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Antoninus Pius

Antoninus Pius (Latin: Titus Aelius Hadrianus Antoninus Pius; 19 September 86 – 7 March 161) was Roman emperor from 138 to 161. He was the fourth of the Five Good Emperors from the Nerva–Antonine dynasty.[3]

Antoninus Pius
Bust in the Glyptothek, Munich
Roman emperor
Reign11 July 138 – 7 March 161
PredecessorHadrian
SuccessorMarcus Aurelius and Lucius Verus
Born19 September 86
Lanuvium, Italy
Died7 March 161 (aged 74)
Lorium, Italy
Burial
SpouseAnnia Galeria Faustina
Issue
Detail
Names
Titus Aurelius Fulvus Boionius Antoninus[1]
Titus Aelius Caesar Antoninus (adoption)[2]
Regnal name
Imperator Caesar Titus Aelius Hadrianus Antoninus Augustus Pius[2]
DynastyNerva–Antonine
Father
Mother
ReligionAncient Roman religion
Denarius, struck 140 AD with portrait of Antoninus Pius (obverse) and his adoptive son Marcus Aurelius (reverse). Inscription: ANTIVS P. P., TR. P., CO[N]S. III / AVRELIVS CAES. AVG. PII F. CO[N]S.

Born into a senatorial family, Antoninus held various offices during the reign of Emperor Hadrian. He married Hadrian's niece Faustina, and Hadrian adopted him as his son and successor shortly before his death. Antoninus acquired the cognomen Pius after his accession to the throne, either because he compelled the Senate to deify his adoptive father,[4] or because he had saved senators sentenced to death by Hadrian in his later years.[5] His reign is notable for the peaceful state of the Empire, with no major revolts or military incursions during this time. A successful military campaign in southern Scotland early in his reign resulted in the construction of the Antonine Wall.

Antoninus was an effective administrator, leaving his successors a large surplus in the treasury, expanding free access to drinking water throughout the Empire, encouraging legal conformity, and facilitating the enfranchisement of freed slaves. He died of illness in 161 and was succeeded by his adopted sons Marcus Aurelius and Lucius Verus as co-emperors.

Early life

Childhood and family

Antoninus Pius was born Titus Aurelius Fulvus Boionius Antoninus near Lanuvium (modern-day Lanuvio) in Italy to Titus Aurelius Fulvus, consul in 86, and wife Arria Fadilla[3][6] The Aurelii Fulvi were an Aurelian family settled in Nemausus (modern Nîmes).[7] Titus Aurelius Fulvus was the son of a senator of the same name, who, as legate of Legio III Gallica, had supported Vespasian in his bid to the Imperial office and been rewarded with a suffect consulship, plus an ordinary one under Domitian in 85. The Aurelii Fulvi were therefore a relatively new senatorial family from Gallia Narbonensis whose rise to prominence was supported by the Flavians.[8] The link between Antoninus' family and their home province explains the increasing importance of the post of proconsul of Gallia Narbonensis during the late second century.[9]

Antoninus' father had no other children and died shortly after his 89 ordinary consulship. Antoninus was raised by his maternal grandfather Gnaeus Arrius Antoninus,[3] reputed by contemporaries to be a man of integrity and culture and a friend of Pliny the Younger.[10] The Arrii Antonini were an older senatorial family from Italy, very influential during Nerva's reign. Arria Fadilla, Antoninus' mother, married afterwards Publius Julius Lupus, suffect consul in 98; from that marriage came two daughters, Arria Lupula and Julia Fadilla.[11]

Marriage and children

Some time between 110 and 115, Antoninus married Annia Galeria Faustina the Elder.[12] They are believed to have enjoyed a happy marriage. Faustina was the daughter of consul Marcus Annius Verus (II)[3] and Rupilia Faustina (a step-sister to the Empress Vibia Sabina).[13][14] Faustina was a beautiful woman, and despite rumours about her character, it is clear that Antoninus cared for her deeply.[15]

Faustina bore Antoninus four children, two sons and two daughters.[16] They were:

  • Marcus Aurelius Fulvus Antoninus (died before 138); his sepulchral inscription has been found at the Mausoleum of Hadrian in Rome.[17][18]
  • Marcus Galerius Aurelius Antoninus (died before 138); his sepulchral inscription has been found at the Mausoleum of Hadrian in Rome.[17][19] His name appears on a Greek Imperial coin.
  • Aurelia Fadilla (died in 135); she married Lucius Plautius Lamia Silvanus, consul 145. She appeared to have no children with her husband; and her sepulchral inscription has been found in Italy.[20]
  • Annia Galeria Faustina Minor or Faustina the Younger (between 125 and 130–175), a future Roman Empress, married her maternal cousin Marcus Aurelius in 146.[7]

When Faustina died in 141, Antoninus was greatly distressed.[21] In honour of her memory, he asked the Senate to deify her as a goddess, and authorised the construction of a temple to be built in the Roman Forum in her name, with priestesses serving in her temple.[22] He had various coins with her portrait struck in her honor. These coins were scripted "DIVA FAUSTINA" and were elaborately decorated. He further founded a charity, calling it Puellae Faustinianae or Girls of Faustina, which assisted destitute girls[12] of good family.[23] Finally, Antoninus created a new alimenta, a Roman welfare program, as part of Cura Annonae.

The emperor never remarried. Instead, he lived with Galeria Lysistrate,[24] one of Faustina's freed women. Concubinage was a form of female companionship sometimes chosen by powerful men in Ancient Rome, especially widowers like Vespasian, and Marcus Aurelius. Their union could not produce any legitimate offspring who could threaten any heirs, such as those of Antoninus. Also, as one could not have a wife and an official concubine (or two concubines) at the same time, Antoninus avoided being pressed into a marriage with a noblewoman from another family. (Later, Marcus Aurelius would also reject the advances of his former fiancée Ceionia Fabia, Lucius Verus's sister, on the grounds of protecting his children from a stepmother, and took a concubine instead.)[25][26][27]

Favour with Hadrian

 
Marble bust of Antoninus Pius (138–161 CE); British Museum, London

Having filled the offices of quaestor and praetor with more than usual success,[28] he obtained the consulship in 120[12] having as his colleague Lucius Catilius Severus.[29] He was next appointed by the Emperor Hadrian as one of the four proconsuls to administer Italia,[30] his district including Etruria, where he had estates.[31] He then greatly increased his reputation by his conduct as proconsul of Asia, probably during 134–135.[30]

He acquired much favor with Hadrian, who adopted him as his son and successor on 25 February 138,[32] after the death of his first adopted son Lucius Aelius,[33] on the condition that Antoninus would in turn adopt Marcus Annius Verus, the son of his wife's brother, and Lucius, son of Lucius Aelius, who afterwards became the emperors Marcus Aurelius and Lucius Verus.[12] He also adopted (briefly) the name Imperator Titus Aelius Caesar Antoninus, in preparation for his rule.[34] There seems to have been some opposition to Antoninus' appointment on the part of other potential claimants, among them his former consular colleague Lucius Catilius Severus, then prefect of the city. Nevertheless, Antoninus assumed power without opposition.[35]

Emperor

 
The Roman Empire during the reign of Antoninus Pius.

On his accession, Antoninus' name and style became Imperator Caesar Titus Aelius Hadrianus Antoninus Augustus Pontifex Maximus. One of his first acts as Emperor was to persuade the Senate to grant divine honours to Hadrian, which they had at first refused;[36] his efforts to persuade the Senate to grant these honours is the most likely reason given for his title of Pius (dutiful in affection; compare pietas).[37] Two other reasons for this title are that he would support his aged father-in-law with his hand at Senate meetings, and that he had saved those men that Hadrian, during his period of ill-health, had condemned to death.[7]

Immediately after Hadrian's death, Antoninus approached Marcus and requested that his marriage arrangements be amended: Marcus' betrothal to Ceionia Fabia would be annulled, and he would be betrothed to Faustina, Antoninus' daughter, instead. Faustina's betrothal to Ceionia's brother Lucius Commodus would also have to be annulled. Marcus consented to Antoninus' proposal.[38][39]

Antoninus built temples, theaters, and mausoleums, promoted the arts and sciences, and bestowed honours and financial rewards upon the teachers of rhetoric and philosophy.[12] Antoninus made few initial changes when he became emperor, leaving intact as far as possible the arrangements instituted by Hadrian.[36] Epigraphical and prosopographical research has revealed that Antoninus' imperial ruling team centered around a group of closely knit senatorial families, most of them members of the priestly congregation for the cult of Hadrian, the sodales Hadrianales. According to the German historian H.G. Pflaum, prosopographical research of Antoninus' ruling team allows us to grasp the deeply conservative character of the ruling senatorial caste.[40]

Lack of warfare

 
The temple of Antoninus and Faustina in the Roman Forum (now the church of San Lorenzo in Miranda). The emperor and his Augusta were deified after their death by Marcus Aurelius.

There are no records of any military related acts in his time in which he participated. One modern scholar has written "It is almost certain not only that at no time in his life did he ever see, let alone command, a Roman army, but that, throughout the twenty-three years of his reign, he never went within five hundred miles of a legion."[41]

His reign was the most peaceful in the entire history of the Principate,[42] notwithstanding the fact that there were several military disturbances in the Empire in his time. Such disturbances happened in Mauretania, where a senator was named as governor of Mauretania Tingitana in place of the usual equestrian procurator[43] and cavalry reinforcements from Pannonia were brought in,[44] towns such as Sala and Tipasa being fortified.[45] Similar disturbances took place in Judea, and amongst the Brigantes in Britannia; however, these were considered less serious than prior (and later) revolts among both.[42] It was however in Britain that Antoninus decided to follow a new, more aggressive path, with the appointment of a new governor in 139, Quintus Lollius Urbicus,[36] a native of Numidia and previously governor of Germania Inferior[46] as well as a new man.[47]

Under instructions from the emperor, Lollius undertook an invasion of southern Scotland, winning some significant victories, and constructing the Antonine Wall[48] from the Firth of Forth to the Firth of Clyde. The wall, however, was soon gradually decommissioned during the mid-150s and eventually abandoned late during the reign (early 160s), for reasons that are still not quite clear.[49][50] Antonine's Wall is mentioned in just one literary source, Antoninus' biography in the Historia Augusta. Pausanias makes a brief and confused mention of a war in Britain. In one inscription honoring Antoninus, erected by Legio II Augusta, which participated in the building of the Wall, a relief showing four naked prisoners, one of them beheaded, seems to stand for some actual warfare.[51]

 
Statue of Antoninus Pius in military garb and muscle cuirass, from the Museo Chiaramonti (Vatican Museums).

