Tiberius – 14-37 AD

Tiberius

14 – 37 AD

born 42 BC – died 37 AD, age 78


Tiberius Claudius Nero was born on November 16, 42 BC, the elder son of Tiberius Claudius Nero and Livia. Tiberius was most likely born on the Palatine Hill in Rome where he and his younger brother Nero Claudius Drusus, spent much of their early childhood. However, his early childhood was indeed a difficult one due primarily to his family’s opposition toOctavian during the Civil War. His family was forced to flee Italy as a result of his father’s failed revolt against Octavian in 40 BC. They returned in 39 AD, under the terms of the Treaty of Misenum. It was upon their return to Rome when Octavian fell in love with his mother, Livia. Tiberius’ parents thus divorced, and the rest of his life was entwined in the fortunes of his stepfather – Octavian. Upon the death of his natural father, Tiberius delivered the funeral oration in 33 BC.

Tiberius thus spent much of his formative years living in the house of Octavian (Augustus) where he received the finest Roman education. He was also in a position to grow up among the political elite of the Roman Empire. His closest friend during these early years became his brother Drusus. Where Tiberius himself may have lacked ambition, his mother’s plans and guidance more than made up for his personal lack of attention in these matters.

Although Tiberius’ first marriage was arranged with Vipsania Agrippina, daughter of Marcus Agrippa, Tiberius came to love his wife very deeply. Agrippa was the closest friend of Augustus and it was through his military readership that Augustus owed his political position. Therefore, Tiberius’ marriage was indeed political in nature. Still the son Vipsania bore with Tiberius in 14 BC brought him much joy at first and he respectfully named him after his brother – Nero Claudius Drusus, the Younger.

As time passed slowly, Augustus began to entrust various military commands to Tiberius. In 20 BC, he was sent to the East, where he restored Tigranes to the Armenian throne and received back the standards of Crassus that had been captured at Carrhae in 53 BC.

Augustus was not interested in Tiberius as an heir. After all, his father had been an opponent years before. Augustus’ dream was to establish his own Julio dynasty. Consequently, Augustus wanted an heir from his bloodline – not that of his wife Livia. Augustus himself had only a daughter Julia by a previous marriage. Augustus arranged the marriage of his daughter Julia to his nephew Claudius Marcellus in 25 BC, whom he began to groom as his heir. Unfortunately, Marcellus died two years later. Agrippa and Marcellus had become rivals and Agrippa to some extent felt slighted and departed from Rome. With the death of Marcellus, Augustus married Julia to Agrippa in 21 BC and it was through this union that five children were born among whom Augustus now turned for a potential heir.

Agrippa died in 12 BC and with his death, Tiberius’ life would take a turn for the worse, from his perspective. In 12 BC, Augustus instructed Tiberius to divorce Vipsania and to marry his daughter Julia. Tiberius loved his wife desperately, and his relationship with Julia deteriorated rapidly, contributing to his dark moods.

At the same time, Tiberius’ military career continued to progress and by 12 BC, he advanced to the rank of general of Rome. His new rank allowed Tiberius to prove his military abilities while in Pannonia between 12 – 9 BC. This post was followed almost immediately by his appointment to Germania where he served between 9 – 7 BC.

From 9 BC onwards, Tiberius’ life would take another sudden turn of misfortune that undoubtedly had much to do with his increasing solace. It was in 9 BC when his beloved brother Drusus died from an injury while on campaign in Germania. Tiberius’ world had been seriously changed. His love for his brother was perhaps demonstrated best for all to see when Tiberius walked in front of the body as it was carried from Germania all the way back to Rome.

With the knowledge that Augustus had cared little for him, Tiberius felt used and unappreciated. Augustus was becoming consumed with his personal grooming of his grandsons Gaius and Lucius (sons of Agrippa and Julia) as his obvious heirs. This was the scene at court despite the fact that Augustus gave Tiberius the tribunician power in 6 BC. Tiberius remained devoted to his imperial chores, running the provinces with a firm but surprisingly effective and fair hand, all the while his mother urged him to endure.

Nonetheless, in 6 BC Tiberius found this situation so unbearable that he petitioned for a divorce from Julia. This was denied by Augustus who insisted that the two of them learn to get along. Instead, Tiberius left Rome for voluntary exile or retirement to Rhodes, against his mother’s wishes. Livia did her best to collect evidence against Julia in an attempt to discredit her in hopes of seeing her son Tiberius reinstated. Even after Julia’s scandalous sexual exploits with numerous men in Rome was exposed, which resulted in her father ordering her banishment in 2 BC, Augustus still remained cold and indifferent to Tiberius.

With Tiberius in Rhodes, Augustus spent his time with his grandsons to such an extent that they had become quite spoiled. Gaius was given the consulship in 1 AD and was sent on a mission to Syria. But tragedy struck Augustus’ house first in 2 AD when Lucius died suddenly at Marseilles. In 3 AD Gauis was wounded in a siege and he became quite ill thereafter. He attempted to return to Rome but died along the way at Limyra in Turkey. This double tragedy struck Augustus quite hard leaving him little choice but to turn to Livia’s son Tiberius.

Bronze As of Tiberius as heir

Summoned back to Rome in 4 AD, Tiberius was adopted by Augustus, granted tribunician power once more (for 10 years) and apparently chosen as the heir to the throne. For the first time, Augustus authorized coinage with the portrait of Tiberius announcing his designation as heir. Still Augustus preferred almost anyone else to Tiberius, which became obvious from the aging Emperor’s sudden change of heart by the adoption of Agrippa Postumus, the last surviving grandson who had been exiled to Planasia on charges of rape.

The revolt in Germania (4 – 6 AD) and the major uprising in Pannonia (6 – 9 AD) demanded Tiberius’ presence. When word arrived that the legate, Quinctilius Varus, had been killed with his three legions, massacred in the Teutoburg Forest, it was Tiberius who stabilized the Rhine region. Tiberius achieved great distinction from his victory in the war with the Germans, being given a magnificent triumphal celebration in Rome in 11 AD. It was also Tiberius to whom the task of running the government fell upon as Augustus reached the later stages of his life.

When Augustus died in 14 AD, Agrippa Postumus, who was still in exile, was immediately murdered most likely on the orders of Livia to clear the way for her son. Tiberius, thus, began his reign amid some questions. He would be the first to inherit the throne of Rome and the tradition of inheriting power had not yet been tried. There was much concern and question as to the loyalty of the legions. The legions in Pannonia and Germania revolted for better pay and improved conditions of service. Drusus, Tiberius’ son, was sent to Pannonia while Germanicus, Tiberius’ nephew, son of Drusus the Elder, was dispatched to Germany.

Tiberius engaged in a series of disastrous debates in the Senate as to the extent and nature of his powers.

IMPERIAL INTENTIONS

Senators, I am a human being performing human tasks, and it is my ambition to fulfill the role of princeps [emperor]. I want you to understand this, and I want future generations to believe it; you and they will do more than adequate service to my reputation if I am held to be worthy of my forebears, careful for your interests, steadfast in danger, and not afraid to be unpopular if I am serving the national good. As far as I am concerned, if you hold these opinions of me, they will stand as my temples and my finest statues, and they will last.

Tiberius, quoted in Tacitus,

Annals

Tiberius was almost an unwilling ruler who found himself as Emperor due largely, if not entirely, to the political intrigues of his mother Livia who dreamed of a Claudian dynasty. Tiberius was therefore difficult to understand not merely for historians, but also by his contemporaries, particularly those in the Senate. It was little wonder that he had no patience with the flattering politicians of Rome.

Tiberius’ sense of fairness and upstanding character and devotion to his duty was clear during his early reign. He began well in terms of justice and power, for despite his arguments with the Senate, he treated his position with respect and refused to allow any case of treason to go unheard by himself personally. When one man was charged with impiety against the gods, Tiberius replied that the gods must defend their own good name.

As Emperor, Tiberius proved faithful to his deified predecessor, declaring that the acts of Augustus were law. He certainly furthered the authority and the supremacy of the imperial house, but only after it became painfully clear that the Senate was incapable of wielding any true privileges or rights given to it. Corruption and political jealousy was still present within the Senate, which only served to make Tiberius suspicious.

