Britain and Rome: Caesar to Claudius by P J O'Gorman;
Author:P J O'Gorman;
Language: eng
Format: epub
Tags: HISTORY / Military / Ancient
Publisher: Casemate Publishers & Book Distributors, LLC
Published: 2022-01-15T00:00:00+00:00
I shall be asked how I expect to escape the vengeance of those whom I satirise. Well, if I cannot show the names of the living, I must attack them under guise of the dead.33
According to Suetonius, it was Juvenalâs failure to âcovertly satirizeâ which saw him exiled to Egypt in his eightieth year.34 Juvenalâs coyness is expected and understandable but, nonetheless, his statement neither suggests nor proves that he was writing beyond the reign of Nero. Claudius and Nero are both mentioned by name several times and Juvenal makes relevant references to them also. It is wrong to presume that every named individual in the Satires is automatically an alias. Each time Claudius and Nero are explicitly mentioned, they are clearly not the butt of Juvenalâs joke and required no disguise. However, the satirist conspicuously avoids naming the emperor who âcaptured the Orkneysâ and the emperor who subscribed to obscure oracles inferred from the condition of a fish. Similarly, when Juvenal attacked unscrupulous governors, âwho have made greater triumphs in time of peace than were ever made in time of warâ, he employed the guise of the dead â using the name âMariusâ.
Traditionalist assumptions have misrepresented Juvenalâs Marius to be Marius Priscus. T.H.S. Escott explains that Juvenalâs âmention of the condemnation of Mariusâ links him to âan event which occurred A.D. 100â.35 Escott accepts that âthis is really the only sign in the satire which gives us certain knowledge as to its chronologyâ. However, this is patently untrue. It is worth highlighting that this enlightening event, which Escott cites as âcertain knowledgeâ, comes by way of the dubious discoveries of Tacitus during the Renaissance. Nevertheless, Juvenalâs âMariusâ appears twice in his Satires â in Satire I and VIII, and was specifically singled out because he represented âgovernorsâ¦who have made greater triumphs in time of peace than were ever made in time of warâ.36 Juvenal asks his audience ânot [to] despise Spain, Gaul, Illyricum, and Africaâ because âMarius has robbed all theseâ.37 He is patently referring to Gaius Marius, famous for his Marian reforms circa 107 BC, who notoriously plundered all of the aforementioned regions. Gaius Marius stands alone as one who enjoyed seven consulships, as well as multiple governorships, and remains as remarkable and recognizable today as he evidently was to Juvenalâs audience.
The creation of Tacitus, and especially his Agricola, have continued to fool traditionalists into assigning Juvenalâs work to âthe end of Domitianâs reign or at the beginning of that of Nerva or of Trajanâ.38 This short-sighted assertion relies on Juvenalâs reference to the Orkneys in his second satire, which the creator of Tacitus cynically lifted into a bogus biography of his protagonistâs fictitious father-in-law. However, both Juvenal and the Brittonic source predate the farcical find of âTacitusâ in the fifteenth century. Moreover, both assign Romeâs subjugation of the Orkneys to Claudiusâ reign and confirm it as valid satirical fodder for Juvenal. He rightfully ridicules Claudiusâ advance âbeyond the Irish coastâ but categorically avoids naming Claudius, presumably because of his stated fear of âvengeanceâ.
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