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Roman imperial cult

The Roman imperial cult identified emperors and some members of their families with the divinely sanctioned authority (auctoritas) of the Roman State. Its framework was based on Roman and Greek precedents, and was formulated during the early Principate of Augustus. It was rapidly established throughout the Empire and its provinces, with marked local variations in its reception and expression.

Augustus's reforms transformed Rome's Republican system of government to a de facto monarchy, couched in traditional Roman practices and Republican values. The princeps (emperor) was expected to balance the interests of the Roman military, Senate and people, and to maintain peace, security and prosperity throughout an ethnically diverse empire. The official offer of cultus to a living emperor acknowledged his office and rule as divinely approved and constitutional: his Principate should therefore demonstrate pious respect for traditional Republican deities and mores.

A deceased emperor held worthy of the honor could be voted a state divinity (divus, plural divi) by the Senate and elevated as such in an act of apotheosis. The granting of apotheosis served religious, political and moral judgment on Imperial rulers and allowed living emperors to associate themselves with a well-regarded lineage of Imperial divi from which unpopular or unworthy predecessors were excluded. This proved a useful instrument to Vespasian in his establishment of the Flavian Imperial Dynasty following the death of Nero and civil war, and to Septimius in his consolidation of the Severan dynasty after the assassination of Commodus.

The imperial cult was inseparable from that of Rome's official deities, whose cult was essential to Rome's survival and whose neglect was therefore treasonous. Traditional cult was a focus of Imperial revivalist legislation under Decius and Diocletian. It therefore became a focus of theological and political debate during the ascendancy of Christianity under Constantine I. The emperor Julian failed to reverse the declining support for Rome's official religious practices: Theodosius I adopted Christianity as Rome's state religion. Rome's traditional gods and imperial cult were officially abandoned.

Background Edit

Roman Edit

 
Venus and Mars sculpture group reworked to portray an Imperial couple (created 120–140 AD, reworked 170–175)

For five centuries, the Roman Republic did not give worship to any historic figure, or any living man, although surrounded by divine and semi-divine monarchies. Rome's legendary kings had been its masters; with their removal, Republican Romans could identify Romulus, the founder of the city, with the god Quirinus and still retain Republican liberty. Similarly, Rome's ancestor-hero Aeneas was worshipped as Jupiter Indiges.[1] The Romans worshipped several gods and demi-gods who had been human, and knew the theory that all the gods had originated as human beings, yet Republican traditions (mos maiorum) were staunchly conservative and anti-monarchic. The aristocrats who held almost all Roman magistracies, and thereby occupied almost all of the Senate, acknowledged no human as their inherent superior. No citizen, living or dead, was officially regarded as divine, but the honors[2] awarded by the state—crowns, garlands, statues, thrones, processions—were also suitable to the gods, and tinged with divinity; indeed, when the emperors were later given state worship, it was done by a decree of the Senate, phrased like any other honor.[3]

Among the highest of honors was the triumph. When a general was acclaimed imperator by his troops, the Senate would then choose whether to award him a triumph, a parade to the Capitol in which the triumphator displayed his captives and spoils of war in the company of his troops; by law, all were unarmed. The triumphator rode in a chariot, bearing divine emblems, in a manner supposed to be inherited from the ancient kings of Rome, and ended by dedicating his victory to Jupiter Capitolinus. Some scholars have viewed the triumphator as impersonating or even becoming a king or a god (or both) for the day but the circumstances of triumphal award and subsequent rites also functioned to limit his status. Whatever his personal ambitions, his victory and his triumph alike served the Roman Senate, people, and gods and were recognised only through their consent.[4][5]

In private life, however, tradition required that some human beings be treated as more or less divine; cult was due from familial inferiors to their superiors. Every head of household embodied the genius – the generative principle and guardian spirit – of his ancestors, which others might worship and by which his family and slaves took oaths;[6] his wife had a juno. A client could call his patron "Jupiter on earth".[7] The dead, collectively and individually, were gods of the underworld or afterlife (Manes). A letter has survived from Cornelia, the mother of the Gracchi, expecting that when she was dead, her sons would venerate her as deus parens, a parental (or a nurturing) divinity; such piety was expected from any dutiful son.[8]

A prominent clan might claim divine influence and quasi-divine honors for its leader. Death masks (imagines) were made for all notable Romans and were displayed in the atria of their houses; they were used to represent their ghostly presence at family funerals. The mask of Scipio Africanus, Cornelia's father and victor over Hannibal, was stored in the temple of Jupiter; his epitaph (by Ennius) said that he had ascended to Heaven.[8] A tradition arose in the centuries after his death that Africanus had been inspired by prophetic dreams, and was himself the son of Jupiter.[9]

There are several cases of unofficial cult directed at men viewed as saviors, military or political. In Further Spain in the 70s BC, loyalist Romans greeted the proconsul Metellus Pius as a savior, burning incense "as if to a god" for his efforts to quash the Lusitanian rebellion led by the Roman Sertorius, a member of the faction which called itself "men of the People" (populares). This celebration, in Spain, featured a lavish banquet with local and imported delicacies, and a mechanical statue of Victory to crown Metellus, who wore (extralegally) a triumphator's toga picta for the occasion. These festivities were organized by the quaestor[10] Gaius Urbinus, but were not acts of the state. Metellus liked all this, but his older and pious (veteres et sanctos) contemporaries thought it arrogant and intolerable.[11][12] After the land reformers Tiberius and Gaius Gracchus were both murdered by their opponents, their supporters "fell down" and offered daily sacrifice at the statues of the Gracchi "as though they were visiting the shrines of the gods".[13] After Gaius Marius defeated the Teutones, private citizens would offer food and drink to him alongside their household gods; he was called the third founder of Rome after Romulus and Camillus.[14] In 86 BC, offerings of incense and wine were made at crossroad shrines to statues of the still-living Marius Gratidianus, the nephew of the elder Marius, who was wildly popular in his own right, in large part for monetary reforms that eased an economic crisis in Rome during his praetorship.[15]

Greek Edit

 
Repoussé pendant of Alexander the Great, horned and diademed like Zeus Ammon; images of Alexander were worn as magic charms (4th-century Roman).

When the Romans began to dominate large parts of the Greek world, Rome's senior representatives there were given the same divine honours as were Hellenistic rulers. This was a well-established method for Greek city-states to declare their allegiance to an outside power; such a cult committed the city to obey and respect the king as they obeyed and respected Apollo or any of the other gods.

The cities of Ionia worshipped the Spartan general Lysander, when he personally dominated Greece, immediately following the Peloponnesian War; according to Plutarch, this was the first instance of ruler cult in Greek history. There were similar instances of divine cult to humans in the same century, although some rulers, like Agesilaus, declined it.[16] Clearchus, tyrant of Heraclea, dressed up like Zeus and claimed godhood; this did not stop the Heracleots from assassinating him. Isocrates said of Philip II of Macedon that after he conquered the Persian Empire, there would be nothing for him to attain but to become a god; the city of Amphipolis, and a private society at Athens, worshipped him even without this conquest; he himself set out his statue, dressed as a god, as the thirteenth of the Twelve Olympians.[17]

But it was Philip's son Alexander the Great who made the divinity of kings standard practice among the Greeks. The Egyptians accepted him as Pharaoh, and therefore divine, after he drove the Persians out of Egypt; other nations received him as their traditional divine or quasi-divine ruler as he acquired them. In 324 BC, he sent word to the Greek cities that they should also make him a god; they did so, with marked indifference,[18] which did not stop them from rebelling when they heard of his death next year.

His immediate successors, the Diadochi, offered sacrifices to Alexander, and made themselves gods even before they claimed to be kings; they put their own portraits on the coinage, whereas the Greeks had always reserved this for a god or for an emblem of the city. When the Athenians allied with Demetrius Poliorcetes, eighteen years after the deification of Alexander, they lodged him in the Parthenon with Athena, and sang a hymn extolling him as a present god who heard them, as the other gods did not.[19]

Euhemerus, a contemporary of Alexander, wrote a fictitious history of the world, which showed Zeus and the other established gods of Greece as mortal men, who had made themselves into gods in the same way; Ennius appears to have translated this into Latin some two centuries later, in Scipio Africanus' time.

The Ptolemies of Egypt and the Seleucids claimed godhood as long as they lasted; they may have been influenced in this by the Persian and Egyptian traditions of divine kings – although the Ptolemies had separate cults in Egyptian polytheism, as Pharaoh, and in the Greek. Not all Greek dynasties made the same claims; the descendants of Demetrius, who were kings of Macedon and dominated the mainland of Greece, did not claim godhead or worship Alexander (cf. Ptolemaic cult of Alexander the Great).

Romans among the Greeks Edit

The Roman magistrates who conquered the Greek world were fitted into this tradition; games were set up in honor of Marcus Claudius Marcellus, when he conquered Sicily at the end of the Second Punic War, as the Olympian games were for Zeus; they were kept up for a century and a half until another Roman governor abolished them, to make way for his own honors. When Titus Quinctius Flamininus extended Roman influence to Greece proper, temples were built for him and cities placed his portrait on their coinage; he called himself godlike (isotheos) in an inscription at Delphi – but not in Latin, or at Rome. The Greeks also devised a goddess Roma, not worshipped at Rome, who was worshipped with Flamininus (their joint cult is attested in 195 BC); she would become a symbol of idealised romanitas in the later Roman provinces, and a continuing link, whereas a Marcellus or Flamininus might only hold power for a couple years.

When King Prusias I of Bithynia was granted an interview by the Roman Senate, he prostrated himself and addressed them as "Saviour Gods", which would have been etiquette at his own court; Livy was shocked by Polybius' account of this, and insists that there is no Roman source it ever happened.[20]

Worship and temples appear to have been routinely offered by Greeks to their Roman governors, with varied reactions. Cicero declined a temple proposed by the city officials of Roman Asia to his brother and himself, while the latter was proconsul, to avoid jealousy from other Romans; when Cicero himself was Governor of Cilicia, he claimed to have accepted no statues, shrines, or chariots. His predecessor, Appius Claudius Pulcher, was so pleased, however, when the Cilicians built a temple to him that, when it was not finished at the end of Claudius' year in office, Claudius wrote Cicero to make sure it was done, and complaining that Cicero was not active enough in the matter.[21]

Intermediate forms Edit

The Romans and the Greeks gave religious reverence to and for human beings in ways that did not make the recipients gods; these made the first Greek apotheoses easier. Similar middle forms appeared as Augustus approached official divinity.

 
Ruins of a hero-shrine or heroön at Sagalassos, Turkey

The Greeks did not consider the dead to be gods, but they did pay them homage and gave them sacrifices, using different rituals than those for the gods of Olympus. The Greeks called the extraordinary dead – founders of cities and the like – heroes; in the simplest form, Greek hero cult was the burial and the memorials which any respectable Greek family gave their dead, but paid for by their City in perpetuity.[22] Most heroes were the figures of ancient legend, but some were historical: the Athenians revered Harmodius and Aristogeiton as heroes, as saviours of Athens from tyranny; also, collectively, those who fell at the Battle of Marathon. Statesmen did not generally become heroes, but Sophocles was the hero Dexion ("the Receiver") – not as a playwright, nor a general, but because when the Athenians took Asclepius' cult during the Peloponnesian War, Sophocles housed an image of Asclepius until a shrine could be built. The Athenian leader Hagnon founded Amphipolis shortly before the Peloponnesian War; thirteen years later, while Hagnon was still alive, the Spartan general Brasidas liberated it from the Athenian Empire, and was fatally wounded in the process. The Amphipolitans buried him as a hero, declaring him the second founder of the city, and erased Hagnon's honors as much as they could.

The Greeks also honored founders of cities while they were still alive, like Hagnon. This could also be extended to men who did equally important things; during the period when Dion ruled in Syracuse, the Syracusans gave him "heroic honors" for suppressing the tyrants, and repeated this for Timoleon; these could also be described as worshipping his good spirit (agathos daimon, agathodaemon; every Greek had an agathodaemon, and the Greek equivalent of a toast was offered to one's agathodaemon).[23] Timoleon was called savior; he set up a shrine to Fortune (Automatia) in his house; and his birthday, the festival of his daimon, became a public holiday.[24]

Other men might claim divine favor by having a patron among the gods; so Alcibiades may have had both Eros and Cybele as patrons;[25] and Clearchus of Heraclea claimed to be "son of Zeus". Alexander claimed the patronage of Dionysus and other gods and heroes;[26] he held a banquet at Bactra which combined the toast to his agathos daimon and libations to Dionysus, who was present within Alexander (and therefore the celebrants saluted Alexander rather than the hearth and altar, as they would have done for a toast).[27]

It was not always easy to distinguish between heroic honors, veneration for a man's good spirit, worship of his patron deity, worship of the Fortune of a city he founded, and worship of the man himself. One might slide into another: In Egypt, there was a cult of Alexander as god and as founder of Alexandria; Ptolemy I Soter had a separate cult as founder of Ptolemais, which presumably worshipped his daimon and then gave him heroic honors, but in his son's reign, the priests of Alexander also worshipped Ptolemy and Berenice as the Savior Gods (theoi soteres).[28]

Finally, a man might, like Philip II, assume some prerogatives of godhood and not others. The first Attalid kings of Pergamum, were not gods, and supported a cult of Dionysus Cathegemon, as their ancestor; they put the picture of Philetaerus, the first prince, on the coins, rather than their own. Eventually, like the Seleucids, they acquired an eponymous priest, and put themselves on the coinage; but they still were not called gods before their deaths. Pergamum was usually allied with Rome, and this may have influenced the eventual Roman practice.[29]

End of the Republic Edit

In the last decades of the Roman Republic, its leaders regularly assumed extra-constitutional powers. The mos majorum had required that magistrates hold office collectively, and for short periods; there were two consuls; even colonies were founded by boards of three men;[30] but these new leaders held power by themselves, and often for years.

The same men were often given extraordinary honors. Triumphs grew ever more splendid; Marius and Sulla, the rival leaders in Rome's first civil war, each founded cities, which they named after themselves; Sulla had annual games in his honor, at Rome itself, bearing his name; the unofficial worship of Marius is above. In the next generation, Pompey was allowed to wear his triumphal ornaments whenever he went to the Games at the Circus.[31] Such men also claimed a special relationship to the gods: Sulla's patron was Venus Felix, and at the height of his power, he added Felix to his own name; his opponent Marius believed he had a destiny, and that no ordinary man might kill him. Pompey also claimed Venus' personal favour, and built her a temple. But the first Roman to become a god, as part of aiming at monarchy, was Julius Caesar.

Divus Julius Edit

Caesar could claim personal ties to the gods, both by descent and by office. He was from the gens Julia, whose members contended to be descended from Aeneas and his mother Venus. In his eulogy for his aunt Julia, Caesar also indirectly claimed to be descended from Ancus Marcius and the kings of Rome, and so from Mars.[32] Moreover, when he was a teenager, Marius had named him flamen Dialis, the special priest of Jupiter. Sulla had cancelled this appointment; however, relatively early in his career, Caesar had become pontifex maximus, the chief priest of Rome, who fulfilled most of the religious duties of the ancient kings.[33] He had spent his twenties in the divine monarchies of the eastern Mediterranean, and was intimately familiar with Bithynia.[34] Caesar made use of these connections in his rise to power, but not more than his rivals would have, or more than his other advantages. When he spoke at the funeral of his aunt Julia in 69 BC, Julius Caesar spoke of her descent from the Roman kings, and implied his own; but he also reminded his audience she had been Marius' wife, and (by implication) that he was one of the few surviving Marians.

When, however, he defeated his rivals in 45 BC and assumed full personal control of the Roman state, he asserted more. During the Roman Civil War, since 49 BC, he had returned to the Eastern Mediterranean, where he had been called god and savior, and been familiar with the Ptolemaic Egyptian monarchy of Cleopatra, called Cleopatra Thea because of the weight she placed on her own divinity. Also, he had a new Senate to deal with. Most of the more resolute defenders of the Senate had joined with Pompey, and – one way or another – they were not sitting in the Senate. Caesar had replaced them with his own partisans, few of whom were committed to the old Roman methods; some of them were not even from Italy. It was rumoured that Caesar intended a despotic removal of power and wealth from Rome eastwards, perhaps to Alexandria or Ilium (Troy).[35]

During the Civil War, he had declared Venus his patron goddess: he vowed to erect a temple for Venus Victrix if she granted him the battle of Pharsalia, but he had built it, in 46 BC, to Venus Genetrix, which epithet combined her aspects as his ancestress, the mother of the Roman people, and the goddess invoked in the philosophical poem De rerum natura. The new Senate had also put up a statue of Caesar, with an inscription declaring him a demi-god, but he had it effaced, as not the claim he wished to make.[36] Granted the same extension of rights to triumphal dress as Pompey had been given, Caesar took to wearing his triumphal head-wreath "wherever and whenever", excusing this as a cover for his baldness. He may also have publicly worn the red boots and the toga picta ("painted", purple toga) usually reserved to a triumphing general for the day of his triumph; a costume also associated with the rex sacrorum (the priestly "king of the sacred rites" of Rome's monarchic era, later the pontifex maximus), the Monte Albano kings, and possibly the statue of Jupiter Capitolinus.

 
Denarius of C. Cossutius Maridianus, 44 BC, with the head of Julius Caesar on the obverse. The legend mentions PARENS PATRIAE

When the news of his final victory, at the battle of Munda, reached Rome, the Parilia, the games commemorating the founding of the city, were to be held the next day; they were rededicated to Caesar, as if he were founder. Statues were set up to "Caesar's Liberty", and to Caesar himself, as "unconquered god."[37] He was accorded a house at public expense which was built like a temple; his image was paraded with those of the gods;[38] his portrait was put on the coins (the first time a living man had appeared on Roman coinage). Early in 44 BC, he was called parens patriae (father of the country);[39] legal oaths were taken by his Genius; his birthday was made a public festival; the month Quinctilis was renamed July, in his honor (as June was named for Juno). At last a special priest, a flamen, was ordained for him; the first was to be Mark Antony, Caesar's adjutant, then consul. To be served by a flamen would rank Caesar not only as divine, but as an equal of Quirinus, Jupiter, and Mars. In Cicero's hostile account, the living Caesar's honours in Rome were already and unambiguously those of a full-blown god (deus).[40]

 
A denarius minted circa 18 BC. Obverse: CAESAR AVGVSTVS; Reverse: DIVVS IVLIV(S), with comet of eight rays, tail upward

Caesar's name as a living divinity – not as yet ratified by senatorial vote – was Divus Julius (or perhaps Jupiter Julius); divus, at that time, was a slightly archaic form of deus, suitable for poetry, implying some association with the bright heavens. A statue of him was erected next to the statues of Rome's ancient kings: with this, he seemed set to make himself King of Rome, in the Hellenistic style, as soon as he came back from the expedition to Parthia he was planning; but he was betrayed and killed in the Senate on 15 March 44 BC.[41][42][43][44]

An angry, grief-stricken crowd gathered in the Roman Forum to see his corpse and hear Mark Antony's funeral oration. Antony appealed to Caesar's divinity and vowed vengeance on his killers. A fervent popular cult to divus Julius followed. It was forcefully suppressed but the Senate soon succumbed to Caesarian pressure and confirmed Caesar as a divus of the Roman state. A comet interpreted as Caesar's soul in heaven was named the "Julian star" (sidus Iulium) and in 42 BC, with the "full consent of the Senate and people of Rome", Caesar's young heir, his great-nephew Octavian, held ceremonial apotheosis for his adoptive father.[45] In 40 BC Antony took up his appointment as flamen of the divus Julius. Provincial cult centres (caesarea) to the divus Julius were founded in Caesarian colonies such as Corinth.[46] Antony's loyalty to his late patron did not extend to Caesar's heir: but in the last significant act of the long-drawn civil war, on 1 August 31 BC, Octavian defeated Antony at Actium.

Caesar's heir Edit

 
Augustus as Jove, holding scepter and orb (first half of 1st century AD)[47]

In 30–29 BC, the koina of Asia and Bithynia requested permission to worship Octavian as their "deliverer" or "saviour".[48] This was by no means a novel request but it placed Octavian in a difficult position. He must satisfy popularist and traditionalist expectations and these could be notoriously incompatible. Marius Gratidianus's popular support and cult had ended in his public and spectacular death in 82 BC, at the hands of his enemies in the Senate; likewise Caesar's murder now marked an hubristic connection between living divinity and death.[46] Octavian had to respect the overtures of his Eastern allies, acknowledge the nature and intent of Hellenic honours and formalise his own pre-eminence among any possible rivals: he must also avoid a potentially fatal identification in Rome as a monarchic-deistic aspirant. It was decided that cult honours to him could be jointly offered to dea Roma, at cult centres to be built at Pergamum and Nicomedia. Provincials who were also Roman citizens were not to worship the living emperor, but might worship dea Roma and the divus Julius at precincts in Ephesus and Nicaea.[49][50][51]

In 29 BC Octavian dedicated the temple of the divus Julius at the site of Caesar's cremation. Not only had he dutifully, legally and officially honoured his adoptive father as a divus of the Roman state. He "had come into being" through the Julian star and was therefore the divi filius (son of the divinity).[52] But where Caesar had failed, Octavian had succeeded: he had restored the pax deorum (lit. peace of the gods) and re-founded Rome through "August augury".[53] In 27 BC he was voted – and accepted – the elevated title of Augustus.[54]

Religion and Imperium under Augustus Edit

Augustus appeared to claim nothing for himself, and innovate nothing: even the cult to the divus Julius had a respectable antecedent in the traditional cult to di parentes.[55] His unique – and still traditional – position within the Senate as princeps or primus inter pares (first among equals) offered a curb to the ambitions and rivalries that had led to the recent civil wars. As censor and pontifex maximus he was morally obliged to renew the mos maiores by the will of the gods and the "Senate and People of Rome" (Senatus Populusque Romanus). As tribune he encouraged generous public spending, and as princeps of the Senate he discouraged ambitious extravagance. He disbanded the remnants of the civil war armies to form new legions and a personal imperial guard (the Praetorian Guard): the patricians who still clung to the upper echelons of political, military and priestly power were gradually replaced from a vast, Empire-wide reserve of ambitious and talented equestrians. For the first time, senatorial status became heritable.[56]

Ordinary citizens could circumvent the complex, hierarchic bureaucracy of the State, and appeal directly to the emperor, as if to a private citizen. The emperor's name and image were ubiquitous – on state coinage and on the streets, within and upon the temples of the gods, and particularly in the courts and offices of the civil and military administration. Oaths were sworn in his name, with his image as witness. His official res gestae (achievements) included his repair of 82 temples in 28 BC alone, the founding or repair of 14 others in Rome during his lifetime and the overhauling or foundation of civic amenities including a new road, water supplies, Senate house and theatres.[57] Above all, his military pre-eminence had brought an enduring and sacred peace, which earned him the permanent title of imperator and made the triumph an Imperial privilege.[58] He seems to have managed all this within due process of law through a combination of personal brio, cheerfully veiled threats and self-deprecation as "just another senator".[59][60]

In Rome, it was enough that the office, munificence, auctoritas and gens of Augustus were identified with every possible legal, religious and social institution of the city. Should "foreigners" or private citizens wish to honour him as something more, that was their prerogative, within moderation; his acknowledgment of their loyalty demonstrated his own moral responsibility and generosity; "his" Imperial revenue funded temples, amphitheatres, theatres, baths, festivals and government. This unitary principle laid the foundations for what is now known as "imperial cult", which would be expressed in many different forms and emphases throughout the multicultural Empire.[citation needed]

Eastern provinces Edit

 
Augustus in Egyptian style, on the temple of Kalabsha in Egyptian Nubia.

In the Eastern provinces, cultural precedent ensured a rapid and geographically widespread dissemination of cult, extending as far as the Augustan military settlement at modern-day Najran.[61] Considered as a whole, these provinces present the Empire's broadest and most complex syntheses of imperial and native cult, funded through private and public initiatives and ranging from the god-like honours due a living patron to what Harland (2003) interprets as privately funded communal mystery rites.[62][63] The Greek cities of Roman Asia competed for the privilege of building high-status imperial cult centres (neocorates). Ephesus and Sardis, ancient rivals, had two apiece until the early 3rd century AD, when Ephesus was allowed an additional temple, to the reigning Emperor Caracalla. When he died, the city lost its brief, celebrated advantage through a religious technicality.[64]

The Eastern provinces offer some of the clearest material evidence for the imperial domus and familia as official models of divine virtue and moral propriety. Centres including Pergamum, Lesbos and Cyprus offered cult honours to Augustus and the Empress Livia: the Cypriot calendar honoured the entire Augustan familia by dedicating a month each (and presumably cult practise) to imperial family members, their ancestral deities and some of the major gods of the Romano-Greek pantheon. Coin evidence links Thea Livia with Hera and Demeter, and Julia the Elder with Venus Genetrix (Aphrodite). In Athens, Livia and Julia shared cult honour with Hestia (equivalent to Vesta), and the name of Gaius was linked to Ares (Mars). These Eastern connections were made within Augustus' lifetime – Livia was not officially consecrated in Rome until some time after her death. Eastern imperial cult had a life of its own.[65] Around 280, in the reign of the emperor Probus and just before the outbreak of the Diocletianic persecution, part of the Luxor Temple was converted to an imperial cult chapel.[66]

Western provinces Edit

The Western provinces were only recently "Latinised" following Caesar's Gallic Wars and most fell outside the Graeco-Roman cultural ambit. There were exceptions: Polybius mentions a past benefactor of New Carthage in Republican Iberia "said to have been offered divine honours".[67] In 74 BC, Roman citizens in Iberia burned incense to Metellus Pius as "more than mortal" in hope of his victory against Sertorius.[68] Otherwise, the West offered no native traditions of monarchic divinity or political parallels to the Greek koina to absorb the imperial cult as a romanising agency.[69] The Western provincial concilia emerged as direct creations of the imperial cult, which recruited existing local military, political and religious traditions to a Roman model. This required only the willingness of barbarian elites to "Romanise" themselves and their communities.[70]

 
Temple of Augustus and Livia, Vienne (modern France). Originally dedicated to Augustus and Roma. Augustus was deified on his death in 14 AD: his widow Livia was deified in 42 AD by Claudius.

