early signs of decline in the adequate reign of tiberius, agustusus’ successor as princeps, 14-37...

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EarLY SIGNS OF DECLINE IN THE ADEQUATE REIGN of Tiberius, Agustusus’ successor as princeps, 14-37 CE By: … British Museum, Portrait Head (Tiberius), N.d., http://www.britishmuseum.org/research/search_the_collection_d atabase/search_object_details.aspx? objectid=433299&partid=1&output=People%2F!!%2FOR%2F!! %2F94496%2F!%2F94496-1-6%2F!%2FPortrait+of+Tiberius%2F!%2F %2F!!%2F%2F!!!%2F&orig=%2Fresearch %2Fsearch_the_collection_database

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relationship with the senate: The Law of Treason (Maiestas) “By decree the Senate for preserving the citizens”. His poor attitude toward the Senate was an early sign of the deteriorating relationship that played a role in Rome’s eventual downfall. Professor Eddie Lowry, Clark Collection of Ancient Art “I would ask you sire: when are you going to vote? If first, you set me an example to follow; if last, I am afraid that I may unintentionally disagree with you.” Senator Gnaeus Piso Gov’t

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Page 1: EarLY SIGNS OF DECLINE IN THE ADEQUATE REIGN of Tiberius, Agustusus’ successor as princeps, 14-37 CE By: … British Museum, Portrait Head (Tiberius), N.d.,

EarLY SIGNS OF DECLINE IN THE ADEQUATE REIGN

of Tiberius,Agustusus’ successor as

princeps, 14-37 CEBy: …

British Museum, Portrait Head (Tiberius), N.d., http://www.britishmuseum.org/research/search_the_collection_database/search_object_details.aspx?objectid=433299&partid=1&output=People%2F!!%2FOR%2F!!%2F94496%2F!%2F94496-1-6%2F!%2FPortrait+of+Tiberius%2F!%2F%2F!!%2F%2F!!!%2F&orig=%2Fresearch%2Fsearch_the_collection_database%2Fadvanced_search.aspx&currentPage=1&numpages=10 (April 11, 2013).

Page 2: EarLY SIGNS OF DECLINE IN THE ADEQUATE REIGN of Tiberius, Agustusus’ successor as princeps, 14-37 CE By: … British Museum, Portrait Head (Tiberius), N.d.,

TIBERIUS AS PRINCEPS:CONNECTING TO augustus

BBC History, Augustus, 2013, http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/historic_figures/augustus.shtml (April 11, 2013).

Bronze bust of Augustus, Tiberius’ predecessor.

NameGov’t

The Julio-Claudian Family Tree

Antony Kamm’s The Romans, 2006-2009, Julio-Claudian Family Tree, http://www.the-romans.co.uk/augustus_genealogy.htm (April 11, 2013).

Page 3: EarLY SIGNS OF DECLINE IN THE ADEQUATE REIGN of Tiberius, Agustusus’ successor as princeps, 14-37 CE By: … British Museum, Portrait Head (Tiberius), N.d.,

relationship with the senate: The Law of Treason (Maiestas)

“By decree the Senate for preserving the citizens”. His poor attitude toward the Senate was an early sign of the deteriorating relationship that played a role in Rome’s eventual downfall.

Professor Eddie Lowry, Clark Collection of Ancient Art <http://www.ripon.edu/Academics/art/clark/coin_photos/33rev.gif >

“I would ask you sire: when are you going to vote?If first, you set me an example to follow; if last, I am afraid that I may unintentionally disagree with you.” Senator Gnaeus Piso

Gov’t

Page 4: EarLY SIGNS OF DECLINE IN THE ADEQUATE REIGN of Tiberius, Agustusus’ successor as princeps, 14-37 CE By: … British Museum, Portrait Head (Tiberius), N.d.,

MAGISTRATES LOSE FAVOUR

Gov’t

Consuls and praetors

By the 400s emperors will control so much power that Tiberius can take some blame for starting this trend.

Page 5: EarLY SIGNS OF DECLINE IN THE ADEQUATE REIGN of Tiberius, Agustusus’ successor as princeps, 14-37 CE By: … British Museum, Portrait Head (Tiberius), N.d.,

TIBERIUS’ OPPONENTS

Coin depicting Stoic Brutus and honouring him for murdering Caesar.

The Roman Numismatic Gallery, Imperatorial Coins of the Late Republic, 1996-2013, http://www.romancoins.info/Imperatorial-murderers.HTML (April 11, 2013).

