Livy

born
59/64 bc, Patavium, Venetia, Italy
died ad 17, Patavium
with Sallust and Tacitus, one of the
three great Roman historians. His
history of Rome became a classic in his
own lifetime and exercised a profound
influence on the style and philosophy of
historical writing down to the 18th
century.
Early
life and career
Little is known about Livy’s life and
nothing about his family background.
Patavium, a rich city, famous for its
strict morals, suffered severely in the
Civil Wars of the 40s. The wars and the
unsettled condition of the Roman world
after the death of Caesar in 44 bc
probably prevented Livy from studying in
Greece, as most educated Romans did.
Although widely read in Greek
literature, he made mistakes of
translation that would be unnatural if
he had spent any length of time in
Greece and had acquired the command of
Greek normal among his contemporaries.
His education was based on the study of
rhetoric and philosophy, and he wrote
some philosophical dialogues that do not
survive. There is no evidence about
early career. His family apparently did
not belong to the senatorial class,
however distinguished it may have been
in Patavium itself, and Livy does not
seem to have embarked on a political or
forensic profession. He is first heard
of in Rome after Octavian (later known
as the emperor Augustus) had restored
stability and peace to the empire by his
decisive naval victory at Actium in 31
bc. Internal evidence from the work
itself shows that Livy had conceived the
plan of writing the history of Rome in
or shortly before 29 bc, and for this
purpose he must have already moved to
Rome, because only there were the
records and information available. It is
significant that another historian, the
Greek Dionysius of Halicarnassus, who
was to cover much the same ground as
Livy, settled in Rome in 30 bc. A more
secure age had dawned.
Most of
his life must have been spent at Rome,
and at an early stage he attracted the
interest of Augustus and was even
invited to supervise the literary
activities of the young Claudius (the
future emperor), presumably about ad 8.
But he never became closely involved
with the literary world of Rome—the
poets Horace, Virgil, and Ovid, as well
as the patron of the arts, Maecenas, and
others. He is never referred to in
connection with these men. He must have
possessed sufficient private means not
to be dependent on official patronage.
Indeed, in one of the few recorded
anecdotes about him, Augustus called him
a “Pompeian,” implying an outspoken and
independent turn of mind. His lifework
was the composition of his history.
Livy’s history of Rome
Livy began by composing and publishing
in units of five books, the length of
which was determined by the size of the
ancient papyrus roll. As his material
became more complex, however, he
abandoned this symmetrical pattern and
wrote 142 books. So far as it can be
reconstructed, the shape of the history
is as follows (books 11–20 and 46–142
have been lost):
1–5
From the foundation of the city until
the sack of Rome by the Gauls (386 bc)
6–10 The Samnite wars
11–15 The conquest of Italy
16–20 The First Punic (Carthaginian) War
21–30 The Second Punic War (until 201
bc)
31–45 Events until the end of the war
with Perseus (167 bc)
46–70 Events until the Social War (91
bc)
71–80 Civil wars until the death of
Marius (86bc)
81–90 Civil wars until the death of
Sulla (78 bc)
91–103 Events until the triumph of
Pompey in 62 bc
104–108 The last years of the Republic
109–116 The Civil War until the murder
of Caesar (44 bc)
117–133 From the death of Caesar to the
Battle of Actium
134–142 From 29 to 9 bc
Apart
from fragments, quoted by grammarians
and others, and a short section dealing
with the death of the orator and
politician Cicero from Book 120, the
later books after Book 45 are known only
from summaries. These were made from the
1st century ad onward, because the size
of the complete work made it
unmanageable. There were anthologies of
the speeches and also concise summaries,
two of which survive in part, a
3rd-century papyrus from Egypt
(containing summaries of Books 37–40 and
48–55) and a 4th-century summary of
contents (known as the Periochae) of the
whole work. A note in the Periochae of
Book 121 records that that book (and
presumably those that followed) was
published after Augustus’ death in ad
14. The implication is that the last 20
books dealing with the events from the
Battle of Actium until 9 bc were an
afterthought to the original plan and
were also too politically explosive to
be published with impunity in Augustus’
lifetime.
The
sheer scope of the undertaking was
formidable. It presupposed the
composition of three books a year on
average. Two stories reflect the
magnitude of the task. In his letters
the statesman Pliny the Younger records
that Livy was tempted to abandon the
enterprise but found that the task had
become too fascinating to give it up; he
also mentions a citizen of Cádiz who
came all the way to Rome for the sole
satisfaction of gazing at the great
historian.
Livy’s historical approach
The project of writing the history of
Rome down to the present day was not a
new one. Historical research and writing
had flourished at Rome for 200 years,
since the first Roman historian Quintus
Fabius Pictor. There had been two main
inspirations behind it—antiquarian
interest and political motivation.
Particularly after 100 bc, there
developed a widespread interest in
ancient ceremonies, family genealogies,
religious customs, and the like. This
interest found expression in a number of
scholarly works: Titus Pomponius
Atticus, Cicero’s friend and
correspondent, wrote on chronology and
on Trojan families; others compiled
lengthy volumes on Etruscan religion;
Marcus Terentius Varro, the greatest
scholar of his age, published the
encyclopaedic work Divine and Human
Antiquities. The standard of scholarship
was not always high, and there could be
political pressures, as in the attempt
to derive the Julian family to which
Julius Caesar belonged from the
legendary Aeneas and the Trojans; but
the Romans were very conscious and proud
of their past, and an enthusiasm for
antiquities was widespread.
