Surprising deaths were likely to have been from undiagnosed natural causes. Poison scares often coincided with plagues, and there are well-attested cases of food poisoning, especially from contaminated fish. The practice of boiling down wine in lead pans to create a cooking sauce will have led to many illnesses and premature deaths. Some years later a close friend of Augustus, Nonius Asprenas, gave a party after which 130 guests fell ill and died, presumably from food poisoning. Asprenas was taken to court for murder, but (after a show of support by the princeps) was acquitted.

There was little that Livia could do in the face of this anonymous gossip. A woman had no locus as a public figure and was obliged to suffer slander in silence.

XVIII

EXERCISING POWER

23–17 B.C.

Travel was slow and often dangerous; weeks might pass before the princeps learned of a serious development on the Parthian frontier, months before any substantial reaction could be implemented. The pace of communications also slowed the analysis of complex problems. Important branches of knowledge—geography, for example, and economics—were in their infancy, so there were insufficient reliable and accessible data on which to base policy decisions. From a modern perspective, events took place in slow motion and in a fog.

Augustus and Agrippa took the business of empire seriously, realizing that it would be difficult to achieve anything without being on the spot themselves. Both men spent years away from Rome, traveling from province to province. Sometimes they exchanged places, one of them picking up where the other left off.

For some years after the settlement after Actium, the eastern provinces were largely left to their own devices. In 26 B.C., there was an unsuccessful Roman expedition to Arabia Felix (the southwest corner of the Arabian peninsula, today’s Yemen), probably aimed at opening up a trade route; in the following year, Galatia (in central Anatolia) was annexed as a province.

When the princeps sent Agrippa to the east in 23 B.C., we do not know exactly what his mission was. He made the island of Samos his headquarters and it can be assumed that his presence was intended to be a reminder of Roman power. It is possible that he also had an important unpublicized task—to gain intelligence on the Parthians. It would be useful to settle the unfinished business of the Roman defeat at Carrhae in 53 B.C., and, in particular, to negotiate the return of the army standards that the Parthians had captured (as well as those lost in 36 B.C. by Antony). The princeps was not interested in resuming hostilities and hoped for a long-term entente.

He intended either to join Agrippa or to take over from him, but was detained by trouble in Rome. The river Tiber overflowed its banks and flooded the city. The plague of the previous year continued throughout Italy and farmers stopped tilling the fields. Food shortages followed. The panic-stricken and angry mob did not trust old-style republican politicians to govern effectively and called for Augustus to be appointed dictator. It besieged the Senate House and threatened to burn it down with the senators inside it if they did not vote for the appointment.

The episode showed how fragile the princeps’ underlying position was. The careful balance between autocracy and a restoration of the Senate’s authority had been designed to reconcile the ruling class to the Augustan order. However, it irritated the people—that is, the hundreds of thousands of citizens who lived in or near Rome. They wanted to see Augustus seize absolute power openly and unambiguously.

Not only would it have been unwise to listen to such calls, it would have been illegal, for Mark Antony had abolished the dictatorship in 44, shortly after the Ides of March. Any attempt to restore the post would infuriate mainstream senatorial opinion. Augustus made it clear that he would do no such thing.

When facing disgrace a Roman would tear his clothes in public, and this was what the princeps did to dramatize his refusal to be moved. He went up to the crowd, bared his throat, and swore that he would rather be stabbed to death by its daggers than accept the appointment. Instead, he had himself made commissioner for the grain supply, rapidly put an end to the food shortages, and arranged for the annual appointment of two former praetors to supervise the distribution of grain in the future. Although, so far as we know, Augustus did not reform the system of production and distribution, he did his best to ensure that shortfalls were quickly made good and he used his own financial resources to alleviate famine.

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