Although Antonine's Wall was, in principle, much shorter (37 miles in length as opposed to 73), and at first sight more defensible than Hadrian's Wall, the additional area that it enclosed within the Empire was barren, with land use for grazing already in decay.[52] This meant that supply lines to the wall were strained enough such as the costs for maintaining the additional territory outweighed the benefits of doing so.[53] Also, in the absence of urban development and the ensuing Romanization process, the rear of the wall could not be lastingly pacified.[54]

It has been therefore speculated that the invasion of Lowland Scotland and the building of the wall had to do mostly with internal politics, that is, offering Antoninus an opportunity to gain some modicum of necessary military prestige at the start of his reign. Actually, the campaign in Britannia was followed by an Imperial salutation, that is, by Antoninus formally taking for the second (and last) time the title of Imperator in 142.[55] The fact that around the same time coins were struck announcing a victory in Britain points to Antoninus' need to publicize his achievements.[56] The orator Fronto was later to say that, although Antoninus bestowed the direction of the British campaign to others, he should be regarded as the helmsman who directed the voyage, whose glory, therefore, belonged to him.[57]

That this quest for some military achievement responded to an actual need is proved by the fact that, although generally peaceful, Antoninus' reign was not free from attempts at usurpation: Historia Augusta mentions two, made by the senators Cornelius Priscianus ("for disturbing the peace of Spain";[58] Priscianus had also been Lollius Urbicus' successor as governor of Britain) and Atilius Rufius Titianus (possibly a troublemaker already exiled under Hadrian[59]). Both attempts are confirmed by the Fasti Ostienses as well as by the erasing of Priscianus' name from an inscription.[60] In both cases, Antoninus was not in formal charge of the ensuing repression: Priscianus committed suicide and Titianus was found guilty by the Senate, with Antoninus abstaining from sequestering their families' properties.[61]

 
A coin of Antoninus Pius showing a subdued Parthia (PAR-TH-IA on the reverse) handing the crown to him, an empty claim that Parthia was still subject to Rome after the events surrounding Parthamaspates.[62]

There were also some troubles in Dacia Inferior which required the granting of additional powers to the procurator governor and the dispatch of additional soldiers to the province.[49] On the northern Black Sea coast, the Greek city of Olbia was held against the Scythians.[63] Also during his reign the governor of Upper Germany, probably Caius Popillius Carus Pedo, built new fortifications in the Agri Decumates, advancing the Limes Germanicus fifteen miles forward in his province and neighboring Raetia.[64] In the East, Roman suzerainty over Armenia was retained by the choice in AD 140 of Arsacid scion Sohaemus as client king.[65]

Nevertheless, Antoninus was virtually unique among emperors in that he dealt with these crises without leaving Italy once during his reign,[66] but instead dealt with provincial matters of war and peace through their governors or through imperial letters to the cities such as Ephesus (of which some were publicly displayed). This style of government was highly praised by his contemporaries and by later generations.[67]

Antoninus was the last Roman Emperor recognised by the Indian Kingdoms, especially the Kushan Empire.[68] Raoul McLaughlin quotes Aurelius Victor as saying "The Indians, the Bactrians, and the Hyrcanians all sent ambassadors to Antoninus. They had all heard about the spirit of justice held by this great emperor, justice that was heightened by his handsome and grave countenance, and his slim and vigorous figure." Due to the outbreak of the Antonine epidemic and wars against northern Germanic tribes, the reign of Marcus Aurelius was forced to alter the focus of foreign policies, and matters relating to the Far East were increasingly abandoned in favour of those directly concerning the Empire's survival.[68]

Economy and administration

 
An aureus of Antoninus Pius, 145 AD. Inscription: ANTONINVS AVG PIVS PP / TR POT COS IIII

Antoninus was regarded as a skilled administrator and as a builder. In spite of an extensive building directive—the free access of the people of Rome to drinking water was expanded with the construction of aqueducts, not only in Rome but throughout the Empire, as well as bridges and roads—the emperor still managed to leave behind a sizable public treasury of around 2.7 billion sesterces. Rome would not witness another Emperor leaving his successor with a surplus for a long time, but this treasury was depleted almost immediately after Antoninus's reign due to the Antonine Plague brought back by soldiers after the Parthian victory.[69]

The Emperor also famously suspended the collection of taxes from cities affected by natural disasters, such as when fires struck Rome and Narbona, and earthquakes affected Rhodes and the Province of Asia. He offered hefty financial grants for rebuilding and recovery of various Greek cities after two serious earthquakes: the first, circa 140, which affected mostly Rhodes and other islands; the second, in 152, which hit Cyzicus (where the huge and newly built Temple to Hadrian was destroyed[70]), Ephesus, and Smyrna. Antoninus' financial help earned him praise by Greek writers such as Aelius Aristides and Pausanias.[71] These cities received from Antoninus the usual honorific accolades, such as when he commanded that all governors of Asia should enter the province, when taking office, by way of Ephesus.[72] Ephesus was specially favoured by Antoninus, who confirmed and upheld its distinction of having two temples for the imperial cult (neocorate), therefore having first place in the list of imperial honor titles, surpassing both Smyrna and Pergamon.[73]

In his dealings with Greek-speaking cities, Antoninus followed the policy adopted by Hadrian of ingratiating himself with local elites, especially with local intellectuals: philosophers, teachers of literature, rhetoricians and physicians were explicitly exempted from any duties involving private spending for civic purposes, a privilege granted by Hadrian that Antoninus confirmed by means of an edict preserved in the Digest (27.1.6.8).[74] Antoninus also created a chair for the teaching of rhetoric in Athens.[75]

Antoninus was known as an avid observer of rites of religion and of formal celebrations, both Roman and foreign. He is known for having increasingly formalized the official cult offered to the Great Mother, which from his reign onwards included a bull sacrifice, a taurobolium, formerly only a private ritual, now being also performed for the sake of the Emperor's welfare.[76] Antoninus also offered patronage to the worship of Mithras, to whom he erected a temple in Ostia.[77] In 148, he presided over the celebrations of the 900th anniversary of the founding of Rome.

Legal reforms

 
Copy inscribed in marble of a letter from Antoninus to the Ephesians, from the Bouleuterion at Ephesus, 140–4 AD, explaining how the emperor resolved a dispute between the Roman cities of Ephesus and Smyrna.
British Museum, London.

Antoninus tried to portray himself as a magistrate of the res publica, no matter how extended and ill-defined his competencies were. He is credited with the splitting of the imperial treasury, the fiscus. This splitting had to do with the division of imperial properties into two parts. Firstly, the fiscus itself, or patrimonium, meaning the properties of the "Crown", the hereditary properties of each succeeding person that sat on the throne, transmitted to his successors in office,[78] regardless of their previous membership in the imperial family.[79] Secondly, the res privata, the "private" properties tied to the personal maintenance of the Emperor and his family,[80] something like a Privy Purse. An anecdote in the Historia Augusta biography, where Antoninus replies to Faustina (who complained about his stinginess) that "we have gained an empire [and] lost even what we had before" possibly relates to Antoninus' actual concerns at the creation of the res privata.[81] While still a private citizen, Antoninus had increased his personal fortune greatly by mean of various legacies, the consequence of his caring scrupulously for his relatives.[82] Also, Antoninus left behind him a reputation for stinginess and was probably determined not to leave his personal property to be "swallowed up by the demands of the imperial throne".[83]

The res privata lands could be sold and/or given away, while the patrimonium properties were regarded as public.[84] It was a way of pretending that the Imperial function—and most properties attached to it—was a public one, formally subject to the authority of the Senate and the Roman people.[85] That the distinction played no part in subsequent political history—that the personal power of the princeps absorbed his role as office-holder—proves that the autocratic logic of the imperial order had already subsumed the old republican institutions.[86]

Of the public transactions of this period there is only the scantiest of information, but, to judge by what is extant, those twenty-two years were not remarkably eventful in comparison to those before and after the reign.[10] However, Antoninus did take a great interest in the revision and practice of the law throughout the empire.[87] One of his chief concerns was to having local communities conform their legal procedures to existing Roman norms: in a case concerning repression of banditry by local police officers ("irenarchs", Greek for "peace keepers") in Asia Minor, Antoninus ordered that these officers should not treat suspects as already condemned, and also keep a detailed copy of their interrogations, to be used in the possibility of an appeal to the Roman governor.[88] Also, although Antoninus was not an innovator, he would not always follow the absolute letter of the law; rather he was driven by concerns over humanity and equality, and introduced into Roman law many important new principles based upon this notion.[87]

In this, the emperor was assisted by five chief lawyers: Lucius Fulvius Aburnius Valens, an author of legal treatises;[89] Lucius Ulpius Marcellus, a prolific writer; and three others.[87] Of these three, the most prominent was Lucius Volusius Maecianus, a former military officer turned by Antoninus into a civil procurator, and who, in view of his subsequent career (discovered on the basis of epigraphical and prosopographical research), was the Emperor's most important legal adviser.[90] Maecianus would eventually be chosen to occupy various prefectures (see below) as well as to conduct the legal studies of Marcus Aurelius. He was also the author of a large work on Fidei commissa (Testamentary Trusts). As a hallmark of the increased connection between jurists and the imperial government,[91] Antoninus' reign also saw the appearance of the Institutes of Gaius, an elementary legal textbook for beginners.[87]

 
Gold aureus of Antoninus, 153 AD. ANTONINVS AVG PIVS PP TR P XVII

Antoninus passed measures to facilitate the enfranchisement of slaves.[92] Mostly, he favoured the principle of favor libertatis, giving the putative freedman the benefit of the doubt when the claim to freedom was not clearcut.[93] Also, he punished the killing of a slave by his/her master without previous trial[94] and determined that slaves could be forcibly sold to another master by a proconsul in cases of consistent mistreatment.[95] Antoninus upheld the enforcement of contracts for selling of female slaves forbidding their further employment in prostitution.[96] In criminal law, Antoninus introduced the important principle that accused persons are not to be treated as guilty before trial,[92] as in the case of the irenarchs (see above). It was to Antoninus that the Christian apologist Justin Martyr addressed his defense of the Christian faith, reminding him of his father's (Emperor Hadrian's) rule that accusations against Christians required proof.[97] Antoninus also asserted the principle that the trial was to be held, and the punishment inflicted, in the place where the crime had been committed. He mitigated the use of torture in examining slaves by certain limitations. Thus he prohibited the application of torture to children under fourteen years, though this rule had exceptions.[92] However, it must be stressed that Antoninus extended, by means of a rescript, the use of torture as a means of obtaining evidence to pecuniary cases, when it had been applied up until then only in criminal cases.[98] Also, already at the time torture of free men of low status (humiliores) had become legal, as proved by the fact that Antoninus exempted town councillors expressly from it, and also free men of high rank (honestiores) in general.[99]

One highlight during his reign occurred in 148, with the nine-hundredth anniversary of the foundation of Rome being celebrated by the hosting of magnificent games in Rome.[100] It lasted a number of days, and a host of exotic animals were killed, including elephants, giraffes, tigers, rhinoceroses, crocodiles and hippopotamuses. While this increased Antoninus's popularity, the frugal emperor had to debase the Roman currency. He decreased the silver purity of the denarius from 89% to 83.5, the actual silver weight dropping from 2.88 grams to 2.68 grams.[49][101]

Scholars name Antoninus Pius as the leading candidate for an individual identified as a friend of Rabbi Judah the Prince. According to the Talmud (Avodah Zarah 10a–b), Rabbi Judah was very wealthy and greatly revered in Rome. He had a close friendship with "Antoninus", possibly Antoninus Pius,[102] who would consult Rabbi Judah on various worldly and spiritual matters.

