Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-pftt2 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-05-16T10:07:24.328Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

LIVIA THE AUCTOR AND THE SYMBOLISM OF GRAFTING

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2023

Annalisa Marzano*
Affiliation:
Department of History and Cultures, University of Bologna, Italy
*
*Corresponding author. Email: annalisa.marzano2@unibo.it
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

The article discusses a passage in book 15 of Pliny's Natural history which lists Livia among the creators of new fruit cultivar. It argues that Livia's unique position within and outside her family explains why she appears to be the only woman remembered for her direct involvement in arboriculture. The article then discusses grafting, which in ancient Rome was charged with many symbolic meanings, and contextualises the appearance of Livia in horticultural discourse within the ideology of the Augustan era and the increased interest in horticultural matters at that time.

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of The Cambridge Philological Society

In a passage of book 15 of the Natural history, the book devoted to fruit and nut trees, Pliny explicitly names Livia as the auctor, or the creator, of a new type of fig to which she gave her name.Footnote 1 He writes:

ad nos ex aliis transiere gentibus, Chalcide, Chio […] nigra et Rhodia est et Tiburtina de praecocibus. Sunt et auctorum nomina iis, Liviae, Pompei: siccandis haec sole in annuos usus aptissima. (Plin. HN 15.69–70)

Figs have been introduced among us from other countries, for instance, Chalcis and Chios […] among figs that ripen early, those of Rhodes and Tivoli are also black. Early figs also have the names of the persons who createdFootnote 2 them: Livia and Pompey. These figs are the best to be sun-dried for use throughout the year. (tr. Rackham (Reference Rackham1968), slightly modified)

Several sections earlier, at 15.49, Pliny had introduced the context within which the creation and naming of new fruit varieties should be understood:

Reliqua cur pigeat nominatim indicare, cum conditoribus suis aeternam propagauerint memoriam, tamquam ob egregium aliquod in uita factum? Nisi fallor, apparebit ex eo ingenium inserendi nihilque tam paruum esse quod non gloriam parere possit. (Plin. HN 15.49)

Why should I hesitate to indicate by name the remaining varieties of fruit, seeing that they have extended the memory of those who established them for all time, as though on account of some outstanding achievement in life? Unless I am mistaken, the recital will reveal the ingenuity exercised in grafting, and will show that nothing is so trifling as to be incapable of producing glory. (tr. Rackham (Reference Rackham1968), slightly modified)

Pliny here makes an explicit connection between developing new fruit types and grafting. The passage displays fascinating lexical choices, since the terms egregius (‘distinguished’, ‘eminent’), gloria (‘glory’, ‘renown’), aeterna memoria (‘eternal remembrance’) are more typically found in reference to military achievements, the elite's traditional avenue to fame. Instead, Pliny suggests that developing new fruit varieties and naming them is a pursuit that can ensure glory and posthumous commemoration.

In the natural history, Pliny connects horticulture and military expansion repeatedly. For example, he reports on novel plants encountered abroad during Rome's military conquests and then transplanted to Italy (e.g. L. Licinius Lucullus and the cherry tree from Pontus) or displayed in the triumphal processions by famous generals and emperors, as if the plants were captives of war.Footnote 3 These plants are often humanised by Pliny, even using the legal language of citizenship, e.g. at HN 12.14: ‘[S]ome fruit trees in Italy are still peregrinae – “foreign” – others have become incolae – “inhabitants”. In the wider context of Pliny's association of horticulture with military deeds, both the Greeks and the Romans considered agriculture to be ‘conducive to the development of good character traits’Footnote 4 preparing the landholder for political and military life. To put it with Long, ‘(agriculture) was a discipline appropriate to the praxis of political and military leadership’.Footnote 5 However, the mention in the passage quoted above of achieving ‘glory’ and ‘immortal remembrance’ by selecting and naming new fruit varieties moves the discourse to a different symbolic level because these actions do not occur in an explicit military context. Some scholars have considered Pliny's statement as ironic but, as I explain later, I do not believe this was the case.Footnote 6

In book 15, Pliny lists many varieties of apple, pear, cherry and fig, which had been named after prominent (male) Romans who had ‘created’ them. Pliny does not explicitly say that these people grafted the new cultivars – he does not use the verb inserere. However, the connection between prominent individuals and the creation of new fruit which, as we shall see, could only have happened by vegetative propagation, is unmistakably stated using the noun auctor. Auctor and its derivative auctoritas are two poignant words closely associated in many ancient writers. These terms cover a range of meanings and are often difficult to translate with just one word,Footnote 7 as already pointed out by Cassius Dio when he noted the difficulty of expressing auctoritas with a single Greek word.Footnote 8 Auctor is connected to the stem aug-, Footnote 9 which denotes ‘vegetal growth in a divinized nature’.Footnote 10 The auctor is thus ‘he that brings about the existence of any object, or promotes the increase or prosperity of it, whether he first originates it, or by his efforts gives greater permanence or continuance to it’,Footnote 11 and can be variously rendered in English as ‘creator, maker, author, inventor, producer, father, teacher, composer, leader’ and the like. Auctor and auctoritas are also key concepts in technical and scientific thinking – combined with other semantic expressions in relevant texts, they help shape the author's ‘scientific self’.Footnote 12 Accordingly, when Pliny defines Livia or other notable Romans as auctor of a new fruit variety, he is also implying their knowledge and authority in a specific field. The idea of knowledge is further stressed when these noble individuals name the new cultivars: naming, systematising and ordering something new, making it part of the known natural world requires knowledge of the new object (the plant in this case) and its relationship to other elements of the natural world. We find several notable individuals or Roman gentes mentioned in the natural history in discussions of the creation and naming of new cultivars. Pliny tells of Gaius Matius (Augustus’ friend and the ‘inventor’ of topiary art) and his new apple cultivar, the Matiana; of cherry and pear varieties named Aproniana, Lutatia, Pliniana, Dolabelliana (names which refer to important Roman families: the Apronii, Lutatii, Plinii and the Cornelii Dolabellae) and of apples bearing the name of the gentes Claudia, Caecilia, Lutatia, Scaudia and Pomponia.Footnote 13 In this list of notable men and famous gentes, Livia's name stands out.

