Antiquities of the Jews
- Book XIX
CONTAINING THE INTERVAL OF THREE YEARS AND A HALF.
FROM THE DEPARTURE OUT OF BABYLON TO FADUS, THE ROMAN PROCURATOR.
CHAPTER 1.
HOW CAIUS (1) WAS SLAIN BY CHEREA.
1. NOW this Caius (2) did not demonstrate his madness in offering
injuries only to the Jews at Jerusalem, or to those that dwelt in the
neighborhood; but suffered it to extend itself through all the earth and
sea, so far as was in subjection to the Romans, and filled it with ten
thousand mischiefs; so many indeed in number as no former history
relates. But Rome itself felt the most dismal effects of what he did,
while he deemed that not to be any way more honorable than the rest of
the cities; but he pulled and hauled its other citizens, but especially
the senate, and particularly the nobility, and such as had been
dignified by illustrious ancestors; he also had ten thousand devices
against such of the equestrian order, as it was styled, who were
esteemed by the citizens equal in dignity and wealth with the senators,
because out of them the senators were themselves chosen; these he
treated after all ignominious manner, and removed them out of his way,
while they were at once slain, and their wealth plundered, because he
slew men generally in order to seize on their riches. He also asserted
his own divinity, and insisted on greater honors to be paid him by his
subjects than are due to mankind. He also frequented that temple of
Jupiter which they style the Capitol, which is with them the most holy
of all their temples, and had boldness enough to call himself the
brother of Jupiter. And other pranks he did like a madman; as when he
laid a bridge from the city Dicearchia, which belongs to Campania, to
Misenum, another city upon the sea-side, from one promontory to another,
of the length of thirty furlongs, as measured over the sea. And this was
done because he esteemed it to be a most tedious thing to row over it in
a small ship, and thought withal that it became him to make that bridge,
since he was lord of the sea, and might oblige it to give marks of
obedience as well as the earth; so he enclosed the whole bay within his
bridge, and drove his chariot over it; and thought that, as he was a
god, it was fit for him to travel over such roads as this was. Nor did
he abstain from the plunder of any of the Grecian temples, and gave
order that all the engravings and sculptures, and the rest of the
ornaments of the statues and donations therein dedicated, should be
brought to him, saying that the best things ought to be set no where but
in the best place, and that the city of Rome was that best place. He
also adorned his own house and his gardens with the curiosities brought
from those temples, together with the houses he lay at when he traveled
all over Italy; whence he did not scruple to give a command that the
statue of Jupiter Olympius, so called because he was honored at the
Olympian games by the Greeks, which was the work of Phidias the
Athenian, should be brought to Rome. Yet did not he compass his end,
because the architects told Memmius Regulus, who was commanded to remove
that statue of Jupiter, that the workmanship was such as would be
spoiled, and would not bear the removal. It was also reported that
Memmius, both on that account, and on account of some such mighty
prodigies as are of an incredible nature, put off the taking it down,
and wrote to Caius those accounts, as his apology for not having done
what his epistle required of him; and that when he was thence in danger
of perishing, he was saved by Caius being dead himself, before he had
put him to death.
2. Nay, Caius's madness came to this height, that when he had a daughter
born, he carried her into the capitol, and put her upon the knees of the
statue, and said that the child was common to him and to Jupiter, and
determined that she had two fathers, but which of these fathers were the
greatest he left undetermined; and yet mankind bore him in such his
pranks. He also gave leave to slaves to accuse their masters of any
crimes whatsoever they pleased; for all such accusations were terrible,
because they were in great part made to please him, and at his
suggestion, insomuch that Pollux, Claudius's slave, had the boldness to
lay an accusation against Claudius himself; and Caius was not ashamed to
be present at his trial of life and death, to hear that trial of his own
uncle, in hopes of being able to take him off, although he did not
succeed to his mind. But when he had filled the whole habitable world
which he governed with false accusations and miseries, and had
occasioned the greatest insults of slaves against their masters, who
indeed in a great measure ruled them, there were many secret plots now
laid against him; some in anger, and in order for men to revenge
themselves, on account of the miseries they had already undergone from
him; and others made attempts upon him, in order to take him off before
they should fall into such great miseries, while his death came very
fortunately for the preservation of the laws of all men, and had a great
influence upon the public welfare; and this happened most happily for
our nation in particular, which had almost utterly perished if he had
not been suddenly slain. And I confess I have a mind to give a full
account of this matter particularly, because it will afford great
assurance of the power of God, and great comfort to those that are under
afflictions, and wise caution to those who think their happiness will
never end, nor bring them at length to the most lasting miseries, if
they do not conduct their lives by the principles of virtue.
3. Now there were three several conspiracies made in order to take off
Caius, and each of these three were conducted by excellent persons.
Emilius Regulus, born at Corduba in Spain, got some men together, and
was desirous to take Caius off, either by them or by himself. Another
conspiracy there was laid by them, under the conduct of Cherea Cassius,
the tribune [of the Pretorian band]. Minucianus Annins was also one of
great consequence among those that were prepared to oppose his tyranny.
Now the several occasions of these men's several hatred and conspiracy
against Caius were these: Regulus had indignation and hatred against all
injustice, for he had a mind naturally angry, and bold, and free, which
made him not conceal his counsels; so he communicated them to many of
his friends, and to others who seemed to him persons of activity and
vigor: Minucianus entered into this conspiracy, because of the injustice
done to Lepidus his particular friend, and one of the best character of
all the citizens, whom Caius had slain, as also because he was afraid of
himself, since Caius's wrath tended to the slaughter of all alike: and
for Cherea, he came in, because he thought it a deed worthy of a free
ingenuous man to kill Caius, and was ashamed of the reproaches he lay
under from Caius, as though he were a coward; as also because he was
himself in danger every day from his friendship with him, and the
observance he paid him. These men proposed this attempt to all the rest
that were concerned, who saw the injuries that were offered them, and
were desirous that Caius's slaughter might succeed by their mutual
assistance of one another, and they might themselves escape being killed
by the taking off Caius; that perhaps they should gain their point; and
that it would be a happy thing, if they should gain it, to approve
themselves to so many excellent persons, as earnestly wished to be
partakers with them in their design for the delivery of the city and of
the government, even at the hazard of their own lives. But still Cherea
was the most zealous of them all, both out of a desire of getting
himself the greatest name, and also by reason of his access to Caius's
presence with less danger, because he was tribune, and could therefore
the more easily kill him.
4. Now at this time came on the horse-races [Circensian games]; the view
of which games was eagerly desired by the people of Rome, for they come
with great alacrity into the hippodrome [circus] at such times, and
petition their emperors, in great multitudes, for what they stand in
need of; who usually did not think fit to deny them their requests, but
readily and gratefully granted them. Accordingly, they most
importunately desired that Caius would now ease them in their tributes,
and abate somewhat of the rigor of their taxes imposed upon them; but he
would not hear their petition; and when their clamors increased, he sent
soldiers some one way and some another, and gave order that they should
lay hold on those that made the clamors, and without any more ado bring
them out, and put them to death. These were Caius's commands, and those
who were commanded executed the same; and the number of those who were
slain on this occasion was very great. Now the people saw this, and bore
it so far, that they left off clamoring, because they saw with their own
eyes that this petition to be relieved, as to the payment of their
money, brought immediate death upon them. These things made Cherea more
resolute to go on with his plot, in order to put an end to this
barbarity of Caius against men. He then at several times thought to fall
upon Caius, even as he was feasting; yet did he restrain himself by some
considerations; not that he had any doubt on him about killing him, but
as watching for a proper season, that the attempt might not be
frustrated, but that he might give the blow so as might certainly gain
his purpose.
5. Cherea had been in the army a long time, yet was he not pleased with
conversing so much with Caius. But Caius had set him to require the
tributes, and other dues, which, when not paid in due time, were
forfeited to Caesar's treasury; and he had made some delays in requiring
them, because those burdens had been doubled, and had rather indulged
his own mild disposition than performed Caius's command; nay, indeed, be
provoked Caius to anger by his sparing men, and pitying the hard
fortunes of those from whom he demanded the taxes; and Caius upbraided
him with his sloth and effeminacy in being so long about collecting the
taxes. And indeed he did not only affront him in other respects, but
when he gave him the watchword of the day, to whom it was to be given by
his place, he gave him feminine words, and those of a nature very
reproachful; and these watchwords he gave out, as having been initiated
in the secrets of certain mysteries, which he had been himself the
author of. Now although he had sometimes put on women's clothes, and had
been wrapt in some embroidered garments to them belonging, and done a
great many other things, in order to make the company mistake him for a
woman; yet did he, by way of reproach, object the like womanish behavior
to Cherea. But when Cherea received the watchword from him, he had
indignation at it, but had greater indignation at the delivery of it to
others, as being laughed at by those that received it; insomuch that his
fellow tribunes made him the subject of their drollery; for they would
foretell that he would bring them some of his usual watchwords when he
was about to take the watchword from Caesar, and would thereby make him
ridiculous; on which accounts he took the courage of assuming certain
partners to him, as having just reasons for his indignation against
Caius. Now there was one Pompedius, a senator, and one who had gone
through almost all posts in the government, but otherwise an Epicurean,
and for that reason loved to lead an inactive life. Now Timidius, an
enemy of his, had informed Caius that he had used indecent reproaches
against him, and he made use of Quintilia for a witness to them; a woman
she was much beloved by many that frequented the theater, and
particularly by Pompedius, on account of her great beauty. Now this
woman thought it a horrible thing to attest to an accusation that
touched the life of her lover, which was also a lie. Timidius, however,
wanted to have her brought to the torture. Caius was irritated at this
reproach upon him, and commanded Cherea, without any delay, to torture
Quintilia, as he used to employ Cherea in such bloody matters, and those
that required the torture, because he thought he would do it the more
barbarously, in order to avoid that imputation of effeminacy which he
had laid upon him. But Quintilia, when she was brought to the rack, trod
upon the foot of one of her associates, and let him know that he might
be of good courage, and not be afraid of the consequence of her
tortures, for that she would bear them with magnanimity. Cherea tortured
this woman after a cruel manner; unwillingly indeed, but because he
could not help it. He then brought her, without being in the least moved
at what she had suffered, into the presence of Caius, and that in such a
state as was sad to behold; and Caius, being somewhat affected with the
sight of Quintilia, who had her body miserably disordered by the pains
she had undergone, freed both her and Pompedius of the crime laid to
their charge. He also gave her money to make her an honorable amends,
and comfort her for that maiming of her body which she had suffered, and
for her glorious patience under such insufferable torments.
6. This matter sorely grieved Cherea, as having been the cause, as far
as he could, or the instrument, of those miseries to men, which seemed
worthy of consolation to Caius himself; on which account he said to
Clement and to Papinius, (of whom Clement was general of the army, and
Papinius was a tribune,) "To be sure, O Clement, we have no way failed
in our guarding the emperor; for as to those that have made conspiracies
against his government, some have been slain by our care and pains, and
some have been by us tortured, and this to such a degree, that he hath
himself pitied them. How great then is our virtue in submitting to
conduct his armies!" Clement held his peace, but showed the shame he was
under in obeying Caius's orders, both by his eyes and his blushing
countenance, while he thought it by no means right to accuse the emperor
in express words, lest their own safety should be endangered thereby.
Upon which Cherea took courage, and spake to him without fear of the
dangers that were before him, and discoursed largely of the sore
calamities under which the city and the government then labored, and
said, "We may indeed pretend in words that Caius is the person unto whom
the cause of such miseries ought to be imputed; but, in the opinion of
such as are able to judge uprightly, it is I, O Clement! and this
Papinius, and before us thou thyself, who bring these tortures upon the
Romans, and upon all mankind. It is not done by our being subservient to
the commands of Caius, but it is done by our own consent; for whereas it
is in our power to put an end to the life of this man, who hath so
terribly injured the citizens and his subjects, we are his guard in
mischief, and his executioners instead of his soldiers, and are the
instruments of his cruelty. We bear these weapons, not for our liberty,
not for the Roman government, but only for his preservation, who hath
enslaved both their bodies and their minds; and we are every day
polluted with the blood that we shed, and the torments we inflict upon
others; and this we do, till somebody becomes Caius's instrument in
bringing the like miseries upon ourselves. Nor does he thus employ us
because he hath a kindness for us, but rather because he hath a
suspicion of us, as also because when abundance more have been killed,
(for Caius will set no bounds to his wrath, since he aims to do all, not
out of regard to justice, but to his own pleasure,) we shall also
ourselves be exposed to his cruelty; whereas we ought to be the means of
confirming the security and liberty of all, and at the same time to
resolve to free ourselves from dangers.
7. Hereupon Clement openly commended Cherea's intentions, but bid him
hold his tongue; for that in case his words should get out among many,
and such things should be spread abroad as were fit to be concealed, the
plot would come to be discovered before it was executed, and they should
be brought to punishment; but that they should leave all to futurity,
and the hope which thence arose, that some fortunate event would come to
their assistance; that, as for himself, his age would not permit him to
make any attempt in that case. "However, although perhaps I could
suggest what may be safer than what thou, Cherea, hast contrived and
said, yet trow is it possible for any one to suggest what is more for
thy reputation?" So Clement went his way home, with deep reflections on
what he had heard, and what he had himself said. Cherea also was under a
concern, and went quickly to Cornelius Sabinus, who was himself one of
the tribunes, and whom he otherwise knew to be a worthy man, and a lover
of liberty, and on that account very uneasy at the present management of
public affairs, he being desirous to come immediately to the execution
of what had been determined, and thinking it right for him to propose it
to the other, and afraid lest Clement should discover them, and besides
looking upon delays and puttings off to be the next to desisting from
the enterprise.
