Read The Book of Ancient Bastards Online
Authors: Brian Thornton
THE BOOK OF
Ancient
BASTARDS
101 OF THE
WORST
Miscreants
and
Misdeeds
FROM
ANCIENT SUMER
TO THE
ENLIGHTENMENT
BRIAN THORNTON
For Robyn
Copyright © 2011 by Brian Thornton
All rights reserved.
This book, or parts thereof, may not be reproduced in any form without permission from the publisher; exceptions are made for brief excerpts used in published reviews.
Published by
Adams Media, a division of F+W Media, Inc.
57 Littlefield Street, Avon, MA 02322. U.S.A.
ISBN 10: 1-4405-2488-2
ISBN 13: 978-1-4405-2488-2
eISBN 10: 1-4405-2557-9
eISBN 13: 978-1-4405-2557-5
Printed in the United States of America.
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Thornton, Brian
The book of ancient bastards / Brian Thornton.
p. cm.
Includes index.
ISBN-13: 978-1-4405-2488-2
ISBN-10: 1-4405-2488-2
ISBN-13: 978-1-4405-2557-5 (electronic)
ISBN-10: 1-4405-2557-9 (electronic)
1. History, Ancient—Miscellanea. 2. Biography—Miscellanea. 3. Good and evil—History—Miscellanea. 4. Scandals—History—Miscellanea. I. Title.
D62.T47 2011
920.02—dc22
2011006235
This publication is designed to provide accurate and authoritative information with regard to the subject matter covered. It is sold with the understanding that the publisher is not engaged in rendering legal, accounting, or other professional advice. If legal advice or other expert assistance is required, the services of a competent professional person should be sought.
—From a
Declaration of Principles
jointly adopted by a Committee of the American Bar Association and a Committee of Publishers and Associations
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I’ve said before that the creation of a book is a collaborative effort. Such was definitely the case with
The Book of Ancient Bastards
. Paula Munier, Director of Innovation at Adams Media, believed in the project from the moment I brought it to her, and supported me every step of the way. My agent Gina Panettieri helped get me a deal and made it a better one. Development Editor Jennifer Lawler was a true professional and the embodiment of “grace under pressure.” Thank you all.
And thanks to colleagues like author Jeri Westerson, who helped with the selection of bastards who occupy the medieval section of the book, and author/editor Heather B. Moore, for her help with the research on King Solomon. Your efforts helped make the book better, and for that, I am deeply grateful.
Lastly and most importantly, thanks to my family: my parents Hal and Berniece, and my brother Paul, for all of their support. And thanks most especially to my wife Robyn. Once again this book is dedicated to you.
Just Like Moses, Only Bloodier, and Not Egyptian (reigned 2334–2279 B.C.)
Sometimes Your Really Don’t Want to Lick the Spoon (reigned 1792–1750 B.C.)
Or How to Get Your Own People to Destroy Every Trace of You After You’re Gone (reigned ca. 1351–1334 B.C.)
Or How to Make It Impossible for Your Own People to Forget You After You’re Gone (reigned 1279–1213 B.C.)
5. SENNACHERIB, KING OF ASSYRIA:
If You Can’t Conquer Jerusalem, at Least Brag about All the Little Towns You Destroyed (reigned 705–681 B.C.)
All Those Women, All Those Gods, All That Trouble (ca. 1011–931 B.C.)
The Last King of Babylon and His Army of Gods (reigned 556–539 B.C.)
8. DARIUS I, GREAT KING OF PERSIA:
Will the Real Usurper Please Stand Up? (ca. 550–486 B.C.)
9. POLYCRATES, TYRANT OF SAMOS:
Never Arm Your Enemies (reigned ca. 538–522 B.C.)
10. HIPPIAS, TYRANT OF ATHENS:
Just Because You’re a Paranoid Tyrant Doesn’t Mean Someone Isn’t Out to Get You (reigned 527–510 B.C.)
11. ARISTAGORAS, TYRANT OF MILETUS:
Better a Live Rebel Than a Dead Royal Governor (?–497 B.C.)
Opportunism, Anyone? (ca. 450–404 B.C.)
13. CRITIAS, LEADER OF THE THIRTY ATHENIAN TYRANTS:
Putting the Terror into Tyranny (460–403 B.C.)
