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THE ADLOCVTIO AT THE ACCESSION OF THE ROMAN EMPEROR

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 December 2023

Kevin Feeney*
Affiliation:
New York University
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Abstract

One of the most distinctive rituals of Roman imperial accession was the adlocutio, the speech delivered by the new emperor to a military assembly, which can be documented from the first to the fifth centuries a.d. This article seeks to explain the extraordinary endurance of this neglected genre of speech by examining its origins, setting and content. After outlining the unusual nature of the accession adlocutio when set against both earlier and contemporary Mediterranean practice, the first half of this article traces its origins to the military culture of the late Roman Republic. In particular, the adlocutio is related to two other rituals which rose to new prominence in the era of the Civil Wars: the acclamation of the victorious general as imperator and the granting of military gifts. In the second part of this article, the setting for the typical adlocutio of the Imperial era is discussed using the often-problematic evidence of our ancient historical sources. The content of the speech itself is then reconstructed primarily through a close reading of our one surviving example, the brief address of Leo I preserved by Peter the Patrician. Finally, the evidence for the origins and content of the speech are brought together in an argument for the speech's survival as a useful tool for emperors seeking to establish a permanent bond with the soldiers they commanded.

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Research Article
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Copyright © The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of The Classical Association

Shortly after the death of Emperor Claudius in a.d. 54, the 16-year-old Nero was carried to the camp of the Praetorian Guards outside the city walls. During this trip, the new emperor mounted a tribunal amidst the gathered soldiers and delivered an adlocutio, a military oration. He was also acclaimed by the soldiers as imperator, and promised a substantial financial bequest.Footnote 1 Four hundred and three years later and over fourteen hundred miles away, Nero's distant successor, a Thracian soldier named Leo, would mount a similar tribunal in a military camp outside the walls of Constantinople. There, he was hailed as αὐτοκράτωρ and, through one of his officials, ‘delivered’ a brief oration in which he too pledged a generous donative.Footnote 2 The vast temporal gulf which separated these two events saw fundamental changes in the nature of both the Roman Empire itself and the office at its summit, yet this speech along with the rituals around it remained intact.

This article will consider the reasons for this survival by looking at the origins and substance of this almost entirely neglected speech genre. When the address’ historical development is considered alongside its setting and content, it becomes evident that the accession adlocutio owed its improbable endurance to its utility as a tool for cementing the bonds between an emperor and his army. Rather than a piece of sophisticated oratory, this speech was a short, formulaic address which enabled the emperor both to respond to and to solicit the acclamations of his soldiers as imperator while promising them a donative. It thus formed a central component of an interlocking set of distinctively Roman legitimizing rituals which dated back to the Republic itself. In performing these traditional rites, the new emperor fulfilled his soldiers’ ideological expectations and demonstrated his worthiness to rule.

The first section of this article will examine the significance of this oration with a particular emphasis on its historical uniqueness as a militarized speech-ritual forming part of an accession ceremony. The second part will set out its origins in the military oratory of the late Roman Republic, with particular emphasis on its relationship to the acclamation of imperatores and the distribution of rewards. The third section will examine what can be recovered of the setting of the adlocutio and the circumstances under which it was delivered. Finally, the most substantial section of this article will reconstruct the content of this speech as far as we can recover it through a close reading of the sole surviving example, the extremely brief remarks delivered by Leo in 457 that are preserved in the De Ceremoniis of Constantine Porphyrogenitus.

SIGNIFICANCE OF THE SPEECH

From the early first century until the late fifth, every adult emperor who was not promoted by a colleague began his reign with an address to a military audience.Footnote 3 This was true regardless of the location of his accession and whether he was a dynastic heir or a usurper against an existing ruler.Footnote 4 Such speeches are attested when the emperor was created at Rome—as was the case with Nero in the early Empire—or in the provinces—Septimius Severus in second-century Pannonia or Valentinian I in fourth-century Asia Minor—or at Constantinople—Leo at the very end of our period.Footnote 5 Even where it is not specifically mentioned, the delivery of this address is suggested on many more occasions, when we are told of new emperors such as Domitian or Marcian appearing before their troops to receive their acclamations, a ritual which, as we will see, was closely linked with the adlocutio.Footnote 6 It probably occurred too in instances such as the successions of Titus or Antoninus Pius which were either too uneventful or too poorly covered by our sources to have left us any detailed contemporary notice.Footnote 7 In many of these cases, this first speech was likely followed by a series of subsequent reiterations as the new emperor addressed himself to further military audiences as part of the ongoing process of accession, but it is the initial speech alone which is considered here, the first formal act of the new regime.

For much of this period, the accession adlocutio was not the only oration that a new emperor would be called upon to perform, nor even necessarily the most important. Nero followed up his speech to the cohorts with a Senate address and soon afterwards gave a poorly received laudatio funebris for his predecessor.Footnote 8 Senatorial orations would remain a recurring element of accession for the following two centuries, even for emperors who initially took power abroad.Footnote 9 Yet over time such occasions lost much of their significance, with the emperor's presence in both the Senate and Rome itself becoming steadily rarer.Footnote 10 Theoretically of course, the reading of a speech in the absent emperor's name carried the same weight and force as his physical presence, just as his image was treated as an extension of the man, but contemporaries clearly understood that there was a real difference, whatever the ideological fiction.Footnote 11 The fact that new emperors continued to present themselves physically to deliver a military adlocutio thus set this oration apart from those accession addresses which were reduced to indirect communications earlier in imperial history.

Despite this extraordinary endurance, the fact of this speech has mostly been noted in passing by modern historians, receiving little attention even in dedicated discussions of the accession ceremonial.Footnote 12 It has consistently if understandably been overshadowed by the associated acclamatio which marked the official inauguration of a new reign and thus the moment of most profound political and constitutional significance.Footnote 13 Nevertheless, the adlocutio was in itself an unusual custom for at least two reasons.

In the first place, it stands out because Rome did not develop the elaborate coronation rituals typical of ancient monarchy until the middle of the fifth century a.d.Footnote 14 Romans were certainly familiar with accession ceremonies from the Hellenistic world, and Roman historians invented elaborate rituals of inauguration and enthronement for their own archaic kings.Footnote 15 Yet the Augustan monarchy famously began as a collection of scattered powers rather than as a single formal office, and no single ceremonial formula developed for a long time. Particular elements of Roman accession might wax or wane: for instance, the delivery of a funeral oration upon one's predecessor which expired with the Julio-Claudians, or the formal vote of the Senate that fades from record in the third century.Footnote 16 Many of the visual regalia of the imperial office, most notably the diadem, became standardized only in Late Antiquity, in tandem with the development of formal coronation.Footnote 17 However, while features of accession ceremony came and went, a speech by the new emperor to a military audience remained a central element of emperor creation which began in the informal, ad hoc process of the Principate and survived through the increasingly elaborate formalization of the ceremony in the Tetrarchic and Constantinian eras.Footnote 18

The second reason why the accession address is so unusual is that in all the tremendous variety of coronation rituals in the ancient world there is no parallel for a military speech. Indeed, it was rare for there to be a speech of any sort. The Ancient Near East furnishes us with a considerable wealth of evidence for the ceremonial confirmation of a new monarch, often with common elements which would find their way into early Byzantine ceremonial, such as processions through the capital or changes into royal clothing.Footnote 19 Yet nowhere in the complex ritual of Pharaonic enthronement or the anointing of the King of Israel was there a place for the new ruler himself to make any form of public address.Footnote 20 Indeed, the Pharaoh was deliberately held at arm's length from the public during his coronation, a ‘passive and distant’ figure seen only in a ‘glimpse spied from afar’.Footnote 21 The Hellenistic world, which did so much to shape Roman preconceptions of monarchy, provides us with a range of coronation scenes, from Polybius’ detailed account of Ptolemy V's enthronement to Plutarch's sketch of the coronation of Antigonus Monophthalmos; yet again, however, nowhere does it offer a new basileus addressing his soldiers in a ritualized manner.Footnote 22 This does not mean that these kings were always entirely silent; the Sasanian Shahanshah, for instance, would deliver a brief, formulaic address from the throne to an audience of nobles as part of his investiture.Footnote 23 Yet speech was confined to private remarks before a restricted, elite audience, rather than the open and military setting of the Roman adlocutio.

This matters not only because it distinguishes the Roman monarchy from its antecedents and contemporaries in the ancient world, but also because it suggests that this particular feature could not have been adopted from them either. In the absence of any external influence, we must therefore seek the origins of this peculiar speech in the earlier history and society of Rome itself.

