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Roman triumph

The Roman triumph (triumphus) was a civil ceremony and religious rite of ancient Rome, held to publicly celebrate and sanctify the success of a military commander who had led Roman forces to victory in the service of the state or, in some historical traditions, one who had successfully completed a foreign war.

Panel from a representation of a triumph of the Emperor Marcus Aurelius; a winged genius hovers above his head
Scene from the Triumphs of Caesar by Andrea Mantegna (1482–94, Royal Collection)

On the day of his triumph, the general wore a crown of laurel and an all-purple, gold-embroidered triumphal toga picta ("painted" toga), regalia that identified him as near-divine or near-kingly. In some accounts, his face was painted red, perhaps in imitation of Rome's highest and most powerful god, Jupiter. The general rode in a four-horse chariot through the streets of Rome in unarmed procession with his army, captives, and the spoils of his war. At Jupiter's temple on the Capitoline Hill, he offered sacrifice and the tokens of his victory to Jupiter.

In Republican tradition, only the Senate could grant a triumph. The origins and development of this honour were obscure: Roman historians placed the first triumph in the mythical past. Republican morality required that the general conduct himself with dignified humility, as a mortal citizen who triumphed on behalf of Rome's Senate, people, and gods. Inevitably, the triumph offered the general extraordinary opportunities for self-publicity, besides its religious and military dimensions. Most triumphal celebrations included a range of popular games and entertainments for the Roman masses.

Most Roman festivals were calendar fixtures, tied to the worship of particular deities. While the triumphal procession culminated at Jupiter's temple, the procession itself, attendant feasting, and public games promoted the general's status and achievement. By the Late Republican era, triumphs were drawn out and extravagant, motivated by increasing competition among the military-political adventurers who ran Rome's nascent empire. Some triumphs were prolonged by several days of public games and entertainments. From the Principate onwards, the triumph reflected the Imperial order and the pre-eminence of the Imperial family. The triumph was consciously imitated by medieval and later states in the royal entry and other ceremonial events.

Background and ceremonies

The vir triumphalis

In Republican Rome, truly exceptional military achievement merited the highest possible honours, which connected the vir triumphalis ("man of triumph", later known as a triumphator) to Rome's mythical and semi-mythical past. In effect, the general was close to being "king for a day", and possibly close to divinity. He wore the regalia traditionally associated both with the ancient Roman monarchy and with the statue of Jupiter Capitolinus: the purple and gold "toga picta", laurel crown, red boots and, again possibly, the red-painted face of Rome's supreme deity. He was drawn in procession through the city in a four-horse chariot, under the gaze of his peers and an applauding crowd, to the temple of Capitoline Jupiter. His spoils and captives led the way; his armies followed behind. Once at the Capitoline temple, he sacrificed two white oxen to Jupiter, and laid tokens of victory at the feet of Jupiter's statue, thus dedicating the triumph to the Roman Senate, people, and gods.[1]

Triumphs were tied to no particular day, season, or religious festival of the Roman calendar. Most seem to have been celebrated at the earliest practicable opportunity, probably on days that were deemed auspicious for the occasion. Tradition required that, for the duration of a triumph, every temple was open. The ceremony was thus, in some sense, shared by the whole community of Roman gods,[2] but overlaps were inevitable with specific festivals and anniversaries. Some may have been coincidental; others were designed. For example, March 1, the festival and dies natalis of the war god Mars, was the traditional anniversary of the first triumph by Publicola (504 BCE), of six other Republican triumphs, and of the very first Roman triumph by Romulus.[3] Pompey postponed his third and most magnificent triumph for several months to make it coincide with his own dies natalis (birthday).[4][5]

Religious dimensions aside, the focus of the triumph was the general himself. The ceremony promoted him – however temporarily – above every mortal Roman. This was an opportunity granted to very few. From the time of Scipio Africanus, the triumphal general was linked (at least for historians during the Principate) to Alexander and the demi-god Hercules, who had laboured selflessly for the benefit of all mankind.[6][7][8] His sumptuous triumphal chariot was bedecked with charms against the possible envy (invidia) and malice of onlookers.[9][10] In some accounts, a companion or public slave would remind him from time to time of his own mortality (a memento mori).[11]

The procession

Rome's earliest "triumphs" were probably simple victory parades, celebrating the return of a victorious general and his army to the city, along with the fruits of his victory, and ending with some form of dedication to the gods. This is probably so for the earliest legendary and later semi-legendary triumphs of Rome's regal era, when the king functioned as Rome's highest magistrate and war-leader. As Rome's population, power, influence, and territory increased, so did the scale, length, variety, and extravagance of its triumphal processions.

The procession (pompa) mustered in the open space of the Campus Martius (Field of Mars) probably well before first light. From there, all unforeseen delays and accidents aside, it would have managed a slow walking pace at best, punctuated by various planned stops en route to its final destination of the Capitoline temple, a distance of just under 4 km (2.48 mi). Triumphal processions were notoriously long and slow;[12] the longest could last for two or three days, and possibly more, and some may have been of greater length than the route itself.[13]

Some ancient and modern sources suggest a fairly standard processional order. First came the captive leaders, allies, and soldiers (and sometimes their families) usually walking in chains; some were destined for execution or further display. Their captured weapons, armour, gold, silver, statuary, and curious or exotic treasures were carted behind them, along with paintings, tableaux, and models depicting significant places and episodes of the war. Next in line, all on foot, came Rome's senators and magistrates, followed by the general's lictors in their red war-robes, their fasces wreathed in laurel, then the general in his four-horse chariot. A companion, or a public slave, might share the chariot with him or, in some cases, his youngest children. His officers and elder sons rode horseback nearby. His unarmed soldiers followed in togas and laurel crowns, chanting "io triumphe!" and singing ribald songs at their general's expense. Somewhere in the procession, two flawless white oxen were led for the sacrifice to Jupiter, garland-decked and with gilded horns. All this was done to the accompaniment of music, clouds of incense, and the strewing of flowers.[14]

Almost nothing is known of the procession's infrastructure and management. Its doubtless enormous cost was defrayed in part by the state but mostly by the general's loot, which most ancient sources dwell on in great detail and unlikely superlatives. Once disposed, this portable wealth injected huge sums into the Roman economy; the amount brought in by Octavian's triumph over Egypt triggered a fall in interest rates and a sharp rise in land prices.[15] No ancient source addresses the logistics of the procession: where the soldiers and captives, in a procession of several days, could have slept and eaten, or where these several thousands plus the spectators could have been stationed for the final ceremony at the Capitoline temple.[16]

The route

The following schematic is for the route taken by "some, or many" triumphs, and is based on standard modern reconstructions.[17] Any original or traditional route would have been diverted to some extent by the city's many redevelopments and re-building, or sometimes by choice. The starting place (the Campus Martius) lay outside the city's sacred boundary (pomerium), bordering the eastern bank of the Tiber. The procession entered the city through a Porta Triumphalis (Triumphal Gate),[18] and crossed the pomerium, where the general surrendered his command to the senate and magistrates. It continued through the site of the Circus Flaminius, skirting the southern base of the Capitoline Hill and the Velabrum, along a Via Triumphalis (Triumphal Way)[19] towards the Circus Maximus, perhaps dropping off any prisoners destined for execution at the Tullianum.[20] It entered the Via Sacra then the Forum. Finally, it ascended the Capitoline Hill to the Temple of Jupiter Capitolinus. Once the sacrifice and dedications were completed, the procession and spectators dispersed to banquets, games, and other entertainments sponsored by the triumphing general.

Banquets, games, and entertainments

In most triumphs, the general funded any post-procession banquets from his share of the loot. There were feasts for the people and separate, much richer feasts for the elite; some went on for most of the night. Dionysius offers a contrast to the lavish triumphal banquets of his time by giving Romulus's triumph the most primitive possible "banquet" – ordinary Romans setting up food-tables as a "welcome home", and the returning troops taking swigs and bites as they marched by. He recreates the first Republican triumphal banquet along the same lines.[21] Varro claims that his aunt earned 20,000 sesterces by supplying 5,000 thrushes for Caecilius Metellus's triumph of 71 BCE.[22]

Some triumphs included ludi as fulfillment of the general's vow to a god or goddess, made before battle or during its heat, in return for their help in securing victory.[23] In the Republic, they were paid for by the triumphing general. Marcus Fulvius Nobilior vowed ludi in return for victory over the Aetolian League and paid for ten days of games at his triumph.

Commemoration

 
Detail from the Arch of Titus showing his triumph held in 71 for his Sack of Jerusalem.

Most Romans would never have seen a triumph, but its symbolism permeated Roman imagination and material culture. Triumphal generals minted and circulated characteristically detailed, high value coins to propagate their triumphal fame and generosity empire-wide. Pompey's issues for his three triumphs are typical. One is an aureus (a gold coin) that has a laurel-wreathed border enclosing a head which personifies Africa; beside it, Pompey's title "Magnus" ("The Great"), with wand and jug as symbols of his augury. The reverse identifies him as proconsul in a triumphal chariot attended by Victory. A triumphal denarius (a silver coin) shows his three trophies of captured arms, with his augur's wand and jug. Another shows a globe surrounded by triumphal wreaths, symbolising his "world conquest", and an ear of grain to show that his victory protected Rome's grain supply.[24] A notable coin, minted by Lucius Manlius Torquatus, a supporter of Sulla, references Sulla's victory over Mithridates VI of Pontus. This coin depicts a quadriga with Sulla's legend and the general partially visible in his chariot. This established a precedent for the Imperial period, where coins often depicted triumphal arches erected by emperors to commemorate their victories. Germanicus' achievements in Germany in 15-16 CE are depicted on coins showing Tiberius in a quadriga.[25]

In Republican tradition, a general was expected to wear his triumphal regalia only for the day of his triumph; thereafter, they were presumably displayed in the atrium of his family home. As one of the nobility, he was entitled to a particular kind of funeral in which a string of actors walked behind his bier wearing the masks of his ancestors; another actor represented the general himself and his highest achievement in life by wearing his funeral mask, triumphal laurels, and toga picta.[26] Anything more was deeply suspect; Pompey was granted the privilege of wearing his triumphal wreath at the Circus, but he met with a hostile reception.[27] Julius Caesar's penchant for wearing his triumphal regalia "wherever and whenever" was taken as one among many signs of monarchical intentions which, for some, justified his murder. In the Imperial era, emperors wore such regalia to signify their elevated rank and office and to identify themselves with the Roman gods and Imperial order – a central feature of Imperial cult.

The building and dedication of monumental public works offered local, permanent opportunities for triumphal commemoration. In 55 BCE, Pompey inaugurated Rome's first stone-built Theatre as a gift to the people of Rome, funded by his spoils. Its gallery and colonnades doubled as an exhibition space and likely contained statues, paintings, and other trophies carried at his various triumphs.[28] It contained a new temple to Pompey's patron goddess Venus Victrix ("Victorious Venus"); the year before, he had issued a coin which showed her crowned with triumphal laurels.[29] Julius Caesar claimed Venus as both patron and divine ancestress; he funded a new temple to her and dedicated it during his quadruple triumph of 46 BCE. He thus wove his patron goddess and putative ancestress into his triumphal anniversary.

