The
Roman Magician Lucius Pituanius And His Execution
Lucius
Pituanius is a shadowy figure from early imperial Rome, known almost
exclusively from a single terse reference in the historian Tacitus.
In Annals 2.32, amid the fallout from a senatorial crackdown on
perceived threats to the regime of Emperor Tiberius, Pituanius
appears as one of two exemplars of harsh justice: “Decrees of the
Senate were also passed to expel from Italy astrologers and
magic-mongers. One of their number, Lucius Pituanius, was flung from
the Rock; another—Publius Marcius—was executed by the consuls
outside the Esquiline Gate according to ancient usage and at sound of
trumpet.”
This
brief notice, set in 16 CE, captures the intersection of
superstition, politics, and authoritarian control in the early
Principate. Pituanius was likely an astrologer or magician
(mathematicus or magus) implicated in or associated with the
conspiracy of Marcus Scribonius Libo Drusus. His dramatic death by
defenestration from the Tarpeian Rock underscores the Roman state’s
willingness to employ spectacular, archaic punishments to deter
occult practices seen as destabilizing.
Execution
of the Roman Magician Lucius Pituanius
Image: meisterdrucke.uk
Historical
Context: Tiberius and the Year 16 CE
Tiberius
Claudius Nero, stepson and adopted heir of Augustus, had become
emperor in 14 CE. By 16 CE, his rule was consolidating but marked by
suspicion. The early years featured tensions with the Senate,
military mutinies on the Rhine and Danube, and dynastic intrigues.
Germanicus, Tiberius’s popular adopted son and heir apparent, was
campaigning in Germany, while the emperor himself navigated
accusations of tyranny.
The
pivotal event for Pituanius was the affair of Libo Drusus, a young
noble of the Scribonian family with distant imperial connections.
Libo was accused of consulting astrologers, magicians, and
fortune-tellers about his prospects for power—questions that, in
the paranoid atmosphere of the Principate, smelled of treason
(maiestas). Tacitus portrays Libo as somewhat foolish: inquiring
whether he would have enough wealth to pave the Appian Way to
Brundisium with money, or marking names of emperors and senators with
mysterious signs. Prosecutors, including figures like Firmius Catus
and others, amplified these into a conspiracy. Slaves were tortured
(via a legal workaround ordered by Tiberius), Libo’s house was
surrounded, and he ultimately committed suicide on September 13, 16
CE, before a verdict.
In
the Senate’s enthusiastic follow-up—filled with sycophantic
decrees dividing Libo’s property among accusers, banning certain
names, and instituting thanksgivings—came the broader expulsion of
astrologers and magicians from Italy. Pituanius was not merely
expelled but executed publicly, suggesting he was viewed as
particularly dangerous or deeply involved. Some later traditions link
him explicitly to Libo’s circle, perhaps providing divinatory
support for a coup or deification schemes.
The
Practice of Astrology and Magic in Rome
Astrology
and magic had deep roots in the Roman world, blending indigenous
beliefs with Hellenistic and Eastern imports. By the late Republic
and early Empire, mathematici (astrologers) were ubiquitous,
consulted by elites for horoscopes, predictions of death or fortune,
and political advice. Figures like Augustus publicly embraced
astrology (his birth sign was prominently displayed), yet the state
periodically cracked down when such practices threatened authority.
Laws
against magic dated back to the Republic (e.g., the Twelve Tables
prohibiting harmful incantations). Under the Empire, maiestas trials
increasingly folded in occult consultations as evidence of plotting.
Tiberius, influenced by his own interest in astrology (he reportedly
consulted Thrasyllus), nonetheless saw unregulated practitioners as
vectors for sedition. Expulsions had precedents—e.g., in 139 BCE
and under Augustus—but the 16 CE measures were notably severe, with
exemplary executions.
Pituanius,
described in artistic depictions and later references as a “Roman
magician,” likely practiced mathesis (astrological divination) or
related arts. His origin is obscure; one tradition places him from
Alba Picena (modern Ascoli Piceno in Picenum), suggesting he was not
a Roman aristocrat but a professional expert whose services appealed
to ambitious nobles like Libo.
The
Tarpeian Rock: Symbol of Roman Justice
Execution
from the Tarpeian Rock (Saxum Tarpeium or Rupes Tarpeia) was a
ancient, brutal punishment reserved for traitors, murderers, and
those guilty of heinous crimes. Located on the Capitoline Hill,
overlooking the Forum, the steep cliff (about 25 meters high) was
named after the legendary Tarpeia, who betrayed Rome to the Sabines
and was crushed under shields. Victims were hurled from it, their
broken bodies a public deterrent.
Classical
authors like Livy and Tacitus reference it for parricides, traitors,
and in this case, a magician. The choice for Pituanius—rather than
simple expulsion—signaled the regime’s view of magic as a capital
threat when tied to conspiracy. The public, theatrical nature
reinforced Tiberius’s severitas while satisfying senatorial
bloodlust. Publius Marcius’s parallel execution outside the
Esquiline Gate, with trumpets sounding in “ancient usage,” evoked
archaic rituals, blending spectacle with tradition.
Significance
and Legacy
Pituanius
himself remains enigmatic—Tacitus gives no biography, motives, or
defense. He functions as a footnote illustrating broader themes: the
fragility of the new imperial order, the fusion of religion and
politics, and the emperor’s control over private beliefs. His death
exemplifies how personal ambition, elite paranoia, and popular
superstition collided under Tiberius, foreshadowing later purges
under Nero and the Flavians.In the wider sweep of Roman history, such
episodes highlight the tension between religio (state-approved cult)
and superstitio (uncontrolled foreign or magical practices).
Astrology persisted despite bans—emperors continued consulting it
privately—but public practitioners operated at risk. Pituanius’s
fate warned nobles against seeking supernatural validation for
treasonous dreams.
Artistic
representations, such as 19th-century chromolithographs depicting his
dramatic plunge, romanticize the event as emblematic of Roman
brutality and superstition. These images often show a robed figure
plummeting from a rocky precipice, crowds below, underscoring the
visual drama that made the Tarpeian Rock infamous.
Annals By Tacitus
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Tacitus'
Annals recounts the major historical events from the years shortly
before the death of Augustus to the death of Nero in AD 68. With
clarity and vivid intensity Tacitus describes the reign of terror
under the corrupt Tiberius, the great fire of Rome during the time of
Nero and the wars, poisonings, scandals, conspiracies and murders
that were part of imperial life. Despite his claim that the Annals
were written objectively, Tacitus' account is sharply critical of the
emperors' excesses and fearful for the future of imperial Rome, while
also filled with a longing for its past glories.
Conclusion:
A Minor Life in a Pivotal Era
Lucius
Pituanius lived and died in an age when Rome transitioned from
Republic to Empire, where whispers of horoscopes could topple careers
and lives. His execution, alongside the Libo affair, helped solidify
Tiberius’s authority by eliminating perceived occult threats and
cowing the Senate into performative loyalty. Though history records
little else about him—no writings, family, or further
deeds—Pituanius embodies the era’s anxieties: the fear of hidden
powers, whether astrological or political.In roughly 1000 words, this
account draws from the sparse primary evidence while situating him in
the rich tapestry of early imperial Rome. He was no hero or villain
of grand narrative, but a casualty of a system where magic and
majesty were dangerously intertwined. His fall from the Rock echoes
through Tacitus’s pages as a stark reminder of the costs of
suspicion in autocratic rule.
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