FROM REPUBLICAN PRIVILEGE TO IMPERIAL PREREQUISITE

The Roman general stands before his gathered soldiers and delivers a fiery oration, castigating the tyranny of the current regime and promising a better future. His exultant audience responds with adulation, and with one voice acclaims him as their supreme commander, hailing him specifically as imperator. This account could be describing the accession ceremony of any number of usurpers in the Imperial era, yet in fact the subject is the Late Republican aristocrat Lucius Antonius, and the event is set in the Perusine War of 41 b.c., over two years before Caesar's heir would add ‘Imperator’ as a praenomen and over a decade before he would assume the name ‘Augustus’.Footnote 24 As with so much of the Roman emperor's practice, we can find the roots of his acclamation and related adlocutio, along with the title of imperator itself, in the rituals of the Roman Republic from which his office originally emerged.

The salutation of victorious generals as imperator by their soldiers has left a sparse and complex trail in our sources.Footnote 25 While later authors situate the ritual as early as the Second Punic War, it is not mentioned in contemporary literary texts until the middle of the first century b.c., though it clearly predated this.Footnote 26 Major questions remain around the acclamation's constitutional significance and its relationship to the right to hold a triumph, but the key ambiguity for our purposes is around the ritual of acclamation itself. The number of recorded acclamations grew considerably throughout the Civil Wars, but almost all are described by our sources only with a brief note along the lines of imperator appellatur with no details on what this entailed.Footnote 27 In rare cases, we hear of soldiers acclaiming the imperator while still on the battlefield, flush with success, but it is far from clear whether this was the norm.Footnote 28 What is absolutely clear, however, is that a general who had received such a salutation had to respond to it. Indeed, the subject of acclamations not only could but also should decline them at times. Plutarch criticizes Crassus harshly for accepting an undeserved acclamation, while praising Pompey for declining the honour even after a victory, preferring to wait until the war was won.Footnote 29 Appian likewise claims that commanders would accept the salutation only for the greatest victories, though he implies that this standard had slipped by his own day.Footnote 30

This raises the question of how such a response was delivered. Conceivably, it could be given in a non-verbal gesture, along the lines of Caesar's famous refusal of Antonius’ diadem, although it is difficult to imagine this being communicated easily on the battlefield.Footnote 31 It seems plausible, however, that any response—and potentially sometimes the initial acclamation itself—would be given in the more orderly venue of a post-battle contio, a military assembly. Such assemblies are amply documented and served as the standard setting for both Republican and imperial adlocutiones, when the general addressed his soldiers from an elevated platform.Footnote 32 Livy depicts these addresses regularly in the aftermath of battles, including by inventing his own speeches, such as the oration of Scipio after the storming of Cartagena in 209 b.c.Footnote 33 From early on, a major function of these adlocutiones appears to have been the granting of rewards to particular units for successful combat operations, the dona militaria.Footnote 34 By the era of the Civil Wars, generals were also using them to promise, and probably also to distribute, significant cash gifts from their own coffers, sometimes called largitiones. Footnote 35 Even before the Principate, the adlocutio was thus frequently connected with military rewards, a natural development given the contemporary tendency to treat all such bequests as a personal gift of the commander himself.Footnote 36

By the end of the Republic, our sources thus draw repeated links between the phenomena of acclamation and response, contio and adlocutio, and the granting of military rewards. As we saw at the beginning of this section, Appian gives us one instance where an adlocutio seems to provoke an acclamatio after the surrender of a city.Footnote 37 The Bellum Alexandrinum presents us with another case in which Quintus Cassius Longinus granted his soldiers a largitio immediately after being hailed as imperator and then distributed the dona militaria, rituals we know were firmly associated with the adlocutio. Footnote 38 If the precise relationship of these rites is nowhere explicitly set out, this may itself be telling. We need not assume a single set practice; the entire process of acclaiming an imperator remained a loose collection of traditions rather than a codified ritual, and elements presumably fluctuated considerably between individual cases.Footnote 39 What we can say with certainty is that the acclamatio, the adlocutio and the personal granting of gifts by the victorious general were all firmly established Republican military rituals, that the latter two were clearly and closely interrelated, and that the former appears to have been increasingly associated with these by the time of the Civil Wars.

All three of these rites also fit within a larger trend in late Republican military culture in which generals increasingly sought opportunities to bind themselves personally to their soldiers. Oratory was a key part of this approach. While there has been considerable modern debate around the historicity of the battlefield exhortations so beloved of classical historians, there is little doubt that military rhetoric more broadly was a real and burgeoning genre in the first century b.c.Footnote 40 Just as the number of imperatorial salutations appears to have grown considerably at this time, so too did it see the emergence of what Campbell dubs a ‘new tradition of military eloquence’.Footnote 41 The success of techniques such as these in bonding imperatores and the men they commanded would remake the state itself from the time of Sulla onwards.

When the following century of revolution gave way to the order of the Principate, the new rulers understood from the beginning that theirs was a military monarchy resting on the support of those same soldiers.Footnote 42 Following the death of Augustus in a.d. 14, Tacitus emphasizes that Tiberius immediately gave the watchword to the Praetorians as Imperator, sent out letters to the legions, and ensured that the sacramentum, the military oath, was sworn to him, all before addressing the Senate in order to feign reluctance to take power.Footnote 43 At the same time, he was able to reward the guards by distributing the thousand sesterces apiece left by Augustus in his will, a tradition he would follow and indeed double himself.Footnote 44 Yet it is interesting to note that no source describes Tiberius promising this payment to his soldiers in person, nor does he offer his own money. Indeed, he is nowhere recorded as delivering an adlocutio to either the Praetorians or any other unit, even as he made numerous speeches in other venues, including in the Senate and at the funeral of his adoptive father.Footnote 45 He also did not receive a new salutation as imperator at this time, which was perhaps understandable since he had already been acclaimed seven times.Footnote 46

Why then did the accession adlocutio develop in the later Julio-Claudian era if it had not existed at the commencement of the Principate? It can hardly have been for its rhetorical value; while the emperor was expected to pose as an ‘orator par excellence’ and as an ‘ideological model’ of rhetoric, military addresses were not found in rhetorical handbooks, and they were not accorded the same respect as speeches in the Senate, the law courts and at funerals.Footnote 47 A clue can be found in the rites we have already seen associated with the Republican antecedents of the adlocutio and similarly omitted by Tiberius upon his accession: the imperatorial acclamation and personal granting of military gifts, particularly the donations of the Civil Wars given in kind.Footnote 48 Gaius was almost certainly acclaimed by the Praetorians at Misenum and very probably gave an adlocutio thereafter, and he certainly then awarded money to the soldiers, though like Tiberius this came primarily in the form of a legacy.Footnote 49 Claudius was likewise acclaimed by the Praetorians in their camp, may well have given an unattested adlocutio on this occasion, and was the first emperor to award the independent cash sum which would become ritualized as the donatiuum.Footnote 50 Nero is the first emperor who unquestionably did all three, and afterwards they became standard rituals of imperial accession.Footnote 51 What united these men, and distinguished them from Augustus or Tiberius, was that none had serious military experience or had ever received a salutation as imperator before the day of their accessions. Indeed, after Junius Blaesus in a.d. 22, the title of imperator would be reserved for the princeps alone.Footnote 52

In this context, the new utility of the adlocutio alongside its accompanying rituals becomes rather clearer. Early in their reigns, Augustus and Tiberius could point to long and at least superficially impressive military careers.Footnote 53 Each had already won the respect of their soldiers and each had in particular already been repeatedly saluted as imperator, that ultimate mark of generalship, with Augustus adding it to his permanent nomenclature.Footnote 54 Both therefore took power with established histories as generals and patrons of their soldiers; it was thus possible, for example, for Augustus to be depicted on statues in military dress and with his hand raised in the traditional gesture of adlocutio, even as he almost never took to the field himself in his later reign.Footnote 55 This surely also helps to explain why these emperors could credibly claim credit for battles won ‘under their auspices’, also in the manner of the imperatores of the Republic.Footnote 56

When, however, their heirs took power without this same record to point to, it was still more urgent that they both win the consent of their soldiers and publicly demonstrate their support. The interwoven rituals of acclamation, adlocutio and the granting of gifts formed an obvious set of pre-existing mechanisms for extracting this consent with an impeccably Republican pedigree. Once adopted, they would be retained because they served precisely this function. Gaius would be acclaimed as imperator six more times while Claudius would record twenty-seven acclamations in total.Footnote 57 The donatiuum became a sum handed out not only upon accession but at important imperial anniversaries and occasions, its value rising over the course of the Principate.Footnote 58 In this context, it is unsurprising that the adlocutio too would endure, and indeed be celebrated. The first issues of adlocutio coinage would be issued in the first year of Gaius’ reign, and they would continue into the fourth century.Footnote 59

While historians at the time tended to dismiss the accession adlocutio without much comment in order to focus upon speeches to the Senate or at imperial funerals, it was the military address alone which would become a permanent feature of accession in Late Antiquity. This peculiar speech was a Republican tradition which did not simply ‘survive’ but rather was actively revived and modified in the Principate precisely because it served an important function for these early emperors. It endured thereafter because it continued to have this utility for their successors. It remains then to examine exactly how this useful speech played out in practice, and how it retained its relationship with the rites of acclamation and donative-giving which had made it so indispensable.