Augustus, Caesar's heir and Rome's first emperor, built a vast triumphal monument on the Greek coast at Actium, overlooking the scene of his decisive sea-battle against Antony and Egypt; the bronze beaks of captured Egyptian warships projected from its seaward wall. Imperial iconography increasingly identified Emperors with the gods, starting with the Augustan reinvention of Rome as a virtual monarchy (the principate). Sculpted panels on the arch of Titus (built by Domitian) celebrate Titus' and Vespasian's joint triumph over the Jews after the siege of Jerusalem, with a triumphal procession of captives and treasures seized from the temple of Jerusalem – some of which funded the building of the Colosseum. Another panel shows the funeral and apotheosis of the deified Titus. Prior to this, the senate voted Titus a triple-arch at the Circus Maximus to celebrate or commemorate the same victory or triumph.[30]

Awarding a triumph

In Republican tradition, only the Senate could grant a triumph. A general who wanted a triumph would dispatch his request and report to the Senate. Officially, triumphs were granted for outstanding military merit; the state paid for the ceremony if this and certain other conditions were met – and these seem to have varied from time to time, and from case to case – or the Senate would pay for the official procession, at least. Most Roman historians rest the outcome on an open Senatorial debate and vote, its legality confirmed by one of the people's assemblies; the senate and people thus controlled the state's coffers and rewarded or curbed its generals. Some triumphs seem to have been granted outright, with minimal debate. Some were turned down but went ahead anyway, with the general's direct appeal to the people over the senate and a promise of public games at his own expense. Others were blocked or granted only after interminable wrangling. Senators and generals alike were politicians, and Roman politics was notorious for its rivalries, shifting alliances, back-room dealings, and overt public bribery.[31] The senate's discussions would likely have hinged on triumphal tradition, precedent, and propriety; less overtly but more anxiously, it would hinge on the extent of the general's political and military powers and popularity, and the possible consequences of supporting or hindering his further career. There is no firm evidence that the Senate applied a prescribed set of "triumphal laws" when making their decisions,[32][33] Valerius Maximus extrapolated various "triumphal laws" from disputed historic accounts of actual practice. They included one law that the general must have killed at least 5,000 of the enemy in a single battle, and another that he must swear an oath that his account was the truth. No evidence has survived for either of these laws, or any other laws relating to triumphs.[34]

Ovation

A general might be granted a "lesser triumph", known as an Ovation. He entered the city on foot, minus his troops, in his magistrate's toga and wearing a wreath of Venus' myrtle. In 211 BCE, the Senate turned down Marcus Marcellus' request for a triumph after his victory over the Carthaginians and their Sicilian-Greek allies, apparently because his army was still in Sicily and unable to join him. They offered him instead a thanksgiving (supplicatio) and ovation. The day before it, he celebrated an unofficial triumph on the Alban Mount. His ovation was of triumphal proportions. It included a large painting, showing his siege of Syracuse, the siege engines themselves, captured plate, gold, silver, and royal ornaments, and the statuary and opulent furniture for which Syracuse was famous. Eight elephants were led in the procession, symbols of his victory over the Carthaginians. His Spanish and Syracusan allies led the way wearing golden wreaths; they were granted Roman citizenship and lands in Sicily.[35]

In 71 BCE, Crassus earned an ovation for quashing the Spartacus revolt, and increased his honours by wearing a crown of Jupiter's "triumphal" laurel.[36] Ovations are listed along with triumphs on the Fasti Triumphales.

Sources

 
Segment XX of the Fasti triumphales, a portion recording triumphs during the First Punic War

The Fasti Triumphales (also called Acta Triumphalia) are stone tablets that were erected in the Forum Romanum around 12 BCE, during the reign of Emperor Augustus. They give the general's formal name, the names of his father and grandfather, the people(s) or command province whence the triumph was awarded, and the date of the triumphal procession. They record over 200 triumphs, starting with three mythical triumphs of Romulus in 753 BCE and ending with that of Lucius Cornelius Balbus (19 BCE).[37] Fragments of similar date and style from Rome and provincial Italy appear to be modeled on the Augustan Fasti, and have been used to fill some of its gaps.[38]

Many ancient historical accounts also mention triumphs. Most Roman accounts of triumphs were written to provide their readers with a moral lesson, rather than to provide an accurate description of the triumphal process, procession, rites, and their meaning. This scarcity allows only the most tentative and generalised (and possibly misleading) reconstruction of triumphal ceremony, based on the combination of various incomplete accounts from different periods of Roman history.

Evolution

Origins and Regal era

 
The Triumph of Bacchus, a Roman mosaic from Africa Proconsolaris, dated 3rd century CE, now in the Sousse Archaeological Museum, Tunisia

The origins and development of this honour are obscure. Roman historians placed the first triumph in the mythical past; some thought that it dated from Rome's foundation; others thought it more ancient than that. Roman etymologists thought that the soldiers' chant of triumpe was a borrowing via Etruscan of the Greek thriambus (θρίαμβος), cried out by satyrs and other attendants in Dionysian and Bacchic processions.[39] Plutarch and some Roman sources traced the first Roman triumph and the "kingly" garb of the triumphator to Rome's first king Romulus, whose defeat of King Acron of the Caeninenses was thought coeval with Rome's foundation in 753 BCE.[40] Ovid projected a fabulous and poetic triumphal precedent in the return of the god Bacchus/Dionysus from his conquest of India, drawn in a golden chariot by tigers and surrounded by maenads, satyrs, and assorted drunkards.[41][42][43] Arrian attributed similar Dionysian and "Roman" elements to a victory procession of Alexander the Great.[44] Like much in Roman culture, elements of the triumph were based on Etruscan and Greek precursors; in particular, the purple, embroidered toga picta worn by the triumphal general was thought to be derived from the royal toga of Rome's Etruscan kings.

For triumphs of the Roman regal era, the surviving Imperial Fasti Triumphales are incomplete. After three entries for the city's legendary founder Romulus, eleven lines of the list are missing. Next in sequence are Ancus Marcius, Tarquinius Priscus, Servius Tullius, and finally Tarquin "the proud", the last king. The Fasti were compiled some five centuries after the regal era, and probably represent an approved, official version of several different historical traditions. Likewise, the earliest surviving written histories of the regal era, written some centuries after it, attempt to reconcile various traditions, or else debate their merits. Dionysius, for example, gives Romulus three triumphs, the same number given in the Fasti. Livy gives him none, and credits him instead with the first spolia opima, in which the arms and armour were stripped off a defeated foe, then dedicated to Jupiter. Plutarch gives him one, complete with chariot. Tarquin has two triumphs in the Fasti but none in Dionysius.[45] No ancient source gives a triumph to Romulus' successor, the peaceful king Numa.

The Republic

Rome's aristocrats expelled their last king as a tyrant and legislated the monarchy out of existence. They shared among themselves the kingship's former powers and authority in the form of magistracies. In the Republic, the highest possible magistracy was an elected consulship, which could be held for no more than a year at a time. In times of crisis or emergency, the Senate might appoint a dictator to serve a longer term; but this could seem perilously close to the lifetime power of kings. The dictator Camillus was awarded four triumphs but was eventually exiled. Later Roman sources point to his triumph of 396 BCE as a cause for offense; the chariot was drawn by four white horses, a combination properly reserved for Jupiter and Apollo – at least in later lore and poetry.[46] The demeanour of a triumphal Republican general, and the symbols he employed in his triumph, would have been closely scrutinised by his aristocratic peers, alert for any sign that he might aspire to be more than "king for a day".[47]

In the Middle to Late Republic, Rome's expansion through conquest offered her political-military adventurers extraordinary opportunities for self-publicity; the long-drawn series of wars between Rome and Carthage – the Punic Wars – produced twelve triumphs in ten years. Towards the end of the Republic, triumphs became still more frequent,[48] lavish, and competitive, with each display an attempt (usually successful) to outdo the last. To have a triumphal ancestor – even one long-dead – counted for a lot in Roman society and politics. Cicero remarked that, in the race for power and influence, some individuals were not above vesting an inconveniently ordinary ancestor with triumphal grandeur and dignity, distorting an already fragmentary and unreliable historical tradition.[49][50][51]

To Roman historians, the growth of triumphal ostentation undermined Rome's ancient "peasant virtues".[52] Dionysius of Halicarnassus (c. 60 BCE to after 7 BCE) claimed that the triumphs of his day had "departed in every respect from the ancient tradition of frugality".[53] Moralists complained that successful foreign wars might have increased Rome's power, security, and wealth, but they also created and fed a degenerate appetite for bombastic display and shallow novelty. Livy traces the start of the rot to the triumph of Gnaeus Manlius Vulso in 186, which introduced ordinary Romans to such Galatian fripperies as specialist chefs, flute girls, and other "seductive dinner-party amusements". Pliny adds "sideboards and one-legged tables" to the list,[54] but lays responsibility for Rome's slide into luxury on the "1400 pounds of chased silver ware and 1500 pounds of golden vessels" brought somewhat earlier by Scipio Asiaticus for his triumph of 189 BCE.[55]

The three triumphs awarded to Pompey the Great were lavish and controversial. The first in 80 or 81 BCE was for his victory over King Hiarbas of Numidia in 79 BCE, granted by a cowed and divided Senate under the dictatorship of Pompey's patron Sulla. Pompey was only 24 and a mere equestrian.[56] Roman conservatives disapproved of such precocity[57] but others saw his youthful success as the mark of a prodigious military talent, divine favour, and personal brio; and he also had an enthusiastic, popular following. His triumph, however, did not go quite to plan. His chariot was drawn by a team of elephants in order to represent his African conquest – and perhaps to outdo even the legendary triumph of Bacchus. They proved too bulky to pass through the triumphal gate, so Pompey had to dismount while a horse team was yoked in their place.[58] This embarrassment would have delighted his critics, and probably some of his soldiers – whose demands for cash had been near-mutinous.[59] Even so, his firm stand on the matter of cash raised his standing among the conservatives, and Pompey seems to have learned a lesson in populist politics. For his second triumph (71 BCE, the last in a series of four held that year) his cash gifts to his army were said to break all records, though the amounts in Plutarch's account are implausibly high: 6,000 sesterces to each soldier (about six times their annual pay) and about 5 million to each officer.[60]

Pompey was granted a third triumph in 61 BCE to celebrate his victory over Mithridates VI of Pontus. It was an opportunity to outdo all rivals – and even himself. Triumphs traditionally lasted for one day, but Pompey's went on for two in an unprecedented display of wealth and luxury.[61] Plutarch claimed that this triumph represented Pompey's domination over the entire world – on Rome's behalf – and an achievement to outshine even Alexander's.[62][63] Pliny's narrative of this triumph dwells with ominous hindsight upon a gigantic portrait-bust of the triumphant general, a thing of "eastern splendor" entirely covered with pearls, anticipating his later humiliation and decapitation.[64]

