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Caligula

Gaius Caesar Augustus Germanicus (31 August 12 – 24 January 41), better known by his nickname Caligula (/kəˈlɪɡjʊlə/), was Roman emperor from AD 37 until his assassination in AD 41. He was the son of the Roman general Germanicus and Agrippina the Elder, Augustus' granddaughter. Caligula was born into the first ruling family of the Roman Empire, conventionally known as the Julio-Claudian dynasty.

Caligula
Marble bust, 37—41 CE
Roman emperor
Reign16 March 37 – 24 January 41
PredecessorTiberius
SuccessorClaudius
BornGaius Julius Caesar
31 August AD 12
Antium, Italy
Died24 January AD 41 (aged 28)
Palatine Hill, Rome, Italy
Burial
Spouses
Issue
Regnal name
Gaius Caesar Augustus Germanicus[1]
DynastyJulio-Claudian
FatherGermanicus
MotherAgrippina

Although Gaius was named after Gaius Julius Caesar, he acquired the nickname "Caligula" ('little boot'), the diminutive form of caliga, a military boot, from his father's soldiers during their campaign in Germania. When Germanicus died at Antioch in 19, Agrippina returned with her six children to Rome, where she became entangled in a bitter feud with the emperor Tiberius (Germanicus' biological uncle and adoptive father). The conflict eventually led to the destruction of her family, with Caligula as the sole male survivor. In 26, Tiberius withdrew from public life to the island of Capri, and in 31, Caligula joined him there. Following the former's death in 37, Caligula succeeded him as emperor. There are few surviving sources about the reign of Caligula, though he is described as a noble and moderate emperor during the first six months of his rule. After this, the sources focus upon his cruelty, sadism, extravagance, and sexual perversion, presenting him as an insane tyrant.

While the reliability of these sources is questionable, it is known that during his brief reign, Caligula worked to increase the unconstrained personal power of the emperor, as opposed to countervailing powers within the principate. He directed much of his attention to ambitious construction projects and luxurious dwellings for himself, and he initiated the construction of two aqueducts in Rome: the Aqua Claudia and the Anio Novus. During his reign, the empire annexed the client kingdom of Mauretania as a province. In early 41, Caligula was assassinated as a result of a conspiracy by officers of the Praetorian Guard, senators, and courtiers. However, the conspirators' attempt to use the opportunity to restore the Roman Republic was thwarted. On the day of the assassination of Caligula, the Praetorians declared Caligula's uncle, Claudius, the next emperor. Caligula's death marked the official end of the Julii Caesares in the male line, though the Julio-Claudian dynasty continued to rule until the demise of his nephew, Nero.

Early life Edit

 
 
Left: Marble portrait of Agrippina, Caligula's mother
Right: Marble portrait of Germanicus, Caligula's father

Caligula was born in Antium on 31 August AD 12, the third of six surviving children born to Germanicus and his wife and second cousin, Agrippina the Elder. Germanicus was a grandson of Mark Antony, and Agrippina was the daughter of Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa and Julia the Elder, making her the granddaughter of Augustus.[2] The future emperor Claudius was Caligula's paternal uncle.[3] Caligula had two older brothers, Nero and Drusus, and three younger sisters, Agrippina the Younger, Julia Drusilla and Julia Livilla.[2][4] At the age of two or three, he accompanied his father, Germanicus, on campaigns in the north of Germania.[5] He wore a miniature soldier's outfit, including army boots (caligae) and armour.[5] The soldiers thus nicknamed him Caligula ("little boot"). He reportedly grew to dislike the nickname.[6]

Germanicus died at Antioch, Syria, in AD 19, aged only 33. Suetonius claims that Germanicus was poisoned by an agent of Tiberius, who viewed Germanicus as a political rival.[7] After the death of his father, Caligula lived with his mother, Agrippina, until her relations with Tiberius deteriorated.[8] Tiberius would not allow Agrippina to remarry for fear her husband would be a rival.[9] Agrippina and Caligula's brother, Nero, were banished in the year 29 on charges of treason.[10][11] The adolescent Caligula was sent to live with his great-grandmother (Tiberius' mother), Livia. After her death, he was sent to live with his grandmother Antonia Minor.[8] In the year 30, his brother Drusus was imprisoned on charges of treason, and his brother Nero died in exile from either starvation or suicide.[11][12] Suetonius writes that after the banishment of his mother and brothers, Caligula and his sisters were nothing more than prisoners of Tiberius under the close watch of soldiers.[13] In the year 31, Caligula was remanded to the personal care of Tiberius at Villa Jovis on Capri, where he lived for six years.[8] To the surprise of many, Caligula was spared by Tiberius.[14] Roman historians describe Caligula as an excellent natural actor who recognized the danger he was in, and hid his resentment towards Tiberius. An observer said of Caligula, "Never was there a better servant or a worse master!"[8][15]

 
A Roman caliga, after which the name Caligula derived. This piece was excavated near Xanten, where Caligula was stationed with his parents during military campaigns in Germania
 
Reconstruction drawing of the Villa Jovis on Capri, where Caligula grew up at the court of Tiberius

Caligula claimed to have planned to kill Tiberius with a dagger to avenge his mother and brother, however, having brought the weapon into Tiberius' bedroom he did not kill the Emperor but threw the dagger down on the floor. Supposedly Tiberius knew of this plot but did nothing about it.[16] Suetonius claims that Caligula was by this time already cruel and vicious; he writes that when Tiberius brought Caligula to the island of Capri, his purpose was to allow Caligula to live in order that he "prove the ruin of himself and of all men, and that he was rearing a viper for the Roman people and a Phaethon for the world."[17] In 33, Tiberius gave Caligula an honorary quaestorship, a position he held until his rise to emperor.[18] Meanwhile, both Caligula's mother and his brother Drusus died in prison.[19] Caligula was briefly married to Junia Claudilla in the year 33, though she died in childbirth the following year.[16] Caligula spent time befriending the Praetorian prefect, Naevius Sutorius Macro, an important ally.[16] Macro spoke well of Caligula to Tiberius, attempting to quell any ill will or suspicion the Emperor felt towards Caligula.[20] In the year 35, Caligula was named joint heir to Tiberius' estate along with Tiberius Gemellus.[21]

Emperor Edit

Early reign Edit

 
Caligula Depositing the Ashes of his Mother and Brother in the Tomb of his Ancestors, by Eustache Le Sueur, 1647.

Tiberius died on 16 March AD 37, a day before the Liberalia festival. Rumors circulated that Caligula, possibly assisted by Macro, smothered Tiberius with a pillow,[22] recorded both by Suetonius and Tacitus.[16][23] However, Philo, who wrote during Tiberius' reign, and Josephus, who began his service to the Romans under Nero, both record Tiberius as having died a natural death.[24][25] Caligula assumed the leadership of the domus Caesaris and this was ratified by the senate, which acclaimed him imperator two days later on 18 March.[26] Ten days later, Tiberius' will, naming two heirs, was nullified with the standard justification that he had been insane.[22][27]

Caligula is described as the first emperor who was admired by everyone in "all the world, from the rising to the setting sun."[28] Caligula was loved by many for being the beloved son of the popular Germanicus[29] and because he was not Tiberius.[30] Suetonius said that over 160,000 animals were sacrificed during three months of public rejoicing to usher in the new reign.[31] Philo mentions widespread sacrifice, but no estimation on the degree. He describes the first seven months of Caligula's reign as completely blissful.[32]

Caligula's first acts were said to be generous in spirit, though many were political in nature.[27] Overriding Tiberius' will, which left a legacy of 500 sesterces to each praetorian, he instead doubled it;[33] further bonuses were granted to the city troops and the army outside Italy.[27] Coinage indicates that donations to the praetorians may have been repeated through Caligula's reign. A further distribution of 75 sesterces per citizen in Rome was given from 1 June to 19 July; Caligula wasted no time putting on lavish games, immediately requesting from the senate exemption from sumptuary laws limiting the number of gladiators. He also restored the right to elect praetors to the comitia, which meant in practice that aediles had incentives to spend money to put on lavish spectacles to win popularity. Building projects on the Palatine hill and elsewhere were also announced, which would have been the largest of these expenditures.[33]

Caligula also took action to win the support of the aristocracy. He made a public show of burning Tiberius' secret papers, falsely claiming that he had not read them. On coinage, he advertised that he had restored the rule of law; to that end, he lifted a backlog on court cases in Rome by adding more jurors and lifting the need for imperial confirmation of sentences.[34] Refusing the title pater patriae on the grounds of his youth, he also recalled those who had been sent into exile.[33][35] Stressing his descent from Augustus, he went in person to retrieve the remains of his mother and brothers for interment in the Mausoleum of Augustus.[36][37] His sisters and other family members, including Claudius – who had not been a member of the imperial household during Tiberius' reign – were granted political and priestly honours. Work on a temple to Livia, vowed but never constructed, also began.[38]

Those whom Tiberius alone had supported lost out. Gemellus was required to kill himself on charges of having taken an antidote, "ie implicitly accusing Caligula of wanting to poison him". Tiberius' political associate Marcus Junius Silanus, a support of Gemellus, was executed; Caligula's friend Macro also was killed. These purges suggest "the new emperor had learnt a great deal from Tiberius" and "that attempts to divide his reign into a 'good' beginning followed by unremitting atrocities... are misplaced".[36] This division into good and bad phases has variously been attributed to the death of Antonia in summer 37, illness in autumn that year, or the death of Caligula's beloved sister Drusilla on 10 June AD 38.[39]

During his illness in AD 37 and after Gemellus' death, Caligula named his brother-in-law, Marcus Aemilius Lepidus as heir, marrying him to his sister Drusilla. Ancient sources allege that he and Lepidus were homosexual lovers. After Drusilla's death in June AD 38, she was deified in September the same year.[40]

Public reform and financial crisis Edit

 
Quadrans celebrating the abolition of a tax in AD 38 by Caligula. The obverse of the coin contains a picture of a Pileus which symbolizes the liberation of the people from the tax burden. Caption: c caesar divi avg pron avg / pon m, pp cos des rcc.
 