Diplomatic mission to China

 
Green Roman glass cup unearthed from an Eastern Han Dynasty (25–220 AD) tomb, Guangxi, China

The first group of people claiming to be an ambassadorial mission of Romans to China was recorded in 166 AD by the Hou Hanshu.[103] Harper (2017)[104] states that the embassy was likely to be a group of merchants, as many Roman merchants traveled to India and some might have gone beyond, while there are no records of official ambassadors of Rome travelling as far east. The group came to Emperor Huan of Han China and claimed to be an embassy from "Andun" (Chinese: 安敦 āndūn; for Anton-inus), "king of Daqin" (Rome).[105] As Antoninus Pius died in 161, leaving the empire to his adoptive son Marcus Aurelius (Antoninus), and the envoy arrived in 166, confusion remains about who sent the mission, given that both Emperors were named "Antoninus".[106][107][108] The Roman mission came from the south (therefore probably by sea), entering China by the frontier province of Jiaozhi at Rinan or Tonkin (present-day northern Vietnam). It brought presents of rhinoceros horns, ivory, and tortoise shell, probably acquired in South Asia.[103][109] The text specifically states that it was the first time there had been direct contact between the two countries.[103][110]

Furthermore, a piece of Republican-era Roman glassware has been found at a Western Han tomb in Guangzhou along the South China Sea, dated to the early 1st century BC.[111] Roman golden medallions made during the reign of Antoninus Pius and perhaps even Marcus Aurelius have been found at Óc Eo in southern Vietnam, then part of the Kingdom of Funan near the Chinese province of Jiaozhi.[112][113] This may have been the port city of Kattigara, described by Ptolemy (c. 150) as being visited by a Greek sailor named Alexander and lying beyond the Golden Chersonese (i.e., Malay Peninsula).[112][113] Roman coins from the reigns of Tiberius to Aurelian have been discovered in Xi'an, China (site of the Han capital Chang'an), although the significantly greater amount of Roman coins unearthed in India suggest the Roman maritime trade for purchasing Chinese silk was centered there, not in China or even the overland Silk Road running through ancient Iran.[114]

Death and legacy

 
Ruins of the triumphal arch of Antoninus Pius outside the Sanctuary of Demeter and Kore in Eleusis, Greece, imitating Hadrian's Arch in Athens

In 156, Antoninus Pius turned 70. He found it difficult to keep himself upright without stays. He started nibbling on dry bread to give him the strength to stay awake through his morning receptions.

Marcus Aurelius had already been created consul with Antoninus in 140, receiving the title of Caesar, i.e., heir apparent.[115] As Antoninus aged, Marcus took on more administrative duties. Marcus's administrative duties increased again after the death, in 156 or 157, of one of Antoninus' most trusted advisers, Marcus Gavius Maximus.

For twenty years, Gavius Maximus had been praetorian prefect, an office that was as much secretarial as military.[116][117] Gavius Maximus had been awarded with the consular insignia and the honors due a senator.[118] He had a reputation as a most strict disciplinarian (vir severissimus, according to Historia Augusta) and some fellow equestrian procurators held lasting grudges against him. A procurator named Gaius Censorius Niger died while Gavius Maximus was alive. In his will, Censorius Niger vilified Maximus, creating serious embarrassment for one of the heirs, the orator Fronto.[119]

Gavius Maximus' death initiated a change in the ruling team. It has been speculated that it was the legal adviser Lucius Volusius Maecianus who assumed the role of grey eminence. Maecianus was briefly Praefect of Egypt, and subsequently Praefectus annonae in Rome. If it was Maecianus who rose to prominence, he may have risen precisely in order to prepare the incoming — and unprecedented — joint succession.[120] In 160, Marcus and Lucius were designated joint consuls for the following year. Perhaps Antoninus was already ill; in any case, he died before the year was out, probably on 7 March.[125]

 
The bust of Antoninus Pius at the Museo del Prado, Madrid

Two days before his death, the biographer reports, Antoninus was at his ancestral estate at Lorium, in Etruria,[126][127] about twelve miles (19 km) from Rome.[128] He ate Alpine Gruyere cheese at dinner quite greedily. In the night he vomited; he had a fever the next day. The day after that, he summoned the imperial council, and passed the state and his daughter to Marcus. The emperor gave the keynote to his life in the last word that he uttered: when the tribune of the night-watch came to ask the password, he responded, "aequanimitas" (equanimity).[129] He then turned over, as if going to sleep, and died.[130][131] His death closed out the longest reign since Augustus (surpassing Tiberius by a couple of months).[126] His record for the second-longest reign would be unbeaten for 168 years, until 329 when it was surpassed by Constantine the Great.

Antoninus Pius' funeral ceremonies were, in the words of the biographer, "elaborate".[132] If his funeral followed the pattern of past funerals, his body would have been incinerated on a pyre at the Campus Martius, while his spirit would rise to the gods' home in the heavens. However, it seems that this was not the case: according to his Historia Augusta biography (which seems to reproduce an earlier, detailed report) Antoninus' body (and not his ashes) was buried in Hadrian's mausoleum. After a seven-day interval (justitium), Marcus and Lucius nominated their father for deification.[133] In contrast to their behavior during Antoninus' campaign to deify Hadrian, the senate did not oppose the emperors' wishes. A flamen, or cultic priest, was appointed to minister the cult of the deified Antoninus, now Divus Antoninus.

A column was dedicated to Antoninus on the Campus Martius,[12] and the temple he had built in the Forum in 141 to his deified wife Faustina was rededicated to the deified Faustina and the deified Antoninus.[129] It survives as the church of San Lorenzo in Miranda.[134]

Historiography

 
Arch of Antoninus Pius in Sbeïtla, Tunisia.
 
Statue of Antoninus Pius, Palazzo Altemps, Rome

The only intact account of his life handed down to us is that of the Augustan History, an unreliable and mostly fabricated work. Nevertheless, it still contains information that is considered reasonably sound, for instance, it is the only source that mentions the erection of the Antonine Wall in Britain.[135] Antoninus is unique among Roman emperors in that he has no other biographies.

Antoninus in many ways was the ideal of the landed gentleman praised not only by ancient Romans, but also by later scholars of classical history, such as Edward Gibbon[136] or the author of the article on Antoninus Pius in the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition.[10]

A few months afterwards, on Hadrian's death, he was enthusiastically welcomed to the throne by the Roman people, who, for once, were not disappointed in their anticipation of a happy reign. For Antoninus came to his new office with simple tastes, kindly disposition, extensive experience, a well-trained intelligence and the sincerest desire for the welfare of his subjects. Instead of plundering to support his prodigality, he emptied his private treasury to assist distressed provinces and cities, and everywhere exercised rigid economy (hence the nickname κυμινοπριστης "cummin-splitter"). Instead of exaggerating into treason whatever was susceptible of unfavorable interpretation, he turned the very conspiracies that were formed against him into opportunities for demonstrating his clemency. Instead of stirring up persecution against the Christians, he extended to them the strong hand of his protection throughout the empire. Rather than give occasion to that oppression which he regarded as inseparable from an emperor's progress through his dominions, he was content to spend all the years of his reign in Rome, or its neighbourhood.[10]

Some historians have a less positive view of his reign. According to the historian J. B. Bury,

however estimable the man, Antoninus was hardly a great statesman. The rest which the Empire enjoyed under his auspices had been rendered possible through Hadrian's activity, and was not due to his own exertions; on the other hand, he carried the policy of peace at any price too far, and so entailed calamities on the state after his death. He not only had no originality or power of initiative, but he had not even the insight or boldness to work further on the new lines marked out by Hadrian.[137]

German historian Ernst Kornemann has had it in his Römische Geschichte [2 vols., ed. by H. Bengtson, Stuttgart 1954] that the reign of Antoninus comprised "a succession of grossly wasted opportunities", given the upheavals that were to come. There is more to this argument, given that the Parthians in the East were themselves soon to make no small amount of mischief after Antoninus' death. Kornemann's brief is that Antoninus might have waged preventive wars to head off these outsiders. Michael Grant agrees that it is possible that had Antoninus acted decisively sooner (it appears that, on his death bed, he was preparing a large-scale action against the Parthians), the Parthians might have been unable to choose their own time, but current evidence is not conclusive. Grant opines that Antoninus and his officers did act in a resolute manner dealing with frontier disturbances of his time, although conditions for long-lasting peace were not created. On the whole, according to Grant, Marcus Aurelius' eulogistic picture of Antoninus seems deserved, and Antoninus appears to have been a conservative and nationalistic (although he respected and followed Hadrian's example of Philhellenism moderately) Emperor who was not tainted by the blood of either citizen or foe, combined and maintained Numa Pompilius' good fortune, pacific dutifulness and religious scrupulousness, and whose laws removed anomalies and softened harshnesses.[138]

Krzysztof Ulanowski argues that the claims of military inability are exaggerated, considering that although the sources praise Antoninus' love for peace and his efforts "rather to defend, than enlarge the provinces", he could hardly be considered a pacifist, as shown by the conquest of the Lowlands, the building of the Antonine Wall and the expansion of Germania Superior. Ulanowski also praises Antoninus for being successful in deterrence by diplomatic means.[139]

Descendants

Although only one of his four children survived to adulthood, Antoninus came to be ancestor to four generations of prominent Romans, including the Emperor Commodus. Hans-Georg Pflaum has identified five direct descendants of Antoninus and Faustina who were consuls in the first half of the third century.[140]

  1. Marcus Aurelius Fulvus Antoninus (died before 138), died young without issue
  2. Marcus Galerius Aurelius Antoninus (died before 138), died young without issue
  3. Aurelia Fadilla (died in 135), who married Lucius Plautius Lamia Silvanus, suffect consul in 145;[141] no children known for certain.
  4. Annia Galeria Faustina the Younger (21 September between 125 and 130–175), had several children; those who had children were:[142]
    1. Annia Aurelia Galeria Lucilla (7 March 150–182?), whose children included:
      1. Tiberius Claudius Pompeianus
    2. Annia Galeria Aurelia Faustina (151–?), whose children included:
      1. Tiberius Claudius Severus Proculus
        1. Empress Annia Faustina, Elagabalus' third wife
    3. Annia Aurelia Fadilla (159–after 211)
    4. Annia Cornificia Faustina Minor (160–213)

Nerva–Antonine family tree

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  142. ^ Based on Table F, "The Children of Faustina II" in Birley 2000

Sources

Primary sources
  • Cassius Dio, Roman History, Book 70, English translation
  • Aurelius Victor, Epitome de Caesaribu", English translation
  • Historia Augusta, The Life of Antoninus Pius, English translation. Note that the Historia Augusta includes pseudohistorical elements.
Secondary sources
  • Weigel, Richard D. "Antoninus Pius (A.D. 138–161) De Imperatoribus Romanis".
  • Bowman, Alan K. (2000). The Cambridge Ancient History: The High Empire, A.D. 70–192. Cambridge University Press.
  • Birley, Anthony (2000). Marcus Aurelius. Routledge.
  • Bury, J. B. (1893). A History of the Roman Empire from its Foundation to the Death of Marcus Aurelius. Harper.
  • Cooley, Alison E. (2012). The Cambridge Manual of Latin Epigraphy. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-84026-2.
  • Hill, John E. (2009). Through the Jade Gate to Rome: A Study of the Silk Routes during the Later Han Dynasty, First to Second Centuries CE. BookSurge. ISBN 978-1-4392-2134-1.
  • Hüttl, W. (1936) [1933]. Antoninus Pius. Vol. I & II, Prag.
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Antoninus Pius". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 2 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 148–149. This source lists:
    • Bossart-Mueller, Zur Geschichte des Kaisers A. (1868)
    • Bryant, The Reign of Antonine (Cambridge Historical Essays, 1895)
    • Lacour-Gayet, A. le Pieux et son Temps (1888)
    • Watson, P. B. (1884). "ii". Marcus Aurelius Antoninus. London: New York, Harper. ISBN 9780836956672.

