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+The Project Gutenberg EBook The Lives Of The Caesars, by Suetonius, V9
+#9 in our series by C. Suetonious Tranquillus
+
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+Title: The Lives Of The Twelve Caesars, Volume 9.
+ [VITELLIUS]
+
+Author: C. Suetonius Tranquillus
+
+Release Date: August, 2004 [EBook #6394]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on December 3, 2003]
+
+Edition: 10
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+Language: English
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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LIVES OF THE CAESARS, SUETONIUS, V9 ***
+
+
+
+This eBook was produced by Tapio Riikonen
+and David Widger <widger@cecomet.net>
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE LIVES
+ OF
+ THE TWELVE CAESARS
+
+ By
+ C. Suetonius Tranquillus;
+
+ To which are added,
+
+ HIS LIVES OF THE GRAMMARIANS, RHETORICIANS, AND POETS.
+
+
+ The Translation of
+ Alexander Thomson, M.D.
+
+ revised and corrected by
+ T.Forester, Esq., A.M.
+
+
+
+
+
+(427)
+
+
+ AULUS VITELLIUS.
+
+
+I. Very different accounts are given of the origin of the Vitellian
+family. Some describe it as ancient and noble, others as recent and
+obscure, nay, extremely mean. I am inclined to think, that these several
+representations have been made by the flatterers and detractors of
+Vitellius, after he became emperor, unless the fortunes of the family
+varied before. There is extant a memoir addressed by Quintus Eulogius to
+Quintus Vitellius, quaestor to the Divine Augustus, in which it is said,
+that the Vitellii were descended from Faunus, king of the aborigines, and
+Vitellia [689], who was worshipped in many places as a goddess, and that
+they reigned formerly over the whole of Latium: that all who were left of
+the family removed out of the country of the Sabines to Rome, and were
+enrolled among the patricians: that some monuments of the family
+continued a long time; as the Vitellian Way, reaching from the Janiculum
+to the sea, and likewise a colony of that name, which, at a very remote
+period of time, they desired leave from the government to defend against
+the Aequicolae [690], with a force raised by their own family only: also
+that, in the time of the war with the Samnites, some of the Vitellii who
+went with the troops levied for the security of Apulia, settled at
+Nuceria [691], and their descendants, a long time afterwards, returned
+again to Rome, and were admitted (428) into the patrician order. On the
+other hand, the generality of writers say that the founder of the family
+was a freedman. Cassius Severus [692] and some others relate that he was
+likewise a cobbler, whose son having made a considerable fortune by
+agencies and dealings in confiscated property, begot, by a common
+strumpet, daughter of one Antiochus, a baker, a child, who afterwards
+became a Roman knight. Of these different accounts the reader is left to
+take his choice.
+
+II. It is certain, however, that Publius Vitellius, of Nuceria, whether
+of an ancient family, or of low extraction, was a Roman knight, and a
+procurator to Augustus. He left behind him four sons, all men of very
+high station, who had the same cognomen, but the different praenomina of
+Aulus, Quintus, Publius, and Lucius. Aulus died in the enjoyment of the
+consulship [693], which office he bore jointly with Domitius, the father
+of Nero Caesar. He was elegant to excess in his manner of living, and
+notorious for the vast expense of his entertainments. Quintus was
+deprived of his rank of senator, when, upon a motion made by Tiberius, a
+resolution passed to purge the senate of those who were in any respect
+not duly qualified for that honour. Publius, an intimate friend and
+companion of Germanicus, prosecuted his enemy and murderer, Cneius Piso,
+and procured sentence against him. After he had been made proctor, being
+arrested among the accomplices of Sejanus, and delivered into the hands
+of his brother to be confined in his house, he opened a vein with a
+penknife, intending to bleed himself to death. He suffered, however, the
+wound to be bound up and cured, not so much from repenting the resolution
+he had formed, as to comply with the importunity of his relations. He
+died afterwards a natural death during his confinement. Lucius, after
+his consulship [694], was made governor of Syria [695], and by his
+politic management not only brought Artabanus, king of the Parthians, to
+give him an interview, but to worship the standards of the Roman legions.
+He afterwards filled two ordinary consulships [696], and also the
+censorship [697] jointly with the emperor Claudius. Whilst that (429)
+prince was absent upon his expedition into Britain [698], the care of the
+empire was committed to him, being a man of great integrity and industry.
