Pertinax
Publius Helvius Pertinax (/ˈpɜːrtɪnæks/ PER-tin-ax; 1 August 126 – 28 March 193) was Roman emperor for the first three months of 193. He succeeded Commodus and became the first ruler of the turbulent Year of the Five Emperors. The son of a freedman, Pertinax rose from modest origins through a military career. He distinguished himself in the Roman–Parthian War of 161–166 and went on to hold a succession of governorships and senior commands. He also sat in the Roman Senate, where he was a contemporary of the historian Cassius Dio. After the assassination of Commodus, Pertinax was chosen emperor. He tried to restore discipline to the army and finances of the empire, but his reforms antagonised the Praetorian Guard, who killed him after just 87 days. He was later deified by Septimius Severus, who promoted his memory as part of his own rise to power. Ancient and modern assessments generally view Pertinax as a capable and conscientious ruler undone by circumstances. Early lifePertinax’s background is recorded in the Historia Augusta and in Cassius Dio’s Roman History, with many details supported by inscriptions. He was born in Alba Pompeia in northern Italy,[5] the son of Helvius Successus, a freedman. According to Dio, Successus had no noble lineage but gave his son an education sufficient to secure him advancement.[5] With the support of a patron—either Lucius Avitus or Tiberius Claudius Pompeianus—Pertinax obtained a commission as a cohort officer.[6] He won distinction in the Parthian War,[7] earning rapid promotion. He later served in Roman Britain as tribune of the Legio VI Victrix[8] and along the Danube frontier, and then as procurator in Dacia.[9] Though briefly sidelined by court politics under Marcus Aurelius, he was recalled for the Marcomannic Wars and made suffect consul in 175.[5] Between 175 and 185, he governed a series of provinces including Upper and Lower Moesia, Dacia, Syria, and finally Britain.[8] In Britain his strict discipline provoked hostility: mutinous soldiers once left him for dead, and he was forced to resign in 187.[10] He later served as proconsul of Africa (188–189),[11] then as urban prefect of Rome,[12] and finally consul again in 192 with Commodus as colleague.[13] Emperor![]() On 31 December 192 Commodus was assassinated by a palace conspiracy involving the praetorian prefect Quintus Aemilius Laetus, his mistress Marcia, and his chamberlain Eclectus.[14] Pertinax, then urban prefect, was taken to the Praetorian camp and acclaimed emperor.[15] He reigned only 87 days,[16] but attempted to emulate Marcus Aurelius in restraint and reform. He tightened discipline in the Praetorian Guard, tried to regulate the alimenta (a state welfare scheme), and improved the coinage by raising the silver content of the denarius from 74% to 87%.[17] His efforts, however, met resistance. The Guard resented the modest donativum on his accession and demanded more, forcing him to sell off Commodus’ property and concubines.[18][19] In March, a failed coup sought to replace him with the consul Quintus Pompeius Sosius Falco.[20] On 28 March 193, around 200–300 praetorians stormed the palace.[21] Abandoned by his guards and betrayed by Laetus, Pertinax attempted to reason with them, but was cut down. Cassius Dio praised his courage but noted the futility of confronting enraged soldiers.[22] Aftermath![]() After Pertinax’s death, the Guard notoriously auctioned the throne, which was purchased by Didius Julianus.[23] Julianus lasted only weeks before being replaced by Septimius Severus, who honoured Pertinax by executing his killers, securing his deification, and adopting “Pertinax” into his own name.[24] Historical reputationCassius Dio, who knew him personally, called him “an excellent and upright man” who governed with integrity and frugality.[25] He criticised only the haste of his reforms, which provoked resentment and led to his downfall.[26] Later writers echoed this assessment. Niccolò Machiavelli cited him in The Prince as a good ruler fatally undermined by trying to reform corrupt soldiers too quickly. David Hume praised him as an “excellent prince”. In 1788, at the Virginia Ratifying Convention, John Dawson referred to Pertinax’s murder as a warning against standing armies.[27] In popular cultureThe French journalist André Géraud (1882–1974) wrote under the pseudonym “Pertinax”.[28] In the alternate history novel Romanitas by Sophia McDougall, Pertinax survives the coup and enacts reforms that preserve the Roman Empire into the modern age.[29] References
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