The mention of Livia in the context of arboriculture and the creation of a new variety of fig is remarkable for two reasons. First, in the literary works we have, she is the only woman credited with creating a new fruit variety.Footnote 14 Second, selecting specific fruit traits conducive to creating a new variety required vegetative propagation techniques, among which grafting was the most important.Footnote 15 Many texts of Latin literature, most famously Vergil's second Georgic, display a deep fascination with grafting.Footnote 16 It was seen as a potent symbol of human ingenuity and ability to control nature. These traits, too, commonly characterise men, not women. In Latin literary texts, the only other female figure to my knowledge directly connected to grafting and cultivating fruit trees is Pomona in Ovid's Metamorphoses, not a ‘simple’ woman but a nymph.Footnote 17

Livia Drusilla, Augustus’ wife, achieved a unique position during her long life. She received many unusual honours, and her station greatly transcended what was typically allowed and expected of a matrona. The critical dynastic role Livia had acquired as the mother of Tiberius, after the death of all the other possible heirs of Augustus, also continued after her death: subsequent Julio-Claudian emperors viewed her as a means of further legitimising their positions. This article argues that Livia's unique position within and outside her family explains why she appears to be the only woman remembered for her direct involvement in arboriculture.

Livia, an extraordinary woman

Livia Drusilla was remarkable in many ways.Footnote 18 Married to Augustus for about fifty years, she must have been as politically shrewd as her husband. She helped him transform the Roman state and promote, in celebrating the peace and return to a golden age, the importance of the family, simplicity and marital harmony. She linked her name to euergetic building projects that were transforming Rome, such as the Macellum Liviae and the Porticus Liviae, and restorations of temples such as those consecrated to Fortuna Muliebris and Bona Dea Subsaxana.Footnote 19 Above all, she participated in political life probably more than any previous woman in Rome. As she had responsibility for the welfare of her family and husband, whose prominence attracted continual public scrutiny, Livia played an important role in promoting conjugal harmony and peace in general, through, for example, the cult of Concordia. Her public role and unique standing were well captured in the attribution Romana princeps in the Consolatio ad Liviam, written by an anonymous Roman eques after the death of Livia's son Drusus in 9 BCE, or in Ovid's expression femina princeps.Footnote 20 Even more explicit are Cassius Dio's words, stating that during the reign of her son Tiberius she had:

πάνυ γὰρ μέγα καὶ ὑπὲρ πάσας τὰς πρόσθεν γυναῖκας ὤγκωτο, ὥστε καὶ τὴν βουλὴν καὶ τοῦ δήμου τοὺς ἐθέλοντας οἴκαδε ἀσπασομένους ἀεί ποτε ἐσδέχεσθαι, καὶ τοῦτο καὶ ἐς τὰ δημόσια ὑπομνήματα ἐσγράφεσθαι. (Cassius Dio 57.12.2)

a very exalted station, far above all women of former days, so that she could at any time receive the senate and such of the people as wished to greet her in her house; and this fact was entered in the public records. (tr. Cary (1924))

Livia received several exceptional honours during her life – some were traditional male prerogatives – that distinguished her among all the other matronae of Rome and marked her public role. In 35 BCE, together with Octavia, Octavian/Augustus’ sister, Livia received two honours never before awarded: the freedom from legal tutela and the sacrosanctitas or inviolability of the body accorded to the tribunes of the plebs. Footnote 21 Livia and Octavia were also awarded the right to be commemorated with public statues, another novelty in the case of living women. Later, in 9 BCE, Livia was granted the ius trium liberum, a right given, according to Augustus’ legislation on marriage of 18 BCE, to freeborn women who had borne at least three children. Livia thus had the right to inherit and was exempt from legal guardianship. Livia had already received the exemption from tutela in 35 BCE; the reiteration of this privilege by the senate was a significant honour. Together with a small group of matronae, she was also exempted from the Lex Voconia in 9 CE, enabling her to inherit more than 100,000 sesterces at a time. She was further granted, possibly on the occasion of her illness in 22 CE, the right to use the carpentum, the ceremonial two-wheeled vehicle. Finally, after the death of Augustus, as the priestess of his cult, she gained the right to be preceded in public by a lictor, the traditional prerogative of magistrates holding imperium.

