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Thread: The Worse Roman Emperor?

  1. #46
    confidentially pleased cacian's Avatar
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    =BookBeauty;1121344]Honorius is a good candidate for the worst Roman emperor.
    Never heard of him, for a name such as Honorius whoever he was he obviously did not live up to his Honorius name.
    Big words and nothing to back them up with.
    He killed the one man who might have prevented the Western Roman empire collapse: His guardian, father-in-law, and principal general Flavius Stilicho. Stilicho provided much-needed stability in the already-declining empire. If he had lived, that might have been just enough to shift the tides... But we shall never know.
    I personally would not think they would have lasted more then they have, they had gone too far and had too many on their hands, such as empires outside Rome.
    Ruling outside your own city leads to debauchery corruption treason and ultimately destruction. They bit more then they could chew.

    There's also a funny story about his chicken, that he named ''Rome''.
    What it this chicken story about (not the chicken and the egg story I hope)


    Valentinian III is another lesser known emperor.



    He killed a very good General too, in a fit of jealous rage.
    Fits, I agree, they had many. Never heard of him either.

    Caligula didn't really mess up the Empire in any real way. Nero didn't really burn down Rome. Based upon their debauchery, and immoral behaviour,
    No you are right but one can say that they did it to themselves rather then to Rome. The city still stands today, they have gone. The proof is in the story.
    these aren't, in my opinion, true reasons to put them up as the worst.
    May be you are right, 'the worst' is propably the wrong expression, but a more appropriate term,something like 'notoriously inept and absurd failure was their only option' would make a better description.

    There were very few Roman emperors that were moral.
    I read that there were very few roman emperor that were 'normal' hehe
    Last edited by cacian; 03-07-2012 at 09:45 AM.
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  2. #47
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    I think the most sadly underrated Emperor ,whose mission to stop the insidious tide of Christianity unhappily failed, was Julian the Apostate.

  3. #48
    Registered User /dev/null's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Darcy88 View Post
    I just read in Tacitus that Nero had fun by dressing up like a criminal, descending upon the city by night-fall and assaulting random people. He attacked one nobleman who struck him in return. The nobleman then recognized who his assailant was and apologized. Unmoved, Nero ordered him to commit suicide.
    Is that form the Annals? I was considering rereading Suetonius, but that sounds tempting.

  4. #49
    confidentially pleased cacian's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Darcy88 View Post
    I just read in Tacitus that Nero had fun by dressing up like a criminal, descending upon the city by night-fall and assaulting random people. He attacked one nobleman who struck him in return. The nobleman then recognized who his assailant was and apologized. [/QUOTE
    Unmoved, Nero ordered him to commit suicide.
    I would propably say that he ordered him to kill himself rather then commit suicide.
    Last edited by cacian; 03-07-2012 at 01:36 PM.
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  5. #50
    Registered User Darcy88's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by cacian View Post
    I would propably say that he ordered him to kill himself rather then commit suicide.
    What's the difference?

  6. #51
    Registered User Darcy88's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by /dev/null View Post
    Is that form the Annals? I was considering rereading Suetonius, but that sounds tempting.
    Yeah its from the Annals. Its pretty good. I really much prefer earlier Roman history, the Punic wars up to the late Republic, but imperial Rome is still interesting. Before you read Tacitus I would urge to you read Livy if you haven't already. He might be my favourite ancient historian of all, excepting maybe Thucydides.

  7. #52
    confidentially pleased cacian's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Darcy88 View Post
    What's the difference?
    Hi Darcy

    The way I see the difference is this:

    one can kill themselves in many different ways:
    one is by accident
    one is by fighting like gladiators did they fought till one of them died
    and
    one can kill themselves by being told they have to like in this case.

    to commit suicide is a one way decision it comes from the person themselves because of unknown/hopeless circumstances.
    it may never try
    but when it does it sigh
    it is just that
    good
    it fly

  8. #53
    Registered User Darcy88's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by cacian View Post
    Hi Darcy

    The way I see the difference is this:

    one can kill themselves in many different ways:
    one is by accident
    one is by fighting like gladiators did they fought till one of them died
    and
    one can kill themselves by being told they have to like in this case.

    to commit suicide is a one way decision it comes from the person themselves because of unknown/hopeless circumstances.
    That's one way of looking at it. I think both ways are correct though.