The first known Western regional cults to Augustus were established with his permission around 19 BC in north-western ("Celtic") Spain and named arae sestianae after their military founder, L. Sestius Quirinalis Albinianus.[71] Soon after, in either 12 BC or 10 BC, the first provincial imperial cult centre in the West was founded at Lugdunum by Drusus, as a focus for his new tripartite administrative division of Gallia Comata. Lugdunum set the type for official Western cult as a form of Roman-provincial identity, parcelled into the establishment of military-administrative centres. These were strategically located within the unstable, "barbarian" Western provinces of the new Principate and inaugurated by military commanders who were – in all but one instance – members of the imperial family.[72]

The first priest of the Ara (altar) at Lugdunum's great imperial cult complex was Caius Julius Vercondaridubnus, a Gaul of the provincial elite, given Roman citizenship and entitled by his priestly office to participate in the local government of his provincial concilium. Though not leading to senatorial status, and almost certainly an annually elected office (unlike the traditional lifetime priesthoods of Roman flamines), priesthood in imperial provinces thus offered a provincial equivalent to the traditional Roman cursus honorum.[73] The rejection of cult spurned romanitas, priesthood and citizenship; in 9 AD Segimundus, imperial cult priest of what would later be known as Colonia Claudia Ara Agrippinensium (sited at modern Cologne in Germany) cast off or destroyed his priestly regalia to join the rebellion of his kinsman Arminius.[74]

Western provinces of Roman Africa Edit

In the early Principate, an altar inscribed Marazgu Aug(usto) Sac(rum) ("Dedicated to Marazgu Augustus"), identifies a local Ancient Libyan (Berber) deity with the supreme power of Augustus. In the senatorial province of Africa Proconsularis, altars to the Dii Magifie Augusti attest (according to Potter) a deity who was simultaneously local and universal, rather than one whose local identity was subsumed or absorbed by an Imperial divus or deity.[75] Two temples are attested to Roma and the divus Augustus: one dedicated under Tiberius at Leptis Magna, and another (Julio-Claudian) at Mactar.[76] A third at Carthage was dedicated to the Gens Augusta in the very early empire.[77]

The Imperial succession Edit

Julio-Claudian Edit

 
Temple of Divus Augustus, a major temple built to commemorate the deified Roman emperor Augustus.

Even as he prepared his adopted son Tiberius for the role of princeps and recommended him to the Senate as a worthy successor, Augustus seems to have doubted the propriety of dynastic imperium; this, however, was probably his only feasible course.[78] When Augustus died, he was voted a divus by the Senate, and his body was cremated in a sumptuous funeral; his soul was said to have ascended to the heavens, to join his adoptive father among the Olympians; his ashes were deposited in the Imperial Mausoleum, which tactfully identified him (and later, his descendants) by his Imperial names, rather than as divus.[79] After Augustus, the only new cults to Roman officials are those connected to the Imperial household.[80][81][82] On his death, the Senate debated and passed a lex de imperio which voted Tiberius princeps through his "proven merit in office", and awarded him the honorific Augustus as name and title.[83]

Tiberius accepted his position and title as emperor with apparent reluctance. Though he proved a capable and efficient administrator, he could not match his predecessor's extraordinary energy and charisma. Roman historians described him as morose and mistrustful. With a self-deprecation that may have been entirely genuine, he encouraged the cult to his father, and discouraged his own.[84] After much wrangling, he allowed a single temple in Smyrna to himself and the genius of the Senate in 26 AD; eleven cities had competed – with some vehemence and even violence – for the honour.[85] His lack of personal auctoritas allowed increasing praetorian influence over the Imperial house, the Senate and through it, the state.[86] In 31 AD, his praetorian prefect Sejanus – by now a virtual co-ruler – was implicated in the death of Tiberius' son and heir apparent Drusus, and was executed as a public enemy. In Umbria, the imperial cult priest (sevir Augustalis) memorialised "the providence of Tiberius Caesar Augustus, born for the eternity of the Roman name, upon the removal of that most pernicious enemy of the Roman people". In Crete, thanks were given to "the numen and foresight of Tiberius Caesar Augustus and the Senate" in foiling the conspiracy, but at his death the Senate and his heir Caligula chose not to officially deify him.[87]

Caligula's rule exposed the legal and moral contradictions of the Augustan "Republic". To legalise his succession, the Senate was compelled to constitutionally define his role, but the rites and sacrifices to the living genius of the emperor already acknowledged his constitutionally unlimited powers. The princeps played the role of primus inter pares only through personal self-restraint and decorum. It became evident that Caligula had little of either. He seems to have taken the cult of his own genius very seriously and is said to have enjoyed acting the god – or rather, several of them. However, his infamous and oft-cited impersonations of major deities may represent no more than his priesthood of their cults, a desire to shock and a penchant for triumphal dress[88] or simply mental illness.[89] Whatever his plans, there is no evidence for his official cult as a living divus in Rome or his replacement of state gods, and none for major deviations or innovations in his provincial cult.[90] His reported sexual relations with his sister Drusilla and her deification after death aroused scorn from later historians; after Caligula's death, her cult was simply allowed to fade. His reported extortion of priesthood fees from unwilling senators are marks of private cult and personal humiliations among the elite. Caligula's fatal offense was to willfully "insult or offend everyone who mattered", including the senior military officers who assassinated him.[91] The histories of his reign highlight his wayward impiety. Perhaps not only his: in 40 AD the Senate decreed that the "emperor should sit on a high platform even in the very Senate house".[92] Claudius (his successor and uncle) intervened to limit the damage to the imperial house and those who had conspired against it and had Caligula's public statues discreetly removed.[93]

 
Cameo depicting the apotheosis of Claudius (mid-1st century CE)

Claudius was chosen emperor by Caligula's Praetorian Guard and consolidated his position with cash payments (donativa) to the military. The Senate was forced to ratify the choice and accept the affront. Claudius adopted the cognomen Caesar, deified Augustus' wife, Livia, 13 years after her death and in 42 AD was granted the title pater patriae (father of the country), but relations between emperor and Senate seem to have been irreparable.[94] Claudius showed none of Caligula's excesses. He seems to have entirely refused a cult to his own genius: but the offer of cult simultaneously acknowledged the high status of those empowered to grant it and the extraordinary status of the princeps – Claudius' repeated refusals may have been interpreted as offensive to Senate, provincials and the imperial office itself. He further offended the traditional hierarchy by promoting his own trusted freedmen as imperial procurators; those closest to the emperor held high status through their proximity.[95]

It has been assumed that he allowed a single temple for his cult in Britain, following his conquest there.[96] The temple is certain – it was sited at Camulodunum (modern Colchester), the main colonia in the province, and was a focus of British wrath during the Boudiccan revolt of 60 AD.[97] But cult to the living Claudius there is very unlikely: he had already refused Alexandrine cult honours as "vulgar" and impious and cult to living emperors was associated with arae (altars), not temples.[98] The British worship offered him as a living divus is probably no more than a cruel literary judgment on his worth as emperor. Despite his evident respect for republican norms, he was not taken seriously by his own class, and in Seneca's fawning Neronian fiction, the Roman gods cannot take him seriously as a divus – the wild British might be more gullible.[99] In reality, they proved resentful enough to rebel, though probably less against the Claudian divus than against brutal abuses and the financial burden represented by its temple.

Claudius died in 54 AD and was deified by his adopted son and successor Nero.[100] After an apparently magnificent funeral, the divus Claudius was given a temple on Rome's disreputable Caelian Hill.[101] Fishwick remarks that "the malicious humour of the site can hardly have been lost by those in the know... the location of Claudius' temple in Britain (the occasion for his "pathetic triumph") may be more of the same".[102]

Once in power, Nero allowed Claudius' cult to lapse, built his Domus Aurea over the unfinished temple, indulged his sybaritic and artistic inclinations and allowed the cult of his own genius as pater familias of the Roman people.[103] Senatorial attitudes to him appear to have been largely negative. He was overthrown in a military coup, and his institutions of cult to his dead wife Poppaea and infant daughter Claudia Augusta were abandoned. Otherwise, he seems to have been a popular emperor, particularly in the Eastern provinces. Tacitus reports a senatorial proposal to dedicate a temple to Nero as a living divus, taken as ominous because "divine honours are not paid to an emperor till he has ceased to live among men".[104]

Flavian Edit

 
The Genius of Domitian, with aegis and cornucopia, found near the Via Labicana, Esquiline

Nero's death saw the end of imperial tenure as a privilege of ancient Roman (patrician and senatorial) families. In a single chaotic year, power passed violently from one to another of four emperors. The first three promoted their own genius cult: the last two of these attempted Nero's restitution and promotion to divus. The fourth, Vespasian – son of an equestrian from Reate – secured his Flavian dynasty through reversion to an Augustan form of principate and renewed the imperial cult of divus Julius.[105][106] Vespasian could not validate his reign in the same way as the previous Julio-Claudian dynasty, who could trace their lineage back to the divine ancestry of Julius Caesar. Without the ability to trace their origins to any Roman deity, the new Flavian dynasty under Vespasian had to establish a new standard of policy in order to rule over a people predisposed to the divine imperial cult tradition.[107] Vespasian was respected for his "restoration" of Roman tradition and the Augustan modesty of his reign. He dedicated state cult to genio populi Romani (the genius of the Roman people), respected senatorial "Republican" values and repudiated Neronian practice by removing various festivals from the public calendars, which had (in Tacitus' unsparing assessment) become "foully sullied by the flattery of the times".[108] He may have had the head of Nero's Colossus replaced or recut for its dedication (or rededication) to the sun god in 75 AD.[109][110][111] Following the first Jewish Revolt and the destruction of the Temple in Jerusalem in 70 AD, he imposed the didrachmon, formerly paid by Jews for their Temple's upkeep but now re-routed to Jupiter Capitolinus as victor over them "and their God". Jews who paid the tax were exempt from the cult to imperial state deities. Those who offered it however were ostracised from their own communities.[112] Vespasian appears to have approached his own impending cult with dry humour: according to Suetonius, his last words were puto deus fio ("I think I'm turning into a god"). Vespasian's son Titus reigned for two successful years then died of natural causes. He was deified and replaced by his younger brother Domitian.

Within two weeks of accession, Domitian had restored the cult of the ruling emperor's genius.[113] He remains a controversial figure, described as one of the very few emperors to scandalously style himself a living divus, as evidenced by the use of "master and god" (dominus et deus) in imperial documents. However, there are no records of Domitian's personal use of the title, its use in official address or cult to him, its presence on his coinage or in the Arval Acts relating to his state cult. It occurs only in his later reign and was almost certainly initiated and used by his own procurators (who in the Claudian tradition were also his freedmen).[114] Like any other pater familias and patron, Domitian was "master and god" to his extended familia, including his slaves, freedmen and clients. Pliny's descriptions of sacrifice to Domitian on the Capitol are consistent with the entirely unremarkable "private and informal" rites accorded to living emperors. Domitian was a traditionalist, severe and repressive but respected by the military and the general populace. He admired Augustus and may have sought to emulate him but made the same tactless error as Caligula in treating the Senate as clients and inferiors, rather than as the fictive equals required by Augustan ideology. His assassination was planned and implemented from within his court, and his name officially but rather unsystematically erased from inscriptions.[115]

Nervan-Antonine Edit

The Senate chose the elderly, childless and apparently reluctant Nerva as emperor. Nerva had long-standing family and consular connections with the Julio-Claudian and Flavian families but proved a dangerously mild and indecisive princeps: he was persuaded to abdicate in favour of Trajan. Pliny the Younger's panegyric of 100 AD claims the visible restoration of senatorial authority and dignity throughout the empire under Trajan, but while he praises the emperor's modesty, Pliny does not disguise the precarious nature of this autocratic gift.[116] Under Trajan's very capable civil and military leadership, the office of emperor was increasingly interpreted as an earthly viceregency of the divine order. He would prove an enduring model for Roman imperial virtues.[117][118]

The emperor Hadrian's Hispano-Roman origins and marked pro-Hellenism changed the focus of imperial cult. His standard coinage still identifies with the genius populi Romani, but other issues stress his identification with Hercules Gaditanus (Hercules of Gades), and Rome's imperial protection of Greek civilisation.[119] Commemorative coinage shows him "raising up" provincial deities (thus elevating and "restoring" the provinces); he promoted Sagalassos in Greek Pisidia as the Empire's leading imperial cult centre and in 131–2 AD he sponsored the exclusively Greek Panhellenion.[120] He was said to have "wept like a woman" at the death of his young lover Antinous, and arranged his apotheosis. Dio claims that Hadrian was held to ridicule for this emotional indulgence, particularly as he had delayed the apotheosis of his own sister Paulina after her death.[121]

 
Antinous portrayed as Dionysus in a relief from the area between Anzio et Lanuvium

The cult of Antinous would prove one of remarkable longevity and devotion, particularly in the Eastern provinces. Bithynia, as his birthplace, featured his image on coinage as late as the reign of Caracalla (r. 211–217). His popular cult appears to have thrived well into the 4th century, when he became the "whipping boy of pagan worship" in Christian polemic. Vout (2007) remarks his humble origins, untimely death and "resurrection" as theos, and his identification – and sometimes misidentification by later scholarship – with the images and religious functions of Apollo, Dionysius/Bacchus, and later, Osiris.[122] In Rome itself he was also theos on two of three surviving inscriptions but was more closely associated with hero-cult, which allowed direct appeals for his intercession with "higher gods".[123][124] Hadrian imposed the imperial cult to himself and Jupiter on Judaea following the Bar Kokhba revolt. He was predeceased by his wife Vibia Sabina. Both were deified but Hadrian's case had to be pleaded by his successor Antoninus Pius.[125]

Marcus Aurelius' tutor Fronto offers the best evidence of imperial portraiture as a near-ubiquitous feature of private and public life.[126] Though evidence for private emperor worship is as sparse in this era as in all others, Fronto's letters imply the genius cult of the living emperor as an official, domestic and personal practice, probably more common than cult to the divi in this and other periods.[127]

Marcus' son Commodus succumbed to the lures of self-indulgence, easy populism and rule by favourites.[128][129] He described his reign as a "golden age", and himself as a new Romulus and "re-founder" of Rome, but was deeply antagonistic toward the Senate – he reversed the standard "Republican" imperial formula to populus senatusque romanus (the people and senate of Rome). He increasingly identified himself with the demigod Hercules in statuary, temples and in the arena, where he liked to entertain as a bestiarius in the morning and a gladiator in the afternoon. In the last year of his life he was voted the official title Romanus Hercules; the state cult to Hercules acknowledged him as heroic, a divinity or semi-divinity (but not a divus) who had once been mortal.[130] Commodus may have intended declaring himself as a living god some time before his murder on the last day of 192 AD.[131]

The Nervan-Antonine dynasty ended in chaos. The Senate declared damnatio memoriae on Commodus, whose urban prefect Pertinax was declared emperor by the Praetorian Guard in return for the promise of very large donativa.[132] Pertinax had risen through equestrian ranks by military talent and administrative efficiency to become senator, consul and finally and briefly emperor; he was murdered by his Praetorians for attempting to cap their pay.[133] Pertinax was replaced by Didius Julianus, who had promised cash to the Praetorians and restoration of power to the Senate. Julianus began his reign with an ill-judged appeal to the memory of Commodus, a much resented attempt to bribe the populace en masse and the use of Praetorian force against them. In protest, a defiant urban crowd occupied the senatorial seats at the Circus Maximus.[134] Against a background of civil war among competing claimants in the provinces, Septimius Severus emerged as a likely victor. The Senate soon voted for the death of Julianus, the deification of Pertinax and the elevation of Septimius as emperor.[135] Only a year had passed since the death of Commodus.

Severan Edit

"Sit divus dum non sit vivus" (let him be a divus as long as he is not alive). Attributed to Caracalla, before murdering his co-emperor and brother Geta.[136]

 
The Severan Tondo shows Septimius Severus, his wife Julia Domna, their younger son Caracalla (lower right of picture) and the obliterated image of his murdered co-heir, Geta. Staatliche Museen zu Berlin.

In 193 AD, Septimius Severus triumphally entered Rome and gave apotheosis to Pertinax. He cancelled the Senate's damnatio memoriae of Commodus, deified him as a frater (brother) and thereby adopted Marcus Aurelius as his own ancestor through an act of filial piety.[137] Severan coin images further re-enforced Severus' association with prestigious Antonine dynasts and the genius populi Romani.[138][139]

Severus' reign represents a watershed in relations between Senate, emperors, and the military.[140] Senatorial consent defined divine imperium as a republican permission for the benefit of the Roman people, and apotheosis was a statement of senatorial powers. Where Vespasian had secured his position with appeals to the genius of the Senate and Augustan tradition, Severus overrode the customary preferment of senators to senior military office. He increased plebeian privilege in Rome, stationed a loyal garrison there and selected his own commanders. He paid personal attention to the provinces, as sources of revenue, military manpower and unrest. Following his defeat of his rival Clodius Albinus at Lugdunum, he re-founded and reformed its imperial cult centre: dea Roma was removed from the altar and confined to the temple along with the deified Augusti.[141] Fishwick interprets the obligatory new rites as those due any pater familias from his inferiors.[142] Severus' own patron deities, Melqart/Hercules and Liber/Bacchus, took pride of place with himself and his two sons at the Secular Games of 204 AD.[143] Severus died of natural causes in 211 AD at Eboracum (modern York) while on campaign in Britannia, after leaving the Empire equally to Caracalla and his older brother Geta, along with advice to "be harmonious, enrich the soldiers, and scorn all other men."[144]

 
A denarius of Geta

By 212 AD, Caracalla had murdered Geta, pronounced his damnatio memoriae and issued the Constitutio Antoniniana: this gave full Roman citizenship to all free inhabitants of the Empire.[145] and was couched as a generous invitation to celebrate the "victory of the Roman people" in foiling Geta's "conspiracy". In reality, Caracalla was faced by an endemic shortfall of cash and recruits. His "gift" was a far from popular move, as most of its recipients were humiliores of peasant status and occupation – approximately 90% of the total population. Humiliores they remained, but now liable to pay taxes, serve in the legions and adopt the name of their "liberator". Where other emperors had employed the mos maiorum of family obligation at the largely symbolic level of genius cult, Caracalla literally identified his personal survival with the state and "his" citizens.[146] Caracalla inherited the devotion of his father's soldiery but his new citizens were not inclined to celebrate and his attempts to court popularity in Commodan style seem to have misfired.[147] In Philostratus' estimation, his embrace of Empire foundered on his grudging, parochial mindset. He was assassinated in 217 AD, with the possible collusion of his praetorian prefect Macrinus.[148]

The military hailed Macrinus as imperator, and he arranged for the apotheosis of Caracalla. Aware of the impropriety of his unprecedented leap through the traditional cursus honorum from equestrian to emperor, he respectfully sought senatorial approval for his "self-nomination". It was granted – the new emperor had a lawyer's approach to imperium,[149] but his foreign policy proved too cautious and placatory for the military.[150] After little more than a year, he was murdered in a coup and replaced with an emperor of Syrian background and Severan descent, Varius Avitus Bassianus, more usually known by the Latinised name of his god and his priesthood, Elagabalus.[151]

The 14-year-old emperor brought his solar-mountain deity from his native Emesa to Rome and into official imperial cult.[152] In Syria, the cult of Elagabalus was popular and well established. In Rome, it was a foreign and (according to some ancient sources) disgusting Eastern novelty. In 220 AD, the priest Elagabalus replaced Jupiter with the god Elagabalus as sol invictus (the unconquered Sun) and thereafter neglected his Imperial role as pontifex maximus. According to Marius Maximus, he ruled from his degenerate domus through prefects who included among others a charioteer, a locksmith, a barber, and a cook.[153] At the very least, he appears to have been regarded as an unacceptably effete eccentric by the Senate and military alike. He was assassinated by the Praetorians at the age of 18, subjected to the fullest indignities of damnatio memoriae and replaced with his young cousin Alexander Severus, the last of his dynasty, who reigned for 13 years until killed in a mutiny in 235.

Imperial crisis and the Dominate Edit

The end of the Severan dynasty marked the breakdown of central imperium. Against a background of economic hyperinflation and latterly, endemic plague, rival provincial claimants fought for supremacy and failing this, set up their own provincial Empires. Most emperors seldom even saw Rome, and had only notional relationships with their senates. In the absence of coordinated Imperial military response, foreign peoples seized the opportunity for invasion and plunder.

 
Antoninianus of Philip the Arab showing him in the radiate crown

Maximinus Thrax (reigned 235–8 AD) sequestered the resources of state temples in Rome to pay his armies. The temples of the divi were first in line. It was an unwise move for his own posterity, as the grant or withholding of apotheosis remained an official judgment of Imperial worthiness, but the stripping of the temples of state gods caused far greater offense. Maximinus's actions more likely show need in extreme crisis than impiety, as he had his wife deified on her death,[154] but in a rare display of defiance the Senate deified his murdered predecessor, then openly rebelled.[155] His replacement, Gordian I, reigned briefly but successfully and was made a divus on his death. A succession of short-lived soldier-emperors followed. Further development in imperial cult appears to have stalled until Philip the Arab, who dedicated a statue to his father as divine in his home town of Philippopolis and brought the body of his young predecessor Gordian III to Rome for apotheosis. Coins of Philip show him in the radiate crown (suggestive of solar cult or a Hellenised form of imperial monarchy), with Rome's temple to Venus and dea Roma on the reverse.[156]

In 249 AD, Philip was succeeded (or murdered and usurped) by his praetorian prefect Decius, a traditionalist ex-consul and governor. After an accession of doubtful validity, Decius justified himself as rightful "restorer and saviour" of Empire and its religio: early in his reign he issued a coin series of imperial divi in radiate (solar) crowns.[157] Philip, the three Gordians, Pertinax and Claudius were omitted, presumably because Decius thought them unworthy of the honour.[158][159] In the wake of religious riots in Egypt, he decreed that all subjects of the Empire must actively seek to benefit the state through witnessed and certified sacrifice to "ancestral gods" or suffer a penalty: sacrifice on Rome's behalf by loyal subjects would define them and their gods as Roman.[160] Only Jews were exempt from this obligation.[161] The Decian edict required that refusal of sacrifice be tried and punished at proconsular level. Apostasy was sought, rather than capital punishment.[162] A year after its due deadline, the edict was allowed to expire and shortly after this, Decius himself died.[163]

Valerian (253–60) identified Christianity as the largest, most stubbornly self-interested of non-Roman cults, outlawed Christian assembly and urged Christians to sacrifice to Rome's traditional gods.[164][165] His son and co-Augustus Gallienus, an initiate of the Eleusinian Mysteries, identified himself with traditional Roman gods and the virtue of military loyalty.[166] Aurelian (270–75) appealed for harmony among his soldiers (concordia militum), stabilised the Empire and its borders and established an official, Hellenic form of unitary cult to the Palmyrene Sol Invictus in Rome's Campus Martius. The Senate hailed him as restitutor orbis (restorer of the world) and deus et dominus natus (god and born ruler); he was murdered by his Praetorians. His immediate successors consolidated his achievements: coinage of Probus (276–82) shows him in radiate solar crown, and his prolific variety of coin types include issues showing the temple of Venus and Dea Roma in Rome.[167][168]

These policies and preoccupations culminated in Diocletian's Tetrarchy: the Empire was divided into Western and Eastern administrative blocs, each with an Augustus (senior emperor), helped by a Caesar (junior emperor) as Augustus-in-waiting. Provinces were divided and subdivided: their imperial bureaucracy became extraordinary in size, scope and attention to detail. Diocletian was a religious conservative. On his accession in AD 284, he held games in honour of the divus Antinous.[169] Where his predecessors had attempted the persuasion and coercion of recalcitrant sects, Diocletian launched a series of ferocious reactions known in Church history as the Diocletianic Persecution. According to Lactantius, this began with a report of ominous haruspicy in Diocletian's domus and a subsequent (but undated) dictat of placatory sacrifice by the entire military.[170] A date of 302 is regarded as likely and Eusebius also says the persecutions of Christians began in the army.[171] However, Maximilian's martyrdom (295) came from his refusal of military service, and Marcellus' (298) for renouncing his military oath. Legally, these were military insurrections and Diocletian's edict may have followed these and similar acts of conscience and faith.[164] An unknown number of Christians appear to have suffered the extreme and exemplary punishments traditionally reserved for rebels and traitors.

Under Diocletian's expanded imperial collegia, imperial honours distinguished both Augusti from their Caesares, and Diocletian (as senior Augustus) from his colleague Maximian.[172] While the division of Empire and imperium seemed to offer the possibility of a peaceful and well-prepared succession, its unity required the highest investiture of power and status in one man. An elaborate choreography of etiquette surrounded the approach to the imperial person and imperial progressions. The senior Augustus in particular was made a separate and unique being, accessible only through those closest to him.[173]

 
The near identical official images of the collegial Imperial Tetrarchs conceal Diocletian's seniority and the internal stresses of his empire.

Diocletian's avowed conservatism almost certainly precludes a systematic design toward personal elevation as a "divine monarch". Rather, he formally elaborated imperial ceremony as a manifestation of the divine order of Empire and elevated emperorship as the supreme instrument of the divine will. The idea was Augustan, or earlier, expressed most clearly in Stoic philosophy and the solar cult, especially under Aurelian. At the very beginning of his reign, before his Tetrarchy, Diocletian had adopted the signum of Jovius; his co-Augustus adopted the title Herculius. During the Tetrarchy, such titles were multiplied, but with no clear reflection of implicit divine seniority: in one case, the divine signum of the Augustus is inferior to that of his Caesar. These divine associations may have followed a military precedent of emperors as comes to divinities (or divinities as comes to emperors). Moreover, the divine signum appears in the fairly narrow context of court panegyric and civil etiquette. It makes no appearance on the general coinage or statuary of the Tetrarchs, who are presented as impersonal, near-homogenous abstractions of imperial might and unity.[174][175]

Context and precedents Edit

The Augustan settlement was promoted by its contemporary apologists as restorative and conservative rather than revolutionary.[176] Official cult to the genius of the living princeps as "first among equals" recognised his exceptional powers, his capacity for self-restraint, and his pious respect for Republican traditions. "Good" emperors rejected offers of official cult as a living deity, and accepted the more modest honour of genius cult. Claims that later emperors sought and obtained divine honours in Rome reflect their bad relationship with their senates: in Tertullian's day, it was still "a curse to name the emperor a god before his death". On the other hand, to judge from the domestic ubiquity of the emperor's image, private cults to living emperors are as likely in Rome as elsewhere. As Gradel observes, no Roman was ever prosecuted for sacrificing to his emperor.[177][178]

Divus, deus and the numen Edit

 
Dedicatory inscription (CIL 14.04319) to the "numen of the House of the Augustus", from Ostia Antica

The divi had some form of precedent in the di parentes, divine ancestors who received ancestral rites as manes (gods of the underworld) during the Parentalia and other important domestic festivals. Their powers were limited; deceased mortals did not normally possess the divine power (numen) of the higher gods.[179][180] Deceased emperors did not automatically become divi; they must be nominated for the privilege. Their case was discussed by the Senate, then put to the vote.[181][182] As long as the correct rituals and sacrifice were offered, the divus would be received by the heavenly gods as a coelicola (a dweller in heaven), a lesser being than themselves.[183] Popular belief held that the divus Augustus would be personally welcomed by Jupiter. In Seneca's Apocolocyntosis, on the other hand, the unexpected arrival of the divinised Claudius creates a problem for the Olympians, who have no idea who or what he is; and when they find out, they cannot think what to do with him. Seneca's sarcastic wit, an unacceptable impiety towards a deus, freely portrays the divus Claudius as just a dead, ridiculous and possibly quite bad emperor.[184] Though their images were sacrosanct and their rites definitively divine[185] divi could be created, unmade, reinstated or simply forgotten.[186] Augustus and Trajan appear to have remained the ideals for longer than any, and cult to "good" divi appears to have lasted well into the late Imperial dominate.

