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Historian claims King Arthur was buried in Croatia   Message List  
Reply | Forward Message #26840 of 27335 |
Re: [Imperial Rome] Favorite Emperor

Itis a rule rather than exception that the least qualified and often mentally deficient individuals are cast in the highest positions of power by socio-political circumstance, force or electoral mischief.  Even in our own "empire" we have had our Warren Hardings and George Bushes.  Whether it their lack of intellect or just malicious greed (or a combination of both) the results are devastating.  Power hunger, greed and corruption are rampant in our own Congress and yet even our positions as electors in a representative repubic is not sufficient as we sit back and watch blatant abuses, "earmarks" and "scandals of the week."  Yet we can probably consider ourselves lucky that our congress is not plagued by lead poisoning.  Political historians pose that the best form of government for a large society is a benevolent dictatorship but it is that "benevolent" part that is illusive.  In many respects, Iran and North Korea resemble ancient Rome under crazy emperors.
 
Regards,
 
Jack
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Tuesday, June 30, 2009 8:48 PM
Subject: Re: [Imperial Rome] Favorite Emperor

you are quite right about the lead intake. let alone what they did with body hair shavings! but what did tiberius do on capri for water. i recollect water from wells. i don't think there is a quick answer. we have a fair number of such characters today. was it DNA malfunction? chemical poisoning?  lack of hygene? just being rich and all powerful? it needs further study oh great and mighty universities of the world (hint for phd studies).

m: Jack Kilmon <jkilmon@...>
To: imperialrome2@...
Sent: Tuesday, June 30, 2009 7:07:42 PM
Subject: Re: [Imperial Rome] Favorite Emperor

 
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Thursday, June 25, 2009 11:00 AM
Subject: Re: [Imperial Rome] Favorite Emperor

Thanks Jack

I really meant favourite - in the sense of who do you actually like? Vespasian just makes me laugh. I like him - he can come round to dinner. I think that is what I mean. Who wd you invite for dinner?

Agree with most of what you say about the Emperors  but I try to look at them from a post modern perspective. What made them the men they were? Acumen or accident? On drugs or what? So you start with the early gang being brain dead, in bred, psychotic creatures suddenly given unlimited wealth power and fame. The early equivalents of Brittany Spears, or drug addled sportsmen today.  The military had to take over. 
 
It has been mentioned before but a considerable portion of the upper class population of Rome, with its lead plumbing, were suffering from lead poisoning.  It must be factored into the high infant mortality and poisonings that the historians blamed on conspiracies and the psychotic behavior of the upper class who could afford the piped in water.  It could explain the transitions of both Tiberius and Nero from resposible behavior early in their imperiums and becoming whack jobs later.  The moral?  Don't drink the water on the Palatine.
 
I agree on Vespasian.  Probably avoided the leaded water being primarily in the field.
 
Jack
 
 
 
But just generally, and this is just conversation and not a formal statement:

Augustus - the gold  standard from which all were measured. So cool, so clever, so wonderful. 
Caligula - barking mad nuttter.
Marcus Aurelius and his Meditaions  - yes that's fine, but I hate to say this I think he was an air head and a bit of a hippy drippy, nit wit.  His adopted brother poncing around on a gilded barge in the Med with shedloads of girlfriends whilst pretending to rule the eastern empire and Marcus never seeming to realise. Commodus was no more his son than I am. But Gibbon thought Marcus was way cool so must be something in it.  

Tiberius,and  Nero do seem to me to be suffering from a smear campaign and need re-evaluating eg Nero was quite popular with the plebs as he picked on the super rich but the super rich wrote the spin. Was Tiberius nothing more than pissed at the world because of Augustus' treatment of him? 

Domitian, Commodus, Caligula, Caracalla, and lets not forget Elagabalus all in bred zombies walking. 

But what of dear sweet cuddly wuddly Justinian?  Has he any fans? Has Julian? I wonder that's all.

Gerry


From: Jack Kilmon <jkilmon@historian. net>
To: imperialrome2@ yahoogroups. co.uk
Sent: Wednesday, June 24, 2009 7:00:50 PM
Subject: Re: [Imperial Rome] Favorite Emperor

Such a simple question...one I never thought of...yet difficult to answer.
We have an initial tendency to define "favorite" as one who possesses
qualities we admire, for example Barack Obama is my "favorite" president
since 1952. A Roman Emperor that comes closest to possessing good
qualities, for me, was Marcus Aurelius. I first read Ta Eis hEauton at 10
and still read it at 70. Most of the Emperors from the Claudians through the
Flavians were cruel, vicious whack jobs...maybe with the exception of
Claudius. If we use the term "fascinating" rather than "favorite," its a
different issue. The most fascinating, for me, would be Augustus. Tiberius
was neither a victim or a hero. He rode on Augustus' steam. He hid out on
Capris raping children and throwing them off a cliff while his chosen thug
ran the Empire. Augustus, on the other hand, was a metaphor for Roman
civilization. Much to admire yet a culture enamored with cruelty. Most
fascinating? Augustus. Favorite? Marcus Aurelius. Most reviled? Nero,
Caligula, Domitian, Commodus.

