Dios Rome, Vol. 6

Cassius Dio
Dio's Rome, Vol. 6

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Title: Dio's Rome, Vol VI. An Historical Narrative Originally
Composed In Greek During The Reigns Of Septimius Severus, Geta
And Caracalla, Macrinus, Elagabalus And Alexander Severus
Author: Cassius Dio
Release Date: April 16, 2004 [EBook #12061]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
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DIO'S ROME
AN
HISTORICAL NARRATIVE ORIGINALLY COMPOSED IN
GREEK DURING THE REIGNS OF SEPTIMIUS SEVERUS, GETA
AND CARACALLA, MACRINUS, ELAGABALUS AND
ALEXANDER SEVERUS:
AND
NOW PRESENTED IN ENGLISH FORM

BY
HERBERT BALDWIN FOSTER, A.B. (Harvard), Ph.D. (Johns
Hopkins), Acting Professor of Greek in Lehigh University

SIXTH VOLUME

I. Books 77-80 (A.D. 211-229).
II. Fragments of Books 1-21 (Melber's Arrangement).
III. Glossary of Latin Terms.
IV. General Index.

1905
PAFRAETS BOOK COMPANY TROY NEW YORK

DIO'S ROMAN HISTORY
77
Antoninus begins his reign by having various persons assassinated,
among them his brother Geta (chapters 1-3).
Cruelty of Antoninus toward Papinianus, Cilo, and others (chapters
4-6).
Antoninus as emulator of Alexander of Macedon (chapters 7, 8).
His levies and extravagance (chapters 9-11).
His treachery toward Abgarus of Osrhoene, toward the Armenian king,
the Parthian king, and the Germans (chapters 12, 13).
The Cenni conquer Antoninus in battle (chapter 14).
He strives to drive out his disease of mind by consulting spirits and
oracles (chapter 15).
Slaughter of vestals, insults to the senate, demise of others contrary to
his mother's wishes (chapters 16-18).
Antoninus's Parthian war (chapters 19-21).
Massacres of Alexandrians caused by Antoninus (chapters 22-24).
DURATION OF TIME.
Q. Epidius Rufus Lollianus Gentianus, Pomponius Bassus (A.D. 211 =
a. u. 964 = First of Antoninus, from Feb. 4th).
C. Iulius Asper (II), C. Iulius Asper. (A.D. 212 = a.u. 965 = Second of
Antoninus.)

Antoninus Aug. (IV), D. Coelius Balbinus (II). (A.D. 213 = a.u. 966 =
Third of Antoninus.)
Silius Messala, Sabinus. (A.D. 214 = a.u. 967 = Fourth of Antoninus.)
Lætus (II), Cerealis. (A.D. 215 = a.u. 968 = Fifth of Antoninus.)
C. Attius Sabinus (II), Cornelius Annullinus. (A.D. 216 = a.u. 969 =
Sixth of Antoninus.)
(_BOOK 78, BOISSEVAIN_.)
[Sidenote: A.D. 211 (_a.u._ 964)] [Sidenote:--1--] After this Antoninus
secured the entire power. Nominally he ruled with his brother, but in
reality alone and at once. With the enemy he came to terms, withdrew
from their country, and abandoned the forts. But his own people he
either dismissed (as Papinianus the prefect) or else killed (as Euodus,
his nurse, Castor, and his wife Plautilla, and the latter's brother
Plautius). In Rome itself he also executed a man who was renowned for
no other reason than his profession, which made him very conspicuous.
This was Euprepes, the charioteer; he killed him when the man dared to
show enthusiasm for a cause that the emperor opposed. So Euprepes
died in old age after having been crowned in an endless number of
horse-races. He had won seven hundred and eighty-two of them,--a
record equaled by none other.
Antoninus had first had the desire to murder his brother while his father
was still alive, but had been unable to do so at that time because of
Severus, or later, on the road, because of the legions. The men felt very
kindly toward the younger son, especially because in appearance he
was the very image of his father. But when Antoninus arrived in Rome,
he got rid of this rival also. The two pretended to love and commend
each other, but their actions proved quite the reverse to be true, and
anybody could see that some catastrophe would result from their
relations. This fact was recognized even prior to their reaching Rome.
When it had been voted by the senate to sacrifice in behalf of their
harmony both to the other gods and to Harmony herself, the assistants
made ready a victim to be sacrificed to Harmony and the consul arrived
to do the slaughtering; yet he could not find them, nor could the
assistants find the consul. They spent nearly the whole night looking
for each other, so that the sacrifice could not be performed on that
occasion. The next day two wolves climbed the Capitol, but were
chased away from that region: one of them was next encountered

somewhere in the Forum, and the other was later slain outside the
pomerium. This is the story about those two animals.
[Sidenote:--2---] It was Antoninus's wish to
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