Imperial era

 
Flemish tapestry in the smoking room of the Palace of the Marqués de Dos Aguas

Following Caesar's murder, Octavian assumed the permanent title of imperator and became the permanent head of the Senate from 27 BCE (see principate) under the title and name Augustus. Only the year before, he had blocked the senatorial award of a triumph to Marcus Licinius Crassus the Younger, despite the latter's acclamation in the field as Imperator and his fulfillment of all traditional, Republican qualifying criteria except full consulship. Technically, generals in the Imperial era were legates of the ruling Emperor (Imperator).[65] Augustus claimed the victory as his own but permitted Crassus a second, which is listed on the Fasti for 27 BCE.[66] Crassus was also denied the rare (and technically permissible, in his case) honour of dedicating the spolia opima of this campaign to Jupiter Feretrius.[67]

The last triumph listed on the Fasti Triumphales is for 19 BCE. By then, the triumph had been absorbed into the Augustan imperial cult system, in which only the emperor[68] would be accorded such a supreme honour, as he was the supreme Imperator. The Senate, in true Republican style, would have held session to debate and decide the merits of the candidate; but this was little more than good form. Augustan ideology insisted that Augustus had saved and restored the Republic, and it celebrated his triumph as a permanent condition, and his military, political, and religious leadership as responsible for an unprecedented era of stability, peace, and prosperity. From then on, emperors claimed – without seeming to claim – the triumph as an Imperial privilege. Those outside the Imperial family might be granted "triumphal ornaments" (Ornamenta triumphalia) or an ovation, such as Aulus Plautius under Claudius. The senate still debated and voted on such matters, though the outcome was probably already decided.[69] In the Imperial era, the number of triumphs fell sharply.[70]

Imperial panegyrics of the later Imperial era combine triumphal elements with Imperial ceremonies such as the consular investiture of Emperors, and the adventus, the formal "triumphal" arrival of an emperor in the various capitals of the Empire in his progress through the provinces. Some emperors were perpetually on the move and seldom or never went to Rome.[71] Christian emperor Constantius II entered Rome for the first time in his life in 357, several years after defeating his rival Magnentius, standing in his triumphal chariot "as if he were a statue".[72] Theodosius I celebrated his victory over the usurper Magnus Maximus in Rome on June 13, 389.[73] Claudian's panegyric to Emperor Honorius records the last known official triumph in the city of Rome and the western Empire.[74][75] Emperor Honorius celebrated it conjointly with his sixth consulship on January 1, 404; his general Stilicho had defeated Visigothic King Alaric at the battles of Pollentia and Verona.[76] In Christian martyrology, Saint Telemachus was martyred by a mob while attempting to stop the customary gladiatorial games at this triumph, and gladiatorial games (munera gladiatoria) were banned in consequence.[77][78][79] In 438 CE, however, the western emperor Valentinian III found cause to repeat the ban, which indicates that it was not always enforced.[80]

In 534, well into the Byzantine era, Justinian I awarded general Belisarius a triumph that included some "radically new" Christian and Byzantine elements. Belisarius successfully campaigned against his adversary Vandal leader Gelimer to restore the former Roman province of Africa to the control of Byzantium in the 533–534 Vandalic War. The triumph was held in the Eastern Roman capital of Constantinople. Historian Procopius, an eyewitness who had previously been in Belisarius's service, describes the procession's display of the loot seized from the Temple of Jerusalem in 70 CE by Roman Emperor Titus, including the Temple Menorah. The treasure had been stored in Rome's Temple of Peace after its display in Titus' own triumphal parade and its depiction on his triumphal arch; then it was seized by the Vandals during their sack of Rome in 455; then it was taken from them in Belisarius' campaign. The objects themselves might well have recalled the ancient triumphs of Vespasian and his son Titus; but Belisarius and Gelimer walked, as in an ovation. The procession did not end at Rome's Capitoline Temple with a sacrifice to Jupiter, but terminated at Hippodrome of Constantinople with a recitation of Christian prayer and the triumphant generals prostrate before the emperor.[81]

Influence

 
Miniature representation of the emperor Basil II's triumphal procession through the Forum of Constantinople, from the (Madrid Skylitzes)
 
Charles V announcing the capture of Tunis to Pope Paul III, as imagined in an anonymous sixteenth century tapestry

During the Renaissance, kings and magnates sought ennobling connections with the classical past. Ghibelline Castruccio Castracani defeated the forces of the Guelph Florence in the 1325 Battle of Altopascio. Holy Roman Emperor Louis IV made him Duke of Lucca, and the city gave him a Roman-style triumph. The procession was led by his Florentine captives, made to carry candles in honour of Lucca's patron saint. Castracani followed, standing in a decorative chariot. His booty included the Florentines' portable, wheeled altar, the carroccio.[82]

Flavio Biondo's Roma Triumphans (1459) claimed the ancient Roman triumph, divested of its pagan rites, as a rightful inheritance of Holy Roman Emperors.[83] Italian poet Petrarch's Triumphs (I triomfi) represented the triumphal themes and biographies of ancient Roman texts as ideals for cultured, virtuous rule; it was influential and widely read.[84] Andrea Mantegna's series of large paintings on the Triumphs of Caesar (1484–92, now Hampton Court Palace) became immediately famous and was endlessly copied in print form. The Triumphal Procession commissioned by Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian I (1512–19) from a group of artists including Albrecht Dürer was a series of woodcuts of an imaginary triumph of his own that could be hung as a frieze 54 metres (177 ft) long.

In the 1550s, the fragmentary Fasti Triumphales were unearthed and partially restored. Onofrio Panvinio's Fasti continued where the ancient Fasti left off.[85] The last triumph recorded by Panvinio was the Royal Entry of Holy Roman Emperor Charles V into Rome on April 5, 1536, after his conquest of Tunis in 1535.[86][87] Panvinio described it as a Roman triumph "over the infidel." The Emperor followed the traditional ancient route, "past the ruins of the triumphal arches of the soldier-emperors of Rome", where "actors dressed as ancient senators hailed the return of the new Caesar as miles christi," (a soldier of Christ).[88]

The extravagant triumphal entry into Rouen of Henri II of France in 1550 was not "less pleasing and delectable than the third triumph of Pompey ... magnificent in riches and abounding in the spoils of foreign nations".[89] A triumphal arch made for the Royal entry into Paris of Louis XIII of France in 1628 carried a depiction of Pompey.[90]

