Caligula: A Biography

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Authors: Aloys Winterling

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In honor of beloved Virgil—

“O degli altri poeti onore e lume . . .”

—Dante,
Inferno

The publisher gratefully acknowledges the generous support of
the Classical Literature Endowment Fund of the University of
California Press Foundation, which was established
by a major gift from Joan Palevsky
.

Caligula

Bust of Caligula. Copenhagen, Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek 637 (Inv. 1453). Photo: Ole Haupt.

Caligula

A Biography

Aloys Winterling

Translated by Deborah Lucas Schneider,

Glenn W. Most, and Paul Psoinos

University of California Press, one of the most distinguished university presses in the United States, enriches lives around the world by advancing scholarship in the humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences. Its activities are supported by the UC Press Foundation and by philanthropic contributions from individuals and institutions. For more information, visit
www.ucpress.edu
.

University of California Press
Berkeley and Los Angeles, California

University of California Press, Ltd.
London, England

© 2011 by The Regents of the University of California

German original © Verlag C. H. Beck oHG, München 2003

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Winterling, Aloys.

[Caligula. English]

Caligula : a biography / Aloys Winterling ; translated by Deborah

Lucas Schneider, Glenn W. Most, and Paul Psoinos

p.    cm.

Originally published in German: München : C.H. Beck, c2003,

with title Caligula : eine Biographie.

Includes bibliographical references and index.

ISBN
978-0-520-24895-3 (cloth, alk. paper)

1. Caligula, Emperor of Rome, 12–41. 2. Rome—History—Caligula, 37–41.

3. Emperors—Rome—Biography. I. Title.

DG283.W5613    2011

 

937′.07092—dc22

2011012924

Manufactured in the United States of America

20   19   18   17   16   15   14   13   12   11

10   9   8   7   6   5   4   3   2   1

In keeping with its commitment to support environmentally responsible and sustainable printing practices, UC Press has printed this book on Natures Book, which contains 30% post-consumer waste and meets the minimum requirements of
ANSI
/
NISO Z
39.48-1992 (
R
1997) (
Permanence of Paper
).

CONTENTS

List of Abbreviations

Introduction: A Mad Emperor?

1. Childhood and Youth

2. Two Years as
Princeps

3. The Conflicts Escalate

4. Five Months of Monarchy

5. Murder on the Palatine

Conclusion: Inventing the Mad Emperor

Epilogue to the English Edition

Notes

Bibliography

Index

ABBREVIATIONS

Dig
.

Digesta Justiniani

Dio

Cassius Dio,
Roman History

Jos.
Ant
.

Flavius Josephus,
Antiquitates Judaicae

Phil.
Leg
.

Philo,
Legatio ad Gaium

Sen.
Ad Helv
.

Seneca,
Ad Helviam Matrem de Consolatione

De Const. Sap
.

Seneca,
De Constantia Sapientis

Suet.
Aug
.

Suetonius,
De Vita Caesarum libri: Augustus

Cal
.

Suetonius,
De Vita Caesarum libri: Gaius Caligula

Claud
.

Suetonius,
De Vita Caesarum libri: Claudius

Tib
.

Suetonius,
De Vita Caesarum libri: Tiberius

Vit
.

Suetonius,
De Vita Caesarum libri: Vitellius

Tac.
Ann
.

Tacitus,
Annales

Figure 1. Ruling Emperors.

INTRODUCTION
A Mad Emperor?

Caligula, the man who was Roman emperor from
A.D
. 37 to 41, started out as a tyrannical ruler and degenerated into a monster. He drank pearls dissolved in vinegar and ate food covered with gold leaf. He forced men and women of high rank to have sex with him, turned part of his palace into a brothel, and even committed incest with his own sisters. The chief victims of his senseless cruelty were Roman senators. Torture and executions were the order of the day. He removed two consuls from office because they had forgotten his birthday. He considered himself superhuman and forced contemporaries to worship him as a god. He wanted to make his horse a consul and planned to move the capital of the Empire from Rome to Alexandria.

His biographer Suetonius, to whom we owe most of this information, and the other ancient sources have an explanation for this behavior: He was insane. The philosopher Seneca, a contemporary who knew him personally, mentions his “madness” and calls him a “beast.” Another contemporary, Philo of Alexandria, who had contact with him as the head of a legation, speaks of his
“insanity.” Pliny the Elder and Flavius Josephus, two authors writing several decades later, mention his absurd behavior and report on his “madness.” At the beginning of the second century Tacitus, the most noted historian of the Roman Empire, whose account of Caligula’s reign has been lost, speaks of the emperor’s “troubled brain.” Suetonius, who wrote his biography a little less than a hundred years after Caligula’s death, considered him to have been “mentally ill,” and Cassius Dio, who wrote a voluminous history of Rome at the start of the third century, also believed that the emperor had “lost his head.”

No wonder, then, that modern scholarship has followed these conclusions: “Imperial madness” is the standard explanation. Ludwig Quidde, who made this term famous at the end of the nineteenth century, describes this “disease” as “megalomania, carried to the point of regarding oneself as divine; disregard for all limits of law and all the rights of other individuals; brutal cruelty without purpose or reason.” Although these elements are also found “in other mentally ill people,” the unique quality of an emperor’s madness lay in his position as ruler, which “provides particularly fertile soil for the seeds of such a predisposition and permits them to develop unhindered in a manner that is otherwise hardly possible.” For Quidde’s contemporaries, however, this brief biographical sketch of Caligula had a double meaning, a hidden intention beneath the surface of the words. They saw the depiction as so clearly aimed simultaneously at another emperor, Kaiser Wilhelm II of Germany—who was certainly not insane—that Quidde’s book ran through thirty printings within a short time. It also earned the author three months in prison and ended his academic career. Yet these events did not weaken the impact of his conclusions about Caligula. The author of a recent biography (published in 1991) still describes the emperor
as “crazy,” and a recent survey of the scholarly literature contains references to his “imperial madness.”

Readers of this biography of Caligula thus appear to be in for quite a story—and indeed they are. Matters are considerably more complicated than might appear at first glance, however. It was established during the nineteenth century that ancient accounts of this emperor are by no means as much in agreement as they may seem. Take Caligula’s sex life, for example: The claim that the emperor committed incest with his three sisters is misinformation that surfaces for the first time in Suetonius. Its hollowness is easily proved: The emperor’s two contemporaries Seneca and Philo, who were both familiar with aristocratic circles in Rome and well informed, heap invective on the emperor and would hardly have failed to mention such a charge had it been in circulation then. But clearly they knew nothing about it. The same holds for Tacitus. In his history of the early Empire he discusses at some length the dissolute life of the younger Agrippina, who was Caligula’s sister and the wife of the later emperor Claudius. He even considers her capable of having attempted incest with her own son, the emperor Nero. Clearly he would have mentioned any incest between Agrippina and her brother, which would have suited his account, but no such allegation was known to him. Thus the story was invented at some point after Caligula’s death.

A further example: A broadly based conspiracy against Caligula took place midway through the year 39, in which many members of the Roman aristocracy participated, including an important military commander in Germania, the emperor’s sisters, his closest confidant among the senators, and the sitting consuls. It was a highly dramatic occurrence, which threatened the emperor’s life and fundamentally altered his behavior toward
his fellow members of the senatorial order. Curiously, the early sources are completely silent on the matter. Suetonius does not devote a single word to the conspiracy itself; he describes only the emperor’s apparently confused reactions to it. Yet two casual references to it in his biographies of the emperors Claudius and Vespasian reveal that the events, which are also documented in inscriptions, were well known to him.

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