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HUI216 Italian Civilization

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Title: HUI216 Italian Civilization


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HUI216Italian Civilization
  • Andrea Fedi

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Marble Portrait of Agrippina (ca. 50 CE, National
Museum, Naples)
Aureus of Agrippina and Nero, from Lyon (France,
ca. 54 CE)
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11.6 The life of Nero chronology of the main
events
  • 49 Agrippina marries Emperor Claudius, who adopts
    Nero (Agrippina's son from a previous marriage)
  • 53 Nero marries his stepsister Octavia
  • 54 Claudius dies (poison?)
  • Nero becomes Emperor, before his 17th birthday
  • Seneca and Burrus are his tutors the first a
    great philosopher, originally from Spain, the
    second a former military officer
  • 55 Britannicus (Claudius's son) dies (poison?)

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11.6 The murder of Agrippina and the life of
Nero chronology of the main events
  • 59-62 Agrippina is killed, Burrus dies, Seneca
    retires
  • Nero is on his own, free to do whatever he likes
  • 64 The Great Fire destroys more than half of Rome
  • Nero builds his new palace on prime land that was
    expropriated after the fire
  • 68 Nero kills himself before he is captured by
    the soldiers of an opposing faction
  • 68-69 the year of the 4 Emperors
  • in a short period, these 4 Emperors succeed one
    another by defeating the previous Emperor in
    battle, or by gaining larger support within the
    army
  • the events of this year shows the weakness
    resulting from the lack of a clear mechanism of
    succession in the Roman Empire

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11.6 Emperor Claudius
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11.7 Tacitus how Roman Emperors are chosen (54
CE)
  • At noon on the 13th of October, the gates of the
    palace were suddenly thrown open, and Nero,
    accompanied by Burrus, went forth to the cohort
    which was on guard
  • There, at the suggestion of the commanding
    officer, he was hailed with joyful shouts, and
    set on a litter
  • Some, it is said, hesitated, and looked around
    and asked where Britannicus was
  • then, when there was no one to lead a resistance,
    they yielded to what was offered them

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11.7 How Nero becomes Emperor at the age of 17
  • Nero is hailed Emperor by a small military unit,
    that was guarding the palace
  • A gift is promised to the soldiers in Rome, to
    encourage them to welcome and support the new
    Emperor
  • The Senate follows "the voice of the soldiers"
  • There is "no hesitation in the provinces"
  • "Divine honors" are decreed to Claudius
  • Claudius's will is not "publicly read," for fear
    that it might mention his son Britannicus, who
    was the legitimate heir to the throne (even
    though younger than Nero himself)

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11.7 The mechanism of accession to the throne
  • The mechanism of accession to the throne was not
    clearly regulated in ancient Rome
  • The practice of Kings in other regions dictated
    that the firstborn son would succeed his father,
    but in Rome that did not always happened, not
    even during the monarchy (753-509 BCE)
  • This lack of fixed rules allowed Nero and his
    mother to act quickly and seize the throne
  • Nero, after all, was Claudius's stepson, and
    although he was barely 16 (all of this happened
    before his 17th birthday), he was a few years
    older than Britannicus
  • This course of events makes Claudius's death
    suspicious

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11.8 The murder of Agrippina a "long meditated
crime"
  • Power and ambition
  • Nero, justifiably, suspects that his mother wants
    a share of the power that she has procured for
    her son
  • It is not by chance that on the Roman coins
    produced during the first years of his empire,
    one can see not just the face of the Emperor
    Nero, as customary, but also the profile of his
    mother
  • The passion for Poppaea
  • Nero wants to be free to divorce Octavia and
    marry his lover
  • Tacitus's narration is framed like a tragedy,
    rather than an accurate and objective historical
    narration

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11.8 The murder of Agrippina political bias
inside the narration
  • Tacitus, as a conservative Republican historian,
    was biased, and his narration betrays his
    political agenda
  • he lobbied for a more powerful Senate, capable of
    keeping Emperors from abusing their position of
    power
  • he thought it possible to revert to even a
    limited form of democracy
  • Tacitus and other historians, like Suetonius, are
    largely responsible for the creation of the
    stereotypical image of the decadent Roman empire
  • The issue is not whether Nero or Caligula were
    not as immoral or violent as these historians
    described them, but how much their personality
    quirks really affected the Empire, which survived
    for another 400 years