Livia also seems to have performed a significant symbolic role in Augustus’ triumph in 29 BCE. According to Ovid and the anonymous author of the Consolatio ad Liviam, she had prepared and adorned the triumphal chariot.Footnote 22 The Consolatio implies that this had been Livia's particular responsibility. It has been suggested that she might have adorned the chariot with laurel branches from the grove located at her suburban villa Ad Gallinas Albas,Footnote 23 a grove which only Augustus and his family could touch. Furthermore, it is possible that the adornment of the chariot had been a public event that preceded the triumphal procession, a ritual that involved Livia as the recipient of the sacred laurel branch that ‘had been sent from heaven’.Footnote 24

As a powerful woman, she also attracted much criticism. Some ancient sources depicted her as scheming and ruthless – Tacitus’ depiction is particularly negative.Footnote 25 She was accused of having masterminded the murder of her grandson Germanicus and was even suspected of engineering her husband's death when he was ill: rumours that she had poisoned him circulated at the time.Footnote 26

As mentioned, Pliny saw grafting and naming new fruit varieties as a way to secure future remembrance. Livia is the only woman he names when discussing the creation of new fruit varieties. Whether she actually grafted the plants herself or practised any form of gardening at all is not the point. It was perfectly normal to attribute to an estate owner or slave master the horticulture developed on their property.Footnote 27 Latin agronomists routinely deny the agency of the servile personnel engaged in the cultivation of plants on rural estates. In Varro, for example, there is an interesting distinction: slaves who maintain herds are construed as shepherds (pastores), but those engaged in field cultivation are never recognised as farmers (agricolae), but rather called servi, mancipia or instrumenta vocalia. Footnote 28 So, whether the ficus liviana or the ficus pompeiana mentioned by Pliny were directly cultivated by Livia or Pompey or were more likely developed on their estates by others and then given fame by association of the fruit with such illustrious names, the result was the same: Livia or Pompey were remembered in the sources as the trees’ auctores, their ‘inventors’. The attribution most likely circulated during Livia's lifetime: there is mention of a Livian fig among the various types of figs listed in a fragment of Cloatius Verus’ work preserved in Macrobius.Footnote 29

Given that the literary discourse about arboricultural feats focused on prominent Roman men, it is very likely that Livia's unique status as auctor of the ficus liviana had as much to do with her transit into the male – and public – sphere in other areas of action as it did with her social prominence. Great interest in grafting and horticulture had arisen, as exemplified, for instance, by the number of literary works on these topics composed in the early first century CE.Footnote 30 The fig is also a symbolic tree, strictly connected with the early history of Rome: the ficus ruminalis (a wild fig tree) stood close to the Lupercal, where Romulus and Remus were suckled by the she-wolf.Footnote 31 In the Old Testament the fig is frequently used as a symbol of a nation's flourishing (Mi 4:4; Joel 2:22), and in the New Testament Jesus uses the fig tree as a symbol of spiritual fruitfulness (e.g. Matt 7:16b; Lc 6:44).Footnote 32 While the wood of the fig tree was considered inutilis and weak – indeed it is not suitable for furniture making or to use as timber, let alone to burn as fuel – Latin texts report that statues of Priapus, which were placed in gardens to protect them and their produce, were carved out of fig-tree wood.Footnote 33 The fruit also had obscene associations: its name was used, both in Greek and Latin, to mean the female genitalia.Footnote 34

Grafting, as an action, was perceived as male by definition; insero, to in-graft, can also mean to insert, and the term could take on sexual overtones.Footnote 35 Theophrastus, in his classification of male and female trees, usually categorises fruit-bearing trees as female.Footnote 36 As these ‘female’ trees, to remain true to type, were propagated mainly by grafting, it is natural that the act of grafting was perceived as male. But it seems fair to say that, for Romans of the early and mid-Republican periods, the hortus (= the domestic vegetable garden) had been a typically female space entrusted to the care of the women of the house.Footnote 37 By contrast, the cultivation of crops was a men's responsibility. As stressed by Pliny, who refers to Cato's authority, in old times the kitchen garden's status gave the measure of the mater familias’ ability since the care of the hortus was her responsibility.Footnote 38

With time, and with the emergence of commercial vegetable gardens, the hortus was no longer seen as an exclusively female sphere. However, as observed by von Stackelberg, if a man's presence in the garden was not balanced by an appropriate activity either of the body or the mind, his masculinity could be threatened.Footnote 39 Arboriculture and viticulture were probably not subject to this gender ambiguity: they remained a male prerogative throughout. Thus, as Livia was able to appropriate various traditionally male attributes, her active role in arboriculture alluded to by Pliny must be seen as yet another element emphasising her extraordinary passage into the male sphere of action.

As mentioned above, attributing to Livia the creation of a new kind of fig was possible precisely because of her unique status in Roman public life, encompassing several much more essential prerogatives from the exclusively male political and public sphere. Livia cum tribunicia potestate, Livia suis iuris, ‘Livia the builder’,Footnote 40 could then also become ‘Livia the auctor’ of a new fruit variety. The naming of the fig after Livia is another indicator of how ideologically charged even mundane activities were. It could also be a remnant of an intentional ‘promotion’ of Livia as engaging in an activity – agriculture – that was traditionally Roman and morally sound, since Livia's connection with vegetation ‘branched’ out in different directions.

