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|  | OCTAVIUS CAESAR AUGUSTUS :THE LIFE AND TIMES OF THE FOUNDER OF THE ROMAN EMPIRE
           AUGUSTUS’S ACCOUNT OF HIS REIGN (FROM THE INSCRIPTION
          IN THE TEMPLE OF ROME AND AUGUSTUS AT ANGORA)
            
             When I was nineteen I collected an army on my own
            account and at my own expense, by the help of which I restored the republic to
            liberty, which had been enslaved by the tyranny of a faction; for which
            services the Senate, in complimentary decrees, added my name to the roll of
            their House in the consulship of Gaius Pansa and Aulus Hirtius [BC 43], giving me at the same time consular precedence in voting; and
            gave me imperium. It ordered me as pro-praetor “to see along with the consuls
            that the republic suffered no damage." Moreover, in the same year, both
            consuls having fallen, the people elected me consul and a triumvir for revising
            the constitution.
             Those who killed my father I drove into exile, after a
            legal trial, in punishment of their crime, and afterwards when these same men
            rose in arms against the republic I conquered them
            twice in a pitched battle.  .
             I had to undertake wars by land and sea, civil and
            foreign, all over the world, and when victorious I spared surviving citizens.
            Those foreign nations, who could safely be pardoned, I preferred to preserve
            rather than exterminate. About 500,000 Roman citizens took the military oath to
            me. Of these I settled out in colonies or sent back to their own towns, after
            their terms of service were over, considerably more than 300,000; and to them
            all I assigned lands purchased by myself or money in lieu of lands. I captured
            600 ships, not counting those below the rating of triremes.
             I twice celebrated an ovation, three times curule
            triumphs, and was twenty-nine times greeted as imperator. Though the Senate
            afterwards voted me several triumphs I declined them. I frequently also
            deposited laurels in the Capitol after performing the vows which I had taken in
            each war. For successful operations performed by myself or by my legates under
            my auspices by land and sea, the Senate fifty-three times decreed a
            supplication to the immortal gods. The number of days during which, in
            accordance with a decree of the Senate, supplication was offered amounted to
            890. In my triumphs there were led before my chariot nine kings or sons of
            kings. I had been consul thirteen times at the writing of this,
              and am in the course of the thirty-seventh year of my tribunician power
            [AD. 13-14].
             The Dictatorship offered me in my presence and absence
            by the Senate and people in the consulship of Marcus Marcellus and Lucius Arruntius [BC22] I declined to accept. I did not refuse at
            a time of very great scarcity of corn the commissionership of corn supply,
            which I administered in such a way that within a few days I freed the whole
            people from fear and danger. The consulship— either yearly or for life—then
            offered to me I declined to accept.
             In the consulship of M. Vinicius and Q. Lucretius
            [BC19], of P. and Cn. Lentulus [BC18], and of Paullus Fabius Maximus and Q. Tubero [BC11], when the Senate and
            people of Rome unanimously agreed that I should be elected overseer of the laws
            and morals, with unlimited powers and without a colleague, I refused every
            office offered me which was contrary to the customs of our ancestors. But what
            the Senate at that time wished me to manage, I carried put in virtue of my
            tribunician power, and in this office I five times received at my own request a
            colleague from the Senate.
             I was one of the triumvirate for the re-establishment of the constitution for ten consecutive years. I have
            been princeps senatus up to the day on which I write this for forty years. I am Pontifex Maximus,
            Augur, one of the fifteen commissioners for religion, one of the seven for
            sacred feasts, an Arval brother, a sodalis Titius, a fetial.
