69 A.D. : the year of four emperors

Author(s)

    • Morgan, Gwyn

Bibliographic Information

69 A.D. : the year of four emperors

Gwyn Morgan

(Oxford paperbacks)

Oxford University Press, 2007, c2006

Available at  / 2 libraries

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Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The Year of Four Emperors, so the ancient sources assure us, was one of the most chaotic, violent and frightening periods in all Roman history: a time of assassinations and civil wars, of armies so out of control that they had no qualms about occupying the city of Rome, and of ambitious men who seized power only to lose it, one after another. In 69 AD, Gwyn Morgan offers a fresh look at this period, based on two considerations to which insufficient attention has been paid in the past. First, that we need to unravel rather than cherry-pick between the conflicting accounts of Tacitus, Plutarch and Suetonius, our three main sources of information. And second, that the role of the armies, as distinct from that of their commanders, has too often been exaggerated. The result is a remarkably accurate and insightful narrative history, filled with colorful portraits of the leading participants and new insights into the nature of the Roman military Morgan ranges from the suicide of Nero in June 68 to the triumph of Vespasian in December 69. In between, three other emperors hold power. We meet Galba, old, tightfisted and conservative, who was declared emperor in June 68 and assassinated in January 69. Otho, once Nero's boon companion, who was responsible for murdering Galba, seized power in a coup in Rome in January 69 and, to everybody's surprise, committed suicide three months later in a vain attempt to end the civil wars. Vitellius, as indolent as he was extravagant, who was put forward by two ambitious lieutenants, recognized by the senate in Rome once they heard of Otho's death in April, and cut down by Vespasian's partisans in the last days of December. And then there is Vespasian, the candidate who looked least likely to succeed, but (according to Tacitus) was still the first to be improved by becoming emperor. A strikingly vivid account of ancient Rome, 69 AD is an original and compelling account of one of the best known but perhaps least understood periods in all Roman history.

Table of Contents

Introduction 1: The Fall of Nero and the Julio-Claudian House 2: The Reign of Galba 3: Adoption and Assassination 4: The Opening of the Vitellian Offensive (January-February) 5: Otho Prepares for War (January-February) 6: The War between Otho and Vitellius (March-April) 7: The Reign of Vitellius (April-September 69) 8: The Beginning of the End: Vespasian through August 69 9: The Opening of the Flavian Offensive (August-October) 10: End-Game (November-December) Conclusion Appendices

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