8. But as all was agreeable to Sabinus, who had himself, equally without
Cherea, the same design, but had been silent for want of a person to
whom he could safely communicate that design; so having now met with
one, who not only promised to conceal what he heard, but who had already
opened his mind to him, he was much more encouraged, and desired of
Cherea that no delay might be made therein. Accordingly they went to
Minucianus, who was as virtuous a man, and as zealous to do glorious
actions, as themselves, and suspected by Caius on occasion of the
slaughter of Lepidus; for Minucianus and Lepidus were intimate friends,
and both in fear of the dangers that they were under; for Caius was
terrible to all the great men, as appearing ready to act a mad part
towards each of them in particular, and towards all of: them in general;
and these men were afraid of one another, while they were yet uneasy at
the posture of affairs, but avoided to declare their mind and their
hatred against Caius to one another, out of fear of the dangers they
might be in thereby, although they perceived by other means their mutual
hatred against Caius, and on that account were not averse to a mutual
kindness one towards another.
9. When Minuetanus and Cherea had met together, and saluted one another,
(as they had been used on former conversations to give the upper hand to
Minucianus, both on account of his eminent dignity, for he was the
noblest of all the citizens, and highly commended by all men, especially
when he made speeches to them,) Minuetanus began first, and asked Cherea,
What was the watchword he had received that day from Caius; for the
affront which was offered Cherea, in giving the watchwords, was famous
over the city. But Cherea made no delay so long as to reply to that
question, out of the joy he had that Minueianus would have such
confidence in him as to discourse with him. "But do thou," said he,
"give me the watchword of liberty. And I return thee my thanks that thou
hast so greatly encouraged me to exert myself after an extraordinary
manner; nor do I stand in need of many words to encourage me, since both
thou and I are of the same mind, and partakers of the same resolutions,
and this before we have conferred together. I have indeed but one sword
girt on, but this one will serve us both. Come on, therefore, let us set
about the work. Do thou go first, if thou hast a mind, and bid me follow
thee; or else I will go first, and thou shalt assist me, and we will
assist one another, and trust one another. Nor is there a necessity for
even one sword to such as have a mind disposed to such works, by which
mind the sword uses to be successful. I am zealous about this action,
nor am I solicitous what I may myself undergo; for I can not at leisure
to consider the dangers that may come upon myself, so deeply am I
troubled at the slavery our once free country is now under, and at the
contempt cast upon our excellent laws, and at the destruction which
hangs over all men, by the means of Caius. I wish that I may be judged
by thee, and that thou mayst esteem me worthy of credit in these
matters, seeing we are both of the same opinion, and there is herein no
difference between us."
10. When Minucianus saw the vehemency with which Cherea delivered
himself, he gladly embraced him, and encouraged him in his bold attempt,
commending him, and embracing him; so he let him go with his good
wishes; and some affirm that he thereby confirmed Minuclanus in the
prosecution of what had been agreed among them; for as Cherea entered
into the court, the report runs, that a voice came from among the
multitude to encourage him, which bid him finish what he was about, and
take the opportunity that Providence afforded; and that Cherea at first
suspected that some one of the conspirators had betrayed him, and he was
caught, but at length perceived that it was by way of exhortation.
Whether somebody (3) that was conscious of what he was about, gave a
signal for his encouragement, or whether it was God himself, who looks
upon the actions of men, that encouraged him to go on boldly in his
design, is uncertain. The plot was now communicated to a great many, and
they were all in their armor; some of the conspirators being senators,
and some of the equestrian order, and as many of the soldiery as were
made acquainted with it; for there was not one of them who would not
reckon it a part of his happiness to kill Caius; and on that account
they were all very zealous in the affair, by what means soever any one
could come at it, that he might not be behindhand in these virtuous
designs, but might be ready with all his alacrity or power, both by
words and actions, to complete this slaughter of a tyrant. And besides
these, Callistus also, who was a freed-man of Caius, and was the only
man that had arrived at the greatest degree of power under him, - such a
power, indeed, as was in a manner equal to the power of the tyrant
himself, by the dread that all men had of him, and by the great riches
he had acquired; for he took bribes most plenteously, and committed
injuries without bounds, and was more extravagant in the use of his
power in unjust proceedings than any other. He also knew the disposition
of Caius to be implacable, and never to be turned from what he had
resolved on. He had withal many other reasons why he thought himself in
danger, and the vastness of his wealth was not one of the least of them;
on which account he privately ingratiated himself with Claudius, and
transferred his courtship to him, out of this hope, that in case, upon
the removal of Caius, the government should come to him, his interest in
such changes should lay a foundation for his preserving his dignity
under him, since he laid in beforehand a stock of merit, and did
Claudius good offices in his promotion. He had also the boldness to
pretend that he had been persuaded to make away with Claudius, by
poisoning him, but had still invented ten thousand excuses for delaying
to do it. But it seems probable to me that Callistus only counterfeited
this, in order to ingratiate himself with Claudius; for if Caius had
been in earnest resolved to take off Claudius, he would not have
admitted of Callistus's excuses; nor would Callistus, if he had been
enjoined to do such an act as was desired by Caius, have put it off; nor
if he had disobeyed those injunctions of his master, had he escaped
immediate punishment; while Claudius was preserved from the madness of
Caius by a certain Divine providence, and Callistus pretended to such a
piece of merit as he no way deserved.
11. However, the execution of Cherea's designs was put off from day to
day, by the sloth of many therein concerned; for as to Cherea himself,
he would not willingly make any delay in that execution, thinking every
time a fit time for it; for frequent opportunities offered themselves;
as when Caius went up to the capitol to sacrifice for his daughter, or
when he stood upon his royal palace, and threw gold and silver pieces of
money among the people, he might be pushed down headlong, because the
top of the palace, that looks towards the market-place, was very high;
and also when he celebrated the mysteries, which he had appointed at
that time; for he was then no way secluded from the people, but
solicitous to do every thing carefully and decently, and was free from
all suspicion that he should be then assaulted by any body; and although
the gods should afford him no divine assistance to enable him to take
away his life, yet had he strength himself sufficient to despatch Caius,
even without a sword. Thus was Chorea angry at his fellow conspirators,
for fear they should suffer a proper opportunity to pass by; and they
were themselves sensible that he had just cause to be angry at them, and
that his eagerness was for their advantage; yet did they desire he would
have a little longer patience, lest, upon any disappointment they might
meet with, they should put the city into disorder, and an inquisition
should be made after the conspiracy, and should render the courage of
those that were to attack Caius without success, while he would then
secure himself more carefully than ever against them; that it would
therefore be the best to set about the work when the shows were
exhibited in the palace. These shows were acted in honor of that Caesar
(4) who first of all changed the popular government, and transferred it
to himself; galleries being fixed before the palace, where the Romans
that were patricians became spectators, together with their children and
their wives, and Caesar himself was to be also a spectator; and they
reckoned, among those many ten thousands who would there be crowded into
a narrow compass, they should have a favorable opportunity to make their
attempt upon him as he came in, because his guards that should protect
him, if any of them should have a mind to do it, would not here be able
to give him any assistance.
12. Cherea consented to this delay; and when the shows were exhibited,
it was resolved to do the work the first day. But fortune, which allowed
a further delay to his slaughter, was too hard for their foregoing
resolution; and as three days of the regular times for these shows were
now over, they had much ado to get the business done on the last day.
Then Cherea called the conspirators together, and spake thus to them:
"So much time passed away without effort is a reproach to us, as
delaying to go through such a virtuous design as we are engaged in; but
more fatal will this delay prove if we be discovered, and the design be
frustrated; for Caius will then become more cruel in his unjust
proceedings. Do we not see how long we deprive all our friends of their
liberty, and give Caius leave still to tyrannize over them? while we
ought to have procured them security for the future, and, by laying a
foundation for the happiness of others, gain to ourselves great
admiration and honor for all time to come." Now while the conspirators
had nothing tolerable to say by way of contradiction, and yet did not
quite relish what they were doing, but stood silent and astonished, he
said further, "O my brave comrades! why do we make such delays? Do not
you see that this is the last day of these shows, and that Caius is
about to go to sea? for he is preparing to sail to Alexandria, in order
to see Egypt. Is it therefore for your honor to let a man go out of your
hands who is a reproach to mankind, and to permit him to go, after a
pompous manner, triumphing both at land and sea? Shall not we be justly
ashamed of ourselves, if we give leave to some Egyptian or other, who
shall think his injuries insufferable to free-men, to kill him? As for
myself, I will no longer bear your stow proceedings, but will expose
myself to the dangers of the enterprise this very day, and bear
cheerfully whatsoever shall be the consequence of the attempt; nor, let
them be ever so great, will I put them off any longer: for, to a wise
and courageous man, what can be more miserable than that, while I am
alive, any one else should kill Caius, and deprive me of the honor of so
virtuous an action?"
13. When Cherea had spoken thus, he zealously set about the work, and
inspired courage into the rest to go on with it, and they were all eager
to fall to it without further delay. So he was at the palace in the
morning, with his equestrian sword girt on him; for it was the custom
that the tribunes should ask for the watchword with their swords on, and
this was the day on which Cherea was, by custom, to receive the
watchword; and the multitude were already come to the palace, to be soon
enough for seeing the shows, and that in great crowds, and one
tumultuously crushing another, while Caius was delighted with this
eagerness of the multitude; for which reason there was no order observed
in the seating men, nor was any peculiar place appointed for the
senators, or for the equestrian order; but they sat at random, men and
women together, and free-men were mixed with the slaves. So Caius came
out in a solemn manner, and offered sacrifice to Augustus Caesar, in
whose honor indeed these shows were celebrated. Now it happened, upon
the fall of a certain priest, that the garment of Asprenas, a senator,
was filled with blood, which made Caius laugh, although this was an
evident omen to Asprenas, for he was slain at the same time with Caius.
It is also related that Caius was that day, contrary to his usual
custom, so very affable and good-natured in his conversation, that every
one of those that were present were astonished at it. After the
sacrifice was over, Caius betook himself to see the shows, and sat down
for that purpose, as did also the principal of his friends sit near him.
Now the parts of the theater were so fastened together, as it used to be
every year, in the manner following: It had two doors, the one door led
to the open air, the other was for going into, or going out of, the
cloisters, that those within the theater might not be thereby disturbed;
but out of one gallery there went an inward passage, parted into
partitions also, which led into another gallery, to give room to the
combatants and to the musicians to go out as occasion served. When the
multitude were set down, and Cherea, with the other tribunes, were set
down also, and the right corner of the theater was allotted to Caesar,
one Vatinius, a senator, commander of the praetorian band, asked of
Cluvius, one that sat by him, and was of consular dignity also, whether
he had heard any thing of news, or not? but took care that nobody should
hear what he said; and when Cluvius replied, that he had heard no news,
"Know then," said Vatinius, "that the game of the slaughter of tyrants
is to be played this dav." But Cluvius replied "O brave comrade hold thy
peace, lest some other of the Achaians hear thy tale." And as there was
abundance of autumnal fruit thrown among the spectators, and a great
number of birds, that were of great value to such as possessed them, on
account of their rareness, Caius was pleased with the birds fighting for
the fruits, and with the violence wherewith the spectators seized upon
them: and here he perceived two prodigies that happened there; for an
actor was introduced, by whom a leader of robbers was crucified, and the
pantomime brought in a play called Cinyras, wherein he himself was to be
slain, as well as his daughter Myrrha, and wherein a great deal of
fictitious blood was shed, both about him that was crucified, and also
about Cinyras. It was also confessed that this was the same day wherein
Pausanias, a friend of Philip, the son of Amyntas, who was king of
Macedonia, slew him, as he was entering into the theater. And now Caius
was in doubt whether he should tarry to the end of the shows, because it
was the last day, or whether he should not go first to the bath, and to
dinner, and then return and sit down as before. Hereupon Minucianus, who
sat over Caius, and was afraid that the opportunity should fail them,
got up, because he saw Cherea was already gone out, and made haste out,
to confirm him in his resolution; but Caius took hold of his garment, in
an obliging way, and said to him, "O brave man! whither art thou going?"
Whereupon, out of reverence to Caesar, as it seemed, he sat down again;
but his fear prevailed over him, and in a little time he got up again,
and then Caius did no way oppose his going out, as thinking that he went
out to perform some necessities of nature. And Asprenas, who was one of
the confederates, persuaded Caius to go out to the bath, and to dinner,
and then to come in again, as desirous that what had been resolved on
might be brought to a conclusion immediately.