             In my fifth consulship [BC29] I increased the number
            of the patricians by order of people and Senate. I three times made up the roll
            of the Senate, and in my sixth consulship [BC28] I took  a census of the people with M. Agrippa
            as thy colleague. I performed the lustrum after an interval of forty-one years; in which the number of Roman citizens
            entered on the census roll was 4,063,000. A second time with consular imperium
            I took the census by myself in the consulship of Gaius Censorinus and Gaius Asinius [BC8], in which the number of Roman
            citizens entered on the roll was 4,223,000. I took a third census with consular
            imperium, my son Tiberius Caesar acting as my colleague, in the consulship of
            Sextus Pompeius and Sextus Appuleius [AD14], in which
            the number of Roman citizens entered on the census roll was 4,937.000. By new
            laws passed I recalled numerous customs of our ancestors that were falling into
            desuetude in our time, and myself set precedents in many particulars for the
            imitation of posterity.
             The Senate decreed that vows should be offered for my health by consuls and priests every fifth year. In
            fulfilment of these vows the four chief colleges of priests or the consuls
            often gave games in my lifetime. Also individually and
            by townships the people at large always offered sacrifices at all the temples
            for my health.
             By a decree of the Senate my name was included in the
            ritual of the Salii; and it was ordained by a law
            that my person should be sacred and that I should have the tribunician power
            for the term of my natural life. I refused to become Pontifex Maximus in
            succession to my colleague during his life, though the people offered me that
            sacred office formerly held by my father. Some years later I accepted that
            sacred office on the death of the man who had availed himself of the civil
            disturbance to secure; such a multitude flocking to my election from all parts
            of Italy as is never recorded to have come to Rome before, in the consulship of
            P. Sulpicius and C. Valgius [6 March, BC12].
             The Senate consecrated an altar to Fortuna Redux, near
            the temple of Honour and Virtue, by the Porta Capena,
            for my return, on which it ordered the Vestal Virgins to offer a yearly
            sacrifice on the day on which in the consulship of Q. Lucretius and M. Vinucius [BC19] I returned to the city from Syria, and gave that day the name Auguslalia from my cognomen [15
            Dec.].
             By a decree of the Senate at the same time part of the
            praetors and tribunes of the plebs, along with the consul Q. Lucretius and
            leading nobles, were despatched into Campania to meet me—an honour that up to
            this time has been decreed to no one else. When I returned to Rome from Spain
            and Gaul after successful operations in those provinces, in the consulship of
            Tiberius Nero and Publius Quintilius [BC13], the
            Senate voted that an altar to Pax Augusta should be consecrated for my return
            on the Campus Martius, upon which it ordered the magistrates and priests and
            Vestal Virgins to offer an annual sacrifice [30 Jan.].
             Whereas the Ianus Quirinus,
            which our ancestors ordered to be closed when peace throughout the whole
            dominions of the Roman people by land and sea had been obtained by victories,
            is recorded to have been only twice shut before my birth since the foundation
            of the city, the Senate three times voted its closure during my principate.
             My sons Gaius and Lucius Cassar,
            whom fortune snatched from me in their early manhood, in compliment to me, the
            Senate and Roman people designated consuls in their fifteenth year with a
            proviso that they should enter on that office after an interval of five years.
            From the day of their assuming the toga virilis the Senate decreed that they should take part
            in public business. Moreover, the Roman equites in a body gave each of them the
            title of Princeps Iuventutis, and presented them with silver
            shields and spears.
             To the Roman plebs I paid 300 sesterces per head in
            virtue of my father's will; and in my own name I gave 400 apiece in my fifth
            consulship [BC29] from the sale of spoils of war; and a second time in my tenth
            consulship [BC24] out of my own private property I paid a bounty of 400
            sesterces per man, and in my eleventh consulship [BC23] I measured out twelve
            distributions of corn, having purchased the grain from my own resources. In the
            twelfth year of my tribunician power [BC11], I for the third time gave a bounty
            of 400 sesterces a head. These largesses of mine
            affected never less than 50,200 persons.
             In the eighteenth year of my tribunician power and my
            twelfth consulship [BC5] I gave 320,000 of the urban plebs sixty denarii a
            head. In the colonies of my soldiers, in my fifth consulship [BC29] I gave from
            the sale of spoils of war 1,000 sesterces a head; and among such settlers the
            number who received that triumphal largess amounted to about 120,000 men. In my
            thirteenth consulship [BC2] I gave 60 denarii apiece to the plebeians then in
            receipt of public corn; they amounted to somewhat more than 200,000 persons.
