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Nero
and Venus: A Fatal Affair
According to the historian Tacitus, Nero was hounded to death
"by messages and rumors, rather than by force of arms".
The seven legions on the German frontier, the best in the empire,
remained loyal until Nero threw away his crown. Had he appealed
to them they would undoubtedly have stood with the descendant
of Julius Caesar. The British legion remained loyal to him even
after his death. In Rome the Praetorian Guards deserted only
when their perfidious Praetorian commander lied that Nero had
fled. He was wildly popular with the Roman plebs, he was worshipped
in the East. What explains his sudden and catastrophic loss
of confidence during the last six weeks of his life?
In
Nero's world astrology exceeded every religion in power and
influence so it is quite possible that his lethargy resulted
from an astrology-inspired plot that persuaded him he was powerless
to defend himself and that his only hope was to flee. The plot
may have been conceived during or shortly after the spectacular
appearance of Halley's comet in February 66 since comets predicted
the death of kings, gathered support during the next two years
and finally came to fruition in April 68. Why then? The best
explanation seems to involve the movement through the zodiac
of the planet Venus.
Nero
had a family connection with Venus. He was the last of the Julian
dynasty which claimed Venus, both goddess and star, as its ancestor
by descent from the Trojan hero Aeneas, son of Venus and father
of Iulus (Julius). We think of Venus as the goddess of love
and lovely things but she originated as the Semitic war goddess
Ishtar (Babylonia) and Astarte (Phoenicia). It was as Venus
the war goddess that Nero's ancestor Julius Caesar exploited
his heavenly connection. He stamped Venus in military uniform
holding Winged Victory in her right hand on the reverse of his
coins. His watchword for his pivotal battle against Pompey at
Pharsalus was "Venus Bringer of Victory". His watchword
for his final battle (against Pompey's son in Spain) was "Venus".
Emblazoned on the shields of his favorite legion, the 10th,
was the astrological sign Taurus. This was an unmistakable emblem
of Venus because Taurus was the zodiacal throne of Venus during
daylight hours. Julius Caesar built a temple dedicated to Mother
Venus. Caesar's grandnephew Augustus also made the most of his
family's decent from the brilliant planet.
As
both Nero's ancestor and a patroness of the arts including music,
it is likely that Nero drew inspiration from his family star.
According to ancient astrological lore, when a planet stops
its usual forward movement through the zodiac and then moves
backward it loses much of its power. Venus goes retrograde more
or less annually for about two months at a time. Periods where
Venus went retrograde were probably thought to be unfortunate
for Nero's musical endeavors because Venus was "turning
her back" on him. During his reign (54-68 AD) Venus went
retrograde eight times. But after his singing debut in the summer
of 64 AD Venus went retrograde only twice before his death.
The
first of these unfortunate retrograde events took place in the
autumn of 66 AD, an import time for Nero because he was on his
way to Greece for his infamous musical tour. The precise chronology
of this tour is difficult to reconstruct. The records of the
imperial cult make it fairly certain he departed Rome between
June 19 and September 14, 66 AD. However the September date
was too late in the year for a safe crossing of the Adriatic
sea. Venus went retrograde between September 23 and November
3, 66 AD so the "divine voice" could not be called
on for its best performance during this inauspicious time. The
historian Suetonius tells us that, on his way to Greece, Nero
sang on Corfu (an island off Albania)which suggests he arrived
there before September 23. When he traveled to Nicopolis and
then Delphi to visit the Actian and Pythian Games, these visits
may have fallen into the September 23 to November 3 retrograde
period when Venus could not inspire the singing emperor.
Nero
was determined to conquer Greece by winning every important
musical contest. These were normally held at intervals of several
years, the Olympic, for example, every fourth year. Nero is
mocked by hostile historians for ordering three contests to
be held a second time in a single year so he could carry off
more prizes. The Actian and the Pythian Games were indeed repeated
a year later in about September 67 AD. But it may be that Nero
didn't compete during his first (autumn 66 AD) visit to these
games, which were on his way to his winter quarters in Corinth,
because they were being held during the September 23 to November
3 astrologically inauspicious time.
True,
he also ordered a replay of the Isthmian Games where he had
originally performed in the Venus-blessed spring of 67 AD. But
Nero did not necessarily hold them a second time to win more
wreaths. This was the occasion when he gave Greece its freedom
(November 28, 67) on the eve of his hurried and hazardous return
to Italy. Since he had already won the musical first prizes
in the Isthmian Games in spring, his grandiloquent freedom speech,
part of which has survived, might have been his only dramatic
contribution during the November 67 AD replay.
It
could be that Nero chose the year 67 AD for his Greek tour because,
unlike the preceding two years (65 AD and 66 AD), Venus did
not go retrograde at all in 67. In the final six weeks of Nero's
short life (he died at age 30) Venus shunned him again. On April
29, 68 AD she stopped in her tracks and began moving backward
in the zodiac, a bad omen for a ruler who planned to vanquish
his enemies with song. This was when Nero would have heard the
news of his general Galba's April 3 rebellion in Spain. In an
age where nothing celestial happened by chance, Venus's disdain
could be why Nero, who had survived more dangerous conspiracies,
lost his nerve.
At
1 p.m. on June 11, a few hours after Nero's suicide, Venus began
moving forward again. No wonder Nero's enemies sent a galloping
hit squad to hunt him down when they discovered he was skulking
in a Roman basement waiting for fate's tide to turn. Had they
allowed him to survive until then, he might have saved his famous
last words, "What a great artist dies in me!" for
a much later occasion.
Humphry
Knipe info@neroprediction.com
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