14. So Cherea's associates placed themselves in order, as the time would
permit them, and they were obliged to labor hard, that the place which
was appointed them should not be left by them; but they had an
indignation at the tediousness of the delays, and that what they were
about should be put off any longer, for it was already about the ninth
(5) hour of the day; and Cherea, upon Caius's tarrying so long, had a
great mind to go in, and fall upon him in his seat, although he foresaw
that this could not be done without much bloodshed, both of the
senators, and of those of the equestrian order that were present; and
although he knew this must happen, yet had he a great mind to do so, as
thinking it a right thing to procure security and freedom to all, at the
expense of such as might perish at the same time. And as they were just
going back into the entrance to the theater, word was brought them that
Caius was arisen, whereby a tumult was made; hereupon the conspirators
thrust away the crowd, under pretense as if Caius was angry at them, but
in reality as desirous to have a quiet place, that should have none in
it to defend him, while they set about Caius's slaughter. Now Claudius,
his uncle, was gone out before, and Marcus Vinicius his sister's
husband, as also Valellus of Asia; whom though they had had such a mind
to put out of their places, the reverence to their dignity hindered them
so to do; then followed Caius, with Paulus Arruntius: and because Caius
was now gotten within the palace, he left the direct road, along which
those his servants stood that were in waiting, and by which road
Claudius had gone out before, Caius turned aside into a private narrow
passage, in order to go to the place for bathing, as also in order to
take a view of the boys that came out of Asia, who were sent thence,
partly to sing hymns in these mysteries which were now celebrated, and
partly to dance in the Pyrrhic way of dancing upon the theatres. So
Cherea met him, and asked him for the watchword; upon Caius's giving him
one of his ridiculous words, he immediately reproached him, and drew his
sword, and gave him a terrible stroke with it, yet was not this stroke
mortal. And although there be those that say it was so contrived on
purpose by Chorea, that Caius should not be killed at one blow, but
should be punished more severely by a multitude of wounds; yet does this
story appear to me incredible, because the fear men are under in such
actions does not allow them to use their reason. And if Cherea was of
that mind, I esteem him the greatest of all fools, in pleasing himself
in his spite against Caius, rather than immediately procuring safety to
himself and to his confederates from the dangers they were in, because
there might many things still happen for helping Caius's escape, if he
had not already given up the ghost; for certainly Cherea would have
regard, not so much to the punishment of Caius, as to the affliction
himself and his friends were in, while it was in his power, after such
success, to keep silent, and to escape the wrath of Caius's defenders,
and not to leave it to uncertainty whether he should gain the end he
aimed at or not, and after an unreasonable manner to act as if he had a
mind to ruin himself, and lose the opportunity that lay before him. But
every body may guess as he please about this matter. However, Caius was
staggered with the pain that the blow gave him; for the stroke of the
sword falling in the middle, between the shoulder and the neck, was
hindered by the first bone of the breast from proceeding any further.
Nor did he either cry out, (in such astonishment was he,) nor did he
call out for any of his friends; whether it were that he had no
confidence in them, or that his mind was otherwise disordered, but he
groaned under the pain he endured, and presently went forward and fled;
when Cornelius Sabinus, who was already prepared in his mind so to do,
thrust him down upon his knee, where many of them stood round about him,
and struck him with their swords; and they cried out, and encouraged one
another all at once to strike him again; but all agree that Aquila gave
him the finishing stroke, which directly killed him. But one may justly
ascribe this act to Cherea; for although many concurred in the act
itself, yet was he the first contriver of it, and began long before all
the rest to prepare for it, and was the first man that boldly spake of
it to the rest; and upon their admission of what he said about it, he
got the dispersed conspirators together; he prepared every thing after a
prudent manner, and by suggesting good advice, showed himself far
superior to the rest, and made obliging speeches to them, insomuch that
he even compelled them all to go on, who otherwise had not courage
enough for that purpose; and when opportunity served to use his sword in
hand, he appeared first of all ready so to do, and gave the first blow
in this virtuous slaughter; he also brought Caius easily into the power
of the rest, and almost killed him himself, insomuch that it is but just
to ascribe all that the rest did to the advice, and bravery, and labors
of the hands of Cherea.
15. Thus did Caius come to his end, and lay dead, by the many wounds
which had been given him. Now Cherea and his associates, upon Caius's
slaughter, saw that it was impossible for them to save themselves, if
they should all go the same way, partly on account of the astonishment
they were under; for it was no small danger they had incurred by killing
an emperor, who was honored and loved by the madness of the people,
especially when the soldiers were likely to make a bloody inquiry after
his murderers. The passages also were narrow wherein the work was done,
which were also crowded with a great multitude of Caius's attendants,
and of such of the soldiers as were of the emperor's guard that day;
whence it was that they went by other ways, and came to the house of
Germanicus, the father of Caius, whom they had now killed (which house
adjoined to the palace; for while the edifice was one, it was built in
its several parts by those particular persons who had been emperors, and
those parts bare the names of those that built them or the name of him
who had begun to build its parts). So they got away from the insults of
the multitude, and then were for the present out of danger, that is, so
long as the misfortune which had overtaken the emperor was not known.
The Germans were the first who perceived that Caius was slain. These
Germans were Caius's guard, and carried the name of the country whence
they were chosen, and composed the Celtic legion. The men of that
country are naturally passionate, which is commonly the temper of some
other of the barbarous nations also, as being not used to consider much
about what they do; they are of robust bodies and fall upon their
enemies as soon as ever they are attacked by them; and which way soever
they go, they perform great exploits. When, therefore, these German
guards understood that Caius was slain, they were very sorry for it,
because they did not use their reason in judging about public affairs,
but measured all by the advantages themselves received, Caius being
beloved by them because of the money he gave them, by which he had
purchased their kindness to him; so they drew their swords, and Sabinus
led them on. He was one of the tribunes, not by the means of the
virtuous actions of his pro genitors, for he bad been a gladiator, but
he had obtained that post in the army by his having a robust body. So
these Germans marched along the houses in quest of Caesar's murderers,
and cut Asprenas to pieces, because he was the first man they fell upon,
and whose garment it was that the blood of the sacrifices stained, as I
have said already, and which foretold that this his meeting the soldiers
would not be for his good. Then did Norbanus meet them, who was one of
the principal nobility of and could show many generals of armies among
his ancestors; but they paid no regard to his dignity; yet was he of
such great strength, that he wrested the sword of the first of those
that assaulted him out of his hands, and appeared plainly not to be
willing to die without a struggle for his life, until he was surrounded
by a great number of assailants, and died by the multitude of the wounds
which they gave him. The third man was Anteius, a senator, and a few
others with him. He did not meet with these Germans by chance, as the
rest did before, but came to show his hatred to Caius, and because he
loved to see Caius lie dead with his own eyes, and took a pleasure in
that sight; for Caius had banished Anteius's father, who was of the same
name with himself, and being not satisfied with that, he sent out his
soldiers, and slew him; so he was come to rejoice at the sight of him,
now he was dead. But as the house was now all in a tumult, when he was
aiming to hide himself, he could not escape that accurate search which
the Germans made, while they barbarously slew those that were guilty,
and those that were not guilty, and this equally also. And thus were
these [three] persons slain.
16. But when the rumor that Caius was slain reached the theater, they
were astonished at it, and could not believe it; even some that
entertained his destruction with great pleasure, and were more desirous
of its happening than almost any other faction that could come to them,
were under such a fear, that they could not believe it. There were also
those who greatly distrusted it, because they were unwilling that any
such thing should come to Caius, nor could believe it, though it were
ever so true, because they thought no man could possibly so much power
as to kill Caius. These were the women, and the children, and the
slaves, and some of the soldiery. This last sort had taken his pay, and
in a manner tyrannized with him, and had abused the best of the
citizens, in being subservient to his unjust commands, in order to gain
honors and advantages to themselves; but for the women and the youth,
they had been inveigled with shows, and the fighting of the gladiators,
and certain distributions of flesh-meat among them, which things them
pretense were designed for the pleasing of multitude, but in reality to
satiate the barbarous cruelty and madness of Caius. The slaves also were
sorry, because they were by Caius allowed to accuse and to despise their
masters, and they could have recourse to his assistance when they had
unjustly affronted them; for he was very easy in believing them against
their masters, even when they the city, accused them falsely; and if
they would discover what money their masters had, they might soon obtain
both riches and liberty, as the rewards of their accusations, because
the reward of these informers was the eighth (6) part of the criminal's
substance. As to the nobles, although the report appeared credible to
some of them, either because they knew of the plot beforehand, or
because they wished it might be true; however, they concealed not only
the joy they had at the relation of it, but that they had heard any
thing at all about it. These last acted so out of the fear they had,
that if the report proved false, they should be punished, for having so
soon let men know their minds. But those that knew Caius was dead,
because they were partners with the conspirators, they concealed all
still more cautiously, as not knowing one another's minds; and fearing
lest they should speak of it to some of those to whom the continuance of
tyranny was advantageous; and if Caius should prove to be alive, they
might be informed against, and punished. And another report went about,
that although Caius had been wounded indeed, yet was not he dead, but
alive still, and under the physician's hands. Nor was any one looked
upon by another as faithful enough to be trusted, and to whom any one
would open his mind; for he was either a friend to Caius, and therefore
suspected to favor his tyranny, or he was one that hated him, who
therefore might be suspected to deserve the less credit, because of his
ill-will to him. Nay, it was said by some (and this indeed it was that
deprived the nobility of their hopes, and made them sad) that Caius was
in a condition to despise the dangers he had been in, and took no care
of healing his wounds, but was gotten away into the market-place, and,
bloody as he was, was making an harangue to the people. And these were
the conjectural reports of those that were so unreasonable as to
endeavor to raise tumults, which they turned different ways, according
to the opinions of the bearers. Yet did they not leave their seats, for
fear of being accused, if they should go out before the rest; for they
should not be sentenced according to the real intention with which they
went out, but according to the supposals of the accusers and of the
judges.
17. But now a multitude of Germans had surrounded the theater with their
swords drawn: all the spectators looked for nothing but death, and at
every one coming in a fear seized upon them, as if they were to be cut
in pieces immediately; and in great distress they were, as neither
having courage enough to go out of the theater, nor believing themselves
safe from dangers if they tarried there. And when the Germans came upon
them, the cry was so great, that the theater rang again with the
entreaties of the spectators to the soldiers, pleading that they were
entirely ignorant of every thing that related to such seditious
contrivances, and that if there were any sedition raised, they knew
nothing of it; they therefore begged that they would spare them, and not
punish those that had not the least hand in such bold crimes as belonged
to other persons, while they neglected to search after such as had
really done whatsoever it be that hath been done. Thus did these people
appeal to God, and deplore their infelicity with shedding of tears, and
beating their faces, and said every thing that the most imminent danger
and the utmost concern for their lives could dictate to them. This brake
the fury of the soldiers, and made them repent of what they minded to do
to the spectators, which would have been the greatest instance of
cruelty. And so it appeared to even these savages, when they had once
fixed the heads of those that were slain with Asprenas upon the altar;
at which sight the spectators were sorely afflicted, both upon the
consideration of the dignity of the persons, and out of a commiseration
of their sufferings; nay, indeed, they were almost in as great disorder
at the prospect of the danger themselves were in, seeing it was still
uncertain whether they should entirely escape the like calamity. Whence
it was that such as thoroughly and justly hated Caius could yet no way
enjoy the pleasure of his death, because they were themselves in
jeopardy of perishing together with him; nor had they hitherto any firm
assurance of surviving.
18. There was at this time one Euaristus Arruntius, a public crier in
the market, and therefore of a strong and audible voice, who vied in
wealth with the richest of the Romans, and was able to do what he
pleased in the city, both then and afterward. This man put himself into
the most mournful habit he could, although he had a greater hatred
against Caius than any one else; his fear and his wise contrivance to
gain his safety taught him so to do, and prevailed over his present
pleasure; so he put on such a mournful dress as he would have done had
he lost his dearest friends in the world; this man came into the
theater, and informed them of the death of Caius, and by this means put
an end to that state of ignorance the men had been in. Arruntius also
went round about the pillars, and called out to the Germans, as did the
tribunes with him, bidding them put up their swords, and telling them
that Caius was dead. And this proclamation it was plainly which saved
those that were collected together in the theater, and all the rest who
any way met the Germans; for while they had hopes that Caius had still
any breath in him, they abstained from no sort of mischief; and such an
abundant kindness they still had for Caius, that they would willingly
have prevented the plot against him, and procured his escape from so sad
a misfortune, at the expense of their own lives. But they now left off
the warm zeal they had to punish his enemies, now they were fully
satisfied that Caius was dead, because it was now in vain for them to
show their zeal and kindness to him, when he who should reward them was
perished. They were also afraid that they should be punished by the
senate, if they should go on in doing such injuries; that is, in case
the authority of the supreme governor should revert to them. And thus at
length a stop was put, though not without difficulty, to that rage which
possessed the Germans on account of Caius's death.