Despite his later reputation for perversion, Tiberius sought to curb not merely corruption but also the declining morals of Roman society. He passed a law forbidding the payment of prostitutes with coinage portraying the image of the Emperor. While this may have been a clever attempt at eliminating prostitution, it only served to illustrate man’s ingenuity. Tokens had become more widely used for a variety of events and games during this period in Roman history. The brothels simply issued tokens of their own depicting a variety of sexual acts, which the patron would purchase and in turn give to the prostitute as payment thereby circumventing the authority of Tiberius.

Much of Tiberius’ trouble stemmed from his inability to effectively communicate with people including his own family. Moody and withdrawn, Tiberius was not seen for the virtues he truly possessed. Tiberius had always felt persecuted by Augustus and manipulated by his mother. No doubt the loss of his brother and his forced marriage with Julia contributed greatly to his suspicious nature as time progressed.

His nephew Germanicus became a respected figure in the Empire and the memory of his brother among the people always tended to overshadow Tiberius. When Germanicus was dispatched to the Rhine he launched a retributive campaign against the Germans. While these operations were more successful from the perspective of propaganda than actual military gain, Tiberius gave Germanicus a triumph in 17 AD.

Germanicus & Drusus

Tiberius had adopted Germanicus as his heir in 4 AD along side his own son Drusus when he himself was adopted by Augustus. We even find coinage minted in the East showing Tiberius with his heirs as illustrated above. His own son Drusus was married to his cousin Livilla who was the daughter of his brother by his wife Antonia and thus the sister of Germanicus. Nevertheless, the triumph celebration granted Germanicus in 17 AD caused tensions within the palace to rise, as the mob in Rome openly preferred dashing Germanicus to the moody Emperor Tiberius. The popularity of Germanicus no doubt had something to do with his being given the IMPERIUM MAIUS and his being sent to the East in 17 AD shortly after his triumph.

Tiberius’ decision to send Germanicus to Syria was most likely the scheme of his mother Livia who still very much dabbled in politics within her son’s court. Whatever the case, the scheme backfired when in 19 AD Germanicus died suddenly at Antioch after quarreling with the Governor of Syria, Gnaeus Calpurnius Piso. A hot issue erupted as Piso and his wife, Plancina, were suspected of poisoning Germanicus and some suspected Tiberius or more likely Livia.

Germanicus’ wife, Agrippina the Elder, (daughter of Julia and Agrippa) was a very outspoken woman. She was much more like the politically active wife of Marc Antony, Fulvia, but unlike Fulvia, Agrippina had many supporters. Following the death of Germanicus, Agrippina turned into an avenging, bitter opponent of Tiberius and Livia. She began a campaign of open hostility marching in the funeral of Germanicus held in Rome and publicly accusing Livia and Tiberius of murder. Ultimately Tiberius sacrificed his longtime supporter Piso who was put on trial for the murder of Germanicus but forever after Tiberius hated Agrippina for what he viewed was the persecution of an innocent man.

Tiberius finally granted his own son Drusus a triumph for his success in Pannonia on May 28th, 20 AD. But this gesture was perhaps more to try to show the people that they still had an heir to the throne who was the cousin of Germanicus.

Tiberius’ mistrust of the Senators, his mother, Agrippina and others led him to search for a loyal aide. Unfortunately, Tiberius would find little relief long-term as he fell directly into the arms of Lucius Aelius Sejanus who was perhaps the most ambitious Prefect of the Praetorian Guard in Roman History. Sejanus correctly recognized Tiberius’ plight and moved to exploit his suspicious nature into outright paranoia.

With Sejanus at his side, Tiberius’ natural moderate rule of justice and fairness declined as the years passed and as the weight of office increased. Informers (DELATORES) invaded the legal system, as accusations against persons high and low initiated a wave of treason trials and deaths as part of the plot woven by Sejanus. Having worked his way into the Emperor’s trust, he convinced Tiberius that there were plots everywhere, using the resulting fear to widen his own influence. Sejanus on one hand pretended to be the friend of Agrippina while warning her that Tiberius wanted to have her poisoned. Likewise, Sejanus told Tiberius that Agrippina intended to have him assassinated thus he drove a wedge between Tiberius and any potential heirs from the house of Germanicus.

Sejanus then moved the prefectship of the Guard into the CASTRA PRAETORIA, a barracks in Rome, which became his key administrative office from where a reign of terror would emerge. Tiberius, tired of the burden of office, was eager to put absolute faith and trust in Sejanus and even called him his friend and loyal assistant.

Tiberius’ son Drusus disliked Sejanus intensely. He did not know the extent of his ambitions, but still he tried to warn his father about his reliance upon Sejanus and Tiberius did not appreciate his concern. They apparently argued and Drusus struck his father in the process. According to Dio, Tiberius shouted at his son saying “You will commit no act of violence or insubordination while I am alive, nor when I am dead either!”

Finally, in 22 AD, Tiberius granted his son Drusus the tribunician power. The following year, however, he fell a victim to Sejanus, who conspired with his wife Livilla to poison him. Sejanus planned to married Livilla and become the next heir to the throne and to this end, he persecuted everyone who stood in the way of that ambition.

The pressure and intrigue of Rome proved too much and Tiberius was persuaded by Sejanus to leave Rome once and for all, leaving the burdens of government to his care. Tiberius was happy to leave his mother Livia behind as well perhaps in part because he may have suspected her hand in the death of Germanicus. Livia had undoubtedly guided his path to the throne, using every means, including murder to secure his accession. He hated her for it, and her constant interference in his rule made his departure from Rome all the more desirable. Tiberius thus retired to the island of Capri where for once in his life he could feel free.

Livia finally died in 29 AD and Tiberius was intent that the Senate should give her as few honors as possible. When the Senate proposed erecting an arch in her honor Tiberius promised to build the arch himself, but he never did it. However, Livia’s death was not only welcomed by Tiberius, but also by Sejanus for with Livia out of the way, his ambitions knew no bounds. Apparently, Livia had saved many senators from the traps set by Sejanus and she was fond of Caligula, a son of Germanicus whom she also protected.

After Livia’s death Sejanus began a judicial attack against Titius Sabinus, a supporter of Agrippina. This evolved into a trial, which incriminated Agrippina and her two sons Nero and Drusus Caesar that ultimately led to them all being imprisoned. Agrippina was condemned and exiled to the island of Pandateria, where her mother Julia had also died in exile under the orders of her father Augustus. However, before Agrippina departed, Tiberius personally flogged her putting out one of her eyes in the process taking great pleasure for all the pain she had caused him and others. Agrippina eventually committed suicide by starving herself to death.

Nero Caesar was exiled and died (like his mother) on a distant rock 31 AD, while Drusus, who aided Sejanus in turning evidence against his brother, endured many years of misery in a Roman dungeon before succumbing in 33 AD. Sejanus then tried to maneuver himself into the inheritance by petitioning Tiberius for permission to marry his son’s widow, Livilla. Tiberius refused and instead proposed a betrothal to his granddaughter Julia (daughter of Drusus and Livilla), which obviously outraged Livilla.

Between Livia’s plots against the heirs of the Julian line and Sejanus’ plots against the heirs of the Claudian line, one by one most of the potential heirs either died or were murdered. By 31 AD, Sejanus had few overt opponents. Antonia, however, finally became aware of Sejanus’ ambitions perhaps at the insistence of her son Claudius. Whatever the reason, Antonia finally sent a letter of warning to Tiberius, delivered by her most trusted freedman, Pallas. Antonia had always been held in the highest respect by Tiberius who believed the warning and began the intrigue necessary to bring Sejanus into custody. Tiberius was aided by Caligula and the plot involved the promise of position to Macro, Sejanus’ second in command, and a large donative of 1,000 denarii per man to the Praetorian Guard for standing by the Emperor. Sejanus was executed for his crimes but his intrigues revealed far more than anyone imagined.

Sejanus’ former wife Apicata, implicated Livilla in the murder of her husband Drusus and as Sejanus’s co-conspirator. Tiberius did not move against Livilla, partly out of respect for Antonia. Dio reported that Antonia imprisoned Livilla, who either starved to death or killed herself because she knew there was no escape. The last years of Tiberius, from 31 until 37, were characterized by reigns of terror, as anyone associated with Sejanus or anyone guilty of often imaginary crimes was executed.

Tiberius’ retirement to Capri did more to destroy his reputation due largely to his association with his great-nephew, Caligula, the last surviving son of Germanicus. Contemporary historians portrayed Tiberius as a man with peculiar tastes and the image that gave was one of an old, dirty, perverted debaucher – a view that was perhaps exaggerated. Nevertheless, Caligula, who was clearly an insane pervert, did what he could to encourage Tiberius’ adventures into pornography.

