Antinoos
Antinoos
Antinoos
had Antinoos' likeness sculpted and delivered all over the Empire where it was to inspire the
masses. Antinoos died in a tragic drowning in the Nile very young and was deified by Hadrian.
Generations later, his likeness still inspires a small subset of the masses :)
Antinoos & Hadrian's world coincided with the Roman tendency to classicize its artworks in an
attempt to present itself as the archetype. In expressing their personal vision of the emperor, the
great artists of the age were united in their adaptation of classical models to the realities of their
contemporary life. Antinous, was not only a beautiful youth from Bithynia but the beloved
favourite of the Emperor. And after drowning in Egypt in 130, his image inspired artists to follow
in the footsteps of the great Greek sculptors, Calamis, Phidias, and Praxiteles, reverting to the
ancient figurative tradition in order to portray contemporary power in aesthetic, religious and
philosophical terms. Perfect models were to be found in mythology, from which portraits of
Antinous assumed the body and attitudes of heroes and deities, from the edge of India to the
coast of Portugal.
We have links to Antinoos life, his likenesses around the world, the religious cult that is still
practiced by a small group of folks and his place in Roman history. If you have additional
Antinoos information or links, please feel free to pass them on!
Hadrian
and
Antinous
"And such a one is the new God Antinous, that was the
Emperor Hadrian's minion and the slave of his unlawful
pleasure; a wreth, whom that that worshipped in obedience to
the Emperor's command, and for fear of his vengeance, knew
and confessed to be a man, and not a good or deserving man
neither, but a sordid and loathsome instrument of his master's
lust. This shameless and scandalous boy died in Egypt when
the court was there; and forthwith his Imperial Majesty issued
out an order or edict strictly requiring and commanding his
loving subjects to acknowledge his departed page a deity and to
pay him his quota of divine reverences and honours as such: a
resolution and act which did more effectually publish and
testify to the world how entirely the Emperor's unnatural
passion survived the foul object of it; and how much his master
was devoted to memory, than it recorded his own crime and
condemnation, immortalized his infamy and shame, and
bequeathed to mankind a lasting and notorious specimen of
the true origin and extraction of all idolatry"
- ST Anthanasius, 350 AD
Faced with such harshly prudish comments, it is of no wonder that many like myself have
become fascinated in the boy whom they address. The majority of references one will see in
modern times to Antinous are either such as the above or take the form of proudly displayed
quips declaring the manes of famous homosexuals throughout history which tell us little other
than the fact that, like most Greek men or his era, Antinous participated in homosexual activities.
In deed, there are few works that even bother mentioning the boy as it has been the tendency of
the majority of historians to sweep Antinous under the rug to avoid what they consider a
defamation of Emperor Hadrian, who has long been considered one of the most successful of the
Emperors of Rome.
The story of Hadrian and Antinous, seen by some as a real life version of the myth of Zeus and
Ganymede, is a romance and a tragedy. That the young Antinous was the lover of the Emperor,
who is known for his Hellenistic ways, is of little true amazement and in itself would not have
caused a scandalous cry to echo through the centuries. However, when the boy who is thought to
have been the only true love in Hadrian's life was found drowned in the Nile it sent the Emperor
into a swell of grief so mighty that it altered the Roman world.
Hadrian
Publius Aeliues Hadrienus was born January of 76 AD, most likely in
Rome but possibly in Italica, near Seville. In his youth, he developed a
fondness for Hellenic culture that was to earn him the nickname,
"Graeculus," or "The Greekling."
In 85 AD, Hadrian's life was changed by the death of his father. The boy
was left in the care of two guardians, his father's dear friend Acilius
Attianus and his father's cousin, Trajan, who became Emperor in 98 AD.
The relationship between Hadrian and Trajan is open to speculation. It
seemed to vary between immense affection to near hatred. Since it is oft
said that the only thing that the two truly had in common was a love of
boys, it is possible though not proven that they were in fact lovers and it
has long been alleged that many of the troubles between the two were
caused by the boys they kept. It has also been alleged, with less evidence,
Emperor Trajan that Hadrian became the lover of the Empress Plotina. While the two
"He looked stupid and was where very close, the relationship seems to have been more similar to
believed honest."
that of mentor to student as the Empress was most well known for her
learning and love of history. There also seems to have been a maternal
aspect to the relationship as in letters, Hadrian refers to Plotina as "my
dearest and most honoured mother" and she to him as, "my own dear
son."