Social Relations/Gov’t

Page 6: EarLY SIGNS OF DECLINE IN THE ADEQUATE REIGN of Tiberius, Agustusus’ successor as princeps, 14-37 CE By: … British Museum, Portrait Head (Tiberius), N.d.,

Self-Imposed Exile

Map of Italy, http://www.dailynews.lk/images/edisupplement/Map%20of%20Italy.gif

Name

Map of Italy and its remote islands; specifically note the Isle of Capri where Tiberius went in 28 CE. Tiberius wasn’t the most popular emperor.

Social Relations

Page 7: EarLY SIGNS OF DECLINE IN THE ADEQUATE REIGN of Tiberius, Agustusus’ successor as princeps, 14-37 CE By: … British Museum, Portrait Head (Tiberius), N.d.,

Dealing with the early Legions’ revolts

Pannonia

“Wretched Pay, Long Terms of Service, and Brutal

Disciplinary Enforcement.”

1.European History. http://whydyoueatthat.wordpress.com/2011/04/27/scrapple-its-final-european-

2. Wikimedia Commons. Pannonia. http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Pannonia_SPQR.png?uselang=fr?uselang=fr. (November 5, 2011).

2.

1.

Romanization

Even from this early time, legions will not always loyally follow their emperor -a sign of decline.

Page 8: EarLY SIGNS OF DECLINE IN THE ADEQUATE REIGN of Tiberius, Agustusus’ successor as princeps, 14-37 CE By: … British Museum, Portrait Head (Tiberius), N.d.,

FOREIGN POLICY: maintain frontiers

Tiberius avoided war with the powerful Parthians. By the end of the Roman Empire in the west another powerful empire will rise in Iran, so Tiberius can’t be blamed for this factor that contributed to Rome’s decline. History World International, A History of the Parthians, N.d.,

http://history-world.org/parthianmap.jpg (April 11, 2013).

Romanization

Page 9: EarLY SIGNS OF DECLINE IN THE ADEQUATE REIGN of Tiberius, Agustusus’ successor as princeps, 14-37 CE By: … British Museum, Portrait Head (Tiberius), N.d.,

A Citizen’s Rights Decline

“Tiberius tried to limit free speech in Rome; a citizen’s right.”

Normal men, those of working (Plebian) class, were about to be denied their right to speak freely. Here Tiberius can take some blame for the long, slow erosion of respect for and rights of plebs.

2008. Rome Reading. http://www.bible-researcher.com/headcoverings3.html. (November 5, 2011).

Burgan, Micheal. Empire of Ancient. New York: Shoreline Publishing inc, 2005.

Social Relations

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Tiberius’ Religious Views

Sympathized with the Christians and treated them well,

but still supported the imperial cults.

The oberver,2011, http://observanda.blogspot.com/2011/03/do-you-dare-take-quiz.html

Social Relations

The growth of Christianity was a factor in Rome’s decline, so Tiberius’ encouragement of this religion may have been an early long-term cause.

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taking care of rome’s wealth

Like other emperors before and after, Tiberius built a palace on the Palatine Hill in Rome. His excesses were not equal to Nero’s. He contributed his small part to a drain on the treasury that eventually contributed to Rome’s fall.

Google Sightseeing, Ancient Rome, Feb. 6, 2013, http://www.google.ca/imgres?hl=en&biw=1024&bih=625&tbm=isch&tbnid=4QgV1k4lH5akbM:&imgrefurl=http://googlesightseeing.com/2013/02/ancient-rome/&docid=sZWF5Hokq1PkBM&imgurl=http://googlesightseeing.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/11/r2-atrb.jpg&w=482&h=323&ei=0OVmUeazC8fW2QWalIGQAw&zoom=1&iact=hc&vpx=304&vpy=306&dur=11656&hovh=184&hovw=274&tx=61&ty=209&page=5&tbnh=151&tbnw=214&start=83&ndsp=22&ved=1t:429,r:85,s:0,i:339 (April 11, 2013).

Economics

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InfraSTRUCTURETo assist his treason trials he built permanent barracks for the Praetorian Guard just outside Rome. It wasn’t the building that contributed to decline, in this case, but the fact that he was giving more responsibility to the Praetorian Guard; in turn, that eventually became a factor in weakening the empire.

Vroma (Virtual Community for Teaching and Learning Classics), Praetorian Guard, N.d., http://www.vroma.org/images/mcmanus_images/cancelleriaA_soldiers.jpg (April 11, 2013).