+But he lessened his character not a little, by his passionate fondness
+for an abandoned freedwoman, with whose spittle, mixed with honey, he
+used to anoint his throat and jaws, by way of remedy for some complaint,
+not privately nor seldom, but daily and publicly. Being extravagantly
+prone to flattery, it was he who gave rise to the worship of Caius Caesar
+as a god, when, upon his return from Syria, he would not presume to
+accost him any otherwise than with his head covered, turning himself
+round, and then prostrating himself upon the earth. And to leave no
+artifice untried to secure the favour of Claudius, who was entirely
+governed by his wives and freedmen, he requested as the greatest favour
+from Messalina, that she would be pleased to let him take off her shoes;
+which, when he had done, he took her right shoe, and wore it constantly
+betwixt his toga and his tunic, and from time to time covered it with
+kisses. He likewise worshipped golden images of Narcissus and Pallas
+among his household gods. It was he, too, who, when Claudius exhibited
+the secular games, in his compliments to him upon that occasion, used
+this expression, "May you often do the same."
+
+III. He died of palsy, the day after his seizure with it, leaving behind
+him two sons, whom he had by a most excellent and respectable wife,
+Sextilia. He had lived to see them both consuls, the same year and
+during the whole year also; the younger succeeding the elder for the last
+six months [699]. The senate honoured him after his decease with a
+funeral at the public expense, and with a statue in the Rostra, which had
+this inscription upon the base: "One who was steadfast in his loyalty to
+his prince "The emperor Aulus Vitellius, the son of this Lucius, was born
+upon the eighth of the calends of October [24th September], or, as some
+say, upon the seventh of the ides of September [7th September], in the
+consulship of Drusus Caesar and Norbanus Flaccus [700]. His parents were
+so (430) terrified with the predictions of astrologers upon the
+calculation of his nativity, that his father used his utmost endeavours
+to prevent his being sent governor into any of the provinces, whilst he
+was alive. His mother, upon his being sent to the legions [701], and
+also upon his being proclaimed emperor, immediately lamented him as
+utterly ruined. He spent his youth amongst the catamites of Tiberius at
+Capri, was himself constantly stigmatized with the name of Spintria
+[702], and was supposed to have been the occasion of his father's
+advancement, by consenting to gratify the emperor's unnatural lust.
+
+IV. In the subsequent part of his life, being still most scandalously
+vicious, he rose to great favour at court; being upon a very intimate
+footing with Caius [Caligula], because of his fondness for chariot-
+driving, and with Claudius for his love of gaming. But he was in a still
+higher degree acceptable to Nero, as well on the same accounts, as for a
+particular service which he rendered him. When Nero presided in the
+games instituted by himself, though he was extremely desirous to perform
+amongst the harpers, yet his modesty would not permit him,
+notwithstanding the people entreated much for it. Upon his quitting the
+theatre, Vitellius fetched him back again, pretending to represent the
+determined wishes of the people, and so afforded him the opportunity of
+yielding to their in treaties.
+
+V. By the favour of these three princes, he was not only advanced to the
+great offices of state, but to the highest dignities of the sacred order;
+after which he held the proconsulship of Africa, and had the
+superintendence of the public works, in which appointment his conduct,
+and, consequently, his reputation, were very different. For he governed
+the province with singular integrity during two years, in the latter of
+which he acted as deputy to his brother, who succeeded him. But in his
+office in the city, he was said to pillage the temples of their gifts and
+ornaments, and to have exchanged brass and tin for gold and silver. [703]
+
+VI. He took to wife Petronia, the daughter of a man of consular rank,
+and had by her a son named Petronius, who was blind of an eye. The
+mother being willing to appoint this youth her heir, upon condition that
+he should be released from his father's authority, the latter discharged
+him accordingly; but shortly after, as was believed, murdered him,
+charging him with a design upon his life, and pretending that he had,
+from consciousness of his guilt, drank the poison he had prepared for his
+father. Soon afterwards, he married Galeria Fundana, the daughter of a
+man of pretorian rank, and had by her both sons and daughters. Among the
+former was one who had such a stammering in his speech, that he was
+little better than if he had been dumb.