In the year 100 AD, two years after his guardian became Emperor,
Hadrian was wed to the young great-niece of said guardian. The girl,
Sabina, was approximately 13 and still fairly young even by Roman
terms of marriage. There was never to be much fondness between Sabina
and Hadrian, and indeed there was much hostility, who were married for
purely political reasons as Sabina was the Emperor's closest unmarried
female relative. In retaliation to the lack of emotion given her by her
husband, Sabina apparently took steps to insure that Hadrian would
never have a child by her. To describe his wife, Hadrian used the words,
"moody and difficult," and declared that if he were a private citizen free
to do his own will, he would divorce her. However, despite the hostility
between the couple, Hadrian was very fond of his mother-in-law,
Matidia, who he praised as, "helpful to all, troublesome to no one, ill-
humoured with nobody." It was in her honour that the first temple in
Rome ever to be built in the name of a woman was constructed by order
of her son-in-law.
Although by 117, Hadrian had been given control of the armies of the
east and it had been rumored for many years the he was to be officially
adopted by Trajan as heir, no papers where ever produced to the effect
until the time of Trajan's death. The papers arrived in Rome two days
before the news of the Emperor's death and it was long rumored that the
Empress Sabina
clever Plotina had forged the documents to aide her protege. It is
arguable that Hadrian would most likely have been able to win the
Empire either way due to his control of the army and his connection to
Trajan by blood and marriage, but formal documents from Trajan could
hardly have hurt his cause..
While Hadrian hastily dealt with the war in Tigris and Euphrates that
Trajan had died before completing and went on to suppress the Jewish
revolts in t he Middle East, Plotina and Attianus, the other guardian of
Hadrian's childhood and current Prefect of the Guard, made swiftly to
Rome with the ashes of Trajan and praise of Hadrian. The case to crown
Hadrian Emperor was defended before the Senate with the help of
Attianus, who managed to bully the Senate into executing four of the
most distinguished consolers of Trajan's rule. These men were powerful
and thought to be against Hadrian, whom the Senate never fully forgave
for the death sentences although there was no proof directly connecting
him to the action. For taking the trouble to help Hadrian ascend to
Emperor, Attianus was swiftly promoted to the Senate, which was seen
as a form of political extinction, for Hadrian was never to look kindly
upon anyone who implied a weakness in his position or character by
openly aiding him.
Hadrian was, throughout most of his life, known as a military man. He,
like many other young Romans, joined the army when he was a teenager
and went to train in Italica. He rose through the ranks as was befitting of
one of his position in life and became a well-respected general. He was a
leader known for such radical behavior as marching with his troops and
sleeping alongside him. Had this occurred only infrequently, one might
Hadrian's Wall
postulate that it was only for effect, but as it was a mark of the majority
of his campaigns, it would seem to be a deep felt command style.
Hadrian was also known for his architecture. It is theorized that Hadrian
actually had a hand in the design of many of the buildings that were
erected by his order. The most obvious construct of Hadrian's reign is by
far Hadrian's Wall, built to defend Roman Britain from the Scottish Picts
in the North. More impressive and important was the construction by
Hadrian of a series of defenses stretching between the Rhine and Danube
Rivers. Although these defenses where mostly of wood and failed to
survive very long, they did serve to protect Rome against the Germanic
tribes that were much more of a threat to the Empire than the Picts were.
Entrance Arch to old Athens And, of great use to the Empire and to Greece in particular, Hadrian did
much to improve the infrastructure of the East, adding new roads,
Constructed by Hadrian
aqueducts, temples, theatres, circuses, and other city improvements.
Antinous
But even knowing that Antinous drowned in itself tells us little. It may
have been an accident. One theory purports that perhaps he was a victim
of a boating accident, tipping over a small boat which he sailing.
