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AUGUSTAN See also: biographies of the See also: Roman emperors from See also: Hadrian to See also: Carinus (A.D
.
117-284)
.
The See also: work professes to have been written during the reigns of See also: Diocletian and See also: Constantine, and is to be regarded as the composition of six authors,—Aelius Spartianus, See also: Julius Capitolinus; Aelius Lampridius, Vulcacius Gallicanus, Trebellius Pollio and Flavius Vopiscus—known as Scriptores Historiae Augustae, writers of Augustan See also: history
.
It is generally agreed, however, that there is a large number of interpolations in the work, which are referred to the reign of See also: Theodosius ; and that the documents inserted in the lives are almost all forgeries
.
The more advanced school of critics holds that the names of the supposed authors are purely fictitious, as those of some of the authorities which they profess to quote certainly are
.
The lives, which (with few exceptions) are arranged in See also: chronological See also: order, are distributed as follows:—To Spartianus: the biographies of Hadrian, Aelius Verus, Didius Julianus, Septimius Severus, Pescennius See also: Niger, Caracallus, See also: Geta (?); to Vulcacius Gallicanus : Avidius Cassius ; to Capitolinus : See also: Antoninus See also: Pius, See also: Marcus Aurelius Antoninus, Verus, Pertinax, See also: Clodius Albinus, the two Maximins, the three Gordians, See also: Maximus and Balbinus, Opilius Macrinus (?) ; to Lampridius : Commodus, Diadumenus, Elagabalus, See also: Alexander Severus; to Pollio: the two Valerians, the
See also: Gallieni, the so-called See also: Thirty Tyrants or Usurpers, See also: Claudius (his lives of See also: Philip, Decius, and
See also: Gallus being lost); to Vopiscus: Aurelian, Tacitus, Florian, Probus, the four tyrants (Firmus, See also: Saturninus, Proculus, Bonosus), Carus, Numerian, Carinus
.
The importance of the Augustan history as a repertory of information is very considerable, but its See also: literary pretensions are of the humblest order
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The writers' See also: standard was confessedly low
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" My purpose," says Vopiscus, " has been to provide materials for persons more eloquent than I." Copsidering the perverted taste of the age, it is perhaps fortunate that the task See also: fell into the hands of no showy declaimer who measured his success by his skill in making See also: surface do duty for substance, but of homely, See also: matter-of-fact See also: scribes, whose See also: sole concern was to record what they knew
.
Their narrative is unmethodical and inartificial ; their See also: style is tame and plebeian ; their conception of biography is that of a collection of anecdotes ; they have
no notion of arrangement, no measure of proportion, and no criterion of discrimination between the important and the trivial; they are equally destitute of critical and of See also: historical insight, unable to sift the authorities on which they rely, and unsuspicious of the stupendous social revolution comprised within the See also: period which they undertake to describe
.
Their value, consequently, depends very much on that of the See also: sources to which they happen to have recourse for any given period of history, and on the fidelity of their adherence to these when valuable
.
See also: Marius Maximus and Aelius Junius See also: Cordus, to whose qualifications they themselves bear no favourable testimony, were their chief authorities for the earlier lives of the series
.
Marius Maximus, who lived about 165–230, wrote biographies of the emperors, in continuation of those of Suetonius, from See also: Nerva to Elagabalus; Junius Cordus dealt with the less-known emperors, perhaps down to Maximus and Balbinus
.
The earlier lives, however, contain a substratum of authentic historical fact, which See also: recent critics have supposed to be derived from a lost work by a contemporary writer, described by one of these scholars as " the last See also: great Roman historian." For the later lives the Scriptores were obliged to resort more largely to public records, and thus preserved matter of the highest importance, rescuing from oblivion many imperial rescripts and sen%tonal decrees, reports of official proceedings and speeches on public occasions, and a number of interesting and characteristic letters from various emperors
.
Their incidental allusions sometimes cast vivid though undesigned See also: light on the circumstances of the age, and they have made large contributions to our knowledge of imperial See also: jurisprudence in particular
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Even their trivialities have their use; their endless anecdotes respecting the See also: personal habits of the subjects of their biographies, if valueless to the historian, are most acceptable to the archaeologist, and not unimportant to the economist and moralist
.
