Historia Augusta Re-Examined: The Sources of The
Historia Augusta Re-Examined: The Sources of The
Historia Augusta Re-Examined: The Sources of The
Abstract: The first step toward unravelling the mysteries of the late Roman biographical
collection called the Historia Augusta is to separate out the authentic historical material
from the fictions which the author offers in abundance. This article presents a careful re-
examination of the evidence for the sources of each section of the work, concluding that
the author draws upon Enmann’s Kaisergeschichte and its progeny, Marius Maximus,
Herodian, Dexippus, and, for the last Lives, a Greek source, perhaps Eunapius.
. Introduction
Ronald Syme described the late Roman biographical collection that we call
the Historia Augusta as ‘the most enigmatic work that Antiquity has transmit-
ted’. In , Hermann Dessau demonstrated that the work, which purports
to be the product of six different authors writing in the early fourth century,
is in fact the product of a single author writing decades later. Since that
demonstration, no fully satisfactory explanation of the HA has won out. The
HA combines false and invented passages with passages drawn from tradi-
tional historians and biographers, but identifying the authentic material is
particularly challenging in the absence of a full understanding of the pur-
pose and nature of the work itself.
Dessau’s arguments were immediately opposed by Mommsen, who of-
fered a complicated series of mostly-unconvincing explanations for the prob-
lems Dessau had revealed. But Mommsen’s scepticism found takers as late
as Momigliano because of his pointed question, ‘cui bono?’. Why would
someone undertake such a complicated, extensive, and unprecedented
fraud?
Various explanations for the composition of the Historia Augusta have
been offered. Some argued that the author had a political purpose: Baynes
Syme (b) . Cf. Chastagnol () i: ‘certainement l’ouvrage le plus énigmatique
que nous ait légué l’Antiquité’; Mehl () : ‘wohl das mysteriöseste Werk der antiken
Literatur’.
Dessau ().
The best introduction to the Historia Augusta is Chastagnol (); see also Paschoud
(); Birley ().
Mommsen ().
Mommsen () ; Momigliano () .
Baynes (); Stern ().
Straub ().
‘Rogue grammaticus’: Syme () ; see also Syme (a) , ; Syme () ,
.
Chastagnol () cxxxii–cxxxiii.
Chastagnol () clxxiv.
Paschoud () xxv.
David Rohrbacher
Paschoud ().
Cameron ().
Syme () .
The Sources of the Historia Augusta Re-examined
Barnes (); see also Barnes ().
David Rohrbacher
portant source for the whole of the Historia Augusta. More recent work has
allowed us to offer an outline of what the lost source was like. The KG pre-
sented short sketches of each emperor from Augustus at least as far as Con-
stantius II. The early lives of the KG draw their information largely, but not
entirely, from Suetonius. While the sources for the later lives cannot be de-
termined with certainty, it is possible that the biographer Marius Maximus
was a source for the emperors of the second and early third century, since a
passage of the HA that the author attributes to Marius Maximus is found in
Eutropius (Marc. . ~ Eutr. ..). The KG proved to be quite influential.
Although it was short and not especially reliable, the paucity of Latin
sources for the second and third centuries led many later historians to turn
to it for information. In addition to the three breviarists mentioned above,
the KG was probably used by Jerome in his Chronicle, by Ammianus Marcel-
linus, by the breviarist Festus, and by the chronicler Polemius Silvius.
The influence of the KG can be detected in the HA by finding parallels in
language or in content with the breviaria of Aurelius Victor and of Eutropius,
who relied on the KG alone for their account of the imperial period. An im-
mediate problem arises, however. How are we to determine whether the
HA-author is using the KG or one of the breviarists directly? Although for
many passages this is an unanswerable question, there is sufficient evidence
to conclude that the HA-author definitely uses the KG and Victor directly,
and probably uses Eutropius as well.
One of the key contentions of Dessau’s pathbreaking article, which
proved that the HA could not be a product of the age of Constantine, was
that the HA reproduced a section of Aurelius Victor, whose work was pub-
lished in (Sev. . to . = Victor ., –). This passage in the Life
of Septimius Severus contains a major error found in KG sources but not
elsewhere, the conflation of the short-lived emperor Didius Julianus with the
legal scholar Salvius Julianus. We might now suspect that this classic pas-
sage derives from the KG itself, rather than Victor, as Chausson argues, but
there are other passages in the HA that must derive from Victor. In his
chapter on the reign of the emperor Philip, Victor follows the KG in report-
ing that Philip had banned male prostitution (.–). He adds his own
moralising reflection to the effect that such activity continues, nevertheless,
to his own day, since men seek out even more avidly what is forbidden. The
Enmann (); see also Cohn (). Modern bibliography in Rohrbacher ()
n. .
Dessau () –.
Hohl () –.
Chausson () –.