+
+VII. He was sent by Galba into Lower Germany [704], contrary to his
+expectation. It is supposed that he was assisted in procuring this
+appointment by the interest of Titus Junius, a man of great influence at
+that time; whose friendship he had long before gained by favouring the
+same set of charioteers with him in the Circensian games. But Galba
+openly declared that none were less to be feared than those who only
+cared for their bellies, and that even his enormous appetite must be
+satisfied with the plenty of that province; so that it is evident he was
+selected for that government more out of contempt than kindness. It is
+certain, that when he was to set out, he had not money for the expenses
+of his journey; he being at that time so much straitened in his
+circumstances, that he was obliged to put his wife and children, whom he
+left at Rome, into a poor lodging which he hired for them, in order that
+he might let his own house for the remainder of the year; and he pawned a
+pearl taken from his mother's ear-ring, to defray his expenses on the
+road. A crowd of creditors who were waiting to stop him, and amongst
+them the people of Sineussa and Formia, whose taxes he had converted to
+his own use, he eluded, by alarming them with the apprehension of false
+accusation. He had, however, sued a certain freedman, who was clamorous
+in demanding a debt of him, under pretence that he had kicked him; which
+action he would not withdraw, until he had wrung from the freedman fifty
+thousand sesterces. Upon his arrival in the province, the army, (432)
+which was disaffected to Galba, and ripe for insurrection, received him
+with open arms, as if he had been sent them from heaven. It was no small
+recommendation to their favour, that he was the son of a man who had been
+thrice consul, was in the prime of life, and of an easy, prodigal
+disposition. This opinion, which had been long entertained of him,
+Vitellius confirmed by some late practices; having kissed all the common
+soldiers whom he met with upon the road, and been excessively complaisant
+in the inns and stables to the muleteers and travellers; asking them in a
+morning, if they had got their breakfasts, and letting them see, by
+belching, that he had eaten his.
+
+VIII. After he had reached the camp, he denied no man any thing he asked
+for, and pardoned all who lay under sentence for disgraceful conduct or
+disorderly habits. Before a month, therefore, had passed, without regard
+to the day or season, he was hurried by the soldiers out of his bed-
+chamber, although it was evening, and he in an undress, and unanimously
+saluted by the title of EMPEROR [705]. He was then carried round the
+most considerable towns in the neighbourhood, with the sword of the
+Divine Julius in his hand; which had been taken by some person out of the
+temple of Mars, and presented to him when he was first saluted. Nor did
+he return to the pretorium, until his dining-room was in flames from the
+chimney's taking fire. Upon this accident, all being in consternation,
+and considering it as an unlucky omen, he cried out, "Courage, boys! it
+shines brightly upon us." And this was all he said to the soldiers. The
+army of the Upper Province likewise, which had before declared against
+Galba for the senate, joining in the proceedings, he very eagerly
+accepted the cognomen of Germanicus, offered him by the unanimous consent
+of both armies, but deferred assuming that of Augustus, and refused for
+ever that of Caesar.
+
+IX. Intelligence of Galba's death arriving soon after, when he had
+settled his affairs in Germany he divided his troops into two bodies,
+intending to send one of them before him against Otho, and to follow with
+the other himself. The army he sent forward had a lucky omen; for,
+suddenly, an eagle cams flying up to them on the right, and having
+hovered (433) round the standards, flew gently before them on their road.
+But, on the other hand, when he began his own march, all the equestrian
+statues, which were erected for him in several places, fell suddenly down
+with their legs broken; and the laurel crown, which he had put on as
+emblematical of auspicious fortune, fell off his head into a river. Soon
+afterwards, at Vienne [706], as he was upon the tribunal administering
+justice, a cock perched upon his shoulder, and afterwards upon his head.
+The issue corresponded to these omens; for he was not able to keep the
+empire which had been secured for him by his lieutenants.
+
+X. He heard of the victory at Bedriacum [707], and the death of Otho,
+whilst he was yet in Gaul, and without the least hesitation, by a single
+proclamation, disbanded all the pretorian cohorts, as having, by their
+repeated treasons, set a dangerous example to the rest of the army;
+commanding them to deliver up their arms to his tribunes. A hundred and
+twenty of them, under whose hands he had found petitions presented to
+Otho, for rewards of their service in the murder of Galba, he besides
+ordered to be sought out and punished. So far his conduct deserved
+approbation, and was such as to afford hope of his becoming an excellent
+prince, had he not managed his other affairs in a way more corresponding
+with his own disposition, and his former manner of life, than to the
+imperial dignity. For, having begun his march, he rode through every
+city in his route in a triumphal procession; and sailed down the rivers
+in ships, fitted out with the greatest elegance, and decorated with
+various kinds of crowns, amidst the most extravagant entertainments.