THE SETTING

Any discussion of the accession ceremony at which the adlocutio was staged requires a note of historiographical caution. Much of the evidence for this event comes from a handful of literary historians, in particular Herodian and Ammianus Marcellinus. Yet these were authors who had larger agendas to advance even when they were well informed about events, which was not always the case. Historians understood well the importance of first impressions for a new emperor, just as Tacitus had famously set the tone for Tiberius’ reign by inaugurating his discussion of it with the ‘first crime of the new regime’.Footnote 60 Herodian in particular wrote about accession more than any other author, each time seizing the opportunity of the ceremony to establish some of the driving themes that would guide his discussion of the new ruler.Footnote 61 Ammianus has long been recognized for his love of depicting vivid visual tableaux where historical plausibility often seems secondary to arrestive imagery.Footnote 62 This problem will only become more acute when it comes to the supposed texts of speeches themselves, as we shall see in the following section.

Fortunately, we are able to stitch together a reasonably coherent picture of what was probably a ‘standard’ accession ceremony from at least the late second century on, although there was doubtless considerable individual variation.Footnote 63 An emperor was chosen, through means which fall outside the scope of this paper.Footnote 64 A military assembly was then called to ratify the choice. The location of this could vary widely, though it was typically at the Praetorian Barracks if the emperor acceded at Rome before 312, or the campus Martius at the Hebdomon if he acceded at Constantinople up to 457.Footnote 65 An announcement of the chosen candidate, the pronuntiatio, would be made by a senior official from a wooden or stone platform, to which the would-be emperor would then ascend, usually dressed in military clothing ‘to reinforce his role as imperator’.Footnote 66 He might first make a sacrifice in the pagan era, although this seems to have been more commonly performed after his acclamation.Footnote 67 Upon the platform itself, the chosen man would be surrounded by eagles and the signa militaria to ensure that he presented a suitably regal image, and he might also be accompanied by guards or other supporters; it is possible that Commodus, for example, was flanked by his father's advisers.Footnote 68 Once imperial insignia such as the paludamentum and the diadem had been developed in the later period, it was at this point that the claimant would be invested with them.Footnote 69

The central purpose of the ceremony was to extract a ritual endorsement of the new emperor's claim through an expression of consensus from the massed soldiers. This endorsement was won by the proclamation of the candidate as imperator, the nuncupatio, which would be answered by the acclamatio of the soldiers.Footnote 70 As we have seen, this acclamation as imperator was linked with adlocutio from the beginning and as a direct sequel to the salutation of Republican generals. The prominence of acclamations in broader Roman society only grew in the late antique period.Footnote 71 Nor were these acclamations a single moment in the ceremony; rather, they were evidently stage-managed to precede and follow the new emperor's adlocutio and even to interrupt it.Footnote 72 Following the speech and any final acclamations, the ceremony would end with the soldiers taking an oath in their new ruler's name.

This naturally raises the question of how far the audience were ever ‘reacting’ to the adlocutio as they heard it. Were their shouts prearranged, or genuinely unplanned? This issue is once again complicated by the ever-present tension in our historiographical sources between an accurate reporting of events as they knew them and the desire to construct a dramatic literary set-piece. We can see this tension vividly illustrated in Ammianus’ contrasting treatment of a pair of acclamations in Book 26, neither of which he witnessed.Footnote 73 As the soldiers began to chant for Valentinian I to appoint a second emperor at his accession in 364, Ammianus leaves no doubt that this represented the authentic will of the army. We are repeatedly told that the uproar emerged from all of the units present, and allegations from ‘a few’ later detractors that these were purchased are refuted because the outcry was heard from ‘the entire assembly’.Footnote 74 Once Valentinian promised that he would appoint a colleague, he won over everyone (uniuersos), including those who had been shouting most adamantly beforehand.Footnote 75 Later in the same book, however, when the usurper Procopius seized power in Constantinople, the historian writes off the acclamations which he received by claiming that they began not as a genuine declaration of spontaneous mass support but rather through a handful of men hired for the purpose.Footnote 76 In both cases, it is clear that the historian is less concerned with relaying what actually happened than with presenting a larger point: Valentinian was a legitimate Roman emperor who enjoyed the authentic consensus of his subjects while Procopius was not.Footnote 77

Regardless of personal motivations, it is clear from this contrast that our historians are unlikely to provide us with a clear insight into the true level of imperial control exerted over these events. The most that can be said is that each accession obviously took significant preparation, and the Roman world was certainly no stranger to claques and planned demonstrations of apparent spontaneity.Footnote 78 The contio had its own rituals which were commonly understood by those who partook in them, even if much of this procedure was never written down. We get a glimpse of this procedure in the description of how the soldiers reacted to the nomination of Julian as Caesar: ‘When the speech ended, nobody restrained themselves; instead, all the soldiers crashed their shields against their knees in an awful clamour, which is a clear sign of their approval.’Footnote 79

On the other hand, our historian immediately follows this by adding that the soldiers could also smash their shields against their spears when they wished to indicate anger and disapproval, so perhaps the emperor was not always wholly in control.Footnote 80 After all, the initial unanimity in chants at Valentinian's accession described above reflected an audience that was actively making a demand of the new emperor, specifically that he appoint a colleague.Footnote 81 This might have been prearranged in order to give him an excuse to elevate his brother Valens, but this is impossible to say with certainty.Footnote 82 At the accession of Pertinax, we are told that soldiers were displeased by the speech but did not voice this immediately, but once again this seems suspiciously redolent of literary hindsight given the circumstances of his fall thereafter.Footnote 83 Ultimately, two things may be stated with confidence: first, that the vast majority of accession adlocutiones seem to have passed without incident, and second, that ancient authors believed that their readers would find it plausible that this was not always the case.Footnote 84

The ritual staging of the accession adlocutio thus went a considerable way to demonstrating the functions for which it was adopted by the later Julio-Claudians. The explicitly military trappings of the ceremony place the emphasis firmly on the relationship between the emperor and his soldiers, while the central role of the acclamatio makes clear the utility of the ceremony in extracting their declarations of consent. Nevertheless, it was possible to have all of these elements without an accompanying address by the new ruler. It may even have been less risky to do so, if our accounts of various disruptions to the adlocutio can be believed. It remains to be seen then what exactly the emperor said in his speech to justify its survival, along with how this linked to the third of our key rites, the promise of the donative.

THE SPEECH AND THE MODEL OF LEO I

Unfortunately, we are far more poorly informed about what emperors actually said on these occasions than we are about the ceremony at which they spoke. Speeches were likely written down rather than delivered extemporaneously; Dio claims that Nero's was scripted by no less an authority than Seneca.Footnote 85 However, military speeches were never considered fit for independent publication and no variant of the adlocutio is even mentioned in rhetorical handbooks.Footnote 86 We are thus left in effect with three distinct types of evidence of varying degrees of utility.

At the heart of any effort to reconstruct the accession adlocutio must be the account of Leo I's accession in 457 preserved probably by the sixth-century courtier Peter the Patrician.Footnote 87 This document appears to draw on official records and is utilized by Peter as a potential model for future accession ceremonies drawing on older precedents. If we cannot be certain that every detail is precisely correct, this text none the less represents the closest we can come to an authentic transcript of an accession adlocutio, supplying not only the brief speech itself but also a detailed record of the proceedings that accompanied it. Unfortunately, even if we accept the broad accuracy of the text, it presents a number of problems in reconstructing the phenomenon of accession adlocutiones in general. As the final accession adlocutio to occur in the traditional military context, this account shows multiple indicators of the formalization typical of late antique ceremonial, including the use of a herald to deliver the oration as well as the incorporation of increasingly complex coronation rituals such as the crowning with a torque and elevation upon a shield. None of these practices is recorded any earlier than the middle of the fourth century, and even then it is not clear that they were standard yet.Footnote 88 Given the ceremony's characteristic flexibility, we cannot simply assume that Leo's speech was representative of all adlocutiones held in the first four and a half centuries of imperial history, even if it provides us with a useful starting point.