19. But Cherea was so much afraid for Minucianus, lest he should light
upon the Germans now they were in their fury, that he went and spike to
every one of the soldiers, and prayed them to take care of his
preservation, and made himself great inquiry about him, lest he should
have been slain. And for Clement, he let Minucianus go when he was
brought to him, and, with many other of the senators, affirmed the
action was right, and commended the virtue of those that contrived it,
and had courage enough to execute it; and said that "tyrants do indeed
please themselves and look big for a while, upon having the power to act
unjustly; but do not however go happily out of the world, because they
are hated by the virtuous; and that Caius, together with all his
unhappiness, was become a conspirator against himself, before these
other men who attacked him did so; and by becoming intolerable, in
setting aside the wise provision the laws had made, taught his dearest
friends to treat him as an enemy; insomuch that although in common
discourse these conspirators were those that slew Caius, yet that, in
reality, he lies now dead as perishing by his own self."
20. Now by this time the people in the theatre were arisen from their
seats, and those that were within made a very great disturbance; the
cause of which was this, that the spectators were too hasty in getting
away. There was also one Aleyon, a physician, who hurried away, as if to
cure those that were wounded, and under that pretense he sent those that
were with him to fetch what things were necessary for the healing of
those wounded persons, but in reality to get them clear of the present
dangers they were in. Now the senate, during this interval, had met, and
the people also assembled together in the accustomed form, and were both
employed in searching after the murderers of Caius. The people did it
very zealously, but the senate in appearance only; for there was present
Valerius of Asia, one that had been consul; this man went to the people,
as they were in disorder, and very uneasy that they could not yet
discover who they were that had murdered the emperor; he was then
earnestly asked by them all who it was that had done it. He replied, "I
wish I had been the man." The consuls (7) also published an edict,
wherein they accused Caius, and gave order to the people then got
together, and to the soldiers, to go home; and gave the people hopes of
the abatement of the oppressions they lay under; and promised the
soldiers, if they lay quiet as they used to do, and would not go abroad
to do mischief unjustly, that they would bestow rewards upon them; for
there was reason to fear lest the city might suffer harm by their wild
and ungovernable behavior, if they should once betake themselves to
spoil the citizens, or plunder the temples. And now the whole multitude
of the senators were assembled together, and especially those that had
conspired to take away the life of Caius, who put on at this time an air
of great assurance, and appeared with great magnanimity, as if the
administration of the public affairs were already devolved upon them.
CHAPTER 2.
HOW THE SENATORS DETERMINED TO RESTORE THE DEMOCRACY; BUT THE SOLDIERS
WERE FOR PRESERVING THE MONARCHY, CONCERNING THE SLAUGHTER OF CAIUS'S
WIFE AND DAUGHTER. A CHARACTER OF CAIUS'S MORALS.
1. WHEN the public affairs were in this posture, Claudius was on the
sudden hurried away out of his house; for the soldiers had a meeting
together; and when they had debated about what was to be done, they saw
that a democracy was incapable of managing such a vast weight of public
affairs; and that if it should be set up, it would not be for their
advantage; and in case any one of those already in the government should
obtain the supreme power, it would in all respects be to their grief, if
they were not assisting to him in this advancement; that it would
therefore be right for them, while the public affairs were unsettled, to
choose Claudius emperor, who was uncle to the deceased Caius, and of a
superior dignity and worth to every one of those that were assembled
together in the senate, both on account of the virtues of his ancestors,
and of the learning he had acquired in his education; and who, if once
settled in the empire, would reward them according to their deserts, and
bestow largesses upon them. These were their consultations, and they
executed the same immediately. Claudius was therefore seized upon
suddenly by the soldiery. But Cneas Sentins Saturninns, although he
understood that Claudius was seized, and that he intended to claim the
government, unwillingly indeed in appearance, but in reality by his own
free consent, stood up in the senate, and, without being dismayed, made
an exhortatory oration to them, and such a one indeed as was fit for men
of freedom and generosity, and spake thus:
2. "Although it be a thing incredible, O Romans! because of the great
length of time, that so unexpected an event hath happened, yet are we
now in possession of liberty. How long indeed this will last is
uncertain, and lies at the disposal of the gods, whose grant it is; yet
such it is as is sufficient to make us rejoice, and be happy for the
present, although we may soon be deprived of it; for one hour is
sufficient to those that are exercised in virtue, wherein we may live
with a mind accountable only to ourselves, in our own country, now free,
and governed by such laws as this country once flourished under. As for
myself, I cannot remember our former time of liberty, as being born
after it was gone; but I am beyond measure filled with joy at the
thoughts of our present freedom. I also esteem those that were born and
bred up in that our former liberty happy men, and that those men are
worthy of no less esteem than the gods themselves who have given us a
taste of it in this age; and I heartily wish that this quiet enjoyment
of it, which we have at present, might continue to all ages. However,
this single day may suffice for our youth, as well as for us that are in
years. It will seem an age to our old men, if they might die during its
happy duration: it may also be for the instruction of the younger sort,
what kind of virtue those men, from whose loins we are derived, were
exercised in. As for ourselves, our business is, during the space of
time, to live virtuously, than which nothing can be more to our
advantage; which course of virtue it is alone that can preserve our
liberty; for as to our ancient state, I have heard of it by the
relations of others; but as to our later state, during my lifetime, I
have known it by experience, and learned thereby what mischiefs
tyrannies have brought upon this commonwealth, discouraging all virtue,
and depriving persons of magnanimity of their liberty, and proving the
teachers of flattery and slavish fear, because it leaves the public
administration not to be governed by wise laws, but by the humor of
those that govern. For since Julius Caesar took it into his head to
dissolve our democracy, and, by overbearing the regular system of our
laws, to bring disorders into our administration, and to get above right
and justice, and to be a slave to his own inclinations, there is no kind
of misery but what hath tended to the subversion of this city; while all
those that have succeeded him have striven one with another to overthrow
the ancient laws of their country, and have left it destitute of such
citizens as were of generous principles, because they thought it tended
to their safety to have vicious men to converse withal, and not only to
break the spirits of those that were best esteemed for their virtue, but
to resolve upon. their utter destruction. Of all which emperors, who
have been many in number, and who laid upon us insufferable hardships
during the times of their government, this Caius, who hath been slain
today, hath brought more terrible calamities upon us than did all the
rest, not only by exercising his ungoverned rage upon his fellow
citizens, but also upon his kindred and friends, and alike upon all
others, and by inflicting still greater miseries upon them, as
punishments, which they never deserved, he being equally furious against
men and against the gods. For tyrants are not content to gain their
sweet pleasure, and this by acting injuriously, and in the vexation they
bring both upon men's estates and their wives; but they look upon that
to be their principal advantage, when they can utterly overthrow the
entire families of their enemies; while all lovers of liberty are the
enemies of tyranny. Nor can those that patiently endure what miseries
they bring on them gain their friendship; for as they are conscious of
the abundant mischiefs they have brought on these men, and how
magnanimously they have borne their hard fortunes, they cannot but be
sensible what evils they have done, and thence only depend on security
from what they are suspicious of, if it may be in their power to take
them quite out of the world. Since, then, we are now gotten clear of
such great misfortunes, and are only accountable to one another, (which
form of government affords us the best assurance of our present concord,
and promises us the best security from evil designs, and will be most
for our own glory in settling the city in good order,) you ought, every
one of you in particular, to make provision for his own, and in general
for the public utility: or, on the contrary, they may declare their
dissent to such things as have been proposed, and this without any
hazard of danger to come upon them, because they have now no lord set
over them, who, without fear of punishment, could do mischief to the
city, and had an uncontrollable power to take off those that freely
declared their opinions. Nor has any thing so much contributed to this
increase of tyranny of late as sloth, and a timorous forbearance of
contradicting the emperor's will; while men had an over-great
inclination to the sweetness of peace, and had learned to live like
slaves; and as many of us as either heard of intolerable calamities that
happened at a distance from us, or saw the miseries that were near us,
out of the dread of dying virtuously, endured a death joined with the
utmost infamy. We ought, then, in the first place, to decree the
greatest honors we are able to those that have taken off the tyrant,
especially to Cherea Cassius; for this one man, with the assistance of
the gods, hath, by his counsel and by his actions, been the procurer of
our liberty. Nor ought we to forget him now we have recovered our
liberty, who, under the foregoing tyranny, took counsel beforehand, and
beforehand hazarded himself for our liberties; but ought to decree him
proper honors, and thereby freely declare that he from the beginning
acted with our approbation. And certainly it is a very excellent thing,
and what becomes free-men, to requite their benefactors, as this man
hath been a benefactor to us all, though not at all like Cassius and
Brutus, who slew Caius Julius [Caesar]; for those men laid the
foundations of sedition and civil wars in our city; but this man,
together with his slaughter of the tyrant, hath set our city free from
all those sad miseries which arose from the tyranny." (8)
3. And this was the purport of Sentius's oration, (9) which was received
with pleasure by the senators, and by as many of the equestrian order as
were present. And now one Trebellius Maximus rose up hastily, and took
off Sentius's finger a ring, which had a stone, with the image of Caius
engraven upon it, and which, in his zeal in speaking, and his
earnestness in doing what he was about, as it was supposed, he had
forgotten to take off himself. This sculpture was broken immediately.
But as it was now far in the night, Cherea demanded of the consuls the
watchword, who gave him this word, Liberty. These facts were the
subjects of admiration to themselves, and almost incredible; for it was
a hundred years since the democracy had been laid aside, when this
giving the watchword returned to the consuls; for before the city was
subject to tyrants, they were the commanders of the soldiers. But when
Cherea had received that watchword, he delivered it to those who were on
the senate's side, which were four regiments, who esteemed the
government without emperors to be preferable to tyranny. So these went
away with their tribunes. The people also now departed very joyful, full
of hope and of courage, as having recovered their former democracy, and
were no longer under an emperor; and Cherea was in very great esteem
with them.
4. And now Cherea was very uneasy that Caius's daughter and wife were
still alive, and that all his family did not perish with him, since
whosoever was left of them must be left for the ruin of the city and of
the laws. Moreover, in order to finish this matter with the utmost zeal,
and in order to satisfy his hatred of Caius, he sent Julius Lupus, one
of the tribunes, to kill Caius's wife and daughter. They proposed this
office to Lupus as to a kinsman of Clement, that he might be so far a
partaker of this murder of the tyrant, and might rejoice in the virtue
of having assisted his fellow citizens, and that he might appear to have
been a partaker with those that were first in their designs against him.
Yet did this action appear to some of the conspirators to be too cruel,
as to this using such severity to a woman, because Caius did more
indulge his own ill-nature than use her advice in all that he did; from
which ill-nature it was that the city was in so desperate a condition
with the miseries that were brought on it, and the flower of the city
was destroyed. But others accused her of giving her consent to these
things; nay, they ascribed all that Caius had done to her as the cause
of it, and said she had given a potion to Caius, which had made him
obnoxious to her, and had tied him down to love her by such evil
methods; insomuch that she, having rendered him distracted, was become
the author of all the mischiefs that had befallen the Romans, and that
habitable world which was subject to them. So that at length it was
determined that she must die; nor could those of the contrary opinion at
all prevail to have her saved; and Lupus was sent accordingly. Nor was
there any delay made in executing what he went about, but he was
subservient to those that sent him on the first opportunity, as desirous
to be no way blameable in what might be done for the advantage of the
people. So when he was come into the palace, he found Cesonia, who was
Caius's wife, lying by her husband's dead body, which also lay down on
the ground, and destitute of all such things as the law allows to the
dead, and all over herself besmeared with the blood of her husband's
wounds, and bewailing the great affliction she was under, her daughter
lying by her also; and nothing else was heard in these her circumstances
but her complaint of Caius, as if he had not regarded what she had often
told him of beforehand; which words of hers were taken in a different
sense even at that time, and are now esteemed equally ambiguous by those
that hear of them, and are still interpreted according to the different
inclinations of people. Now some said that the words denoted that she
had advised him to leave off his mad behavior and his barbarous cruelty
to the citizens, and to govern the public with moderation and virtue,
lest he should perish by the same way, upon their using him as he had
used them. But some said, that as certain words had passed concerning
the conspirators, she desired Caius to make no delay, but immediately to
put them all to death, and this whether they were guilty or not, and
that thereby he would be out of the fear of any danger; and that this
was what she reproached him for, when she advised him so to do, but he
was too slow and tender in the matter. And this was what Cesonia said,
and what the opinions of men were about it. But when she saw Lupus
approach, she showed him Caius's dead body, and persuaded him to come
nearer, with lamentation and tears; and as she perceived that Lupus was
in disorder, and approached her in order to execute some design
disagreeable to himself, she was well aware for what purpose he came,
and stretched out her naked throat, and that very cheerfully to him,
bewailing her case, like one that utterly despaired of her life, and
bidding him not to boggle at finishing the tragedy they had resolved
upon relating to her. So she boldly received her death's wound at the
hand of Lupus, as did the daughter after her. So Lupus made haste to
inform Cherea of what he had done.
