The race of the Caesars
ended with Nero. That this would be so was shown by many portents and
especially by two very significant ones. Years before, as Livia was
returning to her estate near Veii, immediately after her marriage with
Augustus, an eagle which flew by dropped into her lap a white hen,
holding in its beak a sprig of laurel, just as the eagle had carried it
off. Livia resolved to rear the fowl and plant the sprig, whereupon such
a great brood of chickens was hatched that to this day the villa is
called Ad Gallinas, and such a grove of laurel
sprang up, that the Caesars gathered their laurels from it when they
were going to celebrate triumphs. Moreover it was the habit of those who
triumphed to plant other branches at once in that same place, and it was
observed that just before the death of each of them the tree which he
had planted withered. Now in Nero's last year the whole grove died from
the root up, as well as all the hens. Furthermore, when shortly
afterwards the temple of the Caesars was struck by lightning, the heads
fell from all the statues at the same time, and his sceptre, too, was
dashed from the hand of Augustus.
2
Nero was succeeded by Galba, who was related in no degree to the house
of the Caesars, although unquestionably of noble origin and of an old
and powerful family; for he always added to the inscriptions on his
statues that he was the great-grandson of Quintus Catulus Capitolinus,
and when he became emperor he even displayed a family tree in his hall
in which he carried back his ancestry on his father's side to Jupiter
and on his mother's to Pasiphae, the wife of Minos.
3
It would be a long story to give in detail his illustrious ancestors and
the honorary inscriptions of the entire race, but I shall give a brief
account of his immediate family.
It is uncertain why the first of the Sulpicii who bore the surname Galba
assumed the name, and whence it was derived. Some think that it was
because after having for a long time unsuccessfully besieged a town in
Spain, he at last set fire to it by torches smeared with galbanum;
others because during a long illness he made constant use of
galbeum, that is to say of remedies wrapped
in wool; still others, because he was a very fat man, such as the Gauls
term galba, or because he was, on the
contrary, as slender as the insects called galbae,
which breed in oak trees.
The family acquired
distinction from Servius Galba, who became consul and was decidedly the
most eloquent speaker of his time. This man, they say, was the cause of
the war with Viriathus, because while governing Spain as propraetor, he
treacherously massacred thirty thousand of the Lusitanians. His grandson
had been one of Caesar's lieutenants in Gaul, but angered because his
commander caused his defeat for the consulship, he joined the conspiracy
with Brutus and Cassius, and was
consequently condemned to death by the Pedian law. From him were descended the grandfather
and the father of the emperor Galba. The former, who was more eminent
for his learning than for his rank — for he did not advance beyond the
grade of praetor — published a voluminous and painstaking history. The
father attained the consulship, and although he was short of stature and
even hunchbacked, besides being only an indifferent speaker, was an
industrious pleader at the bar. He
married Mummia Achaica, the granddaughter of Catulus and
great-granddaughter of Lucius Mummius who destroyed Corinth; and later
Livia Ocellina, a very rich and beautiful woman, who however is thought
to have sought marriage with him because of his high rank, and the more
eagerly when, in response to her frequent advances, he took off his robe
in private and showed her his deformity, so as not to seem to deceive
her by concealing it. By Achaica he had two sons, Gaius and Servius.
Gaius, who was the elder, left Rome after squandering the greater part
of his estate, and committed suicide because Tiberius would not allow
him to take part in the allotment of the provinces in his year.
4
The emperor Servius Galba was born in the consulship of Marcus Valerius
Messala and Gnaeus Lentulus, on the ninth day before the Kalends of
January, in a country house situated on a hill near Tarracina, on the left as you go towards Fundi. Adopted by his
stepmother Livia, he took her name and the surname Ocella, and also
changed his forename; for he used Lucius, instead of Servius, from that
time until he became emperor. It is well known
that when he was still a boy and called to pay his respects to Augustus
with others of his age, the emperor pinched his cheek and said in Greek:
"Thou too, child, wilt have a nibble at this power of mine." Tiberius
too, when he heard that Galba was destined to be emperor, but in his old
age, said: "Well, let him live then, since that does not concern me."
