 3 of the 10-year increments of their terms as Vestals?
3. What punishment was prescribed for a Vestal Virgin who broke her vow of chastity?
TOPICS TO CONSIDER
e Plutarch generally wrote biographies in pairs--a famous Roman matched with a famous Greek. (Hence, the title Parallel Lives is sometimes given to his biographies. ) His prime criteria for selecting the two individuals to be paired in this way were the similarities that each displayed. The Greek leader with whom Plutarch linked Numa was the Spartan king Lycurgus. Research the life of Lycurgus, and determine the commonalities between
Job Description for a Vestal Virgin
? ? ? ? SAVED BY THE VESTALS
Plutarch writes that, should a Vestal Virgin have a chance encounter with a condemned criminal on his way to execution, the criminal's life would automatically be spared. Apparently, the Vestals' power to induce pardons went beyond the realm of mere chance. In his Life of Julius Caesar, the biographer Suetonius notes that when Caesar was a young man, he married a lady named Cornelia. This Cornelia hailed from a family who was at odds with the Roman dictator Sulla; Sulla pressured Caesar to divorce his new wife, but Caesar refused to com- ply. Accordingly, Caesar's name was placed on a hit list, with the result that he had to flee for his life. However, the Vestal Virgins, as well as some of Caesar's political allies, intervened on his behalf and prevailed upon Sulla to remove his name from the list. Sulla reluctantly did so.
? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? WANTED: APPLICANTS FOR THE POSITION OF VESTAL VIRGIN
Would-be Vestal Virgins were required to fulfill some fairly unique and stringent requirements, as the essayist Aulus Gellius explains: "[I]t is unlawful for a girl to be chosen who is less than six, or more than ten years old; she must also have both father and mother living. She must be free too from any impediment in her speech, must not have impaired hearing, or be marked by any other bodily defect. She must not herself be freed from paternal control . . . [N]either one nor both of her parents may have been slaves or engaged in mean occupations . . . [T]he daughter of a man without residence in Italy must not be chosen. " Aulus Gellius. Attic Nights 1. 12; tr. Rolfe. ]
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him and Numa that likely led to Plutarch's decision to pair the two of
them.
e Which of the two derivations of the word pontifex (potens, "powerful," or
pons/facere, "bridge-builder") seems more logical? Why do you suppose
Plutarch judged the second explanation to be ridiculously erroneous?
e Plutarch does not specify the kinds of duties the Vestal priestesses were required to perform. Find out what these duties were. Why did it take
the priestesses 10 years to learn these duties?
e Plutarch writes that few Vestal Virgins married after their 30-year term of
service was completed, even though it would have been permissible for them to do so. Why do you suppose most of them did not marry?
Further Information
Scheid, John. An Introduction to Roman Religion, translated by Janet Lloyd. Bloomington, IN, 2003.
Staples, Ariadne. From Good Goddess to Vestal Virgins: Sex and Category in Roman Religion. London, 1998.
Worsfold, T. Cato. History of the Vestal Virgins of Rome. Plymouth, UK, 1934. Websites
Six Vestal Virgins. http://ancienthistory. about. com/cs/rome/a/aa1114001. htm Vestal Virgins. http://www. unrv. com/culture/vestal-virgins. php
Bibliography for Document
Perrin, Bernadotte (tr. ). Plutarch's Lives. Volume I. [LCL. ] London and Cambridge, 1914. Rolfe, John C. (tr. ). The Attic Nights of Aulus Gellius. Volume I. [LCL. ] Cambridge and
London, 1927.
SAFETY
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38. A CASE OF ASSAULT AND BATTERY
INTRODUCTION
The public career of ancient Athens' most famous lawyer and orator, Demosthenes (384-322 BCE), spanned over 40 years. Some 58 extant orations are credited to his name, although contemporary scholars consider several of these to have been produced by other speakers of the time.