Marcus
Aurelius, in full Caesar Marcus Aurelius Antoninus Augustus, original name
(until 161 ce) Marcus Annius Verus
(born April 26, 121 ce, Rome—died March 17, 180, Vindobona [Vienna], or
Sirmium, Pannonia), Roman emperor (ce 161–180), best known for his Meditations
on Stoic philosophy. Marcus Aurelius has symbolized for many generations in the
West the Golden Age of the Roman Empire.
Youth
and apprenticeship
Conservatori,
Palazzo dei: bas-relief of Marcus Aurelius [Credit: Alinari/Art Resource, New
York]When he was born, his paternal grandfather was already consul for the
second time and prefect of Rome, which was the crown of prestige in a
senatorial career; his father’s sister was married to the man who was destined
to become the next emperor and whom he himself would in due time succeed; and
his maternal grandmother was heiress to one of the most massive of Roman
fortunes. Marcus thus was related to several of the most prominent families of
the new Roman establishment, which had consolidated its social and political
power under the Flavian emperors (69–96), and, indeed, the ethos of that
establishment is relevant to his own actions and attitudes. The governing class
of the first age of the Roman Empire, the Julio-Claudian, had been little
different from that of the late Republic: it was urban Roman (despising
outsiders), extravagant, cynical, and amoral. The new establishment, however,
was largely of municipal and provincial origin—as were its emperors—cultivating
sobriety and good works and turning more and more to piety and religiosity.

The
child Marcus was thus clearly destined for social distinction. How he came to
the throne, however, remains a mystery. In 136 the emperor Hadrian (reigned
117–138) inexplicably announced as his eventual successor a certain Lucius
Ceionius Commodus (henceforth L. Aelius Caesar), and in that same year young
Marcus was engaged to Ceionia Fabia, the daughter of Commodus. Early in 138,
however, Commodus died, and later, after the death of Hadrian, the engagement
was annulled. Hadrian then adopted Titus Aurelius Antoninus (the husband of
Marcus’s aunt) to succeed him as the emperor Antoninus Pius (reigned 138–161),
arranging that Antoninus should adopt as his sons two young men—one the son of
Commodus and the other Marcus, whose name was then changed to Marcus Aelius
Aurelius Verus. Marcus thus was marked out as a future joint emperor at the age
of just under 17, though, as it turned out, he was not to succeed until his
40th year. It is sometimes assumed that in Hadrian’s mind both Commodus and Antoninus
Pius were merely to be “place warmers” for one or both of these youths.
The
long years of Marcus’s apprenticeship under Antoninus are illuminated by the
correspondence between him and his teacher Fronto. Although the main society
literary figure of the age, Fronto was a dreary pedant whose blood ran
rhetoric, but he must have been less lifeless than he now appears, for there is
genuine feeling and real communication in the letters between him and both of
the young men. It was to the credit of Marcus, who was intelligent as well as
hardworking and serious-minded, that he grew impatient with the unending regime
of advanced exercises in Greek and Latin declamation and eagerly embraced the
Diatribai (Discourses) of a religious former slave, Epictetus, an important
moral philosopher of the Stoic school. Henceforth, it was in philosophy that
Marcus was to find his chief intellectual interest as well as his spiritual
nourishment.
Meanwhile,
there was work enough to do at the side of the untiring Antoninus, with
learning the business of government and assuming public roles. Marcus was
consul in 140, 145, and 161. In 145 he married his cousin, the emperor’s
daughter Annia Galeria Faustina, and in 147 the imperium and tribunicia
potestas, the main formal powers of emperorship, were conferred upon him;
henceforth, he was a kind of junior coemperor, sharing the intimate counsels
and crucial decisions of Antoninus. (His adoptive brother, nearly 10 years his
junior, was brought into official prominence in due time.) On March 7, 161, at
a time when the brothers were jointly consuls (for the third and the second
time, respectively), their father died.