The Sources of the Historia Augusta Re-examined
HA lacks a life of Philip, since the author has contrived a ‘lacuna’ which ex-
tends from the death of Gordian III to the end of the life of Valerian. One
of the ways we can tell that the lacuna is an authorial invention is the au-
thor’s reluctance to let good material from the KG go to waste. For example,
he takes the information on Philip and male prostitution and inserts it into
the Life of Severus Alexander (.). The HA-author claims, falsely, that Al-
exander had considered such a ban, which, he adds, Philip later promulgat-
ed, adding that Alexander thought better of it since he realised that ‘men are
more apt to demand a vice that is prohibited’ (homines inlicita magis prohibita
poscant furore iactati). The moralising reflection is typical of Victor, not the
KG. Victor’s penchant for didacticism and also his somewhat ornate style
point to other examples where it is likely the HA-author is working from
Victor’s elaborated text rather than the plainer text of the KG. Finally, the
discussion of the interregnum between the reigns of Aurelian and Tacitus is
probably based in part on Victor himself, not the KG.
Whether the HA-author has also used Eutropius directly is harder to as-
certain, in part because Eutropius himself seems to closely mirror the origi-
nal language of the KG. Dessau had pointed out that the section of Eutropius
dedicated to Marcus Aurelius had been replicated nearly word-for-word in
the HA life of Marcus (.–.). It may be that Eutropius was especially
close to the KG for this passage, however. And because the KG itself proba-
bly used the biographer Marius Maximus as a source, it is also possible that
both the KG and the HA draw from Maximus here. Chastagnol offers a few
more passages where the language of Eutropius and the HA are very close,
though again we could be reading the KG rather than Eutropius. Stronger
proof of the use of Eutropius can be found in some shared errors. Some
manuscripts of Eutropius (and the translation of Eutropius into Greek by
Capito) give the name Lollianus for the Gallic usurper Laelianus (Eutr.
..), an error found also in the Historia Augusta (tyr. trig. ), although not in
Victor (.) or in the coin evidence. In addition, Eutropius mistakenly gave
the name Trebellianus to the usurper under Gallienus, Regalianus (..). In
Gall. . the HA-author demonstrates that he knows that Regalianus is the
On the false lacuna: Birley (); Ratti () xix–xxviii.
Chastagnol () –.
Chastagnol (); ().
den Hengst () –.
Dessau () –.
Chastagnol () lxviii–lxix.
Damsholt () –.
David Rohrbacher
correct name, and Regalianus is also counted as one of the thirty tyrants (tyr.
trig. ), but among the thirty tyrants we also find an invented usurper, Tre-
bellianus (tyr. trig. ), whose name was perhaps inspired by the error found
in Eutropius.
Barnes wondered whether the HA-author had used yet another breviary
in the KG-tradition, the work of Festus. He points to a number of passages
(Probus ., .; tyr. trig. .–, .–) in which the HA-author proclaims his
allegiance to the facts, even at the expense of rhetorical brilliance, and ar-
gues that this is a parody of the preface of Festus, who states that he will
‘outline and not elaborate history’ (res gestas signabo, non eloquar). For Barnes,
the humour of the parody would come from the contrast between Festus,
who offers and delivers unadorned facts, and the HA-author, who promises
the facts but produces only empty verbiage. But Festus’ preface is false mod-
esty, for his work is not devoid of rhetorical adornment. And while Barnes
may be correct that Festus’ preface presents the closest parallel to the pas-
sages in extant historiographical literature, it remains a commonplace. But it
is not impossible that the author is familiar with the preface, at least, of the
work.
The KG and other breviaria served as a guide or framework for the au-
thor, particularly as the biographies progressed and his other sources be-
came scantier. In some of the later lives of the HA, virtually the only true in-
formation derives from the paragraph-long description of the emperor in the
KG, embellished by the HA-author’s invented material. The KG tradition of-
ten served as a starting point for more elaborate invention. For example, the
KG described the death of the usurper Aureolus at a place known still to
contemporaries as pons Aureoli; the HA-author follows with a short, invented
verse inscription, supposedly translated from Greek, that he claims marks
Aureolus’ tomb and bridge (tyr. trig. .–). The author also enjoys using the
KG in a kind of scholarship-theatre, where he contrasts his base source with
information from the KG, referred to as ‘other historians’ or ‘Latin writers’.
For example, the author purports to be sometimes unsure whether the
‘Maximus’ he finds in Herodian and Dexippus and the ‘Pupienus’ he finds
in the KG (Victor –, Eutr. .) are the same person (they are, the emperor
Marcus Clodius Pupienus Maximus). At one point he contrasts the views of
Herodian and Dexippus with those of ‘Latin writers’ in expressing this
quandary (Max. et Balb. .).
Barnes ().
See, e.g., Baldwin () –.
The Sources of the Historia Augusta Re-examined
Birley () .
David Rohrbacher
. ‘Ignotus’
A minority of scholars have argued that Maximus cannot be the sole source
of the information of the early lives. This theory is most closely associated
with Ronald Syme, who argued for the existence of ‘Ignotus’, ‘a Latin bio-
graphical source, accurate and sober, that was used as far as Caracalla’.
Syme argued that the HA-author first used only Ignotus for the lives from
Hadrian to Caracalla, and then turned to Marius Maximus, first to supple-
ment the nine lives covered by Ignotus, and then as the basis for the remain-
ing lives through to Elagabalus. I find the case for Ignotus underwhelming,
but working through the arguments for Ignotus will help clarify the nature
and structure of Maximus and of the HA itself.
The argument for Ignotus proceeds from both structure and content.