The adlocutio cohortium of Caligula on a coin, giving a speech to the army

In the year 38, Caligula focused his attention on political and public reform. He published the accounts of public funds, which had not been made public during the reign of Tiberius. He aided those who lost property in fires, abolished certain taxes, and gave out prizes to the public at gymnastic events. He allowed new members into the equestrian and senatorial orders.[41] Perhaps most significantly, he restored the practice of elections.[42] Cassius Dio said that this act "though delighting the rabble, grieved the sensible, who stopped to reflect, that if the offices should fall once more into the hands of the many... many disasters would result".[41] During the same year, though, Caligula was criticized for executing people without full trials and for forcing the Praetorian prefect, Macro, to commit suicide.[43]

According to Cassius Dio, a financial crisis emerged in 39.[43] Suetonius places the beginning of this crisis in 38.[44] Caligula's political payments for support, generosity and extravagance had exhausted the state's treasury. Ancient historians state that Caligula began falsely accusing, fining and even killing individuals for the purpose of seizing their estates.[45] Historians describe a number of Caligula's other desperate measures. To gain funds, Caligula asked the public to lend the state money.[46] He levied taxes on lawsuits, weddings and prostitution.[16] Caligula began auctioning the lives of the gladiators at shows.[45][47] Wills that left items to Tiberius were reinterpreted to leave the items instead to Caligula. Centurions who had acquired property by plunder were forced to turn over spoils to the state. The current and past highway commissioners were accused of incompetence and embezzlement and forced to repay money.[48]

According to Suetonius, in the first year of Caligula's reign he squandered 2.7 billion sesterces that Tiberius had amassed.[44] His nephew Nero both envied and admired the fact that Caligula had run through the vast wealth Tiberius had left him in so short a time.[49] However, some historians have shown scepticism towards the large number of sesterces quoted by Suetonius and Dio. According to Wilkinson, Caligula's use of precious metals to mint coins throughout his principate indicates that the treasury most likely never fell into bankruptcy. He does point out, however, that it is difficult to ascertain whether the purported 'squandered wealth' was from the treasury alone due to the blurring of "the division between the private wealth of the emperor and his income as head of state."[50] Furthermore, Alston points out that Caligula's successor, Claudius, was able to donate 15,000 sesterces to each member of the Praetorian Guard in 41,[23] suggesting the Roman treasury was solvent.[51] A brief famine of unknown extent occurred, perhaps caused by this financial crisis, but Suetonius claims it resulted from Caligula's seizure of public carriages;[45] according to Seneca, grain imports were disrupted because Caligula re-purposed grain boats for a pontoon bridge.[52]

Construction and senatorial feud Edit

 
An artistic depiction of a palatial Nemi Ship of Caligula, by CM Knight-Smith (c. 1906)[53]

Despite financial difficulties, Caligula embarked on a number of construction projects during his reign. Some were for the public good, though others were for himself. Josephus describes Caligula's improvements to the harbours at Rhegium and Sicily, allowing increased grain imports from Egypt, as his greatest contributions.[54] These improvements may have been in response to the famine.[55] Caligula completed the temple of Augustus and the theatre of Pompey and began an amphitheatre beside the Saepta.[56] He also expanded the imperial palace.[57] Later, he began the construction of aqueducts Aqua Claudia and Anio Novus, which Pliny the Elder considered to be engineering marvels.[56][58][59] Caligula then built a large racetrack known as the circus of Gaius and Nero and had an Egyptian obelisk (now known as the "Vatican Obelisk") transported by sea and erected in the middle of Rome.[60] Construction of the aqueaduct Porta Maggiore started under his rule.

At Syracuse, he repaired the city walls and the temples of the gods.[56] He had new roads built and pushed to keep roads in good condition.[48][44] Caligula had planned to rebuild the palace of Polycrates at Samos, to finish the temple of Didymaean Apollo at Ephesus and to found a city high up in the Alps. He also intended to dig a canal through the Isthmus of Corinth in Greece and sent a chief centurion to survey the work.[56] In 39, Caligula performed a spectacular stunt by ordering a temporary floating bridge to be built using ships as pontoons, stretching for over two miles from the resort of Baiae to the neighbouring port of Puteoli.[61] It was said that the bridge was to rival the Persian king Xerxes' pontoon bridge crossing of the Hellespont.[62] Caligula, who could not swim,[11] then proceeded to ride his favourite horse Incitatus across, wearing the breastplate of Alexander the Great.[62] This act was in defiance of a prediction by Tiberius' soothsayer Thrasyllus of Mendes that Caligula had "no more chance of becoming emperor than of riding a horse across the Bay of Baiae".[62]

Caligula had two large ships constructed for himself (which were recovered from the bottom of Lake Nemi around 1930). The ships were among the largest vessels in the ancient world. The smaller ship was designed as a temple dedicated to Diana. The larger ship was essentially an elaborate floating palace with marble floors and plumbing.[63] The ships burned in 1944 after an American attack in the Second World War; almost nothing remains of their hulls, though many archaeological treasures remain intact in the museum at Lake Nemi and in the Museo Nazionale Romano (Palazzo Massimo) at Rome.[64]

In 39, relations between Caligula and the Roman Senate deteriorated.[65][66] The subject of their disagreement is unknown. A number of factors, though, aggravated this feud. The Senate had become accustomed to ruling without an emperor between the departure of Tiberius for Capri in 26 and Caligula's accession. Additionally, Tiberius' treason trials had eliminated a number of pro-Julian senators such as Asinius Gallus.[67] Caligula reviewed Tiberius' records of treason trials and decided, based on their actions during these trials, that numerous senators were not trustworthy. He ordered a new set of investigations and trials.[65][66] He replaced the consul and had several senators put to death. Suetonius reports that other senators were degraded by being forced to wait on him and run beside his chariot.[68] Soon after his break with the Senate, Caligula faced a number of additional conspiracies against him.[69] That autumn, he claimed to have uncovered a conspiracy to replace him with his then-heir Lepidus. Publicising the failure of the sitting consuls to offer prayers on his birthday – 31 August – he gave orders to concentrate military forces in upper Germany. The governor there, Gnaeus Cornelius Lentulus Gaetulicus was possibly a threat and after Caligula's personal arrival there, was executed. Lepidus, Agrippina, and Livilla, were accused to being part of this conspiracy: Lepidus was executed and the two sisters were exiled after being condemned pro forma of adultery.[70][69]

Western expansion Edit

 
Map of the Roman Empire and neighboring states during the reign of Gaius Caligula (AD 37–41)
  Italy and Roman provinces
  Independent countries
  Client states (Roman puppets)
  Mauretania seized by Caligula
  Former Roman provinces Thrace and Commagena made client states by Caligula

In 40, Caligula expanded the Roman Empire into Mauretania,[2] a client kingdom of Rome ruled by Ptolemy of Mauretania. Caligula invited Ptolemy to Rome and then suddenly had him executed.[71] Mauretania was annexed by Caligula and subsequently divided into two provinces, Mauretania Tingitana and Mauretania Caesariensis, separated by the river Malua.[72] Pliny claims that division was the work of Caligula, but Dio states that in 42 an uprising took place, which was subdued by Gaius Suetonius Paulinus and Gnaeus Hosidius Geta, and the division only took place after this.[73] This confusion might mean that Caligula decided to divide the province, but the division was postponed because of the rebellion. The first known equestrian governor of the two provinces was Marcus Fadius Celer Flavianus, in office in 44.[74]

Details on the Mauretanian events of 39–44 are unclear. Cassius Dio wrote an entire chapter on the annexation of Mauretania by Caligula, but it is now lost.[75] Caligula's move seemingly had a strictly personal political motive – fear and jealousy of his cousin Ptolemy – and thus the expansion may not have been prompted by pressing military or economic needs.[76] However, the rebellion of Tacfarinas had shown how exposed Africa Proconsularis was to its west and how the Mauretanian client kings were unable to provide protection to the province, and it is thus possible that Caligula's expansion was a prudent response to potential future threats.[74]

Caligula brought up abortive attempts to extend Roman rule into Britannia.[2] Two legions had been raised for this purpose (both were likely named Primigeniae in honour of Caligula's newborn daughter). Ancient sources depict Caligula as being too cowardly to have attacked or as mad, but stories of his threatening decimation indicates mutinies. Broadly, "it is impossible to judge why the army never embarked" on the invasion. Beyond mutinies, it may have simply been that British chieftains acceded to Rome's demands, removing any justification for war.[77][75] Alternatively, it could have been merely a training and scouting mission[78] or a short expedition to accept the surrender of the British chieftain Adminius.[79][80] Suetonius reports that Caligula ordered his men to collect seashells as "spoils of the sea"; this may also be a mistranslation to musculi, meaning siege engines.[77][81] The conquest of Britannia was later achieved during the reign of his successor, Claudius.

Claims of divinity Edit

 
Cameo depicting Caligula and Roma, a personification of Rome

When Tiberius died, hated by his subjects, Caligula dutifuly asked the Senate to approve his deification but was turned down, in line with senatorial and popular opinion. Caligula did not push the issue. He gave Tiberius a magnificent, long drawn out funeral at public expense, and a tearful eulogy.[82] In the first six months of his reign, he made a good impression, refusing costly honours such as statuary of himself, and apparently promising to share power with his senate, as primus inter pares ("first among equals"). His modesty and personal generosity earned him broad approval; but at some time early in his short reign, possibly following a near-mortal illness, this changed.

Philo, Caligula's contemporary, claims that Caligula costumed himself as various heroes and deities, starting with demigods such as Dionysos, Herakles and the Dioscuri, and working up to major deities such as Mercury, Venus and Apollo. Philo describes these alleged impersonations in a context of private pantomime or theatrical performances, as evidence that Caligula wanted to be a god himself.[83][84] Dio claims that Caligula impersonated Jupiter as no more than a means to seduce various women. Philo's list of impersonations does not include Jupiter at all. To Gradel, the same performances prove no more than Caligula's penchant for theatre, fancy-dress and desire to shock; as emperor, Caligula was also pontifex maximus, one of Rome's most powerful and influential state priesthoods. While he seems to have been amused by baiting the elite who held Rome's most important priesthoods, he seems to have taken his own religious duties very seriously, reorganising the Salii (priests of Mars, and pedanticaly insisting that it was nefas (religiously improper) for Jupiter's leading priest, the Flamen Dialis, to swear the imperial oath of loyalty. [a] Suetonius claims that Caligula found a replacement for the aging priest of Diana's ancient sanctuary at Lake Nemi. Traditionally, the priest must be slain by a runaway slave, who must then replace him; the "slaying" was almost certainly symbolic, not actual.[85] Caligula had two vast and exquisitely appointed ships built at Nemi; one a floating palace, for himself, and the other a "floating temple" for the goddess.[86]

Dio claims that Caligula sometimes referred to himself as a divinity in public meetings, and was sometimes referred to as "Jupiter" in public documents; Caligula's special interest in Jupiter, king of the gods, is confirmed by all surviving sources. Simpson believes that Caligula may have considered Jupiter an equal, perhaps a rival. [87][88][89] In Rome's eastern provinces, cults to rulers as divine and semi-divine saviours and monarchs were long-standing institutions; one of the best known examples is that of Alexander the Great, a divine monarch to at least some of his subjects, and whom Caligula also impersonated.[90] The promotion of mortals to godlike status, based on their superior standing and perceived merits, was also a well established feature of Roman culture; a client could flatter their living patron as "Jupiter on earth", without reprimand.[91] There is no evidence that Caligula intended to supplant Rome's most important deity and protector, Capitoline Jupiter.[92]

A temple to Caligula in the city of Rome is mentioned only by Suetonius and Dio. Augustus had already linked the Temple of Castor and Pollux directly to his imperial residence on the Palatine, and established an official priesthood of lesser magistrates to serve its cults, the seviri Augustales, usually promoted from his own freedmen to serve the genius Augusti (his "family spirit") and Lares (the twinned ancestral spirits of his household).[93]Dio claims that Caligula stationed himself, dressed as Jupiter Latiaris, as an object of worship between the images of Castor and Pollux, the twin Dioscuri, whom he humorously referred to as his doorkeepers.[94][95][96]

According to Cassius Dio, living emperors could be worshipped as divine in the east and dead emperors could be worshipped as divine in Rome.[97] An embassy from Greek states to Rome greeted Caligula as the "new god Augustus". In the Greek city of Cyzicus, a public inscription from the beginning of Caligula's reign gives thanks to him as a "New Sun-god".[98] Egyptian provincial coinage and some state dupondii show Caligula enthroned; the first reigning Roman princeps described as the "New Sun", (Neos Helios) with the radiate crown of the Sun-god, or of Caligula's divine antecedent, the divus Augustus. Caligula's image on other state coinage carries no such "trappings of divinity". [99] In Rome and elsewhere, cult to the genius (generative spirit) of living patrons and benefactors was a religious duty of their clients and inferiors. Compared to the full-blown cults to major deities of state, genius cults were quite modest in scope and religious paraphernalia, a feature of household religion which recognised the head of family's god-like superiority and virtues. Augustus, once deceased, was officially worshipped as a divus - an immortal, but somewhat less than a full-blown deity; Tiberius, his successor, forbade his own personal cult outright in Rome itself, probably in consideration of Julius Caesar's assassination following his hubristic promotion as a living divinity.[97]

Dio claims that two temples were built for Caligula in Rome:[94] but no confirmation has been found for this. Simpson believes it likely that Caligula was voted a temple on the Palatine by the Senate, but funded it himself.[100] Gradel sees Caligula's reported extortion of priesthood fees from an unwilling aristocracy, including his uncle Claudius, as a mark of private cult and personal humiliation among the elite. Throughout his reign, Caligula seems to have remained popular with the masses, in Rome and the empire. There is no sound evidence that he caused the removal, replacement or imposition of Roman or other deities, or even that he threatened to do so, outside the hostile anecdotes of his biographers. He seems to have taken his own genius cult very seriously; but as Gradel observes, no Roman was ever prosecuted for sacrificing to his emperor.[101] Caligula's fatal offense was to willfully "insult or offend everyone who mattered", including the military officers who assassinated him.[102][103] His cult died with him.