Roman
emperor
The
transition was smooth as far as Marcus was concerned; already possessing the
essential constitutional powers, he stepped automatically into the role of full
emperor (and his name henceforth was Imperator Caesar Marcus Aurelius Antoninus
Augustus). At his own insistence, however, his adoptive brother was made
coemperor with him (and bore henceforth the name Imperator Caesar Lucius
Aurelius Verus Augustus). There is no evidence that Lucius Verus had much of a
following, so a ruthless rival could have easily disposed of him, though to
leave him in being as anything less than emperor might have created a focus for
disaffection. It is most probable, however, that Marcus’s conscience impelled
him to carry out loyally what he believed to have been the plan by which alone
he himself had eventually reached the purple. For the first time in history,
the Roman Empire had two joint emperors of formally equal constitutional status
and powers, but, although the achievement of Lucius Verus has suffered by
comparison with the paragon Marcus, it seems probable that the serious work of
government was done throughout by Marcus and was the more arduous in that it
was done during most of his reign in the midst of fighting frontier wars and
combating the effects of plague and demoralization.
For
constructive statesmanship or the initiation of original trends in civil
policy, Marcus had little time or energy to spare. The field most congenial to
him seems to have been the law. Numerous measures were promulgated and judicial
decisions made, clearing away harshnesses and anomalies in the civil law,
improving in detail the lot of the less-favoured—slaves, widows, minors—and
giving recognition to claims of blood relationship in the field of succession
(see inheritance). Marcus’s personal contribution, however, must not be
overstated. The pattern of ameliorating legislation was inherited rather than
novel, and the measures were refinements rather than radical changes in the
structure of law or society; Marcus was not a great legislator, but he was a
devoted practitioner of the role of ombudsman. Moreover, there was nothing
specifically Stoic about this legal activity, and in one respect the age of
Antoninus Pius and Marcus signalizes a retrogression in the relationship of law
to society, for under them there either began or was made more explicit a
distinction of classes in the criminal law—honestiores and humiliores—with two
separate scales of punishments for crime, harsher and more degrading for the
humiliores at every point.
Marcus’s
claim to statesmanship has come under critical attack in numerous other
ways—for example, in the matter of Christian persecution. Although Marcus
disliked the Christians, there was no systematic persecution of them during his
reign. Their legal status remained as it had been under Trajan (reigned 98–117)
and Hadrian: Christians were ipso facto punishable but not to be sought out.
This incongruous position did little harm in times of general security and
prosperity, but when either of these were threatened, the local population
might denounce Christians, a governor might be forced to act, and the law, as
the central authority saw it, must then run its course. The martyrdoms at Lyon
in 177 were of this nature, and, though it appears that Christian blood flowed
more profusely in the reign of Marcus the philosopher than it had before, he
was not an initiator of persecution.
In
161 Syria was invaded by the Parthians, a major power to the east. The war that
followed (162–166) was nominally under the command of Verus, though its
successful conclusion, with the overrunning of Armenia and Mesopotamia, was the
work of subordinate generals, notably Gaius Avidius Cassius. The returning
armies brought back with them a plague, which raged throughout the empire for
many years and—together with the German invasion—fostered a weakening of morale
in minds accustomed to the stability and apparent immutability of Rome and its
empire.
In
167 or 168 Marcus and Verus together set out on a punitive expedition across
the Danube, and behind their backs a horde of German tribes invaded Italy in
massive strength and besieged Aquileia, on the crossroads at the head of the
Adriatic. The military precariousness of the empire and the inflexibility of
its financial structure in the face of emergencies now stood revealed;
desperate measures were adopted to fill the depleted legions, and imperial property
was auctioned to provide funds. Marcus and Verus fought the Germans off with
success, but in 169 Verus died suddenly, and doubtless naturally, of a stroke.
Three years of fighting were still needed, with Marcus in the thick of it, to
restore the Danubian frontier, and three more years of campaigning in Bohemia
were enough to bring the tribes beyond the Danube to peace, at least for a
time.
The
Meditations
A
more intimate contact with the thoughts pursued by Marcus during the troubling
involvements of his reign, though not what would have been historically most
valuable, his day-to-day political thoughts, can be acquired by reading the
Meditations. To what extent he intended them for eyes other than his own is
uncertain; they are fragmentary notes, discursive and epigrammatic by turn, of
his reflections in the midst of campaigning and administration. In a way, it
seems, he wrote them to nerve himself for his daunting responsibilities.