Tiberius named Caligula and his own grandson Tiberius Gemellus as his heirs before he died at the age of 78 on March 16th, 37 AD, at the Villa of Lucullus in Misenum. The cause of death was probably natural, although some reported that he was smothered to death under a pillow by the Prefect Macro, on the orders of Caligula. It was during the reign of Tiberius that the Ministry and Crucifixion of Jesus Christ occurred.

Tiberius’ reign was generally effective and Rome prospered under his administration. However, Tiberius’ tyrannies, especially at the close of his reign, were closely scrutinized by Tacitus, who viewed him from the biased age of the Emperor Domitian who studied Tiberius for clues on how to rule and issued posthumous coinage in his honor. The historian Dio summed him up by saying that he possessed many virtues and many vices. Tiberius was perhaps one of the most misunderstood Emperors who suffered greatly at the hands of both his family and his ministers.


Titles and Powers, 4 – 37 AD

Yr Tribunician Power Imp. Acclamation Consul Other
4 TR.P.VI.
5 TR.P.VI. – VII. IMP.III.
6 TR.P.VII. – VIII.
7 TR.P.VIII. – VIIII.
8 TR.P.VIIII. – X. IMP.V.
9 TR.P.X. – XI.
10 TR.P.XI. – XII.
11 TR.P.XII. – XIII. IMP.VI.
12 TR.P.XIII. – XIIII. IMP.VII.
13 TR.P.XIIII. – XV.
14 TR.P.XV. – XVI. AVGVSTVS.
15 TR.P.XVI. – XVII. P.M.
16 TR.P.XVII. – XVIII.
17 TR.P.XVIII. – XVIIII.
18 TR.P.XVIIII. – XX. IMP.VIII. COS.III.
19 TR.P.XX. – XXI.
20 TR.P.XXI. – XXII.
21 TR.P.XXII. – XXIII. COS.IIII.
22 TR.P.XXIII. – XXIIII.
23 TR.P.XXIIII. – XXV.
24 TR.P.XXV. – XXVI.
25 TR.P.XXVI. – XXVII.
26 TR.P.XXVII. – XXVIII.
27 TR.P.XXVIII. – XXVIIII.
28 TR.P.XXVIIII. – XXX.
29 TR.P.XXX. XXXI.
30 TR.P.XXXI. – XXXII.
31 TR.P.XXXII. – XXXIII. COS.V
32 TR.P.XXXIII. – XXXIIII.
33 TR.P.XXXIIII. – XXXV.
34 TR.P.XXXV. – XXXVI.
35 TR.P.XXXVI. – XXXVII.
36 TR.P.XXXVII. – XXXVIII.
37 TR.P.XXXVIII.

Note: Tiberius’ first two consulships were in 13 BC and 7 BC. He first received the tribunician power in 6 BC when it was granted to him for a period of five years while serving under Augustus. Shortly after his withdrawal from public life due to his intolerable situation with Augustus’ daughter Julia, Tiberius retired to Rhodes where he allowed his tribunician power to expire in 1 BC and it subsequently lapsed for four years. Following the deaths of Augustus’ grandsons, Caius and Lucius, Tiberius was reinvested with the power on June 27th, 4 AD, and it was subsequently renewed each year on that date.


Monetary System

Silver Denarius of Tiberius

Mints: Rome, Lugdunum, Caesarea, Samosata (?)

Obverse Legends:

As Caesar

TI CAESAR AVGVSTI F IMPERATOR V
TI CAESAR AVGVSTI F IMPERAT V
TI CAESAR AVGVSTI F IMPERAT VII

As Augustus (Emperor)

TI CAESAR DIVI AVG F AVGVSTVS
TI DIVI F AVGVSTVS
TI CAESAR DIVI AVG F AVGVST PM TR POT XXIIII
TI CAESAR DIVI AVG F AVGVST IMP VIII


DENOMINATIONS

As Caesar (Designated Heir)

AR Denarius (Augustus/Tiberius)
Æ Sesterius
Æ Dupondius
Æ As
Æ Semis

As Augustus (Emperor)

AU Aureus (7.54 grams)
AU Quinarius
AR Denarius (3.54 grams)
AR Quinarius
Æ Sesterius
Æ Dupondius
Æ As


Posthumous Coinage

Commemorative Aureus issued by Trajan

Restoration of Trajan 117 AD

AU Aureus

Restoration of Titus

Æ Sesterius
Æ As (Bare hd left/SC)
Æ As (Bare hd rt/SC)
Æ As (Bare hd rt/Winged Caduceus)

Restoration by Domitian

Æ As (Bare Hd Left/SC)

 

Lucius Caesar – Son

Lucius Caesar

(Born 17 BC – Died 2 AD)
Son of Agrippa and Julia
Grandson of Augustus


Lucius Caesar was the son of Marcus Agrippa and Julia (daughter of Augustus). Lucius was destined to be heir to the throne along with his brother Gaius. Lucius was adopted, along with his brother, by Augustus and personally raised by him. The excessive attention showed them by Augustus spoiled the boys – Lucius especially.

In 2 BC, Lucius received the title Princeps Juventutius one year after his older brother Gaius. This was in fact Augustus’ sign to his court that both Gaius and Lucius were his legal heirs to the throne. Along with this title the boys were given the honor of dedicating all buildings in Rome.

In 2 AD, Lucius departed Rome destined for Spain. He was to join the legions in Spain to begin his military training. Lucius never made it to Spain. He died of a sudden illness along the way at Massilia. Gaius died two years later giving rise to rumors that Livia, wife of Augustus, had a hand in their deaths in order to make way for her own son, Tiberius, to become the heir to Augustus.


Monetary System

Mints: Lydia

Obverse Legends:


DENOMINATIONS

Colonial Mint Only

AE20 Lydia

 

Germanicus – Son

Germanicus

15 BC – 19 AD

Grandson of Marc Antony
Son of Antonia
Brother of Emperor Claudius
Father of Emperor Caligula


Germanicus was the elder son of Nero Claudius Drusus and Antonia and therefore represented the first potential heir from the combined Julio-Claudian bloodline. Germanicus was born in 15 BC and was adopted by Tiberius in 4 AD at the time Tiberius himself was adopted by Augustus as his ultimate heir.

Germanicus possessed all the highest qualities of body and mind, to a degree never equalled by anyone. A handsome person, unequalled valor, surpassing ability in the oration of Greece and Rome, unexampled kindliness, and a remarkable desire and capacity for winning men’s regard and inspiring their affection.

Suetonius Life of Caligula Ill

Suetonius portrays an image of Germanicus which is beyond probability. The reality of Germanicus was much less perfect, but given the emotional tide of the period, the favoritism history has shown toward Germanicus is understandable. We must keep in mind that Augustus ruled as Emperor for nearly 41 years. This is certainly time enough for the generations to come and go. Therefore, the rule of Augustus was similar to the first 40 years following World War II where peace prevailed for the most part and prosperity filled the land. In this context, the young Germanicus appeared very much to the people as did John F. Kennedy in modern times. And like Kennedy, who became more perfect after his assassination, so did Germanicus in his time period. If we look beyond the legend and into the history of the man we see very much a young dashing politician who perhaps represented to the people the dawn of a new generation.

Germanicus was married around 8 BC to Agrippina, the daughter of Agrippa and Julia. Agrippina was a very outspoken woman who accompanied her husband on all his campaigns and bore him five sons and three daughters, one of who would become the future Emperor Caligula. Their daughter, Agrippina Junior, became the mother of the future EmperorNero.

When Tiberius came to power, he emphasized his heirs being Germanicus and his own son Drusus as illustrated above. Both Drusus and Germanicus played important roles in suring up the support for Tiberius following the death of Augustus.

Drusus was sent to settle the unrest among the legions in Pannomia while Germanicus’ first major role in history was to suppress the mutiny of the Rhine legions. Tacitus claims that the soldiers offered to make him Emperor instead of Tiberius, but again in reality the troops merely wanted higher pay and better conditions. Germanicus was not able to simply solve the problem. However, he had taken his wife Agrippina the Elder and their family along with him to the frontier. When the situation became dangerous Germanicus was forced to order his wife to leave with the children. Her departure so shamed the mutineers that the revolt quickly subsided. It was actually during this campaign when the future Emperor Caligula was born.