However, not only is there no evidence for this, but it would have been
sheer stupidity for Antinous to have been on a small boat in the section
of the Nile he is thought to have drowned in (IE that by Antinopolis)
and the Nile celebrations he is theorized to have been participating in
were that year very subdued on account of the low flooding. If we
ignore the possibility of an accidental death, this leaves us with two
options: sacrifice or suicide, or perhaps most likely, a combination
thereof. It is sacrifice to which the writers of the ancient world most
often seem to indicate.
"As Christ died for to That Antinous may have sacrificed himself has much support. Firstly, he
save mankind, so was at the time in Egypt. The last two floodings of the Nile had been
Antinous expired at unsatisfactory and there was an ancient tradition in Egypt to send a
least for the Roman sacrifice to drown in the river as a way of influencing the river gods to
Empire." send better floods in upcoming years. There was undoubtedly much talk
-Beloved and God,
Royston Lambert of reviving that custom in 130 for a third drought would bring famine to
Egypt, which would lead to turmoil in the Empire. That persons
drowned in the Nile tended to be deified on death may well have
appealed to Antinous.
Secondly, there was a theory in ancient Greece that by dying one could
add years to the life of the one for whom one died. The anti-psyche, as
the Greeks referred to the custom, was a furthering of the concept that
love freely given has the power to heal. That Hadrian was at the time
suffering from the illness that was later to kill him is quite possible and
Antinous may have thought that his death would heal the Emperor, who
had only days before saved Antinous's life when a hunted lion nearly
felled him.
Coins depecting the lion
hunt on which Hadrain One may well wonder why a young and vibrant man would sacrifice
saved the life of Antinous by himself for his Emperor and for Rome. There is the obvious answer that
slaying the cat. people often do strange and illogical things for love. Antinous may well
have believed that he would win immortality in the waters of the Nile
and hence may not have seen his death as an end to his life. And,
although there is no direct evidence that Antinous was suffering from a
depression, he had to have realized that he was passing the age of
eromenos. Within a year or two at most Antinous would either have to
give up his position as royal favorite or accustom himself to the
condemnation, "pathetic." Whatever would become of Antinous after his
decline from favorite could only be a lessening of position and if he
truly loved Hadrian he would undoubtedly be alarmed at the prospect of
ending their relationship not only for reasons of status, but for reasons
of the heart. Or, perhaps, Antinous had simply grown to feel shame at
his position and was driven into the waters with a sense of helplessness
and lack of self worth that could scarcely be considered rare in teenagers
of any time period.
For whatever reason Antinous entered the waters of the Nile, he did
obtain a form of immortality. Had he passed quietly from his role as
favorite he may well have disappeared from history, but with his death
and Hadrian's response to it, he was assured a place in future
remembrance.
Deifying Antinous
It is unclear as to who first proclaimed the deity of Antinous. Emperor
Hadrian was grief stricken by the death of his favorite to the point that
many contemporaries wondered if he was still able to do his job
properly. It was not uncommon for the admirers of youth prematurely
deceased to make a great show of despair and that Hadrian had not only
lost his beloved but most likely felt deep guilt for the death, whether it
was suicide, sacrifice, or a simple accident. The problem was that as
Emperor, Hadrian was expected to be able to separate his private grief
from his public self, which he seemed to have great difficulty doing.
Statue of Osiris-Aninous Hadrian was to remain in morning for the next eight years, ending the
from Hadrian's Villa
period only with his death. He was surrounded by sculptures of
circa 117-138 AD
Antinous as a god and dedicated numerous temples to the new deity
throughout the Empire as well as the Antinous's largest monument, the
Nile city of Antinioopolis. A new star was discovered promptly after
Antinous's death and given his name in the theory that it was his soul
shiny down on Earth. A certain bright red flower was quickly renamed
Antinoeios, wreaths of which would be given to winners in the
competitions held in Antinous's name. A poet named Pancrates wrote a
Homeric epic about the last lion hunt Antinous participated in, during
which Hadrian had to intercede to save the boy's life. Pancrates was
immediately granted a life membership into the Museion by the
Emperor. Soon statues and poetry dedicated to the young god
abounded.
That the Emperor could believe that his mortal companion had
transferred to a god is certainly odd, but not drastically so. The better
question would be as to why other people where willing to believe in
the boy-god.
