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essentially sound health,44 by the lack of success of medical historians in diagnosing, from the vague evidence, what, if anything, was seriously the matter with him, and by the fact that he is known to have staged one crisis, when Tiberius threatened retirement — and Tiberius was unde­terred. Nevertheless, doubt is hypersceptical. Illness and early death stalked the corridors of power in antiquity.45 Iulius Caesar was epileptic; Pompey was ill every year,46 and very gravely ill at Naples in 50 B.C.; as for our Caesar, he nearly died in his teens, and in 42 he was ill at Dyrrhachium and at Philippi, and there were rumours of his death. In 3 3 he was ill in Dalmatia. His illness in 28 went on after the Games all through the winter, for he was still not recovered in May the following year. In 26 illness overtook him at Tarraco after the first Spanish campaign, and may have been continuous through 2 5 and 24; for he was ill at Rome in June 24, and very likely continued so right down to his resignation of the consulship in July 23: then, notoriously, he was thought to be at death's door again. And, surely, he thought himself so: hence the building of the Mausoleum, and the autobiography, after­wards abandoned, and the early versions of the Res Gestae. Caesar's precarious condition, and his own belief in it, must be borne in mind when we think of'constitutional settlements': it really was possible that the whole story would end abruptly, and he must hasten to leave something stable behind.

At the beginning of 27 b.C., all special powers being abolished, Caesar and Agrippa were joint consuls once again. On the Ides of January, in a careful consular speech in the Curia, Caesar handed the whole Roman state back into the hands of the Senate and people, for them to decide the nature of its future government: that was the gesture of fulfilment of the promise. It does not seem likely that the Senate's response was other than carefully prepared and stage-managed:47 it was to grant to Caesar what the Senate had traditional authority to grant, a provincia. But that provincia, 'Caesar's province', gave him nevertheless an overwhelming role in the new order, because of its size: Spain, Gaul and Syria (plus, indeed, Egypt, which, having not existed as a province at all until 30 B.C., may not have been thought of as any of the Senate's business to grant), on a ten-year maximum tenure. Caesar made no gesture to resign the consulship, which lay with the people to grant; and if he chose to continue to offer himself annually for election to it, no doubt he would be regularly elected: he would hold his vast provincia either as consul, or, if he ever dropped the consulship, as proconsul. No change at all needed to be made in the traditional arrangements for the rest of the provinces of the Roman world. Strabo, indeed, states — implying that it was at this

44 Though he remained hypochondriacal^ fussy about himself all his life, and often had throat infections. 45 Syme 1986 (a 95) 20-5. 46 Cic. Att. vin.2.3. 47 Contra, Dio liii.i i.

time - that Caesar received 'headship of the hegemony' and was made arbiter of peace and war for life, but reasons for limiting the significance of that claim will be given in chapter 3 below.[179]

The formal authority Caesar thus took for himself was vast, indeed, and in its totality un-republican; nevertheless, it was a way of expressing his overwhelming predominance in encouragingly familiar concepts — sovereignty vested in Senate and people, and no political structure incompatible with mos maiorum. And not a colossal confidence trick, for who, amongst those who mattered, could have been taken in? Rather - if Caesar turned out to have made the right political guess — what most people badly wanted to believe; and, furthermore, experimental and with a fixed term. And finally, if he died, the traditional res publico would be standing in place, inviolate.

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