Augustus_ The Life of Rome's First Emperor - Anthony Everitt [120]
After them rode Octavian, in the traditional chariot drawn by four horses, wearing a gold-embroidered toga and a flowered tunic. On his head was a laurel wreath signifying victory. Usually the general being honored by a triumph followed the holders of the offices of state and the Senate; but, on this occasion, Octavian went first, in a clear visual demonstration of his political predominance.
A few days later the Senate House, or Curia Hostilia, rebuilt after the mob burned it down on the day of Julius Caesar’s funeral, opened for business with the new name of the Curia Julia; a new speakers’ platform was constructed, decorated with rostra, ships’ prows, from Actium, and the temple to the now deified dictator, erected on the spot in the Forum where he had been cremated on an impromptu pyre, was dedicated.
Octavian had once been proud to call himself divi filius, for it authorized his power in the eyes of his adoptive father’s adoring soldiers and ordinary Roman citizens. But since the Sicilian War he had not used the title so frequently and now, from this high point of celebration, Octavian’s propaganda begins to make even less of Julius Caesar than in the past: the dictator had been an extremist, who destroyed old Rome, and the new Rome wanted to associate itself with tradition rather than innovation.
Sharp-eyed observers were struck by the fact that Octavian was accompanied during his triumph by two teenagers, riding on the chariot’s right and left trace horses. One was Gaius Claudius Marcellus, his sister Octavia’s fourteen-year-old son, and the other was Tiberius Claudius Nero, his wife Livia’s eldest son, thirteen.
Their arrival on the verge of adulthood promised to transform the dynamics of Octavian’s inner circle. Octavia was about six years older than her devoted brother. She adored her son, an attractive and intelligent boy, “cheerful in mind and disposition,” and, just as Julius Caesar had done in his own case, Octavian took a special interest in his development.
Tiberius was also a promising lad, but he was not of Octavian’s blood and so took second place in his plans. The man who was now in sole command of the Roman empire was beginning to consider how to ensure his regime’s long-term future. With his always uncertain health, it was not too soon to establish a dynastic succession; if his nephew fulfilled his promise, he would be an ideal heir.
There was another thing: Octavian liked and trusted youth. He and his “band of brothers,” his two trusted former school friends, Agrippa and Maecenas, had set out together on their great enterprise to avenge Caesar’s murder and win power when in their late teens. The challenges they faced called forth their talent; now Octavian was looking forward to promoting the new younger generation that was about to emerge. Perhaps as early as 29 B.C., he arranged for the minimum ages of officeholders to be reduced: in the case of a quaestor, from thirty years to twenty-five; of a consul, from forty-two to thirty-seven. Senators’ sons were expected to familiarize themselves with administration; they were allowed to wear the purple-striped toga, which was the uniform of a senator, encouraged to attend Senate meetings, and given officer posts during their military service.
Sadly, Octavian and his beloved Livia were childless, although she suffered one miscarriage. It is curious that both had had children by their former spouses. Perhaps, as one classical source has it, this was a case of physical incompatibility, but more probably some illness led one or the other to become infertile.
As yet the boys were too young to help shoulder the burdens of government. That remained the task of Agrippa and Maecenas, although little love was lost between them. The former was “more a rustic at heart than a man of refined tastes,” although he admired great art and argued that all paintings and sculptures should be nationalized rather than spirited away into private collections where