Germanicus’ popularity was indeed very much enhanced by the actions of his wife. During another campaign against the Chatti and Germanic tribes, Agrippina worked personally to prevent panic from spreading among the legions stationed in the encampment on the Rhine. She worked distributing food and clothing among the inhabitants and gained much popularity among the Roman people for her actions.

Germanicus remained with the Rhine legions between 14 and 16 AD. He did lead the legions deep into Germany in successive campaigns and managed to recover two of the three legionary standards lost at the Teutonburg Forest byQuintillius Varus. He also buried the remains of whatever Roman dead he encountered. In reality, Germanicus was at best a moderately competent general but his second campaign into Germany nearly ended in disaster.

Tiberius recalled Germanicus to Rome and gave him a splendid triumph on May 26th, 17 AD. This was perhaps more of a propaganda event on the part of Tiberius to win popular support. However, it was during this period where the emotional support for Germanicus became quite noticeable in Rome, which caused some concern at court.

Perhaps by the design of Livia, Tiberius’ scheming mother, Germanicus was ordered to the East in an attempt to remove him from Rome. Tiberius also appointed Germanicus, his colleague, as consul in 18 AD, which marked Germanicus as the chosen successor. Germanicus departed Rome for the East shortly after his triumph in 17 AD. While at Antioch in Syria, Germanicus came into conflict with Gnaeus Piso, the new governor of Syria and friend of Tiberius. Germanicus clearly over stepped his authority by visiting Egypt without imperial permission. When Germanicus became ill and died at Antioch on October 10th, 19 AD, his wife Agrippina insisted that he had been poisoned by Piso. Agrippina marched to Rome and held a funeral procession for Germanicus and openly accused both Livia and Tiberius of ordering his murder. Tiberius was forced to put his friend Piso on trial. In the end, Piso was compelled to commit suicide, but Agrippina insured that suspicion toward Tiberius would never disappear.


Monetary System

Note: All the coins bearing his name and portrait were struck about twenty years and more after his death.

Mints: Rome, Caesarea

Obverse Legends:

GERMANICVS CAESAR
GERMANICVS CAESAR TI AVGVST F DIVI AVG N
GERMANICVS CAES PC CAES AVG GERM


Finest Known Silver Denarius Germanicus & Caligula

DENOMINATIONS

Issued by Caligula

AU Aureus with Caligula (6.54 grams)
AR Denarius with Caligula (3.54 grams)
Æ Dupondius
Æ As bare head left (12 grams)

Issued by Claudius

Æ As bare head right (12 grams)

Restitution of Titus

Æ As bare head right (12 grams)
Æ As bare head left (12 grams)

Restitution of Domitian

Æ As bare head left (12 grams)


Colonial Coinage

Caesarea

AR Drachm with Augustus Radiate (3.21 grams)

Antonia – Wife

Antonia

36BC-38AD

Younger daughter of Marc Antony & Octavia
Mother of Emperor Claudius
Grandmother of Emperor Caligula


Antonia the Younger was the daughter of Mark Antony and Octavia. Together, the couple produced two daughters, both of whom were named Antonia. The younger Antonia was born about 36 BC. Antonia was a woman of renowned character who had a reputation for honor and dignity. She married Nero Claudius Drusus, the brother of the EmperorTiberius and son of Livia, in 16 BC. Antonia was very much devoted to her husband. She gave birth to several children among whom were Germanicus, future Emperor Claudius and a daughter named Livilla. Her husband died in 9 BC and while Roman law prescribed that all widows should remarry, Augustus, out of respect for her devotion to her husband, freed her of that obligation. Antonia lived her life at court as a Roman matron.

Her elder sister Antonia, although overshadowed by her younger sister, married L. Domitius Ahenobarbus. They had a child named C. Domitius Ahenobarbus who in turn was eventually the father of the future Emperor Nero. Therefore, in their own ways, both Antonias contributed to the Julio-Claudian dynasty.

Antonia the younger spent most of her time in Rome or at her estate in Bauli. She was perhaps the closest friend of Livia who was the wife of Augustus and her mother-in-law. Antonia was never one who sought power but instead was quite supportive of the Emperor Tiberius who was also her brother-in-law.

Antonia was the one person at court who worked hard to keep order among the often divided personal interests within the Julio-Claudian family. Following Tiberius’ rise to the throne, the conflicts between Antonia’s son Germanicus and Tiberius often placed her in the role mediator. After the death of Germanicus in 19 AD, she tended to side with Tiberius and Livia against Agrippina (the Elder) who was the wife of Germanicus and her daughter-in-law. Antonia stood by and watched as the party of Germanicus was later expunged by Tiberius without getting involved.

When it came to a sinister plot developing in Rome, Antonia did get very much involved. She became quite concerned with the increasing power of Lucius Aelius Sejanus, the prefect of the Praetorian Guard. It was Sejanus who was the chief ruler of the state as well as the chief executioner in the name of Tiberius. Sejanus had a eye for not merely power but to take the thrown. In the plot to fulfill his ambitions, he murdered Drusus the Younger who was the son of Tiberius and the husband of Antonia”s daughter Livilla.

The power and corruption of Sejanus became widespread in Rome. Finally, in 31 AD, Antonia sent a letter to Tiberius warning about Sejanus. Tiberius immediately believed the warning, which demonstrates the integrity that he respected in this woman. Tiberius began to hatch his own scheme that would end by bringing Sejanus to justice where he was put to death. The co-conspirator with Sejanus was none other than Antonia’s own daughter Livilla, who had been Sejanus’s mistress. Apicata, the former wife of Sejanus, implicated Livilla in the murder of her own husband Drusus the Younger. It appears as though Sejanus intended to marry Livilla thus gaining access to the royal family and then on to the rank of Emperor.

What is interesting is that Tiberius never moved against Livilla mostly out of respect for Antonia. Nonetheless, Dio tells us that Antonia personally imprisoned Livilla, who then either starved to death or killed herself.

In 29 AD, Antonia’s daughter-in-law Agrippina was banished to the island of Pandataria for plotting against Tiberius. Agrippina eventually died there in 33 AD. Antonia, at a rather late age in life, then took the orphaned grandchildren Gaius Caligula and Drusilla in her own care. Caligula never forget Antonia’s kindness in that matter and upon his rise to the throne, granted Antonia the title of Augusta.

Antonia lived long enough to see the madness of Caligula. While honored at first, she soon fell out of favour. Shortly thereafter, it is believed that Antonia committed suicide or may have been poisoned on the order of the Emperor Caligula.


Monetary System

Æ Dupondius

Note: All the coins bearing her name and portrait were struck under her son, the emperor Claudius (41-54 AD).

Mints: Rome


DENOMINATIONS

AU Aureus (6.54 grams)
AR Denarius (3.54 grams)
Æ Dupondius
Æ As

 

N.C. Drusus – Brother of Tiberius

Nero Claudius Drusus

38 – 9 BC

Brother of Tiberius
Father of Germanicus & Emperor Claudius


Nero Claudius Drusus was the younger son of Livia by her first husband Tiberius Claudius Nero. Drusus was born in 38 BC shortly after his mother’s marriage to Augustus. Augustus apparently fell in love with Livia while she was pregnant. She therefore divorced her husband and married Augustus a few months before the birth of Drusus.

As the younger brother to Tiberius, Drusus married Antonia, the daughter of Mark Antony and Octavia(sister of Augustus). Drusus and Antonia had several children, one of whom was the favorite of the peopleGermanicus. But it would be a son of Drusus who eventually became the Emperor Claudius who was preceded by his grandson Caligula who also became Emperor of Rome.

After campaigning very successfully in Germany, his son Germanicus was so named for his father’s victories. Unfortunately, Drusus was killed by a fall from a horse during the summer of 9 BC.


Monetary System

Note: All the coins bearing his name and portrait were struck under his son, the Emperor Claudius who held the throne between 41 – 54 AD.

Mints: Rome


DENOMINATIONS

AU Aureus (7.75 grams)
AR Didrachm (of Caesarea)
AR Denarius (3.66 grams)
Æ Sesterius

Restoration Issue of Titus

Æ Sesterius

Drusus – Son

Drusus

14 BC – 23 AD
son of Tiberius


Drusus was the son of Tiberius by his first wife, Vipsania. Named after his brother, Nero Claudius Drusus, Drusus the younger was born about 14 BC. Drusus grew up at court and eventually married the granddaughter of Marc Antony, Livilla, daughter of Antonia. Livilla bore three children: a daughter Julia and twin boys named Gemellus and Drusus. Drusus died at a very young age and Gemellus would later find himself unwanted and unloved by most members of his family.