Jack Kilmon

>
> --- In imperialrome2@ yahoogroups. co.uk, Gerry Carter <gec12gec16@ ...>
> wrote:
>>
>> I am worried. There seems to be a lack of Roman news on the group. Talk
>> about scraping the barrel, I mean to say - King Arthur and the lighthouse
>> are not our interests. Come on guys think of something to discuss. Like,
>> was Domitianus the setting sun which the Empire mistook for the dawn?
>> Tiberius - victim or hero? Who is your favorite Emperor and why? Lets
>> discuss.




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Wed Jul 1, 2009 1:39 pm

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Far out . . . Historian claims King Arthur was buried in Croatia Croatian Times, 02. 06. 09. A British historian is claiming King Arthur was buried in Croatia....
robert-blau@...
rb2717
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Jun 17, 2009
5:04 am

I am worried. There seems to be a lack of Roman news on the group. Talk about scraping the barrel, I mean to say - King Arthur and the lighthouse are not our...
Gerry Carter
gec12gec16
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Jun 20, 2009
8:00 am

I know what you mean thinking up new relevant discussions proves problematical. Hopefully after I visit Rome next month I will have some inspiration. Still if...
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gauiscaecilius
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Jun 20, 2009
8:05 am

Here's a question for discussion: with the most recent and up-to-date archaeological discovery and research relating to Kalkriese, is it indeed a part of the...
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kimusinteruptus
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Jun 20, 2009
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Hello there Well Kim it is very interesting. If only the forest wd keep still long enough for us to check it out. Knowing how devious the Romans were I always...
Gerry Carter
gec12gec16
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Jun 25, 2009
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Richard
gauiscaecilius
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Jun 28, 2009
6:18 pm

Hi gec I'll go with you on Vespasian - sensible and thrifty. What a master-stroke to abandon Nero's Domus Aurea as being too ostentatious, draining the lake ...
OctCocceius@...
octcocceius
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Jun 26, 2009
9:01 pm

hi Oct Thanks for raising some points for discussion or just for pondering. Its certainly made me have a re-think. Some more notions. Chester (Deva) is so nice...
Gerry Carter
gec12gec16
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Jun 28, 2009
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Hi again gec Interesting post and I agree the area covered by present day Wales was useful to the Romans for extraction of metals. However, the obsession with...
OctCocceius@...
octcocceius
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Jun 29, 2009
6:41 pm

Oct, thanks A simple view for now. But if I were a Roman, I wd wonder how dare you defy/contradict the cult of my gods (lares etc) when we Romans have been so...
Gerry Carter
gec12gec16
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Jul 14, 2009
6:31 am

Well, you could come over to the Julio-Claudian Iconographic Group! We usually have some interesting (I think) discussion going on over there. ...
postumusagrippa
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Jun 24, 2009
11:10 am

Such a simple question...one I never thought of...yet difficult to answer. We have an initial tendency to define "favorite" as one who possesses qualities we...
Jack Kilmon
jkilmon_2000
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Jun 24, 2009
6:01 pm

Thanks Jack I really meant favourite - in the sense of who do you actually like? Vespasian just makes me laugh. I like him - he can come round to dinner. I...
Gerry Carter
gec12gec16
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Jun 28, 2009
6:10 pm

Hello folks. Ooh, good long discussion. Hooray! ;) (1) Don't malign Domitian too much! Sure, he was dark, miserable and not a little nasty, but he was a genius...
postumusagrippa
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Jun 29, 2009
2:15 pm

... From: Gerry Carter To: imperialrome2@... Sent: Thursday, June 25, 2009 11:00 AM Subject: Re: [Imperial Rome] Favorite Emperor Thanks Jack I...
Jack Kilmon
jkilmon_2000
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Jun 30, 2009
6:13 pm

you are quite right about the lead intake. let alone what they did with body hair shavings! but what did tiberius do on capri for water. i recollect water from...
Gerry Carter
gec12gec16
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Jul 1, 2009
6:22 am

Itis a rule rather than exception that the least qualified and often mentally deficient individuals are cast in the highest positions of power by...
Jack Kilmon
jkilmon_2000
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Jul 1, 2009
1:39 pm

Barry Thanks. Will do. Gerry ________________________________ From: postumusagrippa <no_reply@...> To: imperialrome2@... Sent:...
Gerry Carter
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Jun 28, 2009
6:11 pm
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