+Such was the want of discipline, and the licentiousness both in his
+family and army, that, not satisfied with the provision every where made
+for them at the public expense, they committed every kind of robbery and
+insult upon the inhabitants, setting slaves at liberty as they pleased;
+and if any dared to make resistance, they dealt blows and abuse,
+frequently wounds, and sometimes slaughter amongst them. When he reached
+the plains on which the battles (434) were fought [708], some of those
+around him being offended at the smell of the carcases which lay rotting
+upon the ground, he had the audacity to encourage them by a most
+detestable remark, "That a dead enemy smelt not amiss, especially if he
+were a fellow-citizen." To qualify, however, the offensiveness of the
+stench, he quaffed in public a goblet of wine, and with equal vanity and
+insolence distributed a large quantity of it among his troops. On his
+observing a stone with an inscription upon it to the memory of Otho, he
+said, "It was a mausoleum good enough for such a prince." He also sent
+the poniard, with which Otho killed himself, to the colony of Agrippina
+[709], to be dedicated to Mars. Upon the Appenine hills he celebrated a
+Bacchanalian feast.
+
+XI. At last he entered the City with trumpets sounding, in his general's
+cloak, and girded with his sword, amidst a display of standards and
+banners; his attendants being all in the military habit, and the arms of
+the soldiers unsheathed. Acting more and more in open violation of all
+laws, both divine and human, he assumed the office of Pontifex Maximus,
+upon the day of the defeat at the Allia [710]; ordered the magistrates to
+be elected for ten years of office; and made himself consul for life. To
+put it out of all doubt what model he intended to follow in his
+government of the empire, he made his offerings to the shade of Nero in
+the midst of the Campus Martius, and with a full assembly of the public
+priests attending him. And at a solemn entertainment, he desired a
+harper who pleased the company much, to sing something in praise of
+Domitius; and upon his beginning some songs of Nero's, he started up in
+presence of the whole assembly, and could not refrain from applauding
+him, by clapping his hands.
+
+XII. After such a commencement of his career, he conducted (435) his
+affairs, during the greater part of his reign, entirely by the advice and
+direction of the vilest amongst the players and charioteers, and
+especially his freedman Asiaticus. This fellow had, when young, been
+engaged with him in a course of mutual and unnatural pollution, but,
+being at last quite tired of the occupation, ran away. His master, some
+time after, caught him at Puteoli, selling a liquor called Posca [711],
+and put him in chains, but soon released him, and retained him in his
+former capacity. Growing weary, however, of his rough and stubborn
+temper, he sold him to a strolling fencing-master; after which, when the
+fellow was to have been brought up to play his part at the conclusion of
+an entertainment of gladiators, he suddenly carried him off, and at
+length, upon his being advanced to the government of a province, gave him
+his freedom. The first day of his reign, he presented him with the gold
+rings at supper, though in the morning, when all about him requested that
+favour in his behalf, he expressed the utmost abhorrence of putting so
+great a stain upon the equestrian order.
+
+XIII. He was chiefly addicted to the vices of luxury and cruelty. He
+always made three meals a day, sometimes four: breakfast, dinner, and
+supper, and a drunken revel after all. This load of victuals he could
+well enough bear, from a custom to which he had enured himself, of
+frequently vomiting. For these several meals he would make different
+appointments at the houses of his friends on the same day. None ever
+entertained him at less expense than four hundred thousand sesterces
+[712]. The most famous was a set entertainment given him by his brother,
+at which, it is said, there were served up no less than two thousand
+choice fishes, and seven thousand birds. Yet even this supper he himself
+outdid, at a feast which he gave upon the first use of a dish which had
+been made for him, and which, for its extraordinary size, he called "The
+Shield of Minerva." In this dish there were tossed up together the
+livers of char-fish, the brains of pheasants and peacocks, with the
+tongues of flamingos, and the entrails of lampreys, which had been
+brought in ships of war as far as (436) from the Carpathian Sea, and the
+Spanish Straits. He was not only a man of an insatiable appetite, but
+would gratify it likewise at unseasonable times, and with any garbage
+that came in his way; so that, at a sacrifice, he would snatch from the
+fire flesh and cakes, and eat them upon the spot. When he travelled, he
+did the same at the inns upon the road, whether the meat was fresh
+dressed and hot, or what had been left the day before, and was half-
+eaten.