As his father Tiberius rose to power under Augustus, Drusus was also looked upon by Augustus favorably. In 11 AD he was given the rank of Quaestor and in 13 AD and eventually served as Consul in 15AD. In 14 AD, when his father succeeded Augustus to the throne, Drusus became the logical heir to his father.

Drusus was sent on an important mission in 14 AD following the death of Augustus. He went to Pannonia with the task of subduing the legions stationed there who had broken out into mutiny. Drusus succeeded in his mission aided by bad weather and an eclipse which proved to be the omen he needed. Drusus was given special powers as governor of Pannonia in 17 AD.

As of Tiberius with his heirs
Germanicus & Drusus facing

Drusus was not happy to find that the cousin Germanicus (father’s nephew), rising as the popular prince of the people. Germanicus had been adopted by his father as his heir in 4 AD at the time Tiberius had been adopted by Augustus. Germanicus had been given a splendid triumph in 17 AD for his success in Germany. Nonetheless, Drusus maintained good relations with Germanicus and his family. In 19AD, following the death of Germanicus, Drusus became the center of attention in the ambitious plans of Tiberius’ right-hand man, the Prefect of the Praetorian Guard – Sejanus. His father finally granted him a triumph of his own for his success in Pannonia on May 28th, 20 AD.

Drusus disliked Sejanus intensely. He did not know the extent of his ambitions or of his affair with his wife. Still, Drusus tried to warn his father about his reliance upon Sejanus and Tiberius did not appreciate his concern. They apparently argued and Drusus struck his father in the process. According to Dio, Tiberius shouted at his son saying “You will commit no act of violence or insubordination while I am alive, nor when I am dead either!” Drusus did have a reputation for being cruel and licentious to the point that in Roman slang an insult was to call someone Drusian.

In 22 AD, Tiberius finally granted Drusus the Tribunician Power. The following year, however, he fell a victim to Sejanus, who conspired with his wife to poison him. Sejanus planned to married Livilla and become the next heir to the throne. Thus, Sejanus systematically isolated Tiberius from his own family and did everything he could to insure the downfall of Germanicus’s wife Agrippina and their children. The plot came to light following a letter sent to Tiberius by Livilla’s mother Antonia. Sejanus was put to death but Tiberius did not move against Livilla out of respect for Antonia. However, Livilla was imprisoned by her own mother and either starved to death or perhaps she committed suicide.


Monetary System

Mints: Rome

Obverse Legends

DRVSVS CAESAR TI AVG F DIVI AVG N
DRVSVS CAES TI AVG COS III TR P


DENOMINATIONS

Æ Sesterius
Æ As

Posthumous Issues

Æ As (Restitution by Titus)

Colonial Issues

AR Drachm of Caesarea

 

Tiberius – 14-37 AD

Tiberius

14 – 37 AD

born 42 BC – died 37 AD, age 78


Tiberius Claudius Nero was born on November 16, 42 BC, the elder son of Tiberius Claudius Nero and Livia. Tiberius was most likely born on the Palatine Hill in Rome where he and his younger brother Nero Claudius Drusus, spent much of their early childhood. However, his early childhood was indeed a difficult one due primarily to his family’s opposition toOctavian during the Civil War. His family was forced to flee Italy as a result of his father’s failed revolt against Octavian in 40 BC. They returned in 39 AD, under the terms of the Treaty of Misenum. It was upon their return to Rome when Octavian fell in love with his mother, Livia. Tiberius’ parents thus divorced, and the rest of his life was entwined in the fortunes of his stepfather – Octavian. Upon the death of his natural father, Tiberius delivered the funeral oration in 33 BC.

Tiberius thus spent much of his formative years living in the house of Octavian (Augustus) where he received the finest Roman education. He was also in a position to grow up among the political elite of the Roman Empire. His closest friend during these early years became his brother Drusus. Where Tiberius himself may have lacked ambition, his mother’s plans and guidance more than made up for his personal lack of attention in these matters.

Although Tiberius’ first marriage was arranged with Vipsania Agrippina, daughter of Marcus Agrippa, Tiberius came to love his wife very deeply. Agrippa was the closest friend of Augustus and it was through his military readership that Augustus owed his political position. Therefore, Tiberius’ marriage was indeed political in nature. Still the son Vipsania bore with Tiberius in 14 BC brought him much joy at first and he respectfully named him after his brother – Nero Claudius Drusus, the Younger.

As time passed slowly, Augustus began to entrust various military commands to Tiberius. In 20 BC, he was sent to the East, where he restored Tigranes to the Armenian throne and received back the standards of Crassus that had been captured at Carrhae in 53 BC.

Augustus was not interested in Tiberius as an heir. After all, his father had been an opponent years before. Augustus’ dream was to establish his own Julio dynasty. Consequently, Augustus wanted an heir from his bloodline – not that of his wife Livia. Augustus himself had only a daughter Julia by a previous marriage. Augustus arranged the marriage of his daughter Julia to his nephew Claudius Marcellus in 25 BC, whom he began to groom as his heir. Unfortunately, Marcellus died two years later. Agrippa and Marcellus had become rivals and Agrippa to some extent felt slighted and departed from Rome. With the death of Marcellus, Augustus married Julia to Agrippa in 21 BC and it was through this union that five children were born among whom Augustus now turned for a potential heir.

Agrippa died in 12 BC and with his death, Tiberius’ life would take a turn for the worse, from his perspective. In 12 BC, Augustus instructed Tiberius to divorce Vipsania and to marry his daughter Julia. Tiberius loved his wife desperately, and his relationship with Julia deteriorated rapidly, contributing to his dark moods.

At the same time, Tiberius’ military career continued to progress and by 12 BC, he advanced to the rank of general of Rome. His new rank allowed Tiberius to prove his military abilities while in Pannonia between 12 – 9 BC. This post was followed almost immediately by his appointment to Germania where he served between 9 – 7 BC.

From 9 BC onwards, Tiberius’ life would take another sudden turn of misfortune that undoubtedly had much to do with his increasing solace. It was in 9 BC when his beloved brother Drusus died from an injury while on campaign in Germania. Tiberius’ world had been seriously changed. His love for his brother was perhaps demonstrated best for all to see when Tiberius walked in front of the body as it was carried from Germania all the way back to Rome.

With the knowledge that Augustus had cared little for him, Tiberius felt used and unappreciated. Augustus was becoming consumed with his personal grooming of his grandsons Gaius and Lucius (sons of Agrippa and Julia) as his obvious heirs. This was the scene at court despite the fact that Augustus gave Tiberius the tribunician power in 6 BC. Tiberius remained devoted to his imperial chores, running the provinces with a firm but surprisingly effective and fair hand, all the while his mother urged him to endure.

Nonetheless, in 6 BC Tiberius found this situation so unbearable that he petitioned for a divorce from Julia. This was denied by Augustus who insisted that the two of them learn to get along. Instead, Tiberius left Rome for voluntary exile or retirement to Rhodes, against his mother’s wishes. Livia did her best to collect evidence against Julia in an attempt to discredit her in hopes of seeing her son Tiberius reinstated. Even after Julia’s scandalous sexual exploits with numerous men in Rome was exposed, which resulted in her father ordering her banishment in 2 BC, Augustus still remained cold and indifferent to Tiberius.

With Tiberius in Rhodes, Augustus spent his time with his grandsons to such an extent that they had become quite spoiled. Gaius was given the consulship in 1 AD and was sent on a mission to Syria. But tragedy struck Augustus’ house first in 2 AD when Lucius died suddenly at Marseilles. In 3 AD Gauis was wounded in a siege and he became quite ill thereafter. He attempted to return to Rome but died along the way at Limyra in Turkey. This double tragedy struck Augustus quite hard leaving him little choice but to turn to Livia’s son Tiberius.

Bronze As of Tiberius as heir

Summoned back to Rome in 4 AD, Tiberius was adopted by Augustus, granted tribunician power once more (for 10 years) and apparently chosen as the heir to the throne. For the first time, Augustus authorized coinage with the portrait of Tiberius announcing his designation as heir. Still Augustus preferred almost anyone else to Tiberius, which became obvious from the aging Emperor’s sudden change of heart by the adoption of Agrippa Postumus, the last surviving grandson who had been exiled to Planasia on charges of rape.