Again, when Galba's grandfather was busy
with a sacrifice for a stroke of lightning,
and an eagle snatched the intestines from his hand and carried them to
an oak full of acorns, the prediction was made that the highest dignity
would come to the family, but late; whereupon he said with a laugh:
"Very likely, when a mule has a foal."
Afterwards when Galba was beginning his revolt, nothing gave him so much
encouragement as the foaling of a mule, and while the rest were
horrified and looked on it as an unfavourable omen, he alone regarded it
as most propitious, remembering the sacrifice and his grandfather's
saying.
When he assumed the
gown of manhood, he dreamt that Fortune said that she was tired of
standing before his door, and that unless she were quickly admitted, she
would fall a prey to the first comer. When he awoke, opening the door of
the hall, he found close by the threshold a bronze statue of Fortune
more than a cubit high. This he carried in his arms to Tusculum,
where he usually spent the summer, and consecrated it in a room of his
house; and from that time on he honoured it with monthly sacrifices and
a yearly vigil.
Even before he reached
middle life, he persisted in keeping up an old and forgotten custom of
his country, which survived only in his own household,
of having his freedmen and slaves
appear before him twice a day in a body, greeting him in the morning and
bidding him farewell at evening, one by one.
5
Among other liberal studies he applied himself to the law. He also
assumed a husband's duties,
but after losing his wife Lepida and two sons he had by her, he remained
a widower. And he could not be tempted afterwards by any match, not even
with Agrippina, who no sooner lost Domitius by death than she set her
cap for Galba so obviously, even before the death of his wife, that
Lepida's mother scolded her roundly before a company of matrons and went
so far as to slap her.
He showed marked
respect to Livia Augusta, to whose favour he owed great influence during
her lifetime and by whose last will he almost became a rich man; for he
had the largest bequest among her legatees, one of fifty million
sesterces. But because the sum was designated in figures and not written
out in words, Tiberius, who was her heir, reduced the bequest to five
hundred thousand, and Galba never received even that amount.
6
He began his career of office before the legal age, and in celebrating
the games of the Floralia in his praetorship he gave a new kind of exhibition, namely
of elephants walking the rope.
Then he governed the province of Aquitania for nearly a year and soon
afterwards held a regular consulship
for six months; and it chanced that in this office he succeeded Lucius
Domitius, the father of Nero, and was succeeded by Salvius Otho, the
father of the emperor Otho, a kind of
omen of what happened later, when he became emperor between the reigns
of the sons of these two men.
Appointed governor of
Upper Germany by Gaius Caesar in room of Gaetulicus, the day after he
appeared before the legions he put a stop to their applause at a
festival which chanced to fall at that time, by issuing a written order
to keep their hands under their cloaks; and immediately this verse was
bandied about the camp:
|
"Soldier, learn to play the soldier; 'tis Galba, not
Gaetulicus."
|
With equal strictness
he put a stop to the requests for furloughs. He got both the veterans
and the new recruits into condition by plenty of hard work, speedily
checked the barbarians, who had already made inroads even into Gaul, and
when Gaius arrived,
Galba and his army made such a good impression, that out of the great
body of troops assembled from all the provinces none received greater
commendation or richer rewards. Galba particularly distinguished
himself, while directing the military manoeuvres shield in hand, by
actually running for
twenty miles close beside the emperor's chariot.