 
Cameo depicting Caligula and Roma, a personification of Rome

Eastern policy Edit

Caligula needed to quell several riots and conspiracies in the eastern territories during his reign. Aiding him in his actions was his good friend, Herod Agrippa, who became governor of the territories of Batanaea and Trachonitis after Caligula became emperor in 37.[104][105] The cause of tensions in the east was complicated, involving the spread of Greek culture, Roman law and the rights of Jews in the empire. Caligula did not trust the prefect of Egypt, Aulus Avilius Flaccus. Flaccus had been loyal to Tiberius, had conspired against Caligula's mother and had connections with Egyptian separatists.[106] In 38, Caligula sent Agrippa to Alexandria unannounced to check on Flaccus.[107] According to Philo, the visit was met with jeers from the Greek population who saw Agrippa as the king of the Jews.[108] As a result, riots broke out in the city.[109] Caligula responded by removing Flaccus from his position and executing him.[110]

In 39, Agrippa accused his uncle Herod Antipas, the tetrarch of Galilee and Perea, of planning a rebellion against Roman rule with the help of Parthia. Herod Antipas confessed and Caligula exiled him. Agrippa was rewarded with his territories.[111] Riots again erupted in Alexandria in 40 between Jews and Greeks. Jews were accused of not honouring the emperor.[112] Disputes occurred in the city of Jamnia; Jews were angered by the erection of a clay altar and destroyed it.[113] In response, Caligula ordered the erection of a statue of himself in the Jewish Temple of Jerusalem,[114] a demand in conflict with Jewish monotheism. In this context, Philo wrote that Caligula "regarded the Jews with most especial suspicion, as if they were the only persons who cherished wishes opposed to his".[115]

The Governor of Syria, Publius Petronius, fearing civil war if the order were carried out, delayed implementing it for nearly a year.[116] Agrippa finally convinced Caligula to reverse the order.[112] However, Caligula issued a second order to have his statue erected in the Temple of Jerusalem. In Rome, another statue of himself, of colossal size, was made of gilt brass for the purpose. However, according to Josephus, when the ship carrying the statue was still underway, news of Caligula's death reached Petronius. Thus, the statue was never installed.[117]

Scandals Edit

 
Roman sestertius depicting Caligula, AD 38. The reverse shows Caligula's three sisters, Agrippina, Drusilla and Livilla, with whom Caligula was rumoured to have carried on incestuous relationships. Caption: C. CAESAR AVG. GERMANICVS PON. M. TR. POT. / AGRIPPINA DRVSILLA IVLIA S. C.

Philo and Seneca the Younger, contemporaries of Caligula, describe him as an insane emperor who was self-absorbed and short-tempered, who killed on a whim and indulged in too much spending and sex.[118][119][120] He is accused of sleeping with other men's wives and bragging about it,[121] killing for mere amusement,[118] deliberately wasting money on his bridge, causing starvation,[119] and wanting a statue of himself in the Temple of Jerusalem for his worship.[114] Once, at some games at which he was presiding, he was said to have ordered his guards to throw an entire section of the audience into the arena during the intermission to be eaten by the wild beasts because there were no prisoners to be used and he was bored.[43]

While repeating these earlier stories, the later sources of Suetonius and Cassius Dio provide additional tales of insanity. They accuse Caligula of incest with his sisters, Agrippina the Younger, Drusilla, and Livilla, and say that he prostituted them to other men.[122][69][123] Additionally, they mention affairs with various men including his brother-in-law Marcus Lepidus.[124][125] They say he sent troops on illogical military exercises,[75][126] turned the palace into a brothel,[46] and, most famously, planned or promised to make his horse, Incitatus, a consul,[127][128][47] and appointed a priest to serve him.[94] The validity of these accounts is debatable. In Roman political culture, insanity and sexual perversity were often presented hand-in-hand with poor government.[129]

Assassination and aftermath Edit

 
The Assassination of the Emperor Caligula, by Lazzaro Baldi

Caligula's actions as emperor were described as being especially harsh to the Senate, to the nobility and to the equestrian order.[130] According to Josephus, these actions led to several failed conspiracies against Caligula.[131][132][133] Eventually, officers within the Praetorian Guard led by Cassius Chaerea succeeded in murdering the emperor.[134] The plot is described as having been planned by three men, but many in the Senate, army and equestrian order were said to have been informed of and involved in it.[135] The situation had escalated when, in the year 40, Caligula announced to the Senate that he planned to leave Rome permanently and to move to Alexandria in Egypt, where he hoped to be worshipped as a living god. The prospect of Rome losing its emperor and thus its political power was the final straw for many. Such a move would have left both the Senate and the Praetorian Guard powerless to stop Caligula's repression and debauchery. With this in mind Chaerea persuaded his fellow conspirators, who included Marcus Vinicius and Lucius Annius Vinicianus, to put their plot into action quickly.[citation needed]

According to Josephus, Chaerea had political motivations for the assassination.[136] Suetonius sees the motive in Caligula calling Chaerea derogatory names.[131] Caligula considered Chaerea effeminate because of a weak voice and for not being firm with tax collection.[137][138] Caligula would mock Chaerea with names like "Priapus" and "Venus".[137][131] On 24 January 41,[140] Cassius Chaerea and other guardsmen accosted Caligula as he addressed an acting troupe of young men beneath the palace during a series of games and dramatics being held for the Divine Augustus.[141] Details recorded on the events vary somewhat from source to source, but they agree that Chaerea stabbed Caligula first, followed by a number of conspirators.[137][141][142] Suetonius records that Caligula's death resembled that of Julius Caesar. He states that both the elder Gaius Julius Caesar (Julius Caesar) and the younger Gaius Julius Caesar (Caligula) were stabbed 30 times by conspirators led by a man named Cassius (Cassius Longinus and Cassius Chaerea respectively).[143] By the time Caligula's loyal Germanic guard responded, the Emperor was already dead. The Germanic guard killed several assassins and conspirators, along with some innocent senators and bystanders.[144][141] These wounded conspirators were treated by the physician Arcyon.

The cryptoporticus (underground corridor) beneath the imperial palaces on the Palatine Hill where this event took place was discovered by archaeologists in 2008.[145] The Senate attempted to use Caligula's death as an opportunity to restore the Republic.[146] Chaerea tried to persuade the military to support the Senate. The military, though, remained loyal to the idea of imperial monarchy.[147] Uncomfortable with lingering imperial support, the assassins sought out and killed Caligula's wife, Caesonia, and killed their young daughter, Julia Drusilla, by smashing her head against a wall.[148] They were unable to reach Caligula's uncle, Claudius. A soldier, Gratus, found Claudius hiding behind a palace curtain; he was spirited out of the city by a sympathetic faction of the Praetorian Guard to their nearby camp.[149] Claudius became emperor after procuring the support of the Praetorian Guard. Claudius granted a general amnesty, although he executed a few junior officers involved in the conspiracy, including Chaerea.[150][151][152] According to Suetonius, Caligula's body was placed under turf until it was burned and entombed by his sisters. He was buried within the Mausoleum of Augustus; in 410, during the Sack of Rome, the ashes in the tomb were scattered.

Legacy Edit

Contemporary historiography Edit

 
Fanciful Renaissance depiction of Caligula

The facts and circumstances of Caligula's reign are mostly lost to history. Two major literary sources contemporary with Caligula have survived – the works of Philo and Seneca the Younger. Philo's works, On the Embassy to Gaius and Flaccus, give some details on Caligula's early reign, but mostly focus on events surrounding the Jewish population in Judea and Egypt with whom he sympathizes. Seneca's various works give mostly scattered anecdotes on Caligula's personality. Seneca was almost put to death by Caligula in AD 39 probably due to his associations with conspirators.[153] At one time, there were detailed contemporaneous histories on Caligula, but they are now lost. Additionally, the historians who wrote them are described as biased, either overly critical or praising Caligula.[154] Nonetheless, these lost primary sources, along with the works of Seneca and Philo, were the basis of surviving secondary and tertiary histories on Caligula written by the next generations of historians. A few of the contemporaneous historians are known by name. Fabius Rusticus and Cluvius Rufus both wrote condemning histories on Caligula that are now lost. Fabius Rusticus was a friend of Seneca who was known for historical embellishment and misrepresentation.[155] Cluvius Rufus was a senator involved in the assassination of Caligula.[156]

Caligula's sister, Agrippina the Younger, wrote an autobiography that certainly included a detailed explanation of Caligula's reign, but it too is lost. Agrippina was banished by Caligula for her connection to Marcus Lepidus, who conspired against him.[69] The inheritance of Nero, Agrippina's son and the future emperor, was seized by Caligula. Gaetulicus, a poet, produced a number of flattering writings about Caligula, but they are lost. The bulk of what is known of Caligula comes from Suetonius and Cassius Dio. Suetonius wrote his history on Caligula 80 years after his death, while Cassius Dio wrote his history over 180 years after Caligula's death. Cassius Dio's work is invaluable because it alone gives a loose chronology of Caligula's reign. A handful of other sources add a limited perspective on Caligula. Josephus gives a detailed description of Caligula's assassination. Tacitus provides some information on Caligula's life under Tiberius. In a now lost portion of his Annals, Tacitus gave a detailed history of Caligula. Pliny the Elder's Natural History has a few brief references to Caligula. There are few surviving sources on Caligula and none of them paints Caligula in a favourable light. The paucity of sources has resulted in significant gaps in modern knowledge of the reign of Caligula. Little is written on the first two years of Caligula's reign. Additionally, there are only limited details on later significant events, such as the annexation of Mauretania, Caligula's military actions in Britannia, and his feud with the Roman Senate. According to legend, during his military actions in Britannia, Caligula grew addicted to a steady diet of European sea eels, which led to their Latin name being Coluber caligulensis.[157]

Health Edit

 
Marble bust of Caligula with traces of original paint beside a plaster replica trying to recreate the polychrome traditions of ancient sculpture
 
So-called "little bust" of Caligula, found at the river Tiber in Rome

Several contemporary and near-contemporary Roman sources describe Caligula as insane. It is notoriously difficult to distinguish fact from fiction among the many allegations of his aberrant behaviour as emperor. Several modern sources suggest various possible medical explanations, including encephalitis, epilepsy or meningitis, acquired during the illness early in his reign.[158] Philo, Josephus and Seneca see Caligula's "insanity" as a personality trait acquired through self-indulgence and the unlimited exercise of power.[111][159][160] Seneca states that Caligula became arrogant, angry and insulting once he became emperor.[161] According to Josephus, the power Caligula was able to exercise led him to think himself a living God.[111] Philo claims that Caligula became ruthless after nearly dying of an illness in the eighth month of his reign (in 37).[162]

Suetonius said that Caligula had "falling sickness", or epilepsy, when he was young.[163][164] He may have lived in daily fear of seizures.[165] In Romano-Greek medical theory, the most severe epilepsy attacks were associated with the full moon and the moon goddess Selene, with whom Caligula was claimed to converse and to enjoy sexual congress.[166][57][167]

Suetonius described Caligula as the following: "He was very tall and extremely pale, with an unshapely body, but very thin neck and legs. His eyes and temples were hollow, his forehead broad and grim, his hair thin and entirely gone on the top of his head, though his body was hairy... He was sound neither of body nor mind. As a boy he was troubled with the falling sickness, and while in his youth he had some endurance, yet at times because of sudden faintness he was hardly able to walk, to stand up, to collect his thoughts, or to hold up his head".[164] Based on scientific reconstructions of his official painted busts, Caligula had brown hair, brown eyes, and fair skin.[168] Some modern historians think that Caligula had hyperthyroidism.[169] This diagnosis is mainly attributed to Caligula's irritability and his "stare" as described by Pliny the Elder.

