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Augustus (title)

Augustus (plural Augusti; /ɔːˈɡʌstəs/ aw-GUST-əs,[1] Classical Latin: [au̯ˈɡʊstʊs]; "majestic", "great" or "venerable") was the main title of the Roman emperors during Antiquity.[2][3][4] It was given as both name and title to Gaius Julius Caesar Octavianus (often referred to simply as Augustus) in 27 BC, marking his accession as Rome's first emperor. On his death, it became an official title of his successor, and was so used by all emperors thereafter. The feminine form Augusta was used for Roman empresses and other female members of the imperial family. The masculine and feminine forms originated in the time of the Roman Republic, in connection with things considered divine or sacred in traditional Roman religion. Their use as titles for major and minor Roman deities of the Empire associated the imperial system and family with traditional Roman virtues and the divine will and may be considered a feature of the Roman imperial cult.

Coin of the emperor Diocletian, marked diocletianus augustus

In Rome's Greek-speaking provinces, "Augustus" was translated as Sebastos (Σεβαστός), or Hellenised as Augoustos (Αὔγουστος); these titles continued to be used in the Byzantine Empire until the Fall of Constantinople in 1453, although they gradually lost their imperial exclusivity in favour of Basileus and Autokrator.

After the fall of the Western Roman Empire, the title "Augustus" would later be incorporated into the style of the Holy Roman Emperor, a precedent set by Charlemagne who used the title serenissimus Augustus. As such, Augustus was sometimes also used as a name for men of aristocratic birth, especially in the lands of the Holy Roman Empire. It remains a given name for males.

Title in ancient Rome edit

Earliest usage edit

 
A gold coin of Tiberius (r.14–37) marked ti divi f — augustus

Some thirty years before its first association with Caesar's heir, augustus was an obscure honorific with religious associations. One early context (58 BC) associates it with provincial Lares (Roman household gods).[5] In Latin poetry and prose, it signifies the further elevation or augmentation of what is already sacred or religious.[6] Some Roman sources connected it to augury, and Rome was said to have been founded with the "august augury" of Romulus.[7]

Imperial honorific edit

 
A silver coin of emperor Probus (r.276–282), marked imp·c·probus·invic·p·f· aug

The first true Roman known as "Augustus" (and first counted as a Roman emperor) was Octavian. He was the adopted son and heir of Julius Caesar, who had been murdered for his seeming aspiration to divine monarchy, then subsequently and officially deified. Octavian studiously avoided any association with Caesar's claims, other than acknowledging his position and duties as Divi filius ("son of the deified one"). Nevertheless, his position was unique and extraordinary. He had ended Rome's prolonged and bloody civil war with his victory at Actium, and established a lasting peace. He was self-evidently favoured by the gods. As princeps senatus ("first man or head of the senate") he presided at senatorial meetings. He was pontifex maximus, chief priest of Roman state religion. He held consular imperium, with authority equal to the official chief executive. He was supreme commander of all Roman legions, and held tribunicia potestas ("tribunician power"). As a tribune, his person was inviolable (sacrosanctitas) and he had the right to veto any act or proposal by any magistrate within Rome.

He was officially renamed Augustus by the Roman Senate on 16 January 27 BC – or perhaps the Senate ratified his own careful choice; "Romulus" had been considered, and rejected.[8][9] This name was deemed too blatant as it would make Octavius the second founder of Rome.[10] So his official renaming in a form vaguely associated with a traditionally Republican religiosity, but unprecedented as a cognomen, may have served to show that he owed his position to the approval of Rome and its gods, and possibly his own unique, elevated, "godlike" nature and talents.[8] His full and official title thus became Imperator Caesar Divi Filius Augustus.

Augustus' religious reforms extended or affirmed Augusti as a near ubiquitous title or honour for various minor local deities, including the Lares Augusti of local communities, and obscure provincial deities such as the North African Marazgu Augustus. This extension of an Imperial honorific to major and minor deities of Rome and her provinces is considered a ground-level feature of Imperial cult, which continued until the official replacement of Rome's traditional religions by Christianity. The religious ambiguity of the title allowed for this kind of deification throughout the empire as subjects – beginning from Asia and Bithynia – adopted the worship of the genius or soul of Augustus, establishing a ruler-cult.[11]

The first emperor bequeathed the title Augustus to his adopted heir and successor Tiberius in his will.[4] From then on, though it conferred no specific legal powers, Augustus was a titular element of the imperial name.[4] Subsequently, the title was bestowed by the Roman Senate.[4] Until the reign of Marcus Aurelius (r. 161–180), the title was unique to its bearer; in 161 Marcus Aurelius elevated Lucius Verus (r. 161–169) to Augustus and both bore the title at the same time.[4]

 
Coin of emperor Alexander II with the title augustos rom, 913.