  9. #54
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    No Roman emperor was inmoral or amoral, which is an impossibility. But the nature of the Roman Empire was based strictly on Protagorian, sophist ethics. Those ethics prescribed that the only justified behavior was to proceed in self interest with enduring strength. It was the insitution of the law of the fittest. Check the Protagorian position thouroughly and what happened when the Greek agrarian states became city states ruled by the nouveau rich, who were eventually educated by the sophists. Undestand the roots of moral sophistry.

  10. #55
    Registered User /dev/null's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Darcy88 View Post
    Yeah its from the Annals. Its pretty good. I really much prefer earlier Roman history, the Punic wars up to the late Republic, but imperial Rome is still interesting. Before you read Tacitus I would urge to you read Livy if you haven't already. He might be my favourite ancient historian of all, excepting maybe Thucydides.
    Livy then. Any recomendation on early roman history?

  11. #56
    Registered User Darcy88's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by /dev/null View Post
    Livy then. Any recomendation on early roman history?
    Oh yeah. Penguin has out a book of Livy called The Early History of Rome. Its enthralling. It hammers home what politics was and is fundamentally about. A great read.

  12. #57
    confidentially pleased cacian's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by cafolini View Post
    No Roman emperor was inmoral or amoral, which is an impossibility. But the nature of the Roman Empire was based strictly on Protagorian, sophist ethics. Those ethics prescribed that the only justified behavior was to proceed in self interest with enduring strength. It was the insitution of the law of the fittest. Check the Protagorian position thouroughly and what happened when the Greek agrarian states became city states ruled by the nouveau rich, who were eventually educated by the sophists. Undestand the roots of moral sophistry.
    the point here is this:
    does anyone needs education when it comes to knowing right from wrong?
    Unless of course one is saying one is not very bright which in this case one needs to taught that killing or massacres is wrong.
    I find that quite debiliating as a fact if it was true about the sophists educating emperors. What next? educating presidents would be next.
    it may never try
    but when it does it sigh
    it is just that
    good
    it fly

  13. #58
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    Quote Originally Posted by cacian View Post
    This kind of behaviour bears all the signs of insanity. How these individuals got to rule is beyond my comprehension. It is scary to think that these 'emperors' were literally mad.
    But just because x and y are collarated doesnt mean that one causes the other. Maybe it is just the absolute power which comes along which the position of emperor which makes most of them mad.

    Im not saying what I said is ture, but it is interesting as a thought.

  14. #59
    Registered User Darcy88's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Alexander III View Post
    But just because x and y are collarated doesnt mean that one causes the other. Maybe it is just the absolute power which comes along which the position of emperor which makes most of them mad.

    Im not saying what I said is ture, but it is interesting as a thought.
    I think what you say here is definitely true to a large degree. A person with cruel impulses who is humble and must in order to get on with co-workers and members of the opposite sex wear a mask of affability is not going to indulge his sadistic "evil" desires as he would were he in a position of absolute power.

    But I do not agree with the old saying "absolute power corrupts absolutely." Solon was not corrupt. Marcus Aurelius I don't think was corrupt. A good man in a position of power might very well remain, despite his high authority, a good man.

    Nero the mason or Nero the blacksmith may not have been as wicked a man as Nero the emperor.

  15. #60
    Registered User Darcy88's Avatar
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    And dev null. I said Livy is my favorite ancient historian. I kick myself now for saying that when it is in fact Plutarch who is far and away my definite fav. I'm reading a book of his lives now, short biographies of the leading men of Greece, Macedonia and Rome. Just read the one on the Macedonian King and general Demetrius. One of the most entertaining eye-popping things my eyes have ever been delighted to behold. Now I'm reading one on the great Roman statesman Camillus. It covers the sack of Rome by the Gauls and is full of incidents almost too perfectly dramatic and action-packed to have actually gone down.

    One could gain a decent knowledge of all Greek, Hellenistic and Roman history by reading all of Plutarch's lives. And it sure ain't as tedious as Polybius or some other ancient historians. Its like it was written by a Hollywood screen-writer with a golden muse-blessed pen.

    Plutarch was Shakespeare's main source for Roman history, for some of his plays like Antony and Cleopatra, if I remember correctly.

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