5. This was the end of Caius, after he had reigned four years, within
four months. He was, even before he came to be emperor, ill-natured, and
one that had arrived at the utmost pitch of wickedness; a slave to his
pleasures, and a lover of calumny; greatly affected by every terrible
accident, and on that account of a very murderous disposition where he
durst show it. He enjoyed his exorbitant power to this only purpose, to
injure those who least deserved it, with unreasonable insolene and got
his wealth by murder and injustice. He labored to appear above regarding
either what was divine or agreeable to the laws, but was a slave to the
commendations of the populace; and whatsoever the laws determined to be
shameful, and punished, that he esteemed more honorable than what was
virtuous. He was unmindful of his friends, how intimate soever, and
though they were persons of the highest character; and if he was once
angry at any of them, he would inflict punishment upon them on the
smallest occasions, and esteemed every man that endeavored to lead a
virtuous life his enemy. And whatsoever he commanded, he would not admit
of any contradiction to his inclinations; whence it was that he had
criminal conversation with his own sister; (10) from which occasion
chiefly it was also that a bitter hatred first sprang up against him
among the citizens, that sort of incest not having been known of a long
time; and so this provoked men to distrust him, and to hate him that was
guilty of it. And for any great or royal work that he ever did, which
might be for the present and for future ages, nobody can name any such,
but only the haven that he made about Rhegium and Sicily, for the
reception of the ships that brought corn from Egypt; which was indeed a
work without dispute very great in itself, and of very great advantage
to the navigation. Yet was not this work brought to perfection by him,
but was the one half of it left imperfect, by reason of his want of
application to it; the cause of which was this, that he employed his
studies about useless matters, and that by spending his money upon such
pleasures as concerned no one's benefit but his own, he could not exert
his liberality in things that were undeniably of great consequence.
Otherwise he was an excellent orator, and thoroughly acquainted with the
Greek tongue, as well as with his own country or Roman language. He was
also able, off-hand and readily, to give answers to compositions made by
others, of considerable length and accuracy. He was also more skillful
in persuading others to very great things than any one else, and this
from a natural affability of temper, which had been improved by much
exercise and pains-taking; for as he was the grandson (11) of the
brother of Tiberius, whose successor he was, this was a strong
inducement to his acquiring of learning, because Tiberius aspired after
the highest pitch of that sort of reputation; and Caius aspired after
the like glory for eloquence, being induced thereto by the letters of
his kinsman and his emperor. He was also among the first rank of his own
citizens. But the advantages he received from his learning did not
countervail the mischief he brought upon himself in the exercise of his
authority; so difficult it is for those to obtain the virtue that is
necessary for a wise man, who have the absolute power to do what they
please without control. At the first he got himself such friends as were
in all respects the most worthy, and was greatly beloved by them, while
he imitated their zealous application to the learning and to the
glorious actions of the best men; but when he became insolent towards
them, they laid aside the kindness they had for him, and began to hate
him; from which hatred came that plot which they raised against him, and
wherein he perished.
CHAPTER 3.
HOW CLAUDIUS WAS SEIZED UPON AND BROUGHT OUT OF HIS HOUSE AND BROUGHT TO
THE CAMP; AND HOW THE SENATE SENT AN EMBASSAGE TO HIM.
1. NOW Claudius, as I said before, went out of that way along which
Caius was gone; and as the family was in a mighty disorder upon the sad
accident of the murder of Caius, he was in great distress how to save
himself, and was found to have hidden himself in a certain narrow place,
(12) though he had no other occasion for suspicion of any dangers,
besides the dignity of his birth; for while he was a private man, he
behaved himself with moderation, and was contented with his present
fortune, applying himself to learning, and especially to that of the
Greeks, and keeping himself entirely clear from every thing that might
bring on any disturbance. But as at this time the multitude were under a
consternation, and the whole palace was full of the soldiers' madness,
and the very emperor's guards seemed under the like fear and disorder
with private persons, the band called pretorian, which was the purest
part of the army, was in consultation what was to be done at this
juncture. Now all those that were at this consultation had little regard
to the punishment Caius had suffered, because he justly deserved such
his fortune; but they were rather considering their own circumstances,
how they might take the best care of themselves, especially while the
Germans were busy in punishing the murderers of Caius; which yet was
rather done to gratify their own savage temper, than for the good of the
public; all which things disturbed Claudius, who was afraid of his own
safety, and this particularly because he saw the heads of Asprenas and
his partners carried about. His station had been on a certain elevated
place, whither a few steps led him, and whither he had retired in the
dark by himself. But when Gratus, who was one of the soldiers that
belonged to the palace, saw him, but did not well know by his
countenance who he was, because it was dark, though he could well judge
that it was a man who was privately there on some design, he came nearer
to him; and when Claudius desired that he would retire, be discovered
who he was, and owned him to be Claudius. So he said to his followers,
"This is a Germanicus; (13) come on, let us choose him for our emperor."
But when Claudius saw they were making preparations for taking him away
by force, and was afraid they would kill him, as they had killed Caius,
he besought them to spare him, putting them in mind how quietly he had
demeaned himself, and that he was unacquainted with what had been done.
Hereupon Gratus smiled upon him, and took him by the right hand, and
said, "Leave off, sir, these low thoughts of saving yourself, while you
ought to have greater thoughts, even of obtaining the empire, which the
gods, out of their concern for the habitable world, by taking Caius out
of the way, commit to thy virtuous conduct. Go to, therefore, and accept
of the throne of thy ancestors." So they took him up and carried him,
because he was not then able to go on foot, such was his dread and his
joy at what was told him.
2. Now there was already gathered together about Gratus a great number
of the guards; and when they saw Claudius carried off, they looked with
a sad countenance, as supposing that he was carried to execution for the
mischiefs that had been lately done; while yet they thought him a man
who never meddled with public affairs all his life long, and one that
had met with no contemptible dangers under the reign of Caius; and some
of them thought it reasonable that the consuls should take cognizance of
these matters; and as still more and more of the soldiery got together,
the crowd about him ran away, and Claudius could hardly go on, his body
was then so weak; and those who carried his sedan, upon an inquiry that
was made about his being carried off, ran away and saved themselves, as
despairing of their Lord's preservation. But when they were come into
the large court of the palace, (which, as the report goes about it, was
inhabited first of all the parts of the city of Rome,) and had just
reached the public treasury, many more soldiers came about him, as glad
to see Claudius's face, and thought it exceeding right to make him
emperor, on account of their kindness for Germanicus, who was his
brother, and had left behind him a vast reputation among all that were
acquainted with him. They reflected also on the covetous temper of the
leading men of the senate, and what great errors they had been guilty of
when the senate had the government formerly; they also considered the
impossibility of such an undertaking, as also what dangers they should
be in, if the government should come to a single person, and that such a
one should possess it as they had no hand in advancing, and not to
Claudius, who would take it as their grant, and as gained by their
good-will to him, and would remember the favors they had done him, and
would make them a sufficient recompense for the same.
3. These were the discourses the soldiers had one with another by
themselves, and they communicated them to all such as came in to them.
Now those that inquired about this matter willingly embraced the
invitation that was made them to join with the rest; so they carried
Claudius into the camp, crowding about him as his guard, and
encompassing him about, one chairman still succeeding another, that
their vehement endeavors might not be hindered. But as to the populace
and senators, they disagreed in their opinions. The latter were very
desirous to recover their former dignity, and were zealous to get clear
of the slavery that had been brought on them by the injurious treatment
of the tyrants, which the present opportunity afforded them; but for the
people, who were envious against them, and knew that the emperors were
capable of curbing their covetous temper, and were a refuge from them,
they were very glad that Claudius had been seized upon, and brought to
them, and thought that if Claudius were made emperor, he would prevent a
civil war, such as there was in the days of Pompey. But when the senate
knew that Claudius was brought into the camp by the soldiers, they sent
to him those of their body which had the best character for their
virtues, that they might inform him that he ought to do nothing by
violence, in order to gain the government; that he who was a single
person, one either already or hereafter to be a member of their body,
ought to yield to the senate, which consisted of so great a number; that
he ought to let the law take place in the disposal of all that related
to the public order, and to remember how greatly the former tyrants had
afflicted their city, and what dangers both he and they had escaped
under Caius; and that he ought not to hate the heavy burden of tyranny,
when the injury is done by others, while he did himself willfully treat
his country after a mad and insolent manner; that if he would comply
with them, and demonstrate that his firm resolution was to live quietly
and virtuously, he would have the greatest honors decreed to him that a
free people could bestow; and by subjecting himself to the law, would
obtain this branch of commendation, that he acted like a man of virtue,
both as a ruler and a subject; but that if he would act foolishly, and
learn no wisdom by Caius's death, they would not permit him to go on;
that a great part of the army was got together for them, with plenty of
weapons, and a great number of slaves, which they could make use of;
that good hope was a great matter in such cases, as was also good
fortune; and that the gods would never assist any others but those that
undertook to act with virtue and goodness, who can be no other than such
as fight for the liberty of their country.
4. Now these ambassadors, Veranius and Brocchus, who were both of them
tribunes of the people, made this speech to Claudius; and falling down
upon their knees, they begged of him that he would not throw the city
into wars and misfortunes; but when they saw what a multitude of
soldiers encompassed and guarded Claudius, and that the forces that were
with the consuls were, in comparison of them, perfectly inconsiderable,
they added, that if he did desire the government, he should accept of it
as given by the senate; that he would prosper better, and be happier, if
he came to it, not by the injustice, but by the good-will of those that
would bestow it upon him.
CHAPTER 4.
WHAT THINGS KING AGRIPPA DID FOR CLAUDIUS; AND HOW CLAUDIUS WHEN HE HAD
TAKEN THE GOVERNMENT COMMANDED THE MURDERERS OF CAIUS TO BE SLAIN.
1. NOW Claudius, though he was sensible after what an insolent manner
the senate had sent to him yet did he, according to their advice, behave
himself for the present with moderation; but not so far that he could
not recover himself out of his fright; so he was encouraged [to claim
the government] partly by the boldness of the soldiers, and partly by
the persuasion of king Agrippa, who exhorted him not to let such a
dominion slip out of his hands, when it came thus to him of its own
accord. Now this Agrippa, with relation to Caius, did what became one
that had been so much honored by him; for he embraced Caius's body after
he was dead, and laid it upon a bed, and covered it as well as he could,
and went out to the guards, and told them that Caius was still alive;
but he said that they should call for physicians, since he was very ill
of his wounds. But when he had learned that Claudius was carried away
violently by the soldiers, he rushed through the crowd to him, and when
he found that he was in disorder, and ready to resign up the government
to the senate, he encouraged him, and desired him to keep the
government; but when he had said this to Claudius, he retired home. And
upon the senate's sending for him, he anointed his head with ointment,
as if he had lately accompanied with his wife, and had dismissed her,
and then came to them: he also asked of the senators what Claudius did;
who told him the present state of affairs, and then asked his opinion
about the settlement of the public. He told them in words that he was
ready to lose his life for the honor of the senate, but desired them to
consider what was for their advantage, without any regard to what was
most agreeable to them; for that those who grasp at government will
stand in need of weapons and soldiers to guard them, unless they will
set up without any preparation for it, and so fall into danger. And when
the senate replied that they would bring in weapons in abundance, and
money, and that as to an army, a part of it was already collected
together for them, and they would raise a larger one by giving the
slaves their liberty, - Agrippa made answer, "O senators! may you be
able to compass what you have a mind to; yet will I immediately tell you
my thoughts, because they tend to your preservation. Take notice, then,
that the army which will fight for Claudius hath been long exercised in
warlike affairs; but our army will be no better than a rude multitude of
raw men, and those such as have been unexpectedly made free from
slavery, and ungovernable; we must then fight against those that are
skillful in war, with men who know not so much as how to draw their
swords. So that my opinion is, that we should send some persons to
Claudius, to persuade him to lay down the government; and I am ready to
be one of your ambassadors."
2. Upon this speech of Agrippa, the senate complied with him, and he was
sent among others, and privately informed Claudius of the disorder the
senate was in, and gave him instructions to answer them in a somewhat
commanding strain, and as one invested with dignity and authority.
Accordingly, Claudius said to the ambassadors, that he did not wonder
the senate had no mind to have an emperor over them, because they had
been harassed by the barbarity of those that had formerly been at the
head of their affairs; but that they should taste of an equitable
government under him, and moderate times, while he should only he their
ruler in name, but the authority should be equally common to them all;
and since he had passed through many and various scenes of life before
their eyes, it would be good for them not to distrust him. So the
ambassadors, upon their hearing this his answer, were dismissed. But
Claudius discoursed with the army which was there gathered together, who
took oaths that they would persist in their fidelity to him; Upon which
he gave the guards every man five thousand (14) drachmae a-piece, and a
proportionable quantity to their captains, and promised to give the same
to the rest of the armies wheresoever they were.
3. And now the consuls called the senate together into the temple of
Jupiter the Conqueror, while it was still night; but some of those
senators concealed themselves in the city, being uncertain what to do,
upon the hearing of this summons; and some of them went out of the city
to their own farms, as foreseeing whither the public affairs were going,
and despairing of liberty; nay, these supposed it much better for them
to be slaves without danger to themselves, and to live a lazy and
inactive life, than by claiming the dignity of their forefathers, to run
the hazard of their own safety. However, a hundred and no more were
gotten together; and as they were in consultation about the present
posture of affairs, a sudden clamor was made by the soldiers that were
on their side, desiring that the senate would choose them an emperor,
and not bring the government into ruin by setting up a multitude of
rulers. So they fully declared themselves to be for the giving the
government not to all, but to one; but they gave the senate leave to
look out for a person worthy to be set over them, insomuch that now the
affairs of the senate were much worse than before, because they had not
only failed in the recovery of their liberty, which they boasted
themselves of, but were in dread of Claudius also. Yet were there those
that hankered after the government, both on account of the dignity of
their families and that accruing to them by their marriages; for Marcus
Minucianus was illustrious, both by his own nobility, and by his having
married Julia, the sister of Caius, who accordingly was very ready to
claim the government, although the consuls discouraged him, and made one
delay after another in proposing it: that Minucianus also, who was one
of Caius's murderers, restrained Valerius of Asia from thinking of such
things; and a prodigious slaughter there had been, if leave had been
given to these men to set up for themselves, and oppose Claudius. There
were also a considerable number of gladiators besides, and of those
soldiers who kept watch by night in the city, and rowers of ships, who
all ran into the camp; insomuch that, of those who put in for the
government, some left off their pretensions in order to spare the city,
and others out of fear for their own persons.