It is well known that Livia had received the portent which led to the creation of the sacred laurel grove, from which the wreaths of triumphing emperors were henceforth made, in her suburban villa later named Ad Gallinas Albas. Various authors report the story.Footnote 41 A white hen with a laurel sprig in its beak fell into the empress’ lap. Livia planted the sprig at her villa at Prima Porta north of Rome and personally tended the plant with religious devotion. The plant turned into a grove visited by subsequent emperors to cut branches to be formed into crowns worn in their triumphs. After the triumph, a branch was returned and replanted in the grove. The new plant was given the name of the emperor who had planted it, in what was most likely an official ceremony for a select audience.Footnote 42 This laurel grove became the very symbol of the Julio-Claudian line, suddenly perishing when Nero died.Footnote 43 To put it with Flory, ‘the grove formed a living family genealogy of the triumphatores of the gens Iulia’.Footnote 44 Archaeological investigations at Prima Porta have identified a garden area and other features, leading to the hypothesis that the landscape sculpting of the hilltop was intended to lend great prominence to the villa and its laurel grove.Footnote 45 From this same villa come the beautiful wall paintings of the partially subterranean ‘garden room’, now in the Museo Nazionale Romano-Palazzo Massimo in Rome. The wall paintings, depicting a garden with various trees, shrubs, flowers and birds, with fruits and flowers of all seasons intermingled,Footnote 46 transform the room into an imaginary garden pavilion.

Still other references link Livia with vegetation. She is said to have donated to the population of Rome a large trailing grapevine, planted in the Porticus Liviae. This one vine was remarkable because it not only provided shade in the Porticus but also produced twelve amphorae of wine each year.Footnote 47 After her husband's death, Livia offered a very large cinnamon root in the garden of the temple of Divus Augustus.Footnote 48 Cinnamon was linked to the idea of regeneration, and the gift was symbolic. All these various mentions of plants and their care are consistent with the more general and very long literary and philosophical tradition equating the cura of trees and plants to that of the state.Footnote 49 According to Strabo, Persian elite youths’ training included, in the morning, hunting to build military prowess as well as, in the afternoon, activities in the royal gardens: how to tend to plants (φυτουργεῖν) and cut roots (ῥιζοτομεῖν). Plant cultivation was an essential part of the social ideology of the Persian elites and its pedagogy.Footnote 50 In the Hellenistic period, several rulers displayed keen interest in plants, their properties and cultivation, and wrote treatises on botany and/or agriculture. The research by Mithridates VI on the medicinal properties of plants as well as on poisons and antidotes is famous.Footnote 51 Attalus I, the Pergamene king, authored at least one work on botany. His grandson, Attalus III, was an expert in herbal toxicology and wrote a work on agriculture, a source used by both Varro and Pliny.Footnote 52 The learned Juba II of Mauretania wrote on the natural history and geography of Arabia and Libya, including information on their flora, and authored a botanical treatise on the euphorbia plant.Footnote 53 The interactions of these rulers with specific plants are pregnant with symbolism in Greek and Roman literature and allude to the ‘rhetoric of power associated with plants in the Hellenistic and Hellenized world’.Footnote 54 Totelin observes that Roman generals like Lucullus and Pompey adopted some of these botanical practices – for example, transplanting plants – Footnote 55 but that they did not write about plants or have an active involvement in cultivating them.Footnote 56 This is, I think, only partially correct, as Pliny's reference to a fig cultivar created by Pompey suggests. The Julio-Claudian age, and the Augustan period in particular, were characterised by a strong revival of the old conception of plant care as a symbol of caring for the state.Footnote 57

Elite Romans and arboriculture

Further to creating new fruit cultivars as a way to gain glory and posthumous remembrance, Pliny's remarkable statement at HN 15.49, cited at the beginning of this article, uses terminology not normally associated with arboriculture. His words should not be taken as ironic – in the Natural history, he contrasts the virtues of grafting and developing new fruit varieties with, for example, regrets that the size and cost of simple vegetables have increased beyond the means of the poor people to purchase them.Footnote 58 Although at the beginning of book 17 he frames grafting as immoral, in that the ingenious technique introduces adultery even to trees,Footnote 59 overall grafting is not as prominent in Pliny's discourse against luxury as other aspects of horticulture.Footnote 60 The development of new fruit varieties and transplanting of useful plants are seen mainly in a positive light in the Natural history, even though the topic shows the many contradictions and complexities that so often characterise Roman discourse. It is only when he discusses unproductive plants that Pliny seems to perceive grafting and vegetative propagation as subversion of the natural order.Footnote 61

It has been said that Pliny's discussion of grafted cultivars ‘is also a discussion of aristocratic agriculture and fame in an empire that left few avenues for social recognition to the Roman elite’.Footnote 62 However, even if these had been curtailed in the Imperial period, most notably the possibility of obtaining a military triumph, it is still not fully clear why grafting and naming new fruit varieties could be so highly valued.

Ancient myth emphasises the importance of grafting in agriculture: according to Macrobius, grafting and the cultivation of fruit trees, along with sowing and other forms of propagation, featured among the teachings that the god Saturn would have given to the early inhabitants of Italy.Footnote 63 Grafting is mentioned in the work of all four Latin agronomists (Cato, Varro, Columella and Palladius), but the degree of detail varies; Columella is the author who offers a detailed (and largely accurate) description of various grafting techniques.Footnote 64 Grafting also held a prominent place in Latin poetry: its symbolism and allegorical values had multivalent effects, and several texts display a fascination with wondrous and impossible grafts. It is outside the scope of this article to offer a systematic discussion of the grafting theme in Latin literary texts, on which excellent treatments exist.Footnote 65 Suffice it to note here that in poets of the late Republic and early first century CE such as Vergil, Propertius and Calpurnius Siculus, grafting and the fascination with far-fetched, even impossible plant combinations, were themes that most poignantly expressed the taming of wild nature, but also evoked the idea of a Saturnian golden age.Footnote 66 In some later texts, the biologically impossible grafts described can become a symbol of hubris and violence perpetrated against the natural world. While Pliny is not exempt from the fascination with unusual grafts that can be observed in other authors – for example, he mentions with wonder a tree which had been grafted with an amazing variety of fruits – he overall presents grafting in a very positive light.Footnote 67 To fully understand why, we need to remind ourselves of some important points about the practice of grafting in the context of real – not literary – horticulture.