Cultural depictions Edit

In film and series Edit

In literature and theatre Edit

  • Kajus Cezar Caligula, by Polish author Karol Hubert Rostworowski, is a play premiered in Juliusz Słowacki City Theater, Cracow, 31 March 1917. The title character is presented as a weak and unhappy man who became a victim of circumstances that brought him to power that surpassed him.
  • Caligula, by French author Albert Camus, is a play in which Caligula returns after deserting the palace for three days and three nights following the death of his beloved sister, Drusilla. The young emperor then uses his unfettered power to "bring the impossible into the realm of the likely".[177]
  • In the 1934 novel I, Claudius by English writer Robert Graves, Caligula is presented as a murderous sociopath who became clinically insane early in his reign. In the novel, at the age of only ten, Caligula drove his father Germanicus to a state of despair and death by secretly terrorizing him. Graves' Caligula commits incest with all three of his sisters and is implied to have murdered Drusilla. The novel was adapted for television in the 1976 BBC mini-series of the same name.
  • The life of Incitatus, Caesar's favorite horse, is the subject of Polish poet Zbigniew Herbert's poem Kaligula (in Pan Cogito, 1974), and his political career.[178]
  • A deified Caligula is the antagonist of the 2018 The Trials of Apollo novel The Burning Maze by Rick Riordan. He is presented as an insane tyrant who has returned from the dead - along with Commodus and Emperor Nero - to try to take over the modern world. His horse, Incitatus, also appears.

In opera Edit

  • A young Caligula appears as one of the characters in Heinrich Ignaz Franz Biber's opera Arminio.
  • Caligula is the main character in Detlev Glanert's opera Caligula, based on the Albert Camus play.
  • Different composers from the Baroque era appear to have composed operatic works about Caligula, but most of these have been lost.

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Jupiter was the highest divine witness to oaths. The Flamen Dialis was sworn to his service, and was hedged about with an exhaustive range of prohibitions.

References Edit

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  105. ^ Philo, Flaccus V.25.
  106. ^ Philo, Flaccus III.8, IV.21.
  107. ^ Philo, Flaccus V.26–28.
  108. ^ Philo, Flaccus VI.43.
  109. ^ Philo, Flaccus VII.45.
  110. ^ Philo, Flaccus XXI.185.
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  112. ^ a b Josephus, XVIII.8.1.
  113. ^ Philo, On the Embassy XXX.201.
  114. ^ a b Philo, On the Embassy XXX.203.
  115. ^ Philo, On the Embassy XVI.115.
  116. ^ Philo, On the Embassy XXXI.213.
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  120. ^ Philo, On the Embassy XXIX.
  121. ^ Seneca the Younger, On Firmness xviii.1.
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  123. ^ Suetonius, Caligula 24.
  124. ^ Suetonius, Caligula 36.
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Bibliography Edit

Modern sources Edit

Ancient sources Edit

Further reading Edit

  • Balsdon, JPVD; et al. (2012). "Gaius (1), 'Caligula', Roman emperor, 12–41 CE". In Hornblower, Simon; et al. (eds.). The Oxford classical dictionary (4th ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/acrefore/9780199381135.013.2772. ISBN 978-0-19-954556-8. OCLC 959667246.
  • Barrett, Anthony A.; Yardley, John C. (2023). The Emperor Caligula in the ancient sources. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780198854579.
  • Winterling, Aloys (2011). Caligula: a biography. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-94314-8.
  • Balsdon, V. D. (1934). The Emperor Gaius. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
  • Hurley, Donna W. (1993). An Historical and Historiographical Commentary on Suetonius' Life of C. Caligula. Atlanta: Scholars Press.
  • Sandison, A. T. (1958). "The Madness of the Emperor Caligula". Medical History. 2 (3): 202–209. doi:10.1017/s0025727300023759. PMC 1034394. PMID 13577116.
  • Wilcox, Amanda (2008). "Nature's Monster: Caligula as exemplum in Seneca's Dialogues". In Sluiter, Ineke; Rosen, Ralph M. (eds.). Kakos: Badness and Anti-value in Classical Antiquity. Mnemosyne Supplements. Vol. 307. Leiden: Brill.

External links Edit

  • The portrait of Caligula in the Digital Sculpture Project
  • Biography from De Imperatoribus Romanis
  • Franz Lidz, "Caligula's Garden of Delights, Unearthed and Restored", New York Times, Jan. 12, 2021
Caligula
Born: 31 August AD 12 Died: 24 January AD 41
Preceded by Roman emperor
37–41
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by Roman consul
July–August 37
With: Claudius
Succeeded by
Preceded by Roman consul
January 39
With: L. Apronius Caesianus
Succeeded by
Preceded by Roman consul
January 40
sine collega
Succeeded by
Preceded by Roman consul
January 41
With: Gn. Sentius Saturninus
Succeeded by