The primary lives of the Historia Augusta are haphazardly constructed, with
frequent repetitions and events presented out of chronological order. This
Syme took as evidence for a sloppy merging of two separate works, although
it might also be explained, of course, as a sloppy abridgement of Maximus
Every document in the HA is fictitious: Homo ().
Syme () . Syme’s discussions of Ignotus are scattered throughout his work; the
most comprehensive is in Syme (a) –. See also Barnes () –; Benario
().
The Sources of the Historia Augusta Re-examined
alone. Syme believed that he had detected in the Life of Hadrian, in particu-
lar, two sources, one positively disposed toward the emperor, and one nega-
tively disposed. Benario, in his commentary on the Life, presents material
attributed to each tendency in contrasting columns. But few of these pur-
ported contradictions are really contradictory. In many cases it is easy to
imagine that Maximus provided more than one source or opinion on a mat-
ter. In others, we can assume that the HA-author has added his own opin-
ions to his source text, or simply that the HA-author has garbled his source
in the course of excerpting it. Syme argued more broadly that the sober and
reliable information in the lives could not be attributed to the trivial and
scandalous Marius Maximus. This argument depends crucially, of course,
on how trivial we believe Marius Maximus to be. Syme’s next step, after
positing the need for Ignotus, was to attempt to disentangle the two sources
through structural and content analysis, despite, as he readily admits, the
danger of circular argumentation. A sceptical critic will find that these anal-
yses tend to attribute to Ignotus what is true in the lives, and to Maximus as
what is not.
There are other, less subjective, arguments for Ignotus as a source. One
concerns a passage in the Life of Severus (.). The HA-author falsely claims
that Pescennius Niger was killed at Cyzicus, although Greek sources make it
clear that this is an error and Niger in fact died at Antioch. The error is
found in other Latin sources dependent upon the KG, such as Victor and
Eutropius. Since Marius Maximus commanded one of the armies of Sep-
timius Severus in the civil war where Niger was killed, he could hardly have
been mistaken about this fact. Barnes argues that Ignotus must be the
source, ironically proving the existence of a biographer defined by his accu-
racy through an error. But it is possible to explain the error without re-
course to Ignotus. Cameron, for example, argues that the HA-author de-
rived the error from the KG, suggesting that the presumably full and detailed
account of Maximus would have been too tedious for the HA-author to
work through. Birley argues for a textual error (confusing apud Ciliciam with
apud Cyzicum) occurring early enough in the manuscript tradition to allow
the error to enter the KG as well.
Two of the stronger arguments on behalf of Ignotus focus on the Life of
Macrinus and the Life of Verus. Marius Maximus was appointed to high of-
fice by Macrinus, and so we would expect that his Life of Macrinus would
Benario () –.
Barnes () .
Cameron () .
Birley () .
David Rohrbacher
be particularly rich, but the HA Life of Macrinus is quite short, and depend-
ent upon Herodian and the KG. In the preface to the Life of Macrinus, the
HA-author ruminates on historical accuracy and criticises one of his favour-
ite invented sources, Junius Cordus. These sorts of prefaces are common be-
fore the later, unreliable, lives, and before the lives of Caesars or usurpers,
not the more factual early lives. For Ignotus supporters, the Macrinus marks
the point where our author has only Marius Maximus, not Ignotus, as a
source. This argument is augmented by the points made by Barnes on the
Life of Lucius Verus. The Life of Verus, who was co-emperor for a time
along with Marcus Aurelius, had been relegated since the time of Mommsen
to the category of a secondary life, the lives of Caesars and usurpers that are
of poor quality and that are usually assumed to have been written after the
composition of the main line of imperial lives. But Barnes showed that the
Life of Verus was full of factual material and should be classified as a prima-
ry, not a secondary, life. The significance of this classification for Barnes de-
rives from the consideration of a series of quatrains the poet Ausonius wrote
in on the Roman emperors called the Caesares. After the first twelve,
which correspond to the twelve Caesars of Suetonius from Julius to Domi-
tian, there is a second group of twelve, ending with Elagabalus (this quatrain
is defective, missing its last two lines). This group Barnes associated with the
twelve Caesars of Marius Maximus. Since Ausonius has no poem dedicated
to Verus, Barnes argued that the HA Life of Verus must be from material
offered by Ignotus, not Maximus.
Scholars sceptical of the Ignotus hypothesis have responded to these
challenges in several ways. Maximus would presumably have been embar-
rassed by his role in the government of the unpopular Macrinus, so Birley,
for example, argues that the Life of Macrinus may have been ‘contemptu-
ously’ short. Cameron goes further and suggests that Maximus did not
write a Life of Macrinus, but treated him as a usurper in the Elagabalus.
This would attribute to Maximus a collection of only eleven lives, though.
As for the Verus, Birley and Cameron argue that it could have been made
up of factual material drawn from the Marcus Aurelius, which we know was
long (at least two books). It is a bit difficult, however, to understand the
sharp contrast between the HA-author’s remarkable ability to construct a
secondary life out of a primary one in the case of the Verus and his slapdash
job in the case of the other secondary lives.
Barnes () n. .
Birley () .
Cameron () .