See also

References

  1. ^ A summary of disparate viewpoints regarding the Triumph is in Versnel, 56–93: limited preview via Books.Google.com
  2. ^ Versnel, p. 386.
  3. ^ Beard, p. 77.
  4. ^ Beard, p. 7.
  5. ^ Denis Feeney, Caesar's Calendar: Ancient Time and the Beginnings of History, University of California Press (2008) p. 148.
  6. ^ Beard, 72–75. See also Diodorus, 4.5 at Thayer: Uchicago.edu
  7. ^ Beard et al, 85–87: see also Polybius, 10.2.20, who suggests that Scipio's assumption of divine connections (and the personal favour of divine guidance) was unprecedented and seemed suspiciously "Greek" to his more conservative peers.
  8. ^ See also Galinsky, 106, 126–149, for Heraklean/Herculean associations of Alexander, Scipio, and later triumphing Roman generals.
  9. ^ Versnel, p. 380.
  10. ^ Various Roman sources describe the different charms employed against envy during triumphs, not necessarily at the same event; they include an assemblage of miniature bells (tintinnabulum) and a whip on the chariot's dashboard. In Pliny, a sacred phallos loaned by the Vestal Virgins is slung between the chariot wheels; see Beard, pp. 83–85.
  11. ^ The very few accounts are from the Imperial era 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", and are open to a variety of interpretations. Nevertheless, they imply a tradition that the triumphing general was publicly reminded of his mortal nature, whatever his kingly appearance, temporary godlike status, or divine associations. See Beard, pp. 85–92.
  12. ^ Emperor Vespasian regretted his triumph because its vast length and slow movement bored him; see Suetonius, Vespasian, 12.
  13. ^ The "2,700 wagonloads of captured weapons alone, never mind the soldiers and captives and booty" on one day of Aemilius Paulus's triumphal "extravaganza" of 167 BCE is wild exaggeration. Some modern scholarship suggests a procession 7 km long as plausible. See Beard, p. 102.
  14. ^ Summary based on Versnel, pp. 95–96.
  15. ^ Beard, pp. 159–161, citing Suetonius, Augustus, 41.1.
  16. ^ Beard, pp. 93–95, 258. For their joint triumph of 71 CE, Titus and Vespasian treated their soldiers to a very early, and possibly traditional "triumphal breakfast".
  17. ^ See map, in Beard, p. 334, and discussion on pp. 92–105.
  18. ^ The location and nature of the Porta Triumphalis are among the most uncertain and disputed aspects of the triumphal route; some sources imply a gate exclusively dedicated to official processions, others a free-standing arch, or the Porta Carmentalis by another name, or any convenient gate in the vicinity. See discussion in Beard, pp. 97–101.
  19. ^ Sometimes thought to be the same route as the modern Via dei Fori Imperiali
  20. ^ This is where Jugurtha was starved to death and Vercingetorix was strangled.
  21. ^ Beard, pp. 258–259; cf Livy's "soldiers feasting as they went" at the triumph of Cincinnatus (458 BCE).
  22. ^ Beard, p. 49.
  23. ^ Beard, pp. 263–264.
  24. ^ Beard pp. 19–21,
  25. ^ Eiland, Murray (2023-04-30). Picturing Roman Belief Systems: The iconography of coins in the Republic and Empire. British Archaeological Reports (Oxford) Ltd. pp. 70–71. doi:10.30861/9781407360713. ISBN 978-1-4073-6071-3.
  26. ^ Flower, Harriet I., Ancestor Masks and Aristocratic Power in Roman Culture, Oxford University Press, 1999, p. 33.
  27. ^ Taylor, Lily Ross, The Divinity of the Roman Emperor, American Philological Association, 1931 (reprinted by Arno Press, 1975), p. 57, citing Cicero, To Atticus, 1.18.6, and Velleius Paterculus, 2.40.4. Faced with this reaction, Pompey never tried it again.
  28. ^ Beard, pp. 23–25.
  29. ^ Beard, pp. 22–23.
  30. ^ Fergus Millar, "Last Year in Jerusalem: Monuments of the Jewish War in Rome", in Flavius Josephus and Flavian Rome, J. C. Edmondson, Steve Mason, J. B. Rives (eds.), pp. 101–124.
  31. ^ Beard, 196−201.
  32. ^ See discussion in Beard, pp. 199–206, 209–210. Livy's "triumphal laws" hark back to earlier, traditional but probably reinvented triumphs of Republican Rome's expansion to Empire and its defeat of foreign kings; his notion was that triumphal generals must possess the highest level of imperium (Livy, 38.38.4, in the 206 BCE case of Scipio Africanus), but this is contradicted in Polybius 11.33.7 and Pompey's status at his first triumph.
  33. ^ The tradition was probably an indication of esteem and popularity that triumphal generals in the Republic had been spontaneously proclaimed as imperator by their troops in the field; it was not an absolute requirement (see Beard, p. 275). Taking divine auspices before battle might have been formally reserved to the highest magistrate on the field, while a victory proved that a commander must have pleased the gods – whatever the niceties of his authority. Conversely, a lost battle was a sure sign of religious dereliction; see Veit Rosenberger, "The Gallic Disaster", The Classical World, (The Johns Hopkins University Press), 96, 4, 2003, p. 371, note 39.
  34. ^ Beard, pp. 206–211, citing Valerius Maximus, Memorable Facts and Sayings, 2. 8. 1.
  35. ^ Livy, Ab Urbe Condita, 26, 21; cf. Plutarch Marcellus 19–22.
  36. ^ Beard, p. 265.
  37. ^ Romulus' three triumphs are in Dionysius of Halicarnassus (Antiquitates Romanae, 2.54.2 & 2.55.5). Dioysius may have seen the Fasti. Livy (1.10.5–7) allows Romulus the spolia opima, not a "triumph". Neither author mentions the two triumphs attributed by the Fasti to the last king of Rome, Tarquin. See Beard, 74 and endnotes 1 &2.
  38. ^ Beard, 61–62, 66–67. The standard modern edition of the Fasti Triumphales is that of Attilio Degrassi, in Inscriptiones Italiae, vol. XIII, fasc. 1 (Rome, 1947)
  39. ^ Versnel considers it an invocation for divine help and manifestation, derived via an unknown pre-Greek language through Etruria and Greece. He cites the chant of "Triumpe", repeated five times, which terminates the Carmen Arvale, a now-obscure prayer for the help and protection of Mars and the Lares. Versnel, pp. 39–55 (conclusion and summary on p. 55).
  40. ^ Beard et al, vol. 1, 44–45, 59–60: see also Plutarch, Romulus (trans. Dryden) at The Internet Classics Archive MIT.edu
  41. ^ Bowersock, 1994, 157.
  42. ^ Ovid, The Erotic Poems, 1.2.19–52. Trans P. Green.
  43. ^ Pliny attributes the invention of the triumph to "Father Liber" (identified with Dionysus): see Pliny, Historia Naturalis, 7.57 (ed. Bostock) at Perseus: Tufts.edu
  44. ^ Bosworth, 67–79, notes that Arrian's attributions here are non-historic and their details almost certainly apocryphal: see Arrian, 6, 28, 1–2.
  45. ^ Beard, p. 74.
  46. ^ Beard, p. 235.
  47. ^ Flower, Harriet, "Augustus, Tiberius, and the End of the Roman Triumph", Classical Antiquity, 2020, 39 (1): 1–28 [1]
  48. ^ Beard, p. 42; four were clustered in one year (71 BCE), including Pompey's second triumph.
  49. ^ Cicero, Brutus, 62.
  50. ^ See also Livy, 8, 40.
  51. ^ Beard, 79, notes at least one ancient case of what seems blatant fabrication, in which two ancestral triumphs became three.
  52. ^ Beard, 67: citing Valerius Maximus, 4.4.5., and Apuleius, Apol.17
  53. ^ Dionysus of Halicarnassus, Roman Antiquities, 2.34.3.
  54. ^ Livy, 39.6–7: cf Pliny, Historia Naturalis, 34.14.
  55. ^ Beard, p. 162.
  56. ^ Beard, 16; he was aged 25 or 26 in some accounts.
  57. ^ Dio Cassius, 42.18.3.
  58. ^ Pliny, Historia Naturalis, 8.4: Plutarch, Pompey, 14.4.
  59. ^ Beard, 16, 17.
  60. ^ Beard, 39–40, notes that the introduction of such vast sums into the Roman economy would have left substantial traces, but none are evidenced (citing Brunt (1971), 459–460; Scheidel (1996); Duncan-Jones (1990), 43, & (1994), 253).
  61. ^ Beard, 9, cites Appian's very doubtful "75,100,000" drachmae carried in the procession as 1.5 times his own estimate of Rome's total annual tax revenue (Appian, Mithradates, 116).
  62. ^ Beard, 15–16, citing Plutarch, Pompey, 45, 5.
  63. ^ Beard, 16. For further elaboration on Pompey's 3rd triumph, see also Plutarch, Sertorius, 18, 2, at Thayer Uchicago.edu: Cicero, Man. 61: Pliny, Nat. 7, 95.
  64. ^ Beard, 35: Pliny, Historia Naturalis, 37, 14–16.
  65. ^ Beard, pp. 297–298.
  66. ^ Syme, 272–275: Google Books Search
  67. ^ Southern, 104: Google Books Search
  68. ^ Very occasionally, a close relative who had glorified the Imperial gens might receive the honor.
  69. ^ Suetonius, Lives, Claudius, 24.3: given for the conquest of Britain. Claudius was "granted" a triumph by the Senate and gave "triumphal regalia" to his prospective son-in-law, who was still "only a boy." Thayer: Uchicago.edu Archived 2012-06-30 at archive.today
  70. ^ Beard, 61–71.
  71. ^ On triumphal entrances to Rome in the fourth century, see discussion in Schmidt-Hofner, pp. 33–60, and Wienand, pp. 169–197.
  72. ^ Beard pp. 322–323.
  73. ^ "Theodosius I – Livius". www.livius.org. from the original on 2015-04-29.
  74. ^ Claudian (404). Panegyricus de Sexto Consulatu Honorii Augusti. Retrieved 21 August 2013.
  75. ^ Beard, 326.
  76. ^ Gibbon, Edward (1776–1789). "Chapter XXX". The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire. pp. 39–41. Retrieved 21 August 2013. After the retreat of the barbarians, Honorius was directed to accept the dutiful invitation of the senate, and to celebrate, in the Imperial city, the auspicious aera of the Gothic victory, and of his sixth consulship.
  77. ^ Wace, Henry (1911). "Entry for "Honorius, Flavius Augustus, emperor"". Dictionary of Christian Biography and Literature to the End of the Sixth Century A.D., with an Account of the Principal Sects and Heresies. from the original on 21 October 2014. Retrieved 21 August 2013. The customary games took place with great magnificence, and on this occasion St. Telemachus sacrificed himself by attempting to separate the gladiators.
  78. ^ Theodoret (449–450). "Book V, chapter 26". Ecclesiastical History. from the original on 20 September 2013. Retrieved 21 August 2013. When the admirable emperor was informed of this he numbered Telemachus in the array of victorious martyrs, and put an end to that impious spectacle.
  79. ^ Foxe, John (1563). "Chapter III, section on "The Last Roman 'Triumph.'"". Actes and Monuments (a.k.a. Foxe's Book of Martyrs). from the original on 30 May 2013. Retrieved 21 August 2013. [F]rom the day Telemachus fell dead ... no other fight of gladiators was ever held there.
  80. ^ Dell'Orto, Luisa Franchi (1983). Ancient Rome: Life and Art. Scala Books. p. 52. ISBN 978-0-935748-46-8.
  81. ^ Beard, 318–321. Procopius' account is the source for a "marvelous set piece" of Belisarius' triumph, in Robert Graves' historical novel Count Belisarius.
  82. ^ Zaho and Bernstein, 2004, p. 47.
  83. ^ Beard, p. 54.
  84. ^ Zaho and Bernstein, 2004, pp. 4, 31 ff.
  85. ^ De fasti et triumphi Romanorum a Romulo usque ad Carolum V, Giacomo Strada, Venice, 1557 (Latin text, accessed 22 August 2013)
  86. ^ Beard, p. 53; in preparation, Pope Paul III arranged the clearance of any buildings that obstructed the traditional Via Triumphalis.
  87. ^ Pinson, Yona (2001). "Imperial Ideology in the Triumphal Entry into Lille of Charles V and the Crown Prince (1549)" (PDF). Assaph: Studies in Art History. 6: 212. (PDF) from the original on 2014-02-23. Already in his Imperial Triumphal Entry into Rome (1536) the Emperor appeared as a triumphant Roman Imperator: mounted on a white horse and wearing a purple cape, he embodied the figure of the ancient conqueror. At the head of a procession marching along the ancient Via Triumphalis, Charles had re-established himself as the legitimate successor to the Roman Empire.
  88. ^ Frieder, Braden (2016). Chivalry & the Perfect Prince: Tournaments, Art, and Armor at the Spanish Habsburg Court. Truman State University Press. p. 80. ISBN 978-1-931112-69-7. from the original on 10 May 2017.
  89. ^ Beard, 31. See 32, Fig. 7 for a contemporary depiction of Henri's "Romanised" procession.
  90. ^ Beard, 343, footnote 65.

Bibliography

  • Aicher, Peter J. (2004). Rome alive : a source-guide to the ancient city. Wauconda, Ill.: Bolchazy-Carducci. ISBN 978-0865164734. Retrieved 19 October 2015.
  • Bastien J-L, Le triomphe romain et son utilisation politique à Rome aux trois derniers siècles de la République, CEFR 392, Rome, 2007
  • Bastien J-L, Le triomphe à Rome sous la République, un rite monarchique dans une cité aristocratique (IVe-Ier siècle av. notre ère) dans Guisard P. et Laizé C. (dir.), La guerre et la paix, coll. Cultures antiques, Ellipses, 2014, pp. 509–526
  • Beard, Mary: The Roman Triumph, The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass., and London, 2007. (hardcover). ISBN 978-0-674-02613-1
  • Beard, M., Price, S., North, J., Religions of Rome: Volume 1, a History, illustrated, Cambridge University Press, 1998. ISBN 0-521-31682-0
  • Bosworth, A. B., From Arrian to Alexander: Studies in Historical Interpretation, illustrated, reprint, Oxford University Press, 1988. ISBN 0-19-814863-1
  • Bowersock, Glen W., "Dionysus as an Epic Hero," Studies in the Dionysiaca of Nonnos, ed. N. Hopkinson, Cambridge Philosophical Society, suppl. Vol. 17, 1994, 156–166.
  • Brennan, T. Corey: "Triumphus in Monte Albano", 315–337 in R. W. Wallace & E. M. Harris (eds.) Transitions to Empire. Essays in Greco-Roman History, 360–146 B.C., in honor of E. Badian (University of Oklahoma Press, 1996) ISBN 0-8061-2863-1
  • Galinsky, G. Karl, The Herakles theme: the adaptations of the hero in literature from Homer to the twentieth century (Oxford, 1972). ISBN 0-631-14020-4
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  • Lemosse, M., "Les éléments techniques de l'ancien triomphe romain et le probleme de son origine", in H. Temporini (ed.) ANRW I.2 (Berlin, 1972). Includes a comprehensive bibliography.
  • MacCormack, Sabine, Change and Continuity in Late Antiquity: the ceremony of "Adventus", Historia, 21, 4, 1972, pp 721–752.
  • Pais, E., Fasti Triumphales Populi Romani (Rome, 1920)
  • Richardson, J. S., "The Triumph, the Praetors and the Senate in the early Second Century B.C.", JRS 65 (1975), 50–63
  • Schmidt-Hofner, Sebastian, "Trajan und die symbolische Kommunikation bei kaiserlichen Rombesuchen in der Spätantike", in R. Behrwald & C. Witschel (eds.) Rom in der Spätantike (Steiner, 2012) pp. 33–60. ISBN 978-3-515-09445-0
  • Southern, Pat, Augustus, illustrated, reprint, Routledge, 1998. ISBN 0-415-16631-4
  • Syme, Ronald, The Augustan Aristocracy (Oxford University Press, 1986; Clarendon reprint with corrections, 1989) ISBN 0-19-814731-7
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  • Wienand, Johannes, "O tandem felix civili, Roma, victoria! Civil War Triumphs From Honorius to Constantine and Back", in J. Wienand (ed.) Contested Monarchy: Integrating the Roman Empire in the 4th Century AD (Oxford, 2015) pp. 169–197 ISBN 978-0-19-976899-8
  • Wienand, Johannes; Goldbeck, Fabian; Börm, Henning: Der römische Triumph in Prinzipat und Spätantike. Probleme – Paradigmen – Perspektiven, in F. Goldbeck, J. Wienand (eds.): Der römische Triumph in Prinzipat und Spätantike (Berlin/New York, 2017), pp. 1–26.
  • Zaho, Margaret A, and Bernstein, Eckhard, Imago Triumphalis: The Function and Significance of Triumphal Imagery for Italian Renaissance Rulers, Peter Lang Publishing Inc, 2004, ISBN 978-0-8204-6235-6