14. DIONYSIUS I, TYRANT OF SYRACUSE:
When Philosophers and Tyrants Don’t Mix (ca. 432–367 B.C.)
Sometimes the Bastard Doesn’t Fall Far from the Tree (382–336 B.C.)
Bastard as Exemplar for an Age (356–323 B.C.)
17. OLYMPIAS, QUEEN OF MACEDONIA:
Sometimes the Bastard Doesn’t Fall Far from the Tree, Redux (ca. 375–316 B.C.)
Sage Old Bastard Who Died in His Bed (ca. 367–ca. 283 B.C.)
The Guy Who Made Oedipus Look Like a Boy Scout (?–279 B.C.)
Why We “Draw the Line” (ca. 215–164 B.C.)
What Your Subjects Call You Behind Your Back Is a Lot More Important Than What They Call You to Your Face (ca. 182–116 B.C.)
Poisonous Evil Queen or Just Misunderstood? (ca. 164–121 B.C.)
Gold-Plated Bastard (134–63 B.C.)
24. CLEOPATRA VII, QUEEN OF EGYPT:
Yes, That Cleopatra (69–30 B.C.)
25. LUCIUS TARQUINIUS SUPERBUS, KING OF ROME:
That’s
Superbus
, Not
Superb
(reigned 535–509 B.C.)
Elephants and Siege Engines Just the Tip of the Iceberg (248–182 B.C.)
The Man Who Killed the Roman Republic (157–86 B.C.)
28. LUCIUS CORNELIUS SULLA FELIX:
With Friends Like These . . . . (ca. 138–78 B.C.)
29. CATILINE AND HIS CONSPIRACY:
A Confederacy of Dunces? (108–62 B.C.)
Lies and the Lying Liar Who Told Them (?–84 B.C.)
31. PUBLIUS CORNELIUS CETHEGUS:
When You Sleep with Someone, You’re Sleeping with Everyone They Slept with, Too (fl. first century B.C.)
With Friends Like These, Redux (93–53 B.C.)
33. MARCUS LICINIUS CRASSUS DIVES:
How Rich Is Rich Enough? (ca. 115–53 B.C.)
If You’re Going to be the “New Alexander,” Better Prepare for a Messy End (106–48 B.C.)
No Fool Like an Old Fool (106–43 B.C.)
One Man’s Thief Is Another Man’s Art Connoisseur (ca. 114–43 B.C.)
The Gold Standard of Bastardry (ca. 100–44 B.C.)
38. MARCUS PORCIUS CATO UTICENSIS:
The Bastard as Tiresome, Humorless Scold (95–46 B.C.)
The Noblest Roman Tax Farmer of Them All (85–42 B.C.)
“Lean and Hungry” Bastard (ca. 85–42 B.C.)
Dandy, Playboy, Ruthless Bastard (ca. 86–30 B.C.)
42. GAIUS JULIUS CAESAR OCTAVIANUS (AUGUSTUS):
Sage Old Bastard Who Died in Bed, Redux (63 B.C.– A.D. 14)
Stage Mother for an Empire (58 B.C.– A.D. 29)
Bastard as the Grumpy Old Man Who Lives on Your Street (42 B.C.– A.D. 37)
Clearing the Way for a Monster (20 B.C.– A.D. 31)
You Call That Nag a Roman Consul? (A.D. 12–41)
When Is a Consul Like a Stone? (10 B.C.–A.D. 54)
Actor, Singer, Poet, Athlete, Matricidal Mamma’s Boy (A.D. 37–68) . .114
How Being Too Cheap to Pay Off Your Promised Bribes Can Be a Bad Idea (3 B.C.– A.D. 68)
The Emperor as Scheming Pretty Boy (A.D. 32–69)
The Fat Bastard Who Tried to Sell His Throne (A.D. 12–69)
No Bald Jokes! (?–84 B.C.)