7
When the murder of Gaius was announced, although many urged Galba to
take advantage of the opportunity, he preferred quiet. Hence he was in
high favour with Claudius, became one of his staff of intimate friends,
and was treated with such consideration that the departure of the
expedition to Britain was put off because Galba was taken with a sudden
illness, of no great severity. He governed Africa
for two years with the rank of proconsul, being specially chosen
to restore order in the province, which was disturbed both by internal
strife and by a revolt of the barbarians. And he was successful, owing
to his insistence on strict discipline and his observance of justice
even in trifling matters. When provisions
were very scarce during a foray and a soldier was accused of having sold
for a hundred denarii a peck
of wheat which was left from his rations, Galba gave orders that when
the man began to lack food, he should receive aid from no one; and he
starved to death. On another occasion when he was holding court and the
question of the ownership of a beast of burden was laid before him, as
the evidence on both sides was slight and the witnesses unreliable, so
that it was difficult to get at the truth, he ruled that the beast
should be led with its head muffled up to the pool where it was usually
watered, that it should then be unmuffled, and should belong to the man
to whom it returned of its own accord after drinking.
8
His services in Africa at that time, and previously in Germany, were
recognised by the triumphal regalia and three priesthoods, for he was
chosen a member of the Fifteen,
of the brotherhood of Titius,
and of the priests of Augustus.
After that he lived for the most part in retirement until about the
middle of Nero's reign, never going out even for recreation without
taking a million sesterces in gold with him in a second carriage;
until at last, while he was staying in the town of Fundi, Hispania
Tarraconensis was offered him. And it
fell out that as he was offering sacrifice in a public temple after his
arrival in the province, the hair of a young attendant who was carrying
an incense-box suddenly turned white
all over his head, and there were some who did not hesitate to interpret
this as a sign of a change of rulers and of the succession of an old man
to a young one; that is to say, of Galba to Nero. Not long after this
lightning struck a lake of Cantabria and twelve axes were found there,
an unmistakable token of supreme power.
9
For eight years he governed the province in a variable and inconsistent
manner. At first he was vigorous and energetic and even over severe in
punishing offences; for he cut off the hands of a money-lender who
carried on his business dishonestly and nailed them to his counter;
crucified a man for poisoning his ward, whose property he was to inherit
in case of his death; and when the man invoked the law and declared that
he was a Roman citizen, Galba, pretending to lighten his punishment by
some consolation and honour, ordered that a cross much higher than the
rest and painted white be set up, and the man transferred to it. But he
gradually changed to sloth and inaction, not to give Nero any cause for
jealousy, and as he used to say himself, because no one could be forced
to render an account for doing nothing.
As he was holding the
assizes at New Carthage, he learned of the rebellion of the Gallic
provinces through an urgent appeal for help from the governor of
Aquitania; then came letters from Vindex, calling upon him to make
himself the liberator and leader of mankind. So without much hesitation
he accepted the proposal, led by fear as well as by hope. For he had
intercepted despatches ordering his own death, which had been secretly
sent by Nero to his agents.
He was encouraged too, in addition to most favourable
auspices and omens, by the prediction
of a young girl of high birth, and the more so because the priest of
Jupiter at Clunia, directed by a dream, had found in the inner shrine of
his temple the very same prediction, likewise spoken by an inspired girl
two hundred years before. And the purport of the verses
was that one day there would come forth from Spain the ruler and lord of
the world.
10
Accordingly, pretending that he was going to attend to the manumitting
of slaves, he mounted the tribunal, on the front of which he had set up
as many images as he could find of those who had been condemned and put
to death by Nero; and having by his side a boy of noble family, whom he
had summoned for that very purpose from his place of exile hard by in
the Balearic Isles, he deplored the state of the times; being thereupon
hailed as emperor, he declared that he was their governor, representing
the senate and people of Rome. Then proclaiming a holiday, he enrolled
from the people of the province legions and auxiliaries in addition to
his former force of one legion, two divisions of cavalry, and three
cohorts. But from the oldest and most experienced of the nobles he chose
a kind of senate, to whom he might refer matters of special importance
whenever it was necessary. He also chose
young men of the order of knights, who were to have the title of
volunteers
and keep guard before his bedchamber in place of the regular soldiers,
without losing their right to wear the gold ring.
He also sent proclamations broadcast throughout the province, urging all
men individually and collectively to join the revolution and aid the
common cause in every possible way.
