The Month to Honor Augustus

In 8 BC, the month of Sextilis was re-named in honor of Rome’s first emperor and we’ve called it August ever since. It seems only right that we should take this month to celebrate his accomplishments.
In deciding which month to claim as his own, Augustus passed over the month of his own birth in favor of the month in which he conquered Cleopatra. Augustus put an end to the civil wars by ruthlessly eliminating all possible rivals. However, once he was the unquestioned ruler of the empire, he was able maintain a period of relative peace and prosperity for the Romans that lasted more than two hundred years. This became known as the Pax Romana.
A superb administrator, he seems to have attempted to inculcate a love of peace in the Roman mindset that transcended the more traditional aspirations of war-booty and territorial expansion. What’s more, unlike his predecessor, Julius Caesar, Augustus had a knack for recruiting men who would not only be useful to him, but also, loyal to him. For example, though Augustus wasn’t talented on the battlefield, he befriended men of military brilliance, like his school friend, Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa.
Order was the byword of his regime, and he used his authority as “First Citizen” to reform and stabilize the empire. He introduced the notion of publicly funded police and fire fighters. He maintained a standing army to defend Roman territory. He built an unprecedented number of roads and instituted public projects on a scale never attempted before, or perhaps since. He standardized taxation throughout the empire and he restored a great many temples. He also commissioned great works of art, including the nationalistic epic poem, Virgil’s Aeneid.
Of his most enduring legacies was the effective political use of an appeal to traditional values. Augustus asked the Romans to reform their behavior so as to be in keeping with older and supposedly more simple times. He passed all manner of social legislation that directly interfered with the family lives of his subjects–laws on marriage, adultery, and social obligation. His attempt to transform Roman society was ultimately a failure: within a generation, the debauched days of Caligula were visited upon the Romans. However, the political notion of a culture war endures to this day.