             The money for the lands, which in my fourth consulship
            [BC30], and afterwards in the consulship of M. Crassus and Cn. Lentulus the augur [BC14], I assigned to the soldiers, I
            paid to the municipal towns. The amount was about 600,000,000 sesterces, which
            I paid for lands in Italy, and about 260,000,000 which I disbursed for lands in
            the provinces.
             I was the first and only one within the memory of my
            own generation to do this of all who settled colonies in Italy and the
            provinces. And afterwards in the consulship of Tib. Nero and Cn. Piso [BC7], and again in the consulship of C. Antistius and D. Laelius bBC6],
            and of C. Calvisius and L. Pasienus [BC4], and of L. Lentulus and M. Messalla [BC3], and of L. Caninius and Q. Fabricius [BC2], to the soldiers, whom after their terms of service I sent back to their
            own towns, I paid good service allowances in ready money; on which I expended
            400,000,000 sesterces as an act of grace.
             I four times subsidised the aerarium from my own money, the sums which I thus paid over to the
            commissioners of the treasury amounting to 150,000,000 sesterces. And in the
            consulship of M. Lepidus and L. Arruntius [AD6], to
            the military treasury, which was established on my initiative for the payment
            of their good service allowance, to the soldiers who had served twenty years or
            more, I contributed from my own patrimony 170,000,000 sesterces.
             From and after the year of the consulship of Gnaeus and Publius Lentulus [BC18], whenever the payment of the revenues were in
            arrear, I paid into the treasury from my own patrimony the taxes, whether due
            in corn or money, sometimes of 100,000 persons, sometimes of more.
             I built the curia and Chalcidicum adjoining it, and the temples of Apollo on the Palatine with its colonnades,
            the temple of the divine Iulius, the Lupercal, the colonnade at the Flaminian
            circus, which I allowed to be called Octavia, from the name of the builder of
            the earlier one on the same site, the state box at the Circus Maximus, the
            temples of Jupiter Feretrius and of Jupiter Tonans on the Capitol, the temple of Quirinus, the temples
            of Minerva and of Juno the Queen, and of Jupiter Liberalis in the Aventine, the temple of the Lares at the head
            of the via Sacra, the temple of the
            divine Penates in the Velia, the temple of Youth, the temple of the Mater Magna
            on the Palatine.
             The Capitolium and the Pompeian theatre—both very
            costly works—I restored without any inscription of my own name. Water conducts
            in many places that were decaying from age I repaired; and I doubled the
            aqueduct called the Aqua Marcia, by turning a new spring into its channel.
             The Forum Iulium and the
            basilica, which was between the temple of Castor and the temple of Saturn,
            works begun and far advanced by my father) I completed; and when the same
            basilica was destroyed by fire, I began its reconstruction on an extended plan,
            to be inscribed with the names of my sons, and in case I do not live to complete
            it I have ordered it to be completed by my heirs.
             In my sixth consulship [BC28], I repaired eighty-two
            temples of the gods in the city in accordance with a decree of the Senate, none
            being omitted which at that time stood in need of repair. In my seventh consulship
            [BC27] I constructed the Flaminian road from the city
            to Ariminum, and all the bridges except the Mulvian and Minucian.
             On ground belonging to myself I built a temple to Mars Ultor and the Forum Augustum,
            with money arising from sale of war spoils. I built a theatre adjoining the
            temple of Apollo, on ground for the most part purchased from private owners, to
            be under the name of my son-in-law Marcus Marcellus. Offerings from money
            raised by sale of war-spoil I consecrated in the temple of Apollo, and in the
            temple of Vesta, and in the temple of Mars Ultor,
            which cost me about 100,000,000 sesterces. Thirty-five thousand pounds of gold,
            crown money contributed by the municipia and colonies of Italy for my triumphs,
            I refunded in my fifth consulship [BC29], and subsequently, as often as I was
            greeted Imperator, I refused to receive crown money, though the municipia and
            colonies had decreed it with as much warmth as before.