Strikingly, though they comprise the innermost thoughts of a Roman, the
Meditations were written in Greek—to such an extent had the union of cultures
become a reality. In many ages these thoughts have been admired; the modern
age, however, is more likely to be struck by the pathology of them, their
mixture of priggishness and hysteria. Marcus was forever proposing to himself
unattainable goals of conduct, forever contemplating the triviality,
brutishness, and transience of the physical world and of humanity in general
and himself in particular; otherworldly, yet believing in no other world, he
was therefore tied to duty and service with no hope, even of everlasting fame,
to sustain him. Sickly all through his life and probably plagued with a chronic
ulcer, he took daily doses of a drug; the suggestion has been made that the
apocalyptic imagery of passages in the Meditations betrays the addict. More
certain and more important is the point that Marcus’s anxieties reflect, in an
exaggerated manner, the ethos of his age.
The
Meditations, the thoughts of a philosopher-king, have been considered by many
generations one of the great books of all times. Although they were Marcus’s
own thoughts, they were not original. They are basically the moral tenets of
Stoicism, learned from Epictetus: the cosmos is a unity governed by an intelligence,
and the human soul is a part of that divine intelligence and can therefore
stand, if naked and alone, at least pure and undefiled, amid chaos and
futility. One or two of Marcus’s ideas, perhaps more through lack of rigorous
understanding than anything else, diverged from Stoic philosophy and approached
that Platonism that was itself then turning into the Neoplatonism into which
all pagan philosophies, except Epicureanism, were destined to merge. But he did
not deviate so far as to accept the comfort of any kind of survival after
death.
At
the same time that Marcus was securing his trans-Danubian frontiers, Egypt,
Spain, and Britain were troubled by rebellions or invasions. By 175, the
general Avidius Cassius, who earlier had served under Verus, had virtually
become a prefect of all of the eastern provinces, including control of the
important province of Egypt. In that year, Avidius Cassius took the occasion of
a rumour of Marcus’s death to proclaim himself emperor. Marcus made peace in
the north with those tribes not already subjugated and prepared to march
against Avidius, but the rebel general was assassinated by his own soldiers.
Marcus used the opportunity to make a tour of pacification and inspection in
the East, visiting Antioch, Alexandria, and Athens—where, like Hadrian, he was
initiated into the Eleusinian Mysteries (though that esoteric religious cult
does not seem to have impinged at all upon his philosophical views). During the
journey the empress Faustina, who had been with her husband in the Danubian
wars as well, died. Great public honours were bestowed upon her in life and in
death, and in his Meditations Marcus spoke of her with love and admiration. The
ancient sources accuse her of infidelity and disloyalty (complicity, in fact,
with Avidius Cassius), but the charges are implausible.
Commodus:
marble bust of Commodus as Hercules [Credit: Anderson—Alinari/Art Resource, New
York]In 177 Marcus proclaimed his 16-year-old son, Commodus, joint emperor.
Together they resumed the Danubian wars. Marcus was determined to pass from
defense to offense and to an expansionist redrawing of Rome’s northern
boundaries. His determination seemed to be winning success when, in 180, he
died at his military headquarters, having just had time to commend Commodus to
the chief advisers of the regime.
Assessment
Marcus’s
choice of his only surviving son as his successor has always been viewed as a
tragic paradox. Commodus (reigned as sole emperor 180–192) turned out badly,
though two things must be borne in mind: emperors are good and bad in the
ancient sources according as they did or did not satisfy the senatorial
governing class, and Commodus’s rapid calling off of the northern campaigns may
well have been wiser than his father’s obsessive and costly expansionism. But
those who criticize Marcus for ensuring the accession of Commodus are usually
under the misapprehension that Marcus was reverting to crude dynasticism after
a long and successful period of “philosophic” succession by the best available
man. This is historically untenable. Marcus had no choice in the matter: if he
had not made Commodus his successor, he would have had to order him to be put
to death.
Marcus
was a statesman, perhaps, but one of no great calibre; nor was he really a
sage. In general, he is a historically overrated figure, presiding in a
bewildered way over an empire beneath the gilt of which there already lay many
a decaying patch. But his personal nobility and dedication survive the most
remorseless scrutiny; he counted the cost obsessively, but he did not shrink
from paying it.
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