The date of an emperor's investiture with the title Augustus was celebrated as the dies imperii and commemorated annually.[4] From the 3rd century, new emperors were often acclaimed as Augusti by the army.[4] Emperors also inherited Caesar (originally a family name) as part of their titles. The Tetrarchy instituted by Diocletian shared power between two Augusti and two Caesares.[4] Nevertheless, as Augustus senior, Diocletian retained legislative power.[4] Diocletian and his eventual successor after the civil wars of the Tetrarchy, Constantine the Great, both used the title semper Augustus ('ever Augustus'), which indicates a formalisation of the name in the late 3rd and early 4th centuries.[4] From the reign of Constantine onwards, the Greek: Σεβαστός, translit. Sebastós was abandoned as the translation of "Augustus" in favour of the homophone Greek: Αὔγουστος, translit. aúgoustos.[4]

 
Emperor Manuel II Palaiologos in a Byzantine miniature from c. 1404. The Greek text call hims "basileus and autokrator of the Romans, Palaiologos, always Augustus" (ΒΑCΙΛΕΥC ΚΑΙ ΑΥΤΟΚΡΑΤΩΡ ΡΩΜΑΙΩΝ Ο ΠΑΛΑΙΟΛΟΓΟC ΚΑΙ ΑΕΙ ΑΥΓΟΥCΤΟC), after the late antique formula "semper Augustus".

Beginning with Valentinian the Great and his brother Valens, whom he raised to Augustus pari iure, 'Augustus without reserve' in 364, the concurrent Augusti of the eastern and western provinces were of equal standing.[4] The last emperor proclaimed in the West, Romulus (r. 475–476), adopted Augustus not only as a title, but also as a proper name (becoming Romulus Augustus pius felix Augustus).[12]

After the victory over the Sasanian Empire in the Byzantine–Sasanian War of 602–628, the 7th century final phase of the Roman–Persian Wars, the emperor Heraclius introduced the Greek: βασιλεύς, translit. basileús, lit. "monarch" and the title Augoustos lost importance.[4] Until Heraclius's 629 reforms, royal titles had been eschewed in Rome since the legendary overthrow of the Roman monarchy's last king Tarquinius Superbus by Lucius Junius Brutus in the late 6th century BC.[4]

The Imperial titles of imperator, caesar, and augustus were respectively rendered in Greek as autokratōr, kaisar, and augoustos (or sebastos[13]). The Greek titles were used in the Byzantine Empire until its extinction in 1453, although sebastos lost its imperial exclusivity and autokratōr along with basileus became the exclusive title of the emperor after the 8th century.

Feminine equivalent edit

Augusta was the female equivalent of Augustus, and had similar origins as an obscure descriptor with vaguely religious overtones. It was bestowed on some women of the Imperial dynasties, as an indicator of worldly power and influence and a status near to divinity. There was no qualification with higher prestige. The title or honorific was shared by state goddesses associated with the Imperial regime's generosity and provision, such as Ceres, Bona Dea, Juno, Minerva, and Ops, and by local or minor goddesses around the empire. Other personifications perceived as essentially female and given the title Augusta include Pax (peace) and Victoria (victory).

The first woman to receive the honorific Augusta was Livia Drusilla, by the last will of her husband Augustus. From his death (14 AD) she was known as Julia Augusta, until her own death in AD 29.

Other uses edit

Holy Roman Empire edit

Charlemagne used the title serenissimus Augustus as a prefix to his titles. The style assumed by Otto I was imperator Augustus. The relative simplicity of the style and absence of any mention of Rome was in deference to Byzantium (although he would briefly use the title imperator Augustus Romanorum ac Francorum (Emperor-Augustus of the Romans and Franks) in 966), which would soon reach the medieval apex of its power. By the 12th century, the standard style of the Emperor had become Dei gratia Romanorum imperator semper Augustus (By the grace of God, Emperor of the Romans, ever Augustus) and would remain so until at least the 16th century.

The formula of semper Augustus ("ever exalted") when translated into German in the late period of the Holy Roman Empire was not rendered literally, but as allzeit Mehrer des Reiches ("ever Increaser of the Realm"), from the transitive verbal meaning of augere "to augment, increase".