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11.8 Elements of a literary tragedy inside the
narration of the murder of Agrippina
  • The sins and the impious behavior of the main
    characters justify and prepare the story's
    developments
  • greed, murder, incest, perversion, simulation and
    hypocrisy
  • Growing anxiety results from the various
    successful crimes, rather than elation and
    tranquility (cf. Shakespeare's Macbeth)
  • The theme of the fight of good vs. evil
  • Seneca and some of the senators fight on the side
    of democracy, justice and honesty against
    Agrippina, Nero and their lackeys or accomplices

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11.8 Literary devices used inside the narration
of the murder of Agrippina
  • Another typical literary device employed in this
    episode is the historian's insistence on the
    description of the frame of mind of the main
    characters
  • Traditional historians were expected not to
    speculate on the thoughts and feelings of
    historical figures while dramatic events were
    happening
  • Unless they could rely on the report of an
    eyewitness, real or legendary, they would either
    be silent or they would convey those feelings and
    thoughts by embellishing and re-creating public
    speeches given by those historical figures, under
    the pretense that eyewitness existed who heard
    the speech and could confirm its contents

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11.8 Tacitus the sin of incest, the art of
innuendo
  • Consider how Tacitus treats the alleged incest of
    Agrippina and Nero, introducing a variety of
    sources and eyewitnesses, never fully supporting
    or denying the allegations of incest, all the
    while giving the impression that he wants to keep
    an objective stand
  • Cluvius relates that Agrippina in her eagerness
    to retain her influence went so far that more
    than once at midday, when Nero, even at that
    hour, was flushed with wine and feasting, she
    presented herself attractively attired to her
    half intoxicated son and offered him her person

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11.8 Tacitus incest, superstition,
verisimilitude
  • Acte, the freed-girl, told him Seneca that the
    incest was notorious, as his mother boasted of
    it, and that the soldiers would never endure the
    rule of an impious sovereign
  • Cluvius's account is also that of all other
    authors, and popular belief inclines to it,
    whether it was that Agrippina really conceived
    such a monstrous wickedness in her heart, or
    perhaps because the thought of a strange passion
    seemed comparatively credible

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11.8 Agrippina's theatrical death a tragic fate
  • Agrippina's death, in this episode, is associated
    with the idea of fate, typical of classical
    tragedies
  • First you find the description of the shipwreck,
    at night (darkness and evil acts go hand in hand,
    in tragedies and literary fiction)
  • Then, after Agrippina's messenger is accused of
    being a murderer and is killed, she dies in the
    most theatrical way
  • "as the centurion bared his sword for the fatal
    deed, presenting her person, she exclaimed,
    'Smite my womb!'"

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11.8 Agrippina's death prelude (greed, ambition)
and consequences (guilt, fear)
  • Her death apparently had even been anticipated,
    as it was written in the stars
  • "when she consulted the astrologers about Nero,
    they replied that he would be emperor and kill
    his mother. 'Let him kill her,' she said,
    'provided he is emperor'"
  • After the crime, only guilt and fear follow
  • Where are the political considerations?
  • In reality Agrippina and Nero had probably become
    estranged, as it happens often to members of a
    royal family, and they were fighting for power
    and supremacy like political rivals do

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11.8 After the crime guilt, panic, hypocrisy,
cowardice
  • Nero, when the crime was accomplished, realized
    its portentous guilt
  • The rest of the night, now silent and stupefied,
    now and still oftener starting up in terror,
    bereft of reason, he awaited dawn as if it would
    bring with it his doom
  • He himself, with an opposite phase of hypocrisy,
    seemed sad, and almost angry at his own
    deliverance, and shed tears over his mother's
    death
  • he retired to Naples and sent a letter to the
    Senate