Peter's text can be supplemented in the first place with records of other adlocutiones preserved in documentation rather than by literary sources. Andriollo has recently identified five potential partial texts of imperial adlocutiones delivered to military audiences, of which the most important by far is Hadrian's well-known set of addresses to the army at Lambaesis.Footnote 89 Once again, these sources are problematic for our purposes. One is heavily fragmented; others are clearly conveying a speech in a different literary framework, such as that of an edict, and are thus heavily modified from the words actually spoken. Most obviously, none was delivered on the occasion of an accession; they are therefore useful for helping to reconstruct general elements of military addresses but not for the specific contents of the accession speech.

We also have another, even more challenging category of evidence: the speeches given by Roman historians. These are indeed the only direct records of accession adlocutiones prior to Leo's address and we have only eight in total, none of them by authors who were personally present. Of these, one is preserved by Tacitus, three by Herodian, two by Ammianus, and two in the famously problematic Historia Augusta—in its most heavily fictionalized books at that.Footnote 90 Unfortunately, all face severe limitations as sources for the adlocutio. As noted in the previous section, the accession of a new emperor offered ancient authors a clear opportunity to set a tone for their entire reign. The speech which Tacitus gives to Otho, for example, dwells heavily on the alleged harshness and lack of generosity shown towards the soldiers by his predecessor and rival Galba.Footnote 91 This is a perfectly plausible topic given his audience, but it also corresponds exactly with the historian's treatment of Otho as a profligate opportunist who indulged his lazy and greedy men, and the speech thus serves as an efficient summary of his character.Footnote 92 Likewise, Kemezis has noted that Herodian delights in having his new emperors offer analysis which his audiences knew would be comprehensively refuted or rendered ironic by subsequent events.Footnote 93 Thus Pescennius Niger in his accession speech is made to insist that it is foolish to hesitate when called to take action, only to immediately pause to enjoy the luxuries of the East when the historian tells us it was essential for him to make for Rome at once.Footnote 94 It is well documented that speeches in classical historiography show scant concern with accuracy at the best of times; when combined with the dramatic incentives provided by the occasion of accession, the temptation to invent their content appears to have been irresistible.Footnote 95

Once again, however, our inability to rely on the details of these speeches does not mean that we should dismiss them entirely. Most obviously, they can be said to represent at least what ancient audiences believed would be appropriate for a new emperor to say on such occasions. Even if the Roman reader encountering these texts was not intimately familiar with authentic accession rituals, some details do seem to have been well known. The imperial habit of addressing his troops as commilitiones in military addresses is amply documented, for example, and it finds its way into half of the literary speeches, including the two most obviously fictitious cases.Footnote 96 Thus, while the speeches given by our historians cannot be used as independent evidence for the content of the accession adlocutio, they can none the less give us some idea of what ancient audiences believed was plausible, particularly when read alongside the transcript of Leo's brief address.

In what follows, I attempt to sketch out a handful of knowable points about the course of the accession adlocutio itself based on these disparate sources.

1. Delivery

There is little that we can say for certain about the manner in which the speech was delivered. The adlocutio was frequently depicted in Roman art, above all on coinage. Between the fall of the Julio-Claudians and the end of the Severans, only three emperors did not have an adlocutio coin struck, although these were of course not strictly associated with accession.Footnote 97 These types invariably feature the emperor with his right arm outstretched in what appears to be a sweeping gesture of command.Footnote 98 Gesticulation was an increasingly important aspect of Roman oratory in the late Republic and early Empire, and the raised right hand became emblematic of the adlocutio, perhaps most famously represented in the Augustus of Prima Porta statue as well as on contemporary columns and reliefs.Footnote 99 It was when Valentinian I raised his right hand at his accession that his soldiers realized that he was about to speak and interrupted the ceremony to protest.Footnote 100 Indeed, although evidence is sparse, we can expect that under the circumstances, the speech was typically an animated one on the whole, and we know of at least one instance when props were allegedly used to add a fresh element of theatre.Footnote 101

Such gesticulation was especially necessary since without the aid of technology, the emperor's words can only have been expected to reach a small number of the gathered soldiers. It is possible that heralds were used to relay his words beyond this in a gathered assembly, but our sources do not record it. By the time of Leo I, the adlocutio was apparently no longer even directly delivered by the emperor himself but rather ‘through a libellarius’, meaning that an official actually read the words.Footnote 102 The account nevertheless treats the emperor as speaking throughout, even using the first person. This is the first documented instance of an accession adlocutio being delivered by a figure other than the emperor, although the reading of addresses by others on the emperor's behalf had long precedent.Footnote 103 It is unclear when exactly this custom developed, but we are now a long way removed from the idea of oratorical talent as a core imperial virtue, even if the adlocutio itself remained.

2. Length

The most notable aspect of Leo's address as recorded in the De Ceremoniis is that it is barely a speech at all, consisting of only five sentences and fifty-three words, heavily punctuated by acclamations from the assembly. Yet an adlocutio with what Tacitus dubbed ‘brevity suitable for an emperor’ looks less surprising when placed alongside our other evidence.Footnote 104 The inscribed addresses of Hadrian at Lambaesis, which explicitly purport to be a direct transcript of the emperor's words, would have taken less than a minute each to deliver.Footnote 105 The other three potential military addresses catalogued by Andriollo are also all less than a hundred and twenty-five words in their preserved forms.Footnote 106 Even our most questionable evidence, the literary constructs of the historians, is relatively short for direct oratory; none exceeds three hundred words, which may reflect a general belief that military speeches of this sort were supposed to be succinct.

It is certainly possible that some addresses were longer, particularly in the early Empire. We have seen that Nero's address was allegedly written by Seneca and it was said to be very similar to his Senate address which was subsequently inscribed on silver tablets, suggesting something longer than a handful of words.Footnote 107 Elsewhere, Dio describes Macrinus’ accession speech as ‘lengthy and excellent’.Footnote 108 It has been noted that the ceremony of accession became more formalized over time, and it would be in keeping with this trend for the speech to have also become more minimalist and formulaic, especially as it moved from being spoken by the emperor to being delivered by his heralds. Nevertheless, while there was surely tremendous individual variation, there is no evidence that a lengthy accession adlocutio was ever standard, and military oratory as a genre tended towards concision.

3. Language

In addition to typically being short, the adlocutio was also linguistically straightforward. Quintilian tells us in a rare observation on military speeches that words addressed to soldiers should be simpliciora so that they would be easily understood by an audience untutored in oratory.Footnote 109 Fronto gave similar advice to Marcus Aurelius for addressing non-aristocratic listeners.Footnote 110 Once again, our small corpus of military addresses is useful as a guide here, particularly the Lambaesis text. These brief adlocutiones demonstrate the guidance of the rhetors being followed exactly, using straightforward Latin amply peppered with soldiers’ jargon and precise military terminology clearly tailored towards listeners who would appreciate it.Footnote 111 Likewise, the De Ceremoniis text uses no technical or complex language in Leo's remarks, but sticks to brief and direct sentences with no room for ambiguity. Either Leo spoke in Greek or his speech has been translated; his predecessors would presumably have almost exclusively spoken in Latin, but this might have been adjusted depending on the origins of the soldiers whom he was addressing and on his facility with both languages. Whatever language it was delivered in, our evidence is unanimous that the accession adlocutio was never a speech of great linguistic art.

4. Content

Recovering what emperors actually said in their adlocutio is a process which of necessity entails interrogating our only surviving example, the Leo speech in the De Ceremoniis. This fact along with the aforementioned brevity of these remarks makes it both possible and desirable to reproduce them here in full with translations. I include the acclamations with which the assembly responded to each line, as this also tells us something useful about the way in which the new Augustus interacted with his audience—or, rather, did not. Although the words spoken by the libellarius are always clearly addressed to the military assembly, they never directly respond to any of the chants. The acclamations, however, could respond to specific statements in the speech itself.Footnote 112

1) “ὁ Θεὸς ὁ παντοδύναμος καὶ ἡ κρίσις ἡ ὑμετέρα, ἰσχυρώτατοι συστρατιῶται, αὐτοκράτορά με τῶν τῶν Ῥωμαίων δημοσίων πραγμάτων εὐτυχῶς ἐξελέξατο.” παρὰ πάντων ἐκράγη⋅ : “Λέων αὔγουστε, σὺ νικᾷς⋅ ὁ σὲ ἐκλεξάμενος σὲ διαφυλάξει⋅ τὴν ἐκλογὴν ἑαυτοῦ ὁ Θεὸς περιφρουρήσει. εὐσεβὲς βασίλειον ὁ Θεὸς φυλάξει. καὶ εὐσεβὴς καὶ δυνατός.”