The horticultural context of Roman grafting

Cultivated fruit trees are normally not reproduced from seed but by vegetative propagation, creating clones of the plant. The farmer uses three possible vegetative techniques: rooting of twigs/cuttings, planting of suckers and scion grafting. Domesticated fruit trees are very rarely raised from seeds because seedlings tend to revert to the wild form of the plant, and the fruit produced does not have the same qualities as the parent plant.Footnote 68 The most common fruit trees of classical antiquity, such as the quince, apple, pear, plum and sweet cherry, do not lend themselves well to vegetative propagation from suckers or cuttings; their propagation and maintenance rely almost entirely on grafting. Therefore, while grafting may have fascinated some Latin writers, it was a fundamental and standard practice on any farm, from antiquity to the present. Grafting also offers the cultivator a clear advantage: it allows the ‘domestication’ of wild varieties of the same plant through grafting onto it a domesticated variety with desirable characteristics, thus changing adult and commercially worthless plants into productive ones. The best example is grafting the cultivated olive onto wild olives – the oleasters – which, for instance, allowed a quick diffusion of oleiculture in Roman North Africa.Footnote 69

In short, when the goal is to maintain the exact characteristics of the parent plant in common fruit trees, propagation by grafting is essential. This is particularly crucial in commercial agriculture, when the maintenance of the identical fruit genotypes and reproduction of a specific cultivar on a large scale are needed. In addition, the technique is central to the development of fruits with new characteristics or to the domestication of new plants. The continuous selection of fruit plants with desired characteristics and their propagation by grafting allowed, over time, the development of a range of fruit varieties. These developments are reflected in the mention of various fruit varieties found, above all, in the texts of the agronomists and in Pliny's books dealing with arboriculture. As shown in table 1, over time there was a significant increase in fruit varieties, with Columella and Pliny mentioning the greatest number of fruit cultivars. Indeed, Columella explicitly states that horticulture had gained greater importance in his time, and for this reason he feels compelled to discuss horticulture in greater detail than the earlier writers did.Footnote 70

Table 1. Number of fruit varieties mentioned in the agronomists (after White (Reference White1970) appendix A).

* It must be said that Varro does not discuss fruit varieties in any systematic way; these were not central to the aims of his dialogue. For example, in the case of apples, he mentions only the foreign varieties (White (Reference White1970) 262).

This interest in grafting and selection of fruit types ought to be contextualised on two very different levels: first there is the practical side of grafting in the context of commercial agriculture. In this discourse, the elite landowners occupy centre stage, not simply because of the nature of the surviving written evidence – works of upper-class authors for elite readers – but also because substantial innovation in agriculture, such as the cultivation of new species, was ‘designed to produce great profits for the proprietors rather than to add to the poor man's repertoire of stratagems for avoiding risks’.Footnote 71 These elite owners had a practical interest in grafting and selecting fruit with specific characteristics because this was commercially important.

On another level, the interest in grafting and selecting fruit types encompassed a precise ideological dimension that is exploited and elaborated on. Grafting meant domestication of and control over wild nature – themes that find their way into literary texts such as Vergil's Georgics.

Conclusions

I have argued that Livia finds a place among the many illustrious Romans whom Pliny lists as the creators of new cultivars of fruit because of her exceptionality as a woman: she reached out of the purely female sphere to encroach on many traditional male domains. That horticultural discourse could be an additional way in which to mark Livia's uniqueness was due, on the one hand, to the Augustan ideology celebrating a return to the Golden Age, peace and prosperity. This idea of prosperity was celebrated in poetry and in figurative art – for example, in the symbolic importance of the vegetal motifs on the Ara Pacis. Moreover, the increased prominence of horticulture starting from the late Republic further stimulated the development of such horticultural discourse. Other significant influences on the spread of commercial horticulture were Rome's population growth, urbanisation rates and the return of peace after the civil wars, which permitted long-term planning and investments in the land. In turn, these conditions attracted the interest of several Julio-Claudian intellectuals in horticulture.

In ancient Rome, grafting was charged with many symbolic and allegorical meanings not only because it could signify human ingenuity and the domestication of wild nature, but also because of its fundamental importance in the daily operations of agricultural estates: to keep the plants true to type, the propagation of many fruit trees relied on grafting. In the late Republic, when plants and gardens acquired a specific ideological dimension,Footnote 72 the practical and commercial interest of elite landowners in what was grown on their estates also assumed an ideological dimension. A new type of grape or a new type of apple could be named after their ‘creator’ (i.e. the owner of the estate) and marketed under that name. This ‘creator' could also gain future remembrance because, as long as that variety was cultivated, his name would last.

If the suggestion is valid that Livia's exceptionality and appropriation of male prerogatives were also expressed by the active horticultural role attributed to her, it might be possible to explain related information in the ancient sources. Indeed, Livia's supposed creation of the ficus liviana probably gave rise to the rumour, in Cassius Dio's account, that she killed her husband Augustus to assure the succession of her own son, Tiberius. Dio writes that she accomplished this by smearing poison on ripe figs still on trees from which Augustus usually picked the fruit himself.Footnote 73 She would have eaten the non–poisoned ones and offered to her husband the poisoned figs. With this rumour, the more unusual association between a woman and the creation of a new cultivar is replaced by a much more familiar literary topos: the association between a woman and poisoned food. In this manner, even the story about the creation and naming of a new fig variety can be normalised according to traditional gender roles and literary tropes; Livia the (male) grafter becomes Livia the (female) treacherous preparer of food.

