[Born at Rome, A.D. 51. Died there, A.D. 96. Aged 45.]
Son of the Emperor Vespasian, and brother of Titus. He was bloody and
cowardly throughout his career. Suetonius says his very virtues were
turned into vices. Before the death of his brother Titus he made many
attempts upon his life, and, during his own reign, he frequently
compelled individuals to undergo the terrors of death, sparing their
lives, in order to enjoy the sight of their sufferings. His government
was disastrous for Rome, though he boasted annually of great victories,
and assumed the title of God. Pliny used to say that the triumphs of
Domitian were certain “proofs that the enemy had gained an advantage.”
Neither talent nor virtue was safe from his persecutions, yet, although
the last three years of his life form one of the most frightful epochs
in history, Domitian had talent and a cultivated mind. He promoted
architecture and beautified Rome; he rebuilt the libraries which had
been burnt in the preceding reign, and sent literary men to the famous
Alexandrine library to make copies of books there. He was the victim of
a conspiracy, and the last of the twelve Cæsars.
[From the marble in the Capitoline Museum at Rome.]