The revolt in Germania (4 – 6 AD) and the major uprising in Pannonia (6 – 9 AD) demanded Tiberius’ presence. When word arrived that the legate, Quinctilius Varus, had been killed with his three legions, massacred in the Teutoburg Forest, it was Tiberius who stabilized the Rhine region. Tiberius achieved great distinction from his victory in the war with the Germans, being given a magnificent triumphal celebration in Rome in 11 AD. It was also Tiberius to whom the task of running the government fell upon as Augustus reached the later stages of his life.

When Augustus died in 14 AD, Agrippa Postumus, who was still in exile, was immediately murdered most likely on the orders of Livia to clear the way for her son. Tiberius, thus, began his reign amid some questions. He would be the first to inherit the throne of Rome and the tradition of inheriting power had not yet been tried. There was much concern and question as to the loyalty of the legions. The legions in Pannonia and Germania revolted for better pay and improved conditions of service. Drusus, Tiberius’ son, was sent to Pannonia while Germanicus, Tiberius’ nephew, son of Drusus the Elder, was dispatched to Germany.

Tiberius engaged in a series of disastrous debates in the Senate as to the extent and nature of his powers.

IMPERIAL INTENTIONS

Senators, I am a human being performing human tasks, and it is my ambition to fulfill the role of princeps [emperor]. I want you to understand this, and I want future generations to believe it; you and they will do more than adequate service to my reputation if I am held to be worthy of my forebears, careful for your interests, steadfast in danger, and not afraid to be unpopular if I am serving the national good. As far as I am concerned, if you hold these opinions of me, they will stand as my temples and my finest statues, and they will last.

Tiberius, quoted in Tacitus,

Annals

Tiberius was almost an unwilling ruler who found himself as Emperor due largely, if not entirely, to the political intrigues of his mother Livia who dreamed of a Claudian dynasty. Tiberius was therefore difficult to understand not merely for historians, but also by his contemporaries, particularly those in the Senate. It was little wonder that he had no patience with the flattering politicians of Rome.

Tiberius’ sense of fairness and upstanding character and devotion to his duty was clear during his early reign. He began well in terms of justice and power, for despite his arguments with the Senate, he treated his position with respect and refused to allow any case of treason to go unheard by himself personally. When one man was charged with impiety against the gods, Tiberius replied that the gods must defend their own good name.

As Emperor, Tiberius proved faithful to his deified predecessor, declaring that the acts of Augustus were law. He certainly furthered the authority and the supremacy of the imperial house, but only after it became painfully clear that the Senate was incapable of wielding any true privileges or rights given to it. Corruption and political jealousy was still present within the Senate, which only served to make Tiberius suspicious.

Despite his later reputation for perversion, Tiberius sought to curb not merely corruption but also the declining morals of Roman society. He passed a law forbidding the payment of prostitutes with coinage portraying the image of the Emperor. While this may have been a clever attempt at eliminating prostitution, it only served to illustrate man’s ingenuity. Tokens had become more widely used for a variety of events and games during this period in Roman history. The brothels simply issued tokens of their own depicting a variety of sexual acts, which the patron would purchase and in turn give to the prostitute as payment thereby circumventing the authority of Tiberius.

Much of Tiberius’ trouble stemmed from his inability to effectively communicate with people including his own family. Moody and withdrawn, Tiberius was not seen for the virtues he truly possessed. Tiberius had always felt persecuted by Augustus and manipulated by his mother. No doubt the loss of his brother and his forced marriage with Julia contributed greatly to his suspicious nature as time progressed.

His nephew Germanicus became a respected figure in the Empire and the memory of his brother among the people always tended to overshadow Tiberius. When Germanicus was dispatched to the Rhine he launched a retributive campaign against the Germans. While these operations were more successful from the perspective of propaganda than actual military gain, Tiberius gave Germanicus a triumph in 17 AD.

Germanicus & Drusus

Tiberius had adopted Germanicus as his heir in 4 AD along side his own son Drusus when he himself was adopted by Augustus. We even find coinage minted in the East showing Tiberius with his heirs as illustrated above. His own son Drusus was married to his cousin Livilla who was the daughter of his brother by his wife Antonia and thus the sister of Germanicus. Nevertheless, the triumph celebration granted Germanicus in 17 AD caused tensions within the palace to rise, as the mob in Rome openly preferred dashing Germanicus to the moody Emperor Tiberius. The popularity of Germanicus no doubt had something to do with his being given the IMPERIUM MAIUS and his being sent to the East in 17 AD shortly after his triumph.

Tiberius’ decision to send Germanicus to Syria was most likely the scheme of his mother Livia who still very much dabbled in politics within her son’s court. Whatever the case, the scheme backfired when in 19 AD Germanicus died suddenly at Antioch after quarreling with the Governor of Syria, Gnaeus Calpurnius Piso. A hot issue erupted as Piso and his wife, Plancina, were suspected of poisoning Germanicus and some suspected Tiberius or more likely Livia.

Germanicus’ wife, Agrippina the Elder, (daughter of Julia and Agrippa) was a very outspoken woman. She was much more like the politically active wife of Marc Antony, Fulvia, but unlike Fulvia, Agrippina had many supporters. Following the death of Germanicus, Agrippina turned into an avenging, bitter opponent of Tiberius and Livia. She began a campaign of open hostility marching in the funeral of Germanicus held in Rome and publicly accusing Livia and Tiberius of murder. Ultimately Tiberius sacrificed his longtime supporter Piso who was put on trial for the murder of Germanicus but forever after Tiberius hated Agrippina for what he viewed was the persecution of an innocent man.

Tiberius finally granted his own son Drusus a triumph for his success in Pannonia on May 28th, 20 AD. But this gesture was perhaps more to try to show the people that they still had an heir to the throne who was the cousin of Germanicus.

Tiberius’ mistrust of the Senators, his mother, Agrippina and others led him to search for a loyal aide. Unfortunately, Tiberius would find little relief long-term as he fell directly into the arms of Lucius Aelius Sejanus who was perhaps the most ambitious Prefect of the Praetorian Guard in Roman History. Sejanus correctly recognized Tiberius’ plight and moved to exploit his suspicious nature into outright paranoia.

With Sejanus at his side, Tiberius’ natural moderate rule of justice and fairness declined as the years passed and as the weight of office increased. Informers (DELATORES) invaded the legal system, as accusations against persons high and low initiated a wave of treason trials and deaths as part of the plot woven by Sejanus. Having worked his way into the Emperor’s trust, he convinced Tiberius that there were plots everywhere, using the resulting fear to widen his own influence. Sejanus on one hand pretended to be the friend of Agrippina while warning her that Tiberius wanted to have her poisoned. Likewise, Sejanus told Tiberius that Agrippina intended to have him assassinated thus he drove a wedge between Tiberius and any potential heirs from the house of Germanicus.

Sejanus then moved the prefectship of the Guard into the CASTRA PRAETORIA, a barracks in Rome, which became his key administrative office from where a reign of terror would emerge. Tiberius, tired of the burden of office, was eager to put absolute faith and trust in Sejanus and even called him his friend and loyal assistant.

Tiberius’ son Drusus disliked Sejanus intensely. He did not know the extent of his ambitions, but still he tried to warn his father about his reliance upon Sejanus and Tiberius did not appreciate his concern. They apparently argued and Drusus struck his father in the process. According to Dio, Tiberius shouted at his son saying “You will commit no act of violence or insubordination while I am alive, nor when I am dead either!”

Finally, in 22 AD, Tiberius granted his son Drusus the tribunician power. The following year, however, he fell a victim to Sejanus, who conspired with his wife Livilla to poison him. Sejanus planned to married Livilla and become the next heir to the throne and to this end, he persecuted everyone who stood in the way of that ambition.

The pressure and intrigue of Rome proved too much and Tiberius was persuaded by Sejanus to leave Rome once and for all, leaving the burdens of government to his care. Tiberius was happy to leave his mother Livia behind as well perhaps in part because he may have suspected her hand in the death of Germanicus. Livia had undoubtedly guided his path to the throne, using every means, including murder to secure his accession. He hated her for it, and her constant interference in his rule made his departure from Rome all the more desirable. Tiberius thus retired to the island of Capri where for once in his life he could feel free.

Livia finally died in 29 AD and Tiberius was intent that the Senate should give her as few honors as possible. When the Senate proposed erecting an arch in her honor Tiberius promised to build the arch himself, but he never did it. However, Livia’s death was not only welcomed by Tiberius, but also by Sejanus for with Livia out of the way, his ambitions knew no bounds. Apparently, Livia had saved many senators from the traps set by Sejanus and she was fond of Caligula, a son of Germanicus whom she also protected.