‘Almighty God and your judgement, my most valiant fellow soldiers, have with good fortune selected me as the emperor of the Roman state.’

A cry from all: ‘Leo Augustus, may you conquer! May he who chose you keep you! May God guard his chosen one! May God protect his faithful empire! Both faithful and powerful!’

Dispensing with any preamble, Leo—or, rather, the libellarius speaking as Leo—begins by invoking his selection as a result of both divine and mortal elections, two of the standard legitimizing rationales invoked by Roman emperors.Footnote 113 It is important to note that Leo was not discussing some abstract past event here but rather the present ceremony itself; the ‘judgement’ of the soldiers was given in their preceding acclamations of him as imperator. Indeed, by Late Antiquity, it was standard to argue both that the soldiers had the right to speak for the whole people through the consensus exercituum, and that their supposedly spontaneous vocalization of unanimous support itself constituted a sign of divine endorsement.Footnote 114 The ancient rituals of saluting a victorious general and receiving his response are still recognizable, but they have been given a far deeper ideological and theological resonance. Leo's words are immediately affirmed by the subsequent round of acclamations, which explicitly demonstrate the consensus exercituum in action while also verbally confirming that his selection came through God. This deceptively simple and even formulaic first line thus immediately restates the political theology of the emperorship itself while both responding to and provoking the military acclamatio.

For all its ideological weight, it is worth noting that this sentence is fundamentally generic. It could have been delivered by any of Leo's predecessors with only the number of deities altered. Yet this ritualistic line, presented as a statement of fact, is as much explicit self-justification as Leo gives; there is no sustained argument as to why he in particular has a right to rule, despite being a virtual unknown and the first non-Theodosian emperor in the East for almost eighty years.Footnote 115 When historians recreated these events, they delighted in filling them with lengthy arguments about personal worthiness.Footnote 116 Perhaps this was indeed sometimes the case, particularly for usurpers who may have found it useful, but if so then it was clearly not essential to the adlocutio by 457.

There is also no hint of reluctance by Leo, and thus no hint of the well-attested ritual of recusatio, the performative refusal to accept a proclamation.Footnote 117 Like the adlocutio itself, this tradition dated back to the imperatorial acclamations of the Republic and was present from the very beginnings of the Principate onwards.Footnote 118 In his account of the elevation of Maximinus Thrax, Herodian explicitly depicts this refusal as being done from the tribunal, thereby forming a part of the accession ceremony itself.Footnote 119 This seems plausible enough, since it would doubtless have prompted the mass affirmation of support that demonstrated the requisite consensus.Footnote 120 None the less, the absence of recusatio from Leo's speech suggests that, if it did sometimes form a part of the ceremony, it was a purely optional element. When verbalized as part of the adlocutio, it must have come at the very start, allowing the crowd to vocalize their desire for the new emperor to accept this role before he agreed and delivered the rest of his address.

2) ἀπόκρισις. αὐτοκράτωρ Καῖσαρ αὔγουστος⋅ “ἕξεταί με ἐξουσιαστὴν ἄρχοντα τῶν κόπων συστρατιώτην, ὧν μεθ’ ὑμῶν ἔτι στρατευόμενος ἔμαθον ὑπομένειν.”

παρὰ πάντων ἐβοήθη⋅ “εὐτυχῶς⋅ ὁ στρατός σε βασιλεύοντα, νικητά⋅ ὁ στρατός σε βασιλεύοντα, εὐτυχῆ⋅ σὲ ποθοῦμεν πάντες.”

Response: Emperor Caesar Augustus: ‘You will have me as your authority, managing the soldierly toils which I learnt to bear while serving as a soldier alongside you.’

A cry from all: ‘Good fortune! The army wants you as emperor, conqueror; the army wants you as emperor, fortunate one. We all want you!’

The second line of Leo's address places heavy emphasis on the supposed camaraderie between the emperor and his new subjects. A variant on the word συστρατιώτηs, fellow-soldier, already present in the first line, is here repeated, and Leo also emphasizes his own history as a soldier ‘alongside you’.Footnote 121 While the language of commilitiones is standard, as noted above, the specific mention of Leo's military service is obviously a reference to his past as a guardsman and thus the only clearly personalized element in the entire oration. This is interesting both as a reminder that such personalization could occur even within an extremely short text and because the one place in which this was done was to emphasize the connection with his soldiers. Even at this late date, the creation of the personal bond between an emperor and his troops remained at the heart of the accession ceremony in general and of the adlocutio in particular.

Each of the first two lines of the speech thus serves a distinct ritualistic function; the emperor announces his selection through the accepted mechanisms of divine and human election, then personally underlines his relationship with his army. We know that some emperors made distinct policy promises at the beginning of their reign; rulers in the Principate, for example, often swore an oath not to execute senators.Footnote 122 Yet there is no hint of any such specific promises in Leo's speech with one important exception. When historians insert them into their invented addresses, it is thus hard to avoid the suspicion that they are conflating a number of separate actions in the early accession period in one convenient literary set piece.Footnote 123

This only makes it more notable, however, that there is one extremely specific policy promise which appears in Leo's accession speech, as brief as it is. This promise takes up the entire second half of the speech and serves to introduce the second purpose of the adlocutio beyond the acceptance of the acclamation.

3) ὁ αὔγουστος⋅ “καὶ ἔγνων, ὁποῖα ὀφείλω δώματα παρασχεῖν ταῖς δυνάμεσιν.” ὑπὸ πάντων ἐκράγη⋅ “καὶ εὐσεβὴς καὶ δυνατὸς καὶ λογιώτατος.”

The emperor: ‘And I know with what donatives I shall reward the soldiers.’ A cry from all: ‘Faithful and powerful and most eloquent!’

4) ὁ αὔγουστος⋅ “ὑπὲρ ἐντεύξεως τῆς ἁγίας καὶ εὐτυχοῦς βασιλείας μου ἀνὰ εʹ νομισμάτων καὶ λίτραν ἀργύρου καταβουκοῦλον δώσω.”

παρὰ πάντων ἐβοήθη⋅ “καὶ εὐσεβὴς καὶ δαψιλής. διὰ σοῦ τιμαὶ, διὰ σοῦ οὐσίαι. χρυσέους αἰῶνας βασιλεύουσα εὐτυχὴς εἴη ἡμῖν ἡ βασιλεία σου.”

The emperor: ‘For the commencement of my holy and fortunate reign, I will give five nomismata (solidi) and a pound of silver to each shield-bearer.’ A cry from all: ‘Both faithful and generous! Through you honours, through your riches! May your reign be fortunate for us, a golden age!’

5) αὐτοκράτωρ Καῖσαρ αὔγουστος⋅ “ὁ Θεὸς μεθ’ ὑμῶν.”

Emperor Caesar Augustus: ‘May God be with you.’

It is here that we see again a close relationship between the words of the speech and the acclamations that punctuated it. Leo announces his intention to grant an accession donative and is praised for it; when he continues with the specific amount, then the result is a cacophony of praise specifically directed towards his supposed generosity. In fact, Leo was likely doing no more than was conventional, as the figure matches precisely the accession donative which Ammianus describes Julian offering in a.d. 360 as well as the accession donatives later recorded for Leo II, Anastasius and Justin I.Footnote 124 His specificity in a speech so utterly devoid of it is none the less striking. It is equally telling that these remarks come at the end of the address, and, as soon as the promise is made, the emperor can invoke divine blessing and then proceed into the capital. The announcement of the donative is clearly structured as the climax of Leo's speech as recorded; if more was delivered, then it was considered less worthy of note.

Here at least, the literary historians are in accord with the Leo text. Tacitus’ Otho incites his soldiers against Galba by informing them that his ‘house alone is equal to paying the donative which is never given to you’—he of course will do better.Footnote 125 Herodian's Commodus wins over his father's army from the tribunal not as a consequence of his rhetoric but because he immediately granted a ‘generous’ distribution of money, while his Pescennius Niger likewise invokes his predecessor's non-payment of promised rewards.Footnote 126 In some particularly telling cases, the entire speech is summarized by our historians simply as the emperors promising money, so that almost the only thing we know about the accession addresses of Marcus Aurelius and Pertinax are that the former offered his men twenty thousand sesterces apiece, while Pertinax offered ‘only’ twelve thousand.Footnote 127 In other instances, the adlocutio is not mentioned directly at all but suggested purely by the mention of the donative promise. Domitian rode into the praetorian camp immediately upon Titus’ death and gave to the soldiers all that his brother had given before him, while Hadrian began his reign by pledging a double donative to his army.Footnote 128 It is extremely likely that these promises were made as part of speeches, but this was less important for our sources than the vow itself.