External links

Antoninus Pius
Born: 19 September 86 Died: 7 March 161
Regnal titles
Preceded by Roman emperor
138–161
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by
G. Herennius Capella
L. Coelius Rufus
as suffect consuls
Roman consul
120
with L. Catilius Severus Iulianus Claudius Reginus
Succeeded byas suffect consuls
Preceded by
P. Cassius Secundus
M. Nonius Mucianus
as suffect consuls
Roman consul II
January–April 139
with G. Bruttius Praesens L. Fulvius Rusticus II
Succeeded byas suffect consuls
Preceded by
M. Ceccius Justinus
G. Julius Bassus
as suffect consuls
Roman consul III
January 140
with Marcus Aurelius
Succeeded by
Q. Antonius Isauricus
L. Aurelius Flaccus
as suffect consuls
Preceded byas suffect consuls Roman consul IV
January–February 145
with Marcus Aurelius II
Succeeded by
L. Plautius Lamia Silvanus
L. Poblicola Priscus
as suffect consuls

antoninus, pius, latin, titus, aelius, hadrianus, september, march, roman, emperor, from, fourth, five, good, emperors, from, nerva, antonine, dynasty, bust, glyptothek, munichroman, emperorreign11, july, march, 161predecessorhadriansuccessormarcus, aurelius, . Antoninus Pius Latin Titus Aelius Hadrianus Antoninus Pius 19 September 86 7 March 161 was Roman emperor from 138 to 161 He was the fourth of the Five Good Emperors from the Nerva Antonine dynasty 3 Antoninus PiusBust in the Glyptothek MunichRoman emperorReign11 July 138 7 March 161PredecessorHadrianSuccessorMarcus Aurelius and Lucius VerusBorn19 September 86Lanuvium ItalyDied7 March 161 aged 74 Lorium ItalyBurialHadrian s MausoleumSpouseAnnia Galeria FaustinaIssueDetailFaustina the Younger1 other daughter and 2 sonsMarcus Aurelius adoptive Lucius Verus adoptive NamesTitus Aurelius Fulvus Boionius Antoninus 1 Titus Aelius Caesar Antoninus adoption 2 Regnal nameImperator Caesar Titus Aelius Hadrianus Antoninus Augustus Pius 2 DynastyNerva AntonineFatherTitus Aurelius Fulvus natural Hadrian adoptive MotherArria FadillaVibia Sabina adoptive ReligionAncient Roman religionDenarius struck 140 AD with portrait of Antoninus Pius obverse and his adoptive son Marcus Aurelius reverse Inscription ANTIVS P P TR P CO N S III AVRELIVS CAES AVG PII F CO N S Born into a senatorial family Antoninus held various offices during the reign of Emperor Hadrian He married Hadrian s niece Faustina and Hadrian adopted him as his son and successor shortly before his death Antoninus acquired the cognomen Pius after his accession to the throne either because he compelled the Senate to deify his adoptive father 4 or because he had saved senators sentenced to death by Hadrian in his later years 5 His reign is notable for the peaceful state of the Empire with no major revolts or military incursions during this time A successful military campaign in southern Scotland early in his reign resulted in the construction of the Antonine Wall Antoninus was an effective administrator leaving his successors a large surplus in the treasury expanding free access to drinking water throughout the Empire encouraging legal conformity and facilitating the enfranchisement of freed slaves He died of illness in 161 and was succeeded by his adopted sons Marcus Aurelius and Lucius Verus as co emperors Contents 1 Early life 1 1 Childhood and family 1 2 Marriage and children 1 3 Favour with Hadrian 2 Emperor 2 1 Lack of warfare 2 2 Economy and administration 2 3 Legal reforms 2 4 Diplomatic mission to China 3 Death and legacy 3 1 Historiography 3 2 Descendants 4 Nerva Antonine family tree 5 References 6 Sources 7 External linksEarly life EditChildhood and family Edit Antoninus Pius was born Titus Aurelius Fulvus Boionius Antoninus near Lanuvium modern day Lanuvio in Italy to Titus Aurelius Fulvus consul in 86 and wife Arria Fadilla 3 6 The Aurelii Fulvi were an Aurelian family settled in Nemausus modern Nimes 7 Titus Aurelius Fulvus was the son of a senator of the same name who as legate of Legio III Gallica had supported Vespasian in his bid to the Imperial office and been rewarded with a suffect consulship plus an ordinary one under Domitian in 85 The Aurelii Fulvi were therefore a relatively new senatorial family from Gallia Narbonensis whose rise to prominence was supported by the Flavians 8 The link between Antoninus family and their home province explains the increasing importance of the post of proconsul of Gallia Narbonensis during the late second century 9 Antoninus father had no other children and died shortly after his 89 ordinary consulship Antoninus was raised by his maternal grandfather Gnaeus Arrius Antoninus 3 reputed by contemporaries to be a man of integrity and culture and a friend of Pliny the Younger 10 The Arrii Antonini were an older senatorial family from Italy very influential during Nerva s reign Arria Fadilla Antoninus mother married afterwards Publius Julius Lupus suffect consul in 98 from that marriage came two daughters Arria Lupula and Julia Fadilla 11 Marriage and children Edit Some time between 110 and 115 Antoninus married Annia Galeria Faustina the Elder 12 They are believed to have enjoyed a happy marriage Faustina was the daughter of consul Marcus Annius Verus II 3 and Rupilia Faustina a step sister to the Empress Vibia Sabina 13 14 Faustina was a beautiful woman and despite rumours about her character it is clear that Antoninus cared for her deeply 15 Faustina bore Antoninus four children two sons and two daughters 16 They were Marcus Aurelius Fulvus Antoninus died before 138 his sepulchral inscription has been found at the Mausoleum of Hadrian in Rome 17 18 Marcus Galerius Aurelius Antoninus died before 138 his sepulchral inscription has been found at the Mausoleum of Hadrian in Rome 17 19 His name appears on a Greek Imperial coin Aurelia Fadilla died in 135 she married Lucius Plautius Lamia Silvanus consul 145 She appeared to have no children with her husband and her sepulchral inscription has been found in Italy 20 Annia Galeria Faustina Minor or Faustina the Younger between 125 and 130 175 a future Roman Empress married her maternal cousin Marcus Aurelius in 146 7 When Faustina died in 141 Antoninus was greatly distressed 21 In honour of her memory he asked the Senate to deify her as a goddess and authorised the construction of a temple to be built in the Roman Forum in her name with priestesses serving in her temple 22 He had various coins with her portrait struck in her honor These coins were scripted DIVA FAUSTINA and were elaborately decorated He further founded a charity calling it Puellae Faustinianae or Girls of Faustina which assisted destitute girls 12 of good family 23 Finally Antoninus created a new alimenta a Roman welfare program as part of Cura Annonae The emperor never remarried Instead he lived with Galeria Lysistrate 24 one of Faustina s freed women Concubinage was a form of female companionship sometimes chosen by powerful men in Ancient Rome especially widowers like Vespasian and Marcus Aurelius Their union could not produce any legitimate offspring who could threaten any heirs such as those of Antoninus Also as one could not have a wife and an official concubine or two concubines at the same time Antoninus avoided being pressed into a marriage with a noblewoman from another family Later Marcus Aurelius would also reject the advances of his former fiancee Ceionia Fabia Lucius Verus s sister on the grounds of protecting his children from a stepmother and took a concubine instead 25 26 27 Favour with Hadrian Edit Marble bust of Antoninus Pius 138 161 CE British Museum London Having filled the offices of quaestor and praetor with more than usual success 28 he obtained the consulship in 120 12 having as his colleague Lucius Catilius Severus 29 He was next appointed by the Emperor Hadrian as one of the four proconsuls to administer Italia 30 his district including Etruria where he had estates 31 He then greatly increased his reputation by his conduct as proconsul of Asia probably during 134 135 30 He acquired much favor with Hadrian who adopted him as his son and successor on 25 February 138 32 after the death of his first adopted son Lucius Aelius 33 on the condition that Antoninus would in turn adopt Marcus Annius Verus the son of his wife s brother and Lucius son of Lucius Aelius who afterwards became the emperors Marcus Aurelius and Lucius Verus 12 He also adopted briefly the name Imperator Titus Aelius Caesar Antoninus in preparation for his rule 34 There seems to have been some opposition to Antoninus appointment on the part of other potential claimants among them his former consular colleague Lucius Catilius Severus then prefect of the city Nevertheless Antoninus assumed power without opposition 35 Emperor Edit The Roman Empire during the reign of Antoninus Pius On his accession Antoninus name and style became Imperator Caesar Titus Aelius Hadrianus Antoninus Augustus Pontifex Maximus One of his first acts as Emperor was to persuade the Senate to grant divine honours to Hadrian which they had at first refused 36 his efforts to persuade the Senate to grant these honours is the most likely reason given for his title of Pius dutiful in affection compare pietas 37 Two other reasons for this title are that he would support his aged father in law with his hand at Senate meetings and that he had saved those men that Hadrian during his period of ill health had condemned to death 7 Immediately after Hadrian s death Antoninus approached Marcus and requested that his marriage arrangements be amended Marcus betrothal to Ceionia Fabia would be annulled and he would be betrothed to Faustina Antoninus daughter instead Faustina s betrothal to Ceionia s brother Lucius Commodus would also have to be annulled Marcus consented to Antoninus proposal 38 39 Antoninus built temples theaters and mausoleums promoted the arts and sciences and bestowed honours and financial rewards upon the teachers of rhetoric and philosophy 12 Antoninus made few initial changes when he became emperor leaving intact as far as possible the arrangements instituted by Hadrian 36 Epigraphical and prosopographical research has revealed that Antoninus imperial ruling team centered around a group of closely knit senatorial families most of them members of the priestly congregation for the cult of Hadrian the sodales Hadrianales According to the German historian H G Pflaum prosopographical research of Antoninus ruling team allows us to grasp the deeply conservative character of the ruling senatorial caste 40 Lack of warfare Edit The temple of Antoninus and Faustina in the Roman Forum now the church of San Lorenzo in Miranda The emperor and his Augusta were deified after their death by Marcus Aurelius There are no records of any military related acts in his time in which he participated One modern scholar has written It is almost certain not only that at no time in his life did he ever see let alone command a Roman army but that throughout the twenty three years of his reign he never went within five hundred miles of a legion 41 His reign was the most peaceful in the entire history of the Principate 42 notwithstanding the fact that there were several military disturbances in the Empire in his time Such disturbances happened in Mauretania where a senator was named as governor of Mauretania Tingitana in place of the usual equestrian procurator 43 and cavalry reinforcements from Pannonia were brought in 44 towns such as Sala and Tipasa being fortified 45 Similar disturbances took place in Judea and amongst the Brigantes in Britannia however these were considered less serious than prior and later revolts among both 42 It was however in Britain that Antoninus decided to follow a new more aggressive path with the appointment of a new governor in 139 Quintus Lollius Urbicus 36 a native of Numidia and previously governor of Germania Inferior 46 as well as a new man 47 Under instructions from the emperor Lollius undertook an invasion of southern Scotland winning some significant victories and constructing the Antonine Wall 48 from the Firth of