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Letter of the Emperor Claudius to
the Alexandrians Regarding the Riots of
the Jews
[P. London 1912]
“Tiberius Claudius
Caesar Augustus Germanicus, Imperator, Pontifex Maximus, Holder of the
Tribunician Power, Consul Designate, to the City of the Alexandrians,
greeting.
Tiberius Claudius
Barbillus, Apollonius son of Artemidorus, Chaeremon son of Leonidas, Marcus
Julius Asklepiades, Gaius Julius Dionysios, Tiberius Claudius Phanias,
Pasion son of Potamon, Dionysios son of Sabbion, Tiberius Claudius Archibius,
Apollonius son of Ariston, Gaius Julius Apollonius, Hermaiskos son of
Apollonius, your ambassadors, having delivered to me the decree, discoursed
at length concerning the city, directing my attention to your goodwill
towards us, which, from long ago, you may be sure, had been stored up to
your advantage in my memory; for you are by nature reverent towards the
Augusti, as I know from many proofs, and in particular have taken a warm
interest in my house, warmly reciprocated, of which fact (to mention the
last instance, passing over the others) the supreme witness is my brother
Germanicus addressing you in words more clearly stamped as his own.
Wherefore, I gladly
accepted the honors given to me by hou, though I have no weakness for such
things. And first I permit you to keep my birthday as a dies Augustus as you
have yourselves proposed; and I agree to the erection in their several
places of the statues of myself and my family; for I see that you were
anxious to establish on every side memorials of your reverence for my house.
Of the two golden statues, the one made to represent the Pas Augusta
Claudiana, as my most honored Barbillus suggested and entreated when I
wished to refuse, for fear of being thought too offensive, shall be erected
at Rome; and the other according to your request shall be carried in
procession on the eponymous days in your city, and it shall be accompanied
by a throne adorned with whatever trappings you choose.
It would perhaps be
foolish, while accepting such great honors, to refuse the institution of a
Claudian Tribe and the establishment of groves after the manner of Egypt.
And so I grant you these requests as well, and if you wish you may also
erect the equestrian statues given by Vitrasius Pollio my procurator. As for
the erection of those in four-horse chariots which you wish to set up to me
at the entrances into the country, I consent to let one be placed at
Taposiris, the Libyan town of that name, another at Pharos in Alexandria,
and a third at Pelusium in Egypt. But I deprecate the appointment of a high
priest to me and the building of temples, for I do not wish to be offensive
to my contemporaries, and my opinion is that temples and such forms of honor
have by all ages been granted as a prerogative to the gods alone.
Concerning the
requests which you have been anxious to obtain from me, I decide as follows.
All those who have become epheboi up to the time of my Principate I
confirm and maintain in hte possession of the Alexandrian citizenship with
all the privileges and indulgences enjoyed by the city, excepting those who
have contrived to become epheboi by beguiling you, though born of
servile mothers. And it is equally my will that all the other favors shall
be confirmed wich were granted to you by former princes and kings and
prefects, as the Deified Augustus also confirmed them. It is my will that
the neokoroi of the Temple of the Deified Augustus in Alexandria
shall be chosen by lot in the same was as those of the Deified Augustus in
Canopus are chosen by lot. With regard to the civic magistracies being made
triennial, your proposal seems to me to be very good; for through fear of
being called to account for any abuse of power your magistrates will behave
with greater circumspection during their term of office. Concerning the
Boule, what your custom may have been under the ancient kings I have no
means of saying, but that you had no senate under the earlier Augusti, you
are well aware. As this is the first broaching of a novel project, whose
utility to the city and to my government is not evident, I have written to
Aemilius Rectus to hold an inquiry and inform me whether in the first place
it is right that a Boule should be consituted, and , if it should be
right to create one, in what matter this is to be done.
As for the question
, which party was responsible for the riots and feud (or rather, if the
truth be told, the war) with the Jews, although in confrontation with their
opponents your ambassadors, and particularly Dionysios the son of Theon,
contended with great zeal, nevertheless I was unwilling to make a strict
inquiry, though guarding within me a store of immutable indignation against
whichever party renews the conflict. And I tell you once and for all that
unless you put a stop to this ruinous and obstinate enmity against each
other, I shall be driven to show what a benevolent Prince can be when turned
to righteous indignation. Wherefore, once again I conjure you that, on the
one hand, the Alexandrians show themselves forebearing and kindly towards
the Jews who for many years have dwelt in the same city, and dishonor none
of the rites observed by them in the worship of their god, but allow them to
observe their customs as in the time of the Deified Augustus, which customs
I also, after hearing both sides, have sanctioned; and on the other hand, I
explicitly order the Jews not to agitate for more privileges than they
formerly possessed, and not in the future to send out a separate embassy as
though they lived in a separate city (a thing unprecedented), and not to
force their way into gymnasiarchic or cosmetic games, while enjoying their
own privileges and sharing a great abundance of advantages in a city not
their own, and not to bring in or admit Jews who come down the river from
Egypt or from Syria, a proceeding which will compel me to conceive serious
suspicions. Otherwise I will by all means take vengeance on them as
fomenters of which is a general plague infecting the whole world. If,
desisting from these courses, you consent to live with mutual forebearance
and kindliness, I on my side will exercise a solicitude of very long
standing for the city, as one which is bound to us by traditional
friendship. I bear witness to my friend Barbillus of the solicitude which he
has always shown for you in my presence and of the extreme zeal with which
he has now advocated your cause; and likewise to my friend Tiberius Claudius
Archibius.
Farewell.”
(from Select Papyri
II [Loeb Classical Library] (ed. A.S.Hunt and G.C. Edgar) (1934), pp. 78-89,
adapted.)
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