The Sources of the Historia Augusta Re-examined
Let me offer a new solution to the problem. First, we now know that the
connection of the second twelve poems of Ausonius with the work of Marius
Maximus is a tenuous one. Some manuscript evidence suggests that the
Caesares did not terminate with Elagabalus but continued up to the emperors
of Ausonius’ own time. Ausonius may have been dependent not upon
Maximus but upon the KG, or any other mixture of sources. Without the
support of Ausonius, nothing prevents us from believing that Marius Maxi-
mus did write a life of Verus, and did not write a life of Macrinus. The HA-
author begins the life of Verus with the claim that ‘most’ biographers have
treated Verus first, and then Marcus, but that he will reverse the order.
Since the order Marcus–Verus would seem to be the most natural one, this
represents, perhaps, as I have speculated, a parodic retort to Maximus’ ex-
planation for his own reversal of the usual order. Syme offers two citations
from the life of Avidius Cassius (Avid. Cass. ., .) to support his claim that
Maximus’ life of Marcus ‘comprised two books, the first of them terminating
with the decease of Verus’. The division of the Marcus, however, says
nothing at all about the existence of a separate life of Verus, since Verus
would have to be discussed in the life of Marcus as well as in his own life.
Thus this argument is irrelevant to the existence of Ignotus. We should con-
clude, then, that the Macrinus is a true secondary life constructed from bits
of the Elagabalus, a primary life, and that the HA life of Verus is based on
an original Verus by Marius Maximus. This explanation is preferable to the
argument of Ignotus supporters who claim that Maximus wrote a life of Ma-
crinus and a life of Elagabalus. The Elagabalus contains some solid factual
material and cites Maximus, even if it is not to the standards of the lives at-
tributed to Ignotus because of the fantastic passages that take up the second
half of the piece. The life of Macrinus could have been constructed similar-
ly, had Maximus written a life of Macrinus.
Ignotus supporters see the decline in the factual content of the Elagaba-
lus and especially the Severus Alexander as evidence of the end of the use of
Ignotus and the need for the HA-author to depend upon Maximus alone,
but both lives contain fiction that all scholars would attribute to the HA-
author himself, not to Maximus. The choice to offer fantasy cannot be
blamed on the inadequacies of Maximus, whom even the most severe critics
imagine to have a core of true or at least plausible information. Rather, we
are witnessing literary decisions by our author that were not driven by
source changes and cannot be explained away by them.
Green () –.
Compare Burgess () and Green ().
Syme (a) .
David Rohrbacher
Rubin (); Benario ().
Paschoud ().
Syme also expresses concern about the reliability of Maximus citations: Syme (a)
.
The Sources of the Historia Augusta Re-examined
Paschoud prefers to offer reasons for scepticism rather than a new para-
digm, so it is necessary to consider several different scenarios that his scepti-
cism might imply. We can distinguish ‘weak’ scepticism, where we question
whether Maximus is the actual name of the author’s biographical source,
from ‘strong’ scepticism, where Maximus is a simple invention like so many
other of the HA’s bogus historical sources, such as Junius Cordus, Lollius
Urbicus, or Acholius. The implications of ‘weak’ scepticism are not very sig-
nificant. If Maximus is a biographer but is cited under a false name, as He-
rodian is occasionally cited as Appian, then we can no longer gain insight
into his work from the biography of the consul of . Not much is lost in
this case. In fact, some of the problems with the idea that Marius Maximus
is the source of the early lives disappears if we understand ‘Marius Maxi-
mus’ to be a pseudonym. Our concerns with the poor quality of the Ma-
crinus and with the false placement of the death of Pescennius Niger at Cyz-
icus, for example, derive from biographical assumptions.
On the other hand, if we believe that Marius Maximus is in reality not a
biographer, but a name like Gargilius Martialis that the HA-author has
plucked from Ammianus and the Juvenal scholia and has made responsible
for much of the earlier part of the HA, then we obviously are left with a sub-
stantially different view of the methods of the HA-author and of the HA as a
whole. The invention of Marius Maximus, however, is surely a task too diffi-
cult for our author to undertake from scratch. The early books of the HA are
rich in factual detail, and if the details do not derive from Marius Maximus
or a work attributed by our author to Marius Maximus, we must posit con-
siderable historical research and collation on the part of our author, whose
skills then evaporated as he turned to the rest of his work. What is more, the
collected fragments of Maximus cohere and are consistent with an author
writing a dozen lives in emulation of Suetonius. One might contrast the in-
vented biographer Cordus. Almost every single one of the twenty-seven cita-
tions to Cordus in the HA is to a fabrication. Cordus appears almost entirely
in those lives for which Herodian is the primary source, and he disappears
when Herodian is abandoned. Some material claimed to derive from Cor-
dus is actually from Cicero or Suetonius. The fragments of Maximus share
none of these characteristics. Schlumberger provides further reasons to re-
ject the ‘strong’ anti-Maximus scenario. The Epitome de Caesaribus and the
Historia Augusta share a Latin biographical source for the period traditionally
attributed to Marius Maximus, in addition to their shared use of the KG.
This source is either Maximus himself, or another Latin biographer to
whom the HA-author has chosen to give the name Maximus.
Schlumberger ().
David Rohrbacher
The factuality of the primary lives, combined with the lack of interest of
the HA-author in facts, demand that the sources for these lives be few in
number. Paschoud’s cautions do not greatly affect the available hypotheses.