Their errors and deficiencies may in See also: part be ascribed to the contemporary neglect of history as a branch of instruction
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See also: Education was in the hands of rhetoricians and grammarians; historians were read for their style, not for their matter, and since the days of Tacitus, none had arisen worth a schoolmaster's See also: notice
.
We thus find Vopiscus acknowledging that when he began to write the See also: life of Aurelian, he was entirely misinformed respecting the latter's competitor Firmus, and implying that he would not have ventured on Aurelian himself if he had not had See also: access to the MS. of the emperor's own See also: diary in the See also: Ulpian library
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The writers' historical estimates are superficial and conventional, but report the verdict of public opinion with substantial accuracy
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The only imputation on the integrity of any of them lies against Trebellius Pollio, who, addressing his work to a descendant of Claudius, the successor and probably the assassin of See also: Gallienus, has dwelt upon the latter versatile See also: sovereign's carelessness and extravagance without acknowledgment of the elastic though fitful energy he so frequently displayed in defence of the See also: empire
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The caution of Vopiscus's references to Diocletian cannot be made a reproach to him
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No See also: biographical particulars are recorded respecting any of these writers
.
From their acquaintance with Latin and See also: Greek literature they must have been men of letters by profession, and very probably secretaries or librarians to persons of distinction
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There seems no reason to acceptSee also: Gibbon's contemptuous estimate of their social position
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They appear particularly versed in See also: law
.
Spartianus's reference to himself as " Diocletian's own " seems to indicate that he was a domestic in the imperial See also: household
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They address their patrons with deference, acknowledging their own deficiencies, and seem painfully conscious of the profession of literature having fallen upon evil days
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Editio princeps (Milan, 1495); Casaubon (1603) showed great critical ability in his notes, but for want of a See also: good MS. See also: left the restoration of the text to See also: Salmasius (162o), whose notes are a most remark-able monument of erudition, combined with acuteness in verbal See also: criticism and general vigour of intellect
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Of recent years considerable See also: attention has been devoted by See also: German scholars .to the History, especially by See also: Peter, whose edition of the text in the Teubner series (2nd ed., 1884) contains (praef. See also: xxxv.-See also: xxxvii.) a bibliography of See also: works on the subject preceding the publication of his own See also: special See also: treatise
.
The edition by See also: Jordan-Eyssenhardt (1863) should also be mentioned
.
Amongst the most recent See also: treatises on the subject are: A
.
Gemoll, Die Scriptores Historiae Augustae (1886); H
.
Peter, Die
Scriptores Historiae Augustae (1892); G
.
Tropea, Studi sugli Scriptores Historiae Augustae (1899–1903) ; J
.
M
.
Heer, Der historische Wert der Vita Commodi in der Sammlung der Scriptores Historiae Augustae (1901); C . Lecrivain, Etudes sur l'histoire Auguste (1904); E . Kornemann, Kaiser Hadrian and der letzte See also: grosse Historiker von Rom (1905), according to whom " the last great historian of See also: Rome " is See also: Lollius Urbicus; O
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Schulz, Das Kaiserhaus der Antonin and der letzte Historiker Roms (1907)
.
On their style, see C
.
Paucker, De Latinitate Scriptorum Historiae Augustae (1870); special See also: lexicon by C
.
Lessing (19o1-1906)
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An En lish See also: translation is included in The Lives of the Roman Emperors, by See also: John
See also: Bernard (?698)
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See further See also: Roma: History (anc. ad fin.), section " Authorities "; M
.
Schanz, Geschichte der romischen Litteratur, iii. p
.
69 (for Marius Maximus and Junius Cordus), iv. p
.
47; Teuffel-See also: Schwabe, Hist. of Roman Literature (Eng. tr.), § 392; H
.
Peter, bibliography from 1893 to 1905 in See also: Bursian's Jahresbericht, cxxix
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(1907)
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