caligula, other, uses, disambiguation, gaius, caesar, augustus, germanicus, august, january, better, known, nickname, roman, emperor, from, until, assassination, roman, general, germanicus, agrippina, elder, augustus, granddaughter, born, into, first, ruling, . For other uses see Caligula disambiguation Gaius Caesar Augustus Germanicus 31 August 12 24 January 41 better known by his nickname Caligula k e ˈ l ɪ ɡ j ʊ l e was Roman emperor from AD 37 until his assassination in AD 41 He was the son of the Roman general Germanicus and Agrippina the Elder Augustus granddaughter Caligula was born into the first ruling family of the Roman Empire conventionally known as the Julio Claudian dynasty CaligulaMarble bust 37 41 CERoman emperorReign16 March 37 24 January 41PredecessorTiberiusSuccessorClaudiusBornGaius Julius Caesar31 August AD 12Antium ItalyDied24 January AD 41 aged 28 Palatine Hill Rome ItalyBurialMausoleum of AugustusSpousesJunia ClaudillaLivia OrestillaLollia PaulinaMilonia CaesoniaIssueJulia DrusillaTiberius Gemellus adoptive Regnal nameGaius Caesar Augustus Germanicus 1 DynastyJulio ClaudianFatherGermanicusMotherAgrippinaAlthough Gaius was named after Gaius Julius Caesar he acquired the nickname Caligula little boot the diminutive form of caliga a military boot from his father s soldiers during their campaign in Germania When Germanicus died at Antioch in 19 Agrippina returned with her six children to Rome where she became entangled in a bitter feud with the emperor Tiberius Germanicus biological uncle and adoptive father The conflict eventually led to the destruction of her family with Caligula as the sole male survivor In 26 Tiberius withdrew from public life to the island of Capri and in 31 Caligula joined him there Following the former s death in 37 Caligula succeeded him as emperor There are few surviving sources about the reign of Caligula though he is described as a noble and moderate emperor during the first six months of his rule After this the sources focus upon his cruelty sadism extravagance and sexual perversion presenting him as an insane tyrant While the reliability of these sources is questionable it is known that during his brief reign Caligula worked to increase the unconstrained personal power of the emperor as opposed to countervailing powers within the principate He directed much of his attention to ambitious construction projects and luxurious dwellings for himself and he initiated the construction of two aqueducts in Rome the Aqua Claudia and the Anio Novus During his reign the empire annexed the client kingdom of Mauretania as a province In early 41 Caligula was assassinated as a result of a conspiracy by officers of the Praetorian Guard senators and courtiers However the conspirators attempt to use the opportunity to restore the Roman Republic was thwarted On the day of the assassination of Caligula the Praetorians declared Caligula s uncle Claudius the next emperor Caligula s death marked the official end of the Julii Caesares in the male line though the Julio Claudian dynasty continued to rule until the demise of his nephew Nero Contents 1 Early life 2 Emperor 2 1 Early reign 2 2 Public reform and financial crisis 2 3 Construction and senatorial feud 2 4 Western expansion 2 5 Claims of divinity 2 6 Eastern policy 2 7 Scandals 2 8 Assassination and aftermath 3 Legacy 3 1 Contemporary historiography 3 2 Health 4 Cultural depictions 4 1 In film and series 4 2 In literature and theatre 4 3 In opera 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 Bibliography 8 1 Modern sources 8 2 Ancient sources 9 Further reading 10 External linksEarly life EditSee also Julio Claudian family tree nbsp nbsp Left Marble portrait of Agrippina Caligula s motherRight Marble portrait of Germanicus Caligula s father Caligula was born in Antium on 31 August AD 12 the third of six surviving children born to Germanicus and his wife and second cousin Agrippina the Elder Germanicus was a grandson of Mark Antony and Agrippina was the daughter of Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa and Julia the Elder making her the granddaughter of Augustus 2 The future emperor Claudius was Caligula s paternal uncle 3 Caligula had two older brothers Nero and Drusus and three younger sisters Agrippina the Younger Julia Drusilla and Julia Livilla 2 4 At the age of two or three he accompanied his father Germanicus on campaigns in the north of Germania 5 He wore a miniature soldier s outfit including army boots caligae and armour 5 The soldiers thus nicknamed him Caligula little boot He reportedly grew to dislike the nickname 6 Germanicus died at Antioch Syria in AD 19 aged only 33 Suetonius claims that Germanicus was poisoned by an agent of Tiberius who viewed Germanicus as a political rival 7 After the death of his father Caligula lived with his mother Agrippina until her relations with Tiberius deteriorated 8 Tiberius would not allow Agrippina to remarry for fear her husband would be a rival 9 Agrippina and Caligula s brother Nero were banished in the year 29 on charges of treason 10 11 The adolescent Caligula was sent to live with his great grandmother Tiberius mother Livia After her death he was sent to live with his grandmother Antonia Minor 8 In the year 30 his brother Drusus was imprisoned on charges of treason and his brother Nero died in exile from either starvation or suicide 11 12 Suetonius writes that after the banishment of his mother and brothers Caligula and his sisters were nothing more than prisoners of Tiberius under the close watch of soldiers 13 In the year 31 Caligula was remanded to the personal care of Tiberius at Villa Jovis on Capri where he lived for six years 8 To the surprise of many Caligula was spared by Tiberius 14 Roman historians describe Caligula as an excellent natural actor who recognized the danger he was in and hid his resentment towards Tiberius An observer said of Caligula Never was there a better servant or a worse master 8 15 nbsp A Roman caliga after which the name Caligula derived This piece was excavated near Xanten where Caligula was stationed with his parents during military campaigns in Germania nbsp Reconstruction drawing of the Villa Jovis on Capri where Caligula grew up at the court of TiberiusCaligula claimed to have planned to kill Tiberius with a dagger to avenge his mother and brother however having brought the weapon into Tiberius bedroom he did not kill the Emperor but threw the dagger down on the floor Supposedly Tiberius knew of this plot but did nothing about it 16 Suetonius claims that Caligula was by this time already cruel and vicious he writes that when Tiberius brought Caligula to the island of Capri his purpose was to allow Caligula to live in order that he prove the ruin of himself and of all men and that he was rearing a viper for the Roman people and a Phaethon for the world 17 In 33 Tiberius gave Caligula an honorary quaestorship a position he held until his rise to emperor 18 Meanwhile both Caligula s mother and his brother Drusus died in prison 19 Caligula was briefly married to Junia Claudilla in the year 33 though she died in childbirth the following year 16 Caligula spent time befriending the Praetorian prefect Naevius Sutorius Macro an important ally 16 Macro spoke well of Caligula to Tiberius attempting to quell any ill will or suspicion the Emperor felt towards Caligula 20 In the year 35 Caligula was named joint heir to Tiberius estate along with Tiberius Gemellus 21 Emperor EditEarly reign Edit nbsp Caligula Depositing the Ashes of his Mother and Brother in the Tomb of his Ancestors by Eustache Le Sueur 1647 Tiberius died on 16 March AD 37 a day before the Liberalia festival Rumors circulated that Caligula possibly assisted by Macro smothered Tiberius with a pillow 22 recorded both by Suetonius and Tacitus 16 23 However Philo who wrote during Tiberius reign and Josephus who began his service to the Romans under Nero both record Tiberius as having died a natural death 24 25 Caligula assumed the leadership of the domus Caesaris and this was ratified by the senate which acclaimed him imperator two days later on 18 March 26 Ten days later Tiberius will naming two heirs was nullified with the standard justification that he had been insane 22 27 Caligula is described as the first emperor who was admired by everyone in all the world from the rising to the setting sun 28 Caligula was loved by many for being the beloved son of the popular Germanicus 29 and because he was not Tiberius 30 Suetonius said that over 160 000 animals were sacrificed during three months of public rejoicing to usher in the new reign 31 Philo mentions widespread sacrifice but no estimation on the degree He describes the first seven months of Caligula s reign as completely blissful 32 Caligula s first acts were said to be generous in spirit though many were political in nature 27 Overriding Tiberius will which left a legacy of 500 sesterces to each praetorian he instead doubled it 33 further bonuses were granted to the city troops and the army outside Italy 27 Coinage indicates that donations to the praetorians may have been repeated through Caligula s reign A further distribution of 75 sesterces per citizen in Rome was given from 1 June to 19 July Caligula wasted no time putting on lavish games immediately requesting from the senate exemption from sumptuary laws limiting the number of gladiators He also restored the right to elect praetors to the comitia which meant in practice that aediles had incentives to spend money to put on lavish spectacles to win popularity Building projects on the Palatine hill and elsewhere were also announced which would have been the largest of these expenditures 33 Caligula also took action to win the support of the aristocracy He made a public show of burning Tiberius secret papers falsely claiming that he had not read them On coinage he advertised that he had restored the rule of law to that end he lifted a backlog on court cases in Rome by adding more jurors and lifting the need for imperial confirmation of sentences 34 Refusing the title pater patriae on the grounds of his youth he also recalled those who had been sent into exile 33 35 Stressing his descent from Augustus he went in person to retrieve the remains of his mother and brothers for interment in the Mausoleum of Augustus 36 37 His sisters and other family members including Claudius who had not been a member of the imperial household during Tiberius reign were granted political and priestly honours Work on a temple to Livia vowed but never constructed also began 38 Those whom Tiberius alone had supported lost out Gemellus was required to kill himself on charges of having taken an antidote ie implicitly accusing Caligula of wanting to poison him Tiberius political associate Marcus Junius Silanus a support of Gemellus was executed Caligula s friend Macro also was killed These purges suggest the new emperor had learnt a great deal from Tiberius and that attempts to divide his reign into a good beginning followed by unremitting atrocities are misplaced 36 This division into good and bad phases has variously been attributed to the death of Antonia in summer 37 illness in autumn that year or the death of Caligula s beloved sister Drusilla on 10 June AD 38 39 During his illness in AD 37 and after Gemellus death Caligula named his brother in law Marcus Aemilius Lepidus as heir marrying him to his sister Drusilla Ancient sources allege that he and Lepidus were homosexual lovers After Drusilla s death in June AD 38 she was deified in September the same year 40 Public reform and financial crisis Edit nbsp Quadrans celebrating the abolition of a tax in AD 38 by Caligula The obverse of the coin contains a picture of a Pileus which symbolizes the liberation of the people from the tax burden Caption c caesar divi avg pron avg pon m pp cos des rcc nbsp The adlocutio cohortium of Caligula on a coin giving a speech to the armyIn the year 38 Caligula focused his attention on political and public reform He published the accounts of public funds which had not been made public during the reign of Tiberius He aided those who lost property in fires abolished certain taxes and gave out prizes to the public at gymnastic events He allowed new members into the equestrian and senatorial orders 41 Perhaps most significantly he restored the practice of elections 42 Cassius Dio said that this act though delighting the rabble grieved the sensible who stopped to reflect that if the offices should fall once more into the hands of the many many disasters would result 41 During the same year though Caligula was criticized for executing people without full trials and for forcing the Praetorian prefect Macro to commit suicide 43 According to Cassius Dio a financial crisis emerged in 39 43 Suetonius places the beginning of this crisis in 38 44 Caligula s political payments for support generosity and extravagance had exhausted the state s treasury Ancient historians state that Caligula began falsely accusing fining and even killing individuals for the purpose of seizing their estates 45 Historians describe a number of Caligula s other desperate measures To gain funds Caligula asked the public to lend the state money 46 He levied taxes on lawsuits weddings and prostitution 16 Caligula began auctioning the lives of the gladiators at shows 45 47 Wills that left items to Tiberius were reinterpreted to leave the items instead to Caligula Centurions who had acquired property by plunder were forced to turn over spoils to the state The current and past highway commissioners were accused of incompetence and embezzlement and forced to repay money 48 According to Suetonius in the first year of Caligula s reign he squandered 2 7 billion sesterces that Tiberius had amassed 44 His nephew Nero both envied and admired the fact that Caligula had run through the vast wealth Tiberius had left him in so short a time 49 However some historians have shown scepticism towards the large number of sesterces quoted by Suetonius and Dio According to Wilkinson Caligula s use of precious metals to mint coins throughout his principate indicates that the treasury most likely never fell into bankruptcy He does point out however that it is difficult to ascertain