External links

  • Roman Triumph on World History Encyclopedia
  • Fasti Triumphales at attalus.org. Partial, annotated English translation. From A. Degrassi's "Fasti Capitolini", 1954. Attalus.org

roman, triumph, triumphus, civil, ceremony, religious, rite, ancient, rome, held, publicly, celebrate, sanctify, success, military, commander, roman, forces, victory, service, state, some, historical, traditions, successfully, completed, foreign, panel, from, . The Roman triumph triumphus was a civil ceremony and religious rite of ancient Rome held to publicly celebrate and sanctify the success of a military commander who had led Roman forces to victory in the service of the state or in some historical traditions one who had successfully completed a foreign war Panel from a representation of a triumph of the Emperor Marcus Aurelius a winged genius hovers above his headScene from the Triumphs of Caesar by Andrea Mantegna 1482 94 Royal Collection On the day of his triumph the general wore a crown of laurel and an all purple gold embroidered triumphal toga picta painted toga regalia that identified him as near divine or near kingly In some accounts his face was painted red perhaps in imitation of Rome s highest and most powerful god Jupiter The general rode in a four horse chariot through the streets of Rome in unarmed procession with his army captives and the spoils of his war At Jupiter s temple on the Capitoline Hill he offered sacrifice and the tokens of his victory to Jupiter In Republican tradition only the Senate could grant a triumph The origins and development of this honour were obscure Roman historians placed the first triumph in the mythical past Republican morality required that the general conduct himself with dignified humility as a mortal citizen who triumphed on behalf of Rome s Senate people and gods Inevitably the triumph offered the general extraordinary opportunities for self publicity besides its religious and military dimensions Most triumphal celebrations included a range of popular games and entertainments for the Roman masses Most Roman festivals were calendar fixtures tied to the worship of particular deities While the triumphal procession culminated at Jupiter s temple the procession itself attendant feasting and public games promoted the general s status and achievement By the Late Republican era triumphs were drawn out and extravagant motivated by increasing competition among the military political adventurers who ran Rome s nascent empire Some triumphs were prolonged by several days of public games and entertainments From the Principate onwards the triumph reflected the Imperial order and the pre eminence of the Imperial family The triumph was consciously imitated by medieval and later states in the royal entry and other ceremonial events Contents 1 Background and ceremonies 1 1 The vir triumphalis 1 2 The procession 1 3 The route 1 4 Banquets games and entertainments 1 5 Commemoration 2 Awarding a triumph 2 1 Ovation 3 Sources 4 Evolution 4 1 Origins and Regal era 4 2 The Republic 4 3 Imperial era 5 Influence 6 See also 7 References 8 Bibliography 9 External linksBackground and ceremonies EditThe vir triumphalis Edit In Republican Rome truly exceptional military achievement merited the highest possible honours which connected the vir triumphalis man of triumph later known as a triumphator to Rome s mythical and semi mythical past In effect the general was close to being king for a day and possibly close to divinity He wore the regalia traditionally associated both with the ancient Roman monarchy and with the statue of Jupiter Capitolinus the purple and gold toga picta laurel crown red boots and again possibly the red painted face of Rome s supreme deity He was drawn in procession through the city in a four horse chariot under the gaze of his peers and an applauding crowd to the temple of Capitoline Jupiter His spoils and captives led the way his armies followed behind Once at the Capitoline temple he sacrificed two white oxen to Jupiter and laid tokens of victory at the feet of Jupiter s statue thus dedicating the triumph to the Roman Senate people and gods 1 Triumphs were tied to no particular day season or religious festival of the Roman calendar Most seem to have been celebrated at the earliest practicable opportunity probably on days that were deemed auspicious for the occasion Tradition required that for the duration of a triumph every temple was open The ceremony was thus in some sense shared by the whole community of Roman gods 2 but overlaps were inevitable with specific festivals and anniversaries Some may have been coincidental others were designed For example March 1 the festival and dies natalis of the war god Mars was the traditional anniversary of the first triumph by Publicola 504 BCE of six other Republican triumphs and of the very first Roman triumph by Romulus 3 Pompey postponed his third and most magnificent triumph for several months to make it coincide with his own dies natalis birthday 4 5 Religious dimensions aside the focus of the triumph was the general himself The ceremony promoted him however temporarily above every mortal Roman This was an opportunity granted to very few From the time of Scipio Africanus the triumphal general was linked at least for historians during the Principate to Alexander and the demi god Hercules who had laboured selflessly for the benefit of all mankind 6 7 8 His sumptuous triumphal chariot was bedecked with charms against the possible envy invidia and malice of onlookers 9 10 In some accounts a companion or public slave would remind him from time to time of his own mortality a memento mori 11 The procession Edit Rome s earliest triumphs were probably simple victory parades celebrating the return of a victorious general and his army to the city along with the fruits of his victory and ending with some form of dedication to the gods This is probably so for the earliest legendary and later semi legendary triumphs of Rome s regal era when the king functioned as Rome s highest magistrate and war leader As Rome s population power influence and territory increased so did the scale length variety and extravagance of its triumphal processions The procession pompa mustered in the open space of the Campus Martius Field of Mars probably well before first light From there all unforeseen delays and accidents aside it would have managed a slow walking pace at best punctuated by various planned stops en route to its final destination of the Capitoline temple a distance of just under 4 km 2 48 mi Triumphal processions were notoriously long and slow 12 the longest could last for two or three days and possibly more and some may have been of greater length than the route itself 13 Some ancient and modern sources suggest a fairly standard processional order First came the captive leaders allies and soldiers and sometimes their families usually walking in chains some were destined for execution or further display Their captured weapons armour gold silver statuary and curious or exotic treasures were carted behind them along with paintings tableaux and models depicting significant places and episodes of the war Next in line all on foot came Rome s senators and magistrates followed by the general s lictors in their red war robes their fasces wreathed in laurel then the general in his four horse chariot A companion or a public slave might share the chariot with him or in some cases his youngest children His officers and elder sons rode horseback nearby His unarmed soldiers followed in togas and laurel crowns chanting io triumphe and singing ribald songs at their general s expense Somewhere in the procession two flawless white oxen were led for the sacrifice to Jupiter garland decked and with gilded horns All this was done to the accompaniment of music clouds of incense and the strewing of flowers 14 Almost nothing is known of the procession s infrastructure and management Its doubtless enormous cost was defrayed in part by the state but mostly by the general s loot which most ancient sources dwell on in great detail and unlikely superlatives Once disposed this portable wealth injected huge sums into the Roman economy the amount brought in by Octavian s triumph over Egypt triggered a fall in interest rates and a sharp rise in land prices 15 No ancient source addresses the logistics of the procession where the soldiers and captives in a procession of several days could have slept and eaten or where these several thousands plus the spectators could have been stationed for the final ceremony at the Capitoline temple 16 The route Edit The following schematic is for the route taken by some or many triumphs and is based on standard modern reconstructions 17 Any original or traditional route would have been diverted to some extent by the city s many redevelopments and re building or sometimes by choice The starting place the Campus Martius lay outside the city s sacred boundary pomerium bordering the eastern bank of the Tiber The procession entered the city through a Porta Triumphalis Triumphal Gate 18 and crossed the pomerium where the general surrendered his command to the senate and magistrates It continued through the site of the Circus Flaminius skirting the southern base of the Capitoline Hill and the Velabrum along a Via Triumphalis Triumphal Way 19 towards the Circus Maximus perhaps dropping off any prisoners destined for execution at the Tullianum 20 It entered the Via Sacra then the Forum Finally it ascended the Capitoline Hill to the Temple of Jupiter Capitolinus Once the sacrifice and dedications were completed the procession and spectators dispersed to banquets games and other entertainments sponsored by the triumphing general Banquets games and entertainments Edit In most triumphs the general funded any post procession banquets from his share of the loot There were feasts for the people and separate much richer feasts for the elite some went on for most of the night Dionysius offers a contrast to the lavish triumphal banquets of his time by giving Romulus s triumph the most primitive possible banquet ordinary Romans setting up food tables as a welcome home and the returning troops taking swigs and bites as they marched by He recreates the first Republican triumphal banquet along the same lines 21 Varro claims that his aunt earned 20 000 sesterces by supplying 5 000 thrushes for Caecilius Metellus s triumph of 71 BCE 22 Some triumphs included ludi as fulfillment of the general s vow to a god or goddess made before battle or during its heat in return for their help in securing victory 23 In the Republic they were paid for by the triumphing general Marcus Fulvius Nobilior vowed ludi in return for victory over the Aetolian League and paid for ten days of games at his triumph Commemoration Edit Detail from the Arch of Titus showing his triumph held in 71 for his Sack of Jerusalem Most Romans would never have seen a triumph but its symbolism permeated Roman imagination and material culture Triumphal generals minted and circulated characteristically detailed high value coins to propagate their triumphal fame and generosity empire wide Pompey s issues for his three triumphs are typical One is an aureus a gold coin that has a laurel wreathed border enclosing a head which personifies Africa beside it Pompey s title Magnus The Great with wand and jug as symbols of his augury The reverse identifies him as proconsul in a triumphal chariot attended by Victory A triumphal denarius a silver coin shows his three trophies of captured arms with his augur s wand and jug Another shows a globe surrounded by triumphal wreaths symbolising his world conquest and an ear of grain to show that his victory protected Rome s grain supply 24 A notable coin minted by Lucius Manlius Torquatus a supporter of Sulla references Sulla s victory over Mithridates VI of Pontus This coin depicts a quadriga with Sulla s legend and the general partially visible in his chariot