Forth to the Firth of Clyde The wall however was soon gradually decommissioned during the mid 150s and eventually abandoned late during the reign early 160s for reasons that are still not quite clear 49 50 Antonine s Wall is mentioned in just one literary source Antoninus biography in the Historia Augusta Pausanias makes a brief and confused mention of a war in Britain In one inscription honoring Antoninus erected by Legio II Augusta which participated in the building of the Wall a relief showing four naked prisoners one of them beheaded seems to stand for some actual warfare 51 Statue of Antoninus Pius in military garb and muscle cuirass from the Museo Chiaramonti Vatican Museums Although Antonine s Wall was in principle much shorter 37 miles in length as opposed to 73 and at first sight more defensible than Hadrian s Wall the additional area that it enclosed within the Empire was barren with land use for grazing already in decay 52 This meant that supply lines to the wall were strained enough such as the costs for maintaining the additional territory outweighed the benefits of doing so 53 Also in the absence of urban development and the ensuing Romanization process the rear of the wall could not be lastingly pacified 54 It has been therefore speculated that the invasion of Lowland Scotland and the building of the wall had to do mostly with internal politics that is offering Antoninus an opportunity to gain some modicum of necessary military prestige at the start of his reign Actually the campaign in Britannia was followed by an Imperial salutation that is by Antoninus formally taking for the second and last time the title of Imperator in 142 55 The fact that around the same time coins were struck announcing a victory in Britain points to Antoninus need to publicize his achievements 56 The orator Fronto was later to say that although Antoninus bestowed the direction of the British campaign to others he should be regarded as the helmsman who directed the voyage whose glory therefore belonged to him 57 That this quest for some military achievement responded to an actual need is proved by the fact that although generally peaceful Antoninus reign was not free from attempts at usurpation Historia Augusta mentions two made by the senators Cornelius Priscianus for disturbing the peace of Spain 58 Priscianus had also been Lollius Urbicus successor as governor of Britain and Atilius Rufius Titianus possibly a troublemaker already exiled under Hadrian 59 Both attempts are confirmed by the Fasti Ostienses as well as by the erasing of Priscianus name from an inscription 60 In both cases Antoninus was not in formal charge of the ensuing repression Priscianus committed suicide and Titianus was found guilty by the Senate with Antoninus abstaining from sequestering their families properties 61 A coin of Antoninus Pius showing a subdued Parthia PAR TH IA on the reverse handing the crown to him an empty claim that Parthia was still subject to Rome after the events surrounding Parthamaspates 62 There were also some troubles in Dacia Inferior which required the granting of additional powers to the procurator governor and the dispatch of additional soldiers to the province 49 On the northern Black Sea coast the Greek city of Olbia was held against the Scythians 63 Also during his reign the governor of Upper Germany probably Caius Popillius Carus Pedo built new fortifications in the Agri Decumates advancing the Limes Germanicus fifteen miles forward in his province and neighboring Raetia 64 In the East Roman suzerainty over Armenia was retained by the choice in AD 140 of Arsacid scion Sohaemus as client king 65 Nevertheless Antoninus was virtually unique among emperors in that he dealt with these crises without leaving Italy once during his reign 66 but instead dealt with provincial matters of war and peace through their governors or through imperial letters to the cities such as Ephesus of which some were publicly displayed This style of government was highly praised by his contemporaries and by later generations 67 Antoninus was the last Roman Emperor recognised by the Indian Kingdoms especially the Kushan Empire 68 Raoul McLaughlin quotes Aurelius Victor as saying The Indians the Bactrians and the Hyrcanians all sent ambassadors to Antoninus They had all heard about the spirit of justice held by this great emperor justice that was heightened by his handsome and grave countenance and his slim and vigorous figure Due to the outbreak of the Antonine epidemic and wars against northern Germanic tribes the reign of Marcus Aurelius was forced to alter the focus of foreign policies and matters relating to the Far East were increasingly abandoned in favour of those directly concerning the Empire s survival 68 Economy and administration Edit An aureus of Antoninus Pius 145 AD Inscription ANTONINVS AVG PIVS PP TR POT COS IIII Antoninus was regarded as a skilled administrator and as a builder In spite of an extensive building directive the free access of the people of Rome to drinking water was expanded with the construction of aqueducts not only in Rome but throughout the Empire as well as bridges and roads the emperor still managed to leave behind a sizable public treasury of around 2 7 billion sesterces Rome would not witness another Emperor leaving his successor with a surplus for a long time but this treasury was depleted almost immediately after Antoninus s reign due to the Antonine Plague brought back by soldiers after the Parthian victory 69 The Emperor also famously suspended the collection of taxes from cities affected by natural disasters such as when fires struck Rome and Narbona and earthquakes affected Rhodes and the Province of Asia He offered hefty financial grants for rebuilding and recovery of various Greek cities after two serious earthquakes the first circa 140 which affected mostly Rhodes and other islands the second in 152 which hit Cyzicus where the huge and newly built Temple to Hadrian was destroyed 70 Ephesus and Smyrna Antoninus financial help earned him praise by Greek writers such as Aelius Aristides and Pausanias 71 These cities received from Antoninus the usual honorific accolades such as when he commanded that all governors of Asia should enter the province when taking office by way of Ephesus 72 Ephesus was specially favoured by Antoninus who confirmed and upheld its distinction of having two temples for the imperial cult neocorate therefore having first place in the list of imperial honor titles surpassing both Smyrna and Pergamon 73 In his dealings with Greek speaking cities Antoninus followed the policy adopted by Hadrian of ingratiating himself with local elites especially with local intellectuals philosophers teachers of literature rhetoricians and physicians were explicitly exempted from any duties involving private spending for civic purposes a privilege granted by Hadrian that Antoninus confirmed by means of an edict preserved in the Digest 27 1 6 8 74 Antoninus also created a chair for the teaching of rhetoric in Athens 75 Antoninus was known as an avid observer of rites of religion and of formal celebrations both Roman and foreign He is known for having increasingly formalized the official cult offered to the Great Mother which from his reign onwards included a bull sacrifice a taurobolium formerly only a private ritual now being also performed for the sake of the Emperor s welfare 76 Antoninus also offered patronage to the worship of Mithras to whom he erected a temple in Ostia 77 In 148 he presided over the celebrations of the 900th anniversary of the founding of Rome Legal reforms Edit Copy inscribed in marble of a letter from Antoninus to the Ephesians from the Bouleuterion at Ephesus 140 4 AD explaining how the emperor resolved a dispute between the Roman cities of Ephesus and Smyrna British Museum London Antoninus tried to portray himself as a magistrate of the res publica no matter how extended and ill defined his competencies were He is credited with the splitting of the imperial treasury the fiscus This splitting had to do with the division of imperial properties into two parts Firstly the fiscus itself or patrimonium meaning the properties of the Crown the hereditary properties of each succeeding person that sat on the throne transmitted to his successors in office 78 regardless of their previous membership in the imperial family 79 Secondly the res privata the private properties tied to the personal maintenance of the Emperor and his family 80 something like a Privy Purse An anecdote in the Historia Augusta biography where Antoninus replies to Faustina who complained about his stinginess that we have gained an empire and lost even what we had before possibly relates to Antoninus actual concerns at the creation of the res privata 81 While still a private citizen Antoninus had increased his personal fortune greatly by mean of various legacies the consequence of his caring scrupulously for his relatives 82 Also Antoninus left behind him a reputation for stinginess and was probably determined not to leave his personal property to be swallowed up by the demands of the imperial throne 83 The res privata lands could be sold and or given away while the patrimonium properties were regarded as public 84 It was a way of pretending that the Imperial function and most properties attached to it was a public one formally subject to the authority of the Senate and the Roman people 85 That the distinction played no part in subsequent political history that the personal power of the princeps absorbed his role as office holder proves that the autocratic logic of the imperial order had already subsumed the old republican institutions 86 Of the public transactions of this period there is only the scantiest of information but to judge by what is extant those twenty two years were not remarkably eventful in comparison to those before and after the reign 10 However Antoninus did take a great interest in the revision and practice of the law throughout the empire 87 One of his chief concerns was to having local communities conform their legal procedures to existing Roman norms in a case concerning repression of banditry by local police officers irenarchs Greek for peace keepers in Asia Minor Antoninus ordered that these officers should not treat suspects as already condemned and also keep a detailed copy of their interrogations to be used in the possibility of an appeal to the Roman governor 88 Also although Antoninus was not an innovator he would not always follow the absolute letter of the law rather he was driven by concerns over humanity and equality and introduced into Roman law many important new principles based upon this notion 87 In this the emperor was assisted by five chief lawyers Lucius Fulvius Aburnius Valens an author of legal treatises 89 Lucius Ulpius Marcellus a prolific writer and three others 87 Of these three the most prominent was Lucius Volusius Maecianus a former military officer turned by Antoninus into a civil procurator and who in view of his subsequent career discovered on the basis of epigraphical and prosopographical research was the Emperor s most important legal adviser 90 Maecianus would eventually be chosen to occupy various prefectures see below as well as to conduct the legal studies of Marcus Aurelius He was also the author of a large work on Fidei commissa Testamentary Trusts As a hallmark of the increased connection between jurists and the imperial government 91 Antoninus reign also saw the appearance of the Institutes of Gaius an elementary legal textbook for beginners 87 Gold aureus of Antoninus 153 AD ANTONINVS AVG PIVS PP TR P XVII Antoninus passed measures to facilitate the enfranchisement of slaves 92 Mostly he favoured the principle of favor libertatis giving the putative freedman the benefit of the doubt when the claim to freedom was not clearcut 93 Also he punished the killing of a slave by his her master without previous trial 94 and determined that slaves could