Why Rome Fell. Michael Arnheim

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Republic. So, what Augustus is saying here is that he restored the Republic, which of course is false but which was a major theme in his propaganda. The mention of populusque (and the people), does not have any special significance.

      “Ironic victory”: Rogers suggests that:

      [I]t is possible to argue” that the Augustan “monarchy itself was one of the (unintended) consequences of the struggle between some of the nobiles and the populus Romanus over the question of who was the sovereign power in the res publica. If we look at the breakdown of the Roman Republic from this perspective, we might see the emergence of a monarch from among the nobiles in 27 BC as an ironic victory for that democratic element in the Roman constitution, the Roman people. (Millar 2002, loc. 206.)

      This is muddled. The fall of the Roman Republic was indeed the victory over the senatorial aristocracy by the people’s champion, first Julius Caesar and then his heir, Augustus. But it makes little sense to suggest that this amounted to the victory of the “…democratic element in the Roman constitution, the Roman people.” Moreover, if the Roman people had exercised as much power in the Republic as Millar and Rogers seem to believe, why would they have wanted to destroy the Republic? Yet Julius Caesar had made no bones about his contempt for the Republic by accepting an indefinite dictatorship and by describing the Republic as just “…a name without substance or form.” Augustus’s victory was not of democracy but of a form of monarchy that artfully concealed its true nature and managed to survive, with some modifications, for some 300 years.

      Mommsen’s “Dyarchy”

      Syme: “A Monarchy Rules through an Oligarchy”

      Against Millar’s rejection of the characterisation of the Roman Republic as either an aristocracy or an oligarchy, we have this important statement by Sir Ronald Syme about the Roman Republic, based on detailed prosopographical evidence: “In any age of the history of Republican Rome about twenty or thirty men, drawn from a dozen dominant families, hold a monopoly of office and power.” (Syme 1939, p. 124.) In his much acclaimed The Roman Revolution, a book about the rise to power of Augustus, written in 1939, Syme portrayed Augustus as an autocrat in all but name. But then Syme went off at a tangent and proclaimed in ringing tones, without any evidential basis that “In all ages, whatever the form and name of government or whatever may be the name and theory of the constitution, be it monarchy, republic, or democracy, an oligarchy lurks behind the façade.” (1939, 7, 15.) Fifty years later, in 1989, his portrayal of Augustus’s regime was still the same, describing it as “autocratic government” and adding; “The Princeps duly went on to exploit the ‘res publica’, encroaching on the functions of Senate, of magistrates, of laws.” And:“‘Potentia’ now assumed the respectable name of ‘auctoritas’.” (Syme 1989, p. 1 f.)

      I agree with Syme on the monopoly of office and power in the Roman Republic, but I certainly do not agree with the application of his one-size-fits-all oligarchic theory to the Augustan Principate. Accepting that Augustus initiated a monarchy, Syme tried to square the circle with the self-contradictory and erroneous oracular comment that “A monarchy rules through an oligarchy.”

      Monarchy and oligarchy are diametric opposites, representing the two poles of governmental power. (See Chapter 6 for a full discussion.) By “monarchy,” I mean true, strong monarchy, a system in which power is concentrated in the hands of one person, usually with support from the lower classes, against the return of the oligarchy or aristocracy, which they have most likely overthrown. An oligarchy, on the other hand, is normally intent on perpetuating its shared group power and is, therefore, afraid of any one person becoming too powerful and having too much popular support. The vicissitudes of Roman history epitomize this type of conflict.

      Syme does not mention potestas at all, but rather potentia and he does not suggest that this was ever given up, only that it masqueraded under the “respectable name of auctoritas.” Unlike potestas, which is duly authorised, constitutional power, and auctoritas, which was not power at all, potentia was unbridled, naked power or might.

      Syme’s portrayal of Augustus is a gross exaggeration of Augustus’s position, but it is correct insofar as the regime is shown to be monarchical. Yet, no sooner does Syme condemn Augustus as a lawless despot than we come across the bombshell quoted above: “In all ages, whatever the form and name of government, be it monarchy, republic, or democracy, an oligarchy lurks behind the façade.” (Syme 1939, 7, 15.) Was Augustus’s rule not monarchical then? Syme certainly believed it was. So, how does he square this with his sweeping blanket theory of oligarchy? “A monarchy rules through an oligarchy,” is Syme’s baffling response. (Ibid., p. 8.) In 1989, Syme is still barking up the oligarchy tree: “Oligarchy is imposed as the guiding theme, the link from age to age whatever be the form and name of government.” (Syme 1989, p. 13.)

      This makes little sense. In a purely banal sense, it is of course true that no individual can single-handedly rule a state. The ruler will need the assistance and support of others in order to maintain power. But here we come

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