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11.8 The responsibility and incompetence of the
Senate the opposition has high moral values,
lacks a political plan
  • He told the story of the shipwreck
  • but who could be so stupid as to believe that it
    was accidental, or that a shipwrecked woman had
    sent one man with a weapon to break through an
    Emperor's guards and fleets?
  • Thrasea Paetus then walked out of the Senate,
    thereby imperiling himself, without communicating
    to the other senators any impulse towards freedom
  • Paetus will later will commit suicide, following
    a 'noble' tradition in the Roman upper classes

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11.8 Tacitus highlights the consequences of
Nero's sinful behavior
  • Nero had not omitted a single abomination which
    could heighten his depravity, till a few days
    afterwards he stooped to marry himself to one of
    that filthy herd
  • A disaster followed, whether accidental or
    treacherously contrived by the emperor, is
    uncertain, as authors have given both accounts,
    worse, however, and more dreadful than any which
    have ever happened to this city by the violence
    of fire

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11.9 Suetonius (circa 110 CE), Life of Nero
(transl. by J.C. Rolfe) the Golden House
  • Its vestibule was large enough to contain a
    colossal statue of the Emperor 120 feet high and
    it was so extensive that it had a triple
    colonnade a mile long
  • There was a pond too, like a sea, surrounded with
    buildings to represent cities, besides tracts of
    country, fields, vineyards, pastures and woods,
    with great numbers of wild and domestic animals
  • There were dining-rooms with fretted ceilings of
    ivory, whose panels could turn and shower down
    flowers and were fitted with pipes for sprinkling
    the guests with perfumes
  • The main banquet hall was circular and constantly
    revolved day and night, like the heavens

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11.9 The first Roman Emperors chronology
  • Augustus 27 BCE-14 CE
  • Tiberius 14-37
  • Caligula 37-41
  • Claudius 41-54
  • Nero 54-68
  • Galba 68-69
  • Otho 69
  • Vitellius 69
  • Vespasian 69-79
  • Titus 79-81
  • Domitian 81-96
  • Nerva 96-98
  • Trajan 98-117
  • Hadrian 117-138

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11.9 Optional readings on Nero and the events
narrated by Tacitus
  • Nero's Golden House (Domus aurea)
  • Pictures of the archeological site of the palace
  • read more about Nero
  • Nero, his family, the court
  • http//www.bbc.co.uk/history/historic_figures/nero
    .shtml
  • http//www.pbs.org/empires/romans/empire/nero.html
  • The great fire of Rome
  • http//www.pbs.org/wnet/secrets/case_rome/index.ht
    ml

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11.10 Claudio Monteverdi's opera on Nero
  • The coronation of Poppea was staged in Venice in
    1642 or '43
  • Venice, as a Republic, "prided itself on its
    direct lineage from the Roman republic, retaining
    the values that had been so distorted as
    classical Rome moved from republican strength to
    imperial decadence, a decadence still apparent,
    it was felt, in the Rome of the early
    17th-century" (Tim Carter, "Towards the creation
    of genre Monteverdi's Poppea," p. 18)
  • There is a thesis clearly at work throughout this
    opera when the state is in the hands of a
    tyrant, immorality thrives, especially near the
    source of power, at the court, while the fate of
    the whole state must also be affected

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11.10 Monteverdi's Poppea Nero the immoral tyrant
  • It is not surprising that, even before Nero
    appears on the scene, at the beginning of the 1st
    act he is introduced (during the conversation
    that takes place between two Roman soldiers) as a
    most hateful character, who has no regard for the
    sanctity of marriage, neglects the care of the
    empire at a critical juncture, and favors those
    like him who lack moral values and self-control
  • Second soldier Our Empressconsumes herself with
    weeping, and Nero neglects her for Poppaea.
    Armenia's in revolt, yet he ignores it.
    Pannonia's up in arms and he makes light of it.
    As far as I can see, the empire's going from
    back to worse

