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Four notes on Tacitus

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 September 2012

Extract

This passage is usually taken to be a description, in however informal terms, of the constitutional position which Augustus (Octavian) held in the years immediately after the end of the Triumvirate. I propose to argue that in reality it has a different meaning.

The facts are fairly simple. The second period of the Triumvirate ended with the end of 33 B.C. After that date, it seems that Octavian did not use the title Triumvir, though he probably considered his extraordinary triumviral powers as still running till he formally laid them down in 28–27 B.C. The consulship began in 33 when Octavian was consul for a few hours on 1st January. He was consul again for the whole of 31 and for all the following years continuously till midsummer, 23 ; then he finally resigned the office. The question of the tribunicia potestas is more difficult. According to Appian, Octavian received the tribunicia potestas in 36 B.C. According to Dio, a vote was then passed “that neither in act or word should any violence be offered him, and that in the contrary case (that is, if he were assaulted) the assailant should be liable as in the case of assaulting a tribune.” The Monumentum Ancyranum adds what may be a third statement to the same effect. In a mutilated passage in chapter x it records, without giving a date, that Augustus was made sacrosanct, and that he received the tribunicia potestas for life. A further statement appears in Dio (li, 19, 6) to the effect that in 30 B.C., just after Actium, Octavian received the tribunician power for life, and that this power extended even a little way beyond the pomerium. Otherwise there is no mention of the tribunician power as used by Octavian (Augustus), till he began to reckon the dates of his reign by it in 23 B.C. (Dio, liii, 17 and 32).

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © F. Haverfield 1912. Exclusive Licence to Publish: The Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies

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References

page 195 note 1 So Mommsen, Staatsrecht, ii, 870–873. The Chief recent biographer of Augustus, Gardthausen, and the chief recent English editor of Tacitus, Furneaux, follow him without adding any arguments. Gardthausen, however, seems rather puzzled by the received account.

page 195 note 2 Mommsen, Staatsrecht, ii, 718. Antony continued to style himself iiivir r.p.c. till his death, as his coins seem to shew.

page 195 note 3 Appian, v, 132 ἐϕ̕ οἷς αὐτὸν εὐϕημοῦντες εἴλοντο δήμαρχον ἐς ἀεὶ διηνεκεῖ ἄρα ἀρχῇ προτρέποντες τῆς προτέρας ἀποστῆναι. Dio, xlix, 15 ad fin ἐψήϕισαντο τὸ μήτε ἔργῳ μήτε λόγῳ τι ὐβρίζεσθαι. εἴ δε μή, τοῖς αὐτοῖς τὸν τοιοῦτό τι δράσαντα ἐνέχεσθαι ὥσπερ ἐπὶ τῷ δημάρχ έτἐτακτο. Monumentum Ancyr. ch. x: sacrosanctus ut essem in perpetuum et quoad viverm, tribunicia potestas mihi esset, lege sanctum est.

page 199 note 1 British Museum Guide to the Antiquities of the Early Iron Age, London (1905), figs. 59Google Scholar (probably from the north) and 67 (from the Thames) and p. 95.

page 200 note 1 Staatsrecht, ii, 918, 919, note.

page 200 note 2 Dio, lviii, 20; lix, 20; be, 10; cf. Tac. Ann. xiv, 28 (A.D. 60).