Previous historians had been public
figures and men of affairs. Fabius
Pictor had been a praetor, the elder
Cato had been consul and censor, and
Sallust was a praetor. So, too, many
prominent statesmen such as Sulla and
Caesar occupied their leisure with
writing history. For some it was an
exercise in political self-justification
(hence, Caesar’s Gallic War and Civil
War); for others it was a civilized
pastime. But all shared a common outlook
and background. History was a political
study through which one might hope to
explain or excuse the present.
Livy
was unique among Roman historians in
that he played no part in politics. This
was a disadvantage in that his exclusion
from the Senate and the magistracies
meant that he had no personal experience
of how the Roman government worked, and
this ignorance shows itself from time to
time in his work. It also deprived him
of firsthand access to much material
(minutes of Senate meetings, texts of
treaties, laws, etc.) that was preserved
in official quarters. So, too, if he had
been a priest or an augur, he would have
acquired inside information of great
historical value and been able to
consult the copious documents and
records of the priestly colleges. But
the chief effect is that Livy did not
seek historical explanations in
political terms. The novelty and impact
of his history lay in the fact that he
saw history in personal and moral terms.
The purpose is clearly set out in his
preface:
I
invite the reader’s attention to the
much more serious consideration of the
kind of lives our ancestors lived, of
who were the men and what the means,
both in politics and war, by which
Rome’s power was first acquired and
subsequently expanded, I would then have
him trace the process of our moral
decline, to watch first the sinking of
the foundations of morality as the old
teaching was allowed to lapse, then the
final collapse of the whole edifice, and
the dark dawning of our modern day when
we can neither endure our vices nor face
the remedies needed to cure them.
What
chiefly makes the study of history
wholesome and profitable is this, that
in history you have a record of the
infinite variety of human experience
plainly set out for all to see, and in
that record you can find for yourself
and your country both examples and
warnings.
Although Sallust and earlier historians
had also adopted the outlook that
morality was in steady decline and had
argued that people do the sort of things
they do because they are the sort of
people they are, for Livy these beliefs
were a matter of passionate concern. He
saw history in terms of human
personalities and representative
individuals rather than of partisan
politics. And his own experience, going
back perhaps to his youth in Patavium,
made him feel the moral evils of his
time with peculiar intensity. He
punctuates his history with revealing
comments:
Fortunately in those days authority,
both religious and secular, was still a
guide to conduct and there was as yet no
sign of our modern scepticism which
interprets solemn compacts to suit its
own convenience (3.20.5). Where would
you find nowadays in a single individual
that modesty, fairness and nobility of
mind which in those days belonged to a
whole people? (4.6.12).
In
looking at history from a moral
standpoint, Livy was at one with other
thinking Romans of his day. Augustus
attempted by legislation and propaganda
to inculcate moral ideals. Horace and
Virgil in their poetry stressed the same
message—that it was moral qualities that
had made and could keep Rome great.
The
preoccupation with character and the
desire to write history that would
reveal the effects of character
outweighed for Livy the need for
scholarly accuracy. He showed little if
any awareness of the antiquarian
research of his own and earlier
generations; nor did he seriously
compare and criticize the different
histories and their discrepancies that
were available to him. For the most part
he is content to take an earlier version
(from Polybius or a similar author) and
to reshape it so as to construct moral
episodes that bring out the character of
the leading figures. Livy’s descriptions
of the capture of Veii and the expulsion
of the Gauls from Rome in the 4th
century bc by Marcus Furius Camillus are
designed to illustrate his piety; the
crossing of the Alps shows up the
resourceful intrepidity of Hannibal.
Unfortunately, it is not known how Livy
dealt with the much greater complexity
of contemporary history, but the account
of Cicero’s death contains the same
emphasis on character displayed by
surviving books.
It
would be misplaced criticism to draw
attention to his technical shortcomings,
his credulity, or his lack of
antiquarian curiosity. He reshaped
history for his generation so that it
was alive and meaningful. It is recorded
that the audiences who went to his
recitations were impressed by his
nobility of character and his eloquence.
It is this eloquence that is Livy’s
second claim to distinction.
Together with Cicero and Tacitus, Livy
set new standards of literary style. The
earliest Roman historians had written in
Greek, the language of culture. Their
successors had felt that their own
history should be written in Latin, but
Latin possessed no ready-made style that
could be used for the purpose: for Latin
prose had to develop artificial styles
to suit the different genres. Sallust
had attempted to reproduce the Greek
style of Thucydides in Latin by a
tortured use of syntax and a vocabulary
incorporating a number of archaic and
unusual words, but the result, although
effective, was harsh and unsuitable for
a work of any size. Livy evolved a
varied and flexible style that the
ancient critic Quintilian characterized
as a “milky richness.” At one moment he
will set the scene in long, periodic
clauses; at another a few terse, abrupt
sentences will mirror the rapidity of
the action. Bare notices of archival
fact will be reported in correspondingly
dry and formal language, whereas a
battle will evoke poetical and dramatic
vocabulary, and a speech will be
constructed either in the spirit of a
contemporary orator such as Cicero or in
dramatically realistic tones, designed
to recapture the atmosphere of
antiquity. “When I write of ancient
deeds my mind somehow becomes antique,”
he wrote.
The
work of a candid man and an
individualistic thinker, Livy’s history
was deeply rooted in the Augustan
revival and owed its success in large
measure to its moral seriousness. But
the detached attempt to understand the
course of history through character
(which was to influence later historians
from Tacitus to Lord Clarendon)
represents Livy’s great achievement.
Robert Maxwell Ogilvie