AugustusAugustusAfter defeated the combined forces of Antony and Cleopatra at the battle of Actium in 31 B.C.E, Octovian took supreme control and assumed the title Augustus. At this time, Augustus establishing a new political orders and effectively maintain all the power in his hand and the hand of the imperial’s staffs. Augustus and his bureaucracy controlled virtually all decisions, even though the emperor had claimed that he replaced the State in the hand of the Senate and Roman people.
Augustus also reforms his army, developing civil services, and created many career paths for the Roman. During Augustan reign, many finest achievements were produced. Especially, in art and literature, its represent the highest point of the Roman cultural achievement. Augustus also played an active part in supporting, encouraging the writers and artists in composition of an epic poem intended to honor Romes and its heroes. Most artists and writers works reflect the chief themes of Augustan politics, the return of peace, the importance of the land and agriculture, and all the belief in Rome’s destiny as world ruler. Among other poets, Vigil, the greatest of all Roman’s poets, also commissioned by Augustus to write the Roman national epics. As the result, the Aeneid was introduced. Augustus was portrayed in numerous poems, statues, and portraits. However,
The Romans. During the first half of the Aeneid’s reign, Rome was governed by Augustus. His most successful campaign was a campaign to restore order in the Roman Empire, which brought peace to a devastated and ravaged nation, and eventually brought up to 20,000 Christians within an hour of the end of the Aeneid’s reign. This was followed by the subsequent fall of Rome against the Empire and the end of the Roman Empire in 30 BC, and also by great and unsuccessful expeditions from the west to the east and the Roman frontier at the mouth of Cilicia. There are a few different lines of events related to the Aeneid’s reign: (1) The Emperor has died, thus killing many of the citizens of the empire, (2) the Empire is not to be broken apart, or (3) the Roman-Austrian conflict ends.
Roman soldiers and commanders.
1. The battle of Cassander, where the Romans destroyed the city at Cann.
The Romans at Cassander, the time of Augustus.
The Romans were at the scene as they were destroying Rome.
“All other war could be put up in one fell swoop. It is in the eyes and hearts of the Romans that they fight, just as they fought in battles for other nations. (9) (1) In the first two centuries of Augustus’ reign, the Roman Empire was divided among many warring sects. (2) At the end of Julius Caesar’s reign, the two major factions of the empire, the Christians and the Roman Christians, were able to separate and form separate groups of followers who went to each other’s sides and did not interfere with each other’s interests. (3) During both sides’ war for power, the Roman leaders chose to stay neutral and support their rival, rather than attempt to join forces with the other. There was a period in the empire’s history before the civil war between the Roman governors and the Christians, where they began to fight for territory, property, and territories for Roman governors. During that period, the Roman governors began to take on the leadership role of the government. (4) With the passage of the Act of Union and the civil war between the Christians and the Romans, the Roman governor of Egypt appointed a new emperor in 27 BC. He was not the next man to join that empire, and he was soon expelled by the Romans. The Romans, too, followed suit with the same emperor. The Romans were also divided, and many of them were exiled and sent back to Rome to begin with. The Roman legions were already too numerous to allow the emperor to carry over the whole fleet without the help of Roman commanders in the legions. However, the Roman army was not too thin to support the forces of Rome’s army which were needed for the Romans’ victory. The Romans could not keep up with the numbers of the Roman army just yet as they needed food, water, power, equipment, training and supplies. By 24 BCE, an emperor Augustus sent the fleet, all of which was sent to the east. The fleet had landed in the coastal region of Cyprus and was to take part in the Roman campaigns against the Byzantines until he died. Thus, even after Augustus’