Titus,
in full Titus Vespasianus Augustus, original name Titus Flavius
Vespasianus (born Dec. 30, 39 ce—died
Sept. 13, 81 ce), Roman emperor (79–81), and the conqueror of Jerusalem in 70.
Titus,
Arch of: “Romans Taking Spoils of Jerusalem” [Credit: Erich Lessing/Art
Resource, New York]After service in Britain and Germany, Titus commanded a
legion under his father, Vespasian, in Judaea (67). Following the emperor
Nero’s death in June 68, Titus was energetic in promoting his father’s
candidacy for the imperial crown. Licinius Mucianus, legate of Syria, whom he
reconciled with Vespasian, considered that one of Vespasian’s greatest assets
was to have so promising a son and heir. Immediately on being proclaimed
emperor in 69, Vespasian gave Titus charge of the Jewish war, and a large-scale
campaign in 70 culminated in the capture and destruction of Jerusalem in
September. (The Arch of Titus [81], still standing at the entrance to the Roman
Forum, commemorated his victory.)
The
victorious troops in Palestine urged Titus to take them with him to Italy; it
was suspected that they acted on his prompting and that he was considering some
sort of challenge to his father. But eventually he returned alone in summer 71,
triumphed jointly with Vespasian, and was made commander of the Praetorian
Guard. He also received tribunician power and was his father’s colleague in the
censorship of 73 and in several consulships. Although Vespasian had in various
ways avoided making Titus his own equal, the son became the military arm of the
new principate and is described by Suetonius as particeps atque etiam tutor
imperii (“sharer and even protector of the empire”). As such he incurred
unpopularity, worsened by his relations with Berenice (sister of the Syrian
Herod Agrippa II), who lived with him for a time in the palace and hoped to
become his wife. But the Romans had memories of Cleopatra, and marriage to an
Eastern queen was repugnant to public opinion. Twice he reluctantly had to
dismiss her, the second time just after Vespasian’s death.
In
79 Titus suppressed a conspiracy, doubtless concerned with the succession, but,
when Vespasian died on June 23, he succeeded promptly and peacefully. His
relations with his brother Domitian were bad, but in other ways his short rule
was unexpectedly popular in Rome. He was outstandingly good-looking,
cultivated, and affable; Suetonius called him “the darling of the human race.”
His success was won largely by lavish expenditure, some of it purely personal
largesse but some public bounty, like the assistance to Campania after Vesuvius
erupted in 79 and the rebuilding of Rome after the fire in 80. He completed
construction of the Flavian Amphitheatre, better known as the Colosseum, and
opened it with ceremonies lasting more than 100 days. His sudden death at age
41 was supposedly hastened by Domitian, who became his successor as emperor.
Titus
married twice, but his first wife died, and he divorced the second soon after
the birth (c. 65) of his only child, a daughter, Flavia Julia, to whom he
accorded the title Augusta. She married her cousin Flavius Sabinus, but after
his death in 84 she lived openly as mistress of her uncle Domitian.
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