be forcibly sold to another master by a proconsul in cases of consistent mistreatment 95 Antoninus upheld the enforcement of contracts for selling of female slaves forbidding their further employment in prostitution 96 In criminal law Antoninus introduced the important principle that accused persons are not to be treated as guilty before trial 92 as in the case of the irenarchs see above It was to Antoninus that the Christian apologist Justin Martyr addressed his defense of the Christian faith reminding him of his father s Emperor Hadrian s rule that accusations against Christians required proof 97 Antoninus also asserted the principle that the trial was to be held and the punishment inflicted in the place where the crime had been committed He mitigated the use of torture in examining slaves by certain limitations Thus he prohibited the application of torture to children under fourteen years though this rule had exceptions 92 However it must be stressed that Antoninus extended by means of a rescript the use of torture as a means of obtaining evidence to pecuniary cases when it had been applied up until then only in criminal cases 98 Also already at the time torture of free men of low status humiliores had become legal as proved by the fact that Antoninus exempted town councillors expressly from it and also free men of high rank honestiores in general 99 One highlight during his reign occurred in 148 with the nine hundredth anniversary of the foundation of Rome being celebrated by the hosting of magnificent games in Rome 100 It lasted a number of days and a host of exotic animals were killed including elephants giraffes tigers rhinoceroses crocodiles and hippopotamuses While this increased Antoninus s popularity the frugal emperor had to debase the Roman currency He decreased the silver purity of the denarius from 89 to 83 5 the actual silver weight dropping from 2 88 grams to 2 68 grams 49 101 Scholars name Antoninus Pius as the leading candidate for an individual identified as a friend of Rabbi Judah the Prince According to the Talmud Avodah Zarah 10a b Rabbi Judah was very wealthy and greatly revered in Rome He had a close friendship with Antoninus possibly Antoninus Pius 102 who would consult Rabbi Judah on various worldly and spiritual matters Diplomatic mission to China Edit See also Sino Roman relations Green Roman glass cup unearthed from an Eastern Han Dynasty 25 220 AD tomb Guangxi China The first group of people claiming to be an ambassadorial mission of Romans to China was recorded in 166 AD by the Hou Hanshu 103 Harper 2017 104 states that the embassy was likely to be a group of merchants as many Roman merchants traveled to India and some might have gone beyond while there are no records of official ambassadors of Rome travelling as far east The group came to Emperor Huan of Han China and claimed to be an embassy from Andun Chinese 安敦 andun for Anton inus king of Daqin Rome 105 As Antoninus Pius died in 161 leaving the empire to his adoptive son Marcus Aurelius Antoninus and the envoy arrived in 166 confusion remains about who sent the mission given that both Emperors were named Antoninus 106 107 108 The Roman mission came from the south therefore probably by sea entering China by the frontier province of Jiaozhi at Rinan or Tonkin present day northern Vietnam It brought presents of rhinoceros horns ivory and tortoise shell probably acquired in South Asia 103 109 The text specifically states that it was the first time there had been direct contact between the two countries 103 110 Furthermore a piece of Republican era Roman glassware has been found at a Western Han tomb in Guangzhou along the South China Sea dated to the early 1st century BC 111 Roman golden medallions made during the reign of Antoninus Pius and perhaps even Marcus Aurelius have been found at oc Eo in southern Vietnam then part of the Kingdom of Funan near the Chinese province of Jiaozhi 112 113 This may have been the port city of Kattigara described by Ptolemy c 150 as being visited by a Greek sailor named Alexander and lying beyond the Golden Chersonese i e Malay Peninsula 112 113 Roman coins from the reigns of Tiberius to Aurelian have been discovered in Xi an China site of the Han capital Chang an although the significantly greater amount of Roman coins unearthed in India suggest the Roman maritime trade for purchasing Chinese silk was centered there not in China or even the overland Silk Road running through ancient Iran 114 Death and legacy Edit Ruins of the triumphal arch of Antoninus Pius outside the Sanctuary of Demeter and Kore in Eleusis Greece imitating Hadrian s Arch in Athens In 156 Antoninus Pius turned 70 He found it difficult to keep himself upright without stays He started nibbling on dry bread to give him the strength to stay awake through his morning receptions Marcus Aurelius had already been created consul with Antoninus in 140 receiving the title of Caesar i e heir apparent 115 As Antoninus aged Marcus took on more administrative duties Marcus s administrative duties increased again after the death in 156 or 157 of one of Antoninus most trusted advisers Marcus Gavius Maximus For twenty years Gavius Maximus had been praetorian prefect an office that was as much secretarial as military 116 117 Gavius Maximus had been awarded with the consular insignia and the honors due a senator 118 He had a reputation as a most strict disciplinarian vir severissimus according to Historia Augusta and some fellow equestrian procurators held lasting grudges against him A procurator named Gaius Censorius Niger died while Gavius Maximus was alive In his will Censorius Niger vilified Maximus creating serious embarrassment for one of the heirs the orator Fronto 119 Gavius Maximus death initiated a change in the ruling team It has been speculated that it was the legal adviser Lucius Volusius Maecianus who assumed the role of grey eminence Maecianus was briefly Praefect of Egypt and subsequently Praefectus annonae in Rome If it was Maecianus who rose to prominence he may have risen precisely in order to prepare the incoming and unprecedented joint succession 120 In 160 Marcus and Lucius were designated joint consuls for the following year Perhaps Antoninus was already ill in any case he died before the year was out probably on 7 March 125 The bust of Antoninus Pius at the Museo del Prado Madrid Two days before his death the biographer reports Antoninus was at his ancestral estate at Lorium in Etruria 126 127 about twelve miles 19 km from Rome 128 He ate Alpine Gruyere cheese at dinner quite greedily In the night he vomited he had a fever the next day The day after that he summoned the imperial council and passed the state and his daughter to Marcus The emperor gave the keynote to his life in the last word that he uttered when the tribune of the night watch came to ask the password he responded aequanimitas equanimity 129 He then turned over as if going to sleep and died 130 131 His death closed out the longest reign since Augustus surpassing Tiberius by a couple of months 126 His record for the second longest reign would be unbeaten for 168 years until 329 when it was surpassed by Constantine the Great Antoninus Pius funeral ceremonies were in the words of the biographer elaborate 132 If his funeral followed the pattern of past funerals his body would have been incinerated on a pyre at the Campus Martius while his spirit would rise to the gods home in the heavens However it seems that this was not the case according to his Historia Augusta biography which seems to reproduce an earlier detailed report Antoninus body and not his ashes was buried in Hadrian s mausoleum After a seven day interval justitium Marcus and Lucius nominated their father for deification 133 In contrast to their behavior during Antoninus campaign to deify Hadrian the senate did not oppose the emperors wishes A flamen or cultic priest was appointed to minister the cult of the deified Antoninus now Divus Antoninus A column was dedicated to Antoninus on the Campus Martius 12 and the temple he had built in the Forum in 141 to his deified wife Faustina was rededicated to the deified Faustina and the deified Antoninus 129 It survives as the church of San Lorenzo in Miranda 134 Historiography Edit Arch of Antoninus Pius in Sbeitla Tunisia Statue of Antoninus Pius Palazzo Altemps Rome The only intact account of his life handed down to us is that of the Augustan History an unreliable and mostly fabricated work Nevertheless it still contains information that is considered reasonably sound for instance it is the only source that mentions the erection of the Antonine Wall in Britain 135 Antoninus is unique among Roman emperors in that he has no other biographies Antoninus in many ways was the ideal of the landed gentleman praised not only by ancient Romans but also by later scholars of classical history such as Edward Gibbon 136 or the author of the article on Antoninus Pius in the Encyclopaedia Britannica Eleventh Edition 10 A few months afterwards on Hadrian s death he was enthusiastically welcomed to the throne by the Roman people who for once were not disappointed in their anticipation of a happy reign For Antoninus came to his new office with simple tastes kindly disposition extensive experience a well trained intelligence and the sincerest desire for the welfare of his subjects Instead of plundering to support his prodigality he emptied his private treasury to assist distressed provinces and cities and everywhere exercised rigid economy hence the nickname kyminoprisths cummin splitter Instead of exaggerating into treason whatever was susceptible of unfavorable interpretation he turned the very conspiracies that were formed against him into opportunities for demonstrating his clemency Instead of stirring up persecution against the Christians he extended to them the strong hand of his protection throughout the empire Rather than give occasion to that oppression which he regarded as inseparable from an emperor s progress through his dominions he was content to spend all the years of his reign in Rome or its neighbourhood 10 Some historians have a less positive view of his reign According to the historian J B Bury however estimable the man Antoninus was hardly a great statesman The rest which the Empire enjoyed under his auspices had been rendered possible through Hadrian s activity and was not due to his own exertions on the other hand he carried the policy of peace at any price too far and so entailed calamities on the state after his death He not only had no originality or power of initiative but he had not even the insight or boldness to work further on the new lines marked out by Hadrian 137 German historian Ernst Kornemann has had it in his Romische Geschichte 2 vols ed by H Bengtson Stuttgart 1954 that the reign of Antoninus comprised a succession of grossly wasted opportunities given the upheavals that were to come There is more to this argument given that the Parthians in the East were themselves soon to make no small amount of mischief after Antoninus death Kornemann s brief is that Antoninus might have waged preventive wars to head off these outsiders Michael Grant agrees that it is possible that had Antoninus acted decisively sooner it appears that on his death bed he was preparing a large scale action against the Parthians the Parthians might have been unable to choose their own time but current evidence is not conclusive Grant opines that Antoninus and his officers did act in a resolute manner dealing with frontier disturbances of his time although conditions for long lasting peace were not created On the whole according to Grant Marcus Aurelius eulogistic picture of Antoninus seems deserved and Antoninus appears to have been a conservative and nationalistic although he respected and followed Hadrian s example of Philhellenism moderately Emperor who was not tainted by the blood of either citizen or foe combined and maintained Numa Pompilius good fortune