At 24, a traumatized survivor who had spent his teens as a hostage to the tyrant who murdered his family was handed the entire Roman Empire, with no checks on his power. His name was Caligula.
This episode looks past the cartoonish madman of legend and reads Caligula's reign as a forensic study of trauma meeting unchecked authority. It examines the hostile senatorial sources, his surprisingly competent first months, and the calculated terror that followed, asking whether the monster was insane or simply the logical product of a lawless system.
His survival on Capri by total self-effacement under the paranoid emperor Tiberius
The benevolent golden opening months, then the purges that followed his near-fatal illness
The two-mile pontoon bridge at Baiae as a literal refutation of a prophecy from his powerless youth
How the horse as consul story likely began as weaponized satire mocking the Senate
The near-catastrophic order to place his statue in the Jerusalem temple, halted only by his assassination
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