Footnotes

This article stems from a paper I gave for the Cambridge Philological Society in January 2020. I am grateful to the audience for their comments and questions. I wish to thank the two anonymous reviewers for their useful suggestions which have improved the article. Any remaining shortcomings are my own.

1 See also Columella Rust. 5.10.11; 10.414; Ath. 3.75.

2 Rackham's translation in the Loeb edition (Reference Rackham1968) renders this as those who ‘introduced them’. I take auctor in this and in other passages in which Pliny discusses fruit varieties to mean both the creator of the new cultivar and the producer. It is equally possible to understand the word as meaning ‘promoter’ and thus take the passages to mean that the fruit in question was named after the notable individuals because they preferred a specific variety and gave it popularity.

3 Plin. HN 12.111: ‘[I]t is a remarkable fact that ever since the time of Pompey the Great even trees have figured among the captives in our triumphal processions’ (tr. Rackham (Reference Rackham1968)), in the discussion of the balsamum plant from Judea, displayed in Rome by Vespasian and Titus, presumably during their triumph. For Lucullus and the cherry tree: Plin. HN 15.102; see also HN 15.47: Sex. Papinius Allienus (cos. 36 CE) imported to Italy the zizipha (‘jujube tree’) from Africa and tubures (‘azerole’) from Syria; HN 15.91: L. Vitellius, governor of Syria 34–37 CE, brought back new varieties of fig and introduced into Italy the pistachio plant, while his colleague, the eques Pompeius Flaccus, introduced the pistachio to Hispania.

4 Long (Reference Long2001) 16.

5 Long (Reference Long2001) 16.

6 E.g. Lowe (Reference Lowe2010) 479.

7 For usage and semantic range, see TLLauctor’, ‘auctoritas’.

8 Dio Cass. 55.3.5. As observed by Ziolkowski (Reference Ziolkowski2009) 425: ‘In the classical Latin usage of both auctor and auctoritas, juridical and political senses occupied center stage. The auctor stood as guarantor of a truth that he announced or a right that he held […], while auctoritas represented the guarantee itself or the credibility of such a witness’.

9 Aug- + -tor = auctor; see the verb augeo, ‘to wax, increase, strengthen, bring forth that not already in existence’. A Latin dictionary

10 Ziolkowski (Reference Ziolkowski2009) 424.

11 As defined in Lewis and Short, A Latin dictionary.

13 Marzano (Reference Marzano and Coleman2014) 225–8.

14 It can be said that Livia also ‘grafted’ the Claudian line represented by her sons Tiberius and Drusus onto the Julian line.

15 For a treatment of Roman arboriculture, from an ideological and practical point of view, see Marzano (Reference Marzano2022); for the cultivation of the fig in classical and Arab-Andalusian agronomic literature, Carabaza Bravo (Reference Carabaza Bravo1995).

16 Lowe (Reference Lowe2010); see further discussion below.

17 Ov. Met. 14.623–771.

18 On Livia and her image, see Bartman (Reference Bartman1999) and Barrett (Reference Barrett2002).

19 On Livia's building activity and her direct financial involvement in these projects, see Purcell (Reference Purcell1986) 88–89; Barrett (Reference Barrett2002) 199–205.

20 Consolatio ad Liviam 356; Ov. Tr. 1.6.25; Pont. 3.1.125.

21 Barrett (Reference Barrett2002), 136–8.

22 Ov. Pont. 3.4.95–6; Consolatio ad Liviam 26.

24 Plin. HN 15.130: missa a caelo. See Flory (Reference Flory1998) 491. See below for further discussion about this portent.

25 See e.g. Barrett (Reference Barrett2001).

26 Tac. Ann.1.5; Cass. Dio 56.30.1–2. More on this below.

27 Hardy and Totelin (Reference Hardy and Totelin2016) 40.

28 Nelsestuen (Reference Nelsestuen2015) 71.

29 Macrob. Sat. 3.20. Cloatius was a lexicographer thought to have been active in the early Augustan period.

30 See writers such as Valerius Messalla Potitus (cos. 29 BC), Sabinus Tiro, Iulius Atticus and Iulius Graecinus, who authored cepurika, literally works on ‘garden stuff’ or treatises on other specific branches of agriculture (viticulture). They were active in the Augustan era specifically or Julio-Claudian period more generally: Thibodeau (Reference Thibodeau2011) 220.

31 Varro Ling. 5.54; Plin. HN 15.77.

33 Scarpat (Reference Scarpat1969) 885; see e.g. Hor. Sat. 1.8.1–3.

34 For example, see Ar. Pax 1350; Priap. 50.2; Mart. 1.65.4 and 4.52.2.

35 Hardy and Totelin (Reference Hardy and Totelin2016) 154.

36 Theophr. Hist. pl. 3.8.1.

37 On the hortus as a female space and the blurring of gender distinctions in Roman gardens, see von Stackelberg (Reference Von Stackelberg2009) 70–2.