After Livia’s death Sejanus began a judicial attack against Titius Sabinus, a supporter of Agrippina. This evolved into a trial, which incriminated Agrippina and her two sons Nero and Drusus Caesar that ultimately led to them all being imprisoned. Agrippina was condemned and exiled to the island of Pandateria, where her mother Julia had also died in exile under the orders of her father Augustus. However, before Agrippina departed, Tiberius personally flogged her putting out one of her eyes in the process taking great pleasure for all the pain she had caused him and others. Agrippina eventually committed suicide by starving herself to death.

Nero Caesar was exiled and died (like his mother) on a distant rock 31 AD, while Drusus, who aided Sejanus in turning evidence against his brother, endured many years of misery in a Roman dungeon before succumbing in 33 AD. Sejanus then tried to maneuver himself into the inheritance by petitioning Tiberius for permission to marry his son’s widow, Livilla. Tiberius refused and instead proposed a betrothal to his granddaughter Julia (daughter of Drusus and Livilla), which obviously outraged Livilla.

Between Livia’s plots against the heirs of the Julian line and Sejanus’ plots against the heirs of the Claudian line, one by one most of the potential heirs either died or were murdered. By 31 AD, Sejanus had few overt opponents. Antonia, however, finally became aware of Sejanus’ ambitions perhaps at the insistence of her son Claudius. Whatever the reason, Antonia finally sent a letter of warning to Tiberius, delivered by her most trusted freedman, Pallas. Antonia had always been held in the highest respect by Tiberius who believed the warning and began the intrigue necessary to bring Sejanus into custody. Tiberius was aided by Caligula and the plot involved the promise of position to Macro, Sejanus’ second in command, and a large donative of 1,000 denarii per man to the Praetorian Guard for standing by the Emperor. Sejanus was executed for his crimes but his intrigues revealed far more than anyone imagined.

Sejanus’ former wife Apicata, implicated Livilla in the murder of her husband Drusus and as Sejanus’s co-conspirator. Tiberius did not move against Livilla, partly out of respect for Antonia. Dio reported that Antonia imprisoned Livilla, who either starved to death or killed herself because she knew there was no escape. The last years of Tiberius, from 31 until 37, were characterized by reigns of terror, as anyone associated with Sejanus or anyone guilty of often imaginary crimes was executed.

Tiberius’ retirement to Capri did more to destroy his reputation due largely to his association with his great-nephew, Caligula, the last surviving son of Germanicus. Contemporary historians portrayed Tiberius as a man with peculiar tastes and the image that gave was one of an old, dirty, perverted debaucher – a view that was perhaps exaggerated. Nevertheless, Caligula, who was clearly an insane pervert, did what he could to encourage Tiberius’ adventures into pornography.

Tiberius named Caligula and his own grandson Tiberius Gemellus as his heirs before he died at the age of 78 on March 16th, 37 AD, at the Villa of Lucullus in Misenum. The cause of death was probably natural, although some reported that he was smothered to death under a pillow by the Prefect Macro, on the orders of Caligula. It was during the reign of Tiberius that the Ministry and Crucifixion of Jesus Christ occurred.

Tiberius’ reign was generally effective and Rome prospered under his administration. However, Tiberius’ tyrannies, especially at the close of his reign, were closely scrutinized by Tacitus, who viewed him from the biased age of the Emperor Domitian who studied Tiberius for clues on how to rule and issued posthumous coinage in his honor. The historian Dio summed him up by saying that he possessed many virtues and many vices. Tiberius was perhaps one of the most misunderstood Emperors who suffered greatly at the hands of both his family and his ministers.


Titles and Powers, 4 – 37 AD

Yr Tribunician Power Imp. Acclamation Consul Other
4 TR.P.VI.
5 TR.P.VI. – VII. IMP.III.
6 TR.P.VII. – VIII.
7 TR.P.VIII. – VIIII.
8 TR.P.VIIII. – X. IMP.V.
9 TR.P.X. – XI.
10 TR.P.XI. – XII.
11 TR.P.XII. – XIII. IMP.VI.
12 TR.P.XIII. – XIIII. IMP.VII.
13 TR.P.XIIII. – XV.
14 TR.P.XV. – XVI. AVGVSTVS.
15 TR.P.XVI. – XVII. P.M.
16 TR.P.XVII. – XVIII.
17 TR.P.XVIII. – XVIIII.
18 TR.P.XVIIII. – XX. IMP.VIII. COS.III.
19 TR.P.XX. – XXI.
20 TR.P.XXI. – XXII.
21 TR.P.XXII. – XXIII. COS.IIII.
22 TR.P.XXIII. – XXIIII.
23 TR.P.XXIIII. – XXV.
24 TR.P.XXV. – XXVI.
25 TR.P.XXVI. – XXVII.
26 TR.P.XXVII. – XXVIII.
27 TR.P.XXVIII. – XXVIIII.
28 TR.P.XXVIIII. – XXX.
29 TR.P.XXX. XXXI.
30 TR.P.XXXI. – XXXII.
31 TR.P.XXXII. – XXXIII. COS.V
32 TR.P.XXXIII. – XXXIIII.
33 TR.P.XXXIIII. – XXXV.
34 TR.P.XXXV. – XXXVI.
35 TR.P.XXXVI. – XXXVII.
36 TR.P.XXXVII. – XXXVIII.
37 TR.P.XXXVIII.

Note: Tiberius’ first two consulships were in 13 BC and 7 BC. He first received the tribunician power in 6 BC when it was granted to him for a period of five years while serving under Augustus. Shortly after his withdrawal from public life due to his intolerable situation with Augustus’ daughter Julia, Tiberius retired to Rhodes where he allowed his tribunician power to expire in 1 BC and it subsequently lapsed for four years. Following the deaths of Augustus’ grandsons, Caius and Lucius, Tiberius was reinvested with the power on June 27th, 4 AD, and it was subsequently renewed each year on that date.


Monetary System

Silver Denarius of Tiberius

Mints: Rome, Lugdunum, Caesarea, Samosata (?)

Obverse Legends:

As Caesar

TI CAESAR AVGVSTI F IMPERATOR V
TI CAESAR AVGVSTI F IMPERAT V
TI CAESAR AVGVSTI F IMPERAT VII

As Augustus (Emperor)

TI CAESAR DIVI AVG F AVGVSTVS
TI DIVI F AVGVSTVS
TI CAESAR DIVI AVG F AVGVST PM TR POT XXIIII
TI CAESAR DIVI AVG F AVGVST IMP VIII


DENOMINATIONS

As Caesar (Designated Heir)

AR Denarius (Augustus/Tiberius)
Æ Sesterius
Æ Dupondius
Æ As
Æ Semis

As Augustus (Emperor)

AU Aureus (7.54 grams)
AU Quinarius
AR Denarius (3.54 grams)
AR Quinarius
Æ Sesterius
Æ Dupondius
Æ As


Posthumous Coinage

Commemorative Aureus issued by Trajan

Restoration of Trajan 117 AD

AU Aureus

Restoration of Titus

Æ Sesterius
Æ As (Bare hd left/SC)
Æ As (Bare hd rt/SC)
Æ As (Bare hd rt/Winged Caduceus)

Restoration by Domitian

Æ As (Bare Hd Left/SC)

Lucius Caesar – Son

Lucius Caesar

(Born 17 BC – Died 2 AD)
Son of Agrippa and Julia
Grandson of Augustus


Lucius Caesar was the son of Marcus Agrippa and Julia (daughter of Augustus). Lucius was destined to be heir to the throne along with his brother Gaius. Lucius was adopted, along with his brother, by Augustus and personally raised by him. The excessive attention showed them by Augustus spoiled the boys – Lucius especially.

In 2 BC, Lucius received the title Princeps Juventutius one year after his older brother Gaius. This was in fact Augustus’ sign to his court that both Gaius and Lucius were his legal heirs to the throne. Along with this title the boys were given the honor of dedicating all buildings in Rome.

In 2 AD, Lucius departed Rome destined for Spain. He was to join the legions in Spain to begin his military training. Lucius never made it to Spain. He died of a sudden illness along the way at Massilia. Gaius died two years later giving rise to rumors that Livia, wife of Augustus, had a hand in their deaths in order to make way for her own son, Tiberius, to become the heir to Augustus.