The immense power of living emperors, on the other hand, was mediated through the encompassing agency of the state. Once acknowledged as pater familias to an empire, a princeps was naturally entitled to genius cult from Imperial subjects of all classes. Cult to a living emperor's numen was quite another matter and might be interpreted as no less than a statement of divine monarchy. Imperial responses to the first overtures of cult to the August numen were therefore extremely cautious.[187] Only much later, probably in consequence of the hyperinflation of honours to living emperors, could a living emperor be openly, formally addressed as numen praesens (the numinous presence).[188]

The obscure relationship between deus, divus and numen in imperial cult might simply reflect its origins as a pragmatic, respectful and somewhat evasive Imperial solution using broad terminology whose meanings varied according to context. For Beard et al., a practicable and universal Roman cult of deified emperors and others of the Imperial house must have hinged on the paradox that a mortal might, like the semi-divine "heroic" figures of Hercules, Aeneas and Romulus, possess or acquire sufficient measure of numen to rise above their mortal condition and be in the company of the gods, yet remain mortal in the eyes of Roman traditionalists.[189]

Sacrificium Edit

 
Marcus Aurelius as pontifex offers sacrifice to Jupiter Capitolinus in gratitude for victory. Once part of the Arch of Marcus Aurelius. Capitoline Museum, Rome.

Sacred offerings (sacrificium) formed the contract of public and private religio, from oaths of office, treaty and loyalty to business contracts and marriage. Participation in sacrificium acknowledged personal commitment to the broader community and its values, which under Decius became a compulsory observance.[190] Livy believed that military and civil disasters were the consequence of error (vitium) in augury, neglect of due and proper sacrifice and the impious proliferation of "foreign" cults and superstitio.[191] Religious law focused on the sacrificial requirements of particular deities on specific occasions.[192]

In Julio-Claudian Rome, the Arval priesthood sacrificed to Roman state gods at various temples for the continued welfare of the Imperial family on their birthdays, accession anniversaries and to mark extraordinary events such as the quashing of conspiracy or revolt. On 3 January they consecrated the annual vows: sacrifice promised in the previous year was paid, as long as the gods had kept the Imperial family safe for the contracted time. If not, it could be withheld, as it was in the annual vow following the death of Trajan.[193] In Pompeii, the genius of the living emperor was offered a bull: presumably a standard practice in imperial cult at this time, though lesser offerings of wine, cakes and incense were also given, especially in the later Imperial era. The divi and genii were offered the same kind of sacrifice as the state gods, but cult officials seem to have offered Christians the possibility of sacrifice to emperors as the lesser act.[194][195]

Augury, ira deorum and pax deorum Edit

By ancient tradition, presiding magistrates sought divine opinion of proposed actions through an augur, who read the divine will through the observation of natural signs in the sacred space (templum) of sacrifice.[196] Magistrates could use their right of augury (ius augurum) to adjourn and overturn the process of law, but were obliged to base their decision on the augur's observations and advice. For Cicero, this made the augur the most powerful authority in the Late Republic.[197][198]

In the later Republic augury came under the supervision of the college of pontifices, a priestly-magistral office whose powers were increasingly woven into the cursus honorum. The office of pontifex maximus eventually became a de facto consular office.[199] When the consul Lepidus died, his office as pontifex maximus passed to Augustus, who took priestly control over the State oracles (including the Sibylline books), and used his powers as censor to suppress unapproved oracles.[200] Octavian's honorific title of Augustus indicated his achievements as expressions of divine will: where the impiety of the Late Republic had provoked heavenly disorder and wrath (ira deorum), his obedience to divine ordinance brought divine peace (pax deorum).

Genius and household cults Edit

The mos maiorum established the near-monarchic familial authority of the ordinary pater familias ("the father of the family" or the "owner of the family estate"), his obligations to family and community and his priestly duties to his lares and domestic penates. His position was hereditary and dynastic, unlike the elected, time-limited offices of republican magistrates. His family – and especially his slaves and freedmen – owed a reciprocal duty of cult to his genius.[201][202]

 
A winged genius raises Antoninus Pius and his Empress Faustina in apotheosis, escorted by two eagles. From the column-base of Antoninus Pius, Vatican.

Genius (pl. genii) was the essential spirit and generative power – depicted as a serpent or as a perennial youth, often winged – within an individual and their clan (gens, pl. gentes), such as the Julli (Julians) of Julius Caesar. A pater familias could confer his name, a measure of his genius and a role in his household rites, obligations and honours upon those he adopted. As Caesar's adopted heir, Octavian stood to inherit the genius, heritable property and honours of his adoptive father in addition to those obtained through his own birth gens and efforts.[203] The exceptionally potent genius of living emperors expressed the will of the gods through Imperial actions.[204] In 30 BC, libation-offerings to the genius of Octavian (later Augustus) became a duty at public and private banquets, and from 12 BC, state oaths were sworn by the genius of the living emperor.[205]

The Roman pater familias offered daily cult to his lares and penates, and to his di parentes/divi parentes, in domestic shrines and in the fires of the household hearth.[206] As goddess of all hearths, including the ritual hearth of the State, Vesta connected the "public" and "private" duties of citizens. Her official cults were supervised by the pontifex maximus from a state-owned house near the temple of Vesta. When Augustus became pontifex maximus in 12 BC he gave the Vestals his own house on the Palatine. His penates remained there as its domestic deities and were soon joined by his lares. His gift therefore tied his domestic cult to the sanctified Vestals and Rome's sacred hearth and symbolically extended his domus to the state and its inhabitants. He also co-opted and promoted the traditional and predominantly plebeian Compitalia shrines and extended their festivals, whose lares were known thereafter as Augusti.[207][208][209][210][211]

Role in the military Edit

 
The cult of Mithras was gradually absorbed within Imperial solar monism: sol Invictus is to the left of picture. The plaque was commissioned by an evidently wealthy Imperial slave. Vatican Museum.

Rome's citizen legionaries appear to have maintained their Marian traditions. They gave cult to Jupiter for the emperor's well-being and regular cult to State, local and personal divinities. Cult to the Imperial person and familia was generally offered on Imperial accessions, anniversaries and renewal of annual vows: a bust of the ruling emperor was kept in the legionary insignia shrine for the purpose, attended by a designated military imaginifer. By the time of the early Severans, the legions offered cult to the state gods, the Imperial divi, the current emperor's numen, genius and domus (or familia), and special cult to the Empress as "mother of the camp." At around this time, Mithraic cults became very popular with the military and provided a basis for syncretic imperial cult which absorbed Mithras into Solar and Stoic Monism as a focus of military concordia and loyalty.[212][213][214]

Altars, temples and priesthoods Edit

An imperial cult temple was known as a caesareum (Latin) or sebasteion (Greek). In Fishwick's analysis, cult to Roman state divi was associated with temples, and the genius cult to the living emperor with his altar. The emperor's image, and its siting within the temple complex, focused attention on his person and attributes, and his position in the divine and human hierarchies. Expenditure on the physical expression of imperial cult was vast and was only curbed by the Imperial crisis of the 3rd century. As far as is known, no new temples to state divi were built after the reign of Marcus Aurelius.[215]

 
Interior of the College of the Augustales at Herculaneum

The Imperial divi and living genii appear to have been served by separate ceremonies and priesthoods. Emperors themselves could be priests of state gods, the divi and their own genius cult images. The latter practice illustrates the Imperial genius as innate to its holder but separable from him as a focus of respect and cult, formally consistent with cult to the personification of ideas and ideals such as Fortune (Fortuna), peace (Pax) or victory (Victoria) et al. in conjunction with the genius of the emperor, Senate or Roman people; Julius Caesar had showed his affinity with the virtue of clemency (clementia), a personal quality associated with his divine ancestor and patron goddess Venus. Priests typically and respectfully identified their function by manifesting the appearance and other properties of their deus. The duties of Imperial priests were both religious and magisterial: they included the provision of approved Imperial portraits, statues and sacrifice, the institution of regular calendrical cult and the inauguration of public works, Imperial games (state ludi) and munera to authorised models. In effect, priests throughout the empire were responsible for re-creating, expounding and celebrating the extraordinary gifts, powers and charisma of emperors.[216]

As part of his religious reforms, Augustus revived, subsidised and expanded the Compitalia games and priesthoods, dedicated to the Lares of the vici (neighbourhoods), to include cult to his own Lares (or to his genius as a popular benefactor). Thereafter, the Lares Compitales were known as Lares Augusti. Tiberius created a specialised priesthood, the Sodales Augustales, dedicated to the cult of the deceased, deified Augustus. This priestly office, and the connections between the Compitalia cults and the Imperial household, appear to have lasted for as long as the imperial cult itself.[217]

Saviours and monotheists Edit

 
Livia in the guise of a goddess with cornucopia

Greek philosophies had significant influence in the development of imperial cult. Stoic cosmologists saw history as an endless cycle of destruction and renewal, driven by fortuna (luck or fortune), fatum (fate) and logos (the universal divine principle). The same forces inevitably produced a sōtēr (saviour) who would transform the destructive and "unnatural disorder" of chaos and strife to pax, fortuna and salus (peace, good fortune and well-being) and is thus identified with solar cults such as Apollo and Sol Invictus. Livy (in the early to mid 1st century BC), and Lucan (in the 1st century AD) interpreted the crisis of the late Republic as a destructive phase which led to religious and constitutional renewal by Augustus and his restoration of peace, good fortune and well-being to the Roman people. Augustus was a messianic figure who personally and rationally instigated a "golden age" – the Pax Augusta – and was patron, priest and protege to a range of solar deities. The Imperial order was therefore not merely justified by appeals to the divine; it was represented as an innately natural, benevolent and divine institution.[218][219]

The imperial cult tolerated and later included specific forms of pluralistic monism. For imperial cult apologists, monotheists had no rational grounds for refusal, but imposition of cult was counter productive. Jews presented a special case. Long before the civil war, Judaism had been tolerated in Rome by diplomatic treaty with Graeco-Judaean rulers. It was brought to prominence and scrutiny after Judaea's enrollment as a client kingdom in 63 BC.[220][221] The following Jewish diaspora helped disperse early "Judaic" Christianity. Early Christians appear to have been regarded as a sub-sect of Judaism and as such were sporadically tolerated.[222]

Jewish sources on emperors, polytheistic cult and the meaning of Empire are fraught with interpretive difficulties. In Caligula's reign, Jews resisted the placing of Caligula's statue in their Temple and pleaded that their offerings and prayers to Yahweh on his behalf amounted to compliance with his request for worship.[223] According to Philo, Caligula was unimpressed because the offering was not made directly to him (whether to his genius or his numen is never made clear) but the statue was never installed. Philo does not challenge the imperial cult itself: he commends the god-like honours given Augustus as "the first and the greatest and the common benefactor" but Caligula shames the Imperial tradition by acting "like an Egyptian".[224] However, Philo is clearly pro-Roman: a major feature of the First Jewish Revolt (AD 66) was the ending of Jewish sacrifices to Rome and the emperor and the defacement of imperial images.[225]

The imperial cult and Christianity Edit

To pagan Romans a simple act of sacrifice, whether to ancestral gods under Decius or state gods under Diocletian, represented adherence to Roman tradition and loyalty to the pluralistic unity of the Empire. Refusal to adhere to the cult was treason. Christians, however, identified "Hellenistic honours" as parodies of true worship.[226][227] Under the reign of Nero or Domitian, according to Momigliano, the author of the Book of Revelation represented Rome as the "Beast from the sea", Judaeo-Roman elites as the "Beast from the land" and the charagma (official Roman stamp) as a sign of the Beast.[228] Some Christian thinkers perceived divine providence in the timing of Christ's birth, at the very beginning of the Empire that brought peace and laid paths for the spread of the Gospels; Rome's destruction of Jerusalem and its Temple was interpreted as divine punishment of the Jews for their refusal of the Christ.[229] With the abatement of persecution Jerome could acknowledge Empire as a bulwark against evil but insist that "imperial honours" were contrary to Christian teaching.[230]

As pontifex maximus Constantine I favoured the "Catholic Church of the Christians" against the Donatists because:

it is contrary to the divine law... that we should overlook such quarrels and contentions, whereby the Highest Divinity may perhaps be roused not only against the human race but also against myself, to whose care he has by his celestial will committed the government of all earthly things. Official letter from Constantine, dated AD 314.[231]

In this change of Imperial formula Constantine acknowledged his responsibility to an earthly realm whose discord and conflict might arouse the ira deorum; he also recognised the power of the new Christian priestly hierarchy in determining what was auspicious or orthodox. Though unbaptised, Constantine had triumphed under the signum of the Christ (probably some form of Labarum as an adapted or re-interpreted legionary standard). He may have officially ended – or attempted to end – blood sacrifices to the genius of living emperors but his Imperial iconography and court ceremonial elevated him to superhuman status. Constantine's permission for a new cult temple to himself and his family in Umbria is extant: the cult "should not be polluted by the deception of any contagious superstition".[232] At the First Council of Nicaea Constantine united and re-founded the empire under an absolute head of state by divine dispensation and was honoured as the first Christian Imperial divus. On his death he was venerated and was held to have ascended to heaven. Philostorgius later criticised Christians who offered sacrifice at statues of the divus Constantine.[232] His three sons re-divided their Imperial inheritance: Constantius II was an Arian – his brothers were Nicene.

Constantine's nephew Julian, Rome's last non-Christian emperor, rejected the "Galilean madness" of his upbringing for a synthesis of neo-Platonism, Stoic asceticism and universal solar cult and actively fostered religious and cultural pluralism.[233] His restored Augustan form of principate, with himself as primus inter pares, ended with his death in 363, after which his reforms were reversed or abandoned. The Western emperor Gratian refused the office of pontifex maximus and, against the protests of the Senate,[234] removed the altar of Victoria (Victory) from the Senate House and began the disestablishment of the Vestals. Theodosius I briefly re-united the Western and Eastern halves of the Empire, officially adopted Nicene Christianity as the Imperial religion and ended official support for all other creeds and cults. He refused to restore Victoria to the Senate House, extinguished Vesta's sacred fire and vacated her temple. Even so, he accepted address as a living divinity, comparable to Hercules and Jupiter, by his overwhelmingly pagan Senate.[235][236] After his death the sundered Eastern and Western halves of Empire followed increasingly divergent paths: nevertheless both were Roman and both had emperors. Imperial ceremonial – notably the Imperial adventus or ceremony of arrival, which derived in greater part from the Triumph – was embedded within Roman culture, Church ceremony and the Gospels themselves.[237]

The last Western divus was probably Libius Severus, who died in 465 AD.[238] Very little is known about him. His Imperium was not recognised by his Eastern counterpart and he may have been a puppet-emperor of the Germanic general Ricimer. In the west, imperial authority was partly replaced by the spiritual supremacy and political influence of the Roman Catholic Church.

In the Eastern Empire, sworn adherence to Christian orthodoxy became a prerequisite of Imperial accession – Anastasius I signed a document attesting his obedience to orthodox doctrine and practice. He is the last emperor known to be consecrated as divus on his death (AD 518). The title appears to have been abandoned on grounds of its spiritual impropriety but the consecration of Eastern emperors continued: they held power through divine ordinance and their rule was the manifestation of sacred power on earth. The adventus and the veneration of the Imperial image continued to provide analogies for devotional representations (Icons) of the heavenly hierarchy and the rituals of the Orthodox Church.[239]

Historical evaluations Edit

The Roman imperial cult is sometimes considered a deviation from Rome's traditional Republican values, a religiously insincere cult of personality which served Imperial propaganda.[240][241] It drew its power and effect, however, from both religious traditions deeply engrained in Roman culture, such as the veneration of the genius of each individual and of the ancestral dead, and on forms of the Hellenistic ruler cult developed in the eastern provinces of the Empire.

The nature and function of imperial cult remain contentious, not least because its Roman historians employed it equally as a topos for Imperial worth and Imperial hubris. It has been interpreted as an essentially foreign, Graeco-Eastern institution, imposed cautiously and with some difficulty upon a Latin-Western Roman culture in which the deification of rulers was constitutionally alien, if not obnoxious.[242] In this viewpoint, the essentially servile and "un-Roman" imperial cult was established at the expense of the traditional Roman ethics which had sustained the Republic.[243] For Christians and secularists alike, the identification of mortal emperors with godhead represented the spiritual and moral bankruptcy of paganism which led to the triumph of Christianity as Rome's state religion.[244][245]

Very few modern historians would now support this point of view. Some – among them Beard et al. – find no distinct category of imperial cult within the religio-political life of Empire: the Romans themselves used no such enveloping term. Cult to living or dead emperors was inseparable from Imperial state religion, which was inextricably interwoven with Roman identity and whose beliefs and practices were founded within the ancient commonality of Rome's social and domestic mos maiorum. Descriptions of cult to emperors as a tool of "Imperial propaganda" or the less pejorative "civil religion" emerge from modern political thought and are of doubtful value: in Republican Rome, cult could be given to state gods, personal gods, triumphal generals, magnates, benefactors, patrons and the ordinary paterfamilias – living or dead. Cult to mortals was not an alien practise: it acknowledged their power, status and their bestowal of benefits. The Augustan settlement appealed directly to the Republican mos maiorum and under the principate, cult to emperors defined them as emperors.[246]

With rare exceptions, the earliest institution of cult to emperors succeeded in providing a common focus of identity for Empire. It celebrated the charisma of Roman Imperial power and the meaning of Empire according to local interpretations of romanitas,[247] firstly an agency of transformation, then of stability. Cult to Imperial deities was associated with commonplace public ceremonies, celebrations of extraordinary splendour and unnumbered acts of private and personal devotion. The political usefulness of such an institution implies neither mechanical insincerity nor lack of questioning about its meaning and propriety: an Empire-wide, unifying cult would necessarily be open to a multitude of personal interpretations but its significance to ordinary Romans is almost entirely lost in the critical interpretations of a small number of philosophically literate, skeptical or antagonistic Romans and Greeks, whether Christian or Hellene.[248][249] The decline of prosperity, security and unity of Empire was clearly accompanied by loss of faith in Rome's traditional gods and – at least in the West – in Roman emperors. For some Romans, this was caused by the neglect of traditional religious practices. For others – equally Roman – breakdown of empire was God's judgment on faithless or heretical Christians and hardened pagans alike.

As Roman society evolved, so did cult to emperors: both proved remarkably resilient and adaptable. Until its confrontation by fully developed Christian orthodoxy, "imperial cult" needed no systematic or coherent theology. Its part in Rome's continued success was probably sufficient to justify, sanctify and "explain" it to most Romans.[250][251] Confronted with crisis in Empire, Constantine matched the Augustan achievement by absorbing Christian monotheism into the Imperial hierarchy. Cult to emperors was not so much abolished or abandoned as transformed out of recognition.[252]

