Being a Chinese, I am not too unfamiliar with the imperial guards. We Chinese have abundant opportunities to see TV shows that depicts Chinese imperial guards as extremely loyal to the emperors of China. In contrast, the Roman imperial guards or rather the praetorian guards (praetorium) are far more troublesome and, though they did not strike one of the final blows, contributed significantly to the Roman Empire’s decline.
Of course, the praetorian guards is definitely one of the most visible symbols of imperial dominance in ancient Rome. The first of these troops appeared in the Triumvirate era, where all three most powerful political figures at that time (Caesar, Crassus, Pompey) all had their own armies that protect their safety and fight for their cause. Nevertheless, those armies weren’t official praetorian guards and the first true ones did not appear until the Augustinian time. Even then, the guards didn’t actually control the city Rome as much as later guards did, for they were still placed outside Roman capital, serving as a defensive line for any instabilities inside the city or outside it, but only merely such. Things changed, however, during Tiberius’s times. He made the quite interesting decision to relocate the guards to within the capital. Only at this point, I believe, is when the guards finally obtained the true path to power and henceforth became a great cause of distress for all later emperors. Why may those troubles be caused then? There are two major reasons that I would like to point out which the problems with money policies the emperors enact on the praetorian guards and the corruption that generated from the status of being a praetorian guard. The second of which will be introduced in the next entry.
First, the policies, especially the payment, that emperors impose on the praetorian guards may damage themselves. it is prudent to note that during the beginning phase of this particular type of Legion, the soldiers within this troop were elites of the entire Roman army. They were selected from multiple legions within Roman territory through their own records, with extremely high standards. Thus, reasonably of course, they were granted a significant quantity of salaries every year that is at least two or three times the salaries of a common Roman soldier, alongside handfuls of rewards from the masters they serve, all of these were decided by the emperor. These factors raised massive problems, though. Regarding the fact that the leaders of those troops does not have any actual relationships with the emperors caused the “Princeps”(Name for Roman emperor in Latin, means “first citizen”) to try to pay gigantic amounts of money to them in order to maintain their loyalty. This action was less like filling a hole that can be measures with a long enough ruler, it is more like chucking gold and silver into a Black Hole that gets bigger and bigger with each kilogram it consumes. The greed of the praetorian guards can never be fulfilled and their appetite for riches would get more overwhelming with each change of emperors. And if an emperor hesitated in feeding this beast, it will tear him apart and search for new emperor that are willing to pay them handsomely. The full absurdity of this could best be observed during the civil war of 68-69 A.D., where Galba, who refused to pay that large amount of money that the guards require, were killed by the praetorian guards, and Otto, who yielded to the Legions demands, didn’t die in the hands of this army. An even more ludicrous example occurred during the civil war in 193 A.D., where Julianus and Sulpicianus competed the throne by each trying to offer higher prices to the praetorian’s guards. Both incidences resulted in immense political unrest especially in the boarder legions who considered themselves as just as capable as praetorian guards and who saw this rapid change of leader caused by payment to the guards as both a discrimination and an opportunity for securing power themselves, making this practice of the guards as very disastrous for the Roman Empire’s stability.
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