+
+XIV. He delighted in the infliction of punishments, and even those which
+were capital, without any distinction of persons or occasions. Several
+noblemen, his school-fellows and companions, invited by him to court, he
+treated with such flattering caresses, as seemed to indicate an affection
+short only of admitting them to share the honours of the imperial
+dignity; yet he put them all to death by some base means or other. To
+one he gave poison with his own hand, in a cup of cold water which he
+called for in a fever. He scarcely spared one of all the usurers,
+notaries, and publicans, who had ever demanded a debt of him at Rome, or
+any toll or custom upon the road. One of these, while in the very act of
+saluting him, he ordered for execution, but immediately sent for him
+back; upon which all about him applauding his clemency, he commanded him
+to be slain in his own presence, saying, "I have a mind to feed my eyes."
+Two sons who interceded for their father, he ordered to be executed with
+him. A Roman knight, upon his being dragged away for execution, and
+crying out to him, "You are my heir," he desired to produce his will: and
+finding that he had made his freedman joint heir with him, he commanded
+that both he and the freedman should have their throats cut. He put to
+death some of the common people for cursing aloud the blue party in the
+Circensian games; supposing it to be done in contempt of himself, and the
+expectation of a revolution in the government. There were no persons he
+was more severe against than jugglers and astrologers; end as soon as any
+one of them was informed against, he put him to death without the
+formality of a trial. He was enraged against them, because, after his
+proclamation by which he commanded all astrologers to quit home, and
+Italy also, before the calends [the first] of October, a bill was
+immediately posted about the city, with the following words:--"TAKE
+NOTICE: [713] The Chaldaeans also decree that Vitellius Germanicus shall
+be no more, by the day of the said calends." He was even suspected of
+being accessary to his mother's death, by forbidding sustenance to be
+given her when she was unwell; a German witch [714], whom he held to be
+oracular, having told him, "That he would long reign in security if he
+survived his mother." But others say, that being quite weary of the
+state of affairs, and apprehensive of the future, she obtained without
+difficulty a dose of poison from her son.
+
+XV. In the eighth month of his reign, the troops both in Moesia and
+Pannonia revolted from him; as did likewise, of the armies beyond sea,
+those in Judaea and Syria, some of which swore allegiance to Vespasian as
+emperor in his own presence, and others in his absence. In order,
+therefore, to secure the favour and affection of the people, Vitellius
+lavished on all around whatever he had it in his power to bestow, both
+publicly and privately, in the most extravagant manner. He also levied
+soldiers in the city, and promised all who enlisted as volunteers, not
+only their discharge after the victory was gained, but all the rewards
+due to veterans who had served their full time in the wars. The enemy
+now pressing forward both by sea and land, on one hand he opposed against
+them his brother with a fleet, the new levies, and a body of gladiators,
+and in another quarter the troops and generals who were engaged at
+Bedriacum. But being beaten or betrayed in every direction, he agreed
+with Flavius Sabinus, Vespasian's brother, to abdicate, on condition of
+having his life spared, and a hundred millions of sesterces granted him;
+and he immediately, upon the palace-steps, publicly declared to a large
+body of soldiers there assembled, "that he resigned the government, which
+he had accepted reluctantly;" but they all remonstrating against it, he
+deferred the conclusion of the treaty. Next day, early in the morning,
+he came down to the Forum in a very mean habit, and with many tears
+repeated the (438) declaration from a writing which he held in his hand;
+but the soldiers and people again interposing, and encouraging him not to
+give way, but to rely on their zealous support, he recovered his courage,
+and forced Sabinus, with the rest of the Flavian party, who now thought
+themselves secure, to retreat into the Capitol, where he destroyed them
+all by setting fire to the temple of Jupiter, whilst he beheld the
+contest and the fire from Tiberius's house [715], where he was feasting.