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ It is unclear whether the worship of Aeneas as Jupiter Indiges was an official (and thus, state sponsored) cult.
  2. ^ As opposed to offices
  3. ^ Gradel, pp. 32–52, as is much of this section.
  4. ^ A summary of disparate viewpoints regarding the status of the triumphator (and thus the meaning of the Triumph) can be found in Versnel, 56–93: limited preview via Books.Google.com
  5. ^ Beard, 272-5: the very few accounts of a public slave (or other figure) who stands behind or near the triumphator to remind him that he "is but mortal" or prompts him to "look behind" are open to a variety of interpretations; moreover, they are post-Republican. Nevertheless, they imply a tradition that the triumphator, whatever his kingly appearance, temporary godlike status or divine associations, was publicly reminded of his mortal nature. There is no reason to assume this an innovation of Empire.
  6. ^ Taylor, p.67
  7. ^ Gradel, p.46, citing Plautus – this is Plautus' addition to the Greek originals; Gradel also suggests that the corona civica began as an acknowledgement by A.A. that N.N. had saved his life – as a god might – by crowning N.N. with the leaves of Jupiter's tree.
  8. ^ a b Taylor, p. 55
  9. ^ Walbank, 120-37. Books.Google.co.uk, Convenience link
  10. ^ most likely an aide-de-camp of Metellus, and not a provincial official.
  11. ^ Taylor, p.48; she cites Macrobius, Saturnalia, 3.13.9, which is largely an otherwise unknown quotation from Sallust; quasi deo supplicabatur is from Sallust. The year is uncertain, possibly 77 BC, after a battle at Saguntum.
  12. ^ This incident is also mentioned by Valerius Maximus, Facta et dicta memorabilia 9.1.5
  13. ^ Vout, 119: citing Plutarch, Gaius Gracchus, 10, 18.2. Loeb edition available at Thayer: Penelope.Uchicago.edu
  14. ^ Taylor, p.48, citing Plutarch's Marius, 27
  15. ^ Gradel, 51, citing Cicero, De officiis, 3.80: Stoics.com (accessed 2 August 2009).
  16. ^ When the messengers of Thasos announced to him that the city had declared him a god, he told them that if they could make men into gods, they should make themselves into gods; he would then believe that they could make him into one. Taylor, p. 12, citing Plutarch, Moralia, 210d.
  17. ^ Taylor, pp. 12–13
  18. ^ The Spartan decree was "Since Alexander wishes to be a god, let him be a god"; at Athens, Demades argued against provoking Alexander over this: don't protect Heaven and lose the earth; Demosthenes said "Let him be the son of Zeus – and Poseidon too, if he likes."
  19. ^ Athenaeus, 6.63 Books.Google.com
  20. ^ Taylor, pp. 40–41, citing Polybius 30.16, Livy, 45.44; also, as a parallel case, CIL VI 374, from the Laodiceans to the Roman people.
  21. ^ In general, see Price, 48; Fishwick, Vol 1, 1, 6–20; for details, Taylor, Chapter 2 and 3, passim. Attested statuary of Roman magistrates in Rome may well have been largely commissioned by Greek allies, unaware of the potential for controversy aroused by public display of "Hellenised" images of the Roman military aristocracy. See Christopher Hallett, The Roman Nude, Oxford University Press, 2005. (limited preview available) Books.Google.co.uk, citing descriptions in Plutarch, Lives, Flamininus, & Cicero, Rabiurus Postumus, 10.26
  22. ^ Taylor, p. 8
  23. ^ Taylor, Appendix II, citing Athenaeus, Book 10, passim.
  24. ^ Taylor, pp. 9–10, citing Diodorus, 16.20; Cornelius Nepos, Timoleon 5, Plutarch, Moralia 542 E, Dion 46 and Timoleon 36,39; Timoleon is the first Greek whose birthday is recorded.
  25. ^ Mark H. Munn, The School of History: Athens in the Age of Socrates, pp. 11,172
  26. ^ Chiefly Zeus, as identified with Ammon, and his ancestors Achilles and Hercules.
  27. ^ Taylor, Appendix 2; this was the ritual in which Callisthenes declined to take part, one of the offenses for which Alexander killed him.
  28. ^ Taylor, 31-2. A papyrus survives which has a man swearing by the daimones of Ptolemy II and his queen.
  29. ^ Taylor, p. 33
  30. ^ Taylor, p. 57
  31. ^ Taylor, p.57, citing Cicero, To Atticus, 1.18.6; Velleius Paterculus, 2.40.4. He only exercised the privilege once, and was attacked for it.
  32. ^ Suetonius; Hurley, Donna W. (2011). The Caesars. Hackett Publishing. p. 4. ISBN 978-1603846134.
  33. ^ Taylor, 58–60
  34. ^ And Nicomedes IV of Bithynia was intimately familiar with Caesar, or so rumor sang about the streets of Rome. Suetonius, Divus Julius 49
  35. ^ Books.Google.co.uk, Isaac, 304: limited preview at Google Books
  36. ^ This statue showed him standing on the globe: the dedication is offered by Cassius Dio in Greek: hēmitheos (demigod), Dio 43.14.6 & 21.2. This may be Dio's late, anachronistic and approximate equivalent of divus. Gradel, 61–69 reconstructs the original Latin inscription as Senatus populusque Romanus Divo Caesaris but Taylor suggests Dio's form as an accurate rendition, with no strict Latin equivalent.
  37. ^ Taylor, p.65; this was in the temple of Quirinus.
  38. ^ For instance, at the pompa circensis, the procession held before games presented at the circus.
  39. ^ An honorific also granted Cicero during his consulship and comparable to Romulus' title as parens urbis Romanae (parent of the Roman city)
  40. ^ Price, in Cannadine and Price, 71, 85: in particular Cicero's speech to the Senate some months after Caesar's death: "...couch, image, pediment, priest" refer to Caesar's divine honours while living. Cicero, Philippic ii.110.
  41. ^ Dio 43.45.3: Brutus and his party saw Caesar's "kingly" statue as confirmation of despotic intent which justified his assassination.
  42. ^ Stefan Weinstock, Divus Julius, Oxford 1971, 297; Alexander Del Mar, The Worship of Augustus Caesar, 1899, p. 305 sq.
  43. ^ Weinstock, 324 finds the evidence for the living Caesar's aspirations and divine status equivocal in some details, but Fishwick, vol 1, 1, 68–9, argues that acceptance of divine honours while living seems to herald some form of divine monarchy.
  44. ^ Perseus.tufts.edu, Cicero, Atticus 8.16.1: Latin text at Tufts University
  45. ^ Fishwick, Vol. 1, 1, 65, 73.
  46. ^ a b Fishwick, Vol I, 108.
  47. ^ The imperial cult in Roman Britain-Google docs
  48. ^ Fishwick, Vol 3, part 1, 3: citing Cassius Dio, 51, 20, 6–7.
  49. ^ Suetonius, Lives, Augustus, 52: Tacitus, Annals, 4, 37.
  50. ^ Fishwick, Vol 1, book 1, 77 & 126–30.
  51. ^ Nevertheless, cult offered to divus Julius implies loyalty to his adopted son and heir. See Friesen, 21. Books.Google.co.uk
  52. ^ That is, through the manifest numen of his adoptive father the divus Julius.
  53. ^ Rosenstein, 57-8.
  54. ^ In Florus' epitome, the name Augustus signaled Octavian's divine status outright. Apparently, "Romulus" had also been considered and turned down: see Florus, 2, 34, 66 at Thayer's website – Penelope.Uchicago.edu (accessed 27 July 2009). For most of Augustus' contemporaries, however, the name would have been a quite obscure and somewhat modest synonym for divinus (divine).
  55. ^ Fishwick, vol 1, 1, 51: .
  56. ^ Books.Google.co.uk, Weidemann, 131-2: limited preview available at Google Books
  57. ^ Howgego, in Howgego et al., 4–6: coinage celebrating state deities conspicuously features the restorer of their temples. Ibid 53: Imperial themes, including the Imperial family, dominate Roman coin issues from Augustus to Claudius.
  58. ^ See Ando, 46 ff, for discussion of Augustan ideology.
  59. ^ Beard et al, Vol. 1, 196–7.
  60. ^ Ando, 163, gives 82 temples in the city of Rome: limited preview available at Google Books Books.Google.co.uk
  61. ^ The caesareum at Najaran (in what is now south-west Saudi Arabia) was possibly later known as the "Kaaba of Najran": جواد علي, المفصل في تاريخ العرب قبل الإسلام (Jawad Ali, Al-Mufassal fi Tarikh Al-‘Arab Qabl Al-Islam; "Commentary on the History of the Arabs Before Islam"), Baghdad, 1955–1983
  62. ^ Harland, 2003, 91–103, finds among these examples a privately funded local, traditional Graeco-Asian civil association offering cult to Demeter and the emperor as a form of mystery cult: contra Price, 1986, 7–11, who believes that emperors lacked the requisite fully divine status.
  63. ^ See also Harland, 1996.
  64. ^ Llewelyn, S.R. (Editor), New documents illustrating early Christianity: Volume 9, A Review of the Greek Inscriptions and Papyri Published in 1986–87, Macquarie University, 2002, pp.28 - 30. [1]
  65. ^ Books.Google.co.uk, Severy, 114-5. Limited preview available at Google Books
  66. ^ . Madain Project. Archived from the original on 8 November 2020. Retrieved 8 November 2020.
  67. ^ Polybius, The Histories, 10.10.10: written circa 150 BC. The honorand is named as Aletes, who supposedly discovered the silver mines there. One of the hills of the city is named after him. Others are named after Aesculapius, Vulcan and Saturn. English version (Loeb) available from Thayer Penelope.Uchicago.edu
  68. ^ Taylor, 56: See Macrobius 3.13.6–9 – "ultra mortalium morem".
  69. ^ Fishwick, Vol 1, 1, 92–3. In the reign of Tiberius, Tarraco requested permission for cult to Augustus but this is one of only two known Western provincial initiatives to inaugurate the imperial cult – both were Iberian, and had long-standing ties with Rome. See also Tacitus, Annals, 1.78. Posc.mu.edu
  70. ^ Fishwick, vol 3, 1, pp7 & 230.
  71. ^ Fishwick, vol 3, 1, 7: see also Pliny the Elder, Historia Naturalis, 4.111; Ptolemy, Geographia, 2.6.3; Pomponeus Mela, 3.13.
  72. ^ Fishwick, vol 1,1, 97–149.)
  73. ^ Fishwick vol 1, 1, 101 & vol 3, 1, 12–13: Fishwick determines the lower age limit at 25 years for these priesthoods. With minor exceptions, provincial priesthoods – whether described as sacerdos or flamen – appear to have been annual, but an elected priest remained influential within the ordo beyond his term of office. Female cult divinities were served by priestesses, who may have been the wives of the cult priests.
  74. ^ Tacitus, Annals, 1.57.
  75. ^ Potter, 26-7.
  76. ^ Mellor, 1003.
  77. ^ Mohamed Yacoub, Le musée du Bardo : Départements antiques, Tunis, Agence nationale du patrimoine, 1993, p.111
  78. ^ Ando, 31–33, provides the constitutional and personal background to this dilemma.
  79. ^ Price, in Cannadine and Price, 70.
  80. ^ Beard et al, 360-63
  81. ^ Potter, 6–7.
  82. ^ See also Tacitus, Annals, 1.9–10 for appraisals of compuAugustus' motives in his rise to power, his opaque complexity of character, evaluation of his success and the exchange of constitutional freedoms for peace and prosperity during and after his reign.
  83. ^ Well into the third century AD, the merit of each imperial candidate would be debated as basis for a new lex de imperio. In most cases this simply confirmed his possession of imperial power, acquired through dynastic inheritance or acclamation by the soldiers but its legality was Republican in form, "probably a continuation of the old Republican tradition, of the Lex curiata de imperio which conferred imperium on the higher Roman magistrates." Justinian's law later refers to a Lex regia, consistent with Byzantine conceptions of Imperial power as "kingship". The same association is precisely avoided under the early Lex de imperio Vespasiani of 69–70 AD. See Berger, A., Encyclopedic Dictionary of Roman Law, Philadelphia: (Transactions of the American Philosophical Society; New Series, Volume 43, Part 2, 1953, p551). Reprint, The Lawbook Exchange Ltd., 2002. ISBN 1-58477-142-9. Preview from googlebooks; [2]
  84. ^ Tacitus interprets Tiberius' repeated refusal of provincial cult as a shirking of his moral responsibilities to empire, and therefore a dishonour to his high office and Rome.
  85. ^ Gradel, 15: the collective genius of the Senate was usually personified as a bearded, elderly man – this is an exceptional genius type. Most individual genii are portrayed as youthful.
  86. ^ Klose, in Howgego et al, 127.
  87. ^ Ando, 170-1: see also 170, note 187.
  88. ^ cf Caesar's "kingly" regalia, though as princeps Caligula was also "permanent triumphator".
  89. ^ Suetonius, Life of Caligula
  90. ^ Neither Josephus nor Philo imply Caligula's elevation as a state deity in Jerusalem.
  91. ^ Gradel, 142–158.
  92. ^ Cassius Dio, (in John Xiphilinus' epitome), 59, 26, 3. Both Suetonius and Philo offer Caligula as a suspiciously perfect example of how not to be emperor. The Senate remains a vague figure of superior values and morality, against which Caligula's offenses are meticulously detailed.
  93. ^ Cassius Dio, LX.3.5–6
  94. ^ A cult dedication to Livia as diva Augusta appears in Lusitania, dated to 48 AD.
  95. ^ Gradel proposes that had Claudius employed those of higher rank within his domus, it would have imputed their clientage as his servants. He may have underestimated the complexity of the problems inherent in his own status as princeps.
  96. ^ This surmise is based on a combination of Seneca's satirical Apocolocyntosis, Suetonius' sneering "Life" and Tacitus's sharp observations of Julio-Claudian failings.
  97. ^ Tacitus, Annals, 13, 3.
  98. ^ Fishwick, Vol. 3, 1, 75–6: cf the Lyons Tablet and Claudius' modesty (or fear of seeming arrogant).
  99. ^ Fishwick, 81-9.
  100. ^ Fishwick, Vol. 3, 1, 54–9.
  101. ^ Mons Caelus had "ambiguous Etruscan connections" (Claudius had a historian's interest in Etruscan culture and language). It was also notorious for its brothels and meat-market. Claudius had a reputed liking for "low company", and butchers and prostitutes were classified as infames. Suetonius has Claudius add an extra day to the festival of Saturnalia – for Seneca he is a Lord of Misrule, at whose demise it can be said: "I told you the Saturnalia could not last forever" (Apocolocyntosis 12).
  102. ^ Fishwick, Vol. 3, 1, 88–9.
  103. ^ Claudius' Caelian temple was later rebuilt and some of it survives through incorporation in later building. Nero's cult may have been justified as a "revival" of Claudius' entitlement to genius cult as pater patriae.
  104. ^ Tacitus, Annals, XV.74.
  105. ^ Potter, 68.
  106. ^ Kenneth Scott, The Imperial Cult Under the Flavians, New York 1975
  107. ^ Chabrečková, Barbora. The Imperial Cult During the Reign of Domitian. Masaryk University, Department of Archaeology and Museology. 2017.
  108. ^ Tacitus, Histories, 4.40.2
  109. ^ Some still thought the head resembled Nero's. Others were reminded of Titus, Vespasian's son: see also Cassius Dio, 65.15.1.
  110. ^ A dedication of the Colossus to the sun god is consistent with Neronian iconography – any resemblance to Nero would be appropriate to his imperial representation as the "second sun" of the pax Romana in Stoic and Cynic cosmology. Subsequent alterations or remodeling of a recognisable figure – assuming they happened at all – and rededication were standard responses to an original subject's damnatio memoriae. On the other hand, the heads of some Imperial statues appear to have been recut or replaced as a matter of economy, rather than of legal or moral insult or effacement.
  111. ^ Marlowe, E. (2006), "Framing the sun: the Arch of Constantine and the Roman cityscape." The Art Bulletin
  112. ^ Smallwood, 345.
  113. ^ The practice of a genius cult towards Domitian is shown in the Arval Acts.
  114. ^ Gradel, 159-61: Suetonius' claims for Domitian's personal use of the title – or its use by his procurators at his behest – are unverified. He is clear that Domitian's freedmen were the first to use it.
  115. ^ Gradel, 159-61.
  116. ^ Ando, 167: Pliny panegyric 75.1–3: Pliny refers to the publication of the senatorial voice in proceedings: Trajan's respect for the Senate can only be good for the "dignity" of the state.
  117. ^ Gradel, 190-2.
  118. ^ Sage, (in discussion of Tacitean themes) in Haase & Temporini (eds), 950: Books.Google.co.uk
  119. ^ Gradel, 194-5.
  120. ^ Howgego, in Howgego et al, 6, 10.
  121. ^ Hadrian's "Hellenic" emotionalism finds a culturally sympathetic echo in the Homeric Achilles' mourning for his friend Patroclus: see Vout, 52–135.
  122. ^ Dio – or his epitomist – insists that Antinous died not through drowning, as Hadrian claimed, but as the emperor's willing sacrificial victim as part of a bid for immortality – though whose is not clear.
  123. ^ Vout, 118-9, contra Price, 68, who does not regard Antinous as receiving full cult honours of apotheosis in Rome itself. Both agree that Antinous was unlikely to have had official parity with other imperial divi in Rome.
  124. ^ Vout, 52–135, offers discussion on the nature, context and longevity of the Antinous cult, its function in Christian polemic against pagan cult, notably in Athanasius, and its capacity to fascinate – and sometimes mislead – the modern imagination. Limited preview available: Books.Google.co.uk
  125. ^ Vout, 111. His piety lay in his unrelenting yet personally modest plea to the Senate for the deification of his predecessor Hadrian: morally comparable with the filial devotion of Metellus Pius during the Republican era.
  126. ^ Gradel, 200, citing Fronto, Epistulae ad M. Caesar (letters to M. Aurelius), 4, 12, 6.
  127. ^ Gradel, 199: see also The context and precedents for Imperial Cult. Relative to the living emperor, the divi probably have little or no personal power, unless of divine intercession.
  128. ^ Potter, 78-9.
  129. ^ Dio's assessment is blunt but not entirely unsympathetic – Commodus was lazy, gullible and stupid. See Potter, 85-6: citing Cassius Dio, Penelope.Uchicago.edu, epitome of book 73. Marius Maximus thought him fundamentally wicked and cruel.
  130. ^ On 1 January 193 AD, the legions unwittingly renewed their annual vows of loyalty to a dead Emperor: Potter, 92-6. see also Dio ibid.
  131. ^ This is based on a statement in the Historia Augusta, which claims he planned to have his own flamen while still living. Cassius Dio, in an otherwise detailed account, makes no mention of this. See Gradel, 160-1.
  132. ^ Potter, 93-6.
  133. ^ Potter, 75-9.
  134. ^ Potter, 96–99.
  135. ^ Potter, 103.
  136. ^ Gradel, 265, citing the unreliable Historia Augusta, Antoninus Geta Aeli Spartiani, II, 8: (Latin version online at thelatinlibrary – TheLatinLibrary.com (accessed 18 August 2009). At the very least, the attribution confirms the later devaluation of divus as a divine category.
  137. ^ Dio, Ibid. 77.9.4: (Loeb) – "When the emperor was enrolled in the family of Marcus, Auspex said: "I congratulate you, Caesar, upon finding a father," implying that up to that time he had been fatherless by reason of his obscure birth."
  138. ^ Gradel, 194.
  139. ^ Potter, 107-12: for coinage of Antonine dynasts, see 111.
  140. ^ Potter, 110.
  141. ^ Another name for the Imperial divi, which indicates their elevation to "August" status. "Caesar Augustus" is reserved for living emperors: See Gradel, 88.
  142. ^ Fishwick, vol. 3, 1, 199.
  143. ^ Potter, 113-20.
  144. ^ Cassius Dio, 77.15.2 Penelope.Uchicago.edu.
  145. ^ Potter, 133-5: dediticii (those who had surrendered to Rome in war) and a specific class of freedmen were excluded.
  146. ^ Potter, 138-9: slaves formally adopted the name of the master who freed them.
  147. ^ Like Commodus, he participated in chariot races and beast-fights, with minimal risk to himself.
  148. ^ Potter, 142-6: citing Philostratus, V. Soph, 626.
  149. ^ Days of careful negotiation had preceded his "spontaneous" acclamation as imperator by the military
  150. ^ Dio disapproves of Macrinus' equestrian status, but not his integrity or manner of government.
  151. ^ Potter, 146-8: Avitus took the Imperial name Marcus Aurelius Antoninus.
  152. ^ Potter, 148-9:
  153. ^ Potter, 152-7.
  154. ^ Meckler, in De Imperatoribus Romanis, online roman-emperors.org (accessed 7 August 2009)
  155. ^ Gradel, 356-62: citing Herodian for the removal of temple wealth and reactions to it.
  156. ^ Potter, 237-8, citing Zosimus, 1.19.1–2.
  157. ^ Howgego, in Howgego et al., 5.
  158. ^ Potter, 244-8.
  159. ^ Ando, 209.
  160. ^ Beard et al, Vol. 1, 241.
  161. ^ Potter, 241-3: see 242 for Decian "libellus" (certificate) of oath and sacrifice on papyrus, dated to 250 AD.
  162. ^ Books.Google.co.uk, Rees, 60. Limited preview available at Google Books
  163. ^ Bowman et al, 622-33. Books.Google.co.uk, Limited preview available at Google Books
  164. ^ a b Rees, 60.
  165. ^ Beard et al, 241.
  166. ^ Drinkwater, in Bowman et al. (eds), 46: Under Gallienus, any remaining senatorial rights to military leadership were virtually at an end. The bitterness of the senatorial class towards him on this account almost certainly distorts their histories. See, for example, Aurelius Victor, De Caesaribus (epitome), 33–34, in Banchich's translation online at roman-emperors.org (accessed 7 August 2009.) See also Weigel, at www.roman-emperors.org roman-emperors.org (accessed 7 August 2009.)
  167. ^ Cascio, in Bowman et al. (eds), 171: citing .
  168. ^ See also (with due caveat) Historia Augusta, Vita Taciti, XIII 1–2.
  169. ^ Vout, 118-9.
  170. ^ Lactantius, II.6.10.1–4
  171. ^ Eusebius, II.8.1.8.
  172. ^ Bowman et al, 170-3.
  173. ^ Rees, 46–56.
  174. ^ Rees, 51–56 (ideology) & 73-4 (coin image interpretation).
  175. ^ MacCormack, 722, & note 8.
  176. ^ Brent, 49–51. See also Augustus, Res Gestae, c.4.2.
  177. ^ Fishwick, Vol. 3, 1, 5.
  178. ^ Gradel, 263-8: citing Tertullian.
  179. ^ Gradel, 7: numen "can also be synonymous with deus".
  180. ^ Fishwick, Vol 3, 1, 42: see also Plutarch (based on Varro, Quaestionaes Romanae, 14).
  181. ^ The apotheosed ("deified") Julius Caesar was "translated by the senate and people of Rome into the company of the gods (dei)" and became the divus Julius: Price, in Cannadine and Price, 1992, 77–8: the cited, translated inscription is from Inscriptiones Latinae Selectae, ed H, Dessau, 3 vols, Berlin, 1892–1916, 140. 7–24 (Pisa).
  182. ^ Price, in Cannadine and Price, 82–102, for the changing roles of senate and emperors in the granting of apotheosis.
  183. ^ Javier Arce, in Theuws and Nelson, pp.116 - 117.
  184. ^ Price, 115.
  185. ^ Books.Google.co.uk, Price, 175–202, 209: later Roman divi range from "dead but not guilty emperor" to "emperor of fond memory".
  186. ^ Holland's 1606 English language version of Suetonius' Lives of the Caesars (Claudius) translates Claudius as "canonised... a saint in heaven". Holland's interpretation is consistent with the later use of divus under Christian emperors: saints function as intercessors but some have also been demoted or quietly lapsed from their religious calendars. See Suetonius, History of the twelve Caesars, trans. Philemon Holland, 1606, for Holland's English rendition of divus Claudius, Archive.org
  187. ^ Beard et al, 207: see above for Augustus' permission for cult to his own numen only very late in his reign. Whether it was official cult is uncertain, but it would have been offered and permitted, not claimed. Fishwick (2007) asserts that inscriptional references to numen, connected to the living Augustus and his cult, as at Narbo in 12 BC, imply it as a property of the emperor, a "divinised abstraction", not identical with his person.
  188. ^ Fishwick, Vol.3, 1, 198, referring to the Severan emperor Caracalla.
  189. ^ Beard et al, vol 1, 140–9.
  190. ^ Gradel, 3, 15.
  191. ^ Livy, 25.16.1–4 & 6.1.12: Livy wrote at a time of extreme civil strife, during the era of Rome's transformation from Republic to Principate. See also Rosenstein, 58–60
  192. ^ Beard et al, Vol 1, 32–6.
  193. ^ Gradel, 21.
  194. ^ Gradel, 78, 93
  195. ^ Price, 209, 221.
  196. ^ Beard et al, Vol 1, 12–20: haruspicy was also used. The haruspex read the divine will in the sacrificial entrails. This was regarded as an ethnically Etruscan "outsider" practise, whose priesthood was separate from Rome's internal priestly hierarchy. The augur's interpretation of all these signs informed the magistrate's course of action. The magistrate could repeat the sacrifice until favourable signs were seen, abandon the project or seek further consultation with colleagues of his augural college.
  197. ^ Brent, 17–20: citing Cicero, De Natura Deorum, 2.4.
  198. ^ Beard et al, Vol 1, 17–21: most magistracies ran for only a year. Priesthoods were for life, which offered evident advantages in maintaining a high public and political profile.
  199. ^ Brent, 21–25.
  200. ^ Brent, 59: citing Suetonius, Augustus 31.1–2. cf official reactions to "foreign cult" during the Punic crises, above.
  201. ^ Gradel, 36-8: the paterfamilias held – in theory at least, and through ancient right – powers of life and death over every member of his extended familia, including children, slaves and freedmen. In practice, the extreme form of this right was seldom exercised, and was eventually limited by law.
  202. ^ See also Severy, 9–10 for interpretation of the social, economic and religious role of the paterfamilias within the immediate and extended family and the broader community.
  203. ^ Beard et al, vol 1, 67–8.
  204. ^ Gradel, 5, 8.
  205. ^ Brent, 61: Dio Cassius, 51.19.7.
  206. ^ Brent, 62-3.
  207. ^ Beard et al, Vol. 1, 193–4: under Augustus' programme of "renewal" the Vestals had high status seating at games and theatres, and became priestesses to the cult of the deified Livia (wife of Augustus).
  208. ^ Gradel, 38.
  209. ^ Brent, 61.
  210. ^ Severy, 99–100, Books.Google.co.uk
  211. ^ Lott, 14–15, 115 & 230 (note 127).
  212. ^ Brent, 268-9.
  213. ^ Books.Google.co.uk, Le Bohec, 249: limited preview available via Google Books
  214. ^ Books.Google.co.uk, Dixon, 78: limited preview available from Google Books
  215. ^ Gradel, 364.
  216. ^ Gradel, 78–98.
  217. ^ Lott, 81 - 106; for discussion of Lares Augusti see 107 – 117. Lott rejects the replacement of neighbourhood Lares with Augustus' own as politically indelicate. The Lares Augusti can be understood as August Lares – a joint honorific with unmistakable and flattering connections to the princeps himself, rather than the direct claim of princeps as patron: contra Lilly Ross Taylor, The Divinity of the Roman Emperor, American Philological Association, 1931. Taylor understand the institution of Lares Augusti as the extension of Augustus' domus and its deities to Rome's neighbourhood cults. Lott acknowledges Taylor's view as generally accepted.
  218. ^ Rehak & Younger, 93.
  219. ^ Brent, 17–18, 53–54.
  220. ^ Smallwood, 2–3, 4–6: the presence of practicing Jews in Rome is attested at least a century before this. The more overt and "characteristically Jewish" beliefs, rites and customs were butts of misinformed scorn and mockery. Legislation by Caesar recognised the synagogues in Rome as legitimate collegia. Augustus maintained their status. Smallwood describes the preamble to events of 63 BC as the Hellenising of ruling Jewish dynasties, their claims to kingly messianism and their popular, traditionalist rejection in the Maccabaean revolt. Books.Google.co.uk Ibid, 120–143 for a very detailed account of Roman responses to Judaistic practice in Rome under Caesar and the early Principate.
  221. ^ Smallwood's application of religio licita (licensed religion) to Judaism in this and possibly any period is disputed by Rajack in: Tessa Rajack, "Was there a Roman Charter for the Jews?" Journal of Roman Studies, 74, (1984) 107–23. Rajack finds no evidence for an early "charter": Josephus seems to have inferred a charter from local, ad hoc attempts to deal with anti-Jewish acts. Religio licita is first found in Tertullian. Cicero, pro Flacco, 66, refers to Judaism as superstitio, not religio but a later change in Roman policy is possible.
  222. ^ Potter, 36.
  223. ^ Fishwick, vol. 1, 1, 36.
  224. ^ Niehoff, 45–137: in particular, 75–81 and footnote 25. Limited preview available at Google Books Books.Google.co.uk (accessed 14 August 2009.
  225. ^ Brent, 221.
  226. ^ Price, 10–11.
  227. ^ Potter, 37.
  228. ^ Collins, 125: citing Revelation, 13, 7–8 & 16–17; 14, 9–11; 16, 2.
  229. ^ Momigliano, 142–158: Books.Google.co.uk See particularly p146, (commentary on Dio, 52).
  230. ^ Jerome's interpretations of Imperial ceremonial are heavily reliant on Eusebius' polemical ecclesiastical-Imperial history. Price, 203 : limited preview available at Google Books Books.Google.co.uk
  231. ^ cited in Beard et al, Vol 1, 370.
  232. ^ a b Momigliano, 104.
  233. ^ A summary of relevant legislation – FourthCentury.com (accessed 30 August 2009)
  234. ^ Internet Medieval Sourcebook: Letter of St. Ambrose, trans. H. De Romestin, 1896., Fordham.edu (accessed 29 August 2009)
  235. ^ Books.Google.co.uk, Williams & Friell, 65–67. Limited preview at googlebooks
  236. ^ Nixon & Rodgers, 437-48: Full text of Latinus Pacata Drepanius, Panegyric of Theodosius (389) with commentary and context.
  237. ^ MacCormack, 721-52.
  238. ^ His status as divus is surmised from cons. = consecratio: his. cons. defunctus est Imp. Severus Romae XVIII kal. Septembris (Mommsen) in: Scharf, R., Zu einigen daten der Kaiser Libius Severus und Maiorian, Heidelberg University (pdf), p182. [3] (accessed 1 September 2009)
  239. ^ Price, 204-5, and footnote 171, citing Basil, Homily 24: "on seeing an image of the king in the square, one does not allege that there are two kings" (therefore veneration of the image venerates the original: the analogy is implicit in imperial cult but is not found in the Gospels. See also articles on Iconodules and Iconoclasm).
  240. ^ Price, 13–17, includes historians of opposing political views among those who interpret the imperial cult as the domination of "a servile world" through politically driven "charade". Eduard Meyer, "Alexander der Grosse und die Absolute Monarchie", (1905) in Kleine Schriften, 1, 1924, 265, and Ronald Syme, The Roman Revolution, Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1939. 256, reach essentially the same conclusions about the nature and purpose of the imperial cult, despite their opposing political alignments. Price, 13, note 31, refers to Demandt's analysis of Meyer's position, in A. Demandt, "Politische Aspekte im Alexander-bild der Neuzeit," Archiv für Kulturgeschichte 54, 1972, 325ff at p.355.
  241. ^ See also Harland, P. A., "Honours and Worship: Emperors, Imperial Cults and Associations at Ephesus (First to Third Centuries C.E.)", Studies in Religion/Sciences religieuses 25 (1996) 319–334.
  242. ^ Tacitus' reference to the graeca adulatio (greek adulation or flattery) of benefactor-cult was set within the Graeco-Eastern context of the Roman civil war and referred to Theophanes of Mytilene, whose god-like honours were occasioned by no merit other than his friendship and influence with Pompey: Tacitus, Annals, 6.8: cited and explicated in Gradel, 8.
  243. ^ Roman (and Greek) justifications of Rome's hegemony insisted on Rome's moral superiority over its allies and subject peoples. The same commentators deplored Empire for the demoralising effects of its "foreign" influences. See Sallust, Catalina, 11.5: Livy, 1.11: Pliny the Elder, Natural History, 7.130
  244. ^ Price, 10–20: citing evaluations of the imperial cult as insincere or "mechanical" in Gibbon, Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, Bury edn, 1,75-7; Ferguson, CAH, VII (1928), 17; Eduard Meyer, "Alexander der Grosse und die Absolute Monarchie", (1905) in Kleine Schriften, 1, 1924, 265; Ronald Syme, The Roman Revolution, Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1939.
  245. ^ Harland, 85, cites among others M. P. Nilsson, Greek Piety (Oxford 1948) 177–178, and early work by D. Fishwick, The Development of Provincial Ruler Worship in the Western Roman Empire, ANRW II.16.2 (1978) 1201–1253, for similar evaluations.
  246. ^ Brent, 17.
  247. ^ Beard, North, Price, (1998), 318: see also 208-10, 252–3, 359–61.
  248. ^ Price, 6–20, 116.
  249. ^ Gradel, 3–8.
  250. ^ Price, 11.
  251. ^ Gradel, 23.
  252. ^ Price, 20.