This established a precedent for the Imperial period where coins often depicted triumphal arches erected by emperors to commemorate their victories Germanicus achievements in Germany in 15 16 CE are depicted on coins showing Tiberius in a quadriga 25 In Republican tradition a general was expected to wear his triumphal regalia only for the day of his triumph thereafter they were presumably displayed in the atrium of his family home As one of the nobility he was entitled to a particular kind of funeral in which a string of actors walked behind his bier wearing the masks of his ancestors another actor represented the general himself and his highest achievement in life by wearing his funeral mask triumphal laurels and toga picta 26 Anything more was deeply suspect Pompey was granted the privilege of wearing his triumphal wreath at the Circus but he met with a hostile reception 27 Julius Caesar s penchant for wearing his triumphal regalia wherever and whenever was taken as one among many signs of monarchical intentions which for some justified his murder In the Imperial era emperors wore such regalia to signify their elevated rank and office and to identify themselves with the Roman gods and Imperial order a central feature of Imperial cult The building and dedication of monumental public works offered local permanent opportunities for triumphal commemoration In 55 BCE Pompey inaugurated Rome s first stone built Theatre as a gift to the people of Rome funded by his spoils Its gallery and colonnades doubled as an exhibition space and likely contained statues paintings and other trophies carried at his various triumphs 28 It contained a new temple to Pompey s patron goddess Venus Victrix Victorious Venus the year before he had issued a coin which showed her crowned with triumphal laurels 29 Julius Caesar claimed Venus as both patron and divine ancestress he funded a new temple to her and dedicated it during his quadruple triumph of 46 BCE He thus wove his patron goddess and putative ancestress into his triumphal anniversary Augustus Caesar s heir and Rome s first emperor built a vast triumphal monument on the Greek coast at Actium overlooking the scene of his decisive sea battle against Antony and Egypt the bronze beaks of captured Egyptian warships projected from its seaward wall Imperial iconography increasingly identified Emperors with the gods starting with the Augustan reinvention of Rome as a virtual monarchy the principate Sculpted panels on the arch of Titus built by Domitian celebrate Titus and Vespasian s joint triumph over the Jews after the siege of Jerusalem with a triumphal procession of captives and treasures seized from the temple of Jerusalem some of which funded the building of the Colosseum Another panel shows the funeral and apotheosis of the deified Titus Prior to this the senate voted Titus a triple arch at the Circus Maximus to celebrate or commemorate the same victory or triumph 30 Awarding a triumph EditIn Republican tradition only the Senate could grant a triumph A general who wanted a triumph would dispatch his request and report to the Senate Officially triumphs were granted for outstanding military merit the state paid for the ceremony if this and certain other conditions were met and these seem to have varied from time to time and from case to case or the Senate would pay for the official procession at least Most Roman historians rest the outcome on an open Senatorial debate and vote its legality confirmed by one of the people s assemblies the senate and people thus controlled the state s coffers and rewarded or curbed its generals Some triumphs seem to have been granted outright with minimal debate Some were turned down but went ahead anyway with the general s direct appeal to the people over the senate and a promise of public games at his own expense Others were blocked or granted only after interminable wrangling Senators and generals alike were politicians and Roman politics was notorious for its rivalries shifting alliances back room dealings and overt public bribery 31 The senate s discussions would likely have hinged on triumphal tradition precedent and propriety less overtly but more anxiously it would hinge on the extent of the general s political and military powers and popularity and the possible consequences of supporting or hindering his further career There is no firm evidence that the Senate applied a prescribed set of triumphal laws when making their decisions 32 33 Valerius Maximus extrapolated various triumphal laws from disputed historic accounts of actual practice They included one law that the general must have killed at least 5 000 of the enemy in a single battle and another that he must swear an oath that his account was the truth No evidence has survived for either of these laws or any other laws relating to triumphs 34 Ovation Edit Main article Ovation A general might be granted a lesser triumph known as an Ovation He entered the city on foot minus his troops in his magistrate s toga and wearing a wreath of Venus myrtle In 211 BCE the Senate turned down Marcus Marcellus request for a triumph after his victory over the Carthaginians and their Sicilian Greek allies apparently because his army was still in Sicily and unable to join him They offered him instead a thanksgiving supplicatio and ovation The day before it he celebrated an unofficial triumph on the Alban Mount His ovation was of triumphal proportions It included a large painting showing his siege of Syracuse the siege engines themselves captured plate gold silver and royal ornaments and the statuary and opulent furniture for which Syracuse was famous Eight elephants were led in the procession symbols of his victory over the Carthaginians His Spanish and Syracusan allies led the way wearing golden wreaths they were granted Roman citizenship and lands in Sicily 35 In 71 BCE Crassus earned an ovation for quashing the Spartacus revolt and increased his honours by wearing a crown of Jupiter s triumphal laurel 36 Ovations are listed along with triumphs on the Fasti Triumphales Sources Edit Segment XX of the Fasti triumphales a portion recording triumphs during the First Punic WarThe Fasti Triumphales also called Acta Triumphalia are stone tablets that were erected in the Forum Romanum around 12 BCE during the reign of Emperor Augustus They give the general s formal name the names of his father and grandfather the people s or command province whence the triumph was awarded and the date of the triumphal procession They record over 200 triumphs starting with three mythical triumphs of Romulus in 753 BCE and ending with that of Lucius Cornelius Balbus 19 BCE 37 Fragments of similar date and style from Rome and provincial Italy appear to be modeled on the Augustan Fasti and have been used to fill some of its gaps 38 Many ancient historical accounts also mention triumphs Most Roman accounts of triumphs were written to provide their readers with a moral lesson rather than to provide an accurate description of the triumphal process procession rites and their meaning This scarcity allows only the most tentative and generalised and possibly misleading reconstruction of triumphal ceremony based on the combination of various incomplete accounts from different periods of Roman history Evolution EditOrigins and Regal era Edit The Triumph of Bacchus a Roman mosaic from Africa Proconsolaris dated 3rd century CE now in the Sousse Archaeological Museum TunisiaThe origins and development of this honour are obscure Roman historians placed the first triumph in the mythical past some thought that it dated from Rome s foundation others thought it more ancient than that Roman etymologists thought that the soldiers chant of triumpe was a borrowing via Etruscan of the Greek thriambus 8riambos cried out by satyrs and other attendants in Dionysian and Bacchic processions 39 Plutarch and some Roman sources traced the first Roman triumph and the kingly garb of the triumphator to Rome s first king Romulus whose defeat of King Acron of the Caeninenses was thought coeval with Rome s foundation in 753 BCE 40 Ovid projected a fabulous and poetic triumphal precedent in the return of the god Bacchus Dionysus from his conquest of India drawn in a golden chariot by tigers and surrounded by maenads satyrs and assorted drunkards 41 42 43 Arrian attributed similar Dionysian and Roman elements to a victory procession of Alexander the Great 44 Like much in Roman culture elements of the triumph were based on Etruscan and Greek precursors in particular the purple embroidered toga picta worn by the triumphal general was thought to be derived from the royal toga of Rome s Etruscan kings For triumphs of the Roman regal era the surviving Imperial Fasti Triumphales are incomplete After three entries for the city s legendary founder Romulus eleven lines of the list are missing Next in sequence are Ancus Marcius Tarquinius Priscus Servius Tullius and finally Tarquin the proud the last king The Fasti were compiled some five centuries after the regal era and probably represent an approved official version of several different historical traditions Likewise the earliest surviving written histories of the regal era written some centuries after it attempt to reconcile various traditions or else debate their merits Dionysius for example gives Romulus three triumphs the same number given in the Fasti Livy gives him none and credits him instead with the first spolia opima in which the arms and armour were stripped off a defeated foe then dedicated to Jupiter Plutarch gives him one complete with chariot Tarquin has two triumphs in the Fasti but none in Dionysius 45 No ancient source gives a triumph to Romulus successor the peaceful king Numa The Republic Edit Rome s aristocrats expelled their last king as a tyrant and legislated the monarchy out of existence They shared among themselves the kingship s former powers and authority in the form of magistracies In the Republic the highest possible magistracy was an elected consulship which could be held for no more than a year at a time In times of crisis or emergency the Senate might appoint a dictator to serve a longer term but this could seem perilously close to the lifetime power of kings The dictator Camillus was awarded four triumphs but was eventually exiled Later Roman sources point to his triumph of 396 BCE as a cause for offense the chariot was drawn by four white horses a combination properly reserved for Jupiter and Apollo at least in later lore and poetry 46 The demeanour of a triumphal Republican general and the symbols he employed in his triumph would have been closely scrutinised by his aristocratic peers alert for any sign that he might aspire to be more than king for a day 47 In the Middle to Late Republic Rome s expansion through conquest offered her political military adventurers extraordinary opportunities for self publicity the long drawn series of wars between Rome and Carthage the Punic Wars produced twelve triumphs in ten years Towards the end of the Republic triumphs became still more frequent 48 lavish and competitive with each display an attempt usually successful to outdo the last To have a triumphal ancestor even one long dead counted for a lot in Roman society and politics Cicero remarked that in the race for power and influence some individuals were not above vesting an inconveniently ordinary ancestor with triumphal grandeur and dignity distorting an already fragmentary and unreliable historical tradition 49 50 51 To Roman historians the growth of triumphal ostentation undermined Rome s ancient peasant virtues 52 Dionysius of Halicarnassus c 60 BCE to after 7 BCE claimed that the triumphs of his day had departed in every respect from the ancient tradition of frugality 53 Moralists complained that successful foreign wars might have increased Rome s power security and wealth but they also created and fed a degenerate appetite for bombastic display and shallow novelty Livy