whether the purported squandered wealth was from the treasury alone due to the blurring of the division between the private wealth of the emperor and his income as head of state 50 Furthermore Alston points out that Caligula s successor Claudius was able to donate 15 000 sesterces to each member of the Praetorian Guard in 41 23 suggesting the Roman treasury was solvent 51 A brief famine of unknown extent occurred perhaps caused by this financial crisis but Suetonius claims it resulted from Caligula s seizure of public carriages 45 according to Seneca grain imports were disrupted because Caligula re purposed grain boats for a pontoon bridge 52 Construction and senatorial feud Edit See also Caligula s Giant Ship nbsp An artistic depiction of a palatial Nemi Ship of Caligula by CM Knight Smith c 1906 53 Despite financial difficulties Caligula embarked on a number of construction projects during his reign Some were for the public good though others were for himself Josephus describes Caligula s improvements to the harbours at Rhegium and Sicily allowing increased grain imports from Egypt as his greatest contributions 54 These improvements may have been in response to the famine 55 Caligula completed the temple of Augustus and the theatre of Pompey and began an amphitheatre beside the Saepta 56 He also expanded the imperial palace 57 Later he began the construction of aqueducts Aqua Claudia and Anio Novus which Pliny the Elder considered to be engineering marvels 56 58 59 Caligula then built a large racetrack known as the circus of Gaius and Nero and had an Egyptian obelisk now known as the Vatican Obelisk transported by sea and erected in the middle of Rome 60 Construction of the aqueaduct Porta Maggiore started under his rule At Syracuse he repaired the city walls and the temples of the gods 56 He had new roads built and pushed to keep roads in good condition 48 44 Caligula had planned to rebuild the palace of Polycrates at Samos to finish the temple of Didymaean Apollo at Ephesus and to found a city high up in the Alps He also intended to dig a canal through the Isthmus of Corinth in Greece and sent a chief centurion to survey the work 56 In 39 Caligula performed a spectacular stunt by ordering a temporary floating bridge to be built using ships as pontoons stretching for over two miles from the resort of Baiae to the neighbouring port of Puteoli 61 It was said that the bridge was to rival the Persian king Xerxes pontoon bridge crossing of the Hellespont 62 Caligula who could not swim 11 then proceeded to ride his favourite horse Incitatus across wearing the breastplate of Alexander the Great 62 This act was in defiance of a prediction by Tiberius soothsayer Thrasyllus of Mendes that Caligula had no more chance of becoming emperor than of riding a horse across the Bay of Baiae 62 Caligula had two large ships constructed for himself which were recovered from the bottom of Lake Nemi around 1930 The ships were among the largest vessels in the ancient world The smaller ship was designed as a temple dedicated to Diana The larger ship was essentially an elaborate floating palace with marble floors and plumbing 63 The ships burned in 1944 after an American attack in the Second World War almost nothing remains of their hulls though many archaeological treasures remain intact in the museum at Lake Nemi and in the Museo Nazionale Romano Palazzo Massimo at Rome 64 In 39 relations between Caligula and the Roman Senate deteriorated 65 66 The subject of their disagreement is unknown A number of factors though aggravated this feud The Senate had become accustomed to ruling without an emperor between the departure of Tiberius for Capri in 26 and Caligula s accession Additionally Tiberius treason trials had eliminated a number of pro Julian senators such as Asinius Gallus 67 Caligula reviewed Tiberius records of treason trials and decided based on their actions during these trials that numerous senators were not trustworthy He ordered a new set of investigations and trials 65 66 He replaced the consul and had several senators put to death Suetonius reports that other senators were degraded by being forced to wait on him and run beside his chariot 68 Soon after his break with the Senate Caligula faced a number of additional conspiracies against him 69 That autumn he claimed to have uncovered a conspiracy to replace him with his then heir Lepidus Publicising the failure of the sitting consuls to offer prayers on his birthday 31 August he gave orders to concentrate military forces in upper Germany The governor there Gnaeus Cornelius Lentulus Gaetulicus was possibly a threat and after Caligula s personal arrival there was executed Lepidus Agrippina and Livilla were accused to being part of this conspiracy Lepidus was executed and the two sisters were exiled after being condemned pro forma of adultery 70 69 Western expansion Edit nbsp Map of the Roman Empire and neighboring states during the reign of Gaius Caligula AD 37 41 Italy and Roman provinces Independent countries Client states Roman puppets Mauretania seized by Caligula Former Roman provinces Thrace and Commagena made client states by CaligulaIn 40 Caligula expanded the Roman Empire into Mauretania 2 a client kingdom of Rome ruled by Ptolemy of Mauretania Caligula invited Ptolemy to Rome and then suddenly had him executed 71 Mauretania was annexed by Caligula and subsequently divided into two provinces Mauretania Tingitana and Mauretania Caesariensis separated by the river Malua 72 Pliny claims that division was the work of Caligula but Dio states that in 42 an uprising took place which was subdued by Gaius Suetonius Paulinus and Gnaeus Hosidius Geta and the division only took place after this 73 This confusion might mean that Caligula decided to divide the province but the division was postponed because of the rebellion The first known equestrian governor of the two provinces was Marcus Fadius Celer Flavianus in office in 44 74 Details on the Mauretanian events of 39 44 are unclear Cassius Dio wrote an entire chapter on the annexation of Mauretania by Caligula but it is now lost 75 Caligula s move seemingly had a strictly personal political motive fear and jealousy of his cousin Ptolemy and thus the expansion may not have been prompted by pressing military or economic needs 76 However the rebellion of Tacfarinas had shown how exposed Africa Proconsularis was to its west and how the Mauretanian client kings were unable to provide protection to the province and it is thus possible that Caligula s expansion was a prudent response to potential future threats 74 Caligula brought up abortive attempts to extend Roman rule into Britannia 2 Two legions had been raised for this purpose both were likely named Primigeniae in honour of Caligula s newborn daughter Ancient sources depict Caligula as being too cowardly to have attacked or as mad but stories of his threatening decimation indicates mutinies Broadly it is impossible to judge why the army never embarked on the invasion Beyond mutinies it may have simply been that British chieftains acceded to Rome s demands removing any justification for war 77 75 Alternatively it could have been merely a training and scouting mission 78 or a short expedition to accept the surrender of the British chieftain Adminius 79 80 Suetonius reports that Caligula ordered his men to collect seashells as spoils of the sea this may also be a mistranslation to musculi meaning siege engines 77 81 The conquest of Britannia was later achieved during the reign of his successor Claudius Claims of divinity Edit nbsp Cameo depicting Caligula and Roma a personification of RomeWhen Tiberius died hated by his subjects Caligula dutifuly asked the Senate to approve his deification but was turned down in line with senatorial and popular opinion Caligula did not push the issue He gave Tiberius a magnificent long drawn out funeral at public expense and a tearful eulogy 82 In the first six months of his reign he made a good impression refusing costly honours such as statuary of himself and apparently promising to share power with his senate as primus inter pares first among equals His modesty and personal generosity earned him broad approval but at some time early in his short reign possibly following a near mortal illness this changed Philo Caligula s contemporary claims that Caligula costumed himself as various heroes and deities starting with demigods such as Dionysos Herakles and the Dioscuri and working up to major deities such as Mercury Venus and Apollo Philo describes these alleged impersonations in a context of private pantomime or theatrical performances as evidence that Caligula wanted to be a god himself 83 84 Dio claims that Caligula impersonated Jupiter as no more than a means to seduce various women Philo s list of impersonations does not include Jupiter at all To Gradel the same performances prove no more than Caligula s penchant for theatre fancy dress and desire to shock as emperor Caligula was also pontifex maximus one of Rome s most powerful and influential state priesthoods While he seems to have been amused by baiting the elite who held Rome s most important priesthoods he seems to have taken his own religious duties very seriously reorganising the Salii priests of Mars and pedanticaly insisting that it was nefas religiously improper for Jupiter s leading priest the Flamen Dialis to swear the imperial oath of loyalty a Suetonius claims that Caligula found a replacement for the aging priest of Diana s ancient sanctuary at Lake Nemi Traditionally the priest must be slain by a runaway slave who must then replace him the slaying was almost certainly symbolic not actual 85 Caligula had two vast and exquisitely appointed ships built at Nemi one a floating palace for himself and the other a floating temple for the goddess 86 Dio claims that Caligula sometimes referred to himself as a divinity in public meetings and was sometimes referred to as Jupiter in public documents Caligula s special interest in Jupiter king of the gods is confirmed by all surviving sources Simpson believes that Caligula may have considered Jupiter an equal perhaps a rival 87 88 89 In Rome s eastern provinces cults to rulers as divine and semi divine saviours and monarchs were long standing institutions one of the best known examples is that of Alexander the Great a divine monarch to at least some of his subjects and whom Caligula also impersonated 90 The promotion of mortals to godlike status based on their superior standing and perceived merits was also a well established feature of Roman culture a client could flatter their living patron as Jupiter on earth without reprimand 91 There is no evidence that Caligula intended to supplant Rome s most important deity and protector Capitoline Jupiter 92 A temple to Caligula in the city of Rome is mentioned only by Suetonius and Dio Augustus had already linked the Temple of Castor and Pollux directly to his imperial residence on the Palatine and established an official priesthood of lesser magistrates to serve its cults the seviri Augustales usually promoted from his own freedmen to serve the genius Augusti his family spirit and Lares the twinned ancestral spirits of his household 93 Dio claims that Caligula stationed himself dressed as Jupiter Latiaris as an object of worship between the images of Castor and Pollux the twin Dioscuri whom he humorously referred to as his doorkeepers 94 95 96 According to Cassius Dio living emperors could be worshipped as divine in the east and dead emperors could be worshipped as divine in Rome 97 An embassy from Greek states to Rome greeted Caligula as the new god Augustus In the Greek city of Cyzicus a public inscription from the beginning of Caligula s reign gives thanks to him as a New Sun god 98 Egyptian provincial coinage and some state dupondii show Caligula enthroned the first reigning Roman princeps described as the New Sun Neos Helios with the radiate crown of the Sun god or of Caligula s divine antecedent the divus Augustus Caligula s image on other state coinage carries no such trappings of divinity 99 In Rome and elsewhere cult to the genius generative spirit of living patrons and benefactors was a religious duty of their clients and inferiors Compared to the full blown cults to major deities of state genius cults were quite modest in scope and religious paraphernalia a feature of household religion which recognised the head of family s god like superiority and virtues Augustus once deceased was officially worshipped as a divus an immortal but somewhat less than a full blown deity Tiberius his successor forbade his own personal cult outright in Rome itself probably in consideration of Julius Caesar s assassination following his hubristic promotion as a living divinity 97 Dio claims that two temples were built for Caligula in Rome 94 but no confirmation has been found for this Simpson believes it likely that Caligula was voted a temple on the Palatine by the Senate but funded it himself 100 Gradel sees Caligula s reported extortion of priesthood fees from an unwilling aristocracy including his uncle Claudius as a mark of private cult and personal humiliation among the elite Throughout his reign Caligula seems to have remained popular with the masses in Rome and the empire There is no sound evidence that he caused the removal replacement or imposition of Roman or other deities or even that he threatened to do so outside the hostile anecdotes of his biographers He seems to have taken his own genius cult very seriously but as Gradel observes no Roman was ever prosecuted for sacrificing to his emperor 101 Caligula s fatal offense was to willfully insult or offend everyone who mattered including the military officers who assassinated him 102 103 His cult died with him nbsp Cameo depicting Caligula and Roma a personification of RomeEastern policy Edit Caligula needed to quell several riots and conspiracies in the eastern territories during his reign Aiding him in his actions was his good friend Herod Agrippa who became governor of the territories of Batanaea and Trachonitis after Caligula became emperor in 37 104 105 The cause of tensions in the east was complicated involving the spread of Greek culture Roman law and