References and further reading Edit

  • Ando, Clifford (2000). Imperial ideology and provincial loyalty in the Roman Empire (Illustrated ed.). University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-22067-6.
  • Beard, M., Price, S., North, J., Religions of Rome: Volume 1, a History, illustrated, Cambridge University Press, 1998. ISBN 0-521-31682-0
  • Beard, M., Price, S., North, J., Religions of Rome: Volume 2, a sourcebook, illustrated, Cambridge University Press, 1998. ISBN 0-521-45646-0
  • Beard, Mary: The Roman Triumph, The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass., and London, England, 2007. ISBN 978-0-674-02613-1
  • Bowersock, G., Brown, P. R .L., Graba, O., (eds), Late Antiquity: A Guide to the Postclassical World, Harvard University Press, 1999. ISBN 978-0-674-51173-6
  • Bowman, A., Cameron, A., Garnsey, P., (eds) The Cambridge Ancient History: Volume 12, The Crisis of Empire, AD 193–337, 2nd Edn., Cambridge University Press, 2005. ISBN 0-521-30199-8
  • Brent, A., The imperial cult and the development of church order: concepts and images of authority in paganism and early Christianity before the Age of Cyprian, illustrated, Brill Publishers, 1999. ISBN 90-04-11420-3
  • Cannadine, D., and Price, S., (eds) Rituals of Royalty: Power and Ceremonial in Traditional Societies, reprint, illustrated, Cambridge University Press, 1992. ISBN 0-521-42891-2
  • Chow, John K., Patronage and power: a study of social networks in Corinth, Continuum International Publishing Group, 1992. ISBN 1-85075-370-9
  • Collins, Adela Yarbro, Crisis and catharsis: the power of the Apocalypse, Westminster John Knox Press, 1984. ISBN 0-664-24521-8
  • Elsner, J., "Cult and Sculpture; Sacrifice in the Ara Pacis Augustae", in the Journal of Roman Studies, 81, 1991, 50–60.
  • Ferguson, Everett, Backgrounds of early Christianity, 3rd edition, Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing, 2003. ISBN 0-8028-2221-5
  • Fishwick, Duncan, The Imperial Cult in the Latin West: Studies in the Ruler Cult of the Western Provinces of the Roman Empire, volume 1, Brill Publishers, 1991. ISBN 90-04-07179-2
  • Fishwick, Duncan, The Imperial Cult in the Latin West: Studies in the Ruler Cult of the Western Provinces of the Roman Empire, volume 3, Brill Publishers, 2002. ISBN 90-04-12536-1
  • Fishwick, Duncan, "Numen Augustum," Zeitschrift für Papyrologie und Epigraphik, Bd. 160 (2007), pp. 247–255, Dr. Rudolf Habelt GmbH, Bonn (Germany).
  • Freisen, S. J., Imperial cults and the Apocalypse of John: reading Revelation in the ruins, Oxford University Press, 2001. ISBN 978-0-19-513153-6
  • Gradel, Ittai, Emperor Worship and Roman Religion, Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2002. ISBN 0-19-815275-2
  • Haase, W., Temporini, H., (eds), Aufstieg und Niedergang der romischen Welt, de Gruyter, 1991. ISBN 3-11-010389-3
  • Harland, P., "Honours and Worship: Emperors, Imperial Cults and Associations at Ephesus (First to Third Centuries C.E.)", originally published in Studies in Religion/Sciences religieuses 25, 1996. Online in same pagination:
  • Harland, P., "Imperial Cults within Local Cultural Life: Associations in Roman Asia", originally published in Ancient History Bulletin / Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte 17, 2003. Online in same pagination:
  • Howgego, C., Heuchert, V., Burnett, A., (eds), Coinage and Identity in the Roman Provinces, Oxford University Press, 2005. ISBN 978-0-19-926526-8
  • Lee, A.D., Pagans and Christians in late antiquity: a sourcebook, illustrated, Routledge, 2000. ISBN 0-415-13892-2
  • Lott, John. B., The Neighborhoods of Augustan Rome, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2004. ISBN 0-521-82827-9
  • MacCormack, Sabine, Change and Continuity in Late Antiquity: the ceremony of "Adventus", Historia, 21, 4, 1972, pp 721–52.
  • Martin, Dale B., Inventing superstition: from the Hippocratics to the Christians, Harvard University Press, 2004. ISBN 0-674-01534-7
  • Momigliano, Arnaldo, On Pagans, Jews, and Christians, reprint, Wesleyan University Press, 1987. ISBN 0-8195-6218-1
  • Niehoff, Maren R., Philo on Jewish identity and culture, Mohr Siebeck, English trans GW/Coronet Books, 2001. ISBN 978-3-16-147611-2
  • Nixon, C.E.V., and Rodgers, Barbara S., In Praise of Later Roman Emperors: The Panegyric Latini, University Presses of California, Columbia and Princeton, 1995. ISBN 978-0-520-08326-4
  • Potter, David S., The Roman Empire at Bay, AD 180–395, Routledge, 2004. ISBN 978-0-415-10057-1
  • Price, S.R.F. Rituals and power: the Roman imperial cult in Asia Minor, (reprint, illustrated). Cambridge University Press, 1986. ISBN 0-521-31268-X
  • Rees, Roger (2004). Diocletian and the Tetrarchy. Edinburgh, UK: Edinburgh University Press. ISBN 9780748616602.
  • Rehak, Paul, and Younger, John Grimes, Imperium and cosmos: Augustus and the northern Campus Martius, illustrated, University of Wisconsin Press, 2006. ISBN 0-299-22010-9
  • Rosenstein, Nathan S., Imperatores Victi: Military Defeat and Aristocratic Competition in the Middle and Late Republic. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1990. Ark.CDlib.org
  • Rüpke, Jörg (Editor), A Companion to Roman Religion, Wiley-Blackwell, 2007, ISBN 978-1-4051-2943-5
  • Severy, Beth, Augustus and the family at the birth of the Roman Empire, Routledge, 2003. ISBN 0-415-30959-X
  • Smallwood, E., Mary, The Jews under Roman rule: from Pompey to Diocletian: a study in political relations, illustrated, Brill Publishers, 2001. ISBN 0-391-04155-X
  • Taylor, Lily Ross, The Divinity of the Roman Emperor, American Philological Association, 1931; repr. Arno Press, 1975.
  • Theuws, Frans, and Nelson, Janet L., Rituals of power: from late antiquity to the early Middle Ages, Brill Publishers, 2000. ISBN 90-04-10902-1
  • Versnel, H S: Triumphus: An Inquiry into the Origin, Development and Meaning of the Roman Triumph, Leiden, 1970.
  • Vout, Caroline, Power and eroticism in Imperial Rome, illustrated, Cambridge University Press, 2007. ISBN 0-521-86739-8
  • Walbank, Frank W., Selected Papers: Studies in Greek and Roman History and Historiography, Cambridge University Press, 1986 (pp 120–137). ISBN 978-0-521-30752-9
  • Weinstock, Stefan. Divus Iulius. Oxford (Clarendon Press/OUP). 1971.
  • Wiedemann, Thomas. Adults and Children in the Roman Empire, Taylor & Francis Ltd., 1989. ISBN 978-0-415-00336-0
  • Williams, S., and Friell, J.G.P., Theodosius: The Empire at Bay, Taylor & Francis Ltd., 1994. ISBN 978-0-7134-6691-1