At about this same
time, during the fortification of a
town which he had chosen as the seat of war, a ring of ancient
workmanship was found, containing a precious stone engraved with a
Victory and a trophy. Immediately afterwards a ship from Alexandria
loaded with arms arrived at Dertosa without a pilot, without a single
sailor or passenger, removing all doubt in anyone's mind that the war
was just and holy and undertaken with the approval of the gods. Then
suddenly and unexpectedly the whole plan was almost brought to naught. One of the two divisions of cavalry,
repenting of its change of allegiance, attempted to desert Galba as he
was approaching his camp and was with difficulty prevented. Some slaves
too, whom one of Nero's freedmen had given Galba with treachery in view,
all but slew him as he was going to the bath through a narrow
passage-way. In fact they would have succeeded, had they not conjured
one another not to miss the opportunity and so been questioned as to
what the opportunity was to which they referred; for when they were put
to the torture, a confession was wrung from them.
11
To these great perils was added the death of Vindex, by which he was
especially panic-stricken and came near taking his own life, in the
belief that all was lost. But when some messengers came from the city,
reporting that Nero was dead and that all the people had sworn
allegiance to him, he laid aside the title of governor and assumed that
of Caesar.
He then began his march to Rome in a general's cloak with a dagger
hanging from his neck in front of his breast; and he did not resume the
toga until he had overthrown those who were plotting against him,
Nymphidius Sabinus, prefect of the praetorian guard
at Rome, in Germany and Africa the governors Fonteius Capito and Clodius
Macer.
12
His double reputation for cruelty and avarice had gone before him; men
said that he had punished the cities of the Spanish and Gallic provinces
which had hesitated about taking sides with him by heavier taxes and
some even by the razing of their walls, putting to death the governors
and imperial deputies
along with their wives and children. Further, that he had melted down a
golden crown of fifteen pounds weight, which the people of Tarraco had
taken from their ancient temple of Jupiter and presented to him, with
orders that the three ounces which were found lacking be exacted from
them. This reputation was confirmed and
even augmented immediately on his arrival in the city. For having
compelled some marines whom Nero had made regular soldiers to return to
their former position as rowers, upon their refusing and obstinately
demanding an eagle and standards, he not only dispersed them by a
cavalry charge, but even decimated
them. He also disbanded a cohort of Germans, whom the previous Caesars
had made their body-guard
and had found absolutely faithful in many emergencies, and sent them
back to their native country without any rewards, alleging that they
were more favourably inclined towards Gnaeus Dolabella, near whose
gardens they had their camp. The
following tales too were told in mockery of him, whether truly or
falsely:
that when an unusually elegant dinner was set before him, he groaned
aloud; that when his duly appointed steward presented his expense
account, he handed him a dish of beans in return for his industry and
carefulness; and that when the flute player
Canus greatly pleased him, he presented him with five denarii, which he
took from his own purse with his own hand.
13
Accordingly his coming was not so welcome as it might have been, and
this was apparent at the first performance in the theatre; for when the
actors of an Atellan farce began the familiar lines
|
"Here comes Onesimus from his farm"
|
all the spectators at once finished the song in
chorus and repeated it several times with appropriate gestures,
beginning with that verse.
14
Thus his popularity and prestige were greater when he won, than while he
ruled the empire,
though he gave many proofs of being an excellent prince; but he was by
no means so much loved for those qualities as he was hated for his acts
of the opposite character.
He was wholly under
the control of three men, who were commonly known as his tutors because
they lived with him in the palace and never left his side. They were
Titus Vinius, one of his generals in Spain, a man of unbounded
covetousness; Cornelius Laco, advanced from the position of judge's
assistant to that of prefect of the Guard and intolerably haughty and
indolent; and his own freedman Icelus, who had only just before received
the honour of the gold ring
and the surname of Marcianus, yet already aspired to the highest office
open to the equestrian order.
To these brigands, each with his different vice, he so entrusted and
handed himself over as their tool, that his conduct was far from
consistent; for now he was more
exacting and niggardly, and now more extravagant and reckless than
became a prince chosen by the people and of his time of life.