First, we may attribute all the material to Marius Maximus, who is revealed
to be a full, detailed, and mostly accurate, if often sensationalistic, source,
much like Suetonius. Second, we may attribute the accurate material largely
to an unknown source, Ignotus, and make Maximus a supplementary source
of more trivial information. Third, we may choose the first or second option,
but think of Marius Maximus as pseudo-Marius Maximus, a false name
chosen to cover a more or less accurate biographical work. I find the first
and simplest hypothesis the most compelling.
. Secondary Lives
The sharp contrast between the lives of emperors and the secondary lives,
the lives of usurpers and Caesars, is readily apparent. As a rule, the material
in the subsidiary lives is either drawn from the source that informed the
main lives, or is invented. The author depends therefore, on no additional
sources beyond Marius Maximus to construct the lives of Aelius, Avidius
Cassius, Pescennius Niger, Clodius Albinus, Geta, Macrinus, and
Diadumenianus.
An analysis of the life of Aelius, Hadrian’s Caesar, will provide a demon-
stration. Chapter is a prologue dedicated to Diocletian, a fantasy. Chapter
. draws a couple of (erroneous) details from Hadrian ; . continues the
dedication to Diocletian; .– is a learned digression on the name Caesar;
and .– is drawn from Hadrian again. Chapter spends more time on
material from Hadrian , and . draws a detail on Hadrian’s astrological
interests from Hadrian . Chapter is a mix of invented prophecies and an-
ecdotes, concluding with the notice of the Caesar’s death also found in Ha-
drian . The description of Aelius’ character in .– are entirely invented,
although one detail on the casserole known as the tetrapharmacum is derived
from Hadrian .. Chapter ends with a discussion of Aelius’ heirs; the er-
rors in this section are also found at the beginning of the Life of Marcus.
Chapters and are either fantasy or repeat material found in Hadrian or
. Chapter offers material from Hadrian and fantasy. The biography is
thus created almost entirely from the two sections of the Hadrian that were
dedicated to Aelius in the first place, and from the imagination.
The Sources of the Historia Augusta Re-examined
. Herodian
The imperial bureaucrat Herodian wrote a history in Greek around that
has been preserved in its entirety. It covers the period from the death of
Marcus Aurelius in to the accession of Gordian III in . It is the main
source for the account of the years – in the Historia Augusta, encom-
passing the lives collected under the Duo Maximi, the Tres Gordiani, and the
Maximus et Balbinus. Herodian was also used in an unsystematic way in sev-
eral other Lives. Some of the ten citations of Herodian by name in the HA
are found in the Lives of Clodius Albinus and of Alexander Severus, for ex-
ample, and he is used without citation in the Elagabalus. The HA-author did
not use Herodian as much as he might have for the Life of Alexander Seve-
rus. Instead, the HA-author chose to use the KG alone for the chronological
structure of the Alexander Severus, which is otherwise an elaborate and fan-
tastic invention.
Three times Herodian is, oddly, cited under the name of Arrian, a name
that evokes the second-century Greek historian of the same name (Maximin.
., Gord. ., Max. et Balb. .). It may be that this represents a mistake, ei-
ther by the author or in the manuscript tradition. Given the nature of the
HA, others have reasonably argued that the substitution is purposeful, but
no satisfactory explanation of the name has been offered. Domaszewski sug-
gested that the name was a purposeful piece of mystification derived from
the name of the consul Arrian, given at Gord. .. More plausibly,
Paschoud and Potter look for explanations in the fact that Arrian is always
paired with the historian Dexippus who, like Arrian the historian, includes
among his works a history of the events after the death of Alexander the
Great.
Because we actually possess the text of Herodian, we have the rare op-
portunity to watch the HA-author as he works with his source for this small
group of Lives. In his comprehensive studies of the use of Herodian by the
Historia Augusta, Kolb has classified the different approaches of our author to
Herodian into several categories: word-for-word translation, abbreviation,
Sidebottom (); Marasco (); Opelt ().
Chastagnol () xli; Kolb () –.
Kolb () –.
This is the suggestion, for example, of Hartke () n. .
von Domaszewski () –.
Potter (): –; Paschoud () .
David Rohrbacher
Kolb (; ; ).
Béranger ().
Whittaker () II. n. .
The Sources of the Historia Augusta Re-examined
. Dexippus
There is general agreement that the source for the period from to ,
in addition to the KG, is the third-century Athenian historian Dexippus.
Dexippus is extant only in fragments, although he is better attested than
Marius Maximus by fragments derived from sources other than the HA it-
self—which is not to say that he is very well attested. Dexippus wrote three
works: the Events after Alexander (the Great), the Scythica, and, most important
for our purposes, the Chronicle, an annalistic history beginning in remote an-
tiquity and covering about a thousand years up to the reign of Claudius II.