traces the start of the rot to the triumph of Gnaeus Manlius Vulso in 186 which introduced ordinary Romans to such Galatian fripperies as specialist chefs flute girls and other seductive dinner party amusements Pliny adds sideboards and one legged tables to the list 54 but lays responsibility for Rome s slide into luxury on the 1400 pounds of chased silver ware and 1500 pounds of golden vessels brought somewhat earlier by Scipio Asiaticus for his triumph of 189 BCE 55 The three triumphs awarded to Pompey the Great were lavish and controversial The first in 80 or 81 BCE was for his victory over King Hiarbas of Numidia in 79 BCE granted by a cowed and divided Senate under the dictatorship of Pompey s patron Sulla Pompey was only 24 and a mere equestrian 56 Roman conservatives disapproved of such precocity 57 but others saw his youthful success as the mark of a prodigious military talent divine favour and personal brio and he also had an enthusiastic popular following His triumph however did not go quite to plan His chariot was drawn by a team of elephants in order to represent his African conquest and perhaps to outdo even the legendary triumph of Bacchus They proved too bulky to pass through the triumphal gate so Pompey had to dismount while a horse team was yoked in their place 58 This embarrassment would have delighted his critics and probably some of his soldiers whose demands for cash had been near mutinous 59 Even so his firm stand on the matter of cash raised his standing among the conservatives and Pompey seems to have learned a lesson in populist politics For his second triumph 71 BCE the last in a series of four held that year his cash gifts to his army were said to break all records though the amounts in Plutarch s account are implausibly high 6 000 sesterces to each soldier about six times their annual pay and about 5 million to each officer 60 Pompey was granted a third triumph in 61 BCE to celebrate his victory over Mithridates VI of Pontus It was an opportunity to outdo all rivals and even himself Triumphs traditionally lasted for one day but Pompey s went on for two in an unprecedented display of wealth and luxury 61 Plutarch claimed that this triumph represented Pompey s domination over the entire world on Rome s behalf and an achievement to outshine even Alexander s 62 63 Pliny s narrative of this triumph dwells with ominous hindsight upon a gigantic portrait bust of the triumphant general a thing of eastern splendor entirely covered with pearls anticipating his later humiliation and decapitation 64 Imperial era Edit Flemish tapestry in the smoking room of the Palace of the Marques de Dos AguasFollowing Caesar s murder Octavian assumed the permanent title of imperator and became the permanent head of the Senate from 27 BCE see principate under the title and name Augustus Only the year before he had blocked the senatorial award of a triumph to Marcus Licinius Crassus the Younger despite the latter s acclamation in the field as Imperator and his fulfillment of all traditional Republican qualifying criteria except full consulship Technically generals in the Imperial era were legates of the ruling Emperor Imperator 65 Augustus claimed the victory as his own but permitted Crassus a second which is listed on the Fasti for 27 BCE 66 Crassus was also denied the rare and technically permissible in his case honour of dedicating the spolia opima of this campaign to Jupiter Feretrius 67 The last triumph listed on the Fasti Triumphales is for 19 BCE By then the triumph had been absorbed into the Augustan imperial cult system in which only the emperor 68 would be accorded such a supreme honour as he was the supreme Imperator The Senate in true Republican style would have held session to debate and decide the merits of the candidate but this was little more than good form Augustan ideology insisted that Augustus had saved and restored the Republic and it celebrated his triumph as a permanent condition and his military political and religious leadership as responsible for an unprecedented era of stability peace and prosperity From then on emperors claimed without seeming to claim the triumph as an Imperial privilege Those outside the Imperial family might be granted triumphal ornaments Ornamenta triumphalia or an ovation such as Aulus Plautius under Claudius The senate still debated and voted on such matters though the outcome was probably already decided 69 In the Imperial era the number of triumphs fell sharply 70 Imperial panegyrics of the later Imperial era combine triumphal elements with Imperial ceremonies such as the consular investiture of Emperors and the adventus the formal triumphal arrival of an emperor in the various capitals of the Empire in his progress through the provinces Some emperors were perpetually on the move and seldom or never went to Rome 71 Christian emperor Constantius II entered Rome for the first time in his life in 357 several years after defeating his rival Magnentius standing in his triumphal chariot as if he were a statue 72 Theodosius I celebrated his victory over the usurper Magnus Maximus in Rome on June 13 389 73 Claudian s panegyric to Emperor Honorius records the last known official triumph in the city of Rome and the western Empire 74 75 Emperor Honorius celebrated it conjointly with his sixth consulship on January 1 404 his general Stilicho had defeated Visigothic King Alaric at the battles of Pollentia and Verona 76 In Christian martyrology Saint Telemachus was martyred by a mob while attempting to stop the customary gladiatorial games at this triumph and gladiatorial games munera gladiatoria were banned in consequence 77 78 79 In 438 CE however the western emperor Valentinian III found cause to repeat the ban which indicates that it was not always enforced 80 In 534 well into the Byzantine era Justinian I awarded general Belisarius a triumph that included some radically new Christian and Byzantine elements Belisarius successfully campaigned against his adversary Vandal leader Gelimer to restore the former Roman province of Africa to the control of Byzantium in the 533 534 Vandalic War The triumph was held in the Eastern Roman capital of Constantinople Historian Procopius an eyewitness who had previously been in Belisarius s service describes the procession s display of the loot seized from the Temple of Jerusalem in 70 CE by Roman Emperor Titus including the Temple Menorah The treasure had been stored in Rome s Temple of Peace after its display in Titus own triumphal parade and its depiction on his triumphal arch then it was seized by the Vandals during their sack of Rome in 455 then it was taken from them in Belisarius campaign The objects themselves might well have recalled the ancient triumphs of Vespasian and his son Titus but Belisarius and Gelimer walked as in an ovation The procession did not end at Rome s Capitoline Temple with a sacrifice to Jupiter but terminated at Hippodrome of Constantinople with a recitation of Christian prayer and the triumphant generals prostrate before the emperor 81 Influence EditMain articles Trionfo and Royal entry Miniature representation of the emperor Basil II s triumphal procession through the Forum of Constantinople from the Madrid Skylitzes Charles V announcing the capture of Tunis to Pope Paul III as imagined in an anonymous sixteenth century tapestryDuring the Renaissance kings and magnates sought ennobling connections with the classical past Ghibelline Castruccio Castracani defeated the forces of the Guelph Florence in the 1325 Battle of Altopascio Holy Roman Emperor Louis IV made him Duke of Lucca and the city gave him a Roman style triumph The procession was led by his Florentine captives made to carry candles in honour of Lucca s patron saint Castracani followed standing in a decorative chariot His booty included the Florentines portable wheeled altar the carroccio 82 Flavio Biondo s Roma Triumphans 1459 claimed the ancient Roman triumph divested of its pagan rites as a rightful inheritance of Holy Roman Emperors 83 Italian poet Petrarch s Triumphs I triomfi represented the triumphal themes and biographies of ancient Roman texts as ideals for cultured virtuous rule it was influential and widely read 84 Andrea Mantegna s series of large paintings on the Triumphs of Caesar 1484 92 now Hampton Court Palace became immediately famous and was endlessly copied in print form The Triumphal Procession commissioned by Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian I 1512 19 from a group of artists including Albrecht Durer was a series of woodcuts of an imaginary triumph of his own that could be hung as a frieze 54 metres 177 ft long In the 1550s the fragmentary Fasti Triumphales were unearthed and partially restored Onofrio Panvinio s Fasti continued where the ancient Fasti left off 85 The last triumph recorded by Panvinio was the Royal Entry of Holy Roman Emperor Charles V into Rome on April 5 1536 after his conquest of Tunis in 1535 86 87 Panvinio described it as a Roman triumph over the infidel The Emperor followed the traditional ancient route past the ruins of the triumphal arches of the soldier emperors of Rome where actors dressed as ancient senators hailed the return of the new Caesar as miles christi a soldier of Christ 88 The extravagant triumphal entry into Rouen of Henri II of France in 1550 was not less pleasing and delectable than the third triumph of Pompey magnificent in riches and abounding in the spoils of foreign nations 89 A triumphal arch made for the Royal entry into Paris of Louis XIII of France in 1628 carried a depiction of Pompey 90 See also Edit Ancient Rome portalImperial fora Joyous Entry Triumphal arch Roman triumphal honours Victory paradeReferences Edit A summary of disparate viewpoints regarding the Triumph is in Versnel 56 93 limited preview via Books Google com Versnel p 386 Beard p 77 Beard p 7 Denis Feeney Caesar s Calendar Ancient Time and the Beginnings of History University of California Press 2008 p 148 Beard 72 75 See also Diodorus 4 5 at Thayer Uchicago edu Beard et al 85 87 see also Polybius 10 2 20 who suggests that Scipio s assumption of divine connections and the personal favour of divine guidance was unprecedented and seemed suspiciously Greek to his more conservative peers See also Galinsky 106 126 149 for Heraklean Herculean associations of Alexander Scipio and later triumphing Roman generals Versnel p 380 Various Roman sources describe the different charms employed against envy during triumphs not necessarily at the same event they include an assemblage of miniature bells tintinnabulum and a whip on the chariot s dashboard In Pliny a sacred phallos loaned by the Vestal Virgins is slung between the chariot wheels see Beard pp 83 85 The very few accounts are from the Imperial era 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 and are open to a variety of interpretations Nevertheless they imply a tradition that the triumphing general was publicly reminded of his mortal nature whatever his kingly appearance temporary godlike status or divine associations See Beard pp 85 92 Emperor Vespasian regretted his triumph because its vast length and slow movement bored him see Suetonius Vespasian 12 The 2 700 wagonloads of captured weapons alone never mind the soldiers and captives and booty on one day of Aemilius Paulus s triumphal extravaganza of 167 BCE is wild exaggeration Some modern scholarship suggests a procession 7 km long as plausible See Beard p 102 Summary based on Versnel pp 95 96 Beard pp 159 161 citing Suetonius Augustus 41 1 Beard pp 93 95 258 For their joint triumph of 71 CE Titus and Vespasian treated their soldiers to a very early and possibly traditional triumphal breakfast See map in Beard p 334 and discussion on pp 92 105 The location and nature of the Porta Triumphalis are among the most uncertain and disputed aspects of the triumphal route some sources imply a gate exclusively dedicated to official processions others a free standing arch