He condemned to death
divers distinguished men of both orders on trivial suspicions without a
trial. He rarely granted Roman citizenship, and the privileges of
threefold paternity
to hardly one or two, and even to those only for a fixed and limited
time. When the jurors petitioned that a sixth division be added to their
number, he not only refused, but even deprived them of the privilege
granted by Claudius,
of not being summoned for court duty in winter and at the beginning of
the year.
15
It was thought too that he intended to limit the offices open to
senators and knights to a period of two years, and to give them only to
such as did not wish them and declined them.
He had all the grants of Nero revoked, allowing only a tenth part to be
retained; and he exacted repayment with the help of fifty Roman knights,
stipulating that even if the actors and athletes had sold anything that
had formerly been given them, it should be taken away from the
purchases, in case the recipient had spent the money and could not repay
it. On the other hand, there was nothing
that he did not allow his friends and freedmen to sell at a price or
bestow as a favour, taxes and freedom from taxation, the punishment of
the guiltless and impunity for the guilty. Nay more, when the Roman
people called for the punishment of Halotus and Tigellinus, the most
utterly abandoned of all Nero's creatures, not content with saving their
lives, he honoured Halotus with a very important stewardship and in the
case of Tigellinus even issued an edict rebuking the people for their cruelty.
16
Having thus incurred the hatred of almost all men of every class, he was
especially detested by the soldiers; for although their officers
had promised them a larger gift than common when they swore allegiance
to Galba in his absence, so far from keeping the promise, he declared
more than once that it was his habit to levy troops, not buy them; and
on this account he embittered the soldiers all over the empire. The
praetorians he filled besides with both fear and indignation by
discharging many of them from time to time as under suspicion of being
partisans of Nymphidius. But loudest of all was the grumbling of
the army in Upper Germany, because it was defrauded of the reward for
its services against the Gauls and Vindex. Hence they were the first to
venture on mutiny, refusing on the Kalends of January to swear
allegiance to anyone save the senate, and at once resolving to send a
deputation to the praetorians with the following message: that the
emperor created in Spain did not suit them and the Guard must choose one
who would be acceptable to all the armies.
17
When this was reported to Galba, thinking that it was not so much his
age as his lack of children that was criticised, he picked out Piso
Frugi Licinianus from the midst of the throng at one of his morning
receptions, a young man of noble birth and high character, who had long
been one of his special favourites and always named in his will as heir
to his property and his name. Calling him son, he led him to the
praetorian camp and adopted him before the assembled soldiers.
But even then he made no mention of
largess, thus making it easier for Marcus Salvius Otho to accomplish his
purpose within six days after the adoption.
18
Many prodigies in rapid succession from the very beginning of his reign
had foretold Galba's end exactly as it happened. When victims were being
slain to right and left all along his route in every town,
an ox, maddened by the stroke of an axe, broke its bonds and charged the
emperor's chariot, and as it raised its feet, deluged him with blood.
And as Galba dismounted, one of his guards, pushed forward by the crowd,
almost wounded him with his lance. Again, as he entered the city, and
later the Palace, he was met by a shock of earthquake and a sound like
the lowing of kine. There followed even
clearer signs. He had set apart from all the treasure a necklace
fashioned of pearls and precious stones, for the adornment of his image
of Fortune at Tusculum.
This on a sudden impulse he consecrated to the Capitoline Venus,
thinking it worthy of a more august position. The next night Fortune
appeared to him in his dreams, complaining of being robbed of the gift
intended for her and threatening in her turn to take away what she had
bestowed. When Galba hastened in terror to Tusculum at daybreak, to
offer expiatory sacrifices because of the dream, and sent on men to make
preparations for the ceremony, he found on the altar nothing but warm
ashes and beside it an old man dressed in black, holding the incense in
a glass dish and the wine in an earthen cup. It was also remarked that as he was
sacrificing on the Kalends of January, the garland fell from his head,
and that as he took the auspices, the sacred chickens flew
away. As he was on the point of
addressing the soldiers on the day of the adoption,
his camp chair, through the forgetfulness of his attendants, was not
placed on the tribunal, as is customary, and in the senate his curule
chair was set wrong side foremost.