roman, imperial, cult, identified, emperors, some, members, their, families, with, divinely, sanctioned, authority, auctoritas, roman, state, framework, based, roman, greek, precedents, formulated, during, early, principate, augustus, rapidly, established, thr. The Roman imperial cult identified emperors and some members of their families with the divinely sanctioned authority auctoritas of the Roman State Its framework was based on Roman and Greek precedents and was formulated during the early Principate of Augustus It was rapidly established throughout the Empire and its provinces with marked local variations in its reception and expression Augustus s reforms transformed Rome s Republican system of government to a de facto monarchy couched in traditional Roman practices and Republican values The princeps emperor was expected to balance the interests of the Roman military Senate and people and to maintain peace security and prosperity throughout an ethnically diverse empire The official offer of cultus to a living emperor acknowledged his office and rule as divinely approved and constitutional his Principate should therefore demonstrate pious respect for traditional Republican deities and mores A deceased emperor held worthy of the honor could be voted a state divinity divus plural divi by the Senate and elevated as such in an act of apotheosis The granting of apotheosis served religious political and moral judgment on Imperial rulers and allowed living emperors to associate themselves with a well regarded lineage of Imperial divi from which unpopular or unworthy predecessors were excluded This proved a useful instrument to Vespasian in his establishment of the Flavian Imperial Dynasty following the death of Nero and civil war and to Septimius in his consolidation of the Severan dynasty after the assassination of Commodus The imperial cult was inseparable from that of Rome s official deities whose cult was essential to Rome s survival and whose neglect was therefore treasonous Traditional cult was a focus of Imperial revivalist legislation under Decius and Diocletian It therefore became a focus of theological and political debate during the ascendancy of Christianity under Constantine I The emperor Julian failed to reverse the declining support for Rome s official religious practices Theodosius I adopted Christianity as Rome s state religion Rome s traditional gods and imperial cult were officially abandoned Contents 1 Background 1 1 Roman 1 2 Greek 1 3 Romans among the Greeks 1 4 Intermediate forms 2 End of the Republic 2 1 Divus Julius 3 Caesar s heir 3 1 Religion and Imperium under Augustus 3 2 Eastern provinces 3 3 Western provinces 3 4 Western provinces of Roman Africa 4 The Imperial succession 4 1 Julio Claudian 4 2 Flavian 4 3 Nervan Antonine 4 4 Severan 5 Imperial crisis and the Dominate 6 Context and precedents 6 1 Divus deus and the numen 6 2 Sacrificium 6 3 Augury ira deorum and pax deorum 6 4 Genius and household cults 6 5 Role in the military 6 6 Altars temples and priesthoods 6 7 Saviours and monotheists 7 The imperial cult and Christianity 8 Historical evaluations 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References and further readingBackground EditRoman Edit nbsp Venus and Mars sculpture group reworked to portray an Imperial couple created 120 140 AD reworked 170 175 For five centuries the Roman Republic did not give worship to any historic figure or any living man although surrounded by divine and semi divine monarchies Rome s legendary kings had been its masters with their removal Republican Romans could identify Romulus the founder of the city with the god Quirinus and still retain Republican liberty Similarly Rome s ancestor hero Aeneas was worshipped as Jupiter Indiges 1 The Romans worshipped several gods and demi gods who had been human and knew the theory that all the gods had originated as human beings yet Republican traditions mos maiorum were staunchly conservative and anti monarchic The aristocrats who held almost all Roman magistracies and thereby occupied almost all of the Senate acknowledged no human as their inherent superior No citizen living or dead was officially regarded as divine but the honors 2 awarded by the state crowns garlands statues thrones processions were also suitable to the gods and tinged with divinity indeed when the emperors were later given state worship it was done by a decree of the Senate phrased like any other honor 3 Among the highest of honors was the triumph When a general was acclaimed imperator by his troops the Senate would then choose whether to award him a triumph a parade to the Capitol in which the triumphator displayed his captives and spoils of war in the company of his troops by law all were unarmed The triumphator rode in a chariot bearing divine emblems in a manner supposed to be inherited from the ancient kings of Rome and ended by dedicating his victory to Jupiter Capitolinus Some scholars have viewed the triumphator as impersonating or even becoming a king or a god or both for the day but the circumstances of triumphal award and subsequent rites also functioned to limit his status Whatever his personal ambitions his victory and his triumph alike served the Roman Senate people and gods and were recognised only through their consent 4 5 In private life however tradition required that some human beings be treated as more or less divine cult was due from familial inferiors to their superiors Every head of household embodied the genius the generative principle and guardian spirit of his ancestors which others might worship and by which his family and slaves took oaths 6 his wife had a juno A client could call his patron Jupiter on earth 7 The dead collectively and individually were gods of the underworld or afterlife Manes A letter has survived from Cornelia the mother of the Gracchi expecting that when she was dead her sons would venerate her as deus parens a parental or a nurturing divinity such piety was expected from any dutiful son 8 A prominent clan might claim divine influence and quasi divine honors for its leader Death masks imagines were made for all notable Romans and were displayed in the atria of their houses they were used to represent their ghostly presence at family funerals The mask of Scipio Africanus Cornelia s father and victor over Hannibal was stored in the temple of Jupiter his epitaph by Ennius said that he had ascended to Heaven 8 A tradition arose in the centuries after his death that Africanus had been inspired by prophetic dreams and was himself the son of Jupiter 9 There are several cases of unofficial cult directed at men viewed as saviors military or political In Further Spain in the 70s BC loyalist Romans greeted the proconsul Metellus Pius as a savior burning incense as if to a god for his efforts to quash the Lusitanian rebellion led by the Roman Sertorius a member of the faction which called itself men of the People populares This celebration in Spain featured a lavish banquet with local and imported delicacies and a mechanical statue of Victory to crown Metellus who wore extralegally a triumphator s toga picta for the occasion These festivities were organized by the quaestor 10 Gaius Urbinus but were not acts of the state Metellus liked all this but his older and pious veteres et sanctos contemporaries thought it arrogant and intolerable 11 12 After the land reformers Tiberius and Gaius Gracchus were both murdered by their opponents their supporters fell down and offered daily sacrifice at the statues of the Gracchi as though they were visiting the shrines of the gods 13 After Gaius Marius defeated the Teutones private citizens would offer food and drink to him alongside their household gods he was called the third founder of Rome after Romulus and Camillus 14 In 86 BC offerings of incense and wine were made at crossroad shrines to statues of the still living Marius Gratidianus the nephew of the elder Marius who was wildly popular in his own right in large part for monetary reforms that eased an economic crisis in Rome during his praetorship 15 Greek Edit nbsp Repousse pendant of Alexander the Great horned and diademed like Zeus Ammon images of Alexander were worn as magic charms 4th century Roman When the Romans began to dominate large parts of the Greek world Rome s senior representatives there were given the same divine honours as were Hellenistic rulers This was a well established method for Greek city states to declare their allegiance to an outside power such a cult committed the city to obey and respect the king as they obeyed and respected Apollo or any of the other gods The cities of Ionia worshipped the Spartan general Lysander when he personally dominated Greece immediately following the Peloponnesian War according to Plutarch this was the first instance of ruler cult in Greek history There were similar instances of divine cult to humans in the same century although some rulers like Agesilaus declined it 16 Clearchus tyrant of Heraclea dressed up like Zeus and claimed godhood this did not stop the Heracleots from assassinating him Isocrates said of Philip II of Macedon that after he conquered the Persian Empire there would be nothing for him to attain but to become a god the city of Amphipolis and a private society at Athens worshipped him even without this conquest he himself set out his statue dressed as a god as the thirteenth of the Twelve Olympians 17 But it was Philip s son Alexander the Great who made the divinity of kings standard practice among the Greeks The Egyptians accepted him as Pharaoh and therefore divine after he drove the Persians out of Egypt other nations received him as their traditional divine or quasi divine ruler as he acquired them In 324 BC he sent word to the Greek cities that they should also make him a god they did so with marked indifference 18 which did not stop them from rebelling when they heard of his death next year His immediate successors the Diadochi offered sacrifices to Alexander and made themselves gods even before they claimed to be kings they put their own portraits on the coinage whereas the Greeks had always reserved this for a god or for an emblem of the city When the Athenians allied with Demetrius Poliorcetes eighteen years after the deification of Alexander they lodged him in the Parthenon with Athena and sang a hymn extolling him as a present god who heard them as the other gods did not 19 Euhemerus a contemporary of Alexander wrote a fictitious history of the world which showed Zeus and the other established gods of Greece as mortal men who had made themselves into gods in the same way Ennius appears to have translated this into Latin some two centuries later in Scipio Africanus time The Ptolemies of Egypt and the Seleucids claimed godhood as long as they lasted they may have been influenced in this by the Persian and Egyptian traditions of divine kings although the Ptolemies had separate cults in Egyptian polytheism as Pharaoh and in the Greek Not all Greek dynasties made the same claims the descendants of Demetrius who were kings of Macedon and dominated the mainland of Greece did not claim godhead or worship Alexander cf Ptolemaic cult of Alexander the Great Romans among the Greeks Edit The Roman magistrates who conquered the Greek world were fitted into this tradition games were set up in honor of Marcus Claudius Marcellus when he conquered Sicily at the end of the Second Punic War as the Olympian games were for Zeus they were kept up for a century and a half until another Roman governor abolished them to make way for his own honors When Titus Quinctius Flamininus extended Roman influence to Greece proper temples were built for him and cities placed his portrait on their coinage he called himself godlike isotheos in an inscription at Delphi but not in Latin or at Rome The Greeks also devised a goddess Roma not worshipped at Rome who was worshipped with Flamininus their joint cult is attested in 195 BC she would become a symbol of idealised romanitas in the later Roman provinces and a continuing link whereas a Marcellus or Flamininus might only hold power for a couple years When King Prusias I of Bithynia was granted an interview by the Roman Senate he prostrated himself and addressed them as Saviour Gods which would have been etiquette at his own court Livy was shocked by Polybius account of this and insists that there is no Roman source it ever happened 20 Worship and temples appear to have been routinely offered by Greeks to their Roman governors with varied reactions Cicero declined a temple proposed by the city officials of Roman Asia to his brother and himself while the latter was proconsul to avoid jealousy from other Romans when Cicero himself was Governor of Cilicia he claimed to have accepted no statues shrines or chariots His predecessor Appius Claudius Pulcher was so pleased however when the Cilicians built a temple to him that when it was not finished at the end of Claudius year in office Claudius wrote Cicero to make sure it was done and complaining that Cicero was not active enough in the matter 21 Intermediate forms Edit The Romans and the Greeks gave religious reverence to and for human beings in ways that did not make the recipients gods these made the first Greek apotheoses easier Similar middle forms appeared as Augustus approached official divinity nbsp Ruins of a hero shrine or heroon at Sagalassos TurkeyThe Greeks did not consider the dead to be gods but they did pay them homage and gave them sacrifices using different rituals than those for the gods of Olympus The Greeks called the extraordinary dead founders of cities and the like heroes in the simplest form Greek hero cult was the burial and the memorials which any respectable Greek family gave their dead but paid for by their City in perpetuity 22 Most heroes were the figures of ancient legend but some were historical the Athenians revered Harmodius and Aristogeiton as heroes as saviours of Athens from tyranny also collectively those who fell at the Battle of Marathon Statesmen did not generally become heroes but Sophocles was the hero Dexion the Receiver not as a playwright nor a general but because when the Athenians took Asclepius cult during the Peloponnesian War Sophocles housed an image of Asclepius until a shrine could be built The Athenian leader Hagnon founded Amphipolis shortly before the Peloponnesian War thirteen years later while Hagnon was still alive the Spartan general Brasidas liberated it from the Athenian Empire and was fatally wounded in the process The Amphipolitans buried him as a hero declaring him the second founder of the city and erased Hagnon s honors as much as they could The Greeks also honored founders of cities while they were still alive like Hagnon This could also be extended to men who did equally important things during the period when Dion ruled in Syracuse the Syracusans gave him heroic honors for suppressing the tyrants and repeated this for Timoleon these could also be described as worshipping his good spirit agathos daimon agathodaemon every Greek had an agathodaemon and the Greek equivalent of a toast was offered to one s agathodaemon 23 Timoleon was called savior he set up a shrine to Fortune Automatia in his house and his birthday the festival of his daimon became a public holiday 24 Other men might claim divine favor by having a patron among the gods so Alcibiades may have had both Eros and Cybele as patrons 25 and Clearchus of Heraclea claimed to be son of Zeus Alexander claimed the patronage of Dionysus and other gods and heroes 26 he held a banquet at Bactra which combined the toast to his agathos daimon and libations to Dionysus who was present within Alexander and therefore the celebrants saluted Alexander rather than the hearth and altar as they would have done for a toast 27 It was not always easy to distinguish between heroic honors veneration for a man s good spirit worship of his patron deity worship of the Fortune of a city he founded and worship of the man himself One might slide into another In Egypt there was a cult of Alexander as god and as founder of Alexandria Ptolemy I Soter had a separate cult as founder of Ptolemais which presumably worshipped his daimon and then gave him heroic honors but in his son s reign the priests of Alexander also worshipped Ptolemy and Berenice as the Savior Gods theoi soteres 28 Finally a man might like Philip II assume some prerogatives of godhood and not others The first Attalid kings of Pergamum were not gods and supported a cult of Dionysus Cathegemon as their ancestor they put the picture of Philetaerus the first prince on the coins rather than their own Eventually like the Seleucids they acquired an eponymous priest and put themselves on the coinage but they still were not called gods before their deaths Pergamum was usually allied with Rome and this may have influenced the eventual Roman practice 29 End of the Republic EditIn the last decades of the Roman Republic its leaders regularly assumed extra constitutional powers The mos majorum had required that magistrates hold office collectively and for short periods there were two consuls even colonies were founded by boards of three men 30 but these new leaders held power by themselves and often for years The same men were often given extraordinary honors Triumphs grew ever more splendid Marius and Sulla the rival leaders in Rome s first civil war each founded cities which they named after themselves Sulla had annual games in his honor at Rome itself bearing his name the unofficial worship of Marius is above In the next generation Pompey was allowed to wear his triumphal ornaments whenever he went to the Games at the Circus 31 Such men also claimed a special relationship to the gods Sulla s patron was Venus Felix and at the height of his power he added Felix to his own name his opponent Marius believed he had a destiny and that no ordinary man might kill him Pompey also claimed Venus personal favour and built her a temple But the first Roman to become a god as part of aiming at monarchy was Julius Caesar Divus Julius Edit Caesar could claim personal ties to the gods both by descent and by office He was from the gens Julia whose members contended to be descended from Aeneas and his mother Venus In his eulogy for his aunt Julia Caesar also indirectly claimed to be descended from Ancus Marcius and the kings of Rome and so from Mars 32 Moreover when he was a teenager Marius had named him flamen Dialis the special priest of Jupiter Sulla had cancelled this appointment however relatively early in his career Caesar had become pontifex maximus the chief priest of Rome who fulfilled most of the religious duties of the ancient kings 33 He had spent his twenties in the divine monarchies of the eastern Mediterranean and was intimately familiar with Bithynia 34 Caesar made use of these connections in his rise to power but not more than his rivals would have or more than his other advantages When he spoke at the funeral of his aunt Julia in 69 BC Julius Caesar spoke of her descent from the Roman kings and implied his own but he also reminded his audience she had been Marius wife and by implication that he was one of the few surviving Marians When however he defeated his rivals in 45 BC and assumed full personal control of the Roman state he asserted more During the Roman Civil War since 49 BC he had returned to the Eastern Mediterranean where he had been called god and savior and been familiar with the Ptolemaic Egyptian monarchy of Cleopatra called Cleopatra Thea because of the weight she placed on her own divinity Also he had a new Senate to deal with Most of the more resolute defenders of the Senate had joined with Pompey and one way or another they were not sitting in the Senate Caesar had replaced them with his own partisans few of whom were committed to the old Roman methods some of them were not even from Italy It was rumoured that Caesar intended a despotic removal of power and wealth from Rome eastwards perhaps to Alexandria or Ilium Troy 35 During the Civil War he had declared Venus his patron goddess he vowed to erect a temple for Venus Victrix if she granted him the battle of Pharsalia but he had built it in 46 BC to Venus Genetrix which epithet combined her aspects as his ancestress the mother of the Roman people and the goddess invoked in the philosophical poem De rerum natura The new Senate had also put up a statue of Caesar with an inscription declaring him a demi god but he had it effaced as not the claim he wished to make 36 Granted the same extension of rights to triumphal dress as Pompey had been given Caesar took to wearing his triumphal head wreath wherever and whenever excusing this as a cover for his baldness He may also have publicly worn the red boots and the toga picta painted purple toga usually reserved to a triumphing general for the day of his triumph a costume also associated with the rex sacrorum the priestly king of the sacred rites of Rome s monarchic era later the pontifex maximus the Monte Albano kings and possibly the statue of Jupiter Capitolinus nbsp Denarius of C Cossutius Maridianus 44 BC with the head of Julius Caesar on the obverse The legend mentions PARENS PATRIAEWhen the news of his final victory at the battle of Munda reached Rome the Parilia the games commemorating the founding of the city were to be held the next day they were rededicated to Caesar as if he were founder Statues were set up to Caesar s Liberty and to Caesar himself as unconquered god 37 He was accorded a house at public expense which was built like a temple his image was paraded with those of the gods 38 his portrait was put on the coins the first time a living man had appeared on Roman coinage Early in 44 BC he was called parens patriae father of the country 39 legal oaths were taken by his Genius his birthday was made a public festival the month Quinctilis was renamed July in his honor as June was named for Juno At last a special priest a flamen was ordained for him the first was to be Mark Antony Caesar s adjutant then consul To be served by a flamen would rank Caesar not only as divine but as an equal of Quirinus Jupiter and Mars In Cicero s hostile account the living Caesar s honours in Rome were already and unambiguously those of a full blown god deus 40 nbsp A denarius minted circa 18 BC Obverse CAESAR AVGVSTVS Reverse DIVVS IVLIV S with comet of eight rays tail upwardCaesar s name as a living divinity not as yet ratified by senatorial vote was Divus Julius or perhaps Jupiter Julius divus at that time was a slightly archaic form of deus suitable for poetry implying some association with the bright heavens A statue of him was erected next to the statues of Rome s ancient kings with this he seemed set to make himself King of Rome in the Hellenistic style as soon as he came back from the expedition to Parthia he was planning but he was betrayed and killed in the Senate on 15 March 44 BC 41 42 43 44 An angry grief stricken crowd gathered in the Roman Forum to see his corpse and hear Mark Antony s funeral oration Antony appealed to Caesar s divinity and vowed vengeance on his killers A fervent popular cult to divus Julius followed It was forcefully suppressed but the Senate soon succumbed to Caesarian pressure and confirmed Caesar as a divus of the Roman state A comet interpreted as Caesar s soul in heaven was named the Julian star sidus Iulium and in 42 BC with the full consent of the Senate and people of Rome Caesar s young heir his great nephew Octavian held ceremonial apotheosis for his adoptive father 45 In 40 BC Antony took up his appointment as flamen of the divus Julius Provincial cult centres caesarea to the divus Julius were founded in Caesarian colonies such as Corinth 46 Antony s loyalty to his late patron did not extend to Caesar s heir but in the last significant act of the long drawn civil war on 1 August 31 BC Octavian defeated Antony at Actium Caesar s heir Edit nbsp Augustus as Jove holding scepter and orb first half of 1st century AD 47 In 30 29 BC the koina of Asia and Bithynia requested permission to worship Octavian as their deliverer or saviour 48 This was by no means a novel request but it placed Octavian in a difficult position He must satisfy popularist and traditionalist expectations and these could be notoriously incompatible Marius Gratidianus s popular support and cult had ended in his public and spectacular death in 82 BC at the hands of his enemies in the Senate likewise Caesar s murder now marked an hubristic connection between living divinity and death 46 Octavian had to respect the overtures of his Eastern allies acknowledge the nature and intent of Hellenic honours and formalise his own pre eminence among any possible rivals he must also avoid a potentially fatal identification in Rome as a monarchic deistic aspirant It was decided that cult honours to him could be jointly offered to dea Roma at cult centres to be built at Pergamum and Nicomedia Provincials who were also Roman citizens were not to worship the living emperor but might worship dea Roma and the divus Julius at precincts in Ephesus and Nicaea 49 50 51 In 29 BC Octavian dedicated the temple of the divus Julius at the site of Caesar s cremation Not only had he dutifully legally and officially honoured his adoptive father as a divus of the Roman state He had come into being through the Julian star and was therefore the divi filius son of the divinity 52 But where Caesar had failed Octavian had succeeded he had restored the pax deorum lit peace of the gods and re founded Rome through August augury 53 In 27 BC he was voted and accepted the elevated title of Augustus 54 Religion and Imperium under Augustus Edit Augustus appeared to claim nothing for himself and innovate nothing even the cult to the divus Julius had a respectable antecedent in the traditional cult to di parentes 55 His unique and still traditional position within the Senate as princeps or primus inter pares first among equals offered a curb to the ambitions and rivalries that had led to the recent civil wars As censor and pontifex maximus he was morally obliged to renew the mos maiores by the will of the gods and the Senate and People of Rome Senatus Populusque Romanus As tribune he encouraged generous public spending and as princeps of the Senate he discouraged ambitious extravagance He disbanded the remnants of the civil war armies to form new legions and a personal imperial guard the Praetorian Guard the patricians who still clung to the upper echelons of political military and priestly power were gradually replaced from a vast Empire wide reserve of ambitious and talented equestrians For the first time senatorial status became heritable 56 Ordinary citizens could circumvent the complex hierarchic bureaucracy of the State and appeal directly to the emperor as if to a private citizen The emperor s name and image were ubiquitous on state coinage and on the streets within and upon the temples of the gods and particularly in the courts and offices of the civil and military administration Oaths were sworn in his name with his image as witness His official res gestae achievements included his repair of 82 temples in 28 BC alone the founding or repair of 14 others in Rome during his lifetime and the overhauling or foundation of civic amenities including a new road water supplies Senate house and theatres 57 Above all his military pre eminence had brought an enduring and sacred peace which earned him the permanent title of imperator and made the triumph an Imperial privilege 58 He seems to have managed all this within due process of law through a combination of personal brio cheerfully veiled threats and self deprecation as just another senator 59 60 In Rome it was enough that the office munificence auctoritas and gens of Augustus were identified with every possible legal religious and social institution of the city Should foreigners or private citizens wish to honour him as something more that was their prerogative within moderation his acknowledgment of their loyalty demonstrated his own moral responsibility and generosity his Imperial revenue funded temples amphitheatres theatres baths festivals and government This unitary principle laid the foundations for what is now known as imperial cult which would be expressed in many different forms and emphases throughout the multicultural Empire citation needed Eastern provinces Edit nbsp Augustus in Egyptian style on the temple of Kalabsha in Egyptian Nubia In the Eastern provinces cultural precedent ensured a rapid and geographically widespread dissemination of cult extending as far as the Augustan military settlement at modern day Najran 61 Considered as a whole these provinces present the Empire s broadest and most complex syntheses of imperial and native cult funded through private and public initiatives and ranging from the god like honours due a living patron to what Harland 2003 interprets as privately funded communal mystery rites 62 63 The Greek cities of Roman Asia competed for the privilege of building high status imperial cult centres neocorates Ephesus and Sardis ancient rivals had two apiece until the early 3rd century AD when Ephesus was allowed an additional temple to the reigning Emperor Caracalla When he died the city lost its brief celebrated advantage through a religious technicality 64 The Eastern provinces offer some of the clearest material evidence for the imperial domus and familia as official models of divine virtue and moral propriety Centres including Pergamum Lesbos and Cyprus offered cult honours to Augustus and the Empress Livia the Cypriot calendar honoured the entire Augustan familia by dedicating a month each and presumably cult practise to imperial family members their ancestral deities and some of the major gods of the Romano Greek pantheon Coin evidence links Thea Livia with Hera and Demeter and Julia the Elder with Venus Genetrix Aphrodite In Athens Livia and Julia shared cult honour with Hestia equivalent to Vesta and the name of Gaius was linked to Ares Mars These Eastern connections were made within Augustus lifetime Livia was not officially consecrated in Rome until some time after her death Eastern imperial cult had a life of its own 65 Around 280 in the reign of the emperor Probus and just before the outbreak of the Diocletianic persecution part of the Luxor Temple was converted to an imperial cult chapel 66 Western provinces Edit The Western provinces were only recently Latinised following Caesar s Gallic Wars and most fell outside the Graeco Roman cultural ambit There were exceptions Polybius mentions a past benefactor of New Carthage in Republican Iberia said to have been offered divine honours 67 In 74 BC Roman citizens in Iberia burned incense to Metellus Pius as more than mortal in hope of his victory against Sertorius 68 Otherwise the West offered no native traditions of monarchic divinity or political parallels to the Greek koina to absorb the imperial cult as a romanising agency 69 The Western provincial concilia emerged as direct creations of the imperial cult which recruited existing local military political and religious traditions to a Roman model This required only the willingness of barbarian elites to Romanise themselves and their communities 70 nbsp Temple of Augustus and Livia Vienne modern France Originally dedicated to Augustus and Roma Augustus was deified on his death in 14 AD his widow Livia was deified in 42 AD by Claudius The first known Western regional cults to Augustus were established with his permission around 19 BC in north western Celtic Spain and named arae sestianae after their military founder L Sestius Quirinalis Albinianus 71 Soon after in either 12 BC or 10 BC the first provincial imperial cult centre in the West was founded at Lugdunum by Drusus as a focus for his new tripartite administrative division of Gallia Comata Lugdunum set the type for official Western cult as a form of Roman provincial identity parcelled into the establishment of military administrative centres These were strategically located within the unstable barbarian Western provinces of the new Principate and inaugurated by military commanders who were in all but one instance members of the imperial family 72 The first priest of the Ara altar at Lugdunum s great imperial cult complex was Caius Julius Vercondaridubnus a Gaul of the provincial elite given Roman citizenship and entitled by his priestly office to participate in the local government of his provincial concilium Though not leading to senatorial status and almost certainly an annually elected office unlike the traditional lifetime priesthoods of Roman flamines priesthood in imperial provinces thus offered a provincial equivalent to the traditional Roman cursus honorum 73 The rejection of cult spurned romanitas priesthood and citizenship in 9 AD Segimundus imperial cult priest of what would later be known as Colonia Claudia Ara Agrippinensium sited at modern Cologne in Germany cast off or destroyed his priestly regalia to join the rebellion of his kinsman Arminius 74 Western provinces of Roman Africa Edit In the early Principate an altar inscribed Marazgu Aug usto Sac rum Dedicated to Marazgu Augustus identifies a local Ancient Libyan Berber deity with the supreme power of Augustus In the senatorial province of Africa Proconsularis altars to the Dii Magifie Augusti attest according to Potter a deity who was simultaneously local and universal rather than one whose local identity was subsumed or absorbed by an Imperial divus or deity 75 Two temples are attested to Roma and the divus Augustus one dedicated under Tiberius at Leptis Magna and another Julio Claudian at Mactar 76 A third at Carthage was dedicated to the Gens Augusta in the very early empire 77 The Imperial succession EditJulio Claudian Edit nbsp Temple of Divus Augustus a major temple built to commemorate the deified Roman emperor Augustus Even as he prepared his adopted son Tiberius for the role of princeps and recommended him to the Senate as a worthy successor Augustus seems to have doubted the propriety of dynastic imperium this however was probably his only feasible course 78 When Augustus died he was voted a divus by the Senate and his body was cremated in a sumptuous funeral his soul was said to have ascended to the heavens to join his adoptive father among the Olympians his ashes were deposited in the Imperial Mausoleum which tactfully identified him and later his descendants by his Imperial names rather than as divus 79 After Augustus the only new cults to Roman officials are those connected to the Imperial household 80 81 82 On his death the Senate debated and passed a lex de imperio which voted Tiberius princeps through his proven merit in office and awarded him the honorific Augustus as name and title 83 Tiberius accepted his position and title as emperor with apparent reluctance Though he proved a capable and efficient administrator he could not match his predecessor s extraordinary energy and charisma Roman historians described him as morose and mistrustful With a self deprecation that may have been entirely genuine he encouraged the cult to his father and discouraged his own 84 After much wrangling he allowed a single temple in Smyrna to himself and the genius of the Senate in 26 AD eleven cities had competed with some vehemence and even violence for the honour 85 His lack of personal auctoritas allowed increasing praetorian influence over the Imperial house the Senate and through it the state 86 In 31 AD his praetorian prefect Sejanus by now a virtual co ruler was implicated in the death of Tiberius son and heir apparent Drusus and was executed as a public enemy In Umbria the imperial cult priest sevir Augustalis memorialised the providence of Tiberius Caesar Augustus born for the eternity of the Roman name upon the removal of that most pernicious enemy of the Roman people In Crete thanks were given to the numen and foresight of Tiberius Caesar Augustus and the Senate in foiling the conspiracy but at his death the Senate and his heir Caligula chose not to officially deify him 87 Caligula s rule exposed the legal and moral contradictions of the Augustan Republic To legalise his succession the Senate was compelled to constitutionally define his role but the rites and sacrifices to the living genius of the emperor already acknowledged his constitutionally unlimited powers The princeps played the role of primus inter pares only through personal self restraint and decorum It became evident that Caligula had little of either He seems to have taken the cult of his own genius very seriously and is said to have enjoyed acting the god or rather several of them However his infamous and oft cited impersonations of major deities may represent no more than his priesthood of their cults a desire to shock and a penchant for triumphal dress 88 or simply mental illness 89 Whatever his plans there is no evidence for his official cult as a living divus in Rome or his replacement of state gods and none for major deviations or innovations in his provincial cult 90 His reported sexual relations with his sister Drusilla and her deification after death aroused scorn from later historians after Caligula s death her cult was simply allowed to fade His reported extortion of priesthood fees from unwilling senators are marks of private cult and personal humiliations among the elite Caligula s fatal offense was to willfully insult or offend everyone who mattered including the senior military officers who assassinated him 91 The histories of his reign highlight his wayward impiety Perhaps not only his in 40 AD the Senate decreed that the emperor should sit on a high platform even in the very Senate house 92 Claudius his successor and uncle intervened to limit the damage to the imperial house and those who had conspired against it and had Caligula s public statues discreetly removed 93 nbsp Cameo depicting the apotheosis of Claudius mid 1st century CE Claudius was chosen emperor by Caligula s Praetorian Guard and consolidated his position with cash payments donativa to the military The Senate was forced to ratify the choice and accept the affront Claudius adopted the cognomen Caesar deified Augustus wife Livia 13 years after her death and in 42 AD was granted the title pater patriae father of the country but relations between emperor and Senate seem to have been irreparable 94 Claudius showed none of Caligula s excesses He seems to have entirely refused a cult to his own genius but the offer of cult simultaneously acknowledged the high status of those empowered to grant it and the extraordinary status of the princeps Claudius repeated refusals may have been interpreted as offensive to Senate provincials and the imperial office itself He further offended the traditional hierarchy by promoting his own trusted freedmen as imperial procurators those closest to the emperor held high status through their proximity 95 It has been assumed that he allowed a single temple for his cult in Britain following his conquest there 96 The temple is certain it was sited at Camulodunum modern Colchester the main colonia in the province and was a focus of British wrath during the Boudiccan revolt of 60 AD 97 But cult to the living Claudius there is very unlikely he had already refused Alexandrine cult honours as vulgar and impious and cult to living emperors was associated with arae altars not temples 98 The British worship offered him as a living divus is probably no more than a cruel literary judgment on his worth as emperor Despite his evident respect for republican norms he was not taken seriously by his own class and in Seneca s fawning Neronian fiction the Roman gods cannot take him seriously as a divus the wild British might be more gullible 99 In reality they proved resentful enough to rebel though probably less against the Claudian divus than against brutal abuses and the financial burden represented by its temple Claudius died in 54 AD and was deified by his adopted son and successor Nero 100 After an apparently magnificent funeral the divus Claudius was given a temple on Rome s disreputable Caelian Hill 101 Fishwick remarks that the malicious humour of the site can hardly have been lost by those in the know the location of Claudius temple in Britain the occasion for his pathetic triumph may be more of the same 102 Once in power Nero allowed Claudius cult to lapse built his Domus Aurea over the unfinished temple indulged his sybaritic and artistic inclinations and allowed the cult