The accession adlocutio was thus inextricably bound up with the promise of a donative. We have seen that the ancestry of this connection predates the Empire itself, going back to the post-battle contiones of the Roman Republic and the speech accompanying the awarding of the largitio. Hadrian's Lambaesis address too, while delivered in the middle of his reign, included an explicit promise of a donatiuum in exchange for good performance during military demonstrations.Footnote 129 Allowing the emperor to associate himself personally with gifts to his soldiers had obvious practical benefits for maintaining their loyalty whenever it occurred in his reign. Seen through the most cynical gaze, the emperor's financial patronage of his troops has sometimes been seen as effectively bribery, with the adlocutio as its fine Republican veil.Footnote 130 This is characteristically the line adopted by Tacitus. In his description of Nero's accession adlocutio, the historian does not bother to record the words or even mention its alleged Senecan authorship, but dismisses the entire address as a perfunctory aside: ‘After being carried to the camp, Nero gave a few introductory words that fit the moment (congruentia tempori praefatus), and was hailed as emperor with the promise of a donative on the model of his father's generosity.’Footnote 131

As is so often the case, however, Tacitean cynicism gets at some fundamental truths but can obscure the fuller picture. It was certainly true that the grant of money to the troops was an important political tool, and the sum continued to increase throughout the Principate.Footnote 132 Galba may have claimed that he chose his soldiers and did not buy them, but there is a reason that Galba reigned for only seven months.Footnote 133 However, the centrality of money may also be overstated by elite authors who drew on common senatorial prejudices and literary topoi about the greed of common soldiers.Footnote 134 This article has argued throughout that it must be viewed alongside the rituals of acclamation and adlocutio as part of a concerted ideological ritual to bind the emperor and his soldiers and cement his legitimacy as imperator.

Just as acclamation was a recognized symbol of consensus, the donative too had significant ideological value.Footnote 135 Its granting was a visible demonstration of liberalitas, the imperial generosity which was regularly commemorated on coins and constituted a core virtue for any emperor.Footnote 136 When Leo I awarded the same sum that several of his predecessors had given, he was demonstrating that he would uphold the munificence which his subjects expected from their rulers. He would not short-change his soldiers, the crime for which we have seen emperors such as Galba or Pertinax criticized. Rather than a dry contractual obligation or a simple bribe, the granting of the donative which had begun with Claudius became entrenched because it cemented the personal bond between the emperor and his men.Footnote 137 It has even been suggested that the emperor might sometimes have given soldiers their pay with his own hand to further this connection.Footnote 138 This in turn served as further evidence that he was the rightful and legitimate ruler, possessed of the qualities—such as liberalitas—which the soldiers demanded of any such ruler, proving that he was a worthy imperator who deserved the acclamatio of his men. The very act of granting the donative was thus itself a legitimizing mechanism independent of the actual sum granted.Footnote 139

Seen in this light, then, the adlocutio survived because it facilitated these two all-important ideological rituals. Neither the acclamation of a ruler nor the granting of donatives required a direct address, but the address enabled the emperor to respond directly to his salutation and to take personal ownership of the donative grant, both of which deepened his relationship with his soldiers. In this way, the speech itself became a part of those soldiers’ expectations over time; a legitimate emperor was expected to receive their acclamation, he was expected to grant them a suitable donative, and he was expected to do so in the form of an adlocutio from the platform. In delivering that speech, however rote and even generic the words of the address might be, the new emperor performed one of the most distinctively imperial rituals in public for the first time. Indeed, his very appearance upon the platform was understood to be a sign to his soldiers that they should begin chanting the acclamations which the entire procedure was designed to elicit.Footnote 140 When discussing the prevalence of usurpation in the late Empire, the historian Orosius observed that the most important factor for any would-be emperor was ‘to be seen wearing the diadem and the purple’ before anyone discovered that they planned to rebel.Footnote 141 As Orosius grasped so clearly, the mere act of appearing and acting as an emperor could itself serve as an act of legitimation, and there were few more recognizably imperial modes of behaviour than delivering an accession oration promising a donative. If, in Fergus Millar's famous words, ‘the emperor was what the emperor did’, then the accession adlocutio survived for four centuries because delivering it was seen as an important part of what it meant to be a Roman emperor at all.Footnote 142

CONCLUSION

The accession adlocutio was a distinctively Roman ritual which emerged organically from the military culture of the late Republic. Unlike most other imperial oratory, it survived the transformation of the emperorship itself to remain in use many centuries later and many hundreds of miles away. Our evidence suggests that the speech endured because it served as a tight, efficient vehicle for a single overriding objective: the strengthening of personal ties between the imperator and his soldiers. To accomplish this, the accession adlocutio allowed the emperor to respond to and solicit the legitimizing acclamations of his men and to personally promise the donative which bound them together. In performing these interlinked rituals, the emperor was simultaneously fulfilling his subjects’ expectations of how an emperor should behave and confirming his suitability for the role. The long survival of this military address thus serves as a further demonstration of the enduring military character of the Roman emperorship itself.

APPENDIX: ACCESSION ADLOCVTIONES IN DIRECT SPEECH IN THE ROMAN HISTORIANS

The following is a list of accession adlocutiones given in direct speech by Roman historians. As always with such speeches in these works, little stock should be placed in their verisimilitude. This list includes only speeches supposedly provided in full and not identified as fragments or paraphrases.Footnote 143

Footnotes

I would like to thank Noel Lenski, Andrew Johnston and Brandon Bourgeois for their detailed and helpful feedback on early drafts of this article, as well as the readers for CQ whose invaluable commentary greatly improved them.

References

1 Suet. Ner. 8.1; Tac. Ann. 12.69.1–3; Cass. Dio 61.3.1.

2 De Ceremoniis 1.91. Leo's ceremony was recognized by the sixth century as the last of an ‘old’ style of accession, subsequently replaced with a newer form that no longer included a military-style adlocutio: Dagron, G., Emperor and Priest: The Imperial Office in Byzantium (New York, 2004), 5964Google Scholar.

3 Child emperors were not required to deliver the adlocutio: see Elagabalus at Cass. Dio 79.31 and Hdn. 5.3.12, Severus Alexander at Hdn. 5.8.10, Gordian III at Hdn. 8.8.7, Gratian at Amm. Marc. 27.6, and Valentinian II at Amm. Marc. 30.10.5. On the adjustment of imperial expectations for young rulers: McEvoy, M., Child Emperor Rule in the Late Roman West, AD 367–455 (Oxford, 2013)CrossRefGoogle Scholar. No address by the new emperor is recorded during collegiate accessions: Lactant. De mort. pers. 19; Amm. Marc. 26.4.3.

4 I follow Omissi's definition of a usurper as one who was either declared emperor without the consent of a reigning Augustus or participated in the assassination of an Augustus and then took his place: Omissi, A., Emperors and Usurpers in the Later Roman Empire (Oxford, 2018), 34CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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6 Domitian: Cass. Dio 66.26.3. Marcian: Theodor. Lect. Hist. eccl. epit. 354; Chron. Pasch. Ol. 307.

7 Cass. Dio 66.18; HA, Ant. Pius 5.1–2.

8 Tac. Ann. 13.3.1; Suet. Ner. 9.1; Cass. Dio 61.3.1.

9 Such as Hadrian: HA, Hadr. 7.4.

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16 M. Hammond, ‘The transmission of the powers of the Roman emperor from the death of Nero in a.d. 68 to that of Severus Alexander in a.d. 235’, MAAR 24 (1956), 61–133 and B. Parsi, Désignation et investiture de l'Empereur romain (Ier et IIe siècles après J.-C.) (Paris, 1963). Some elements would return sporadically: Septimius Severus delivered a funeral oration for Pertinax after 193: Cass. Dio 75.4–5.

17 MacCormack (n. 14), 194–5; A. Alföldi, ‘Insignien und Tracht der römischen Kaiser’, MDAI(R) 50 (1935), 1–171, reprinted in Alföldi, A., Die monarchische Repräsentation im römischen Kaiserreiche (Darmstadt, 1970), 121276Google Scholar.