the rights of Jews in the empire Caligula did not trust the prefect of Egypt Aulus Avilius Flaccus Flaccus had been loyal to Tiberius had conspired against Caligula s mother and had connections with Egyptian separatists 106 In 38 Caligula sent Agrippa to Alexandria unannounced to check on Flaccus 107 According to Philo the visit was met with jeers from the Greek population who saw Agrippa as the king of the Jews 108 As a result riots broke out in the city 109 Caligula responded by removing Flaccus from his position and executing him 110 In 39 Agrippa accused his uncle Herod Antipas the tetrarch of Galilee and Perea of planning a rebellion against Roman rule with the help of Parthia Herod Antipas confessed and Caligula exiled him Agrippa was rewarded with his territories 111 Riots again erupted in Alexandria in 40 between Jews and Greeks Jews were accused of not honouring the emperor 112 Disputes occurred in the city of Jamnia Jews were angered by the erection of a clay altar and destroyed it 113 In response Caligula ordered the erection of a statue of himself in the Jewish Temple of Jerusalem 114 a demand in conflict with Jewish monotheism In this context Philo wrote that Caligula regarded the Jews with most especial suspicion as if they were the only persons who cherished wishes opposed to his 115 The Governor of Syria Publius Petronius fearing civil war if the order were carried out delayed implementing it for nearly a year 116 Agrippa finally convinced Caligula to reverse the order 112 However Caligula issued a second order to have his statue erected in the Temple of Jerusalem In Rome another statue of himself of colossal size was made of gilt brass for the purpose However according to Josephus when the ship carrying the statue was still underway news of Caligula s death reached Petronius Thus the statue was never installed 117 Scandals Edit nbsp Roman sestertius depicting Caligula AD 38 The reverse shows Caligula s three sisters Agrippina Drusilla and Livilla with whom Caligula was rumoured to have carried on incestuous relationships Caption C CAESAR AVG GERMANICVS PON M TR POT AGRIPPINA DRVSILLA IVLIA S C Philo and Seneca the Younger contemporaries of Caligula describe him as an insane emperor who was self absorbed and short tempered who killed on a whim and indulged in too much spending and sex 118 119 120 He is accused of sleeping with other men s wives and bragging about it 121 killing for mere amusement 118 deliberately wasting money on his bridge causing starvation 119 and wanting a statue of himself in the Temple of Jerusalem for his worship 114 Once at some games at which he was presiding he was said to have ordered his guards to throw an entire section of the audience into the arena during the intermission to be eaten by the wild beasts because there were no prisoners to be used and he was bored 43 While repeating these earlier stories the later sources of Suetonius and Cassius Dio provide additional tales of insanity They accuse Caligula of incest with his sisters Agrippina the Younger Drusilla and Livilla and say that he prostituted them to other men 122 69 123 Additionally they mention affairs with various men including his brother in law Marcus Lepidus 124 125 They say he sent troops on illogical military exercises 75 126 turned the palace into a brothel 46 and most famously planned or promised to make his horse Incitatus a consul 127 128 47 and appointed a priest to serve him 94 The validity of these accounts is debatable In Roman political culture insanity and sexual perversity were often presented hand in hand with poor government 129 Assassination and aftermath Edit nbsp The Assassination of the Emperor Caligula by Lazzaro BaldiCaligula s actions as emperor were described as being especially harsh to the Senate to the nobility and to the equestrian order 130 According to Josephus these actions led to several failed conspiracies against Caligula 131 132 133 Eventually officers within the Praetorian Guard led by Cassius Chaerea succeeded in murdering the emperor 134 The plot is described as having been planned by three men but many in the Senate army and equestrian order were said to have been informed of and involved in it 135 The situation had escalated when in the year 40 Caligula announced to the Senate that he planned to leave Rome permanently and to move to Alexandria in Egypt where he hoped to be worshipped as a living god The prospect of Rome losing its emperor and thus its political power was the final straw for many Such a move would have left both the Senate and the Praetorian Guard powerless to stop Caligula s repression and debauchery With this in mind Chaerea persuaded his fellow conspirators who included Marcus Vinicius and Lucius Annius Vinicianus to put their plot into action quickly citation needed According to Josephus Chaerea had political motivations for the assassination 136 Suetonius sees the motive in Caligula calling Chaerea derogatory names 131 Caligula considered Chaerea effeminate because of a weak voice and for not being firm with tax collection 137 138 Caligula would mock Chaerea with names like Priapus and Venus 137 131 On 24 January 41 140 Cassius Chaerea and other guardsmen accosted Caligula as he addressed an acting troupe of young men beneath the palace during a series of games and dramatics being held for the Divine Augustus 141 Details recorded on the events vary somewhat from source to source but they agree that Chaerea stabbed Caligula first followed by a number of conspirators 137 141 142 Suetonius records that Caligula s death resembled that of Julius Caesar He states that both the elder Gaius Julius Caesar Julius Caesar and the younger Gaius Julius Caesar Caligula were stabbed 30 times by conspirators led by a man named Cassius Cassius Longinus and Cassius Chaerea respectively 143 By the time Caligula s loyal Germanic guard responded the Emperor was already dead The Germanic guard killed several assassins and conspirators along with some innocent senators and bystanders 144 141 These wounded conspirators were treated by the physician Arcyon The cryptoporticus underground corridor beneath the imperial palaces on the Palatine Hill where this event took place was discovered by archaeologists in 2008 145 The Senate attempted to use Caligula s death as an opportunity to restore the Republic 146 Chaerea tried to persuade the military to support the Senate The military though remained loyal to the idea of imperial monarchy 147 Uncomfortable with lingering imperial support the assassins sought out and killed Caligula s wife Caesonia and killed their young daughter Julia Drusilla by smashing her head against a wall 148 They were unable to reach Caligula s uncle Claudius A soldier Gratus found Claudius hiding behind a palace curtain he was spirited out of the city by a sympathetic faction of the Praetorian Guard to their nearby camp 149 Claudius became emperor after procuring the support of the Praetorian Guard Claudius granted a general amnesty although he executed a few junior officers involved in the conspiracy including Chaerea 150 151 152 According to Suetonius Caligula s body was placed under turf until it was burned and entombed by his sisters He was buried within the Mausoleum of Augustus in 410 during the Sack of Rome the ashes in the tomb were scattered Legacy EditContemporary historiography Edit nbsp Fanciful Renaissance depiction of CaligulaThe facts and circumstances of Caligula s reign are mostly lost to history Two major literary sources contemporary with Caligula have survived the works of Philo and Seneca the Younger Philo s works On the Embassy to Gaius and Flaccus give some details on Caligula s early reign but mostly focus on events surrounding the Jewish population in Judea and Egypt with whom he sympathizes Seneca s various works give mostly scattered anecdotes on Caligula s personality Seneca was almost put to death by Caligula in AD 39 probably due to his associations with conspirators 153 At one time there were detailed contemporaneous histories on Caligula but they are now lost Additionally the historians who wrote them are described as biased either overly critical or praising Caligula 154 Nonetheless these lost primary sources along with the works of Seneca and Philo were the basis of surviving secondary and tertiary histories on Caligula written by the next generations of historians A few of the contemporaneous historians are known by name Fabius Rusticus and Cluvius Rufus both wrote condemning histories on Caligula that are now lost Fabius Rusticus was a friend of Seneca who was known for historical embellishment and misrepresentation 155 Cluvius Rufus was a senator involved in the assassination of Caligula 156 Caligula s sister Agrippina the Younger wrote an autobiography that certainly included a detailed explanation of Caligula s reign but it too is lost Agrippina was banished by Caligula for her connection to Marcus Lepidus who conspired against him 69 The inheritance of Nero Agrippina s son and the future emperor was seized by Caligula Gaetulicus a poet produced a number of flattering writings about Caligula but they are lost The bulk of what is known of Caligula comes from Suetonius and Cassius Dio Suetonius wrote his history on Caligula 80 years after his death while Cassius Dio wrote his history over 180 years after Caligula s death Cassius Dio s work is invaluable because it alone gives a loose chronology of Caligula s reign A handful of other sources add a limited perspective on Caligula Josephus gives a detailed description of Caligula s assassination Tacitus provides some information on Caligula s life under Tiberius In a now lost portion of his Annals Tacitus gave a detailed history of Caligula Pliny the Elder s Natural History has a few brief references to Caligula There are few surviving sources on Caligula and none of them paints Caligula in a favourable light The paucity of sources has resulted in significant gaps in modern knowledge of the reign of Caligula Little is written on the first two years of Caligula s reign Additionally there are only limited details on later significant events such as the annexation of Mauretania Caligula s military actions in Britannia and his feud with the Roman Senate According to legend during his military actions in Britannia Caligula grew addicted to a steady diet of European sea eels which led to their Latin name being Coluber caligulensis 157 Health Edit nbsp Marble bust of Caligula with traces of original paint beside a plaster replica trying to recreate the polychrome traditions of ancient sculpture nbsp So called little bust of Caligula found at the river Tiber in RomeSeveral contemporary and near contemporary Roman sources describe Caligula as insane It is notoriously difficult to distinguish fact from fiction among the many allegations of his aberrant behaviour as emperor Several modern sources suggest various possible medical explanations including encephalitis epilepsy or meningitis acquired during the illness early in his reign 158 Philo Josephus and Seneca see Caligula s insanity as a personality trait acquired through self indulgence and the unlimited exercise of power 111 159 160 Seneca states that Caligula became arrogant angry and insulting once he became emperor 161 According to Josephus the power Caligula was able to exercise led him to think himself a living God 111 Philo claims that Caligula became ruthless after nearly dying of an illness in the eighth month of his reign in 37 162 Suetonius said that Caligula had falling sickness or epilepsy when he was young 163 164 He may have lived in daily fear of seizures 165 In Romano Greek medical theory the most severe epilepsy attacks were associated with the full moon and the moon goddess Selene with whom Caligula was claimed to converse and to enjoy sexual congress 166 57 167 Suetonius described Caligula as the following He was very tall and extremely pale with an unshapely body but very thin neck and legs His eyes and temples were hollow his forehead broad and grim his hair thin and entirely gone on the top of his head though his body was hairy He was sound neither of body nor mind As a boy he was troubled with the falling sickness and while in his youth he had some endurance yet at times because of sudden faintness he was hardly able to walk to stand up to collect his thoughts or to hold up his head 164 Based on scientific reconstructions of his official painted busts Caligula had brown hair brown eyes and fair skin 168 Some modern historians think that Caligula had hyperthyroidism 169 This diagnosis is mainly attributed to Caligula s irritability and his stare as described by Pliny the Elder Cultural depictions EditIn film and series Edit Welsh actor Emlyn Williams was cast as Caligula in the never completed 1937 film I Claudius 170 He was played by Ralph Bates in the 1968 ITV historical drama series The Caesars 171 American actor Jay Robinson famously portrayed a sinister and scene stealing Caligula in two epic films of the 1950s The Robe 1953 and its sequel Demetrius and the Gladiators 1954 172 He was played by John Hurt in the 1976 BBC mini series I Claudius 173 A feature length historical film Caligula was completed in 1979 with Malcolm McDowell in the lead role He was portrayed by David Brandon in the 1982 historical exploitation film Caligula The Untold Story 174 Caligula is a character in the 2015 NBC series A D The Bible Continues and is played by British actor Andrew Gower His portrayal emphasises Caligula s debauched and dangerous persona 175 as well as his sexual appetite quick temper and violent nature The third season of the Roman Empire series released on Netflix in 2019 is named Caligula The Mad Emperor with South African actor Ido Drent in the leading role 176 In the award winning BBC show Horrible Histories he is portrayed by Simon Farnaby In literature and theatre Edit Kajus Cezar Caligula by Polish author Karol Hubert Rostworowski is a play premiered in Juliusz Slowacki City Theater Cracow 31 March 1917 The title character is presented as a weak and unhappy man who became a victim of circumstances that brought him to power that surpassed him Caligula by French author Albert Camus is a play in which Caligula