19
As he was offering sacrifice on the morning before he was killed, a
soothsayer warned him again and again to look out for danger, since
assassins were not far off.
Not long after this he learned that Otho held
possession of the Camp,
and when several advised him to proceed thither as soon as possible —
for they said that he could win the day by his presence and prestige —
he decided to do no more than hold his present position and strengthen
it by getting together a guard of the legionaries, who were encamped in
many different quarters of the city. He did however put on a linen
cuirass, though he openly declared that it would afford little
protection against so many swords. But
he was lured out by false reports, circulated by the conspirators to
induce him to appear in public; for when a few rashly assured him that
the trouble was over, that the rebels had been overthrown, and that the
rest were coming in a body to offer their congratulations, ready to
submit to all his orders, he went out to meet them with so much
confidence, that when one of the soldiers boasted that he had slain
Otho, he asked him, "On whose authority?" and then he went on as far as
the Forum. There the horsemen who had been bidden to slay him, spurring
their horses through the streets and dispersing the crowd of civilians,
caught sight of him from a distance and halted for a moment. Then
they rushed upon him again and
butchered him, abandoned by his followers.
20
Some say that at the beginning of the disturbance he cried out, "What
mean you, fellow soldiers? I am yours and you are mine," and that he
even promised them largess.
But the more general account is, that he offered them his neck without
resistance, urging them to do their duty
and strike, since it was their will. It might seem very surprising that
none of those present tried to lend aid to their emperor, and that all
who were sent for treated the summons with contempt except a company of
German troops. These, because of his recent kindness in showing them
great indulgence when they were weakened by illness, flew to his help,
but through their unfamiliarity with the city took a roundabout way and
arrived too late.
He was killed beside
the Lake of Curtius
and was left lying just as he was, until a common soldier, returning
from a distribution of grain, threw down his load and cut off the head.
Then, since there was no hair by which to grasp it, he put it under his
robe, but later thrust his thumb into the mouth and so carried it to
Otho. He handed it over to his servants and camp-followers, who set it
on a lance and paraded it about the camp with jeers, crying out from
time to time, "Galba, thou Cupid, exult in thy vigour!" The special
reason for this saucy jest was, that the report had gone abroad a few
days before, that when someone had congratulated him on still looking
young and vigorous, he replied:
|
"As yet my strength is unimpaired."
|
From these it was
bought by a freedman of Patrobius Neronianus for a hundred pieces of
gold and thrown aside in the place where his patron had been executed by
Galba's order. At last, however, his steward Argivus consigned it to the
tomb with the rest of the body in Galba's private gardens on the
Aurelian Road.
21
He was of average height, very bald, with blue eyes and a hooked nose.
His hands and feet were so distorted by gout that he could not endure a
shoe for long, unroll a book, or even hold one. The flesh on his right
side too had grown out and hung down to such an extent, that it could
with difficulty be held in place by a bandage.
22
It is said that he was a heavy eater and in winter time was in the habit
of taking food even before daylight, while at dinner he helped himself
so lavishly that he would have the leavings which remained in a heap
before him passed along and distributed among the attendants who waited
on him.
He was more inclined to unnatural desire, and in gratifying it preferred
full-grown, strong men. They say that when Icelus, one of his old-time
favourites, brought him news in Spain of Nero's death, he not only
received him openly with the fondest kisses, but begged him to prepare
himself with delay and took him one side.
23
He met his end in the seventy-third year of his age and the seventh
month of his reign. The senate, as soon as it was allowed to do so,
voted him a statue standing upon a column adorned with the beaks of ships, in the part of the Forum where he
was slain; but Vespasian annulled this decree, believing that Galba had
sent assassins from Spain to Judaea, to take his life.