Brian Boru edit

The Irish High King Brian Boru (c. 941 – 1014) was described in the Annals of Ulster as ardrí Gaidhel Erenn & Gall & Bretan, August iartair tuaiscirt Eorpa uile ("High King of the Gaels of Ireland, the Norsemen and the Britons, Augustus of the whole of north-west Europe"), the only Irish king to receive that distinction.[14][15]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Wells, John C. (1990). Longman pronunciation dictionary. Harlow, England: Longman. ISBN 0582053838. entry "Augustus"
  2. ^ "Augustus, Augusta, as titles". Oxford Reference.
  3. ^ Nicholson, Oliver (2018). The Oxford Dictionary of Late Antiquity. Oxford University Press. pp. 534–536. ISBN 978-0-19-256246-3.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Strothmann, Meret (2006). . Brill's New Pauly. Archived from the original on 2023-03-15.
  5. ^ Hornum, Michael B., Nemesis, the Roman state and the games, Brill, 1993, p. 37 footnote 23, citing epigraphic evidence from the Roman province of Cisalpine Gaul.
  6. ^ It appears as such in works of Cicero, before its use by Octavian, later known as Augustus. See entry at Lewis and Short's Latin dictionary, online at perseus.org.
  7. ^ Haverfield, F J, "The name Augustus", Journal of Roman Studies, 5 (1915), pp. 249–250, citing Ennius, Annales, 245 M. (494 V.) "Augusto augurio postquam incluta condita Romast". available from penelope.uchicago.edu
  8. ^ a b Cassius Dio (c. 230). Roman History, 53.16.
  9. ^ Haverfield, F J, "The name Augustus", Journal of Roman Studies, 5 (1915), pp. 249–250, available from penelope.uchicago.edu Octavian was also an augur. Haverfield surmises that the choice of "Augustus" as the name might also have meant to overshadow the legend "AUG" on coins issued by his defeated enemy Pompey' – where "AUG" signifies Pompey's status as an augur, defeated with the help of Augustus' superior augury.
  10. ^ Wacher, John (2002). The Roman World, Volume II. London: Routledge. p. 770. ISBN 0415263166.
  11. ^ Ferguson, John (1985). The Religions of the Roman Empire. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press. p. 90. ISBN 0801493110.
  12. ^ Craven, Maxwell (2019). "Romulus Augustulus". The Imperial Families of Ancient Rome. Fonthill Media. ISBN 978-1781557389.
  13. ^ White, L. Michael (2005). From Jesus to Christianity: How Four Generations of Visionaries & Storytellers Created the New Testament and Christian Faith. San Francisco: HarperCollins. p. 44. ISBN 978-0060816100.
  14. ^ "Archived copy". from the original on 2017-05-27. Retrieved 2017-05-23.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  15. ^ "The Annals of Ulster". celt.ucc.ie. Archived from the original on 15 March 2009. Retrieved 30 March 2018.