pacific dutifulness and religious scrupulousness and whose laws removed anomalies and softened harshnesses 138 Krzysztof Ulanowski argues that the claims of military inability are exaggerated considering that although the sources praise Antoninus love for peace and his efforts rather to defend than enlarge the provinces he could hardly be considered a pacifist as shown by the conquest of the Lowlands the building of the Antonine Wall and the expansion of Germania Superior Ulanowski also praises Antoninus for being successful in deterrence by diplomatic means 139 Descendants Edit Although only one of his four children survived to adulthood Antoninus came to be ancestor to four generations of prominent Romans including the Emperor Commodus Hans Georg Pflaum has identified five direct descendants of Antoninus and Faustina who were consuls in the first half of the third century 140 Marcus Aurelius Fulvus Antoninus died before 138 died young without issue Marcus Galerius Aurelius Antoninus died before 138 died young without issue Aurelia Fadilla died in 135 who married Lucius Plautius Lamia Silvanus suffect consul in 145 141 no children known for certain Annia Galeria Faustina the Younger 21 September between 125 and 130 175 had several children those who had children were 142 Annia Aurelia Galeria Lucilla 7 March 150 182 whose children included Tiberius Claudius Pompeianus Annia Galeria Aurelia Faustina 151 whose children included Tiberius Claudius Severus Proculus Empress Annia Faustina Elagabalus third wife Annia Aurelia Fadilla 159 after 211 Annia Cornificia Faustina Minor 160 213 Nerva Antonine family tree EditvteNerva Antonine family treeQ Marcius Barea SoranusQ Marcius Barea SuraAntonia FurnillaM Cocceius NervaSergia PlautillaP Aelius HadrianusTitus r 79 81 Marcia FurnillaMarciaTrajanus PaterNerva r 96 98 Ulpia i Aelius Hadrianus MarullinusFlavia ii Marciana iii C Salonius Matidius iv Trajan r 98 117 PlotinaP Acilius AttianusP Aelius Afer v Paulina Major vi Lucius Mindius 2 Libo Rupilius Frugi 3 Salonia Matidia vii L Vibius Sabinus 1 viii Paulina Minor vi L Julius Ursus Servianus ix Matidia Minor vii Suetonius x Sabina iii Hadrian v xi vi r 117 138 Antinous xii Julia Balbilla xiii C Fuscus Salinator IJulia Serviana PaulinaM Annius Verus xiv Rupilia Faustina xv xvi Boionia ProcillaCn Arrius AntoninusL Ceionius CommodusAppia SeveraC Fuscus Salinator IIL Caesennius PaetusArria AntoninaArria Fadilla xvii T Aurelius FulvusL Caesennius AntoninusL CommodusPlautiaignota xviii C Avidius NigrinusM Annius Verus xv Calvisia Domitia Lucilla xix Fundania xx M Annius Libo xv FAUSTINA xvii Antoninus Pius r 138 161 xvii L Aelius Caesar xviii Avidia xviii Cornificia xv MARCUS AURELIUS r 161 180 xxi FAUSTINA Minor xxi C Avidius Cassius xxii Aurelia Fadilla xvii LUCIUS VERUS r 161 169 xviii 1 Ceionia Fabia xviii Plautius Quintillus xxiii Q Servilius PudensCeionia Plautia xviii Cornificia Minor xxiv M Petronius SuraCOMMODUS r 177 192 xxi Fadilla xxiv M Annius Verus Caesar xxi Ti Claudius Pompeianus 2 Lucilla xxi M Plautius Quintillus xviii Junius Licinius BalbusServilia CeioniaPetronius AntoninusL Aurelius Agaclytus 2 Aurelia Sabina xxiv L Antistius Burrus 1 Plautius QuintillusPlautia ServillaC Furius Sabinus TimesitheusAntonia GordianaJunius Licinius Balbus Furia Sabina TranquillinaGORDIAN III r 238 244 1 1st spouse 2 2nd spouse 3 3rd spouse Reddish purple indicates emperor of the Nerva Antonine dynasty lighter purple indicates designated imperial heir of said dynasty who never reigned grey indicates unsuccessful imperial aspirants bluish purple indicates emperors of other dynasties dashed lines indicate adoption dotted lines indicate love affairs unmarried relationships small caps posthumously deified Augusti Augustae or other Notes Except where otherwise noted the notes below indicate that an individual s parentage is as shown in the above family tree Sister of Trajan s father Giacosa 1977 p 7 Giacosa 1977 p 8 a b Levick 2014 p 161 Husband of Ulpia Marciana Levick 2014 p 161 a b Giacosa 1977 p 7 a b c DIR contributor Herbert W Benario 2000 Hadrian a b Giacosa 1977 p 9 Husband of Salonia Matidia Levick 2014 p 161 Smith 1870 Julius Servianus Suetonius a possible lover of Sabina One interpretation of HA Hadrianus 11 3 Smith 1870 Hadrian pp 319 322 Lover of Hadrian Lambert 1984 p 99 and passim deification Lamber 1984 pp 2 5 etc Julia Balbilla a possible lover of Sabina A R Birley 1997 Hadrian the Restless Emperor p 251 cited in Levick 2014 p 30 who is sceptical of this suggestion Husband of Rupilia Faustina Levick 2014 p 163 a b c d Levick 2014 p 163 It is uncertain whether Rupilia Faustina was Frugi s daughter by Salonia Matidia or another woman a b c d Levick 2014 p 162 a b c d e f g Levick 2014 p 164 Wife of M Annius Verus Giacosa 1977 p 10 Wife of M Annius Libo Levick 2014 p 163 a b c d e Giacosa 1977 p 10 The epitomator of Cassius Dio 72 22 gives the story that Faustina the Elder promised to marry Avidius Cassius This is also echoed in HA Marcus Aurelius 24 Husband of Ceionia Fabia Levick 2014 p 164 a b c Levick 2014 p 117 References DIR contributors 2000 De Imperatoribus Romanis An Online Encyclopedia of Roman Rulers and Their Families Retrieved 14 April 2015 Giacosa Giorgio 1977 Women of the Caesars Their Lives and Portraits on Coins Translated by R Ross Holloway Milan Edizioni Arte e Moneta ISBN 0 8390 0193 2 Lambert Royston 1984 Beloved and God The Story of Hadrian and Antinous New York Viking ISBN 0 670 15708 2 Levick Barbara 2014 Faustina I and II Imperial Women of the Golden Age Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 537941 9 Smith William ed 1870 Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology References Edit Salomies O 2014 Adoptive and Polyonymous Nomenclature in the Roman Empire Some Addenda In Caldelli M L Gregori G L eds Epigrafia e ordine senatorio 30 anni dopo Edizioni Quasar pp 492 493 ISBN 9788871405674 a b Cooley Alison E 2012 The Cambridge Manual of Latin Epigraphy Cambridge University Press pp 492 493 ISBN 978 0 521 84026 2 a b c d Bowman 2000 p 150 Birley 2000 p 54 Dio 70 1 2 Birley 2000 p 55 citing the Historia Augusta Life of Hadrian 24 4 Harvey Paul B 2006 Religion in republican Italy Cambridge University Press p 134 a b c Bury 1893 p 523 Whitfield Hugo Thomas Dupuis 2012 The rise of Nemausus from Augustus to Antoninus Pius a prosopographical study of Nemausian senators and equestrians PDF MA Ontario Queen s University pp 49 57 Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Retrieved 24 January 2016 Gayraud Michel 1970 Le proconsulat de Narbonnaise sous le Haut Empire Revue des Etudes Anciennes 72 3 4 344 363 doi 10 3406 rea 1970 3874 Retrieved 24 January 2016 a b c d e Chisholm 1911 Birley 2000 p 242 Historia Augusta Antoninus Pius 1 6 a b c d e f Weigel Antoninus Pius Rupilius Strachan stemma Settipani Christian 2000 Continuite gentilice et continuite familiale dans les familles senatoriales romaines a l epoque imperiale mythe et realite Prosopographica et genealogica in Italian Vol 2 illustrated ed Unit for Prosopographical Research Linacre College University of Oxford p 278 ISBN 9781900934022 Vagi David L 2000 Coinage and History of the Roman Empire C 82 B C A D 480 History Taylor amp Francis p 240 ISBN 9781579583163 Birley 2000 p 34 Historia Augusta Antoninus Pius 1 7 a b Magie David Historia Augusta 1921 Life of Antoninus Pius Note 6 CIL VI 00988 CIL VI 00989 Magie David Historia Augusta 1921 Life of Antoninus Pius Note 7 Bury 1893 p 528 Birley 2000 p 77 Historia Augusta Antoninus Pius 6 7 Dauce Fernand 1968 Decouverte a Rennes d une piece de Faustine jeune Annales de Bretagne 75 1 270 276 doi 10 3406 abpo 1968 2460 Archived from the original on 4 May 2018 Retrieved 23 October 2015 Anise K Strong Prostitutes and Matrons in the Roman World Strong Anise K 2016 Prostitutes and Matrons in the Roman World Cambridge University Press p 85 ISBN 9781107148758 Lind Goran 2008 Common Law Marriage A Legal Institution for Cohabitation Oxford University Press p 72 ISBN 9780199710539 Birley Anthony R 2012 Marcus Aurelius A Biography Routledge p 33 ISBN 9781134695690 Traver Andrew G From polis to empire the ancient world c 800 B C A D 500 2002 p 33 Historia Augusta Life of Antoninus Pius 2 9 E E Bryant The Reign of Antoninus Pius Cambridge University Press 1895 pg 12 a b Bowman 2000 p 149 Bryant p 15 Bowman 2000 p 148 Bury 1893 p 517 Cooley p 492 Grant Michael The Antonines The Roman Empire in Transition 1996 Routledge ISBN 0 415 13814 0 ps 10 11 a b c Bowman 2000 p 151 Birley 2000 p 55 HA Marcus 6 2 Verus 2 3 4 Birley 2000 pp 53 54 H G Pflaum Les pretres du culte imperial sous le regne d Antonin le Pieux In Comptes rendus des seances de l Academie des Inscriptions et Belles Lettres 111e annee N 2 1967 pp 194 209 Available at 1 Archived 2 June 2018 at the Wayback Machine Accessed 27 January 2016 J J Wilkes The Journal of Roman Studies Volume LXXV 19book ISSN 0075 4358 p 242 a b Bury 1893 p 525 Rene Rebuffat Enceintes urbaines et insecurite en Mauretanie Tingitane In Melanges de l Ecole francaise de Rome Antiquite tome 86 n 1 1974 pp 501 522 Available at 2 Archived 4 May 2018 at the Wayback Machine Accessed 26 December 2015 Michel Christol L armee des provinces pannoniennes et la pacification des revoltes maures sous Antonin le Pieux In Antiquites africaines 17 1981 pp 133 141 Michael Grant The Antonines The Roman Empire in Transition Abingdon Routledge 1996 ISBN 0 415 13814 0 page 17 Rebuffat Enceintes urbaines Salway A History of Roman Britain Oxford University Press 2001 ISBN 0 19 280138 4 p 149 Birley Anthony 2005 The Roman Government of Britain Oxford U P ISBN 978 0 19 925237 4 p 137 Bowman 2000 p 152 a b c Bowman 2000 p 155 David Colin Arthur Shotter Roman Britain Abingdon Routledge 2004 ISBN 0 415 31943 9 page 49 Jean Louis Voisin Les Romains chasseurs de tetes In Du chatiment dans la cite Supplices corporels et peine de mort dans le monde antique Table ronde de Rome 9 11 novembre 1982 Rome Ecole Francaise de Rome 1984 pp 241 293 Available at 3 Archived 2 March 2017 at the Wayback Machine Accessed 14 January 2016 W E Boyd 1984 Environmental change and Iron Age land management in the area of the Antonine Wall central Scotland a summary Glasgow Archaeological Journal Volume 11 Issue 1 Page 75 81 Peter Spring Great Walls and Linear Barriers Barnsley Pen amp Sword 2015 ISBN 978 1 84884 377 6 page 75 Edward Luttwak The grand Strategy of the Roman Empire Baltimore The Johns Hopkins University Press 1979 ISBN 0 8018 2158 4 page 88 David J Breeze Roman Frontiers in Britain London Bloomsbury 2013 ISBN 978 1 8539 9698 6 page 53 Salway 149 Birley Anthony 2012 Marcus Aurelius London Routledge 2012 ISBN 0 415 17125 3 p 61 Simon Hornblower Antony Spawforth Esther Eidinow 2014 The Oxford Companion to Classical Civilization ISBN 978 0 1910 1676 9 entry Antoninus Pius Herbert W Benario 1980 A Commentary on the Vita Hadriani in the Historia Augusta Scholars Press ISBN 978 0 891 30391 6 page 103 Albino Garzetti From Tiberius to the Antonines A History of the Roman Empire AD 14 192 London Routledge 2014 ISBN 978 1 138 01920 1 page 447 Paul Veyne L Empire Greco Romain Paris Seuil 2005 ISBN 2 02 057798 4 page 28 footnote 61 Salway 149 Marta Garcia Morcillo Las ventas por subasta en el mundo romano la esfera privada Edicions Universitat Barcelona 2005 ISBN 84 475 3017 5 page 301 Schlude Jason M 13 January 2020 Rome Parthia and the Politics of Peace The Origins of War in the Ancient Middle East Routledge p 176 ISBN 978 1 351 13570 2 Gocha R Tsetskhladze ed North Pontic Archaeology Recent Discoveries and Studies Leiden Brill 2001 ISBN 90 04 12041 6 page 425 Birley 2000 p 113 Rouben Paul Adalian Historical Dictionary of Armenia Lanham Scarecrow 2010 ISBN 978 0 8108 6096 4 entry Arshakuni Arsacid page 174 Speidel Michael P Riding for Caesar The Roman Emperors Horse Guards Harvard University Press 1997 p 50 See Victor 15 3 a b McLaughlin Raoul 2010 Rome and the Distant East Trade Routes to the Ancient