             I three times gave a show of gladiators in my own
            name, and five times in the name of my sons and grandsons; in which shows about
            10,000 men contended. I twice gave the people a show of athletes collected from
            all parts of the world in my own name, and a third time in the name of my
            grandson. I gave games in my own name four times, and representing other magistrates twenty-three times. In behalf of the quindecimviri, and as master of the
            college, with M. Agrippa as colleague, I gave the Secular games in the
            consulship of C. Furnius and C. Silanus [BC17]. In my thirteenth consulship [BC2], I gave for the first time the games
            of Mars which, since that time, the consuls have given in successive years. I
            gave the people wild-beast hunts, of African animals, in my own name and that
            of my sons and grandsons, in the circus and forum, and the amphitheatres
            twenty-six times, in which about 3,500 animals were killed.
             I gave the people the spectacle of a naval battle on
            the other side of the Tiber, in the spot where now is the grove of the Caesars,
            the ground having been hollowed out to a length of 1,800 feet, and a breadth of
            1,200 feet, in which thirty beaked ships, triremes or biremes, and a still
            larger number of smaller vessels contended. In these fleets, besides the
            rowers, there fought about three thousand men.
             In the temples of all the states of the province of
            Asia, I replaced the ornaments after my victory, which he with whom I had
            fought had taken into his private possession from the spoliation of the
            temples. There were about eighty silver statues of me, some on foot, some
            equestrian, some in chariots, in various parts of the city. These I removed,
            and from the money thus obtained I placed golden offerings in the temple of Apollo in my
              own name and in that of those who had honoured me by the statues.
               I cleared the sea of pirates. In that war I captured
            about 30,000 slaves, who had run away from their masters, and had borne arms
            against the republic, and handed them back to their owners to be punished. The
            whole of Italy took the oath to me spontaneously and demanded that I should be
            the leader in the war in which I won the victory off Actium. The provinces of
            the Gauls, the Spains,
            Africa, Sicily, Sardinia, took the same oath. Among those who fought under my
            standards were more than seven hundred Senators, eighty-three of whom had been,
            or have since been, consuls up to the time of my writing this, 170 members of
            the sacred colleges.
             I extended the frontiers of all the provinces of the
            Roman people, which were bordered by tribes that had not submitted to our
            Empire. The provinces of the Gauls, and Spains and Germany, bounded by the Ocean from Gades to the mouth of the river Elbe, I reduced to a
            peaceful state. The Alps, from the district near the Adriatic to the Tuscan sea, I forced to remain peaceful without waging
            unprovoked war with any tribe. My fleet sailed through the Ocean from the mouth
            of the Rhine towards the rising sun, up to the territories of the Cimbri, to which point no Roman had penetrated, up to that
            time, either by land or sea. The Cimbri, and Charydes, and Semnones and other
            peoples of the Germans, belonging to the same tract of country, sent
            ambassadors to ask for the friendship of myself and the Roman people. By my
            command and under my auspices, two armies were marched into Ethiopia and
            Arabia, called Felix, nearly simultaneously, and large hostile forces of both
            these nations were cut to pieces in battle, and a large
              number of towns were captured. Ethiopia was penetrated as far as the
            town Nabata, next to Meroe. Into Arabia the army
            advanced into the territories of the Sabasi as far as
            the town Mariba.
             I added Egypt to the Empire of the Roman people. When
            I might have made the Oreater Armenia a province
            after the assassination of its king Artaxes, I
            preferred, on the precedent of our ancestors, to hand over that kingdom to Tigranes,
            son of King Artavasdes, grandson of king Tigranes, by
            the hands of Tiberius Nero, who was then my stepson. The same nation being
            afterwards in a state of revolt and rebellion, I handed over to the government
            of King Ariobarzanes, son of Artabazus,
            king of the Medes, after it had been reduced by my son Gaius; and after his
            death to his son Artavasdes, upon whose assassination
            I sent Tigranes, a member of the royal family of the Armenians, into that
            kingdom. I recovered all the provinces on the other side of the Adriatic
            towards the East and Cyrenaic, which were by this time for the most part held
            by various kings, and before them Sicily and Sardinia which had been overrun by
            an army of slaves.
