Open Access
Ovid and Illyricum
Author(s) -
Salmedin Mesihović
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
radovi (historija, historija umjetnosti, arheologija)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2303-6974
pISSN - 2303-5749
DOI - 10.46352/23036974.2020.2.45
Subject(s) - emperor , ancient history , victory , battle , roman empire , history , politics , classics , poetry , empire , amnesty , mistake , feud , pleading , art , literature , law , archaeology , political science
The famed Roman poet Ovid was banished from Rome, for unknown
reasons in 8 CE, by the first emperor Augustus, to the remote town of Tomis on the
Black Sea coast, at the then-outmost eastern border of the Roman Empire. Ovid himself
emphasised to have been banished for a mistake and a poem, but did not provide more
elaborate details as to what the cause had exactly been. That was the period when the
Roman Empire fought a difficult war against the Illyrian rebels and their military and
political Alliance led by Bato the Daesitiate. For that reason, Ovid was sent to Tomis not
through the Adriatic shore but rather through roundabouts, via Greece and Moesia. Ovid
was very sad in Tomis, constantly pleading for amnesty. For that reason, he kept sending
letters to influential friends and members of the ruling Augustus family, asking them to
advocate for his return. In one of the letters to Germanicus, Ovid described in detail the
triumphant procession honouring the victory over the rebelled Illyrians, mentioning also
the captured Bato the Daesitate and the kind treatment he had received.