Lands of Arabia India and China A amp C Black p 131 ISBN 9781847252357 Allen Timothy F H Hoekstra Thomas W Tainter Joseph A 2012 Supply Side Sustainability Columbia University Press pp 105 106 ISBN 9780231504072 Barbara Burrell Neokoroi Greek Cities and Roman Emperors Leiden Brill 2004 ISBN 90 04 12578 7 page 87 E E Bryant The Reign of Antoninus Pius Cambridge University Press 1895 pages 45 46 and 68 Conrad Gempf ed The Book of Acts in Its Graeco Roman Setting Grand Rapids Wm B Eerdmans Publishing 1994 ISBN 0 85364 564 7 page 305 Emmanuelle Collas Heddeland Le culte imperial dans la competition des titres sous le Haut Empire Une lettre d Antonin aux Ephesiens In Revue des Etudes Grecques tome 108 Juillet decembre 1995 pp 410 429 Available at 4 Archived 3 June 2018 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 22 January 2016 Edmund Thomas 2007 Monumentality and the Roman Empire Architecture in the Antonine Age Oxford U Press ISBN 978 0 19 928863 2 page 133 Philip A Harland ed Greco Roman Associations Texts translations and commentaries II North Coast of the Black Sea Asia Minor Berlin Walter de Gruyter 2014 ISBN 978 3 11 034014 3 page 381 Paul Graindor Antonin le Pieux et Athenes Revue belge de philologie et d histoire tome 6 fasc 3 4 1927 pp 753 756 Available at 5 Archived 3 June 2018 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 22 January 2016 Gary Forsythe Time in Roman Religion One Thousand Years of Religious History London Routledge 2012 ISBN 978 0 415 52217 5 page 92 Samuel Dill Roman Society from Nero to Marcus Aurelius Library of Alexandria s d g Oxford Classical Dictionary London 2012 ISBN 978 0 19 954556 8 entry Patrimonium After the death of Nero the personal properties of the Julio Claudian dynasty had been appropriated by the Flavians and therefore turned into public properties Carrie amp Roussele 586 Carrie amp Rousselle 586 The Cambridge Ancient History Volume 11 The High Empire AD 70 192 Cambridge U P 2009 ISBN 9780521263351 page 150 Edward Champlin Final Judgments Duty and Emotion in Roman Wills 200 B C A D 250 Berkeley University of California Press 1991 ISBN 0 520 07103 4 page 98 Birley 2000 p 71 David S Potter The Roman Empire at Bay London Routledge 2014 ISBN 978 0 415 84054 5 page 49 Heinz Bellen Die Verstaatlichung des Privatvermogens der romische Kaiser Hildegard Temporini ed Aufstieg und Niedergang der romischen Welt Berlin De Gruyter 1974 ISBN 3 11 004571 0 page 112 Aloys Winterling Politics and Society in Imperial Rome Malden MA John Wiley amp sons 2009 ISBN 978 1 4051 7969 0 pages 73 75 a b c d Bury 1893 p 526 Clifford Ando Imperial Rome AD 193 to 284 The Critical Century Edinburgh University Press 2012 ISBN 978 0 7486 2050 0 page 91 John Anthony Crook Consilium Principis Imperial Councils and Counsellors from Augustus to Diocletian Cambridge U P 1955 page 67 A Arthur Schiller Roman Law Mechanisms of Development The Hague Mouton 1978 ISBN 90 279 7744 5 page 477 George Mousourakis Roman Law and the Origins of the Civil Law Tradition Heidelberg Springer ISBN 978 3 319 12267 0 page 79 a b c Bury 1893 p 527 Keith Bradley Slavery and Society at Rome Cambridge University Press 1994 ISBN 9780521263351 page 162 Aubert Jean Jacques L esclave en droit romain ou l impossible reification de l homme Esclavage et travail force Cahiers de la Recherche sur les droits fondamentaux CRDF Vol 10 2012 Anastasia Serghidou ed Fear of slaves fear of enslavement in the ancient Mediterranean Presses Univ Franche Comte 2007 ISBN 978 2 84867 169 7 page 159 Jean Michel Carrie amp Aline Rousselle L Empire Romain en Mutation des Severes a Constantin 192 337 Paris Seuil 1999 ISBN 2 02 025819 6 page 290 First Apology of Justin Martyr Chapter LXVIII Digest 48 18 9 as quoted by Edward Peters Torture Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press 1996 ISBN 0 8122 1599 0 page 29 Grant 154 155 Bowman 2000 p 154 Tulane University Roman Currency of the Principate A Mischcon Abodah Zara p 10a Soncino 1988 Mischcon cites various sources SJ Rappaport is of opinion that our Antoninus is Antoninus Pius Other opinions cited suggest Antoninus was Caracalla Lucius Verus or Alexander Severus a b c For a full translation of that passage see Paul Halsall 2000 1998 Jerome S Arkenberg ed East Asian History Sourcebook Chinese Accounts of Rome Byzantium and the Middle East c 91 B C E 1643 C E Fordham edu Fordham University Retrieved 17 September 2016 Harper Kyle 2017 The Fate of Rome Princeton New Jersey United States Princeton University Press 其王常欲通使于汉 而安息欲以汉缯彩与之交市 故遮阂不得自达 至桓帝延熹九年 大秦王安敦遣使自日南徼外献象牙 犀角 瑇瑁 始乃一通焉 其所表贡 并无珍异 疑传者过焉 后汉书 西域传 Translation The king of this state always wanted to enter into diplomatic relations with the Han But Anxi wanted to trade with them in Han silk and so put obstacles in their way so that they could never have direct relations with Han This continued until the ninth year of the Yanxi 延熹 reign period of Emperor Huan 桓 A D 166 when Andun 安敦 king of Da Qin sent an envoy from beyond the frontier of Rinan 日南 who offered elephant tusk rhinoceros horn and tortoise shell It was only then that for the first time communication was established between the two states Xiyu Zhuan of the Hou Hanshu ch 88 in YU Taishan Chinese Academy of Social Sciences 2013 China and the Ancient Mediterranean World A Survey of Ancient Chinese Sources Sino Platonic Papers 242 25 26 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 698 1744 Chinese original Chinese Text Project Dictionary ctext org Yu Ying shih 1986 Han Foreign Relations In Twitchett Denis Loewe Michael eds The Cambridge History of China Volume I the Ch in and Han Empires 221 B C A D 220 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 24327 8 de Crespigny Rafe 2007 A Biographical Dictionary of Later Han to the Three Kingdoms 23 220 AD Leiden Koninklijke Brill p 600 ISBN 978 90 04 15605 0 Pulleyblank Edwin G Leslie D D Gardiner K H J 1999 The Roman Empire as Known to Han China Journal of the American Oriental Society 119 1 71 79 doi 10 2307 605541 JSTOR 605541 Hill 2009 p 27 and nn 12 18 and 12 20 Hill 2009 p 27 An Jiayao 2002 When Glass Was Treasured in China In Juliano Annette L Lerner Judith A eds Silk Road Studies VII Nomads Traders and Holy Men Along China s Silk Road Turnhout Brepols p 83 ISBN 2503521789 a b Young Gary K 2001 Rome s Eastern Trade International Commerce and Imperial Policy 31 BC AD 305 London amp New York Routledge pp 29 30 ISBN 0 415 24219 3 a b For further information on Oc Eo see Osborne Milton 2006 first published 2000 The Mekong Turbulent Past Uncertain Future revised ed Crows Nest Allen amp Unwin pp 24 25 ISBN 1 74114 893 6 Ball Warwick 2016 Rome in the East Transformation of an Empire 2nd ed London amp New York Routledge p 154 ISBN 978 0 415 72078 6 Geoffrey William Adams Marcus Aurelius in the Historia Augusta and Beyond Lanham Rowman amp Littlefield 2013 ISBN 978 0 7391 7638 2 pages 74 75 Birley 2000 p 112 Grant The Antonines 14 Michael Petrus Josephus Van Den Hout A Commentary on the Letters of M Cornelius Fronto Leiden Brill 199 ISBN 9004109579 page 389 Champlin Final Judgments 16 Michel Christol Prefecture du pretoire et haute administration equestre a la fin du regne d Antonin le Pieux et au debut du regne de Marc Aurele In Cahiers du Centre Gustave Glotz 18 2007 pp 115 140 Available at 6 Archived 2 June 2018 at the Wayback Machine Accessed 27 January 2016 Graf Fritz 2015 Roman Festivals in the Greek East Cambridge University Press pp 89 90 ISBN 9781107092112 Hammond M 1938 The Tribunician Day during the Early Empire Memoirs of the American Academy in Rome 15 p 46 Istituto Italiano d Arti Grafiche 1956 Memoirs of the American Academy in Rome Vol 24 25 p 101 H Temporini W Haase 1972 Aufstieg und Niedergang der romischen Welt Principat V De Gruyter p 534 ISBN 9783110018851 IGRR I 1509 The date is found in an inscription dedicated to Titus Flavius Xenion 121 The Feriale Duranum 1 21 written half a century later implies that his successors took power the day before Prid ie Non is Ma r tis However and for some reason most historians who cite the passage indicate that it occurred on 7 March nones martis 122 123 124 It s not clear whether the error comes from the authors or the digitized version Either way this is the universally accepted date 10 a b Bowman 2000 p 156 Victor 15 7 Victor 15 7 a b Bury 1893 p 532 HA Antoninus Pius 12 4 8 Birley 2000 p 114 HA Marcus 7 10 tr David Magie cited in Birley 2000 p 118 278 n 6 Robert Turcan Origines et sens de l inhumation a l epoque imperiale In Revue des Etudes Anciennes Tome 60 1958 n 3 4 pp 323 347 Available at 7 Archived 3 June 2018 at the Wayback Machine Accessed 14 January 2016 Birley 2000 p 118 Historia Augusta Life of Antoninus Pius 5 4 Gibbon Edward 2015 Delphi Complete Works of Edward Gibbon Illustrated Delphi Classics p 125 ISBN 9781910630761 Bury 1893 p 524 Grant Michael 2016 The Antonines The Roman Empire in Transition Routledge pp 14 23 ISBN 9781317972112 Ulanowski Krzysztof 2016 The Religious Aspects of War in the Ancient Near East Greece and Rome Ancient Warfare Series Volume 1 BRILL pp 360 361 ISBN 9789004324763 Pflaum Les gendres de Marc Aurele Archived 5 June 2018 at the Wayback Machine Journal des savants 1961 pp 28 41 Ronald Syme Antonine Relatives Ceionii and Vettuleni Athenaeum 35 1957 p 309 Based on Table F The Children of Faustina II in Birley 2000Sources EditPrimary sourcesCassius Dio Roman History Book 70 English translation Aurelius Victor Epitome de Caesaribu English translation Historia Augusta The Life of Antoninus Pius English translation Note that the Historia Augusta includes pseudohistorical elements Secondary sourcesWeigel Richard D Antoninus Pius A D 138 161 De Imperatoribus Romanis Bowman Alan K 2000 The Cambridge Ancient History The High Empire A D 70 192 Cambridge University Press Birley Anthony 2000 Marcus Aurelius Routledge Bury J B 1893 A History of the Roman Empire from its Foundation to the Death of Marcus Aurelius Harper Cooley Alison E 2012 The Cambridge Manual of Latin Epigraphy Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 84026 2 Hill John E 2009 Through the Jade Gate to Rome A Study of the Silk Routes during the Later Han Dynasty First to Second Centuries CE BookSurge ISBN 978 1 4392 2134 1 Huttl W 1936 1933 Antoninus Pius Vol I amp II Prag This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Antoninus Pius Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 2 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 148 149 This source lists Bossart Mueller Zur Geschichte des Kaisers A 1868 Bryant The Reign of Antonine Cambridge Historical Essays 1895 Lacour Gayet A le Pieux et son Temps 1888 Watson P B 1884 ii Marcus Aurelius Antoninus London New York Harper ISBN 9780836956672 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Antoninus Pius Antoninus PiusNerva Antonine dynastyBorn 19 September 86 Died 7 March 161Regnal titlesPreceded byHadrian Roman emperor138 161 Succeeded byMarcus Aurelius and Lucius VerusPolitical officesPreceded byG Herennius CapellaL Coelius Rufusas suffect consuls Roman consul120with L Catilius Severus Iulianus Claudius Reginus Succeeded byG Quinctius Certus Poblicius MarcellusT Rutilius Propinquusas suffect consulsPreceded byP Cassius SecundusM Nonius Mucianusas suffect consuls Roman consul IIJanuary April 139with G Bruttius Praesens L Fulvius Rusticus II Succeeded byL Minicius Natalis Quadronius VerusL Claudius Proculusas suffect consulsPreceded byM Ceccius JustinusG Julius Bassusas suffect consuls Roman consul IIIJanuary 140with Marcus Aurelius Succeeded byQ Antonius IsauricusL Aurelius Flaccusas suffect consulsPreceded byL Marcius Celer M Calpurnius LongusD Velius Fidusas suffect consuls Roman consul IVJanuary February 145with Marcus Aurelius II Succeeded byL Plautius Lamia SilvanusL Poblicola Priscusas suffect consuls Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Antoninus Pius amp oldid 1149525463, wikipedia, wiki, book, 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