38 Plin. HN 19.57.

39 Von Stackelberg (Reference Von Stackelberg2009) 71.

40 Purcell (Reference Purcell1986) 89.

41 Plin. HN 15.136–7; Suet. Galb. 1; Cass. Dio 48.52.3-4; cf. 63.29.

42 Kellum (Reference Kellum1994) 223.

43 Suet. Galb. 1.

44 Flory (Reference Flory1989) 345.

46 Kellum (Reference Kellum1994) 215.

47 Plin. HN 14.11, reporting the observation of Valerianus Cornelius.

48 Plin. HN 12.94; Rehak (Reference Rehak1990).

49 A famous anecdote is told in Xen. Oec. 4.20–5, about the good king Cyrus: the Spartan statesman Lysander, on visiting Cyrus at his palace in Sardis, is surprised to learn that the king himself had designed the park, spaced the trees and determined the orthogonal intersections, as well as planted some of the trees.

50 Strabo 15.3.18; Fauth (Reference Fauth1977) 4–5 for the ‘hunter’ and ‘gardener’ as two ideals for the Persian king.

51 Mithridates is also said to have attempted to acclimate the laurel and the myrtle at Panticapeaon: Plin. HN 16.137.

52 Plut. Demetr. 20.3; Gal. SMT 10.1 = Kühn 12, 252; Just. Epit. 36.4.3. See Scarborough (Reference Scarborough and Cilliers2008); Totelin (Reference Totelin2012) 126–31.

53 On the literary and scientific production of Juba II, see Roller (Reference Roller2003), esp. chapters 7, 8 and 10.

54 Totelin (Reference Totelin2012) 140.

55 On ‘botanical imperialism’ in imperial Rome, see Pollard (Reference Pollard2009).

56 Totelin (Reference Totelin2012) 140–1.

57 von Stackelberg (Reference Von Stackelberg2009) 91.

58 Plin. HN 19.54.

59 Plin. HN 17.8.

60 Pliny offers a unified vision of the physical world of Rome and of the moral price of her vast empire; in the Natural history, art is linked to nature and austerity to luxury: Beagon (Reference Beagon1992), Carey (Reference Carey2003), Murphy (Reference Murphy2004). An important aim of the work is, however, iuvare mortalem: Naas (Reference Naas2002) 84.

61 See e.g. the case of an evergreen plane tree, HN 12.11–12.

62 Squatriti (Reference Squatriti2013) 93.

63 Macrob. Sat. 1.7.25.

64 For mention of many methods of grafting, see Columella Rust. 1. praef. 27; for the benefits of grafting, Rust. 5.10.6. The methods Columella describes are summarised in White (Reference White1970) 248–58.

65 On grafting in Latin texts and its symbolism, see Pease (Reference Pease1933), Ross (Reference Ross1980), Pigeaud (Reference Pigeaud1988), Clément-Tarantino (Reference Clément-Tarantino2006) and Lowe (Reference Lowe2010).

67 Plin. HN 17.120.

68 White (Reference White1970), 248; Zohary, Hopf and Weiss (Reference Zohary, Hopf and Weiss2012) 115. For ancient observations about the quality of the fruit deteriorating when the plant is reproduced from seed, see Theophr. Hist. pl. 2.4-6 and Caus. pl., 5.3.1. Cf. also Docs. G. 2.57–9.

69 On the grafting of cultivated olive onto wild olive, used as an allegory, see Rom 11:24. For the practice in Roman North Africa, see e.g. the epigraphic evidence on imperial estates: CIL 8.25902, CIL 8.26416 and the third-century CE funerary inscription AE 1975.883. On olive cultivation in general: Foxhall (Reference Foxhall2007). While this study focuses on ancient Greece, much is also relevant to the Roman world.

70 Columella Rust. 10. praef. 2–3; see Morley (Reference Morley1996) for the growing importance of horticulture in the hinterland of Rome.

71 Horden and Purcell (Reference Horden and Purcell2000) 260.

73 Cass. Dio 56.30.12. See also Barrett (Reference Barrett2002) 113, who mentions that the murder may have occurred at their villa at Nola.