There are several compelling reasons to attribute some of the material in
this section of the Historia Augusta to Dexippus. First, we know from a frag-
ment of the historian Eunapius (F ), whose work followed Dexippus and
whose preface criticises him, that Dexippus’ Chronicle was arranged by con-
sular dates. Eleven times in this section, but only rarely outside it, events are
dated by the consuls of the year. Second, Barnes points to evidence of an
eastern focus for this section, including multiple trustworthy names and
events. Third, there is evidence for the use of a source written in the Greek
language for this section in multiple phrases and errors that are best ex-
plained by translation or mistranslation. Paschoud offers an example from
Claud. .: the Latin phrase fame ac pestilentia probably translates the Greek
λιµὸς καὶ λοιµός, a phrase found in Hesiod and Thucydides and appropriate
for the archaising Dexippus to use. Some terminology in the Gallienus is
also telling. The HA-author also uses the Greek decennia for Latin decennalia at
Gall. ., but in a passage in the same Life that derives from the KG he reverts
to the term decennalia (Gall. .). He also uses Achaei for Graeci (and also
Achaia, Achaicae) and Scythae for Gothi.
The pattern of citation of Dexippus is striking. Fourteen of the seventeen
citations of Dexippus arise in the narrative of events of the year , where
the author uses Herodian as his primary source. The HA-author seems to
cite Dexippus, then, almost exclusively when he is not the primary source of
his narrative. In the large majority of the occasions when Dexippus is cited,
his version of events is being contrasted with another historian, sometimes
Herodian, sometimes vaguely described ‘historians’, and sometimes one of
the author’s invented authors, such as Cordus. Thus in general we can say
Martin (); Janiszewski () –; Brandt (); Millar ().
Barnes () –.
Paschoud () .
Ratti () lxiv with n. .
David Rohrbacher
Syme (a) n. ; Paschoud ().
Paschoud () .
Paschoud () –; Straub () –.
Janiszewski () –.
The Sources of the Historia Augusta Re-examined
KG, as we can see by continuing parallels with KG-sources like Eutropius and
Victor. Yet it has long been recognised that some details of the later Lives
find parallels in certain later Greek sources, such as the fifth-century histori-
an Zosimus and the twelfth-century historian Zonaras. Is it possible to iden-
tify the source of this information?
We must first modestly recognise the limits to our ability to reconstruct
lost sources. Our extant sources may well have altered their sources for their
own purposes or out of error. Conversely, our lost sources must themselves
depend upon other lost sources, written or oral, which will have shaped
them in ways we cannot recover. The most prudent approach to this
question is probably to simply describe this source as one with affinities to
later Greek works and leave it at that, especially because we will not find
more specific identification valuable in the broader interpretation of the
Historia Augusta. But since such a disproportionately large amount of
scholarly attention has been spent on the question, we will look at two of the
most common answers.
.. Eunapius
Ernst Hohl first suggested that the source for the material found also in Byz-
antine sources was the History After Dexippus of Eunapius of Sardis. A num-
ber of fragments of Eunapius’ history, which covered the period from to
, are still extant, and in addition Eunapius was the sole source for a large
section of the New History of Zosimus, which survives. The ninth-century pa-
triarch Photius, who read both Eunapius and Zosimus, describes Zosimus as
simply transcribing Eunapius, and there are other reasons as well for believ-
ing that Zosimus presents a close approximation to Eunapius in general.
Barnes in his study championed Hohl’s suggestion, but when he re-
turned to the question twenty years later he felt less confident that it was
correct.
Much of the controversy over the Eunapius solution has focused on da-
ting. While the History of Eunapius is fragmentary, his biographical collec-
tion, The Lives of the Sophists, which was published in , is extant. In the
Lives, he sometimes refers to material that he has already covered in the pub-
lished books of his history, and other times refers to material that he hopes
or expects to cover in the later books of history. On first glance, the date of
the books written after should not matter for a student of the HA, since
the HA comes to an end in . To judge from Zosimus, the bulk of Eun-
apius’ work focused on the fourth century, so it is reasonable to expect that
Hohl () –.
Barnes () –; cf. id. () .
David Rohrbacher
his more abbreviated third-century material would have available for the
HA-author before .
The case for Eunapius as the source of the HA is complicated, however,
by the parallels between the Greek material found in the Historia Augusta for
events after and the Greek material found in the anonymous Latin Epit-
ome de Caesaribus for events after . Just as the Epitomator augmented his
KG-material with Marius Maximus for the relevant Lives, so too he aug-
mented his KG-material after with a source that looks like the same
source used by the Historia Augusta. The Epitome described the death of
Theodosius, and so was written after . Some would date it later, even as
late as . Thus it could be argued that the relevant material in Eunapius
must have appeared too late to be a source of the Epitome, and so could not
be the source of the HA either. A digression on the date of Eunapius is there-
fore necessary.
As Aaron Baker has demonstrated, scholars seeking to fix the date of
Eunapius’ History have misinterpreted the discussion of his work by Photius.
The patriarch claims to have seen two versions of Eunapius’ work. While
both, he says, cover the same period of time, the second version is different
because the author has excised much of the anti-Christian material, to such
an extent that he has left parts of it incoherent. Our fragments of Eunapius,
and the relevant parts of Zosimus, are strongly anti-Christian, and so could
not descend from the ‘second edition’. In addition, if Eunapius himself had
bowdlerised his own work (and why would he have?), one would expect him
to have maintained the ornate rhetorical style that characterises our frag-
ments. It seems likely, then, that Photius had seen a copy of Eunapius that a
pious reader had tried, inexpertly, to bring into line with his religious sensi-
bilities. But whether it was Eunapius himself or a later reader who aimed to
soften the anti-Christian elements of the history, the two editions of Photius
have nothing to do with the discussion in the Lives of material that was al-
ready published before and material that Eunapius planned to write and
publish after . Photius explicitly states that the two versions he has seen
cover the full span of the history to , so it is incorrect to consider the ma-
terial before the ‘first edition’ and the later material the ‘second edition’.