4. But as soon as ever it was day, Cherea, and those that were with him,
came into the senate, and attempted to make speeches to the soldiers.
However, the multitude of those soldiers, when they saw that they were
making signals for silence with their hands, and were ready to begin to
speak to them, grew tumultuous, and would not let them speak at all,
because they were all zealous to be under a monarchy; and they demanded
of the senate one for their ruler, as not enduring any longer delays:
but the senate hesitated about either their own governing, or how they
should themselves be governed, while the soldiers would not admit them
to govern, and the murderers of Caius would not permit the soldiers to
dictate to them. When they were in these circumstances, Cherea was not
able to contain the anger he had, and promised, that if they desired an
emperor, he would give them one, if any one would bring him the
watchword from Eutychus. Now this Eutychus was charioteer of the
green-band faction, styled Prasine, and a great friend of Caius, who
used to harass the soldiery with building stables for the horses, and
spent his time in ignominious labors, which occasioned Cherea to
reproach them with him, and to abuse them with much other scurrilous
language; and told them he would bring them the head of Claudius; and
that it was an amazing thing, that, after their former madness, they
should commit their government to a fool. Yet were not they moved with
his words, but drew their swords, and took up their ensigns, and went to
Claudius, to join in taking the oath of fidelity to him. So the senate
were left without any body to defend them, and the very consuls differed
nothing from private persons. They were also under consternation and
sorrow, men not knowing what would become of them, because Claudius was
very angry at them; so they fell a reproaching one another, and repented
of what they had done. At which juncture Sabinus, one of Caius's
murderers, threatened that he would sooner come into the midst of them
and kill himself, than consent to make Claudius emperor, and see slavery
returning upon them; he also abused Cherea for loving his life too well,
while he who was the first in his contempt of Caius, could think it a
good thin to live, when, even by all that they had done for the recovery
of their liberty, they found it impossible to do it. But Cherea said he
had no manner of doubt upon him about killing himself; that yet he would
first sound the intentions of Claudius before he did it.
5. These were the debates [about the senate]; but in the camp every body
was crowding on all sides to pay their court to Claudius; and the other
consul, Quintus Pomponhis, was reproached by the soldiery, as having
rather exhorted the senate to recover their liberty; whereupon they drew
their swords, and were going to assault him, and they had done it, if
Claudius had not hindered them, who snatched the consul out of the
danger he was in, and set him by him. :But he did not receive that part
of the senate which was with Quintus in the like honorable manner; nay,
some of them received blows, and were thrust away as they came to salute
Claudius; nay, Aponius went away wounded, and they were all in danger.
However, king Agrippa went up to Claudius, and desired he would treat
the senators more gently; for if any mischief should come to the senate,
he would have no others over whom to rule. Claudius complied with him,
and called the senate together into the palace, and was carried thither
himself through the city, while the soldiery conducted him, though this
was to the great vexation of the multitude; for Cherea and Sabinus, two
of Caius's murderers, went in the fore-front of them, in an open manner,
while Pollio, whom Claudius, a little before, had made captain of his
guards, had sent them an epistolary edict, to forbid them to appear in
public. Then did Claudius, upon his coming to the palace, get his
friends together, and desired their suffrages about Cherea. They said
that the work he had done was a glorious one; but they accused him the
he did it of perfidiousness, and thought it just to inflict the
punishment [of death] upon him, to discountenance such actions for the
time to come. So Cherea was led to his execution, and Lupus and many
other Romans with him. Now it is reported that Cherea bore this calamity
courageously; and this not only by the firmness of his own behavior
under it, but by the reproaches he laid upon Lupus, who fell into tears;
for when Lupus laid his garment aside, and complained of the cold (15)
he said, that cold was never hurtful to Lupus [i.e. a wolf] And as a
great many men went along with them to see the sight, when Cherea came
to the place, he asked the soldier who was to be their executioner,
whether this office was what he was used to, or whether this was the
first time of his using his sword in that manner, and desired him to
bring him that very sword with which he himself slew Caius. (16) So he
was happily killed at one stroke. But Lupus did not meet with such good
fortune in going out of the world, since he was timorous, and had many
blows leveled at his neck, because he did not stretch it out boldly [as
he ought to have done].
6. Now, a few days after this, as the Parental solemnities were just at
hand, the Roman multitude made their usual oblations to their several
ghosts, and put portions into the fire in honor of Cherea, and besought
him to be merciful to them, and not continue his anger against them for
their ingratitude. And this was the end of the life that Cherea came to.
But for Sabinus, although Claudius not only set him at liberty, but gave
him leave to retain his former command in the army, yet did he think it
would be unjust in him to fail of performing his obligations to his
fellow confederates; so he fell upon his sword, and killed himself, the
wound reaching up to the very hilt of the sword.
CHAPTER 5.
HOW CLAUDIUS RESTORED TO AGRIPPA HIS GRANDFATHERS KINGDOMS AND AUGMENTED
HIS DOMINIONS; AND HOW HE PUBLISHED AN EDICT IN BEHALF.
1. NOW when Claudius had taken out of the way all those soldiers whom he
suspected, which he did immediately, he published an edict, and therein
confirmed that kingdom to Agrippa which Caius had given him, and therein
commended the king highly. He also made all addition to it of all that
country over which Herod, who was his grandfather, had reigned, that is,
Judea and Samaria; and this he restored to him as due to his family. But
for Abila (17) of Lysanias, and all that lay at Mount Libanus, he
bestowed them upon him, as out of his own territories. He also made a
league with this Agrippa, confirmed by oaths, in the middle of the
forum, in the city of Rome: he also took away from Antiochus that
kingdom which he was possessed of, but gave him a certain part of
Cilicia and Commagena: he also set Alexander Lysimachus, the alabarch,
at liberty, who had been his old friend, and steward to his mother
Antonia, but had been imprisoned by Caius, whose son [Marcus] married
Bernice, the daughter of Agrippa. But when Marcus, Alexander's son, was
dead, who had married her when she was a virgin, Agrippa gave her in
marriage to his brother Herod, and begged for him of Claudius the
kingdom of Chalcis.
2. Now about this time there was a sedition between the Jews and the
Greeks, at the city of Alexandria; for when Caius was dead, the nation
of the Jews, which had been very much mortified under the reign of
Caius, and reduced to very great distress by the people of Alexandria,
recovered itself, and immediately took up their arms to fight for
themselves. So Claudius sent an order to the president of Egypt to quiet
that tumult; he also sent an edict, at the requests of king Agrippa and
king Herod, both to Alexandria and to Syria, whose contents were as
follows: "Tiberius Claudius Caesar Augustus Germanicus, high priest, and
tribune of the people, ordains thus: Since I am assured that the Jews of
Alexandria, called Alexandrians, have been joint inhabitants in the
earliest times with the Alexandrians, and have obtained from their kings
equal privileges with them, as is evident by the public records that are
in their possession, and the edicts themselves; and that after
Alexandria had been subjected to our empire by Augustus, their rights
and privileges have been preserved by those presidents who have at
divers times been sent thither; and that no dispute had been raised
about those rights and privileges, even when Aquila was governor of
Alexandria; and that when the Jewish ethnarch was dead, Augustus did not
prohibit the making such ethnarchs, as willing that all men should be so
subject [to the Romans] as to continue in the observation of their own
customs, and not be forced to transgress the ancient rules of their own
country religion; but that, in the time of Caius, the Alexandrians
became insolent towards the Jews that were among them, which Caius, out
of his great madness and want of understanding, reduced the nation of
the Jews very low, because they would not transgress the religious
worship of their country, and call him a god: I will therefore that the
nation of the Jews be not deprived of their rights and privileges, on
account of the madness of Caius; but that those rights and privileges
which they formerly enjoyed be preserved to them, and that they may
continue in their own customs. And I charge both parties to take very
great care that no troubles may arise after the promulgation of this
edict."
3. And such were the contents of this edict on behalf of the Jews that
was sent to Alexandria. But the edict that was sent into the other parts
of the habitable earth was this which follows: "Tiberius Claudius Caesar
Augustus Germanicus, high priest, tribune of the people, chosen consul
the second time, ordains thus: Upon the petition of king Agrippa and
king Herod, who are persons very dear to me, that I would grant the same
rights and privileges should be preserved to the Jews which are in all
the Roman empire, which I have granted to those of Alexandria, I very
willingly comply therewith; and this grant I make not only for the sake
of the petitioners, but as judging those Jews for whom I have been
petitioned worthy of such a favor, on account of their fidelity and
friendship to the Romans. I think it also very just that no Grecian city
should be deprived of such rights and privileges, since they were
preserved to them under the great Augustus. It will therefore be fit to
permit the Jews, who are in all the world under us, to keep their
ancient customs without being hindered so to do. And I do charge them
also to use this my kindness to them with moderation, and not to show a
contempt of the superstitious observances of other nations, but to keep
their own laws only. And I will that this decree of mine be engraven on
tables by the magistrates of the cities, and colonies, and municipal
places, both those within Italy and those without it, both kings and
governors, by the means of the ambassadors, and to have them exposed to
the public for full thirty days, in such a place whence it may plainly
be read from the ground. (18)
CHAPTER 6.
WHAT THINGS WERE DONE BY AGRIPPA AT JERUSALEM WHEN HE WAS RETURNED BACK
INTO JUDEA; AND WHAT IT WAS THAT PETRONIUS WROTE TO THE INHABITANTS OF
DORIS, IN BEHALF
1. NOW Claudius Caesar, by these decrees of his which were sent to
Alexandria, and to all the habitable earth, made known what opinion he
had of the Jews. So he soon sent Agrippa away to take his kingdom, now
he was advanced to a more illustrious dignity than before, and sent
letters to the presidents and procurators of the provinces that they
should treat him very kindly. Accordingly, he returned in haste, as was
likely he would, now lie returned in much greater prosperity than he had
before. He also came to Jerusalem, and offered all the sacrifices that
belonged to him, and omitted nothing which the law required; (19) on
which account he ordained that many of the Nazarites should have their
heads shorn. And for the golden chain which had been given him by Caius,
of equal weight with that iron chain wherewith his royal hands had been
bound, he hung it up within the limits of the temple, over the treasury,
(20) that it might be a memorial of the severe fate he had lain under,
and a testimony of his change for the better; that it might be a
demonstration how the greatest prosperity may have a fall, and that God
sometimes raises up what is fallen down: for this chain thus dedicated
afforded a document to all men, that king Agrippa had been once bound in
a chain for a small cause, but recovered his former dignity again; and a
little while afterward got out of his bonds, and was advanced to be a
more illustrious king than he was before. Whence men may understand that
all that partake of human nature, how great soever they are, may fall;
and that those that fall may gain their former illustrious dignity
again.
2. And when Agrippa had entirely finished all the duties of the Divine
worship, he removed Theophilus, the son of Ananus, from the high
priesthood, and bestowed that honor of his on Simon the son of Boethus,
whose name was also Cantheras whose daughter king Herod married, as I
have related above. Simon, therefore, had the [high] priesthood with his
brethren, and with his father, in like manner as the sons of Simon, the
son of Onias, who were three, had it formerly under the government of
the Macedonians, as we have related in a former book.