returns after deserting the palace for three days and three nights following the death of his beloved sister Drusilla The young emperor then uses his unfettered power to bring the impossible into the realm of the likely 177 In the 1934 novel I Claudius by English writer Robert Graves Caligula is presented as a murderous sociopath who became clinically insane early in his reign In the novel at the age of only ten Caligula drove his father Germanicus to a state of despair and death by secretly terrorizing him Graves Caligula commits incest with all three of his sisters and is implied to have murdered Drusilla The novel was adapted for television in the 1976 BBC mini series of the same name The life of Incitatus Caesar s favorite horse is the subject of Polish poet Zbigniew Herbert s poem Kaligula in Pan Cogito 1974 and his political career 178 A deified Caligula is the antagonist of the 2018 The Trials of Apollo novel The Burning Maze by Rick Riordan He is presented as an insane tyrant who has returned from the dead along with Commodus and Emperor Nero to try to take over the modern world His horse Incitatus also appears In opera Edit A young Caligula appears as one of the characters in Heinrich Ignaz Franz Biber s opera Arminio Caligula is the main character in Detlev Glanert s opera Caligula based on the Albert Camus play Different composers from the Baroque era appear to have composed operatic works about Caligula but most of these have been lost See also EditList of mentally ill monarchs List of Roman emperorsNotes Edit Jupiter was the highest divine witness to oaths The Flamen Dialis was sworn to his service and was hedged about with an exhaustive range of prohibitions References Edit Cooley Alison E 2012 The Cambridge Manual of Latin Epigraphy Cambridge University Press p 489 ISBN 978 0 521 84026 2 a b c d Suetonius Caligula 7 Cassius Dio Book LIX 6 Wood Susan 1995 Diva Drusilla Panthea and the Sisters of Caligula American Journal of Archaeology 99 3 457 482 doi 10 2307 506945 JSTOR 506945 S2CID 191386576 a b Suetonius Caligula 9 Seneca the Younger On the Firmness of the Wise Man XVIII 2 5 See also Malloch 2009 Gaius and the nobiles Athenaeum Suetonius Caligula 2 a b c d Suetonius Caligula 10 Tacitus IV 52 Tacitus V 3 a b c Suetonius Caligula 54 Tacitus V 10 Suetonius Caligula 64 Suetonius Caligula 62 Tacitus VI 20 a b c d e Suetonius Caligula 12 Suetonius Caligula 11 Cassius Dio LVII 23 Tacitus VI 23 25 Philo On the Embassy VI 35 Suetonius Caligula 76 a b Wiedemann 1996 p 221 a b Tacitus XII 53 Philo On the Embassy IV 25 Josephus XIII 6 9 Henzen Wilhelm ed 1874 Acta Fratrum Arvalium p 63 a b c Cassius Dio LIX 1 Philo On the Embassy II 10 Suetonius Caligula 13 Suetonius Tiberius 75 Suetonius Caligula 14 Philo On the Embassy II 12 13 a b c Wiedemann 1996 p 222 Wiedemann 1996 pp 222 23 Suetonius Caligula 15 a b Wiedemann 1996 p 223 Cassius Dio LIX 3 Wiedemann 1996 p 223 Claudius was made Caligula s consular colleague in the new emperor s first consulship Wiedemann 1996 p 223 It is useless to date the turning point to before the death of Antonia two months after his accession an illness in the autumn which is supposed to have affected his brain or the death of his sister Drusilla Wiedemann 1996 pp 224 25 a b Cassius Dio LIX 9 10 Suetonius Caligula 16 2 a b c Cassius Dio LIX 10 a b c Suetonius Caligula 37 a b c Suetonius Caligula 38 a b Suetonius Caligula 41 a b Cassius Dio LIX 14 a b Cassius Dio LIX 15 Suetonius Nero 30 Wilkinson 2004 p 10 Alston Richard 2002 Aspects of Roman history AD 14 117 London Routledge p 82 ISBN 978 0 203 01187 4 Seneca the Younger On the Shortness of Life XVIII 5 The Galleys of Lake Nemi Scientific American Volume 95 Number 02 July 1906 14 July 1906 pp 25 26 Josephus XIX 2 5 7 4 The Julio Claudian Emperors Chemistry LibreTexts 8 August 2020 Retrieved 9 June 2022 a b c d Suetonius Caligula 21 a b Suetonius Caligula 22 Suetonius Claudius 20 Pliny the Elder XXXVI 122 Pliny the Elder XVI 76 Wardle David 2007 Caligula s Bridge of Boats AD 39 or 40 Historia Zeitschrift fur Alte Geschichte 56 1 118 120 JSTOR 25598379 a b c Suetonius Caligula 19 Kroos Kenneth A 2011 Central Heating for Caligula s Pleasure Ship The International Journal for the History of Engineering amp Technology 81 2 291 299 doi 10 1179 175812111X13033852943471 ISSN 1758 1206 S2CID 110624972 Carlson Deborah N May 2002 Caligula s Floating Palaces PDF Archaeology 55 3 26 31 JSTOR 41779576 a b Cassius Dio LIX 16 a b Suetonius Caligula 30 Tacitus IV 41 Suetonius Caligula 26 a b c d Cassius Dio LIX 22 Wiedemann 1996 pp 226 27 Suetonius Caligula 35 Pliny the Elder V 2 Cassius Dio LX 8 a b Barrett 1989 p 118 a b c Cassius Dio LIX 25 Sigman Marlene C 1977 The Romans and the Indigenous Tribes of Mauritania Tingitana Historia Zeitschrift fur Alte Geschichte 26 4 415 439 JSTOR 4435574 a b Wiedemann 1996 p 228 Bicknell Peter 1968 The emperor Gaius military activities in AD 40 Historia Zeitschrift fur Alte Geschichte 17 4 496 505 ISSN 0018 2311 JSTOR 4435047 Davies R 1966 The abortive invasion of Britain by Gaius Historia Zeitschrift fur Alte Geschichte 15 1 124 128 ISSN 0018 2311 JSTOR 4434915 Malloch SJV 2001 Gaius on the Channel coast Classical Quarterly 51 2 551 556 doi 10 1093 cq 51 2 551 ISSN 1471 6844 Suetonius Caligula 45 47 Bennett 2006 p 59 Philo On the Embassy XI XV Pollini 2012 p 377 Barrett 2007 p 145 Carlson Deborah N May 2002 Caligula s Floating Palaces PDF Archaeology 55 3 26 31 JSTOR 41779576 Cassius Dio LIX 26 28 Pollini pp 378 379 Simpson C J The Cult of the Emperor Gaius Latomus vol 40 no 3 1981 pp 495 496 JSTOR 1 Accessed 18 Sept 2023 Barrett 2006 p 146 Gradel p 46 citing Plautus Simpson C J The Cult of the Emperor Gaius Latomus vol 40 no 3 1981 p 503 JSTOR http www jstor org stable 41532141 Accessed 18 Sept 2023 Lott John B The Neighborhoods of Augustan Rome Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2004 pp 107 117 172 ISBN 0 521 82827 9 a b c Cassius Dio LIX 28 Barrett 2006 pp 147 148 Beard M Price S North J Religions of Rome Volume 1 a History illustrated Cambridge University Press 1998 pp 209 210 ISBN 0 521 31682 0 a b Cassius Dio LI 20 Barrett 2006 p 143 Pollini John 2012 From Republic to Empire University of Oklahoma Press pp 150 151 ISBN 978 0 8061 8816 4 Simpson pp 506 507 Gradel Ittai Emperor Worship and Roman Religion Oxford Oxford University Press 2002 pp 263 268ISBN 0 19 815275 2 Gradel Ittai Emperor Worship and Roman Religion Oxford Oxford University Press 2002 pp 142 158 ISBN 0 19 815275 2 Cassius Dio LIX 26 28 Josephus XVIII 6 10 Philo Flaccus V 25 Philo Flaccus III 8 IV 21 Philo Flaccus V 26 28 Philo Flaccus VI 43 Philo Flaccus VII 45 Philo Flaccus XXI 185 a b c Josephus XVIII 7 2 a b Josephus XVIII 8 1 Philo On the Embassy XXX 201 a b Philo On the Embassy XXX 203 Philo On the Embassy XVI 115 Philo On the Embassy XXXI 213 Josephus XVIII 8 a b Seneca the Younger On Anger III xviii 1 a b Seneca the Younger On the shortness of life XVIII 5 Philo On the Embassy XXIX Seneca the Younger On Firmness xviii 1 Cassius Dio LIX 11 Suetonius Caligula 24 Suetonius Caligula 36 Cassius Dio Book 59 penelope uchicago edu Retrieved 15 September 2021 Suetonius Caligula 46 47 Woods David 2014 Caligula Incitatus and the Consulship The Classical Quarterly 64 2 772 777 doi 10 1017 S0009838814000470 ISSN 0009 8388 S2CID 170216093 Suetonius Caligula 55 Younger John G 2004 Sex in the Ancient World from A to Z Routledge xvi ISBN 978 0 415 24252 3 Josephus XIX 1 1 a b c Suetonius Caligula 56 Tacitus 16 17 Josephus XIX 1 2 Josephus XIX 1 3 Josephus XIX 1 10 1 14 Josephus XIX 1 6 a b c Seneca the Younger On Firmness xviii 2 Josephus XIX 1 5 Wardle David 1991 When did Gaius Caligula die Acta Classica 34 1991 158 165 Suetonius 58 On the ninth day before the Kalends of February Ruled three years ten months and eight days Cassius Dio LIX 30 Thus Gaius after doing in three years nine months and twenty eight days all that has been related learned by actual experience that he was not a god this seems to give 23 January but Dio is probably using exclusive reckoning which does give 24 139 a b c Suetonius Caligula 58 Josephus XIX 1 14 Suetonius Caligula 57 58 Josephus XIX 1 15 Owen Richard 17 October 2008 Archaeologists unearth place where Emperor Caligula met his end The Times The Times London Retrieved 31 August 2018 Josephus XIX 2 Josephus XIX 4 4 Suetonius Caligula 59 Josephus XIX 2 1 Suetonius Claudius 11 Josephus XIX 268 269 Cassius Dio LX 3 4 Cassius Dio LIX 19 Tacitus I 1 Tacitus Life of Julius Agricola X Annals XIII 20 Josephus XIX 1 13 Aemilius Macer Theriaca 1 29 Sidwell Barbara 2010 Gaius Caligula s Mental Illness Classical World 103 2 183 206 doi 10 1353 clw 0 0165 ISSN 1558 9234 PMID 20213971 S2CID 39205847 Philo On the Embassy XIII Seneca the Younger On Firmness xviii 1 On Anger I xx 8 Seneca the Younger On Firmness XVII XVIII On Anger I xx 8 Philo On the Embassy II IV Benediktson D Thomas 1989 Caligula s Madness Madness or Interictal Temporal Lobe Epilepsy The Classical World 82 5 370 375 doi 10 2307 4350416 JSTOR 4350416 a b Suetonius Caligula 50 Benediktson D Thomas 1991 Caligula s Phobias and Philias Fear of Seizure The Classical Journal 87 2 159 163 ISSN 0009 8353 JSTOR 3297970 Benediktson D Thomas Caligula s Phobias and Philias Fear of Seizure The Classical Journal 87 no 2 1991 159 161 http www jstor org stable 3297970 Oswei Temkin 1971 The Falling Sickness 2nd ed pp 3 4 7 13 16 26 86 92 96 179 The True Colours Of Greek and Roman Statues By Archaeologist Vinzenz Brinkmann 24 January 2015 Retrieved 2 August 2020 Katz Robert S 1972 The Illness of Caligula The Classical World 65 7 223 2258 doi 10 2307 4347670 JSTOR 4347670 PMID 11619647 refuted in Morgan M Gwyn 1973 Caligula s Illness Again The Classical World 66 6 327 329 doi 10 2307 4347839 JSTOR 4347839 Yablonsky Linda 26 February 2006 Caligula Gives a Toga Party but No One s Really Invited The New York Times Retrieved 30 June 2011 The Caesars at IMDb Robinson Jay 1979 The Comeback Word Books ISBN 978 0 912376 45 5 I Claudius at IMDb Palmerini Luca M Mistretta Gaetano 1996 Spaghetti Nightmares Fantasma Books p 111 ISBN 0 9634982 7 4 Watch A D The Bible Continues Episodes at NBC com retrieved 9 May 2020 Nolan Emma 26 March 2019 Roman Empire Caligula The Mad Emperor Netflix release date cast trailer plot Express co uk Retrieved 2 August 2020 Sheaffer Jones Caroline 2012 A Deconstructive Reading of Albert Camus Caligula Australian Journal of French Studies 49 1 31 42 doi 10 3828 AJFS 2012 3 ISSN 0004 9468 English translation of Caligula Speaks Archived 2016 11 01 at the Wayback Machine by Zbigniew Herbert translated by Oriana IvyBibliography EditModern sources Edit Barrett Anthony A 1989 Caligula the corruption of power London Batsford ISBN 978 0 7134 5487 1 Wiedemann T E J 1996 Tiberius to Nero In Bowman Alan K et al eds The Augustan Empire 43 BC AD 69 Cambridge Ancient History Vol 10 2nd ed pp 198 255 ISBN 0 521 26430 8 Wilkinson Sam 2004 Caligula Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 24693 9 Ancient sources Edit Philo 1855 c 38 AD Various works Translated by Charles Duke Yonge Loeb Classical Library On the Embassy to Gaius Flaccus Lucius Annaeus Seneca the Younger 1932 1st century Essays Translated by Aubrey Stewart Loeb Classical Library Gaius Plinius Secundus 1961 c 77 AD Natural History Translated by H Rackham W H S Jones D E Eichholz Harvard University Press Josephus 1737 c 96 AD Chapters XVIII XIX Antiquities of the Jews Translated by William Whiston Harvard University Press Publius Cornelius Tacitus 1924 c 110 AD The Annals Translated by Frederick W Shipley Loeb Classical Library Gaius Suetonius Tranquillus 1914 c 121 AD Life of Caligula The Twelve Caesars Translated by John Carew Rolfe Loeb Classical Library Lucius Cassius Dio 1927 c 230 Book 59 Roman History Translated by Earnest Cary Loeb Classical Library On Firmness On Anger On Tranquility of Mind On the Shortness of LifeFurther reading EditBalsdon JPVD et al 2012 Gaius 1 Caligula Roman emperor 12 41 CE In Hornblower Simon et al eds The Oxford classical dictionary 4th ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acrefore 9780199381135 013 2772 ISBN 978 0 19 954556 8 OCLC 959667246 Barrett Anthony A Yardley John C 2023 The Emperor Caligula in the ancient sources Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 9780198854579 Winterling Aloys 2011 Caligula a biography University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 94314 8 Balsdon V D 1934 The Emperor Gaius Oxford Clarendon Press Hurley Donna W 1993 An Historical and Historiographical Commentary on Suetonius Life of C Caligula Atlanta Scholars Press Sandison A T 1958 The Madness of the Emperor Caligula Medical History 2 3 202 209 doi 10 1017 s0025727300023759 PMC 1034394 PMID 13577116 Wilcox Amanda 2008 Nature s Monster Caligula as exemplum in Seneca s Dialogues In Sluiter Ineke Rosen Ralph M eds Kakos Badness and Anti value in Classical Antiquity Mnemosyne Supplements Vol 307 Leiden Brill External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Caligula nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Caligula nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Gaius Caesar The portrait of Caligula in the Digital Sculpture Project Biography from De Imperatoribus Romanis Franz Lidz Caligula s Garden of Delights Unearthed and Restored New York Times Jan 12 2021CaligulaJulio Claudian dynastyBorn 31 August AD 12 Died 24 January AD 41Preceded byTiberius Roman emperor37 41 Succeeded byClaudiusPolitical officesPreceded byGn Acerronius ProculusG Petronius Pontius Nigrinus Roman consulJuly August 37 With Claudius Succeeded byA Caecina PaetusG Caninius RebilusPreceded bySer Asinius CelerSex Nonius Quinctilianus Roman consulJanuary 39 With L Apronius Caesianus Succeeded byQ Sanquinius MaximusPreceded byA Didius GallusGn Domitius Afer Roman consulJanuary 40sine collega Succeeded byG Laecanius BassusQ Terentius CulleoPreceded byG Laecanius BassusQ Terentius Culleo Roman consulJanuary 41 With Gn Sentius Saturninus Succeeded byQ Pomponius Secundus Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Caligula amp oldid 1177714873, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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