For the Egyptians, it was not difficult to accept the new deity. The
believed he had sacrificed himself into the Nile in order to help them;
worship was the least they could do for him. There was a whole
pantheon of Nile gods who had entered the river to serve Osiris; they
had once been human and were now minor gods. By Egyptian standards
this was perfectly normal.
For the Greeks, the idea of a young local boy turned hero in the cause
of love would have had an undeniable appeal. In his home province of
Arcadia, Antinous was warmly accepted as an aspect of the god
Hermes, the renowned mediator who was also rumored to have been
born in Arcadia. Others saw in the beautiful youth aspects of the
popular god Dionysos, patron of the arts, wine, cordiality, and fertility.
It has long been an argument for a cold shoulder from Rome that the
local provinces did not issue coins to Antinous as most of the outer
provinces did. However, this argument is rather lacking since the
provinces in question did not have the right to issue independent
coinage.
A Roman Bust of Antinous
Although Italy seems to have had little reason to accept Antinous's
initial divinity other than the will of the Emperor that he be so
recognized, there is evidence that the followers of Antinous were to be
found in Rome until the rise of the Christian Emperors.
It is thought that on his way to Greece, Hadrian may have passed briefly
through Judea. The exact details of several edicts affecting the Jewish
peoples are confused in that they seem to have been issued sometime in
either 130 or 131. If they were in fact passed in 131, they may well have
been a result of Hadrian's grief. Early in his reign, Hadrian had outlawed
castration. He extended this in 130 or 131 to include circumcision, a
practice used by Egyptians and Arabs but of particular religious
importance to the Jews. The Egyptians were later to be given certain
exemptions to this law, but Hadrian showed no such favor to the Jewish.
The Jewish holy city of Jerusalem was re-founded by Hadrian as a
Roman colony with Greek settlers. In further disregard for Jewish
beliefs, Hadrian built a temple to Jupiter on the very spot where a great
Temple of the Jews, a center stone of Jewish religion, had stood. This
action seems particularly out of character for Hadrian, who had in the
past seemed well inclined towards the Jews and had extended much
more religious tolerance towards the Christians than most other non-
Christian Emperors did. This lack of regard for the Jewish people was to
result in not only severe headaches for Hadrian, but in troubles that are
still effecting the world nearly two thousand years later.
In the summer of 131, Hadrian spent touring Greece, where he was met
with a warm reception. He probably stopped briefly in Bithynion, the
birth place of Antinous, where he was gifted with numerous statues of
his likeness and most likely spent some time working out the rights and
plans for the new cult of Antinous.
After touring Greece Hadrian seems to have disappeared again, this time
not for four months but for four years. All that is really known about his
location from 132 to 136 is that on the 5th of May, 134, he wrote a letter
in Rome. It is thought likely that he spent two years touring parts of his
Empire, returning to Rome in early Spring, 134. In Rome, Hadrian
completed his great legal codification and his mausoleum, which still
Hadrian's Mausoleum stands on the banks of the Tiber and suggests a preoccupation with
death.
With Hadrian's obvious illness and "advanced" age (he was sixty), came
another unavoidable concern. As Sabina and his personal tastes had
ascertained, Hadrian had no heir. His nearest blood relative, a great-
nephew names Fuscus, was at the time twenty three and in Hadrian's
mind too impressionable for the throne, particularly in light of the man's
devious grandfather, whom Hadrian had long held a grudge against.
Instead, Hadrian adopted Lucius Commodus, who know became Aelius
Ceasar, a thirty-five year old who had perhaps taken Antinous's position.
The public reaction to this was one of marked opposition; it cost
Hadrian quite a bit of gold to settle the populace into acceptance of the
highly unsuitable heir. It has been theorized that perhaps Hadrian
Commodus- promoted Commodus under the assumption that he would die of the
Lucius Ceionius
illness from which he was suffering soon after taking the throne, leaving
Aelius Caeser
it to his son-in-law, the vastly popular Marcus Aurelius. However, as it
turned out, Commodus's illness dealt its final stroke when it drove
Commodus to overdose on a medication that was supposed to have
given him the strength to address the Senate on January 1st, 138, while
Hadrian was still living.