of his own genius as pater familias of the Roman people 103 Senatorial attitudes to him appear to have been largely negative He was overthrown in a military coup and his institutions of cult to his dead wife Poppaea and infant daughter Claudia Augusta were abandoned Otherwise he seems to have been a popular emperor particularly in the Eastern provinces Tacitus reports a senatorial proposal to dedicate a temple to Nero as a living divus taken as ominous because divine honours are not paid to an emperor till he has ceased to live among men 104 Flavian Edit nbsp The Genius of Domitian with aegis and cornucopia found near the Via Labicana EsquilineNero s death saw the end of imperial tenure as a privilege of ancient Roman patrician and senatorial families In a single chaotic year power passed violently from one to another of four emperors The first three promoted their own genius cult the last two of these attempted Nero s restitution and promotion to divus The fourth Vespasian son of an equestrian from Reate secured his Flavian dynasty through reversion to an Augustan form of principate and renewed the imperial cult of divus Julius 105 106 Vespasian could not validate his reign in the same way as the previous Julio Claudian dynasty who could trace their lineage back to the divine ancestry of Julius Caesar Without the ability to trace their origins to any Roman deity the new Flavian dynasty under Vespasian had to establish a new standard of policy in order to rule over a people predisposed to the divine imperial cult tradition 107 Vespasian was respected for his restoration of Roman tradition and the Augustan modesty of his reign He dedicated state cult to genio populi Romani the genius of the Roman people respected senatorial Republican values and repudiated Neronian practice by removing various festivals from the public calendars which had in Tacitus unsparing assessment become foully sullied by the flattery of the times 108 He may have had the head of Nero s Colossus replaced or recut for its dedication or rededication to the sun god in 75 AD 109 110 111 Following the first Jewish Revolt and the destruction of the Temple in Jerusalem in 70 AD he imposed the didrachmon formerly paid by Jews for their Temple s upkeep but now re routed to Jupiter Capitolinus as victor over them and their God Jews who paid the tax were exempt from the cult to imperial state deities Those who offered it however were ostracised from their own communities 112 Vespasian appears to have approached his own impending cult with dry humour according to Suetonius his last words were puto deus fio I think I m turning into a god Vespasian s son Titus reigned for two successful years then died of natural causes He was deified and replaced by his younger brother Domitian Within two weeks of accession Domitian had restored the cult of the ruling emperor s genius 113 He remains a controversial figure described as one of the very few emperors to scandalously style himself a living divus as evidenced by the use of master and god dominus et deus in imperial documents However there are no records of Domitian s personal use of the title its use in official address or cult to him its presence on his coinage or in the Arval Acts relating to his state cult It occurs only in his later reign and was almost certainly initiated and used by his own procurators who in the Claudian tradition were also his freedmen 114 Like any other pater familias and patron Domitian was master and god to his extended familia including his slaves freedmen and clients Pliny s descriptions of sacrifice to Domitian on the Capitol are consistent with the entirely unremarkable private and informal rites accorded to living emperors Domitian was a traditionalist severe and repressive but respected by the military and the general populace He admired Augustus and may have sought to emulate him but made the same tactless error as Caligula in treating the Senate as clients and inferiors rather than as the fictive equals required by Augustan ideology His assassination was planned and implemented from within his court and his name officially but rather unsystematically erased from inscriptions 115 Nervan Antonine Edit The Senate chose the elderly childless and apparently reluctant Nerva as emperor Nerva had long standing family and consular connections with the Julio Claudian and Flavian families but proved a dangerously mild and indecisive princeps he was persuaded to abdicate in favour of Trajan Pliny the Younger s panegyric of 100 AD claims the visible restoration of senatorial authority and dignity throughout the empire under Trajan but while he praises the emperor s modesty Pliny does not disguise the precarious nature of this autocratic gift 116 Under Trajan s very capable civil and military leadership the office of emperor was increasingly interpreted as an earthly viceregency of the divine order He would prove an enduring model for Roman imperial virtues 117 118 The emperor Hadrian s Hispano Roman origins and marked pro Hellenism changed the focus of imperial cult His standard coinage still identifies with the genius populi Romani but other issues stress his identification with Hercules Gaditanus Hercules of Gades and Rome s imperial protection of Greek civilisation 119 Commemorative coinage shows him raising up provincial deities thus elevating and restoring the provinces he promoted Sagalassos in Greek Pisidia as the Empire s leading imperial cult centre and in 131 2 AD he sponsored the exclusively Greek Panhellenion 120 He was said to have wept like a woman at the death of his young lover Antinous and arranged his apotheosis Dio claims that Hadrian was held to ridicule for this emotional indulgence particularly as he had delayed the apotheosis of his own sister Paulina after her death 121 nbsp Antinous portrayed as Dionysus in a relief from the area between Anzio et LanuviumThe cult of Antinous would prove one of remarkable longevity and devotion particularly in the Eastern provinces Bithynia as his birthplace featured his image on coinage as late as the reign of Caracalla r 211 217 His popular cult appears to have thrived well into the 4th century when he became the whipping boy of pagan worship in Christian polemic Vout 2007 remarks his humble origins untimely death and resurrection as theos and his identification and sometimes misidentification by later scholarship with the images and religious functions of Apollo Dionysius Bacchus and later Osiris 122 In Rome itself he was also theos on two of three surviving inscriptions but was more closely associated with hero cult which allowed direct appeals for his intercession with higher gods 123 124 Hadrian imposed the imperial cult to himself and Jupiter on Judaea following the Bar Kokhba revolt He was predeceased by his wife Vibia Sabina Both were deified but Hadrian s case had to be pleaded by his successor Antoninus Pius 125 Marcus Aurelius tutor Fronto offers the best evidence of imperial portraiture as a near ubiquitous feature of private and public life 126 Though evidence for private emperor worship is as sparse in this era as in all others Fronto s letters imply the genius cult of the living emperor as an official domestic and personal practice probably more common than cult to the divi in this and other periods 127 Marcus son Commodus succumbed to the lures of self indulgence easy populism and rule by favourites 128 129 He described his reign as a golden age and himself as a new Romulus and re founder of Rome but was deeply antagonistic toward the Senate he reversed the standard Republican imperial formula to populus senatusque romanus the people and senate of Rome He increasingly identified himself with the demigod Hercules in statuary temples and in the arena where he liked to entertain as a bestiarius in the morning and a gladiator in the afternoon In the last year of his life he was voted the official title Romanus Hercules the state cult to Hercules acknowledged him as heroic a divinity or semi divinity but not a divus who had once been mortal 130 Commodus may have intended declaring himself as a living god some time before his murder on the last day of 192 AD 131 The Nervan Antonine dynasty ended in chaos The Senate declared damnatio memoriae on Commodus whose urban prefect Pertinax was declared emperor by the Praetorian Guard in return for the promise of very large donativa 132 Pertinax had risen through equestrian ranks by military talent and administrative efficiency to become senator consul and finally and briefly emperor he was murdered by his Praetorians for attempting to cap their pay 133 Pertinax was replaced by Didius Julianus who had promised cash to the Praetorians and restoration of power to the Senate Julianus began his reign with an ill judged appeal to the memory of Commodus a much resented attempt to bribe the populace en masse and the use of Praetorian force against them In protest a defiant urban crowd occupied the senatorial seats at the Circus Maximus 134 Against a background of civil war among competing claimants in the provinces Septimius Severus emerged as a likely victor The Senate soon voted for the death of Julianus the deification of Pertinax and the elevation of Septimius as emperor 135 Only a year had passed since the death of Commodus Severan Edit Sit divus dum non sit vivus let him be a divus as long as he is not alive Attributed to Caracalla before murdering his co emperor and brother Geta 136 nbsp The Severan Tondo shows Septimius Severus his wife Julia Domna their younger son Caracalla lower right of picture and the obliterated image of his murdered co heir Geta Staatliche Museen zu Berlin In 193 AD Septimius Severus triumphally entered Rome and gave apotheosis to Pertinax He cancelled the Senate s damnatio memoriae of Commodus deified him as a frater brother and thereby adopted Marcus Aurelius as his own ancestor through an act of filial piety 137 Severan coin images further re enforced Severus association with prestigious Antonine dynasts and the genius populi Romani 138 139 Severus reign represents a watershed in relations between Senate emperors and the military 140 Senatorial consent defined divine imperium as a republican permission for the benefit of the Roman people and apotheosis was a statement of senatorial powers Where Vespasian had secured his position with appeals to the genius of the Senate and Augustan tradition Severus overrode the customary preferment of senators to senior military office He increased plebeian privilege in Rome stationed a loyal garrison there and selected his own commanders He paid personal attention to the provinces as sources of revenue military manpower and unrest Following his defeat of his rival Clodius Albinus at Lugdunum he re founded and reformed its imperial cult centre dea Roma was removed from the altar and confined to the temple along with the deified Augusti 141 Fishwick interprets the obligatory new rites as those due any pater familias from his inferiors 142 Severus own patron deities Melqart Hercules and Liber Bacchus took pride of place with himself and his two sons at the Secular Games of 204 AD 143 Severus died of natural causes in 211 AD at Eboracum modern York while on campaign in Britannia after leaving the Empire equally to Caracalla and his older brother Geta along with advice to be harmonious enrich the soldiers and scorn all other men 144 nbsp A denarius of GetaBy 212 AD Caracalla had murdered Geta pronounced his damnatio memoriae and issued the Constitutio Antoniniana this gave full Roman citizenship to all free inhabitants of the Empire 145 and was couched as a generous invitation to celebrate the victory of the Roman people in foiling Geta s conspiracy In reality Caracalla was faced by an endemic shortfall of cash and recruits His gift was a far from popular move as most of its recipients were humiliores of peasant status and occupation approximately 90 of the total population Humiliores they remained but now liable to pay taxes serve in the legions and adopt the name of their liberator Where other emperors had employed the mos maiorum of family obligation at the largely symbolic level of genius cult Caracalla literally identified his personal survival with the state and his citizens 146 Caracalla inherited the devotion of his father s soldiery but his new citizens were not inclined to celebrate and his attempts to court popularity in Commodan style seem to have misfired 147 In Philostratus estimation his embrace of Empire foundered on his grudging parochial mindset He was assassinated in 217 AD with the possible collusion of his praetorian prefect Macrinus 148 The military hailed Macrinus as imperator and he arranged for the apotheosis of Caracalla Aware of the impropriety of his unprecedented leap through the traditional cursus honorum from equestrian to emperor he respectfully sought senatorial approval for his self nomination It was granted the new emperor had a lawyer s approach to imperium 149 but his foreign policy proved too cautious and placatory for the military 150 After little more than a year he was murdered in a coup and replaced with an emperor of Syrian background and Severan descent Varius Avitus Bassianus more usually known by the Latinised name of his god and his priesthood Elagabalus 151 The 14 year old emperor brought his solar mountain deity from his native Emesa to Rome and into official imperial cult 152 In Syria the cult of Elagabalus was popular and well established In Rome it was a foreign and according to some ancient sources disgusting Eastern novelty In 220 AD the priest Elagabalus replaced Jupiter with the god Elagabalus as sol invictus the unconquered Sun and thereafter neglected his Imperial role as pontifex maximus According to Marius Maximus he ruled from his degenerate domus through prefects who included among others a charioteer a locksmith a barber and a cook 153 At the very least he appears to have been regarded as an unacceptably effete eccentric by the Senate and military alike He was assassinated by the Praetorians at the age of 18 subjected to the fullest indignities of damnatio memoriae and replaced with his young cousin Alexander Severus the last of his dynasty who reigned for 13 years until killed in a mutiny in 235 Imperial crisis and the Dominate EditThe end of the Severan dynasty marked the breakdown of central imperium Against a background of economic hyperinflation and latterly endemic plague rival provincial claimants fought for supremacy and failing this set up their own provincial Empires Most emperors seldom even saw Rome and had only notional relationships with their senates In the absence of coordinated Imperial military response foreign peoples seized the opportunity for invasion and plunder nbsp Antoninianus of Philip the Arab showing him in the radiate crownMaximinus Thrax reigned 235 8 AD sequestered the resources of state temples in Rome to pay his armies The temples of the divi were first in line It was an unwise move for his own posterity as the grant or withholding of apotheosis remained an official judgment of Imperial worthiness but the stripping of the temples of state gods caused far greater offense Maximinus s actions more likely show need in extreme crisis than impiety as he had his wife deified on her death 154 but in a rare display of defiance the Senate deified his murdered predecessor then openly rebelled 155 His replacement Gordian I reigned briefly but successfully and was made a divus on his death A succession of short lived soldier emperors followed Further development in imperial cult appears to have stalled until Philip the Arab who dedicated a statue to his father as divine in his home town of Philippopolis and brought the body of his young predecessor Gordian III to Rome for apotheosis Coins of Philip show him in the radiate crown suggestive of solar cult or a Hellenised form of imperial monarchy with Rome s temple to Venus and dea Roma on the reverse 156 In 249 AD Philip was succeeded or murdered and usurped by his praetorian prefect Decius a traditionalist ex consul and governor After an accession of doubtful validity Decius justified himself as rightful restorer and saviour of Empire and its religio early in his reign he issued a coin series of imperial divi in radiate solar crowns 157 Philip the three Gordians Pertinax and Claudius were omitted presumably because Decius thought them unworthy of the honour 158 159 In the wake of religious riots in Egypt he decreed that all subjects of the Empire must actively seek to benefit the state through witnessed and certified sacrifice to ancestral gods or suffer a penalty sacrifice on Rome s behalf by loyal subjects would define them and their gods as Roman 160 Only Jews were exempt from this obligation 161 The Decian edict required that refusal of sacrifice be tried and punished at proconsular level Apostasy was sought rather than capital punishment 162 A year after its due deadline the edict was allowed to expire and shortly after this Decius himself died 163 Valerian 253 60 identified Christianity as the largest most stubbornly self interested of non Roman cults outlawed Christian assembly and urged Christians to sacrifice to Rome s traditional gods 164 165 His son and co Augustus Gallienus an initiate of the Eleusinian Mysteries identified himself with traditional Roman gods and the virtue of military loyalty 166 Aurelian 270 75 appealed for harmony among his soldiers concordia militum stabilised the Empire and its borders and established an official Hellenic form of unitary cult to the Palmyrene Sol Invictus in Rome s Campus Martius The Senate hailed him as restitutor orbis restorer of the world and deus et dominus natus god and born ruler he was murdered by his Praetorians His immediate successors consolidated his achievements coinage of Probus 276 82 shows him in radiate solar crown and his prolific variety of coin types include issues showing the temple of Venus and Dea Roma in Rome 167 168 These policies and preoccupations culminated in Diocletian s Tetrarchy the Empire was divided into Western and Eastern administrative blocs each with an Augustus senior emperor helped by a Caesar junior emperor as Augustus in waiting Provinces were divided and subdivided their imperial bureaucracy became extraordinary in size scope and attention to detail Diocletian was a religious conservative On his accession in AD 284 he held games in honour of the divus Antinous 169 Where his predecessors had attempted the persuasion and coercion of recalcitrant sects Diocletian launched a series of ferocious reactions known in Church history as the Diocletianic Persecution According to Lactantius this began with a report of ominous haruspicy in Diocletian s domus and a subsequent but undated dictat of placatory sacrifice by the entire military 170 A date of 302 is regarded as likely and Eusebius also says the persecutions of Christians began in the army 171 However Maximilian s martyrdom 295 came from his refusal of military service and Marcellus 298 for renouncing his military oath Legally these were military insurrections and Diocletian s edict may have followed these and similar acts of conscience and faith 164 An unknown number of Christians appear to have suffered the extreme and exemplary punishments traditionally reserved for rebels and traitors Under Diocletian s expanded imperial collegia imperial honours distinguished both Augusti from their Caesares and Diocletian as senior Augustus from his colleague Maximian 172 While the division of Empire and imperium seemed to offer the possibility of a peaceful and well prepared succession its unity required the highest investiture of power and status in one man An elaborate choreography of etiquette surrounded the approach to the imperial person and imperial progressions The senior Augustus in particular was made a separate and unique being accessible only through those closest to him 173 nbsp The near identical official images of the collegial Imperial Tetrarchs conceal Diocletian s seniority and the internal stresses of his empire Diocletian s avowed conservatism almost certainly precludes a systematic design toward personal elevation as a divine monarch Rather he formally elaborated imperial ceremony as a manifestation of the divine order of Empire and elevated emperorship as the supreme instrument of the divine will The idea was Augustan or earlier expressed most clearly in Stoic philosophy and the solar cult especially under Aurelian At the very beginning of his reign before his Tetrarchy Diocletian had adopted the signum of Jovius his co Augustus adopted the title Herculius During the Tetrarchy such titles were multiplied but with no clear reflection of implicit divine seniority in one case the divine signum of the Augustus is inferior to that of his Caesar These divine associations may have followed a military precedent of emperors as comes to divinities or divinities as comes to emperors Moreover the divine signum appears in the fairly narrow context of court panegyric and civil etiquette It makes no appearance on the general coinage or statuary of the Tetrarchs who are presented as impersonal near homogenous abstractions of imperial might and unity 174 175 Context and precedents EditThe Augustan settlement was promoted by its contemporary apologists as restorative and conservative rather than revolutionary 176 Official cult to the genius of the living princeps as first among equals recognised his exceptional powers his capacity for self restraint and his pious respect for Republican traditions Good emperors rejected offers of official cult as a living deity and accepted the more modest honour of genius cult Claims that later emperors sought and obtained divine honours in Rome reflect their bad relationship with their senates in Tertullian s day it was still a curse to name the emperor a god before his death On the other hand to judge from the domestic ubiquity of the emperor s image private cults to living emperors are as likely in Rome as elsewhere As Gradel observes no Roman was ever prosecuted for sacrificing to his emperor 177 178 Divus deus and the numen Edit nbsp Dedicatory inscription CIL 14 04319 to the numen of the House of the Augustus from Ostia AnticaThe divi had some form of precedent in the di parentes divine ancestors who received ancestral rites as manes gods of the underworld during the Parentalia and other important domestic festivals Their powers were limited deceased mortals did not normally possess the divine power numen of the higher gods 179 180 Deceased emperors did not automatically become divi they must be nominated for the privilege Their case was discussed by the Senate then put to the vote 181 182 As long as the correct rituals and sacrifice were offered the divus would be received by the heavenly gods as a coelicola a dweller in heaven a lesser being than themselves 183 Popular belief held that the divus Augustus would be personally welcomed by Jupiter In Seneca s Apocolocyntosis on the other hand the unexpected arrival of the divinised Claudius creates a problem for the Olympians who have no idea who or what he is and when they find out they cannot think what to do with him Seneca s sarcastic wit an unacceptable impiety towards a deus freely portrays the divus Claudius as just a dead ridiculous and possibly quite bad emperor 184 Though their images were sacrosanct and their rites definitively divine 185 divi could be created unmade reinstated or simply forgotten 186 Augustus and Trajan appear to have remained the ideals for longer than any and cult to good divi appears to have lasted well into the late Imperial dominate The immense power of living emperors on the other hand was mediated through the encompassing agency of the state Once acknowledged as pater familias to an empire a princeps was naturally entitled to genius cult from Imperial subjects of all classes Cult to a living emperor s numen was quite another matter and might be interpreted as no less than a statement of divine monarchy Imperial responses to the first overtures of cult to the August numen were therefore extremely cautious 187 Only much later probably in consequence of the hyperinflation of honours to living emperors could a living emperor be openly formally addressed as numen praesens the numinous presence 188 The obscure relationship between deus divus and numen in imperial cult might simply reflect its origins as a pragmatic respectful and somewhat evasive Imperial solution using broad terminology whose meanings varied according to context For Beard et al a practicable and universal Roman cult of deified emperors and others of the Imperial house must have hinged on the paradox that a mortal might like the semi divine heroic figures of Hercules Aeneas and Romulus possess or acquire sufficient measure of numen to rise above their mortal condition and be in the company of the gods yet remain mortal in the eyes of Roman traditionalists 189 Sacrificium Edit See also Religion in ancient Rome Sacrifice nbsp Marcus Aurelius as pontifex offers sacrifice to Jupiter Capitolinus in gratitude for victory Once part of the Arch of Marcus Aurelius Capitoline Museum Rome Sacred offerings sacrificium formed the contract of public and private religio from oaths of office treaty and loyalty to business contracts and marriage Participation in sacrificium acknowledged personal commitment to the broader community and its values which under Decius became a compulsory observance 190 Livy believed that military and civil disasters were the consequence of error vitium in augury neglect of due and proper sacrifice and the impious proliferation of foreign cults and superstitio 191 Religious law focused on the sacrificial requirements of particular deities on specific occasions 192 In Julio Claudian Rome the Arval priesthood sacrificed to Roman state gods at various temples for the continued welfare of the Imperial family on their birthdays accession anniversaries and to mark extraordinary events such as the quashing of conspiracy or revolt On 3 January they consecrated the annual vows sacrifice promised in the previous year was paid as long as the gods had kept the Imperial family safe for the contracted time If not it could be withheld as it was in the annual vow following the death of Trajan 193 In Pompeii the genius of the living emperor was offered a bull presumably a standard practice in imperial cult at this time though lesser offerings of wine cakes and incense were also given especially in the later Imperial era The divi and genii were offered the same kind of sacrifice as the state gods but cult officials seem to have offered Christians the possibility of sacrifice to emperors as the lesser act 194 195 Augury ira deorum and pax deorum Edit Main article Augur By ancient tradition presiding magistrates sought divine opinion of proposed actions through an augur who read the divine will through the observation of natural signs in the sacred space templum of sacrifice 196 Magistrates could use their right of augury ius augurum to adjourn and overturn the process of law but were obliged to base their decision on the augur s observations and advice For Cicero this made the augur the most powerful authority in the Late Republic 197 198 In the later Republic augury came under the supervision of the college of pontifices a priestly magistral office whose powers were increasingly woven into the cursus honorum The office of pontifex maximus eventually became a de facto consular office 199 When the consul Lepidus died his office as pontifex maximus passed to Augustus who took priestly control over the State oracles including the Sibylline books and used his powers as censor to suppress unapproved oracles 200 Octavian s honorific title of Augustus indicated his achievements as expressions of divine will where the impiety of the Late Republic had provoked heavenly disorder and wrath ira deorum his obedience to divine ordinance brought divine peace pax deorum Genius and household cults Edit The mos maiorum established the near monarchic familial authority of the ordinary pater familias the father of the family or the owner of the family estate his obligations to family and community and his priestly duties to his lares and domestic penates His position was hereditary and dynastic unlike the elected time limited offices of republican magistrates His family and especially his slaves and freedmen owed a reciprocal duty of cult to his genius 201 202 nbsp A winged genius raises Antoninus Pius and his Empress Faustina in apotheosis escorted by two eagles From the column base of Antoninus Pius Vatican Genius pl genii was the essential spirit and generative power depicted as a serpent or as a perennial youth often winged within an individual and their clan gens pl gentes such as the Julli Julians of Julius Caesar A pater familias could confer his name a measure of his genius and a role in his household rites obligations and honours upon those he adopted As Caesar s adopted heir Octavian stood to inherit the genius heritable property and honours of his adoptive father in addition to those obtained through his own birth gens and efforts 203 The exceptionally potent genius of living emperors expressed the will of the gods through Imperial actions 204 In 30 BC libation offerings to the genius of Octavian later Augustus became a duty at public and private banquets and from 12 BC state oaths were sworn by the genius of the living emperor 205 The Roman pater familias offered daily cult to his lares and penates and to his di parentes divi parentes in domestic shrines and in the fires of the household hearth 206 As goddess of all hearths including the ritual hearth of the State Vesta connected the public and private duties of citizens Her official cults were supervised by the pontifex maximus from a state owned house near the temple of Vesta When Augustus became pontifex maximus in 12 BC he gave the Vestals his own house on the Palatine His penates remained there as its domestic deities and were soon joined by his lares His gift therefore tied his domestic cult to the sanctified Vestals and Rome s sacred hearth and symbolically extended his domus to the state and its inhabitants He also co opted and promoted the traditional and predominantly plebeian Compitalia shrines and extended their festivals whose lares were known thereafter as Augusti 207 208 209 210 211 Role in the military Edit nbsp The cult of Mithras was gradually absorbed within Imperial solar monism sol Invictus is to the left of picture The plaque was commissioned by an evidently wealthy Imperial slave Vatican Museum Rome s citizen legionaries appear to have maintained their Marian traditions They gave cult to Jupiter for the emperor s well being and regular cult to State local and personal divinities Cult to the Imperial person and familia was generally offered on Imperial accessions anniversaries and renewal of annual vows a bust of the ruling emperor was kept in the legionary insignia shrine for the purpose attended by a designated military imaginifer By the time of the early Severans the legions offered cult to the state gods the Imperial divi the current emperor s numen genius and domus or familia and special cult to the Empress as mother of the camp At around this time Mithraic cults became very popular with the military and provided a basis for syncretic imperial cult which absorbed Mithras into Solar and Stoic Monism as a focus of military concordia and loyalty 212 213 214 Altars temples and priesthoods Edit An imperial cult temple was known as a caesareum Latin or sebasteion Greek In Fishwick s analysis cult to Roman state divi was associated with temples and the genius cult to the living emperor with his altar The emperor s image and its siting within the temple complex focused attention on his person and attributes and his position in the divine and human hierarchies Expenditure on the physical expression of imperial cult was vast and was only curbed by the Imperial crisis of the 3rd century As far as is known no new temples to state divi were built after the reign of Marcus Aurelius 215 nbsp Interior of the College of the Augustales at HerculaneumThe Imperial divi and living genii appear to have been served by separate ceremonies and priesthoods Emperors themselves could be priests of state gods the divi and their own genius cult images The latter practice illustrates the Imperial genius as innate to its holder but separable from him as a focus of respect and cult formally consistent with cult to the personification of ideas and ideals such as Fortune Fortuna peace Pax or victory Victoria et al in conjunction with the genius of the emperor Senate or Roman people Julius Caesar had showed his affinity with the virtue of clemency clementia a personal quality associated with his divine ancestor and patron goddess Venus Priests typically and respectfully identified their function by manifesting the appearance and other properties of their deus The duties of Imperial priests were both religious and magisterial they included the provision of approved Imperial portraits statues and sacrifice the institution of regular calendrical cult and the inauguration of public works Imperial games state ludi and munera to authorised models In effect priests throughout the empire were responsible for re creating expounding and celebrating the extraordinary gifts powers and charisma of emperors 216 As part of his religious reforms Augustus revived subsidised and expanded the Compitalia games and priesthoods dedicated to the Lares of the vici neighbourhoods to include cult to his own Lares or to his genius as a popular benefactor Thereafter the Lares Compitales were known as Lares Augusti Tiberius created a specialised priesthood the Sodales Augustales dedicated to the cult of the deceased deified Augustus This priestly office and the connections between the Compitalia cults and the Imperial household appear to have lasted for as long as the imperial cult itself 217 Saviours and monotheists Edit nbsp Livia in the guise of a goddess with cornucopiaGreek philosophies had significant influence in the development of imperial cult Stoic cosmologists saw history as an endless cycle of destruction and renewal driven by fortuna luck or fortune fatum fate and logos the universal divine principle The same forces inevitably produced a sōter saviour who would transform the destructive and unnatural disorder of chaos and strife to pax fortuna and salus peace good fortune and well being and is thus identified with solar cults such as Apollo and Sol Invictus Livy in the early to mid 1st century BC and Lucan in the 1st century AD interpreted the crisis of the late Republic as a destructive phase which led to religious and constitutional renewal by Augustus and his restoration of peace good fortune and well being to the Roman people Augustus was a messianic figure who personally and rationally instigated a golden age the Pax Augusta and was patron priest and protege to a range of solar deities The Imperial order was therefore not merely justified by appeals to the divine it was represented as an innately natural benevolent and divine institution 218 219 The imperial cult tolerated and later included specific forms of pluralistic monism For imperial cult apologists monotheists had no rational grounds for refusal but imposition of cult was counter productive Jews presented a special case Long before the civil war Judaism had been tolerated in Rome by diplomatic treaty with Graeco Judaean rulers It was brought to prominence and scrutiny after Judaea s enrollment as a client kingdom in 63 BC 220 221 The following Jewish diaspora helped disperse early Judaic Christianity Early Christians appear to have been regarded as a sub sect of Judaism and as such were sporadically tolerated 222 Jewish sources on emperors polytheistic cult and the meaning of Empire are fraught with interpretive difficulties In Caligula s reign Jews resisted the placing of Caligula s statue in their Temple and pleaded that their offerings and prayers to Yahweh on his behalf amounted to compliance with his request for worship 223 According to Philo Caligula was unimpressed because the offering was not made directly to him whether to his genius or his numen is never made clear but the statue was never installed Philo does not challenge the imperial cult itself he commends the god like honours given Augustus as the first and the greatest and the common benefactor but Caligula shames the Imperial tradition by acting like an Egyptian 224 However Philo is clearly pro Roman a major feature of the First Jewish Revolt AD 66 was the ending of Jewish sacrifices to Rome and the emperor and the defacement of imperial images 225 The imperial cult and Christianity EditThe neutrality of this section is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please do not remove this message until conditions to do so are met December 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message To pagan Romans a simple act of sacrifice whether to ancestral gods under Decius or state gods under Diocletian represented adherence to Roman tradition and loyalty to the pluralistic unity of the Empire Refusal to adhere to the cult was treason Christians however identified Hellenistic honours as parodies of true worship 226 227 Under the reign of Nero or Domitian according to Momigliano the author of the Book of Revelation represented Rome as the Beast from the sea Judaeo Roman elites as the Beast from the land and the charagma official Roman stamp as a sign of the Beast 228 Some Christian thinkers perceived divine providence in the timing of Christ s birth at the very beginning of the Empire that brought peace and laid paths for the spread of the Gospels Rome s destruction of Jerusalem and its Temple was interpreted as divine punishment of the Jews for their refusal of the Christ 229 With the abatement of persecution Jerome could acknowledge Empire as a bulwark against evil but insist that imperial honours were contrary to Christian teaching 230 As pontifex maximus Constantine I favoured the Catholic Church of the Christians against the Donatists because it is contrary to the divine law that we should overlook such quarrels and contentions whereby the Highest Divinity may perhaps be roused not only against the human race but also against myself to whose care he has by his celestial will committed the government of all earthly things Official letter from Constantine dated AD 314 231 In this change of Imperial formula Constantine acknowledged his responsibility to an earthly realm whose discord and conflict might arouse the ira deorum he also recognised the power of the new Christian priestly hierarchy in determining what was auspicious or orthodox Though unbaptised Constantine had triumphed under the signum of the Christ probably some form of Labarum as an adapted or re interpreted legionary standard He may have officially ended or attempted to end blood sacrifices to the genius of living emperors but his Imperial iconography and court ceremonial elevated him to superhuman status Constantine s permission for a new cult temple to himself and his family in Umbria is extant the cult should not be polluted by the deception of any contagious superstition 232 At the First Council of Nicaea Constantine united and re founded the empire under an absolute head of state by divine dispensation and was honoured as the first Christian Imperial divus On his death he was venerated and was held to have ascended to heaven Philostorgius later criticised Christians who offered sacrifice at statues of the divus Constantine 232 His three sons re divided their Imperial inheritance Constantius II was an Arian his brothers were Nicene Constantine s nephew Julian Rome s last non Christian emperor rejected the Galilean madness of his upbringing for a synthesis of neo Platonism Stoic asceticism and universal solar cult and actively fostered religious and cultural pluralism 233 His restored Augustan form of principate with himself as primus inter pares ended with his death in 363 after which his reforms were reversed or abandoned The Western emperor Gratian refused the office of pontifex maximus and against the protests of the Senate 234 removed the altar of Victoria Victory from the Senate House and began the disestablishment of the Vestals Theodosius I briefly re united the Western and Eastern halves of the Empire officially adopted Nicene Christianity as the