ruling class for the empire. Senators filled the chief mag-
istracies of the Roman government, held the most im-
portant military posts, and governed the provinces. One
needed to possess property worth 1 million sesterces
(an unskilled laborer in Rome received 3 sesterces a day;
a Roman legionary, 900 sesterces a year in pay) to
belong to the senatorial order. The equestrian order was
open to all Roman citizens of good standing who pos-
sessed property valued at 400,000 sesterces. They, too,
could now hold military and governmental offices, but
the positions open to them were less important than
those of the senators.
Citizens not of the senatorial or equestrian order
belonged to the lower classes, who made up the over-
whelming majority of free citizens. The diminution of
the power of the Roman assemblies ended whatever
political power the lower classes may have possessed
earlier in the republic. Many of these people were pro-
vided with free grain and public spectacles to keep
them from creating disturbances. Nevertheless, by
gaining wealth and serving as lower officers in the
Roman legions, it was sometimes possible for them to
advance to the equestrian order.
Augustus’s belief that Roman morals had been cor-
rupted during the late republic led him to initiate social
legislation to arrest the decline. He thought that
increased luxury had undermined traditional Roman
frugality and simplicity and caused a loosening of
morals, evidenced by easy divorce, a falling birthrate
among the upper classes, and lax behavior manifested
in hedonistic parties and the love affairs of prominent
Romans with fashionable women and elegant boys.
Through his new social legislation, Augustus hoped
to restore respectability to the upper classes and
reverse the declining birthrate as well. Expenditures
for feasts were limited, and other laws made adultery a
criminal offense. In fact, Augustus’s own daughter Julia
was exiled for adultery. Augustus also revised the tax
laws to penalize bachelors, widowers, and married per-
sons who had fewer than three children.
Significance of the Augustan Age
The Augustan Age was a lengthy one. Augustus died in
14 C.E. after dominating the Roman world for forty-five
years. He had created a new order while placating the
old by restoring and maintaining traditional values, a
fitting combination for a leader whose favorite maxim
was “make haste slowly.” By the time of his death, his
new order was so well established that few agitated
for an alternative. Indeed, as the Roman historian
Tacitus pointed out, “Actium had been won before the
younger men were born. Even most of the older gen-
eration had come into a world of civil wars. Practically
no one had ever seen truly Republican government....
Political equality was a thing of the past; all eyes
watched for imperial commands.”^4 The republic was
now only a memory and, given its last century of war-
fare, an unpleasant one at that. The new order was
here to stay.
The Early Empire (14–180)
Q FOCUSQUESTION: What were the chief features of
the Roman Empire at its height during the second
century?
There was no serious opposition to Augustus’s choice of
his stepson Tiberius (ty-BEER-ee-uss) as his successor. By
designating a family member as princeps, Augustus
established the Julio-Claudian dynasty; the next four
successors of Augustus were related either to his own
family or to that of his wife, Livia.
The Julio-Claudians and Flavians
Several major tendencies emerged during the reigns of
the Julio-Claudians (14–68). In general, more and more
of the responsibilities that Augustus had given to the
senate were taken over by the emperors, who also insti-
tuted an imperial bureaucracy, staffed by talented
freedmen, to run the government on a daily basis. As
the Julio-Claudian successors of Augustus acted more
openly as real rulers rather than “first citizens of the
state,” the opportunity for arbitrary and corrupt acts
also increased. Nero (NEE-roh) (54–68) freely elimi-
nated people he wanted out of the way, including his
own mother, whose murder he arranged. Without
troops, the senators proved unable to oppose these
excesses. Eventually, however, Nero’s extravagances
provoked a revolt of the Roman legions. Abandoned by
his guards, Nero chose to commit suicide by stabbing
himself in the throat after uttering his final words:
“What an artist the world is losing in me.” A new civil
war erupted in 69, known as the year of the four
emperors. Finally, Vespasian (vess-PAY-shun), com-
mander of the legions in the East, established himself
as sole ruler and his family as a new dynasty known as
the Flavians, which ruled from 69 to 96. The signifi-
cance of the year 69 was summed up precisely by Taci-
tus when he stated that “a well-hidden secret of the
124 Chapter 6The Roman Empire
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