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AULUS VITELLIUS

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Originally appearing in Volume V28, Page 147 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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AULUS

VITELLIUS  ,
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Roman emperor from the 2nd of
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January to the 22nd of December A.D . 69, was born. on the 24th of September A.D . 15 . He was the son of
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Lucius Vitellius, who had been consul and governor of
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Syria under Tiberius . Aulus was consul in 48, and (perhaps in 6o-61) proconsul of Africa, in which capacity he is said to have acquitted himself with credit . Under Galba, to the general astonishment, at the end of 68 he was chosen to command the army of
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Lower Germany, and here he made himself popular with his subalterns and with the soldiers by outrageous prodigality and excessive good nature, which soon proved fatal to order and discipline . Far from being ambitious or scheming, he was lazy and self-indulgent, fond of eating and drinking, and owed his
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elevation to the
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throne to
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Caecina and
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Valens, commanders of two legions on the Rhine . Through these two men a military revolution was speedily accomplished, and early in 69 Vitellius was
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pro-claimed emperor at Colonia Agrippinensis (Cologne), or, more accurately, emperor of the armies of Upper and Lower Germany . In fact, he was never acknowledged as emperor by the entire Roman
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world, though at Rome the senate accepted him and decreed to him the usual imperial honours . He advanced into Italy at the head of a licentious and ruffianly soldiery, and Rome became the scene of riot and
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massacre, gladiatorial shows and extravagant feasting . As soon as it was known that the armies of the East, Dalmatia and Illyricum had declared for
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Vespasian, Vitellius, deserted by many of his adherents, would have resigned the title of emperor . It was said that the terms of resignation had actually been agreed upon with Primus, one of Vespasian's chief supporters, but the
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praetorians refused to allow him to carry out the agreement,
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VITERBO 147 and forced him to return to the palace, when he was on his way to deposit the insignia of
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empire in the temple of Concord .

On the entrance of Vespasian's troops into Rome he was dragged out of some miserable hiding-

place, driven to the fatal Gemonian stairs, and there struck down . " Yet I was once your emperor," were the last and, as far as we know, the noblest words of Vitellius . During his brief administration Vitellius showed indications of a
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desire to govern wisely, but he was completely under the control of Valens and Caecina, who for their own ends encouraged him in a course of vicious excesses which threw his better qualities into the background . See Tacitus, Histories; Suetonius, Vitellius; Dio Cassius lxv.; Merivale, Hirt. of the Romans under the Empire, chs . 56, 57; H . Schiller, Geschichte der romischen Kaiserzeit, i. pt . I ; W . A . Spooner's ed. of the Histories of Tacitus (introduction); B . W . Henderson,
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Civil War and
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Rebellion in the Roman Empire, A.D . 69-70 (1908) .

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