This mistaken interpretation led Barnes to feel it necessary to argue that
Eunapius had only reached in the History (later emended to ) before
writing the Lives, against which Paschoud forcefully restated the argument
For just one example, compare Aurelian – with Zosimus . and Epitome .ff.
For an early date, Cameron (). For a later date, Festy () liii–lviii.
Baker ().
The Sources of the Historia Augusta Re-examined
for . But since Eunapius is merely discussing the publication of his work
in installments, the question is irrelevant to the dating of the Epitome or the
HA. The material ‘from the end of Dexippus’ work to the time of Julian’ that
Eunapius claims to have summarised (F Blockley = Exc. de Sent. ) could
have theoretically been published at any time after . The date and the
nature of the history of Eunapius, then, allows it to serve as the conduit for
Greek material into the Historia Augusta and the Epitome de Caesaribus, on the
one hand, and into the later Greek tradition from Zosimus onward.
Paschoud has argued that the Epitomator, whose work is fairly insub-
stantial, would have been unlikely to use a Greek source at all, let alone one
as stylistically tortured as Eunapius. Against this argument I would note
first that Marius Maximus was, apparently, considerably more detailed than
Suetonius had been, yet the Epitomator was able to make use of his work.
Second, the earliest part of Eunapius, which was most important to the
Epitomator, would also probably have been the section least elaborated and
therefore the easiest to interpret. While the Greek tradition for the history of
the third and early fourth century is more rich than the Latin tradition as
exemplified by the KG, it is still not very extensive.
While the use of Eunapius is possible, we should not fool ourselves into
thinking that we know more than we do about lost sources for the period.
We know nothing of the sources for the later part of the KG, for example, or
the sources for Eunapius himself.
Barnes () –; Paschoud ().
Paschoud ().
Hartke () –; Schlumberger () –; Bleckmann (); (a);
Paschoud (); (); () xii–xix; Festy (); Baldini (); (). Cameron has
now written extensively on the Nicomachus Flavianus theory in Cameron () –,
which should be read with Paschoud ().
David Rohrbacher
and from the biographical sketch known as the Anecdoton Holderi. These an-
nals have been claimed as a source, not only of the Historia Augusta and the
Epitome, but also of Eunapius, Ammianus, and the seventh-century Peter the
Patrician. I will avoid exploring every aspect of the question, concentrating
on the Annales only insofar as they explain the source of the Historia Augusta.
Paschoud, the most energetic promoter of the theory, argues that the ev-
idence for the role of the Annales can be found in the traces of a western,
senatorially-biased work written in Latin in the later Greek historians. In
truth, then, there are two theories being put forth, one about a particular
Latin source for the later Greek tradition, and one attributing that source to
Flavianus. Since the scope and the nature of the Annales are unknown to us
from external evidence, the case for equating the posited Latin source with
Nicomachus Flavianus in particular is weak. Cameron points out that the
failure of Symmachus, in his extensive correspondence with Flavianus, to
make any reference to his historical interests, and the lack of any reference
to history in the portrayal of the character of Flavianus in Macrobius’ Satur-
nalia, make him an unlikely candidate for the role of author of an extensive
and influential historical work. But the association seems to have become
engrained and even functions as a shibboleth for certain writers to demon-
strate their adherence to the general theory of a Latin source.
Paschoud points to several passages in Zosimus’ account of the fourth
century as evidence of a western and senatorial bias, including the digres-
sions on the Secular Games (Zos. .–) and on the pontifex maximus (Zos.
.). Cameron has recently investigated these claims. He argues that
Mendelssohn was correct in seeing these digressions as Greek antiquarian
material that Zosimus himself grafted onto his Eunapian base. For example,
the digression on pontifex maximus combines misinformation, such as the
claim that kings and emperors, not private citizens, could hold the office,
with Greek pseudo-scholarship of a kind also found in John Lydus, such as
the suggestion that the college of pontiffs had its origin in prehistoric Thes-
saly. We would expect neither the misinformation nor the Hellenisation
from the pen of a patriotic, religiously-informed aristocrat like Nicomachus
Flavianus.
Galonnier ().
Cameron () –.
Consider, for example, in a recent Festschrift for Paschoud, how Bleckmann sees the
use of the name as a blow against Anglo-Saxon recalcitrance: ‘Dieser Autor sei zum
Ärgernis der angelsächsischen Fachwelt und zur Freude des Jubilars hier wieder mit dem
Etikett Nicomachus Flavianus versehen’: Bleckmann () .
Cameron () –.
