Augustus Caesar: The First Emperor of Rome — Fexingo History

Augustus and the Censorship: Morality Laws and Social Engineering

8 min · 17 de jul de 2026
Portada del episodio Augustus and the Censorship: Morality Laws and Social Engineering

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In 18 BCE, Augustus Caesar, Rome's first emperor, pushed through the Lex Julia de adulteriis coercendis and the Lex Julia de maritandis ordinibus — laws that criminalized adultery, penalized the unmarried, and tried to force the Roman elite to marry and reproduce. Lucas and Luna explore how these moral reforms fit into Augustus's broader project of restoring tradition after civil war, the backlash from the senatorial class, and the ironies of enforcing family values when the emperor's own household was rife with scandal. They discuss the role of the censors, the use of sumptuary laws, the exile of Ovid, and the practical failures of Augustus's attempt to legislate virtue. The conversation also touches on how these laws shaped Roman law for centuries and what modern parallels might look like. A fresh look at the intersection of power, morality, and social control in the early empire. #Augustus #RomanLaw #LexJulia #MoralityLaws #RomanCensors #Adultery #Ovid #SocialEngineering #PaxRomana #RomanEmpire #LexPapiaPoppaea #SumptuaryLaw #JuliaTheElder #RomanWomen #AugustanReforms #AncientHistory #FexingoHistory #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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162 episodios

episode Augustus and the Censorship: Morality Laws and Social Engineering artwork

Augustus and the Censorship: Morality Laws and Social Engineering

In 18 BCE, Augustus Caesar, Rome's first emperor, pushed through the Lex Julia de adulteriis coercendis and the Lex Julia de maritandis ordinibus — laws that criminalized adultery, penalized the unmarried, and tried to force the Roman elite to marry and reproduce. Lucas and Luna explore how these moral reforms fit into Augustus's broader project of restoring tradition after civil war, the backlash from the senatorial class, and the ironies of enforcing family values when the emperor's own household was rife with scandal. They discuss the role of the censors, the use of sumptuary laws, the exile of Ovid, and the practical failures of Augustus's attempt to legislate virtue. The conversation also touches on how these laws shaped Roman law for centuries and what modern parallels might look like. A fresh look at the intersection of power, morality, and social control in the early empire. #Augustus #RomanLaw #LexJulia #MoralityLaws #RomanCensors #Adultery #Ovid #SocialEngineering #PaxRomana #RomanEmpire #LexPapiaPoppaea #SumptuaryLaw #JuliaTheElder #RomanWomen #AugustanReforms #AncientHistory #FexingoHistory #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

17 de jul de 20268 min
episode Augustus and the Parthian Crown Prince Hostage artwork

Augustus and the Parthian Crown Prince Hostage

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the fascinating and little-known story of how Augustus took the Parthian crown prince as a hostage, securing a generation of peace on Rome's eastern frontier. They delve into the diplomatic game that followed the 'signis receptis' — the return of the lost legionary standards — and how the hostage prince Vonones was raised as a Roman citizen before being sent back to rule Parthia, with disastrous consequences. The conversation covers the roles of Phraates IV, his son Phraataces, the queen Musa, and the complex interplay of client kingdoms like Armenia. Lucas explains how this blend of soft power and military threat defined Augustan foreign policy and set a precedent for Roman-Parthian relations for decades. Along the way, they touch on the Res Gestae, the Euphrates frontier, and the limits of cultural integration. A rare look at hostage diplomacy as statecraft. #Augustus #Parthia #Vonones #PhraatesIV #Musa #HostageDiplomacy #SignisReceptis #ResGestae #ClientKingdoms #Euphrates #RomanEmpire #PaxRomana #Diplomacy #SoftPower #AncientHistory #RomanHistory #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer5 min
episode Augustus and the Roman Standard: The Signum Receptum artwork

Augustus and the Roman Standard: The Signum Receptum

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the Roman military standard (signum) and its role in Augustus's reign. They discuss the legionary eagle (aquila), the auxiliary standards, and the symbolic power of recovering lost standards from Parthia. Lucas explains the religious significance of the signa, the ceremony of the signis receptis, and how Augustus turned a diplomatic victory into lasting propaganda. Along the way, they touch on the standards' evolution, their role in the Roman army's identity, and their place in the Pax Romana. This episode dives into a specific cultural and military detail not yet covered: the everyday object that embodied Rome's honor and military might. #RomanStandards #Signum #Augustus #Aquila #Parthia #SignisReceptis #RomanArmy #PaxRomana #MilitaryHistory #StandardBearers #Imagifer #LegionaryEagle #CohortSigillum #PrimaPorta #RomanPropaganda #ResGestae #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer7 min
episode Augustus and the Roman Fire Brigades: The Vigiles artwork

Augustus and the Roman Fire Brigades: The Vigiles

In episode 159 of Augustus Caesar: The First Emperor of Rome, Lucas and Luna explore a lesser-known but vital Augustan innovation: the creation of the Vigiles, Rome's first organized firefighting force. Before Augustus, Rome burned frequently and catastrophically, with no coordinated response. After the great fire of 6 AD, the emperor established seven cohorts of vigiles—a mix of freedmen and slaves—stationed across the city's fourteen districts. Lucas explains how these firemen patrolled at night, carried buckets and pumps, and even acted as a rudimentary police force. The conversation covers the cost of firefighting, the political motives behind the reform, and a dramatic anecdote from the reign of Tiberius where the Vigiles faced a devastating blaze near the Aventine. This episode sheds light on how Augustus brought order to chaos, one bucket at a time. #Augustus #Vigiles #RomanFireBrigade #AncientRome #PaxRomana #FirefightingHistory #UrbanReform #AugustanReforms #PraefectusVigilum #Freedmen #RomanFires #AventineFire #Tiberius #CampusMartius #RomanInfrastructure #History #FexingoHistory #Rome Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

15 de jul de 20266 min
episode Augustus and the Temple of Apollo Palatinus artwork

Augustus and the Temple of Apollo Palatinus

On the Palatine Hill, Augustus built more than a palace. He built a temple to Apollo that was part sanctuary, part propaganda, and part personal library. This episode unpacks the construction of the Temple of Apollo Palatinus, dedicated in 28 BCE, and how it wove together Augustus's claim of divine favor, his patronage of the arts, and his reshaping of Roman religion. We explore the Sibylline Books housed there, the cultural symbolism of Apollo as Augustus's patron god, and the temple's role as a counterweight to the older religious sites of the Republic. Lucas and Luna also discuss the nearby Library of Apollo, the Portico of the Danaids, and how the temple complex became a stage for Augustan ideology. The episode touches on the Vesta shrine within the temple, linking Augustus's household cult to the state religion, and the contrast with the Temple of Jupiter Optimus Maximus on the Capitoline. Specifics include the cypress wood doors, the cult statue by Scopas, and the Greek artistic influences that Augustus deployed to signal Rome's cultural ascendancy. #Augustus #TempleOfApolloPalatinus #PalatineHill #SibyllineBooks #LibraryOfApollo #PorticoOfTheDanaids #Scopas #RomanArchitecture #AugustanReligion #PaxRomana #Apollo #RomanArt #CultStatue #Vesta #CapitolineHill #RomanHistory #FexingoHistory #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

15 de jul de 20265 min