He strengthened the Roman economy and raised the pay of the Roman legions for the first time since Augustus.
Titus Flavius Domitianus, known as , was the last of the Flavian dynasty and one of Rome’s most polarizing figures. Ruling from 81 to 96 CE, he was a ruler of contradictions: a meticulous administrator who stabilized the economy, yet a reclusive autocrat whose reign ended in blood and the official erasure of his memory. The Efficient Autocrat
He showed a strong interest in Egyptian religion, commissioning granite obelisks in honor of the goddess Isis and presenting himself as a "Roman pharaoh". The "Master and God"
He transformed the city of Rome, finishing the Colosseum and building a massive palace on the Palatine Hill that dominated the city’s skyline.