The Sources of the Historia Augusta Re-examined
Zosimus makes one error and one major omission that provide further
evidence against seeing Nicomachus Flavianus as his ultimate source. He
fails to describe the conflict between pagans and Christians over Gratian’s
decision not to provide funds for the altar of Victory in the senate house,
and he claims that Theodosius withdrew state funding for the traditional
cults. It was Gratian, not Theodosius, who withdrew funding, and the affair
of the Altar of Victory was a significant milestone in the disestablishment of
traditional Roman religion, featuring duelling orations between such
illustrious aristocrats as Symmachus and Ambrose. It is impossible to
imagine a history by Flavianus, a close friend of Symmachus, that would not
emphasise this controversy. It is also impossible to imagine that Flavianus
mistakenly attributed the withdrawal of state support for pagan cult to
Theodosius. Paschoud does have a theory that purports to explain these
problems. He claims that a central theme of the history of Eunapius was the
demonstration that Christians who act against paganism are punished, and
that Eunapius wanted to ensure that every Christian emperor was guilty of
anti-pagan activities. Since Gratian’s refusal of the pontifical robe was
sufficient anti-pagan activity for him, his additional act of subsidy
withdrawal was attributed by Eunapius to Theodosius to ensure that both
Christian emperors were portrayed as sufficiently anti-pagan. The need for
such ad hoc solutions weakens the case for Flavianus.
Proponents of the importance of Nicomachus Flavianus also offer philo-
logical arguments that purport to show instances where later Greek histori-
ans must be drawing from a Latin-language source, directly or indirectly.
Here, too, Cameron has offered counterarguments that are strong enough
to ensure that no example seems to be to definitive proof of an ultimate Lat-
in origin, which is not to say that no doubts remain. Rather than recapitu-
late Cameron’s work I will point to evidence in the other direction, where
scholars have suggested that the Epitome and the Historia Augusta have a
Greek source rather than a Latin one in the relevant places. In the Life of
Firmus (quad. tyr. .–), we are told in a fantasy passage that the emperor
Aurelian planned to erect a statue of ‘Jupiter the Consul’. This is apparently
a joke based on the Greek Ζεὺς ὕπατος. Hypatos, ‘the most high’, is an epithet
of Zeus both in Homer and at real cult sites in antiquity (for example, in
Athens before the Erechtheum: Paus. .., ..), but the word in imperial
Greek is also the regular translation for the office of consul. In Aurelian ,
the murderer of the emperor is named Mnestheus, which is puzzling in light
Paschoud () –.
Cameron () –.
See also Straub ().
David Rohrbacher
of the agreement between Zosimus and Zonaras that his name was Eros.
Hohl was the first to see that the HA-author had misunderstood his source:
both Zosimus and Zonaras describe Eros’ office as τῶν ἔξωθεν φεροµένων
ἀποκρίσεων µηνυτής, the functionary who delivers the responses of the em-
peror to petitioners (Zos. .., Zon. .). Presumably the HA-author
understood the name of the office as a personal name. Paschoud dismisses
both of these examples with special pleading. In addition, a usurper under
Carinus, called just Julianus in Victor (.), has his full name, Sabinus Juli-
anus, in the Epitome (.), and also in Zosimus (..). The presence of the
full name in John of Antioch (F Mueller) suggests that the full name is
part of the Greek tradition with which the Epitome was familiar, not just a
detail from the KG which Victor had omitted. Finally we might add more
broadly Potter’s point that the HA-author invents a lot of fake Greek-named
sources for the history of the third century, as we might expect if he were
working from a Greek source himself.
The power of Quellenforschung is limited. The case for Nicomachus Fla-
vianus is not a strong one, even in the more mild sense of a western, Latin,
pagan source. The case for Eunapius I feel is stronger, but it too hardly ad-
mits of proof.
Hohl () –.
Paschoud () –: Jupiter the Consul recognised as a bilingual joke, but no
recognition that a Greek source is likely; Paschoud () –: the error is attributed to
the KG, although it is absent from KG sources.
Birley ().
Potter () –.
The Sources of the Historia Augusta Re-examined
Kolb (); ().
Barnes () –.
Potter () –. See also Bleckmann (b), rejected by Ratti ().
Callu () – provides a short summary of the theory, which is fleshed out in
Callu () xiv–lxx. The theory is presented as fact in Callu and Festy () –.
Paschoud () xxx–xxxvii offers a more detailed rejection.
David Rohrbacher
. Conclusion
The HA-author had access to works of biography and history that we no
longer possess. His use of Herodian and, to some extent, the KG, allows us to
see that although he begins with a source text, he often augments or bur-
lesques the information he draws from it. While his citations of Marius Max-
imus are likely trustworthy, although selective, his citations of Dexippus
sometimes mask his own inventions. For the final five Lives attributed to
Vopiscus, the question of sources becomes particularly tricky because the
Zecchini ().
The Sources of the Historia Augusta Re-examined
author has largely freed himself from dependence on facts and would not be
expected to fully exploit whatever sources he might command.
The factual details in the Lives from Hadrian to Elagabalus demonstrate
that the author of the Historia Augusta has a good source for the early primary
Lives. On the other hand, just because other Lives are deficient in factual de-
tails does not necessarily imply that the author lacks a good source. His
choice to freely invent in the Alexander Severus, rather than make use of Hero-
dian, and his inventions associated with the KG, Herodian, and Dexippus,
show that he is not merely an earnest biographer forced into deception by
insufficient resources. Instead, creative play with his sources is his purpose,
whether those sources are historical or literary.
DAVID ROHRBACHER
New College of Florida [email protected]
I wish to thank Carl Shaw, who read and commented on earlier drafts of this article,
and John Marincola and an anonymous reader, who helped make it better.
David Rohrbacher
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