Thursday, September 24, 2009

The evil emperor Commodus



http://askville.amazon.com/Roman-Emperor-Commodus-contribute-Fall-Rome/AnswerViewer.do?requestId=15133525


Commodus' accession to power, ended a spell of 80 years in Roman history which had brought men to the throne by merit rather than by birth. The last man to take the throne merely by right of birth had been Domitian.

If Commodus merely had not lived up to the gruelingly high standards of his father, the world would have most likely forgiven him. But rather than just failing to be a brilliant emperor, Commodus was in fact a terrible one. Cruelty, vanity, power and fear formed into a terrifyingly dangerous mix of bloodlust, suspicion and megalomania. Commodus should be remembered as a monster, a tyrant who renamed months in his own honour, and who slaughtered his way through the circuses in ludicrous displays of 'manliness'.

Despite his initial promises to the army to continue Marcus Aurelius' attempts of expanding the empire into the territories conquered from the Quadi and Marcomanni, Commodus soon after surrendered all his father had achieved in his wars.
Indeed, Commodus' thoughts that to annex these new territories might have been beyond the capabilities of Rome, could well have been correct. And had emperor Hadrian not relinquished some of the gains of his predecessor Trajan ? But Commodus was no Hadrian and the army knew it. Commodus' retreat from those so direly contested territories was understood as an utter betrayal of everything the beloved Marcus Aurelius had stood for.
Whatever the circumstances surrounding the Roman withdrawal, Commodus did make a treaty with the Marcomanni. The treaty proved very successful in pacifying the barbarians, forcing them to accept various conditions. Although such peace might also have been due to Marcus Aurelius' late successes having reduced the barbarians' capacities for war.

3 comments:

  1. Really interesting stuff. I liked the part about naming months after himself, good research.

    ReplyDelete
  2. You don't hear about many of the Roman emporers except for Julius Ceasar. You normally don't hear about poor leaders in history. I thought this was a good idea although I was concerned that the presentation was a little hard to follow. Maybe I am just not familiar enough with Roman history.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Totally cool!!!!! Just wanted to post!

    ReplyDelete

Julius Caesar

Julius Caesar
Caesar (plural Caesars), Latin: Caesar (plural Caesars), is a title of imperial character. It derives from the cognomen of Julius Caesar, the Roman dictator. The change from being a familial name to an imperial title can be loosely dated to 68 / 69, the so-called "Year of the Four Emperors".