ABSTRACT

Did Trajan really deserve his reputation as the embodiment of all imperial virtues? Why did Dante, writing in the Middle Ages, place him in the sixth sphere of Heaven among the Just and Temperate rulers?
In this, the only biography of Trajan available in English, Julian Bennett rigorously tests the substance of this glorious reputation. Surprisingly, for a Roman emperor, Trajan comes through the test with his reputation relatively intact.

chapter I|11 pages

THE MAKING OF A NEW ARISTOCRACY

chapter II|16 pages

THE RISE OF THE ULPII

chapter III|15 pages

IMPERIAL EXPANSION AND CRISIS

chapter IV|11 pages

DOMITIAN’S GENERAL, NERVA’S HEIR

chapter V|10 pages

THE NEW RULER

chapter VI|11 pages

A PUBLIC IDEOLOGY

chapter VII|12 pages

THE INAUGURATION OF A NEW ERA

chapter VIII|19 pages

DACICUS

chapter IX|14 pages

OPTIMUS PRINCEPS

chapter X|20 pages

LAW, FINANCE AND LITERATURE

chapter XI|40 pages

PATER PATRIAE

chapter XII|22 pages

‘REDACTA IN FORMAM PROVINCIAE…’

chapter XIII|22 pages

PARTHICUS

chapter XIV|9 pages

A PERFECT PRINCE?