Gardners Art through the Ages A Global History

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1
bare-chested youth who is probably a personification of Honor
(Honos). A female personification of Valor (Virtus) leads the horses.
These allegorical figures transform the relief from a record of Titus’s
battlefield success into a celebration of imperial virtues. Such an in-
termingling of divine and human figures occurs on the Republican
Villa of the Mysteries frieze (FIG. 10-18) at Pompeii, but the Arch of
Titus panel is the first known instance of divine beings interacting
with humans on an official Roman historical relief. (On the Ara
Pacis,FIG. 10-29,Aeneas and “Tellus” appear in separate framed pan-
els, carefully segregated from the procession of living Romans.) The
Arch of Titus was erected after the emperor’s death, and its reliefs
were carved when Titus was already a god. Soon afterward, however,
this kind of interaction between mortals and immortals became a
staple of Roman narrative relief sculpture, even on monuments
honoring a living emperor.

High Empire

In the second century CE, under Trajan, Hadrian, and the Antonines,
the Roman Empire reached its greatest geographic extent (MAP10-1)
and the height of its power. Rome’s might was unchallenged in the
Mediterranean world, although the Germanic peoples in Europe, the
Berbers in Africa, and the Parthians and Persians in the Near East

constantly applied pressure. Within the empire’s secure boundaries,
the Pax Romana meant unprecedented prosperity for all who came
under Roman rule.

Trajan
Domitian’s extravagant lifestyle and ego resembled Nero’s. He de-
manded to be addressed as dominus et deus (lord and god) and so
angered the senators that he was assassinated in 96 CE. The Senate
chose the elderly Nerva, one of its own, as emperor. Nerva ruled for
only 16 months, but before he died he established a pattern of suc-
cession by adoption that lasted for almost a century. Nerva picked
Trajan, a capable and popular general born in Italica (Spain), as the
next emperor. Trajan was the first non-Italian to rule Rome. Under
Trajan, imperial armies brought Roman rule to ever more distant ar-
eas (MAP10-1), and the imperial government took on ever greater
responsibility for its people’s welfare by instituting a number of
farsighted social programs. Trajan was so popular that the Senate
granted him the title Optimus (the Best), an epithet he shared with
Jupiter (who was said to have instructed Nerva to choose Trajan as
his successor). In Late Antiquity, Augustus, the founder of the Ro-
man Empire, and Trajan became the yardsticks for success. The goal
of new emperors was to be felicior Augusto, melior Traiano (luckier
than Augustus, better than Trajan).

High Empire 263

10-40Spoils of
Jerusalem, relief panel
from the Arch of Titus,
Rome, Italy, after 81 ce.
Marble, 7 10 high.
The reliefs inside the bay
of the Arch of Titus
commemorate the
emperor’s greatest
achievement—the
conquest of Judaea. Here,
Roman soldiers carry the
spoils from the Jewish
temple in Jerusalem.

10-41Triumph of
Titus, relief panel from
the Arch of Titus, Rome,
Italy, after 81 ce.Marble,
7  10 high.
Victory crowns Titus in
his triumphal chariot.
Also present are person-
ifications of Honor and
Valor in this first known
instance of the inter-
mingling of human and
divine figures in a Roman
historical relief.

1 ft.

1 ft.

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