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Related: About this forumRoman subjects paid emperor piles of silver to leave them alone, inscription reveals
By Mindy Weisberger - Senior Writer a day ago
A stone inscription immortalized the emperor's gratitude for the generous 'donation.'
"You are men of good will and loyalty," said Roman emperor Septimus Severus in the letter.
(Image: © Courtesy of Kalin Chakarov)
An ancient Greek inscription dating to the second century A.D. is essentially a thank-you note for a shady cash gift, a new translation reveals. The inscription immortalized the words of a Roman emperor who accepted piles of silver from a city anxious to demonstrate its loyalty.
During a time of political upheaval in the Roman Empire, residents of the city Nicopolis ad Istrum, in what is now Bulgaria, backed an unsuccessful contender for the emperor's seat. After their champion's loss, they promptly sent the victor Emperor Septimus Severus 700,000 silver coins, as a sign of fealty.
Emperor Severus openly acknowledged accepting their donation in a letter that was sent to the town in A.D. 198, written in ancient Greek. The letter's text was then immortalized by the city as a stone monument. Scholars recently restored the broken artifact and translated the inscription, making it available to the public for the first time, a researcher with the restoration project told Live Science in an email.
Few letters penned by Roman emperors survived the era. In this rare example, Severus tells the town that he accepts their bribe, which he called a "cash contribution," according to the new translation by Nicolay Sharankov, an assistant professor in the Department of Classical Philology at Sofia University in Bulgaria.
More:
https://www.livescience.com/roman-inscription-bribery-corruption.html
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Roman subjects paid emperor piles of silver to leave them alone, inscription reveals (Original Post)
Judi Lynn
Dec 2020
OP
My kid makes me miserable until I give her an indulgence so she can be roamin' the city.
Beakybird
Dec 2020
#3
Dawson Leery
(19,372 posts)1. Indulgences are clearly a Roman thing.
comradebillyboy
(10,473 posts)2. Smart move by the leaders of Nicopolis ad Istrum.
Beakybird
(3,393 posts)3. My kid makes me miserable until I give her an indulgence so she can be roamin' the city.
Then I get a kind letter on my birthday.
tanyev
(44,544 posts)4. Emperor Trumperus?