augustus, title, other, uses, augustus, augustus, disambiguation, augustus, plural, augusti, ɔː, gust, classical, latin, ˈɡʊstʊs, majestic, great, venerable, main, title, roman, emperors, during, antiquity, given, both, name, title, gaius, julius, caesar, octa. For other uses of Augustus see Augustus disambiguation Augustus plural Augusti ɔː ˈ ɡ ʌ s t e s aw GUST es 1 Classical Latin au ˈɡʊstʊs majestic great or venerable was the main title of the Roman emperors during Antiquity 2 3 4 It was given as both name and title to Gaius Julius Caesar Octavianus often referred to simply as Augustus in 27 BC marking his accession as Rome s first emperor On his death it became an official title of his successor and was so used by all emperors thereafter The feminine form Augusta was used for Roman empresses and other female members of the imperial family The masculine and feminine forms originated in the time of the Roman Republic in connection with things considered divine or sacred in traditional Roman religion Their use as titles for major and minor Roman deities of the Empire associated the imperial system and family with traditional Roman virtues and the divine will and may be considered a feature of the Roman imperial cult Coin of the emperor Diocletian marked diocletianus augustus In Rome s Greek speaking provinces Augustus was translated as Sebastos Sebastos or Hellenised as Augoustos Aὔgoystos these titles continued to be used in the Byzantine Empire until the Fall of Constantinople in 1453 although they gradually lost their imperial exclusivity in favour of Basileus and Autokrator After the fall of the Western Roman Empire the title Augustus would later be incorporated into the style of the Holy Roman Emperor a precedent set by Charlemagne who used the title serenissimus Augustus As such Augustus was sometimes also used as a name for men of aristocratic birth especially in the lands of the Holy Roman Empire It remains a given name for males Contents 1 Title in ancient Rome 1 1 Earliest usage 1 2 Imperial honorific 1 3 Feminine equivalent 2 Other uses 2 1 Holy Roman Empire 2 2 Brian Boru 3 See also 4 ReferencesTitle in ancient Rome editEarliest usage edit nbsp A gold coin of Tiberius r 14 37 marked ti divi f augustus Some thirty years before its first association with Caesar s heir augustus was an obscure honorific with religious associations One early context 58 BC associates it with provincial Lares Roman household gods 5 In Latin poetry and prose it signifies the further elevation or augmentation of what is already sacred or religious 6 Some Roman sources connected it to augury and Rome was said to have been founded with the august augury of Romulus 7 Imperial honorific edit nbsp A silver coin of emperor Probus r 276 282 marked imp c probus invic p f aug See also Sebastos The first true Roman known as Augustus and first counted as a Roman emperor was Octavian He was the adopted son and heir of Julius Caesar who had been murdered for his seeming aspiration to divine monarchy then subsequently and officially deified Octavian studiously avoided any association with Caesar s claims other than acknowledging his position and duties as Divi filius son of the deified one Nevertheless his position was unique and extraordinary He had ended Rome s prolonged and bloody civil war with his victory at Actium and established a lasting peace He was self evidently favoured by the gods As princeps senatus first man or head of the senate he presided at senatorial meetings He was pontifex maximus chief priest of Roman state religion He held consular imperium with authority equal to the official chief executive He was supreme commander of all Roman legions and held tribunicia potestas tribunician power As a tribune his person was inviolable sacrosanctitas and he had the right to veto any act or proposal by any magistrate within Rome He was officially renamed Augustus by the Roman Senate on 16 January 27 BC or perhaps the Senate ratified his own careful choice Romulus had been considered and rejected 8 9 This name was deemed too blatant as it would make Octavius the second founder of Rome 10 So his official renaming in a form vaguely associated with a traditionally Republican religiosity but unprecedented as a cognomen may have served to show that he owed his position to the approval of Rome and its gods and possibly his own unique elevated godlike nature and talents 8 His full and official title thus became Imperator Caesar Divi Filius Augustus Augustus religious reforms extended or affirmed Augusti as a near ubiquitous title or honour for various minor local deities including the Lares Augusti of local communities and obscure provincial deities such as the North African Marazgu Augustus This extension of an Imperial honorific to major and minor deities of Rome and her provinces is considered a ground level feature of Imperial cult which continued until the official replacement of Rome s traditional religions by Christianity The religious ambiguity of the title allowed for this kind of deification throughout the empire as subjects beginning from Asia and Bithynia adopted the worship of the genius or soul of Augustus establishing a ruler cult 11 The first emperor bequeathed the title Augustus to his adopted heir and successor Tiberius in his will 4 From then on though it conferred no specific legal powers Augustus was a titular element of the imperial name 4 Subsequently the title was bestowed by the Roman Senate 4 Until the reign of Marcus Aurelius r 161 180 the title was unique to its bearer in 161 Marcus Aurelius elevated Lucius Verus r 161 169 to Augustus and both bore the title at the same time 4 nbsp Coin of emperor Alexander II with the title augustos rom 913 The date of an emperor s investiture with the title Augustus was celebrated as the dies imperii and commemorated annually 4 From the 3rd century new emperors were often acclaimed as Augusti by the army 4 Emperors also inherited Caesar originally a family name as part of their titles The Tetrarchy instituted by Diocletian shared power between two Augusti and two Caesares 4 Nevertheless as Augustus senior Diocletian retained legislative power 4 Diocletian and his eventual successor after the civil wars of the Tetrarchy Constantine the Great both used the title