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20 H.W. Fairman, ‘The kingship rituals of Egypt’, in S.H. Hooke (ed.), Myth, Ritual and Kingship (Oxford, 1958), 74–104 and T.N.D. Mettinger, King and Messiah: The Civil and Sacral Legitimation of the Israelite Kings (Lund, 1976). For more contemporary discussions: E.F. Morris, ‘The Pharaoh and Pharaonic office’, in A.B. Lloyd (ed.), A Companion to Ancient Egypt: Volume 1 (Oxford, 2010), 202–13; J. Day, ‘Some aspects of the monarchy in ancient Israel’, in R.I. Thelle, T. Stordalen and M.E.J. Richardson (edd.), New Perspectives on Old Testament Prophecy and History (Leiden, 2015), 161–74.

21 Morris (n. 20), 205.

22 Polyb. 15.25; Plut. Vit. Demetr. 18.1; see also Plut. Vit. Artax. 3.1–2. R. Strootman, Courts and Elites in the Hellenistic Empire: The Near East after the Achaemenids, c.330 to 30 bce (Edinburgh, 2014), 210–32.

23 A.S. Shahbazi, ‘Coronation’, Encyclopaedia Iranica 6.2 (New York, 1993), 277–9.

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26 Livy 27.19.4; Rivero Gracia (n. 25), 198–211; Assenmaker (n. 25). The title of imperator is attested both epigraphically and numismatically from the early first century: Assenmaker (n. 25), 121–8. For contemporary notifications of the acclamation, see Cic. Pis. 54, Att. 5.20.3; Epit. 2.10.3.

27 Such as Caes. BCiv. 2.26.1, 3.31.1.

28 App. B Civ. 2.44; Tac. Ann. 2.18.2.

29 Plut. Vit. Crass. 17.3, Vit. Pomp. 12.3.

30 App. B Civ. 2.44.

31 Plut. Vit. Caes. 61.

32 F. Pina Polo, Los contiones civiles y militares en Roma (Zaragoza, 1989).

33 Livy 26.48.3–5.

34 S.E. Phang, Roman Military Service: Ideologies of Discipline in the Late Republic and Early Principate (Cambridge, 2008), 197–9. See the catalogue of contiones in Pina Polo (n. 32), 333–45.

35 BAlex. 48, 52. The name was a derisive one.

36 See, for example, the celebrated Bronze of Ascoli, which presents the awarding of citizenship to allied horsemen as a personal act of Pompey Strabo (CIL I 709).

37 App. B Civ. 5.4.30–1.

38 BAlex. 48.

39 Assenmaker (n. 25), 134–8. A handful of Greek sources suggest that there was a minimum number of enemy casualties required for an acclamation but all are problematic. Dio gives no figure, Diodorus places the number at six thousand but the text may be a later interpolation, and Appian claims only that it was ten thousand by his own time: Cass. Dio 37.40.2; Diod. Sic. 36.14; App. B Civ. 2.44.

40 See M.H. Hansen, ‘The battlefield exhortation in ancient historiography. Fact or fiction?’, Historia 42 (1993), 161–80, which distinguishes between camp orations and battlefield exhortations at 166–7. Cf. Anson, E., ‘The general's pre-battle exhortation in Graeco-Roman warfare’, G&R 57 (2010), 304–18Google Scholar.

41 Campbell (n. 12), 70.

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43 Tac. Ann. 1.7. Eaton, J., ‘The political significance of the imperial watchword in the early Empire’, G&R 58 (2011), 4863Google Scholar; Campbell (n. 12), 19–32.

44 Tac. Ann. 1.8.3.

45 Suet. Aug. 100.3, Tib. 23; Cass. Dio 56.34.4–41.9; Tac. Ann. 1.11. See Swan, P.M., The Augustan Succession (Oxford, 2004)Google Scholar; Pettinger, R., The Republic in Danger: Drusus Libo and the Succession of Tiberius (Oxford, 2012)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; J. Osgood, ‘Suetonius and the succession to Augustus’, in A. Gibson (ed.), The Julio-Claudian Succession: Reality and Perception of the Augustan Model (Leiden, 2012), 19–40; C. Vout, ‘Tiberius and the invention of succession’, in A. Gibson (ed.), The Julio-Claudian Succession: Reality and Perception of the Augustan Model (Leiden, 2012), 59–78.

46 L. Schumacher, ‘Die imperatorischen Akklamationen der Triumvirn und die auspicial des Augustus’, Historia 34 (1985), 191–222.

47 L. Pernot (transl. W.E. Higgins), Rhetoric in Antiquity (Washington, DC, 2005), 171; see Millar (n. 10), 205–12; C. Jones, ‘Nero speaking’, HSPh 100 (2000), 453–62.

48 On the relationship of largitio and the donatiuum: Hebblewhite (n. 12), 72; cf. P. Veyne (transl. B. Pearce), Bread and Circuses: Historical Sociology and Political Pluralism (Cambridge, 1990), 339–40. The donatiua remained firmly separate from the dona militaria, which were far more specialized, given in kind, and remained in use independently in the Imperial era: Hebblewhite (n. 12), 93–8.

49 The acclamation can be deduced from subsequent senatorial confirmation: A.A. Barrett, Caligula: The Corruption of Power (New Haven, 1989), 53. An adlocutio is suggested by contemporary coinage: BMC I, 151, 33; Campbell (n. 12), 80–2.

50 Suet. Claud. 10.4; Joseph. AJ 19.3–4.

51 See n. 1 above.

52 Tac. Ann. 3.74.6–7.

53 Augustus at least had a record of sorts by the time he took on this title: Aug. RGDA, 2–4.

54 Syme (n. 24); Campbell (n. 12), 124.

55 As on his famous statue at Prima Porta; see the bibliography in E. Simon, ‘Altes und Neues zur Statue des Augustus von Primaporta’, in G. Binder (ed.), Saeculum Augustum 3 (Darmstadt, 1987), 204–33.

56 F.J. Vervaet, The High Command in the Roman Republic. The Principle of the summum imperium auspiciumque from 509 to 19 BCE (Stuttgart, 2014).

57 Campbell (n. 12), 124.

58 Campbell (n. 12), 186–98.

59 BMC I, 151, 33.

60 Tac. Ann. 1.6.1.

61 Hdn. 1.5, 2.2.6–9, 2.8.1–6, 2.10.

62 E. Auerbach (transl. W. Trask), Mimesis: The Representation of Reality in Western Literature, Fiftieth Anniversary Edition (Princeton, 2003), 50–76; Barnes, T.D., Ammianus Marcellinus and the Representation of Historical Reality (Ithaca, 1998)Google Scholar.

63 See especially Kolb (n. 13), 98–9, which may however be somewhat overrigid in its formalization.

64 See Pabst (n. 42); Flaig (n. 42); Parsi (n. 16); Pfeilschifter, R., Der Kaiser und Konstantinopel (Berlin, 2013)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

65 The scant evidence for other capitals also supports the pattern of an extramural camp ceremony: see Majorian at Ravenna in Fast. Vind. Prior. s.a. 457, and Galerius at Nicomedia in Lactant. De mort. pers. 19. Emperors chosen on campaign were presumably acclaimed wherever the camp happened to be.

66 Hebblewhite (n. 12), 155.

67 De munitionibus castrorum 11; Hdn. 1.5.2, cf. 2.2, 2.6.12.

68 Hebblewhite (n. 12), 156; Hdn. 1.5.2. Herodian had his own reasons for emphasizing the prominence of Commodus’ advisers, but Ammianus repeatedly suggests that the presence of others for adlocutiones was normal: Amm. Marc. 20.5.1, 21.13.9.

69 Alföldi (n. 17), 167–74; MacCormack (n. 14), 194–5.

70 The terms are modern, though derived from the language in our sources; see Kolb (n. 13), 105–7; J. den Boeft, J.W. Drijvers, D. den Hengst, H. Teitler, Philological and Historical Commentary on Ammianus Marcellinus XXVI (Leiden, 2007), 43.

71 C. Roueché, ‘Acclamations in the later Roman empire: new evidence from Aphrodisias’, JRS 74 (1984), 181–99.

72 De Ceremoniis 1.91; Amm. Marc. 15.8.9, 27.6.10; Hebblewhite (n. 12), 152.

73 While Ammianus was with the army that would eventually proclaim Valentinian, his use of the first person to describe its movements stops the prior year: Amm. Marc. 25.10.1.

