Compiled by Emeka Agwu
Emperor Nero’s emergence
as Roman Emperor in AD 54 was greeted with wild jubilation and expectation especially among the plebeians,
aristocrats and subalterns.
Interestingly,
he came on the scene at a point the Roman Empire was burdened by gross internal
decay and corruption.
Regrettably,
rather than address the obvious challenges confronting the Roman Empire, Nero
pandered to the absurd by trying to hunt down and silence every perceived
opposition against his administration.
His childhood was moulded
by freed slaves- a barber and dancer, before Seneca was recalled from exile to
be his tutor.
Despite the over-bearing
attitude of Agrippina, his mother, Nero grew up a complex character- one who
showed little interest in understanding his surrounding; though he tended to
pitch his lot with the masses.
His tragic family
situation, his definitely over-powering mother coupled with what was perhaps a
weak character eventually produced a highly unstable Nero.
He was an addict to
jesting and tended to secrecy.
In the course of time his
character showed darker sides and unleashed the beast in Nero.
His dark sides would
manifest in his many crimes like committing thousands of murders including his
mother, and abuse of people’s fundamental human rights and practice of sodomy.
Prior to his emergence,
Nero was noted for his limited understanding of social forces that produced his
emperorship and this lack of understanding in turn produced a veritable
outcome-gross suspicion of the senators and even the praetors.
His lame approach to the
problems of the empire would re-instigate the several agitations by various
segments of the empire in places like Venice, and Florence.
Patriotic Roman senators
and nobles voiced their concern and wondered why Nero should be fiddling while
Rome was on fire.
Petronius, who Nero had
earlier regarded as his “arbiter of elegance” would eventually call Nero “the
incendiary of Roman Empire”.
Blinded by a rage to
eliminate his real and perceived enemies, Nero would go down in history as the
monster and evil emperor who fed his people to lions in the Roman coliseum.
Though, Nero was condemned
by God and by Man, history is generous with instances of the re-incarnation of
many Neros in several climes and circumstances.
0 comments:
Post a Comment