or the Porta Carmentalis by another name or any convenient gate in the vicinity See discussion in Beard pp 97 101 Sometimes thought to be the same route as the modern Via dei Fori Imperiali This is where Jugurtha was starved to death and Vercingetorix was strangled Beard pp 258 259 cf Livy s soldiers feasting as they went at the triumph of Cincinnatus 458 BCE Beard p 49 Beard pp 263 264 Beard pp 19 21 Eiland Murray 2023 04 30 Picturing Roman Belief Systems The iconography of coins in the Republic and Empire British Archaeological Reports Oxford Ltd pp 70 71 doi 10 30861 9781407360713 ISBN 978 1 4073 6071 3 Flower Harriet I Ancestor Masks and Aristocratic Power in Roman Culture Oxford University Press 1999 p 33 Taylor Lily Ross The Divinity of the Roman Emperor American Philological Association 1931 reprinted by Arno Press 1975 p 57 citing Cicero To Atticus 1 18 6 and Velleius Paterculus 2 40 4 Faced with this reaction Pompey never tried it again Beard pp 23 25 Beard pp 22 23 Fergus Millar Last Year in Jerusalem Monuments of the Jewish War in Rome in Flavius Josephus and Flavian Rome J C Edmondson Steve Mason J B Rives eds pp 101 124 Beard 196 201 See discussion in Beard pp 199 206 209 210 Livy s triumphal laws hark back to earlier traditional but probably reinvented triumphs of Republican Rome s expansion to Empire and its defeat of foreign kings his notion was that triumphal generals must possess the highest level of imperium Livy 38 38 4 in the 206 BCE case of Scipio Africanus but this is contradicted in Polybius 11 33 7 and Pompey s status at his first triumph The tradition was probably an indication of esteem and popularity that triumphal generals in the Republic had been spontaneously proclaimed as imperator by their troops in the field it was not an absolute requirement see Beard p 275 Taking divine auspices before battle might have been formally reserved to the highest magistrate on the field while a victory proved that a commander must have pleased the gods whatever the niceties of his authority Conversely a lost battle was a sure sign of religious dereliction see Veit Rosenberger The Gallic Disaster The Classical World The Johns Hopkins University Press 96 4 2003 p 371 note 39 Beard pp 206 211 citing Valerius Maximus Memorable Facts and Sayings 2 8 1 Livy Ab Urbe Condita 26 21 cf Plutarch Marcellus 19 22 Beard p 265 Romulus three triumphs are in Dionysius of Halicarnassus Antiquitates Romanae 2 54 2 amp 2 55 5 Dioysius may have seen the Fasti Livy 1 10 5 7 allows Romulus the spolia opima not a triumph Neither author mentions the two triumphs attributed by the Fasti to the last king of Rome Tarquin See Beard 74 and endnotes 1 amp 2 Beard 61 62 66 67 The standard modern edition of the Fasti Triumphales is that of Attilio Degrassi in Inscriptiones Italiae vol XIII fasc 1 Rome 1947 Versnel considers it an invocation for divine help and manifestation derived via an unknown pre Greek language through Etruria and Greece He cites the chant of Triumpe repeated five times which terminates the Carmen Arvale a now obscure prayer for the help and protection of Mars and the Lares Versnel pp 39 55 conclusion and summary on p 55 Beard et al vol 1 44 45 59 60 see also Plutarch Romulus trans Dryden at The Internet Classics Archive MIT edu Bowersock 1994 157 Ovid The Erotic Poems 1 2 19 52 Trans P Green Pliny attributes the invention of the triumph to Father Liber identified with Dionysus see Pliny Historia Naturalis 7 57 ed Bostock at Perseus Tufts edu Bosworth 67 79 notes that Arrian s attributions here are non historic and their details almost certainly apocryphal see Arrian 6 28 1 2 Beard p 74 Beard p 235 Flower Harriet Augustus Tiberius and the End of the Roman Triumph Classical Antiquity 2020 39 1 1 28 1 Beard p 42 four were clustered in one year 71 BCE including Pompey s second triumph Cicero Brutus 62 See also Livy 8 40 Beard 79 notes at least one ancient case of what seems blatant fabrication in which two ancestral triumphs became three Beard 67 citing Valerius Maximus 4 4 5 and Apuleius Apol 17 Dionysus of Halicarnassus Roman Antiquities 2 34 3 Livy 39 6 7 cf Pliny Historia Naturalis 34 14 Beard p 162 Beard 16 he was aged 25 or 26 in some accounts Dio Cassius 42 18 3 Pliny Historia Naturalis 8 4 Plutarch Pompey 14 4 Beard 16 17 Beard 39 40 notes that the introduction of such vast sums into the Roman economy would have left substantial traces but none are evidenced citing Brunt 1971 459 460 Scheidel 1996 Duncan Jones 1990 43 amp 1994 253 Beard 9 cites Appian s very doubtful 75 100 000 drachmae carried in the procession as 1 5 times his own estimate of Rome s total annual tax revenue Appian Mithradates 116 Beard 15 16 citing Plutarch Pompey 45 5 Beard 16 For further elaboration on Pompey s 3rd triumph see also Plutarch Sertorius 18 2 at Thayer Uchicago edu Cicero Man 61 Pliny Nat 7 95 Beard 35 Pliny Historia Naturalis 37 14 16 Beard pp 297 298 Syme 272 275 Google Books Search Southern 104 Google Books Search Very occasionally a close relative who had glorified the Imperial gens might receive the honor Suetonius Lives Claudius 24 3 given for the conquest of Britain Claudius was granted a triumph by the Senate and gave triumphal regalia to his prospective son in law who was still only a boy Thayer Uchicago edu Archived 2012 06 30 at archive today Beard 61 71 On triumphal entrances to Rome in the fourth century see discussion in Schmidt Hofner pp 33 60 and Wienand pp 169 197 Beard pp 322 323 Theodosius I Livius www livius org Archived from the original on 2015 04 29 Claudian 404 Panegyricus de Sexto Consulatu Honorii Augusti Retrieved 21 August 2013 Beard 326 Gibbon Edward 1776 1789 Chapter XXX The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire pp 39 41 Retrieved 21 August 2013 After the retreat of the barbarians Honorius was directed to accept the dutiful invitation of the senate and to celebrate in the Imperial city the auspicious aera of the Gothic victory and of his sixth consulship Wace Henry 1911 Entry for Honorius Flavius Augustus emperor Dictionary of Christian Biography and Literature to the End of the Sixth Century A D with an Account of the Principal Sects and Heresies Archived from the original on 21 October 2014 Retrieved 21 August 2013 The customary games took place with great magnificence and on this occasion St Telemachus sacrificed himself by attempting to separate the gladiators Theodoret 449 450 Book V chapter 26 Ecclesiastical History Archived from the original on 20 September 2013 Retrieved 21 August 2013 When the admirable emperor was informed of this he numbered Telemachus in the array of victorious martyrs and put an end to that impious spectacle Foxe John 1563 Chapter III section on The Last Roman Triumph Actes and Monuments a k a Foxe s Book of Martyrs Archived from the original on 30 May 2013 Retrieved 21 August 2013 F rom the day Telemachus fell dead no other fight of gladiators was ever held there Dell Orto Luisa Franchi 1983 Ancient Rome Life and Art Scala Books p 52 ISBN 978 0 935748 46 8 Beard 318 321 Procopius account is the source for a marvelous set piece of Belisarius triumph in Robert Graves historical novel Count Belisarius Zaho and Bernstein 2004 p 47 Beard p 54 Zaho and Bernstein 2004 pp 4 31 ff De fasti et triumphi Romanorum a Romulo usque ad Carolum V Giacomo Strada Venice 1557 Latin text accessed 22 August 2013 Beard p 53 in preparation Pope Paul III arranged the clearance of any buildings that obstructed the traditional Via Triumphalis Pinson Yona 2001 Imperial Ideology in the Triumphal Entry into Lille of Charles V and the Crown Prince 1549 PDF Assaph Studies in Art History 6 212 Archived PDF from the original on 2014 02 23 Already in his Imperial Triumphal Entry into Rome 1536 the Emperor appeared as a triumphant Roman Imperator mounted on a white horse and wearing a purple cape he embodied the figure of the ancient conqueror At the head of a procession marching along the ancient Via Triumphalis Charles had re established himself as the legitimate successor to the Roman Empire Frieder Braden 2016 Chivalry amp the Perfect Prince Tournaments Art and Armor at the Spanish Habsburg Court Truman State University Press p 80 ISBN 978 1 931112 69 7 Archived from the original on 10 May 2017 Beard 31 See 32 Fig 7 for a contemporary depiction of Henri s Romanised procession Beard 343 footnote 65 Bibliography EditAicher Peter J 2004 Rome alive a source guide to the ancient city Wauconda Ill Bolchazy Carducci ISBN 978 0865164734 Retrieved 19 October 2015 Bastien J L Le triomphe romain et son utilisation politique a Rome aux trois derniers siecles de la Republique CEFR 392 Rome 2007 Bastien J L Le triomphe a Rome sous la Republique un rite monarchique dans une cite aristocratique IVe Ier siecle av notre ere dans Guisard P et Laize C dir La guerre et la paix coll Cultures antiques Ellipses 2014 pp 509 526 Beard Mary The Roman Triumph The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press Cambridge Mass and London 2007 hardcover ISBN 978 0 674 02613 1 Beard M Price S North J Religions of Rome Volume 1 a History illustrated Cambridge University Press 1998 ISBN 0 521 31682 0 Bosworth A B From Arrian to Alexander Studies in Historical Interpretation illustrated reprint Oxford University Press 1988 ISBN 0 19 814863 1 Bowersock Glen W Dionysus as an Epic Hero Studies in the Dionysiaca of Nonnos ed N Hopkinson Cambridge Philosophical Society suppl Vol 17 1994 156 166 Brennan T Corey Triumphus in Monte Albano 315 337 in R W Wallace amp E M Harris eds Transitions to Empire Essays in Greco Roman History 360 146 B C in honor of E Badian University of Oklahoma Press 1996 ISBN 0 8061 2863 1 Galinsky G Karl The Herakles theme the adaptations of the hero in literature from Homer to the twentieth century Oxford 1972 ISBN 0 631 14020 4 Goell H A De triumphi Romani origine permissu apparatu via Schleiz 1854 Kunzl E Der romische Triumph Munich 1988 Lemosse M Les elements techniques de l ancien triomphe romain et le probleme de son origine in H Temporini ed ANRW I 2 Berlin 1972 Includes a comprehensive bibliography MacCormack Sabine Change and Continuity in Late Antiquity the ceremony of Adventus Historia 21 4 1972 pp 721 752 Pais E Fasti Triumphales Populi Romani Rome 1920 Richardson J S The Triumph the Praetors and the Senate in the early Second Century B C JRS 65 1975 50 63 Schmidt Hofner Sebastian Trajan und die symbolische Kommunikation bei kaiserlichen Rombesuchen in der Spatantike in R Behrwald amp C Witschel eds Rom in der Spatantike Steiner 2012 pp 33 60 ISBN 978 3 515 09445 0 Southern Pat Augustus illustrated reprint Routledge 1998 ISBN 0 415 16631 4 Syme Ronald The Augustan Aristocracy Oxford University Press 1986 Clarendon reprint with corrections 1989 ISBN 0 19 814731 7 Versnel H S Triumphus An Inquiry into the Origin Development and Meaning of the Roman Triumph Leiden 1970 Wienand Johannes O tandem felix civili Roma victoria Civil War Triumphs From Honorius to Constantine and Back in J Wienand ed Contested Monarchy Integrating the Roman Empire in the 4th Century AD Oxford 2015 pp 169 197 ISBN 978 0 19 976899 8 Wienand Johannes Goldbeck Fabian Borm Henning Der romische Triumph in Prinzipat und Spatantike Probleme Paradigmen Perspektiven in F Goldbeck J Wienand eds Der romische Triumph in Prinzipat und Spatantike Berlin New York 2017 pp 1 26 Zaho Margaret A and Bernstein Eckhard Imago Triumphalis The Function and Significance of Triumphal Imagery for Italian Renaissance Rulers Peter Lang Publishing Inc 2004 ISBN 978 0 8204 6235 6External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Roman triumphs Roman Triumph on World History Encyclopedia Fasti Triumphales at attalus org Partial annotated English translation From A Degrassi s Fasti Capitolini 1954 Attalus org Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Roman triumph amp oldid 1164830613, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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