The Emperor as Hercules (A.D. 161–192)
The Man Who Bought the Roman Empire (A.D. 133–193)
The Emperor Who Gave Us the Word “Severe” (A.D. 145–211)
Don’t Drop Your Guard Along with Your Trousers (A.D. 188–217)
The Emperor and His Big Stone God (A.D. 203–222)
How Screwing Your Employees’ Wives Can Cost Ya! (ca. A.D. 250–285)
The Best Place to Be Standing When Lightning Strikes Your Boss (A.D. 245–311)
The Next Best Thing to Being God (A.D. 272–337)
The Emperor as Paranoid Plodder (A.D. 317–361)
When Nike Is More Than Just the Name of a Shoe (A.D. 483–565)
Literal Bastard, Figurative Bastard (A.D. 742–814)
64. EMPRESS IRENE OF BYZANTIUM:
Sometimes a Boy’s Best Friend Is His Mother. This Isn’t One of Those Times (ca. A.D. 752–803)
Even Death Can’t Stop Justice (A.D. ?–897)
66. BASIL I “THE MACEDONIAN” OF BYZANTIUM:
Why Trusting Your Life to an Assassin Probably Isn’t a Good Idea (ca. A.D. 830–886)
What It Takes to Earn the Title of “Bulgar Slayer” (A.D. 958–1025)
Screwing His Kingdom Away (A.D. 941?–949)
The Man Who Sold the Papacy (ca. A.D. 1012–ca. 1056)
Sounds Better Than “William the Bastard” (ca. A.D. 1028–1087)
When Your Vows Forbid You to Shed Blood, Use a Big, Heavy Club Instead (ca. A.D. 1030–1097)
How Much Penance Can One King Do? (A.D. 1050–1106)
Red-Headed Bachelor Bastard (ca. A.D. 1056–1100)
The Man Who Hijacked the Fourth Crusade (A.D. 1107?–1205):
Putting the “Devil” Into “Devil’s Brood” (A.D. 1133–1189)
Brood Mare to the Devil’s Brood (A.D. 1122–1204)
77. HENRY THE YOUNG KING OF ENGLAND:
Who Wants to Rule When There’s Jousting to Be Done? (A.D. 1155–1183)
78. RICHARD I THE LION-HEARTED:
A Talent for War (A.D. 1157–1199)
Don’t Let the Name Fool Ya (ca. A.D. 1160–1216)
“That Son of Perdition” (A.D. 1158–1186)
Short, Miserly, and Mean (A.D. 1167–1216)
82. PHILIP II AUGUSTUS OF FRANCE:
Cowardly, Duplicitous, and Effective (A.D. 1165–1223)
Stupid Is as Stupid Does (A.D. 1165–1223)
A Saintly King with Locusts for Relatives (A.D. 1207–1272)
When the Only Tool You Have Is a Hammer, Use It on the Scots (A.D. 1239–1307)
86. PHILIP IV THE FAIR OF FRANCE:
Don’t Let the Name Fool Ya, Redux (A.D. 1268–1314)
The Man Who Hijacked the Papacy (A.D. 1264–1314)
88. KING EDWARD II OF ENGLAND:
Giving Away the Kingdom to His Boyfriends (A.D. 1284–1327)
89. ROGER MORTIMER, EARL OF MARCH:
Screwing the Queen Doesn’t Make You King (A.D. 1287–1330)
90. PEDRO THE CRUEL OF CASTILE:
The Nickname Says It All (A.D. 1334–1369)
91. BERNABÒ VISCONTI, LORD OF MILAN:
Why Let Brotherhood Stand in the Way of Your Territorial Ambitions? (A.D. 1323–1385)
92. CHARLES THE BAD, KING OF NAVARRE:
The Nickname Says It All, Redux (A.D. 1332–1387)
Crazy Like a Pope (ca. A.D. 1318–1389)
Why You Should Be Nice to Your Relatives (A.D. 1366–1413)
Don’t Let That Frat-Boy Act Fool Ya (A.D. 1387–1422)
Grand Inquisitor, Closet Jew (A.D. 1420–1498)
The Spider King (A.D. 1423–1483)
Chastity, Schmastity, I’m the Pope and My Son’s Gonna Be a Cardinal (A.D. 1431–1503)
Hunchback? No. Child-Killer? Probably (A.D. 1452–1485)
The Cheap Bastard’s Guide to Solidifying Your Hold on Power (A.D. 1457–1509)
Where to Begin? (A.D. 1491–1547)