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11.10 Monteverdi's Poppea the tyrant affects the
moral stability of single individuals
  • First soldier One might add that our Prince robs
    everyone to line the pockets of a few. The
    innocents suffer while criminals are doing very
    nicely
  • The introduction of historical details on the
    decadence of Imperial Rome gives the author of
    the libretto, Giovanni Francesco Busenello, an
    opportunity, in the first act, to discuss more
    generic moral and political issues, when Arnalta,
    Poppaea's old nurse and confidant, tries to warn
    her about the dangers of dealing with immoral,
    evil princes
  • To have dealings with princes is perilous.Love
    and hate count for nothing with themtheir
    emotions are governed by pure self-interest.Nero'
    s love for you is a but a fancyif he abandons
    you, you can't complainit would only make
    matters worse

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11.10 Monteverdi's Poppea tyranny may corrupt
the souls of the subjects
  • POPPAEA No, no, I fear no setback at all.
  • ARNALTA A great man honors you with his mere
    presence,and, having filled your house with
    wind,pays in nothing but reflected glory.Your
    good name's gone if you admitNero beds me.The
    vice of self-aggrandizement gets you nowhereI
    prefer the sins that yield returns.You can never
    deal with him on equal terms,and if your goal is
    marriageyou're asking for disaster.
  • POPPAEA No, no, I fear no setback at all.

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11.10 Monteverdi's Poppea power and personal
whims
  • Following the historical sources, the opera
    presents the suicide of Seneca as the simple
    result of Nero's almost childish desire to free
    himself of his tutors, his only reasonable
    counselors
  • Power has all to do with personal whims and the
    satisfaction of one's ego, rather than with
    politics or the care of the well-being of the
    community
  • NERO Hey! One of youmake haste to Seneca tell
    himhe must kill himself this evening.I insist
    that my power to act depends on me,not on the
    whims and sophistry of others!I could almost be
    temptedto disown my spiritif I believed it base
    enoughto be ever subject to another's promptings

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11.10 Monteverdi's Poppea Nero, the monster
  • Even those who act as accomplices to Nero, and
    execute his orders, feel a very natural and human
    repulsion for the behavior and the devilish
    decisions of such a wicked man
  • A freedman, sent by the Emperor to inform Seneca
    that he should take his life, confesses that he
    cannot bear to be the messenger of such cruel and
    irrational orders
  • (The tyrant's commandsare quite irrationaland
    always involve violence or death.I must convey
    them, and althoughI am only the innocent
    mouthpiece,I feel tainted by the evilI am
    required to communicate.)Seneca, I am sorry to
    have found you,even though I sought you.

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11.10 Monteverdi's Poppea an immoral conclusion?
  • The conclusion of the opera appears to be
    unusual, in that Nero and his lover, Poppaea,
    sing together on stage celebrating their success
    against all enemies and the realization of their
    dream of love
  • The extraordinary thing is that two characters
    who have committed so many sins are allowed to
    close the story on the sensuous notes of their
    (albeit temporary) triumph does crime pay?
  • It is obvious, rather, given the standards and
    the restrictions of the genre, that this
    conclusion implied the widespread knowledge, in
    the audience, of the actual historical conclusion
    of the events in the story, with Poppea murdered
    and Nero killing himself right before he was
    captured by his opponents

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11.10 Monteverdi's Poppea the final duet
  • POPPAEA, NERO
  • I gaze at you,possess you,press you to
    me,clasp youno more pain,no deathly grief,O
    my life, my treasure.I'm yours,yours am I,my
    dearest, say you love me too.You are the idolof
    my heart,oh yes, my love,my heart, my life, oh
    yes.

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11.10 Petrolini's Nero a parody of Mussolini?
  • In 1930, Italian actor/comedian Ettore Petrolini
    (1886-1936) played the part of Nero in a surreal
    theatrical parody, that famous director
    Alessandro Blasetti shot directly on the stage to
    produce a movie
  • Some suggested that Mussolini might have been the
    target of this satirical representation of the
    Roman tyrant, especially in the scene in which
    Nero speaks to the people of Rome
  • However, the first version of this play was
    staged in 1917, before Fascism
  • see http//www.burcardo.org/mostre/petrolini/

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Emperor Nero
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