Hadrian was again devastated at the loss of a man who was definitely a
friend and quite possibly a lover. To make matters worse, in early 138,
or possibly late 137, Fuscus, enraged at being overlooked for the throne,
attempted to hatch a plot against Hadrian on the advice of his
grandfather. Hadrian had Fuscus executed and developed a paranoia
about the motives of everyone around him. Anyone who had ever felt a
hope that they would be chosen to succeed him was now fearful of the
Emperor's actions as he ranted dire threats. When Hadrian insisted on
the suicide of his brother-in-law for little reason, the man complied but
before dying issues a cure that Hadrian would long for a death that
would evade him.
After naming Antoninus heir, Hadrian withdrew from politics and public
life. True to his curse, Hadrian had lost all desire to live and his pain had
Antoninus Pius reached the point of the unbearable. He turned to active attempts at
suicide, but the dagger was forced from his weakened hand and the
doctor he order to poison him took the poison himself rather than kill his
Emperor. Enraged, Hadrian ordered the deaths of all those who stood in
way of his own death, bitterly commenting that he had the power to kill
everyone but himself. Antoninus calmly rescinded the orders and
Hadrian continued to suffer. Finally, in Naples, Hadrian took vast
amounts of medications to force an overdose. And hence he died at the
age of sixty two after nearly twenty one years of rule on the 10th of July,
138, hated by all of Rome despite undeniably being one of the greatest
of the Roman Emperors.
After his death, when most of the people who had supposedly been
victims of the bloodlust of Hadrian's last year began to crawl out of
hiding and back into Roman public life, it became clear that the
supposed reign of terror had been a mental paranoia rather than a reality.
Even so, the Senate had to be forced by Antoninus to grant Hadrian the
divine honors generally bestowed on the empirical person after death or
even to allow his ashes into the Mausoleum. Like his life, Hadrian's
death had much more of a heartfelt effect on the peoples of Greece, who
genuinely grieved his passing while the people of Rome coldly turned
their backs on his memory.
The remains of the temples of Antinous imply that they were modest
buildings of small wealth. However, the god was offered daily food and
drink, birth and death festivals, and a faith filled with many mysteries
and initiations. While Antinous was sometimes identified with the
Imperial cult, he was held in more value a deity independent of the royal
family. Unlike the Imperial deities, Antinous kept his human personality
on Olympus. And, as it has oft been put, the people developed a belief in
Antinous (said by some to parallel a faith in Jesus) while few ever
bothered to hold a belief in the Imperials.
The main role which Antinous was seen to play is similar to a great
Antinous-Dionysos
number of other deities and it speaks of his character that he was not
simply lost among them. The most obvious thing about the god Antinous
was that he had gained divinity by rescued Hadrian from death and then
triumphing over his own death. Thus he was seen as a friend to the
deceased, a guardian of the soul and an escort through the realms of
Hades. Dionysos, although mostly known as a god of fertility, was also
known as the "Lord of Souls" after his journey into the underworld to
rescue his mother, Semele. Hermes was another famous conductor of
souls who was known to have led Persephone back from the underworld
to this world on the behest of her mother. Antinous also had an obvious
connection to the god Osiris, who was famous for being saved from
death by Isis and who latter went on to save his brothers from the
underworld. The obelisk that Hadrian constructed for Antinous states that
after his death Antinous was "raised again to life" to become a god, much
like another deity then rising in popularity, Jesus Christ.
The god Antinous was a diverse deity with many facets. Although some
would argue that this is a lack of focus was a detriment, it can also be
seen as a strength as it allowed his cult to spread much further than a
more focused worship could have.
Antinous was the last great god to arise from the Roman Empire. A
beautiful provincial youth who became the beloved of an Emperor and
then a god, Antinous was a strikingly popular figure and a last
manifestation of an Ancient spirit that would soon be lost to the world.
His name is still known, his features still recognized, and his story even
now kindles interest, reverence, and moral controversy. His name is
paraded as both a banner of gay pride through history and as a symbol of
the decadence of the Roman Empire. However, no matter what may be
thought of his morals and deeds, it is very hard to argue that providing
fuel for close to two millennia of debate and speculation is not a
remarkable achievement for a small town Grecian boy.