74 Amm. Marc. 26.2.4.

75 Amm. Marc. 26.2.11.

76 Amm. Marc. 26.6.18.

77 See J. Szidat, ‘Imperator legitime declaratus (Ammian 30.10.5)’, in M. Piérart and O. Curty (edd.), Historia testis. Melanges d'epigraphie, d'histoire ancienne et de philologie offerts à Tadeusz Zawadzki (Fribourg, 1989), 175–88.

78 See, for one well-documented example, the claques of Antioch: Liebeschuetz, J.H.W.G., Antioch: City and Administration in the Later Roman Empire (Oxford, 1972), 208–19Google Scholar.

79 Amm. Marc. 15.8.15; translation mine.

80 Amm. Marc. 15.8.15. The same gesture is used when Julian's soldiers protest against his efforts to delay an impending battle at 16.12.13.

81 Amm. Marc. 26.2.3–4; Philostorgius, Hist. Eccl. 8.8; Sozom. Hist. Eccl. 6.6; Theodoret, Hist. eccl. 4.5.

82 Parallels in the description of Valentinian's response across the independent source traditions in n. 78 above suggest that an ‘official version’ of these events may have been circulated by the court.

83 Cass. Dio 74.1.

84 See Hebblewhite (n. 12), 158–9 on failed adlocutiones in other contexts.

85 Cass. Dio 61.3.

86 Quint. Inst. 11.1.33 and 11.1.45 do at least briefly allude to the possibility of delivering a speech to an audience of soldiers.

87 Brightman (n. 12); Bury, J.B., ‘The ceremonial book of Constantine Porphyrogennitos’, EHR 22 (1907), 209–27CrossRefGoogle Scholar, 417–39; MacCormack (n. 14), 240–7.

88 Julian's accession is the first appearance of both the torque coronation and elevation on a shield: Amm. Marc. 25.4.17–18. The former is recorded as a momentary expedient, and there is only one other mention of a new emperor being lifted on a shield prior to Leo: Philost. Hist. eccl. 8.8. See Ennslin, W., ‘Zur Torqueskronung und Schilderhebung bei der Kaiserwahl’, Klio 35 (1942), 268–98CrossRefGoogle Scholar and Teitler, H., ‘Raising on a shield: origin and afterlife of a coronation ceremony’, IJCT 8 (2002), 501–21CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

89 L. Andriollo, ‘Imperial adlocutiones to the army: performance, recording and functions (2nd–4th centuries CE)’, GFA 21 (2018), 67–99.

90 See the Appendix at the end of this article.

91 Tac. Hist. 1.36–8.

92 Perkins, C.A., ‘Tacitus on Otho’, Latomus 52 (1993), 848–55Google Scholar.

93 Kemezis, A.M., Greek Narratives of the Roman Empire under the Severans: Cassius Dio, Philostratus and Herodian (Cambridge, 2014), 252–60CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

94 Hdn. 2.8.3, 2.8.7–10.

95 J. Marincola, ‘Speeches in classical historiography’, in J. Marincola (ed.), A Companion to Greek and Roman Historiography, Volume 1 (Malden, 2007), 118–32.

96 Campbell (n. 12), 32–9; Hebblewhite (n. 12), 23; Tac. Hist. 1.37.1, 1.38.1; Cass. Dio. 74.1; HA, Tyr. Trig. 8.8, Tac. 8.5.

97 Campbell (n. 12), 71.

98 Brilliant, R., Gesture and Rank in Roman Art: The Use of Gestures to Denote Status in Roman Sculpture and Coinage (New Haven, 1963), 167–8Google Scholar.

99 Aldrete, G., Gestures and Acclamations in Ancient Rome (Baltimore, 1999)CrossRefGoogle Scholar, especially 85–164.

100 Amm. Marc. 26.2.3; den Boeft et al. (n. 70), 44–5.

101 Suet. Galb. 10.1. See also Bartsch, S., Actors in the Audience: Theatricality and Doublespeak from Nero to Hadrian (Cambridge, 1994)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

102 De Ceremoniis 1.91.

103 Tac. Ann. 13.3.2; Suet. Claud. 41–2.

104 Tac. Hist. 1.18.1.

105 M.P. Speidel, Emperor Hadrian's Speeches to the African Army – A New Text (Mainz, 2006), 88–92. Speidel thinks that this suggests that more words were spoken but not recorded; see, however, B. Campbell's review of Speidel's volume in JRS 98 (2008), 209–10.

106 Andriollo (n. 89), 75, 79, 85.

107 Cass. Dio 61.3.

108 Cass. Dio 79.12.

109 Quint. Inst. 11.1.32; cf. 11.1.45.

110 Fronto, Ep. Ad M. Caesarem 3.1.

111 Speidel (n. 105), 88–92.

112 Reiske, J.J., De Ceremoniis aulae Byzantinae (Bonn, 1829), 411–12Google Scholar. All translations are my own; I have also broken the text into a transcript format to clearly distinguish the speech from the acclamations.

113 J.R. Fears, Princeps a diis electus: The Divine Election of the Emperor as a Political Concept at Rome (Rome, 1977); Pabst (n. 42). See also De Ceremoniis 1.93.

114 Them. Or. 5.65c–d; Julian. Or. 1.7D; Eutr. 9.2, 9.12, 10.10, 10.15, 10.17; Symm. Or. 1.9; Straub (n. 13), 7–75. See M. Anastos, ‘Vox populi, voluntas Dei and the election of the Byzantine emperor’, in J. Neusner (ed.), Christianity, Judaism and Other Greco-Roman Cults. Studies for Morton Smith at Sixty. Part 2: Early Christianity (Leiden, 1975), 181–207; F. Heim, ‘Vox exercitus, vox dei. La designation de l'empereur charismatique au IVe siècle’, REL 68 (1990), 160–72.

115 His predecessor Marcian became a member through his marriage to Theodosius II's sister Pulcheria.

116 Such as Commodus’ dynastic appeal at Hdn. 1.5.5.

117 Huttner, U., Recusatio imperii. Ein politisches Ritual zwischen Ethik und Taktik (Hildesheim, 2004)Google Scholar.

118 Suet. Aug. 52; Cass. Dio 54.1.4; Tac. Ann. 1.12–13; Vell. Pat. 2.124.2; Suet. Tib. 24.1; Cass. Dio 57.2.3; Pettinger (n. 45), 157–68.

119 Hdn. 6.8.5–6.

120 J. Béranger, Recherches sur l'aspect idéologique du principat (Basel, 1953), 137–69; Huttner (n. 117).

121 Campbell (n. 12), 32–9.

122 A.R. Birley, ‘The oath not to put senators to death’, CR 12 (1962), 197–9.

123 Cass. Dio 79.12; Amm. Marc. 20.5.7.

124 Amm. Marc. 20.4.18; De Ceremoniis 1.94, 1.92, 1.93; cf. Hebblewhite (n. 12), 78–9.

125 Tac. Hist. 1.37.

126 Hdn. 1.5.11 and 2.8.5.

127 HA, Vit. Marc. 7.9; Cass. Dio 74.1. Dio does go on to provide the closing line of Pertinax's address.

128 Cass. Dio 66.26.3; HA, Hadr. 5.7.

129 Speidel (n. 105), 14: ‘Congiar[i]um accipite’.

130 Campbell (n. 12), 194; cf. Hebblewhite (n. 12), 74–6.

131 Tac. Ann. 12.69.3.

132 Campbell (n. 12), 186–91; Hebblewhite (n. 12), 77–9.

133 Tac. Hist. 1.5.2.

134 Flaig (n. 42), 25–32; Phang (n. 34), 155–62.

135 Veyne (n. 48), 339–45; Phang (n. 34), 153–200.

136 Wallace-Hadrill, A., ‘The emperor and his virtues’, Historia 30 (1981), 298323Google Scholar. Noreña, C., ‘The communication of the emperor's virtues’, JRS 91 (2001), 146–68Google Scholar identifies liberalitas and offshoots such as indulgentia and munificentia as among the most common imperial virtues marked on coinage in the Principate: see 158–9.

137 Campbell (n. 12), 181–5; J. Stäcker, Princeps und Miles. Studien zum Bundungs- und Nahverhältnis von Kaiser und Soldat im 1. und 2. Jahrhundert n. Chr. (Zurich, 2003), 369–403; Hebblewhite (n. 12), 77–81.

138 Cassiod. Hist. Trip. 6.30.6.

139 Stäcker (n. 137), 185–6.

140 Hebblewhite (n. 12), 152.

141 Oros. 7.40.6.

142 Millar (n. 10), 6.

143 For example Pertinax's closing remark reported at Cass. Dio 74.1.