             I settled colonies of soldiers in Africa, Sicily,
            Macedonia, both the Spains, Achaia, Asia, Syria,
            Gallia Narbonensis, Pisidia. Italy has twenty-eight
            colonies established under my auspices, which have in my lifetime become very
            densely inhabited and places of great resort.
             A large number of military standards, which had
            been lost under other commanders, I recovered, after defeating the enemy, from
            Spain and Gaul and the Dalmatians. I compelled the Parthians to restore the
            spoils and standards of three Roman armies, and to seek as suppliants the
            friendship of the Roman people. These standards I laid up in the inner shrine
            belonging to the temple of Mars Ultor.
             The tribes of the Pannonii,
            which before I was princeps an army
            of the Roman people never reached, having been subdued by Tiberius Nero, who
            was then my stepson and legate [BC11], I added to the Empire of the Roman
            people, and I extended the frontier of Illyricum to the bank of the river
            Danube. And when an army of the Daci crossed to the south of that river it was
            conquered and put to flight under my auspices; and subsequently my army, being
            led across the Danube, forced the tribes of the Daci to submit to the orders of
            the Roman people.
             To me there were often sent embassies of kings from
            India, who had never before been seen in the camp of
            any Roman general. By ambassadors the Bastarnae and
            the Scythians and the kings of the Sarmatians, who live on both sides of the
            river Don, and the king of the Albani and of the Hiberi and of the Medes, sought our friendship.
             Kings of the Parthians—Tiridates,
            and afterwards Phrates, son of King Phrates—fled to me for refuge; of the Medes Artavasdes; of the Adiabeni Artaxares; of the Britons Dumnobellaunus and Tim...; of the Marcomanni and Suebi ... Phraates, king of the Parthians, son of Orodes,
            sent all his sons and grandsons to me in Italy, not because he had been
            overcome in war, but seeking our friendship by means of his own sons as
            pledges. And a very large number of other nations experienced the good faith of
            the Roman people while I was princeps, with whom before that time there had been no diplomatic or friendly
            intercourse.
             The nations of the Parthians and the chief men of the
            Medes by means of embassies sought and accepted from me kings of those
            peoples—the Parthians Vonones, son of King Phrates, grandson of King Orodes;
            the Medes Ariobarzanes, son of King Artavasdes, grandson of King Ariobarzanes.
             In my sixth and seventh consulships [BC28, 27], when I
            had extinguished the flames of civil war, having by universal consent become
            possessed of the sole direction of affairs, I transferred the republic from my
            power to the will of the Senate and people of Rome. For which good service on
            my part I was by decree of the Senate called by the name of Augustus, and the door-posts of my house were covered with laurels in the name
            of the state, and a civic crown was fixed up over my door, and a golden shield
            was placed in the Curia Iulia, which it was declared by its inscription the
            Senate and people of Rome gave me in recognition of valour, clemency, justice,
            piety. After that time I took precedence of all in
            rank, but of power I had nothing more than those who were my colleagues in the
            several magistracies.
             While I was administering my thirteenth consulship [BC2],
            the Senate and equestrian order and the Roman people with one consent greeted
            me as Father of my Country, and decreed that it should
            be inscribed in the vestibule of my house, and in the Senate house, and in the
            Forum Augustum, and under the chariot which Was there
            placed in my honour in accordance with a senatorial decree.
             When I wrote this I was in my
            seventy-sixth year [AD 13-14].
             
             
             THE END
             
 OCTAVIUS CAESAR AUGUSTUS :THE LIFE AND TIMES OF THE FOUNDER OF THE ROMAN EMPIRE
 
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