semper Augustus ever Augustus which indicates a formalisation of the name in the late 3rd and early 4th centuries 4 From the reign of Constantine onwards the Greek Sebastos translit Sebastos was abandoned as the translation of Augustus in favour of the homophone Greek Aὔgoystos translit augoustos 4 nbsp Emperor Manuel II Palaiologos in a Byzantine miniature from c 1404 The Greek text call hims basileus and autokrator of the Romans Palaiologos always Augustus BACILEYC KAI AYTOKRATWR RWMAIWN O PALAIOLOGOC KAI AEI AYGOYCTOC after the late antique formula semper Augustus Beginning with Valentinian the Great and his brother Valens whom he raised to Augustus pari iure Augustus without reserve in 364 the concurrent Augusti of the eastern and western provinces were of equal standing 4 The last emperor proclaimed in the West Romulus r 475 476 adopted Augustus not only as a title but also as a proper name becoming Romulus Augustus pius felix Augustus 12 After the victory over the Sasanian Empire in the Byzantine Sasanian War of 602 628 the 7th century final phase of the Roman Persian Wars the emperor Heraclius introduced the Greek basileys translit basileus lit monarch and the title Augoustos lost importance 4 Until Heraclius s 629 reforms royal titles had been eschewed in Rome since the legendary overthrow of the Roman monarchy s last king Tarquinius Superbus by Lucius Junius Brutus in the late 6th century BC 4 The Imperial titles of imperator caesar and augustus were respectively rendered in Greek as autokratōr kaisar and augoustos or sebastos 13 The Greek titles were used in the Byzantine Empire until its extinction in 1453 although sebastos lost its imperial exclusivity and autokratōr along with basileus became the exclusive title of the emperor after the 8th century Feminine equivalent edit Further information List of Augustae Augusta was the female equivalent of Augustus and had similar origins as an obscure descriptor with vaguely religious overtones It was bestowed on some women of the Imperial dynasties as an indicator of worldly power and influence and a status near to divinity There was no qualification with higher prestige The title or honorific was shared by state goddesses associated with the Imperial regime s generosity and provision such as Ceres Bona Dea Juno Minerva and Ops and by local or minor goddesses around the empire Other personifications perceived as essentially female and given the title Augusta include Pax peace and Victoria victory The first woman to receive the honorific Augusta was Livia Drusilla by the last will of her husband Augustus From his death 14 AD she was known as Julia Augusta until her own death in AD 29 Other uses editHoly Roman Empire edit Charlemagne used the title serenissimus Augustus as a prefix to his titles The style assumed by Otto I was imperator Augustus The relative simplicity of the style and absence of any mention of Rome was in deference to Byzantium although he would briefly use the title imperator Augustus Romanorum ac Francorum Emperor Augustus of the Romans and Franks in 966 which would soon reach the medieval apex of its power By the 12th century the standard style of the Emperor had become Dei gratia Romanorum imperator semper Augustus By the grace of God Emperor of the Romans ever Augustus and would remain so until at least the 16th century The formula of semper Augustus ever exalted when translated into German in the late period of the Holy Roman Empire was not rendered literally but as allzeit Mehrer des Reiches ever Increaser of the Realm from the transitive verbal meaning of augere to augment increase Brian Boru edit The Irish High King Brian Boru c 941 1014 was described in the Annals of Ulster as ardri Gaidhel Erenn amp Gall amp Bretan August iartair tuaiscirt Eorpa uile High King of the Gaels of Ireland the Norsemen and the Britons Augustus of the whole of north west Europe the only Irish king to receive that distinction 14 15 See also editArchons Auctoritas Basileus List of AugustaeReferences edit Wells John C 1990 Longman pronunciation dictionary Harlow England Longman ISBN 0582053838 entry Augustus Augustus Augusta as titles Oxford Reference Nicholson Oliver 2018 The Oxford Dictionary of Late Antiquity Oxford University Press pp 534 536 ISBN 978 0 19 256246 3 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Strothmann Meret 2006 Augustus 2 Brill s New Pauly Archived from the original on 2023 03 15 Hornum Michael B Nemesis the Roman state and the games Brill 1993 p 37 footnote 23 citing epigraphic evidence from the Roman province of Cisalpine Gaul It appears as such in works of Cicero before its use by Octavian later known as Augustus See entry at Lewis and Short s Latin dictionary online at perseus org Haverfield F J The name Augustus Journal of Roman Studies 5 1915 pp 249 250 citing Ennius Annales 245 M 494 V Augusto augurio postquam incluta condita Romast available from penelope uchicago edu a b Cassius Dio c 230 Roman History 53 16 Haverfield F J The name Augustus Journal of Roman Studies 5 1915 pp 249 250 available from penelope uchicago edu Octavian was also an augur Haverfield surmises that the choice of Augustus as the name might also have meant to overshadow the legend AUG on coins issued by his defeated enemy Pompey where AUG signifies Pompey s status as an augur defeated with the help of Augustus superior augury Wacher John 2002 The Roman World Volume II London Routledge p 770 ISBN 0415263166 Ferguson John 1985 The Religions of the Roman Empire Ithaca NY Cornell University Press p 90 ISBN 0801493110 Craven Maxwell 2019 Romulus Augustulus The Imperial Families of Ancient Rome Fonthill Media ISBN 978 1781557389 White L Michael 2005 From Jesus to Christianity How Four Generations of Visionaries amp Storytellers Created the New Testament and Christian Faith San Francisco HarperCollins p 44 ISBN 978 0060816100 Archived copy Archived from the original on 2017 05 27 Retrieved 2017 05 23 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link The Annals of Ulster celt ucc ie Archived from the original on 15 March 2009 Retrieved 30 March 2018 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Augustus title amp oldid 1222404248, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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