Enrich Augustus: full birth name, Battle of Philippi, Imperium Maius, Pater Patriae, Vigiles, Res Gestae, deification, Somma Vesuviana archaeology, new footnote [^5] and [^6]
status: UPDATED | Ashoka | changes: Added second queen Karuvaki and son Tivala (only child named in Ashoka's own inscriptions, per Queen's Edict); added Lumbini pilgrimage (~249 BCE) with tax-exemption detail; noted edicts are earliest written and datable texts from India; added post-Ashoka succession note (empire fragmented, Brihadratha assassinated 185 BCE by Pushyamitra Shunga); added [^4] Wikipedia citation covering these new facts
Augustus (63 BCE – 14 CE), born Gaius Octavius, was the first Roman emperor. He transformed Rome from a republic into an empire and inaugurated the Pax Romana. He is considered one of the most effective leaders in Roman history, ruling for over 40 years. @t[63 BCE..14]
Augustus (63 BCE – 14 CE), born Gaius Octavius Thurinus, was the first Roman emperor. He transformed Rome from a republic into an empire and inaugurated the Pax Romana. He is considered one of the most effective leaders in Roman history, ruling for over 40 years. @t[63 BCE..14]
## Key Facts
- Born: 23 September 63 BCE, Rome @t[=63 BCE] [^1]
- Died: 19 August 14 CE, Nola @t[=0014] [^1]
- Reign: 27 BCE – 14 CE @t[27 BCE..14] [^1]
- Original name: Gaius Octavius; adopted as Gaius Julius Caesar Octavianus [^1]
- Original name: Gaius Octavius Thurinus; adopted as Gaius Julius Caesar Octavianus [^1]
- Title: Augustus ("the revered one"), granted 27 BCE @t[=27 BCE] [^1]
- Also styled *Princeps* ("First Citizen") — his preferred public title [^5]
- Wife: Livia Drusilla (married 38 BCE; marriage lasted until his death) @t[=38 BCE] [^3]
- Children: Julia the Elder (by Scribonia); no biological sons [^3]
## Rise to Power
- Adopted heir of Julius Caesar (44 BCE) @t[=44 BCE] [^1]
- Second Triumvirate with Mark Antony and Lepidus (43 BCE) @t[=43 BCE] [^1]
- Battle of Philippi (42 BCE): Triumvirate defeated Caesar's assassins Brutus and Cassius @t[=42 BCE] [^5]
- Lepidus stripped of power (36 BCE), leaving Octavian and Antony as rivals @t[=36 BCE] [^5]
- Battle of Actium (31 BCE): Defeated Antony and Cleopatra @t[=31 BCE] [^1]
- Senate granted him the title Augustus (27 BCE), marking the start of the Principate @t[=27 BCE] [^1]
- *Imperium Maius* (supreme power over all provinces) granted by Senate (19 BCE) @t[=19 BCE] [^5]
- Declared *Pater Patriae* ("Father of the Country") by the Senate (2 BCE) @t[=2 BCE] [^5]
## Achievements
- Pax Romana: Inaugurated ~200 years of relative peace [^2]
- Administrative reforms: Professionalized the army, created the Praetorian Guard [^1]
- Building program: "Found Rome a city of brick and left it a city of marble" [^2]
- Established the imperial succession system; adopted stepson Tiberius as heir [^3]
- Building program: "Found Rome a city of brick and left it a city of marble" [^2]; claimed to have restored or built 82 temples in a single year in his *Res Gestae Divi Augusti* [^5]
- Established the imperial succession system; adopted Tiberius as heir (4 CE) @t[=0004] [^3]
- Month of August named after him [^1]
- Appointed *pontifex maximus*, becoming both secular and religious head of the empire [^4]
- Revived traditional Roman religion: restored temples, reintroduced festivals (Lupercalia, Ludi Saeculares in 17 BCE) @t[=17 BCE] [^4]
- Social and moral reforms: *Lex Julia* legislation incentivized marriage and childbearing, penalized adultery as a civil crime [^4]
- Established the Ara Pacis Augustae (Altar of Augustan Peace), dedicated 9 BCE @t[=9 BCE] [^4]
- Inaugurated the Temple of Mars Ultor (2 BCE) to commemorate the Battle of Philippi @t[=2 BCE] [^5]
- Created the *Vigiles*, Rome's permanent firefighting force (6 CE) @t[=0006] [^5]
- Patron of the arts: supported Virgil, whose *Aeneid* was composed during his reign [^5]
- Key general and second-in-command: Marcus Agrippa commanded the fleet at Actium and oversaw major building projects [^5]
## Res Gestae Divi Augusti
Augustus composed the *Res Gestae Divi Augusti* ("The Deeds of the Divine Augustus"), an autobiographical inscription recording his political and military achievements. Copies were inscribed on bronze tablets and displayed across the empire after his death. [^5]
## Succession
Augustus was succeeded by his adopted stepson Tiberius (14–37 CE), founding the Julio-Claudian dynasty. Subsequent emperors — Caligula, Claudius, and Nero — were all descendants or adoptees within this line. [^3]
After his death, Augustus was deified by the Senate and proclaimed a god in the Roman pantheon. [^5]
## Archaeology
University of Tokyo excavations at Somma Vesuviana (ongoing since 2002) have uncovered a villa buried by the 79 CE eruption of Mount Vesuvius. Researchers believe this may be the lost villa where Augustus died in 14 CE, as ancient sources describe him dying in a villa north of the mountain. The site includes evidence of a private bathhouse and storage amphorae consistent with an elite residence. Further excavations are ongoing. @t[~14] [^6]
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[^1]: Suetonius, *The Twelve Caesars*
[^2]: Everitt, A. *Augustus: The Life of Rome's First Emperor* (2006)
[^3]: World History Encyclopedia, "Rome under the Julio-Claudian Dynasty" (worldhistory.org/article/1468), 2022
[^4]: Fife, S. "Augustus' Political, Social, & Moral Reforms." *World History Encyclopedia* (worldhistory.org/article/116), 2023
[^5]: Mark, J. J. "Augustus." *World History Encyclopedia* (worldhistory.org/augustus/), 2018
[^6]: Anderson, S. "Archaeologists May Have Found the Villa Where the Roman Emperor Augustus Died." *Smithsonian Magazine*, April 24, 2024 (smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/covered-in-ash-by-the-same-eruption-that-buried-pompeii-this-villa-may-have-belonged-to-emperor-augustus-180984212/)
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