References

Barrett, A. A. (2001) ‘Tacitus, Livia and the evil stepmother’, RhM 144.2, 171–5.Google Scholar
Barrett, A. A. (2002) Livia: First lady of imperial Rome, New Haven.Google Scholar
Bartman, E. (1999) Portraits of Livia: imaging the imperial woman in Augustan Rome, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Beagon, M. (1992) Roman nature: the thought of Pliny the Elder, Oxford.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carabaza Bravo, J.-M. (1995) ‘Le figuier dans la littérature agronomique gréco-latine et arabo-andalouse’, Journal d'agriculture traditionnelle et de botanique appliquée 37.2, 7992.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carey, S. (2003) Pliny's catalogue of culture: art and empire in the Natural history, Oxford Studies in Ancient Culture and Representation, Oxford.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cary, E. (1924) Dio Cassius: Roman History, Books LVI-LX, with an English translation by Ernest Cary on the basis of the version of H. B. Foster, Loeb Classical Library 175, Cambridge, MA.Google Scholar
Clément-Tarantino, S. (2006) ‘La poétique romaine comme hybridation féconde. Les leçons de la greffe (Virgile, Géorgiques, 2, 9–82)’, Interférences Ars Scribendi 4, 126.Google Scholar
Fauth, W. (1977) ‘Der königliche Gärtner und Jäger im Paradeisos’, Persica 8, 153.Google Scholar
Ferda, T. S. et al. (2014) ‘Fig, fig tree’, in Furey, C. M. et al. (eds) Encyclopedia of the Bible and its reception online, Berlin and Boston.Google Scholar
Flory, M. (1989) ‘Octavian and the omen of the “Gallina Alba”’, CJ 84.4, 343–56.Google Scholar
Flory, M. (1998) ‘The integration of women into the Roman triumph’, Historia 47.4, 489–94.Google Scholar
Foxhall, L. (2007) Olive cultivation in ancient Greece: seeking the ancient economy, Oxford.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hardy, G. and Totelin, L. (2016) Ancient botany, Abingdon-on-Thames.Google Scholar
Horden, P. and Purcell, N. (2000) The corrupting sea. A study of Mediterranean history, Oxford and Malden (MA).Google Scholar
Kellum, B. A. (1994) ‘The construction of landscape in Augustan Rome: the garden room at the Villa ad Gallinas’, ArtB 76, 211–24.Google Scholar
Klynne, A. (2005) ‘The laurel grove of the Caesars: looking in and looking out’, in Santillo Frizell, B. and id (eds.) Roman villas around the urbs: interaction with landscape and environment. Proceedings of a Conference Held at the Swedish Institute in Rome, September 17–18, 2004, Rome, 19.Google Scholar
Kühn, C. G. (ed.). (2011) Claudii Galeni Opera omnia, vol. 12 [originally published in Leipzig 1826–27], Cambridge Library Collection, Classics, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Long, P. (2001) Openness, secrecy, authorship: technical arts and the culture of knowledge from antiquity to the Renaissance, Baltimore.Google Scholar
Lowe, D. (2010) ‘The symbolic value of grafting in ancient Rome’, TAPhA 140.2, 461–88.Google Scholar
Marzano, A. (2014) ‘Roman gardens, military conquests, and elite self-representation’, in Coleman, K. (ed.) Le jardin dans l'antiquité, Entretiens sur l'Antiquité Classique 60, Geneva, 195244.Google Scholar
Marzano, A. (2022) Plants, politics, and empire in ancient Rome, Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Morley, N. (1996) Metropolis and hinterland. The city of Rome and the Italian economy, 200 BC–AD 200, Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Murphy, T. M. (2004) Pliny the Elder's Natural history. The empire in the encyclopedia, Oxford.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Naas, V. (2002) Le project encyclopédique de Pline l'Ancien, Collection de L’école française de Rome 303, Rome.Google Scholar
Nelsestuen, G. A. (2015) Varro the agronomist: political philosophy, satire, and agriculture in the late Republic, Columbus.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pease, A. S. (1933) ‘Notes on ancient grafting’, TAPhA 64, 6676.Google Scholar
Pigeaud, J. (1988) ‘La greffe du monstre’, REL 66, 197218.Google Scholar
Pollard, E. A. (2009) ‘Pliny's Natural history and the Flavian Templum Pacis: botanical imperialism in first-century CE Rome’, Journal of World History 20.3, 309–38.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Purcell, N. (1986) ‘Livia and the womanhood of Rome’, CCJ 32, 78105.Google Scholar
Rackham, H. (1968) Pliny: Natural history, Books 12–16, with an English translation by H. Rackham, Loeb Classical Library 370, revised edn, Cambridge, MA.Google Scholar
Rehak, P. (1990) ‘Livia's dedication in the Temple of Diuus Augustus on the Palatine’, Latomus 49.1, 117–25.Google Scholar
Roller, D. W. (2003) The world of Juba II and Kleopatra Selene. Royal scholarship on Rome's African frontier, New York and London.Google Scholar
Ross, D. O. (1980) ‘Non sua poma: Varro, Virgil, and grafting’, ICS 5, 6371.Google Scholar
Scarborough, J. (2008) ‘Attalus III of Pergamon: research toxicologist’, in Cilliers, L. (ed.) Asklepios. Studies on ancient medicine, Bloemfontein (South Africa), 138–56.Google Scholar
Scarpat, G. (1969) ‘Il fico e le sue foglie nella tradizione classica e cristiana’, in Studi linguistici in onore di Vittore Pisani, vol. 2, Brescia, 873–90.Google Scholar
Squatriti, P. (2013) Landscape and change in early medieval Italy: chestnuts, economy, and culture, Cambridge and New York.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thibodeau, P. (2011) Playing the farmer: representations of rural life in Vergil's Georgics, Berkeley and Los Angeles.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Totelin, L. (2012) ‘Botanizing rulers and their herbal subjects: plants and political power in Greek and Roman literature’, Phoenix 66, 122–44.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
White, K. D. (1970) Roman farming, London.Google Scholar
Von Stackelberg, K. T. (2009) The Roman garden. Space, sense, and society, London.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Von Staden, H. 1994Author and authority: Celsus and the construction of a scientific self’, in Vásquez Buján, M. E. (ed.) Tradición e innovación de la medicina latina de la antigüedad y de la alta edad media. Actas del IV Coloquio Internacional sobre los “Textos Médicos Latinos Antiguos”, Compostela, 103–17.Google Scholar
Ziolkowski, J. M. (2009) ‘Cultures of authority in the long twelfth century’, Journal of English and Germanic Philology 108.4, 421–48.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zohary, D., Hopf, M. and Weiss, E. (2012) Domestication of plants in the Old World: the origin and spread of domesticated plants in south-west Asia, Europe, and the Mediterranean Basin, 4th edn., Oxford.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Figure 0

Table 1. Number of fruit varieties mentioned in the agronomists (after White (1970) appendix A).