Imperial religion and ended official support for all other creeds and cults He refused to restore Victoria to the Senate House extinguished Vesta s sacred fire and vacated her temple Even so he accepted address as a living divinity comparable to Hercules and Jupiter by his overwhelmingly pagan Senate 235 236 After his death the sundered Eastern and Western halves of Empire followed increasingly divergent paths nevertheless both were Roman and both had emperors Imperial ceremonial notably the Imperial adventus or ceremony of arrival which derived in greater part from the Triumph was embedded within Roman culture Church ceremony and the Gospels themselves 237 The last Western divus was probably Libius Severus who died in 465 AD 238 Very little is known about him His Imperium was not recognised by his Eastern counterpart and he may have been a puppet emperor of the Germanic general Ricimer In the west imperial authority was partly replaced by the spiritual supremacy and political influence of the Roman Catholic Church In the Eastern Empire sworn adherence to Christian orthodoxy became a prerequisite of Imperial accession Anastasius I signed a document attesting his obedience to orthodox doctrine and practice He is the last emperor known to be consecrated as divus on his death AD 518 The title appears to have been abandoned on grounds of its spiritual impropriety but the consecration of Eastern emperors continued they held power through divine ordinance and their rule was the manifestation of sacred power on earth The adventus and the veneration of the Imperial image continued to provide analogies for devotional representations Icons of the heavenly hierarchy and the rituals of the Orthodox Church 239 Historical evaluations EditThe Roman imperial cult is sometimes considered a deviation from Rome s traditional Republican values a religiously insincere cult of personality which served Imperial propaganda 240 241 It drew its power and effect however from both religious traditions deeply engrained in Roman culture such as the veneration of the genius of each individual and of the ancestral dead and on forms of the Hellenistic ruler cult developed in the eastern provinces of the Empire The nature and function of imperial cult remain contentious not least because its Roman historians employed it equally as a topos for Imperial worth and Imperial hubris It has been interpreted as an essentially foreign Graeco Eastern institution imposed cautiously and with some difficulty upon a Latin Western Roman culture in which the deification of rulers was constitutionally alien if not obnoxious 242 In this viewpoint the essentially servile and un Roman imperial cult was established at the expense of the traditional Roman ethics which had sustained the Republic 243 For Christians and secularists alike the identification of mortal emperors with godhead represented the spiritual and moral bankruptcy of paganism which led to the triumph of Christianity as Rome s state religion 244 245 Very few modern historians would now support this point of view Some among them Beard et al find no distinct category of imperial cult within the religio political life of Empire the Romans themselves used no such enveloping term Cult to living or dead emperors was inseparable from Imperial state religion which was inextricably interwoven with Roman identity and whose beliefs and practices were founded within the ancient commonality of Rome s social and domestic mos maiorum Descriptions of cult to emperors as a tool of Imperial propaganda or the less pejorative civil religion emerge from modern political thought and are of doubtful value in Republican Rome cult could be given to state gods personal gods triumphal generals magnates benefactors patrons and the ordinary paterfamilias living or dead Cult to mortals was not an alien practise it acknowledged their power status and their bestowal of benefits The Augustan settlement appealed directly to the Republican mos maiorum and under the principate cult to emperors defined them as emperors 246 With rare exceptions the earliest institution of cult to emperors succeeded in providing a common focus of identity for Empire It celebrated the charisma of Roman Imperial power and the meaning of Empire according to local interpretations of romanitas 247 firstly an agency of transformation then of stability Cult to Imperial deities was associated with commonplace public ceremonies celebrations of extraordinary splendour and unnumbered acts of private and personal devotion The political usefulness of such an institution implies neither mechanical insincerity nor lack of questioning about its meaning and propriety an Empire wide unifying cult would necessarily be open to a multitude of personal interpretations but its significance to ordinary Romans is almost entirely lost in the critical interpretations of a small number of philosophically literate skeptical or antagonistic Romans and Greeks whether Christian or Hellene 248 249 The decline of prosperity security and unity of Empire was clearly accompanied by loss of faith in Rome s traditional gods and at least in the West in Roman emperors For some Romans this was caused by the neglect of traditional religious practices For others equally Roman breakdown of empire was God s judgment on faithless or heretical Christians and hardened pagans alike As Roman society evolved so did cult to emperors both proved remarkably resilient and adaptable Until its confrontation by fully developed Christian orthodoxy imperial cult needed no systematic or coherent theology Its part in Rome s continued success was probably sufficient to justify sanctify and explain it to most Romans 250 251 Confronted with crisis in Empire Constantine matched the Augustan achievement by absorbing Christian monotheism into the Imperial hierarchy Cult to emperors was not so much abolished or abandoned as transformed out of recognition 252 See also Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Imperial cult in ancient Rome Ara Pacis Ancient Roman religious monument in Rome Italy Cult of personality Idolization of a leader Divine right of kings Political and religious doctrine of the legitimacy of monarchs Imperial cult Form of state religion Mandate of Heaven Political doctrine of divine legitimacy in ChinaNotes Edit It is unclear whether the worship of Aeneas as Jupiter Indiges was an official and thus state sponsored cult As opposed to offices Gradel pp 32 52 as is much of this section A summary of disparate viewpoints regarding the status of the triumphator and thus the meaning of the Triumph can be found in Versnel 56 93 limited preview via Books Google com Beard 272 5 the very few accounts of a public slave or other figure who stands behind or near the triumphator to remind him that he is but mortal or prompts him to look behind are open to a variety of interpretations moreover they are post Republican Nevertheless they imply a tradition that the triumphator whatever his kingly appearance temporary godlike status or divine associations was publicly reminded of his mortal nature There is no reason to assume this an innovation of Empire Taylor p 67 Gradel p 46 citing Plautus this is Plautus addition to the Greek originals Gradel also suggests that the corona civica began as an acknowledgement by A A that N N had saved his life as a god might by crowning N N with the leaves of Jupiter s tree a b Taylor p 55 Walbank 120 37 Books Google co uk Convenience link most likely an aide de camp of Metellus and not a provincial official Taylor p 48 she cites Macrobius Saturnalia 3 13 9 which is largely an otherwise unknown quotation from Sallust quasi deo supplicabatur is from Sallust The year is uncertain possibly 77 BC after a battle at Saguntum This incident is also mentioned by Valerius Maximus Facta et dicta memorabilia 9 1 5 Vout 119 citing Plutarch Gaius Gracchus 10 18 2 Loeb edition available at Thayer Penelope Uchicago edu Taylor p 48 citing Plutarch s Marius 27 Gradel 51 citing Cicero De officiis 3 80 Stoics com accessed 2 August 2009 When the messengers of Thasos announced to him that the city had declared him a god he told them that if they could make men into gods they should make themselves into gods he would then believe that they could make him into one Taylor p 12 citing Plutarch Moralia 210d Taylor pp 12 13 The Spartan decree was Since Alexander wishes to be a god let him be a god at Athens Demades argued against provoking Alexander over this don t protect Heaven and lose the earth Demosthenes said Let him be the son of Zeus and Poseidon too if he likes Athenaeus 6 63 Books Google com Taylor pp 40 41 citing Polybius 30 16 Livy 45 44 also as a parallel case CIL VI 374 from the Laodiceans to the Roman people In general see Price 48 Fishwick Vol 1 1 6 20 for details Taylor Chapter 2 and 3 passim Attested statuary of Roman magistrates in Rome may well have been largely commissioned by Greek allies unaware of the potential for controversy aroused by public display of Hellenised images of the Roman military aristocracy See Christopher Hallett The Roman Nude Oxford University Press 2005 limited preview available Books Google co uk citing descriptions in Plutarch Lives Flamininus amp Cicero Rabiurus Postumus 10 26 Taylor p 8 Taylor Appendix II citing Athenaeus Book 10 passim Taylor pp 9 10 citing Diodorus 16 20 Cornelius Nepos Timoleon 5 Plutarch Moralia 542 E Dion 46 and Timoleon 36 39 Timoleon is the first Greek whose birthday is recorded Mark H Munn The School of History Athens in the Age of Socrates pp 11 172 Chiefly Zeus as identified with Ammon and his ancestors Achilles and Hercules Taylor Appendix 2 this was the ritual in which Callisthenes declined to take part one of the offenses for which Alexander killed him Taylor 31 2 A papyrus survives which has a man swearing by the daimones of Ptolemy II and his queen Taylor p 33 Taylor p 57 Taylor p 57 citing Cicero To Atticus 1 18 6 Velleius Paterculus 2 40 4 He only exercised the privilege once and was attacked for it Suetonius Hurley Donna W 2011 The Caesars Hackett Publishing p 4 ISBN 978 1603846134 Taylor 58 60 And Nicomedes IV of Bithynia was intimately familiar with Caesar or so rumor sang about the streets of Rome Suetonius Divus Julius 49 Books Google co uk Isaac 304 limited preview at Google Books This statue showed him standing on the globe the dedication is offered by Cassius Dio in Greek hemitheos demigod Dio 43 14 6 amp 21 2 This may be Dio s late anachronistic and approximate equivalent of divus Gradel 61 69 reconstructs the original Latin inscription as Senatus populusque Romanus Divo Caesaris but Taylor suggests Dio s form as an accurate rendition with no strict Latin equivalent Taylor p 65 this was in the temple of Quirinus For instance at the pompa circensis the procession held before games presented at the circus An honorific also granted Cicero during his consulship and comparable to Romulus title as parens urbis Romanae parent of the Roman city Price in Cannadine and Price 71 85 in particular Cicero s speech to the Senate some months after Caesar s death couch image pediment priest refer to Caesar s divine honours while living Cicero Philippic ii 110 Dio 43 45 3 Brutus and his party saw Caesar s kingly statue as confirmation of despotic intent which justified his assassination Stefan Weinstock Divus Julius Oxford 1971 297 Alexander Del Mar The Worship of Augustus Caesar 1899 p 305 sq Weinstock 324 finds the evidence for the living Caesar s aspirations and divine status equivocal in some details but Fishwick vol 1 1 68 9 argues that acceptance of divine honours while living seems to herald some form of divine monarchy Perseus tufts edu Cicero Atticus 8 16 1 Latin text at Tufts University Fishwick Vol 1 1 65 73 a b Fishwick Vol I 108 The imperial cult in Roman Britain Google docs Fishwick Vol 3 part 1 3 citing Cassius Dio 51 20 6 7 Suetonius Lives Augustus 52 Tacitus Annals 4 37 Fishwick Vol 1 book 1 77 amp 126 30 Nevertheless cult offered to divus Julius implies loyalty to his adopted son and heir See Friesen 21 Books Google co uk That is through the manifest numen of his adoptive father the divus Julius Rosenstein 57 8 In Florus epitome the name Augustus signaled Octavian s divine status outright Apparently Romulus had also been considered and turned down see Florus 2 34 66 at Thayer s website Penelope Uchicago edu accessed 27 July 2009 For most of Augustus contemporaries however the name would have been a quite obscure and somewhat modest synonym for divinus divine Fishwick vol 1 1 51 Books Google co uk Weidemann 131 2 limited preview available at Google Books Howgego in Howgego et al 4 6 coinage celebrating state deities conspicuously features the restorer of their temples Ibid 53 Imperial themes including the Imperial family dominate Roman coin issues from Augustus to Claudius See Ando 46 ff for discussion of Augustan ideology Beard et al Vol 1 196 7 Ando 163 gives 82 temples in the city of Rome limited preview available at Google Books Books Google co uk The caesareum at Najaran in what is now south west Saudi Arabia was possibly later known as the Kaaba of Najran جواد علي المفصل في تاريخ العرب قبل الإسلام Jawad Ali Al Mufassal fi Tarikh Al Arab Qabl Al Islam Commentary on the History of the Arabs Before Islam Baghdad 1955 1983 Harland 2003 91 103 finds among these examples a privately funded local traditional Graeco Asian civil association offering cult to Demeter and the emperor as a form of mystery cult contra Price 1986 7 11 who believes that emperors lacked the requisite fully divine status See also Harland 1996 Llewelyn S R Editor New documents illustrating early Christianity Volume 9 A Review of the Greek Inscriptions and Papyri Published in 1986 87 Macquarie University 2002 pp 28 30 1 Books Google co uk Severy 114 5 Limited preview available at Google Books Chapel of Imperial Cult Madain Project Archived from the original on 8 November 2020 Retrieved 8 November 2020 Polybius The Histories 10 10 10 written circa 150 BC The honorand is named as Aletes who supposedly discovered the silver mines there One of the hills of the city is named after him Others are named after Aesculapius Vulcan and Saturn English version Loeb available from Thayer Penelope Uchicago edu Taylor 56 See Macrobius 3 13 6 9 ultra mortalium morem Fishwick Vol 1 1 92 3 In the reign of Tiberius Tarraco requested permission for cult to Augustus but this is one of only two known Western provincial initiatives to inaugurate the imperial cult both were Iberian and had long standing ties with Rome See also Tacitus Annals 1 78 Posc mu edu Fishwick vol 3 1 pp7 amp 230 Fishwick vol 3 1 7 see also Pliny the Elder Historia Naturalis 4 111 Ptolemy Geographia 2 6 3 Pomponeus Mela 3 13 Fishwick vol 1 1 97 149 Fishwick vol 1 1 101 amp vol 3 1 12 13 Fishwick determines the lower age limit at 25 years for these priesthoods With minor exceptions provincial priesthoods whether described as sacerdos or flamen appear to have been annual but an elected priest remained influential within the ordo beyond his term of office Female cult divinities were served by priestesses who may have been the wives of the cult priests Tacitus Annals 1 57 Potter 26 7 Mellor 1003 Mohamed Yacoub Le musee du Bardo Departements antiques Tunis Agence nationale du patrimoine 1993 p 111 Ando 31 33 provides the constitutional and personal background to this dilemma Price in Cannadine and Price 70 Beard et al 360 63 Potter 6 7 See also Tacitus Annals 1 9 10 for appraisals of compuAugustus motives in his rise to power his opaque complexity of character evaluation of his success and the exchange of constitutional freedoms for peace and prosperity during and after his reign Well into the third century AD the merit of each imperial candidate would be debated as basis for a new lex de imperio In most cases this simply confirmed his possession of imperial power acquired through dynastic inheritance or acclamation by the soldiers but its legality was Republican in form probably a continuation of the old Republican tradition of the Lex curiata de imperio which conferred imperium on the higher Roman magistrates Justinian s law later refers to a Lex regia consistent with Byzantine conceptions of Imperial power as kingship The same association is precisely avoided under the early Lex de imperio Vespasiani of 69 70 AD See Berger A Encyclopedic Dictionary of Roman Law Philadelphia Transactions of the American Philosophical Society New Series Volume 43 Part 2 1953 p551 Reprint The Lawbook Exchange Ltd 2002 ISBN 1 58477 142 9 Preview from googlebooks 2 Tacitus interprets Tiberius repeated refusal of provincial cult as a shirking of his moral responsibilities to empire and therefore a dishonour to his high office and Rome Gradel 15 the collective genius of the Senate was usually personified as a bearded elderly man this is an exceptional genius type Most individual genii are portrayed as youthful Klose in Howgego et al 127 Ando 170 1 see also 170 note 187 cf Caesar s kingly regalia though as princeps Caligula was also permanent triumphator Suetonius Life of Caligula Neither Josephus nor Philo imply Caligula s elevation as a state deity in Jerusalem Gradel 142 158 Cassius Dio in John Xiphilinus epitome 59 26 3 Both Suetonius and Philo offer Caligula as a suspiciously perfect example of how not to be emperor The Senate remains a vague figure of superior values and morality against which Caligula s offenses are meticulously detailed Cassius Dio LX 3 5 6 A cult dedication to Livia as diva Augusta appears in Lusitania dated to 48 AD Gradel proposes that had Claudius employed those of higher rank within his domus it would have imputed their clientage as his servants He may have underestimated the complexity of the problems inherent in his own status as princeps This surmise is based on a combination of Seneca s satirical Apocolocyntosis Suetonius sneering Life and Tacitus s sharp observations of Julio Claudian failings Tacitus Annals 13 3 Fishwick Vol 3 1 75 6 cf the Lyons Tablet and Claudius modesty or fear of seeming arrogant Fishwick 81 9 Fishwick Vol 3 1 54 9 Mons Caelus had ambiguous Etruscan connections Claudius had a historian s interest in Etruscan culture and language It was also notorious for its brothels and meat market Claudius had a reputed liking for low company and butchers and prostitutes were classified as infames Suetonius has Claudius add an extra day to the festival of Saturnalia for Seneca he is a Lord of Misrule at whose demise it can be said I told you the Saturnalia could not last forever Apocolocyntosis 12 Fishwick Vol 3 1 88 9 Claudius Caelian temple was later rebuilt and some of it survives through incorporation in later building Nero s cult may have been justified as a revival of Claudius entitlement to genius cult as pater patriae Tacitus Annals XV 74 Potter 68 Kenneth Scott The Imperial Cult Under the Flavians New York 1975 Chabreckova Barbora The Imperial Cult During the Reign of Domitian Masaryk University Department of Archaeology and Museology 2017 Tacitus Histories 4 40 2 Some still thought the head resembled Nero s Others were reminded of Titus Vespasian s son see also Cassius Dio 65 15 1 A dedication of the Colossus to the sun god is consistent with Neronian iconography any resemblance to Nero would be appropriate to his imperial representation as the second sun of the pax Romana in Stoic and Cynic cosmology Subsequent alterations or remodeling of a recognisable figure assuming they happened at all and rededication were standard responses to an original subject s damnatio memoriae On the other hand the heads of some Imperial statues appear to have been recut or replaced as a matter of economy rather than of legal or moral insult or effacement Marlowe E 2006 Framing the sun the Arch of Constantine and the Roman cityscape The Art Bulletin Smallwood 345 The practice of a genius cult towards Domitian is shown in the Arval Acts Gradel 159 61 Suetonius claims for Domitian s personal use of the title or its use by his procurators at his behest are unverified He is clear that Domitian s freedmen were the first to use it Gradel 159 61 Ando 167 Pliny panegyric 75 1 3 Pliny refers to the publication of the senatorial voice in proceedings Trajan s respect for the Senate can only be good for the dignity of the state Gradel 190 2 Sage in discussion of Tacitean themes in Haase amp Temporini eds 950 Books Google co uk Gradel 194 5 Howgego in Howgego et al 6 10 Hadrian s Hellenic emotionalism finds a culturally sympathetic echo in the Homeric Achilles mourning for his friend Patroclus see Vout 52 135 Dio or his epitomist insists that Antinous died not through drowning as Hadrian claimed but as the emperor s willing sacrificial victim as part of a bid for immortality though whose is not clear Vout 118 9 contra Price 68 who does not regard Antinous as receiving full cult honours of apotheosis in Rome itself Both agree that Antinous was unlikely to have had official parity with other imperial divi in Rome Vout 52 135 offers discussion on the nature context and longevity of the Antinous cult its function in Christian polemic against pagan cult notably in Athanasius and its capacity to fascinate and sometimes mislead the modern imagination Limited preview available Books Google co uk Vout 111 His piety lay in his unrelenting yet personally modest plea to the Senate for the deification of his predecessor Hadrian morally comparable with the filial devotion of Metellus Pius during the Republican era Gradel 200 citing Fronto Epistulae ad M Caesar letters to M Aurelius 4 12 6 Gradel 199 see also The context and precedents for Imperial Cult Relative to the living emperor the divi probably have little or no personal power unless of divine intercession Potter 78 9 Dio s assessment is blunt but not entirely unsympathetic Commodus was lazy gullible and stupid See Potter 85 6 citing Cassius Dio Penelope Uchicago edu epitome of book 73 Marius Maximus thought him fundamentally wicked and cruel On 1 January 193 AD the legions unwittingly renewed their annual vows of loyalty to a dead Emperor Potter 92 6 see also Dio ibid This is based on a statement in the Historia Augusta which claims he planned to have his own flamen while still living Cassius Dio in an otherwise detailed account makes no mention of this See Gradel 160 1 Potter 93 6 Potter 75 9 Potter 96 99 Potter 103 Gradel 265 citing the unreliable Historia Augusta Antoninus Geta Aeli Spartiani II 8 Latin version online at thelatinlibrary TheLatinLibrary com accessed 18 August 2009 At the very least the attribution confirms the later devaluation of divus as a divine category Dio Ibid 77 9 4 Loeb When the emperor was enrolled in the family of Marcus Auspex said I congratulate you Caesar upon finding a father implying that up to that time he had been fatherless by reason of his obscure birth Gradel 194 Potter 107 12 for coinage of Antonine dynasts see 111 Potter 110 Another name for the Imperial divi which indicates their elevation to August status Caesar Augustus is reserved for living emperors See Gradel 88 Fishwick vol 3 1 199 Potter 113 20 Cassius Dio 77 15 2 Penelope Uchicago edu Potter 133 5 dediticii those who had surrendered to Rome in war and a specific class of freedmen were excluded Potter 138 9 slaves formally adopted the name of the master who freed them Like Commodus he participated in chariot races and beast fights with minimal risk to himself Potter 142 6 citing Philostratus V Soph 626 Days of careful negotiation had preceded his spontaneous acclamation as imperator by the military Dio disapproves of Macrinus equestrian status but not his integrity or manner of government Potter 146 8 Avitus took the Imperial name Marcus Aurelius Antoninus Potter 148 9 Potter 152 7 Meckler in De Imperatoribus Romanis online roman emperors org accessed 7 August 2009 Gradel 356 62 citing Herodian for the removal of temple wealth and reactions to it Potter 237 8 citing Zosimus 1 19 1 2 Howgego in Howgego et al 5 Potter 244 8 Ando 209 Beard et al Vol 1 241 Potter 241 3 see 242 for Decian libellus certificate of oath and sacrifice on papyrus dated to 250 AD Books Google co uk Rees 60 Limited preview available at Google Books Bowman et al 622 33 Books Google co uk Limited preview available at Google Books a b Rees 60 Beard et al 241 Drinkwater in Bowman et al eds 46 Under Gallienus any remaining senatorial rights to military leadership were virtually at an end The bitterness of the senatorial class towards him on this account almost certainly distorts their histories See for example Aurelius Victor De Caesaribus epitome 33 34 in Banchich s translation online at roman emperors org accessed 7 August 2009 See also Weigel at www roman emperors org roman emperors org accessed 7 August 2009 Cascio in Bowman et al eds 171 citing See also with due caveat Historia Augusta Vita Taciti XIII 1 2 Vout 118 9 Lactantius II 6 10 1 4 Eusebius II 8 1 8 Bowman et al 170 3 Rees 46 56 Rees 51 56 ideology amp 73 4 coin image interpretation MacCormack 722 amp note 8 Brent 49 51 See also Augustus Res Gestae c 4 2 Fishwick Vol 3 1 5 Gradel 263 8 citing Tertullian Gradel 7 numen can also be synonymous with deus Fishwick Vol 3 1 42 see also Plutarch based on Varro Quaestionaes Romanae 14 The apotheosed deified Julius Caesar was translated by the senate and people of Rome into the company of the gods dei and became the divus Julius Price in Cannadine and Price 1992 77 8 the cited translated inscription is from Inscriptiones Latinae Selectae ed H Dessau 3 vols Berlin 1892 1916 140 7 24 Pisa Price in Cannadine and Price 82 102 for the changing roles of senate and emperors in the granting of apotheosis Javier Arce in Theuws and Nelson pp 116 117 Price 115 Books Google co uk Price 175 202 209 later Roman divi range from dead but not guilty emperor to emperor of fond memory Holland s 1606 English language version of Suetonius Lives of the Caesars Claudius translates Claudius as canonised a saint in heaven Holland s interpretation is consistent with the later use of divus under Christian emperors saints function as intercessors but some have also been demoted or quietly lapsed from their religious calendars See Suetonius History of the twelve Caesars trans Philemon Holland 1606 for Holland s English rendition of divus Claudius Archive org Beard et al 207 see above for Augustus permission for cult to his own numen only very late in his reign Whether it was official cult is uncertain but it would have been offered and permitted not claimed Fishwick 2007 asserts that inscriptional references to numen connected to the living Augustus and his cult as at Narbo in 12 BC imply it as a property of the emperor a divinised abstraction not identical with his person Fishwick Vol 3 1 198 referring to the Severan emperor Caracalla Beard et al vol 1 140 9 Gradel 3 15 Livy 25 16 1 4 amp 6 1 12 Livy wrote at a time of extreme civil strife during the era of Rome s transformation from Republic to Principate See also Rosenstein 58 60 Beard et al Vol 1 32 6 Gradel 21 Gradel 78 93 Price 209 221 Beard et al Vol 1 12 20 haruspicy was also used The haruspex read the divine will in the sacrificial entrails This was regarded as an ethnically Etruscan outsider practise whose priesthood was separate from Rome s internal priestly hierarchy The augur s interpretation of all these signs informed the magistrate s course of action The magistrate could repeat the sacrifice until favourable signs were seen abandon the project or seek further consultation with colleagues of his augural college Brent 17 20 citing Cicero De Natura Deorum 2 4 Beard et al Vol 1 17 21 most magistracies ran for only a year Priesthoods were for life which offered evident advantages in maintaining a high public and political profile Brent 21 25 Brent 59 citing Suetonius Augustus 31 1 2 cf official reactions to foreign cult during the Punic crises above Gradel 36 8 the paterfamilias held in theory at least and through ancient right powers of life and death over every member of his extended familia including children slaves and freedmen In practice the extreme form of this right was seldom exercised and was eventually limited by law See also Severy 9 10 for interpretation of the social economic and religious role of the paterfamilias within the immediate and extended family and the broader community Beard et al vol 1 67 8 Gradel 5 8 Brent 61 Dio Cassius 51 19 7 Brent 62 3 Beard et al Vol 1 193 4 under Augustus programme of renewal the Vestals had high status seating at games and theatres and became priestesses to the cult of the deified Livia wife of Augustus Gradel 38 Brent 61 Severy 99 100 Books Google co uk Lott 14 15 115 amp 230 note 127 Brent 268 9 Books Google co uk Le Bohec 249 limited preview available via Google Books Books Google co uk Dixon 78 limited preview available from Google Books Gradel 364 Gradel 78 98 Lott 81 106 for discussion of Lares Augusti see 107 117 Lott rejects the replacement of neighbourhood Lares with Augustus own as politically indelicate The Lares Augusti can be understood as August Lares a joint honorific with unmistakable and flattering connections to the princeps himself rather than the direct claim of princeps as patron contra Lilly Ross Taylor The Divinity of the Roman Emperor American Philological Association 1931 Taylor understand the institution of Lares Augusti as the extension of Augustus domus and its deities to Rome s neighbourhood cults Lott acknowledges Taylor s view as generally accepted Rehak amp Younger 93 Brent 17 18 53 54 Smallwood 2 3 4 6 the presence of practicing Jews in Rome is attested at least a century before this The more overt and characteristically Jewish beliefs rites and customs were butts of misinformed scorn and mockery Legislation by Caesar recognised the synagogues in Rome as legitimate collegia Augustus maintained their status Smallwood describes the preamble to events of 63 BC as the Hellenising of ruling Jewish dynasties their claims to kingly messianism and their popular traditionalist rejection in the Maccabaean revolt Books Google co uk Ibid 120 143 for a very detailed account of Roman responses to Judaistic practice in Rome under Caesar and the early Principate Smallwood s application of religio licita licensed religion to Judaism in this and possibly any period is disputed by Rajack in Tessa Rajack Was there a Roman Charter for the Jews Journal of Roman Studies 74 1984 107 23 Rajack finds no evidence for an early charter Josephus seems to have inferred a charter from local ad hoc attempts to deal with anti Jewish acts Religio licita is first found in Tertullian Cicero pro Flacco 66 refers to Judaism as superstitio not religio but a later change in Roman policy is possible Potter 36 Fishwick vol 1 1 36 Niehoff 45 137 in particular 75 81 and footnote 25 Limited preview available at Google Books Books Google co uk accessed 14 August 2009 Brent 221 Price 10 11 Potter 37 Collins 125 citing Revelation 13 7 8 amp 16 17 14 9 11 16 2 Momigliano 142 158 Books Google co uk See particularly p146 commentary on Dio 52 Jerome s interpretations of Imperial ceremonial are heavily reliant on Eusebius polemical ecclesiastical Imperial history Price 203 limited preview available at Google Books Books Google co uk cited in Beard et al Vol 1 370 a b Momigliano 104 A summary of relevant legislation FourthCentury com accessed 30 August 2009 Internet Medieval Sourcebook Letter of St Ambrose trans H De Romestin 1896 Fordham edu accessed 29 August 2009 Books Google co uk Williams amp Friell 65 67 Limited preview at googlebooks Nixon amp Rodgers 437 48 Full text of Latinus Pacata Drepanius Panegyric of Theodosius 389 with commentary and context MacCormack 721 52 His status as divus is surmised from cons consecratio his cons defunctus est Imp Severus Romae XVIII kal Septembris Mommsen in Scharf R Zu einigen daten der Kaiser Libius Severus und Maiorian Heidelberg University pdf p182 3 accessed 1 September 2009 Price 204 5 and footnote 171 citing Basil Homily 24 on seeing an image of the king in the square one does not allege that there are two kings therefore veneration of the image venerates the original the analogy is implicit in imperial cult but is not found in the Gospels See also articles on Iconodules and Iconoclasm Price 13 17 includes historians of opposing political views among those who interpret the imperial cult as the domination of a servile world through politically driven charade Eduard Meyer Alexander der Grosse und die Absolute Monarchie 1905 in Kleine Schriften 1 1924 265 and Ronald Syme The Roman Revolution Oxford Clarendon Press 1939 256 reach essentially the same conclusions about the nature and purpose of the imperial cult despite their opposing political alignments Price 13 note 31 refers to Demandt s analysis of Meyer s position in A Demandt Politische Aspekte im Alexander bild der Neuzeit Archiv fur Kulturgeschichte 54 1972 325ff at p 355 See also Harland P A Honours and Worship Emperors Imperial Cults and Associations at Ephesus First to Third Centuries C E Studies in Religion Sciences religieuses 25 1996 319 334 Tacitus reference to the graeca adulatio greek adulation or flattery of benefactor cult was set within the Graeco Eastern context of the Roman civil war and referred to Theophanes of Mytilene whose god like honours were occasioned by no merit other than his friendship and influence with Pompey Tacitus Annals 6 8 cited and explicated in Gradel 8 Roman and Greek justifications of Rome s hegemony insisted on Rome s moral superiority over its allies and subject peoples The same commentators deplored Empire for the demoralising effects of its foreign influences See Sallust Catalina 11 5 Livy 1 11 Pliny the Elder Natural History 7 130 Price 10 20 citing evaluations of the imperial cult as insincere or mechanical in Gibbon Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire Bury edn 1 75 7 Ferguson CAH VII 1928 17 Eduard Meyer Alexander der Grosse und die Absolute Monarchie 1905 in Kleine Schriften 1 1924 265 Ronald Syme The Roman Revolution Oxford Clarendon Press 1939 Harland 85 cites among others M P Nilsson Greek Piety Oxford 1948 177 178 and early work by D Fishwick The Development of Provincial Ruler Worship in the Western Roman Empire ANRW II 16 2 1978 1201 1253 for similar evaluations Brent 17 Beard North Price 1998 318 see also 208 10 252 3 359 61 Price 6 20 116 Gradel 3 8 Price 11 Gradel 23 Price 20 References and further reading EditAndo Clifford 2000 Imperial ideology and provincial loyalty in the Roman Empire Illustrated ed University of California Press ISBN 0 520 22067 6 Beard M Price S North J Religions of Rome Volume 1 a History illustrated Cambridge University Press 1998 ISBN 0 521 31682 0 Beard M Price S North J Religions of Rome Volume 2 a sourcebook illustrated Cambridge University Press 1998 ISBN 0 521 45646 0 Beard Mary The Roman Triumph The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press Cambridge Mass and London England 2007 ISBN 978 0 674 02613 1 Bowersock G Brown P R L Graba O eds Late Antiquity A Guide to the Postclassical World Harvard University Press 1999 ISBN 978 0 674 51173 6 Bowman A Cameron A Garnsey P eds The Cambridge Ancient History Volume 12 The Crisis of Empire AD 193 337 2nd Edn Cambridge University Press 2005 ISBN 0 521 30199 8 Brent A The imperial cult and the development of church order concepts and images of authority in paganism and early Christianity before the Age of Cyprian illustrated Brill Publishers 1999 ISBN 90 04 11420 3 Cannadine D and Price S eds Rituals of Royalty Power and Ceremonial in Traditional Societies reprint illustrated Cambridge University Press 1992 ISBN 0 521 42891 2 Chow John K Patronage and power a study of social networks in Corinth Continuum International Publishing Group 1992 ISBN 1 85075 370 9 Collins Adela Yarbro Crisis and catharsis the power of the Apocalypse Westminster John Knox Press 1984 ISBN 0 664 24521 8 Elsner J Cult and Sculpture Sacrifice in the Ara Pacis Augustae in the Journal of Roman Studies 81 1991 50 60 Ferguson Everett Backgrounds of early Christianity 3rd edition Wm B Eerdmans Publishing 2003 ISBN 0 8028 2221 5 Fishwick Duncan The Imperial Cult in the Latin West Studies in the Ruler Cult of the Western Provinces of the Roman Empire volume 1 Brill Publishers 1991 ISBN 90 04 07179 2 Fishwick Duncan The Imperial Cult in the Latin West Studies in the Ruler Cult of the Western Provinces of the Roman Empire volume 3 Brill Publishers 2002 ISBN 90 04 12536 1 Fishwick Duncan Numen Augustum Zeitschrift fur Papyrologie und Epigraphik Bd 160 2007 pp 247 255 Dr Rudolf Habelt GmbH Bonn Germany Freisen S J Imperial cults and the Apocalypse of John reading Revelation in the ruins Oxford University Press 2001 ISBN 978 0 19 513153 6 Gradel Ittai Emperor Worship and Roman Religion Oxford Oxford University Press 2002 ISBN 0 19 815275 2 Haase W Temporini H eds Aufstieg und Niedergang der romischen Welt de Gruyter 1991 ISBN 3 11 010389 3 Harland P Honours and Worship Emperors Imperial Cults and Associations at Ephesus First to Third Centuries C E originally published in Studies in Religion Sciences religieuses 25 1996 Online in same pagination Philipharland com Harland P Imperial Cults within Local Cultural Life Associations in Roman Asia originally published in Ancient History Bulletin Zeitschrift fur Alte Geschichte 17 2003 Online in same pagination Philipharland com Howgego C Heuchert V Burnett A eds Coinage and Identity in the Roman Provinces Oxford University Press 2005 ISBN 978 0 19 926526 8 Lee A D Pagans and Christians in late antiquity a sourcebook illustrated Routledge 2000 ISBN 0 415 13892 2 Lott John B The Neighborhoods of Augustan Rome Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2004 ISBN 0 521 82827 9 MacCormack Sabine Change and Continuity in Late Antiquity the ceremony of Adventus Historia 21 4 1972 pp 721 52 Martin Dale B Inventing superstition from the Hippocratics to the Christians Harvard University Press 2004 ISBN 0 674 01534 7 Momigliano Arnaldo On Pagans Jews and Christians reprint Wesleyan University Press 1987 ISBN 0 8195 6218 1 Niehoff Maren R Philo on Jewish identity and culture Mohr Siebeck English trans GW Coronet Books 2001 ISBN 978 3 16 147611 2 Nixon C E V and Rodgers Barbara S In Praise of Later Roman Emperors The Panegyric Latini University Presses of California Columbia and Princeton 1995 ISBN 978 0 520 08326 4 Potter David S The Roman Empire at Bay AD 180 395 Routledge 2004 ISBN 978 0 415 10057 1 Price S R F Rituals and power the Roman imperial cult in Asia Minor reprint illustrated Cambridge University Press 1986 ISBN 0 521 31268 X Rees Roger 2004 Diocletian and the Tetrarchy Edinburgh UK Edinburgh University Press ISBN 9780748616602 Rehak Paul and Younger John Grimes Imperium and cosmos Augustus and the northern Campus Martius illustrated University of Wisconsin Press 2006 ISBN 0 299 22010 9 Rosenstein Nathan S Imperatores Victi Military Defeat and Aristocratic Competition in the Middle and Late Republic Berkeley University of California Press 1990 Ark CDlib org Rupke Jorg Editor A Companion to Roman Religion Wiley Blackwell 2007 ISBN 978 1 4051 2943 5 Severy Beth Augustus and the family at the birth of the Roman Empire Routledge 2003 ISBN 0 415 30959 X Smallwood E Mary The Jews under Roman rule from Pompey to Diocletian a study in political relations illustrated Brill Publishers 2001 ISBN 0 391 04155 X Taylor Lily Ross The Divinity of the Roman Emperor American Philological Association 1931 repr Arno Press 1975 Theuws Frans and Nelson Janet L Rituals of power from late antiquity to the early Middle Ages Brill Publishers 2000 ISBN 90 04 10902 1 Versnel H S Triumphus An Inquiry into the Origin Development and Meaning of the Roman Triumph Leiden 1970 Vout Caroline Power and eroticism in Imperial Rome illustrated Cambridge University Press 2007 ISBN 0 521 86739 8 Walbank Frank W Selected Papers Studies in Greek and Roman History and Historiography Cambridge University Press 1986 pp 120 137 ISBN 978 0 521 30752 9 Weinstock Stefan Divus Iulius Oxford Clarendon Press OUP 1971 Wiedemann Thomas Adults and Children in the Roman Empire Taylor amp Francis Ltd 1989 ISBN 978 0 415 00336 0 Williams S and Friell J G P Theodosius The Empire at Bay Taylor amp Francis Ltd 1994 ISBN 978 0 7134 6691 1 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Roman imperial cult amp oldid 1179039161, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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