+Not long after, repenting of what he had done, and throwing the blame of
+it upon others, he called a meeting, and swore "that nothing was dearer
+to him than the public peace;" which oath he also obliged the rest to
+take. Then drawing a dagger from his side, he presented it first to the
+consul, and, upon his refusing it, to the magistrates, and then to every
+one of the senators; but none of them being willing to accept it, he went
+away, as if he meant to lay it up in the temple of Concord; but some
+crying out to him, "You are Concord," he came back again, and said that
+he would not only keep his weapon, but for the future use the cognomen of
+Concord.
+
+XVI. He advised the senate to send deputies, accompanied by the Vestal
+Virgins, to desire peace, or, at least, time for consultation. The day
+after, while he was waiting for an answer, he received intelligence by a
+scout, that the enemy was advancing. Immediately, therefore, throwing
+himself into a small litter, borne by hand, with only two attendants, a
+baker and a cook, he privately withdrew to his father's house, on the
+Aventine hill, intending to escape thence into Campania. But a
+groundless report being circulated, that the enemy was willing to come to
+terms, he suffered himself to be carried back to the palace. Finding,
+however, nobody there, and those who were with him stealing away, he
+girded round his waist a belt full of gold pieces, and then ran into the
+porter's lodge, tying the dog before the door, and piling up against it
+the bed and bedding.
+
+XVII. By this time the forerunners of the enemy's army had broken into
+the palace, and meeting with nobody, searched, as was natural, every
+corner. Being dragged by them out of his cell, and asked "who he was?"
+(for they did not recognize him), "and if he knew where Vitellius was?"
+he deceived them by a falsehood. But at last being discovered, he begged
+hard to be detained in custody, even were it in a prison; pretending to
+have something to say which concerned Vespasian's security.
+Nevertheless, he was dragged half-naked into the Forum, with his hands
+tied behind him, a rope about his neck, and his clothes torn, amidst the
+most contemptuous abuse, both by word and deed, along the Via Sacra; his
+head being held back by the hair, in the manner of condemned criminals,
+and the point of a sword put under his chin, that he might hold up his
+face to public view; some of the mob, meanwhile, pelting him with dung
+and mud, whilst others called him "an incendiary and glutton." They also
+upbraided him with the defects of his person, for he was monstrously
+tall, and had a face usually very red with hard-drinking, a large belly,
+and one thigh weak, occasioned by a chariot running against him, as he
+was attending upon Caius [716], while he was driving. At length, upon
+the Scalae Gemoniae, he was tormented and put to death in lingering
+tortures, and then dragged by a hook into the Tiber.
+
+XVIII. He perished with his brother and son [717], in the fifty-seventh
+year of his age [718], and verified the prediction of those who, from the
+omen which happened to him at Vienne, as before related [719], foretold
+that he would be made prisoner by some man of Gaul. For he was seized by
+Antoninus Primus, a general of the adverse party, who was born at
+Toulouse, and, when a boy, had the cognomen of Becco [720], which
+signifies a cock's beak.
+
+ * * * * * *
+
+(440) After the extinction of the race of the Caesars, the possession of
+the imperial power became extremely precarious; and great influence in
+the army was the means which now invariably led to the throne. The
+soldiers having arrogated to themselves the right of nomination, they
+either unanimously elected one and the same person, or different parties
+supporting the interests of their respective favourites, there arose
+between them a contention, which was usually determined by an appeal to
+arms, and followed by the assassination of the unsuccessful competitor.
+Vitellius, by being a parasite of all the emperors from Tiberius to Nero
+inclusively, had risen to a high military rank, by which, with a spirit
+of enterprise, and large promises to the soldiery, it was not difficult
+to snatch the reins of government, while they were yet fluctuating in the
+hands of Otho. His ambition prompted to the attempt, and his boldness
+was crowned with success. In the service of the four preceding emperors,
+Vitellius had imbibed the principal vices of them all: but what chiefly
+distinguished him was extreme voraciousness, which, though he usually
+pampered it with enormous luxury, could yet be gratified by the vilest
+and most offensive garbage. The pusillanimity discovered by this emperor
+at his death, forms a striking contrast to the heroic behaviour of Otho.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+
+[689] Faunus was supposed to be the third king who reigned over the
+original inhabitants of the central parts of Italy, Saturn being the
+first. Virgil makes his wife's name Marica--
+
+ Hunc Fauna, et nympha genitum Laurente Marica
+ Accipimus.--Aen. vii. 47.
