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Headword: Dometianos
Adler number: delta,1352
Translated headword: Domitian, Domitianus, Dometianos
Vetting Status: high
Translation:
Emperor of [the] Romans, brother of Titus, whose successor he became. He emulated not his father's or his brother's habit of good government, but, on the contrary, the appetite for iniquity of Tiberius and Nero. He canvassed every form of evil, and having had his fill of murder, woman-craziness and even man-craziness he, though godless, finally made himself into a god. Then that wretched man, having proved himself to be hateful to all, and despised on account of his murderous nature and the beastliness of his polluted mind, quite appropriately brought upon himself the rewards of his own malevolence, and brought an end to his depraved and obscene life with the most shameful of fates.[1]
This man, under the influence of some demonic bewitchment, grew spiteful of his brother and did away with him by poison, out of his passion for power. And although the affairs of the Romans were in a wretched state, he did not curtail any of his forms or pursuits of savagery, greed, murderous activity or anything else, along with his lack of self control and discipline as regards matters of the body. He also exiled Nerva on the charge that he was plotting to obtain the principate, and he arrested Apollonius of Tyana as a friend of Nerva and had him shorn and brought into court in fetters. And when the philosopher did not relent in his ridicule of the things that had happened on account of him and in his criticism of the things that had been done, out of shame he ordered him taken away. It was then, they say, that Apollonius uttered that famous remark -- "You will not kill me, since, I assure you, I am not mortal" -- and thereupon immediately disappeared.[2]
This man banished even the philosophers and the mathematicians from Rome. In his reign also John the Evangelist was exiled to Patmos. And he ordered those from the family of David to be executed, and many Christians were martyred under him. Nerva released John the Theologian from exile. Hadrian, who was a restorer in many respects, also installed a king over the Lazoi or Kolchoi.[3] But it was ill-advised when he withdrew from Mesopotamia (which had been annexed by the Romans under Trajan) at the request of the Persians, making the Euphrates the border of the empire.[4]
This man [Domitian], being universally hated on account of his murderousness and beastliness, was assassinated at the hands of members of his household who had conspired against him. They arranged to send in Stephanos the freedman with a dagger; and he fell upon Domitian while he was sleeping in the middle of the day and struck him, not, in fact, at the right time, but when he had already leapt up from bed.[5]
Greek Original:
Dometianos, basileus Rhômaiôn, adelphos Titou, hou diadochos genomenos ou tên patrikên kai adelphikên ezêlôsen ariston politeian, alla tên Tiberiou kai Nerônos anosiourgian ek diametrou. kai dê pan eidos kakias epelthôn miaiphonias te kai gunaikomanias hama kai andromanias anapleôs genomenos heauton ho atheos teleutaion apetheôse. kanteuthen oun echthiston hapasi kai apoblêton dia to phonikon te kai thêriôdes tês miaras gnômês heauton ho talas apophênas, eikotôs mala ta epicheira tês oikeias dusmeneias komisamenos aischistôi morôi ton musaron kai bebêlon katastrephei bion. houtos sun tôi baskanôi daimoni nemesêsas tôi adelphôi touton anairei pharmakôi, erôti tês archês. kai ponêrôs ta pragmata Rhômaiôn diatheis ouden ômotêtos oude pleonexias oude phonikês energeias ê heterou tinos paraleloipen eidos ê spoudasma, meta tou kai akratês einai kai akolastos ta peri to sôma. houtos kai Nerban metestêsen hôs epibouleuonta têi basileiai, kai Apollônion ton Tuanea hôs philon Nerbai, sullabôn apekeire kai desmion eis dikastêrion êgage. kai epei ho philosophos ouk enedidou epengelôn ta ginomena par' autou kai epiplêttôn tois prattomenois, aischuntheis diaphêken auton. tote phasi kai to poluthrulêton epos eipein ton Apollônion: ou men me kteneeis, epei ou toi morsimos eimi: aphanton genesthai parachrêma. houtos kai tous philosophous kai mathêmatikous ephugadeusen apo Rhômês. epi toutou kai Iôannês ho Euangelistês eis Patmon exorizetai. kai tous apo tou genous Dabid anaireisthai prosetaxe, kai Christianoi polloi ep' autou marturousi. Nerbas de apoluei tês exorias Iôannên ton Theologon. Adrianos de polla anorthôsas kai Lazois êtoi Kolchois basilea epestêsen. ouk euboulôs de tês Mesopotamias parachôrei Persais deêtheisin autou, ktêtheisês hupo Traianou Rhômaiois, kai ton Euphratên horon poieitai tês archês. houtos dia to phonikon kai thêriôdes echthistos ôn pros tôn oikeiôn sustantôn ep' autôi katakteinetai kai paraskeuasamenous eispempsai xun xiphidiôi Stephanon ton apeleutheron: kai touton prospesonta Dometianôi katheudonti to methêmerinon pataxai men, ou mên kairian, anapêdêsantos goun ekeinou.
Notes:
Titus Flavius Domitianus, emperor 81-96; OCD(4) 472-3; De Imperatoribus Romanis entry by John Donahue at web address 1; and already delta 1351.
[1] George the Monk, Chronicon 2.444.1-11.
[2] cf. Philostratus, Life of Apollonius of Tyana 8.8, where A. quotes Apollo's taunt to Achilles from Homer, Iliad 22.13. (On Apollonius see generally alpha 3420.)
[3] For 'Lazoi or Kolchoi' cf. kappa 1979, and see generally OCD(4) s.v. Colchis. The king here was the Arsacid Volog(a)eses II.
[4] cf. Eutropius, Breviarium 8.6.
[5] John of Antioch fr.107 FHG (4.579ff.), now 190.1 Roberto.
Associated internet address:
Web address 1
Keywords: biography; Christianity; chronology; daily life; epic; ethics; gender and sexuality; geography; historiography; history; law; medicine; philosophy; poetry; proverbs; religion
Translated by: William Hutton on 2 November 2002@09:40:26.
Vetted by:
Catharine Roth (added notes and link) on 3 November 2002@00:37:28.
David Whitehead (augmented notes; cosmetics) on 3 November 2002@05:52:50.
David Whitehead (another keyword) on 3 October 2005@09:35:22.
David Whitehead (another keyword) on 3 January 2006@10:27:15.
David Whitehead (tweaking) on 16 July 2012@06:02:57.
David Whitehead on 16 July 2012@06:04:10.
David Whitehead (expanded n.2; another keyword) on 27 May 2013@05:49:26.
Catharine Roth (coding) on 27 May 2013@05:54:05.
David Whitehead (updated 2 refs) on 3 August 2014@05:43:27.
Catharine Roth (coding) on 7 November 2014@02:06:07.
Catharine Roth (tweaked note) on 28 November 2014@12:02:50.
David Whitehead (another keyword) on 29 November 2014@03:14:54.
David Whitehead (updated a ref) on 29 January 2015@08:07:54.

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