Monetary System

Mints: Lydia

Obverse Legends:


DENOMINATIONS

Colonial Mint Only

AE20 Lydia

Gaius Caesar – Son

Gaius Caesar

Died 4 AD


Gaius Caesar was the oldest son of Augustus’ daughter Julia from her second marriage to Marcus Agrippa. His younger brothers were named Lucius and Agrippa Postumus. Gaius and Lucius were destined by Augustus to succeed him, since

Augustus himself lacked a son. Both boys were adopted by Augustus as his own children in 17 BC. There is historical evidence which documents that Augustus was extremely fond of his grandsons. A letter written by Augustus to Gaius while he was in Syria in 1 AD, demonstrates an incredible warmth on Augustus’s part that he felt for the young prince.

Augustus very much wanted to keep the heir to what he had built within the Julian blood-line. At first, he refused to even consider Livia’s sons from her previous marriage, Tiberius and Drusus, who were of the Claudian blood-line. Other than a baby born prematurely, his marriage to Livia produced no children. Augustus’ only child was his daughter, Julia, by his previous marriage to Scribonia. Any dynastic plans that Augustus had for the future must therefore depended upon the children of Julia.

In 25 BC Augustus married Julia to Marcellus, the son of his sister Octavia. Marcellus originally offered hope to Augustus but at the time of his marriage to Julia he was still in his late teens. In 23 BC, Marcellus died suddenly and as such Augustus turned to Agrippa, his long-time friend.

In 21 BC, Agrippa divorced his wife at the request of Augustus in preparation for his marriage to the widow Julia. Despite the fact that Agrippa was 25 years her senior, the marriage succeeded in producing three sons and two daughters. The eldest was Gaius, born in 20 BC and Lucius followed three years later. Agrippa retained the position of heir-apparent but Augustus’ adoption of the boys in 17 BC clearly demonstrated his plans for the future.

Agrippa died in 12 BC, leaving Julia widowed for the second time and pregnant. She gave birth to a third son Agrippa Postumus later in 12 BC. Only following the death of Agrippa did Augustus begin to turn an eye toward the sons of Livia. Realizing that the two young princes needed a guardian should he himself die, Augustus decided to have the eldest son of Livia, Tiberius, marry his daughter Julia. Tiberius was compelled to divorce his present wife Vipsania (daughter of Agrippa by the latter’s first marriage), whom he apparently loved very much. The wedding took place on February 12th, 11 BC.

While the two young princes were quite popular with the people, they had also been quite spoiled by Augustus. This became quite evident in their arrogant attitude. In order to shock them back to reality, Augustus wanted to grant the tribuniciam power for five years to Tiberius, but he refused to get caught up in the middle of the family battle. Instead, Tiberius sought to retire to Rhodes being very unhappy with his life in general and in particular with his marriage to Julia.

Gaius was made consul in the year 1 AD and was sent on a mission to Syria with the authority to reassert Roman rule over Armenia. Lucius took ill quite suddenly and died at Marseilles in 2 AD. In 3 AD, Gaius was wounded during a siege. He became quite ill and set out to return to Rome. By the time he had reached Turkey, his condition became worse. He died at Limyra on the 21st of February during the year 4 AD. Rumors have persisted that both deaths were the work of poison on the part of Livia (Augustus’ wife) who had her own designs of creating a Claudian dynasty. Agrippa Postumus had been banished by Augustus perhaps on false charges. Nevertheless, he was immediately murdered by perhaps on the orders of Livia at the time her son Tiberius came to the trone after the death of Augustus.


Monetary System

Note: While it has been argued that this coinage does not display the portrait of Gaius, but instead a youthful portrait of Augustus, the fact that the obverse inscription clearly states CAESAR tends to imply that such an argument is not correct. Given the extreme pride that Augustus felt toward Gaius, it is unlikely that this portrait is anything but an image of his heir apparent.

Mints: Rome

Obverse Legend:

CAESAR


DENOMINATIONS

AU Aureus (6.54 grams)
AR Denarius

Agrippa – 12BC

Agrippa

Died 12 BC


Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa was of common birth. He was Octavian’s lifelong friend, lieutenant, companion and supporter. Agrippa accompanied Octavian in 45 BC to Apoflonia, where the two friends learned the art of soldiering. Agrippa was even at Octavian’s side in 44 BC when the news of Julius Caesar’s assassination arrived. When Octavian inherited all of Caesar’s wealth and political power, it was Agrippa who emerged as his representative in all matters of finance and politics. It was also Agrippa who raised an army that insured Octavian as a member of the newly formed triumvirate, which emerged in the aftermath Caesar’s assassination. It was Agrippa who stood behind Octavian and was largely responsible for the transformation of Octavian into Augustus the Emperor. But it would be Agrippa’s common birth status that would ultimately prevent him from ever truly being considered as a potential heir to the newly created throne of Augustus.

Agrippa’s abilities were revealed to Octavian during the Civil Wars. He fought against Marc Antony’sbrother, Lucius, in 40 BC, and then helped destroy the remaining so-called Republican forces at Persia. Agrippa was then sent to Gaul where he was the only successful agent of the triumvirate defeating a revolt by the Aquitanii and established Roman site at the Ubii (near Cologne). Agrippa even made a punitive raid over the Rhine against the Germanic tribes. In 37 BC, Agrippa returned to Rome in full triumph and was given the consulship as his reward. At that point in Agrippa’s career, he put down his general’s rank in the army and became an admiral. Between 37 and 31 BC, Agrippa proved to be a formidable admiral as well creating a powerful fleet and then setting sail for war against the pirate, Sextus Pompey. Sextus himself had quite a reputation as master of the high seas. Numerous attempts at defeating him were made, but only Agrippa succeeded in this effort. At Mylae and Naulochus, Sextus was soundly defeated by Agrippa.

At the Battle of ACTIUM, Agrippa invented the HARPAX, a formidable weapon that won the battle. Agrippa commanded the successful left wing that insured victory for Octavian over Marc Antony andCleopatra. This final battle at Actium left Octavian as the ruler of the Roman world and began a new age era for Roman government.

In the new administration, Octavian was given the title of Augustus and Agrippa was never far behind. It was Agrippa who was quite instrumental in conducting the census of 29 – 28 BC and the subsequent reorganization of the Roman institutions, including the reduction of the Senate, that proved critical to the formation of an imperial regime.

Agrippa was given the power to administer the Eastern regions of the Roman Empire. His eastern appointment, however, sparked a feud with Claudius Marcellus, Augustus’ nephew, who at the time was being groomed as the heir to Augustus. Agrippa was then given a mission away from Rome to the Black Sea area, Jerusalem and Pannonia. But clearly, Agrippa, despite his loyalty to Augustus, was not quite acceptable for the post as heir to the newly formed throne.
Upon the Agrippa’s return to Rome, he became quite involved once again in civic affairs. This time he focused upon improvements in public works. He built the famous Pantheon, which is the only Roman building to survive largely intact. He also constructed two aqueducts, built baths and cleaned the Roman water supply system. Agrippa also supervised the building of roads in Lugdunum (Lyons), founded colonies at Berytus and Baalbek and planned several other Roman towns. Agrippa also wrote and drafted a modern map of the Empire.

Throughout the course of his life, Agrippa took three wives. His first wife was the daughter of Pomponius Atticus named Caecilia with whom he had a daughter Vipsania who became the first wife of the EmperorTiberius. His second wife was the niece of Augustus Marcella who was very beautiful and considerably wealthy. Finally, in 21 BC, Agrippa was given Augustus’ daughter Julia. Following the death of Marcellus, Augustus was desperate for an heir. It was at this time that he chose to give his daughter to Agrippa hoping that an heir would be born. Julia did produce three sons, Gaius, Lucius and Agrippa Postumous, as well as a daughter, named Agrippina. However, it would be through his daughter Agrippina that his descendants would ultimately rise to the throne in his grandson Caligula followed by his great-grandson Nero.

Agrippa died in 12 BC a few months before the birth of his third son Agrippa Postumus. Agrippa was not forgotten. He was long remembered and honored by the Roman military, the Roman people and Augustus.


Monetary System

Silver Denarius Agrippa & Augustus

Mints: Rome


DENOMINATIONS

AU Aureus (7.68 grams)
AR Denarius (3.83 grams)


Posthumous Issues

Æ As by Caligula

Æ As (by Caligula)
Æ As (by Titus)
Æ As (by Domitian)