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The Empress-Mother
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THE EMPRESS-MOTHER
[53]
IVIA, Empress and Empress-Mother for nearly seventy
years, is one of the stateliest figures in Roman
history. By birth she belonged to the great Claudian
house, a race far more celebrated indeed for the arts
of peace than for triumphs in war, but the proudest and
most resolute of Roman aristocrats. Adopted by one of
the Livian family—hence the name which she bore
throughout her life—she married into her own house,
though not into her own branch of it.
Her husband was a certain Tiberius Claudius Nero,
descended from the famous Nero, whose rapid march
northwards in the twelfth year of the Second Punic war
had assured, not indeed the safety of Rome, which was
no longer doubtful, but the speedy end of a desolating
war.
[54] Her husband took the wrong, or, at least, the
unsuccessful side in one of the struggles of the Civil
War, and had to fly for his life. Livia was with him,
and the pair had more than one hair-breadth escape,
once very nearly being discovered to their pursuers by
the crying of the infant which the young wife was
carrying with her, at another being almost burnt alive
by a forest fire. But a reconciliation was brought
about between Nero and Augustus now acknowledged master
of the Western world, and the fugitives returned to
Rome. Livia's beauty attracted the notice of the
Emperor. Her husband divorced her, gave her away to her
new spouse and actually—so the story runs—sat as a
guest at the marriage feast. She was then but eighteen,
the mother of one child (afterwards the Emperor
Tiberius), and about to become the mother of another.
It was not then in a very reputable way, that Livia
became the partner of the Imperial throne. But we must
not judge these things by modern standards, and
whatever we may think of Augustus,
[55] Nero and Livia are not much to blame. Resistance to the
supreme ruler of Rome was hardly to be thought of, and
no one certainly in those days dreamt of being a martyr
for the sanctity of the marriage tie. Once seated on
the throne she was a model of all that a wife should
be. Not even a breath of slander tarnished her fair
fame. She was a matron of the old Roman type, the
finest ever seen outside the circle of christian
womanhood.
I have spoken of Livia's ambition for her children.
Whether she used any sinister means to clear the way to
the throne for Tiberius, the elder, is a matter about
which we know nothing for certain. That she was
suspected is clear, but then any woman in her position
and with her opportunities would have been suspected.
That when Tiberius gained the object of her ambition
she sought to secure him in power by removing the
unhappy youth
who had the fatal distinction of being the grandson of
Augustus, is almost certainly true. Tacitus seems to
apportion the guilt of the murder between the mother
and the son. He tells us, however, that Tiberius
disclaimed all knowledge of the deed, and professed an
intention of bringing it under the notice of the
Senate, an intention from which he was turned only by a
representation that there were secrets of Empire
[56] which it would be highly dangerous to reveal, and about
which the Senate must not be permitted to judge. The
historian has a vehement prejudice against Tiberius,
and we may perhaps conclude that the balance of
probabilities inclines to the belief that Livia rather
than her son had the principal share in the deed.
If Livia sinned for her children, she was grievously
punished through them. The younger of the two, Drusus,
a brilliant soldier, who carried the arms of Rome into
regions never visited by them before or after his time,
died at the age of thirty (A. D. 9). This was sad
enough, though it may well be that he was happy in
being taken away from the evil to come and that his
mother lived to feel it. She suffered far more when the
elder son, the one for whom she had dared so much and
suffered so much, showed jealousy which was not long in
growing into something like hatred.
She seemed to him to claim an equal share in the
government, and this his sullen temper could not brook.
He had grown indeed so used to her counsels that he
found it hard to do without them; but he deliberately
estranged himself from her more and more completely. It
was especially annoying for him to be styled, as he was
in the proceedings of the Senate, the son of Augustus
and Livia. He refused to allow the title of "Mother of
the Country"
[57] to be bestowed on her; he limited as far as he could
the distinctions which her position seemed to make
natural. He went further than this; he told
her plainly that she was fond of meddling with affairs
too great for her or for any woman. His jealousy
descended sometimes to ludicrous meanness. A fire
broke out near the Temple of Vesta, the most sacred
spot in Rome, and the Empress, who must have been then
past her eightieth year, herself came upon the scene,
as she had more than once in the lifetime of Augustus,
and urged the populace and the soldiers who were
putting out the flames to do their very best. Tiberius
was most unreasonably angry at her activity. At last
the two came to an open feud.
Livia begged her son to bestow some honour on one of
her protégés. He refused and she repeated her request.
At last he said "Yes, I will do it, if you will allow
this entry to be made in the register; This was extorted
from me by my mother.' " Stung to the quick, she
produced an old memorandum in the hand-writing of
Augustus, complaining of the morose and odious
character of his stepson. Tiberius was furious to find
that such a document had been kept so carefully and was
now brought up against him. This was said to be one of
the causes that drove him out of Rome, where, indeed,
he never set foot during the last eleven years of his
life. His mother lived three years after his departure.
During
[58] that time he saw her but once only, and that but for a
few hours. She must have gone out of the city to meet
him. He did not attend her funeral; neglected her last
wishes as to the disposition of the body; and did not
carry into effect the provisions of her will.
All her friends felt the weight of his displeasure. He
bore and showed a grudge even against those whom she
had entrusted with the conduct of her funeral rites.
Such was the end of all her guilty scheming. There is
no doubt that, up to time of the rupture with her son
Livia exercised a moderating influence on his rule.
Tacitus distinguishes five periods in his character.
There can be little doubt indeed that the historian
does him, on the whole, less than justice; still we may
accept the statement that "as long as his mother lived
he was partly good and partly bad." But the best side
of Livia's nature is one of which, but for an accident,
we should have known nothing. Among the remains of
antiquity which time has spared, is the chamber in
which the cinerary urns of Livia's family
were deposited. There are stored in almost endless
succession the urns of her personal attendants, her
robe-women and tire-women, and others who filled
[59] posts in an establishment which must have been one of
truly imperial dimensions. Generations of such servants
passed away during her long life. There must have been
some tenderness, some capacity of affection in the
woman to whom they rendered faithful service and who
preserved the affectionate memorial of them when they
were gone.
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