3. When the king had settled the high priesthood after this manner, he
returned the kindness which the inhabitants of Jerusalem had showed him;
for he released them from the tax upon houses, every one of which paid
it before, thinking it a good thing to requite the tender affection of
those that loved him. He also made Silas the general of his forces, as a
man who had partaken with him in many of his troubles. But after a very
little while the young men of Doris, preferring a rash attempt before
piety, and being naturally bold and insolent, carried a statue of Caesar
into a synagogue of the Jews, and erected it there. This procedure of
theirs greatly provoked Agrippa; for it plainly tended to the
dissolution of the laws of his country. So he came without delay to
Publius Petronius, who was then president of Syria, and accused the
people of Doris. Nor did he less resent what was done than did Agrippa;
for he judged it a piece of impiety to transgress the laws that regulate
the actions of men. So he wrote the following letter to the people of
Doris in an angry strain: "Publius Petronius, the president under
Tiberius Claudius Caesar Augustus Germanicus, to the magistrates of
Doris, ordains as follows: Since some of you have had the boldness, or
madness rather, after the edict of Claudius Caesar Augustus Germanicus
was published, for permitting the Jews to observe the laws of their
country, not to obey the same, but have acted in entire opposition
thereto, as forbidding the Jews to assemble together in the synagogue,
by removing Caesar's statue, and setting it up therein, and thereby have
offended not only the Jews, but the emperor himself, whose statue is
more commodiously placed in his own temple than in a foreign one, where
is the place of assembling together; while it is but a part of natural
justice, that every one should have the power over the place belonging
peculiarly to themselves, according to the determination of Caesar, - to
say nothing of my own determination, which it would be ridiculous to
mention after the emperor's edict, which gives the Jews leave to make
use of their own customs, as also gives order that they enjoy equally
the rights of citizens with the Greeks themselves, - I therefore ordain
that Proculus Vitellius, the centurion, bring those men to me, who,
contrary to Augustus's edict, have been so insolent as to do this thing,
at which those very men, who appear to be of principal reputation among
them, have an indignation also, and allege for themselves, 'that it was
not done with their consent, but by the violence of the multitude, that
they may give an account of what hath been done. I also exhort the
principal magistrates among them, unless they have a mind to have this
action esteemed to be done with their consent, to inform the centurion
of those that were guilty of it, and take care that no handle be hence
taken for raising a sedition or quarrel among them; which those seem to
me to treat after who encourage such doings; while both I myself, and
king Agrippa, for whom I have the highest honor, have nothing more under
our care, than that the nation of the Jews may have no occasion given
them of getting together, under the pretense of avenging themselves, and
become tumultuous. And that it may be more publicly known what Augustus
hath resolved about this whole matter, I have subjoined those edicts
which he hath lately caused to be published at Alexandria, and which,
although they may be well known to all, yet did king Agrippa, for whom I
have the highest honor, read them at that time before my tribunal, and
pleaded that the Jews ought not to be deprived of those rights which
Augustus hath granted them. I therefore charge you, that you do not, for
the time to come, seek for any occasion of sedition or disturbance, but
that every one be allowed to follow their own religious customs."
4. Thus did Petronius take care of this matter, that such a breach of
the law might be corrected, and that no such thing might be attempted
afterwards against the Jews. And now king Agrippa took the [high]
priesthood away from Simon Cantheras, and put Jonathan, the son of
Ananus, into it again, and owned that he was more worthy of that dignity
than the other. But this was not a thing acceptable to him, to recover
that his former dignity. So he refused it, and said, "O king! I rejoice
in the honor that thou hast for me, and take it kindly that thou wouldst
give me such a dignity of thy own inclinations, although God hath judged
that I am not at all worthy of the high priesthood. I am satisfied with
having once put on the sacred garments; for I then put them on after a
more holy manner than I should now receive them again. But if thou
desirest that a person more worthy than myself should have this
honorable employment, give me leave to name thee such a one. I have a
brother that is pure from all sin against God, and of all offenses
against thyself; I recommend him to thee, as one that is fit for this
dignity." So the king was pleased with these words of his, and passed by
Jonathan, and, according to his brother's desire, bestowed the high
priesthood upon Matthias. Nor was it long before Marcus succeeded
Petronius, as president of Syria.
CHAPTER 7.
CONCERNING SILAS AND ON WHAT ACCOUNT IT WAS THAT KING AGRIPPA WAS ANGRY
AT HIM. HOW AGRIPPA BEGAN TO ENCOMPASS JERUSALEM WITH A WALL; AND WHAT
BENEFITS HE BESTOWED ON THE INHABITANTS OF BERYTUS.
1. NOW Silas, the general of the king's horse, because he had been
faithful to him under all his misfortunes, and had never refused to be a
partaker with him in any of his dangers, but had oftentimes undergone
the most hazardous dangers for him, was full of assurance, and thought
he might expect a sort of equality with the king, on account of the
firmness of the friendship he had showed to him. Accordingly, he would
no where let the king sit as his superior, and took the like liberty in
speaking to him upon all occasions, till he became troublesome to the
king, when they were merry together, extolling himself beyond measure,
and oft putting the king in mind of the severity of fortune he had
undergone, that he might, by way of ostentation, demonstrate What zeal
he had showed in his service; and was continually harping upon this
string, what pains he had taken for him, and much enlarged still upon
that subject. The repetition of this so frequently seemed to reproach
the king, insomuch that he took this ungovernable liberty of talking
very ill at his hands. For the commemoration of times when men have been
under ignominy, is by no means agreeable to them; and he is a very silly
man who is perpetually relating to a person what kindness he had done
him. At last, therefore, Silas had so thoroughly provoked the king's
indignation, that he acted rather out of passion than good
consideration, and did not only turn Silas out of his place, as general
of his horse, but sent him in bonds into his own country. But the edge
of his anger wore off by length of time, and made room for more just
reasonings as to his judgment about this man; and he considered how many
labors he had undergone for his sake. So when Agrippa was solemnizing
his birth-day, and he gave festival entertainments to all his subjects,
he sent for Silas on the sudden to be his guest. But as he was a very
frank man, he thought he had now a just handle given him to be angry;
which he could not conceal from those that came for him, but said to
them, "What honor is this the king invites me to, which I conclude will
soon be over? For the king hath not let me keep those original marks of
the good-will I bore him, which I once had from him; but he hath
plundered me, and that unjustly also. Does he think that I can leave off
that liberty of speech, which, upon the consciousness of my deserts, I
shall use more loudly than before, and shall relate how many misfortunes
I have been delivered from; how many labors I have undergone for him,
whereby I procured him deliverance and respect; as a reward for which I
have borne the hardships of bonds and a dark prison? I shall never
forget this usage. Nay, perhaps, my very soul, when it is departed out
of the body, will not forget the glorious actions I did on his account."
This was the clamor he made, and he ordered the messengers to tell it to
the king. So he perceived that Silas was incurable in his folly, and
still suffered him to lie in prison.
2. As for the walls of Jerusalem, that were adjoining to the new city [Bezetha],
he repaired them at the expense of the public, and built them wider in
breadth, and higher in altitude; and he had made them too strong for all
human power to demolish, unless Marcus, the then president of Syria, had
by letter informed Claudius Caesar of what he was doing. And when
Claudius had some suspicion of attempts for innovation, he sent to
Agrippa to leave off the building of those walls presently. So he
obeyed, as not thinking it proper to contradict Claudius.
3. Now this king was by nature very beneficent and liberal in his gifts,
and very ambitious to oblige people with such large donations; and he
made himself very illustrious by the many chargeable presents he made
them. He took delight in giving, and rejoiced in living with good
reputation. He was not at all like that Herod who reigned before him;
for that Herod was ill-natured, and severe in his punishments, and had
no mercy on them that he hated; and every one perceived that he was more
friendly to the Greeks than to the Jews; for he adorned foreign cities
with large presents in money; with building them baths and theatres
besides; nay, in some of those places he erected temples, and porticoes
in others; but he did not vouchsafe to raise one of the least edifices
in any Jewish city, or make them any donation that was worth mentioning.
But Agrippa's temper was mild, and equally liberal to all men. He was
humane to foreigners, and made them sensible of his liberality. He was
in like manner rather of a gentle and compassionate temper. Accordingly,
he loved to live continually at Jerusalem, and was exactly careful in
the observance of the laws of his country. He therefore kept himself
entirely pure; nor did any day pass over his head without its appointed
sacrifice.
4. However, there was a certain mall of the Jewish nation at Jerusalem,
who appeared to be very accurate in the knowledge of the law. His name
was Simon. This man got together an assembly, while the king was absent
at Cesarea, and had the insolence to accuse him as not living holily,
and that he might justly be excluded out of the temple, since it
belonged only to native Jews. But the general of Agrippa's army informed
him that Simon had made such a speech to the people. So the king sent
for him; and as he was sitting in the theater, he bid him sit down by
him, and said to him with a low and gentle voice, "What is there done in
this place that is contrary to the law?" But he had nothing to say for
himself, but begged his pardon. So the king was more easily reconciled
to him than one could have imagined, as esteeming mildness a better
quality in a king than anger, and knowing that moderation is more
becoming in great men than passion. So he made Simon a small present,
and dismissed him.
5. Now as Agrippa was a great builder in many places, he paid a peculiar
regard to the people of Berytus; for he erected a theater for them,
superior to many others of that sort, both in Sumptuousness and
elegance, as also an amphitheater, built at vast expenses; and besides
these, he built them baths and porticoes, and spared for no costs in any
of his edifices, to render them both handsome and large. He also spent a
great deal upon their dedication, and exhibited shows upon them, and
brought thither musicians of all sorts, and such as made the most
delightful music of the greatest variety. He also showed his
magnificence upon the theater, in his great number of gladiators; and
there it was that he exhibited the several antagonists, in order to
please the spectators; no fewer indeed than seven hundred men to fight
with seven hundred other men (21) and allotted all the malefactors he
had for this exercise, that both the malefactors might receive their
punishment, and that this operation of war might be a recreation in
peace. And thus were these criminals all destroyed at once.
CHAPTER 8.
WHAT OTHER ACTS WERE DONE BY AGRIPPA UNTIL HIS DEATH; AND AFTER WHAT
MANNER HE DIED.
1. WHEN Agrippa had finished what I have above related at Berytus, he
removed to Tiberias, a city of Galilee. Now he was in great esteem among
other kings. Accordingly there came to him Antiochus, king of Commalena,
Sampsigeratnus, king of Emesa, and Cotys, who was king of the Lesser
Armenia, and Polemo, who was king of Pontus, as also Herod his brother,
who was king of Chalcis. All these he treated with agreeable
entertainments, and after an obliging manner, and so as to exhibit the
greatness of his mind, and so as to appear worthy of those respects
which the kings paid to him, by coming thus to see him. However, while
these kings staid with him, Marcus, the president of Syria, came
thither. So the king, in order to preserve the respect that was due to
the Romans, went out of the city to meet him, as far as seven furlongs.
But this proved to be the beginning of a difference between him and
Marcus; for he took with him in his chariot those other kings as his
assessors. But Marcus had a suspicion what the meaning could be of so
great a friendship of these kings one with another, and did not think so
close an agreement of so many potentates to be for the interest of the
Romans. He therefore sent some of his domestics to every one of them,
and enjoined them to go their ways home without further delay. This was
very ill taken by Agrippa, who after that became his enemy. And now he
took the high priesthood away from Matthias, and made Elioneus, the son
of Cantheras, high priest in his stead.
2. Now when Agrippa had reigned three years over all Judea, he came to
the city Cesarea, which was formerly called Strato's Tower; and there he
exhibited shows in honor of Caesar, upon his being informed that there
was a certain festival celebrated to make vows for his safety. At which
festival a great multitude was gotten together of the principal persons,
and such as were of dignity through his province. On the second day of
which shows he put on a garment made wholly of silver, and of a
contexture truly wonderful, and came into the theater early in the
morning; at which time the silver of his garment being illuminated by
the fresh reflection of the sun's rays upon it, shone out after a
surprising manner, and was so resplendent as to spread a horror over
those that looked intently upon him; and presently his flatterers cried
out, one from one place, and another from another, (though not for his
good,) that he was a god; and they added, "Be thou merciful to us; for
although we have hitherto reverenced thee only as a man, yet shall we
henceforth own thee as superior to mortal nature." Upon this the king
did neither rebuke them, nor reject their impious flattery. But as he
presently afterward looked up, he saw an owl (22) sitting on a certain
rope over his head, and immediately understood that this bird was the
messenger of ill tidings, as it had once been the messenger of good
tidings to him; and fell into the deepest sorrow. A severe pain also
arose in his belly, and began in a most violent manner. He therefore
looked upon his friends, and said, "I, whom you call a god, am commanded
presently to depart this life; while Providence thus reproves the lying
words you just now said to me; and I, who was by you called immortal, am
immediately to be hurried away by death. But I am bound to accept of
what Providence allots, as it pleases God; for we have by no means lived
ill, but in a splendid and happy manner." When he said this, his pain
was become violent. Accordingly he was carried into the palace, and the
rumor went abroad every where, that he would certainly die in a little
time. But the multitude presently sat in sackcloth, with their wives and
children, after the law of their country, and besought God for the
king's recovery. All places were also full of mourning and lamentation.
Now the king rested in a high chamber, and as he saw them below lying
prostrate on the ground, he could not himself forbear weeping. And when
he had been quite worn out by the pain in his belly for five days, he
departed this life, being in the fifty-fourth year of his age, and in
the seventh year of his reign; for he reigned four years under Caius
Caesar, three of them were over Philip's tetrarchy only, and on the
fourth he had that of Herod added to it; and he reigned, besides those,
three years under the reign of Claudius Caesar; in which time he reigned
over the forementioned countries, and also had Judea added to them, as
well as Samaria and Cesarea. The revenues that he received out of them
were very great, no less than twelve millions of drachme. (23) Yet did
he borrow great sums from others; for he was so very liberal that his
expenses exceeded his incomes, and his generosity was boundless. (24)
3. But before the multitude were made acquainted with Agrippa's being
expired, Herod the king of Chalcis, and Helcias the master of his horse,
and the king's friend, sent Aristo, one of the king's most faithful
servants, and slew Silas, who had been their enemy, as if it had been
done by the king's own command.
CHAPTER 9.