+
+Her name may have been changed after her deification; but we have no
+other accounts than those preserved by Suetonius, of several of the
+traditions handed down from the fabulous ages respecting the Vitellian
+family.
+
+[690] The Aequicolae were probably a tribe inhabiting the heights in the
+neighbourhood of Rome. Virgil describes them, Aen. vii. 746.
+
+[691] Nuceria, now Nocera, is a town near Mantua; but Livy, in treating
+of the war with the Samnites, always speaks of Luceria, which Strabo
+calls a town in Apulia.
+
+[692] Cassius Severus is mentioned before, in AUGUSTUS, c. lvi.;
+CALIGULA, c. xvi., etc.
+
+[693] A.U.C. 785.
+
+[694] A.U.C. 787.
+
+[695] He is frequently commended by Josephus for his kindness to the
+Jews. See, particularly, Antiq. VI. xviii.
+
+[696] A.U.C. 796, 800.
+
+[697] A.U.C. 801.
+
+[698] A.U.C. 797. See CLAUDIUS, c. xvii.
+
+[699] A.U.C. 801.
+
+[700] A.U.C. 767; being the year after the death of the emperor
+Augustus; from whence it appears that Vitellius was seventeen years older
+than Otho, both being at an advanced age when they were raised to the
+imperial dignity.
+
+[701] He was sent to Germany by Galba.
+
+[702] See TIBERIUS, c. xliii.
+
+[703] Julius Caesar, also, was said to have exchanged brass for gold in
+the Capitol, Junius, c. liv. The tin which we here find in use at Rome,
+was probably brought from the Cassiterides, now the Scilly islands.
+whence it had been an article of commerce by the Phoenicians and
+Carthaginians from a very early period.
+
+[704] A.U.C. 821.
+
+[705] A.U.C. 822.
+
+[706] Vienne was a very ancient city of the province of Narbonne, famous
+in ecclesiastical history as the early seat of a bishopric in Gaul.
+
+[707] See OTHO, c. ix.
+
+[708] See OTHO, c. ix.
+
+[709] Agrippina, the wife of Nero and mother of Germanicus, founded a
+colony on the Rhine at the place of her birth. Tacit. Annal. b. xii. It
+became a flourishing city, and its origin may be traced in its modern
+name, Cologne.
+
+[710] A dies non fastus, an unlucky day in the Roman calendar, being the
+anniversary of their great defeat by the Gauls on the river Allia, which
+joins the Tiber about five miles from Rome. This disaster happened on
+the 16th of the calends of August [17th July].
+
+[711] Posca was sour wine or vinegar mixed with water, which was used by
+the Roman soldiery as their common drink. It has been found beneficial
+in the cure of putrid diseases.
+
+[712] Upwards of 4000 pounds sterling. See note, p. 4S7.
+
+[713] In imitation of the form of the public edicts, which began with
+the words, BONUM FACTUM.
+
+[714] Catta muliere: The Catti were a German tribe who inhabited the
+present countries of Hesse or Baden. Tacitus, De Mor. Germ., informs us
+that the Germans placed great confidence in the prophetical inspirations
+which they attributed to their women.
+
+[715] Suetonius does not supply any account of the part added by
+Tiberius to the palace of the Caesars on the Palatine, although, as it
+will be recollected, he has mentioned or described the works of Augustus,
+Caligula, and Nero. The banquetting-room here mentioned would easily
+command a view of the Capitol, across the narrow intervening valley.
+Flavius Sabinus, Vespasian's brother, was prefect of the city.
+
+[716] Caligula.
+
+[717] Lucius and Germanicus, the brother and son of Vitellius, were
+slain near Terracina; the former was marching to his brother's relief.
+
+[718] A.U.C. 822.
+
+[719] c. ix.
+
+[720] Becco, from whence the French bec, and English beak; with,
+probably, the family names of Bec or Bek. This distinguished provincial,
+under his Latin name of Antoninus Primus, commanded the seventh legion in
+Gaul. His character is well drawn by Tacitus, in his usual terse style,
+Hist. XI. 86. 2.
+
+
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LIVES OF THE CAESARS, SUETONIUS, V9 ***
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