WHAT THINGS WERE DONE AFTER THE DEATH OF AGRIPPA; AND HOW CLAUDIUS, ON
ACCOUNT OF THE YOUTH AND UNSKILFULNESS OF AGRIPPA, JUNIOR, SENT CUSPIUS
FADUS TO BE PROCURATOR OF JUDEA, AND OF THE ENTIRE KINGDOM.
1. AND thus did king Agrippa depart this life. But he left behind him a
son, Agrippa by name, a youth in the seventeenth year of his age, and
three daughters; one of which, Bernice, was married to Herod, his
father's brother, and was sixteen years old; the other two, Mariamne and
Drusilla, were still virgins; the former was ten years old, and Drusilla
six. Now these his daughters were thus espoused by their father;
Marlatone to Julius Archclaus Epiphanes, the son of Antiochus, the son
of Chelcias; and Drusilla to the king of Commagena. But when it was
known that Agrippa was departed this life, the inhabitants of Cesarea
and of Sebaste forgot the kindnesses he had bestowed on them, and acted
the part of the bitterest enemies; for they cast such reproaches upon
the deceased as are not fit to be spoken of; and so many of them as were
then soldiers, which were a great number, went to his house, and hastily
carried off the statues (25) of this king's daughters, and all at once
carried them into the brothel-houses, and when they had set them on the
tops of those houses, they abused them to the utmost of their power, and
did such things to them as are too indecent to be related. They also
laid themselves down in public places, and celebrated general feastings,
with garlands on their heads, and with ointments and libations to
Charon, and drinking to one another for joy that the king was expired.
Nay, they were not only unmindful of Agrippa, who had extended his
liberality to them in abundance, but of his grandfather Herod also, who
had himself rebuilt their cities, and had raised them havens and temples
at vast expenses.
2. Now Agrippa, the son of the deceased, was at Rome, and brought up
with Claudius Caesar. And when Caesar was informed that Agrippa was
dead, and that the inhabitants of Sebaste and Cesarea had abused him, he
was sorry for the first news, and was displeased with the ingratitude of
those cities. He was therefore disposed to send Agrippa, junior, away
presently to succeed his father in the kingdom, and was willing to
confirm him in it by his oath. But those freed-men and friends of his,
who had the greatest authority with him, dissuaded him from it, and said
that it was a dangerous experiment to permit so large a kingdom to come
under the government of so very young a man, and one hardly yet arrived
at years of discretion, who would not be able to take sufficient care of
its administration; while the weight of a kingdom is heavy enough to a
grown man. So Caesar thought what they said to be reasonable.
Accordingly he sent Cuspins Fadus to be procurator of Judea, and of the
entire kingdom, and paid that respect to the eceased as not to introduce
Marcus, who had been at variance with him, into his kingdom. But he
determined, in the first place, to send orders to Fadus, that he should
chastise the inhabitants of Cesarca and Sebaste for those abuses they
had offered to him that was deceased, and their madness towards his
daughters that were still alive; and that he should remove that body of
soldiers that were at Cesarea and Sebaste, with the five regiments, into
Pontus, that they might do their military duty there; and that he should
choose an equal number of soldiers out of the Roman legions that were in
Syria, to supply their place. Yet were not those that had such orders
actually removed; for by sending ambassadors to Claudius, they mollified
him, and got leave to abide in Judea still; and these were the very men
that became the source of very great calamities to the Jews in
after-times, and sowed the seeds of that war which began under Florus;
whence it was that when Vespasian had subdued the country, he removed
them out of his province, as we shall relate hereafter.
ENDNOTE
(1) In this and the three next chapters we have, I think, a larger and
more distinct account of the slaughter of Caius, and the succession of
Claudius, than we have of any such ancient facts whatsoever elsewhere.
Some of the occasions of which probably were, Josephus's bitter hatred
against tyranny, and the pleasure he took in giving the history of the
slaughter of such a barbarous tyrant as was this Caius Caligula, as also
the deliverance his own nation had by that slaughter, of which he speaks
sect. 2, together with the great intimacy he had with Agrippa, junior,
whose father was deeply concerned in the advancement of Claudius, upon
the death of Caius; from which Agrippa, junior, Josephus might be fully
informed Of his history.
(2) Called Caligula by the Romans.
(3) Just such a voice as this is related to be came, and from an unknown
original also, to the famous Polycarp, as he was going to martyrdom,
bidding him "play the man;" as the church of Smyrna assures us in their
account of that his martyrdom, sect. 9.
(4) Here Josephus supposes that it was Augustus, and not Julius Caesar,
who first changed the Roman commonwealth into a monarchy; for these
shows were in honor of Augustus, as we shall learn in the next section.
(5) Suetonius says Caius was slain about the seventh hour of the day,
the ninth. The series of the narration favors Josephus.
(6) The rewards proposed by the Roman laws to informers was sometimes an
eigth partm as Spanheim assures us, from the criminal's goods, as here,
and sometimes a fourth part.
(7) These consuls are named in the War of the Jews, B. II. ch. 11. sect;
1, Sentius Saturninus and Pomponius Secundus, as Spanheim notes here.
The speech of the former of them is set down in the next chapter, sect.
2.
(8) In this oration of Sentius Saturninus, we may see the great value
virtuous men put upon public liberty, and the sad misery they underwent,
while they were tyrannized over by such emperors as Caius. See
Josephus's own short but pithy reflection at the end of the chapter: "So
difficult," says he, "it is for those to obtain the virtue that is
necessary to a wise man, who have the absolute power to do what they
please without control."
(9) Hence we learn that, in the opinion of Saturninus, the sovereign
authority of the consuls and senate had been taken away just a hundred
years before the death of Caius, A.D. 41, or in the sixtieth year before
the Christian saga, when the first triumvirate began under Caesar,
Pompey, and Crassus.
(10) Spanheim here notes from Suetonius, that the name of Caius's sister
with whom he was guilty of incest, was Drusilla and that Suetonius adds,
he was guilty of the same crime with all his sisters also. He notes
further, that Suetonius omits the mention of the haven for ships, which
our author esteems the only public work for the good of the present and
future ages which Caius left behind him, though in an imperfect
condition.
(11) This Caius was the son of that excellent person Germanicus, who was
the son of Drusus, the brother of Tiberius the emperor.
(12) The first place Claudius came to was inhabited, and called
Herincure, as Spanheim here informs us from Suetonius, in Claud. ch. 10.
(13) How Claudius, another son of Drusus, which Drusus was the father of
Germanicus, could be here himself called Germanicus, Suetonius informs
us, when he assures us that, by a decree of the senate, the surname of
Germanicus was bestowed upon Drusus, and his posterity also.--In Claud.
ch. 1.
(14) This number of drachmae to be distributed to each private soldier,
five thousand drachmae, equal to twenty thousand sesterces, or one
hundred and sixty-one pounds sterling, seems much too large, and
directly contradicts Suetonius, ch. 10., who makes them in all but
fifteen sesterces, or two shillings and four pence. Yet might Josephus
have this number from Agrippa, junior, though I doubt the thousands, or
at least the hundreds, have been added by the transcribers, of which we
have had several examples already in Josephus.
(15) This piercing cold here complained of by Lupus agrees well to the
time of the year when Claudius began his reign; it being for certain
about the months of November, December, or January, and most probably a
few days after January the twenty-fourth, and a few days before the
Roman Parentalia.
(16) It is both here and elsewhere very remarkable, that the murders of
the vilest tyrants, who yet highly deserved to die, when those murderers
were under oaths, or other the like obligations of fidelity to them,
were usually revenged, and the murderers were cut off themselves, and
that after a remarkable manner; and this sometimes, as in the present
case, by those very persons who were not sorry for such murders, but got
kingdoms by them. The examples are very numerous, both in sacred and
profane histories, and seem generally indications of Divine vengeance on
such murderers. Nor is it unworthy of remark, that such murderers of
tyrants do it usually on such ill principles, in such a cruel manner,
and as ready to involve the innocent with the guilty, which was the case
here, ch. 1. sect. 14, and ch. 2. sect. 4, as justly deserved the Divine
vengeance upon them. Which seems to have been the case of Jehu also,
when, besides the house of Ahab, for whose slaughter he had a commission
from God, without any such commission, any justice or commiseration, he
killed Ahab's great men, and acquaintance, and priests, and forty-two of
the kindred of Ahaziah, 2 Kings 10:11-14. See Hosea 1:4. I do not mean
here to condemn Ehud or Judith, or the like executioners of God's
vengeance on those wicked tyrants who had unjustly oppressed God's own
people under their theocracy; who, as they appear still to have had no
selfish designs nor intentions to slay the innocent, so had they still a
Divine commission, or a Divine impulse, which was their commission for
what they did, Judges 3:15, 19, 20; Judith 9:2; Test. Levi. sect. 5, in
Authent. Rec. p. 312. See also page 432.
(17) Here St. Luke is in some measure confirmed, when he reforms us, ch.
3:1, that Lysanias was some time before tetrarch of Abilene, whose
capital was Abila; as he is further confirmed by Ptolemy, the great
geographer, which Spanheim here observes, when he calls that city Abila
of Lysanias. See the note on B. XVII. ch. 11. sect. 4; and Prid. at the
years 36 and 22. I esteem this principality to have belonged to the land
of Canaan originally, to have been the burying-place of Abel, and
referred to as such, Matthew 23:35; Luke 11:51. See Authent. Rec. Part.
II. p. 883--885.
(18) This form was so known and frequent among the Romans, as Dr. Hudson
here tells us from the great Selden, that it used to be thus represented
at the bottom of their edicts by the initial letters only, U. D. P. R.
L. P, Unde De Plano Recte Lege Possit; "Whence it may be plainly read
from the ground."
(19) Josephus shows, both here and ch. 7. sect. 3, that he had a much
greater opinion of king Agrippa I. than Simon the learned Rabbi, than
the people of Cesarea and Sebaste, ch. 7. sect. 4; and ch. 9. sect. 1;
and indeed than his double-dealing between the senate and Claudius, ch.
4. sect. 2, than his slaughter of James the brother of John, and his
imprisonment of Peter, or his vain-glorious behavior before he died,
both in Acts 12:13; and here, ch. 4. sect. 1, will justify or allow.
Josephus's character was probably taken from his son Agrippa, junior.
(20) This treasury-chamber seems to have been the very same in which our
Savior taught, and where the people offered their charity money for the
repairs or other uses of the temple, Mark 12:41, etc.; Luke 22:1; John
8:20.
(21) A strange number of condemned criminals to be under the sentence of
death at once; no fewer, it seems, than one thousand four hundred!
(22) We have a mighty cry made here by some critics, as the great
Eusebius had on purpose falsified this account of Josephus, so as to
make it agree with the parallel account in the Acts of the Apostles,
because the present copies of his citation of it, Hist. Eceles. B. II.
ch. 10., omit the words an owl--on a certain rope, which Josephus's
present copies retain, and only have the explicatory word or angel; as
if he meant that angel of the Lord which St. Luke mentions as smiting
Herod, Acts 12:23, and not that owl which Josephus called an angel or
messenger, formerly of good, but now of bad news, to Agrippa. This
accusation is a somewhat strange one in the case of the great Eusebius,
who is known to have so accurately and faithfully produced a vast number
of other ancient records, and particularly not a few out of our Josephus
also, without any suspicion of prevarication. Now, not to allege how
uncertain we are whether Josephus's and Eusebius's copies of the fourth
century were just like the present in this clause, which we have no
distinct evidence of, the following words, preserved still in Eusebius,
will not admit of any such exposition: "This [bird] (says Eusebius)
Agrippa presently perceived to be the cause of ill fortune, as it was
once of good fortune, to him;" which can only belong to that bird, the
owl, which as it had formerly foreboded his happy deliverance from
imprisonment, Antiq. B. XVIII. ch. 6. sect. 7, so was it then foretold
to prove afterward the unhappy forerunner of his death in five days'
time. If the improper words signifying cause, be changed for Josephus's
proper word angel or messenger, and the foregoing words, be inserted,
Esuebius's text will truly represent that in Josephus. Had this
imperfection been in some heathen author that was in good esteem with
our modern critics, they would have readily corrected these as barely
errors in the copies; but being in an ancient Christian writer, not so
well relished by many of those critics, nothing will serve but the
ill-grounded supposal of willful corruption and prevarication.
(23) This sum of twelve millions of drachmae, which is equal to three
millions of shekels, i.e. at 2s. 10d. a shekel, equal to four hundred
and twenty-five thousand pounds sterling, was Agrippa the Great's yearly
income, or about three quarters of his grandfather Herod's income; he
having abated the tax upon houses at Jerusalem, ch. 6. sect. 3, and was
not so tyrannical as Herod had been to the Jews. See the note on Antiq.
B. XVII. ch. 11. sect. 4. A large sum this! but not, it seems,
sufficient for his extravagant expenses.
(24) Reland takes notice here, not improperly, that Josephus omits the
reconciliation of this Herod Agrippa to the Tyrians and Sidoninus, by
the means of Blastus the king's chamberlain, mentioned Acts 12:20. Nor
is there any history in the world so complete, as to omit nothing that
other historians take notice of, unless the one be taken out of the
other, and accommodated to it.
(25) Photius, who made an extract out of this section, says they were
not the statues or images, but the ladies themselves, who were thus
basely abused by the soldiers.
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