by Brian Thornton
[Today's entry is the latest in my on-going miniseries cataloging infamous bastards throughout history. For previous entries, click here, here, and here.]
I will not
describe the barbaric chants which [Elagabalus], together with his mother and
grandmother, chanted to [Elagabal], or the secret sacrifices that he offered to
him, slaying boys and using charms, in fact actually shutting up alive in the
god’s temple a lion, a monkey and a snake, and throwing in among them human
genitals, and practicing other unholy rites.
— Dio Cassius
If you’re going
to catalogue historical bastardry throughout the ages, you’d better plan to
touch on that colorful period in the historical record known as “Imperial
Rome.” As with the Papacy, the sheer
number of men who wore the emperor’s purple robes over the empire’s five-plus
centuries lends itself to the likelihood that the throne would occasionally be
occupied by someone so “eccentric” that he stood out in a crowded field of
“personalities” like Michael Jordan playing basketball with a bunch of
kindergarteners.
Elagabalus was so
much more than an emperor. He was also
the hereditary high priest of a Syrian sun god cult that worshipped a craggy,
two-ton phallic-shaped meteorite as the actual physical incarnation of his god
(“Elagabal,” or “El-Gabal,” from which he derived his nick-name). He was also a transsexual cross-dresser who
wore more make-up than most strippers, and allegedly worked as a hooker out of
his rooms in the imperial palace.
And that’s just
the tip of the iceberg (or, if you prefer, the meteorite).
Elagabalus was a
shirt-tail relation of the great (and ruthless) emperor Septimius Severus. His grandmother was Severus’
sister-in-law. When Severus’ direct line
died out (and the story of how that all played out is grist for a future post), Elagabalus’ grandmother (Julia Maesa) and mother (Julia Soaemias)
schemed along with a eunuch named Gannys to put the boy forward as a plausible
claimant to the imperial throne.
The kid was all
of fourteen. But, a couple of battles,
an army proclamation declaring him emperor and an execution of the unpopular if
effective Gannys later, and Elagabalus (along with his mother and grandmother)
was on his way to Rome.
When he got there
he made quite a splash, not least because he brought his god with him.
Literally.
This massive “sky
stone” was ensconced in a new temple complex built expressly for it, right next
to the old Flavian Amphitheatre (what we know today as the “Colosseum”) on
Rome’s Palatine Hill, and named the “Elagaballium.”
The big rock even got its own coin! |
During Rome’s
annual Midsummer Day festival, the ancient writer Herodian reports:
[Elagabalus]
placed the sun god in a chariot adorned with gold and jewels and brought him
out from the city to the suburbs. A
six-horse chariot carried the divinity, the horses huge and flawlessly white,
with expensive gold fittings and rich ornaments. No one held the reins, and no one rode with
the chariot; the vehicle was escorted as if the god himself were the
charioteer. Elagabalus ran backward in
front of the chariot, facing the god and holding the horses’ reins. He made the whole journey in this reverse
fashion, looking up into the face of his god.
Aquilia Severa |
As if that
weren’t shaking things up enough for his new subjects, Elagabalus promptly
swept aside the old Roman pantheon of gods, and “married” his god Elagabal to
the Roman goddess Minerva. As a mortal
“echo” of this Heavenly union Elagabalus then did the truly unthinkable: he
took one of Rome’s Vestal Virgins as his wife.
Dedicated to the Roman mother goddess Vesta, whose service obliged these
priestesses to remain virgins during their thirty years of service. If one of them didn’t, the punishment was for
her to be buried alive. And Elagabalus
took one of them, a woman named Aquilia Severa as his wife not once, but twice!
In the four years
he was emperor Elagabalus took at least three different women as his wife. These marriages were likely arranged by his
grandmother and mother (“the Julias”) in order to help preserve the fiction that
“Imperator Marcus Aurelius Antoninus” was a solid, dependable Roman citizen and
emperor, rather than the capricious Syrian drag-queen high-priest of a
bloody-thirsty sun-worshipping cult. It
was hoped that keeping up this appearance would help cement support for his
reign. In fact, these two formidable
women proved themselves to be particularly shrewd and capable
administrators. Put simply, things ran
so smoothly in Rome and throughout the empire that for a while people didn’t
seem to mind how much of a “free spirit” their emperor appeared to be.
And a “free
spirit” he definitely was. Although
Romans had tolerated the tendency among some of their previous emperors to take
male lovers, homosexuality in ancient Rome was by and large frowned upon. Elagabalus flouted this attitude by taking as
his “husband” a big, burly slave from Caria; a charioteer of some skill named
Hierocles. One of his favorite roles to
play was that of the “cheating wife,” allowing himself to be “caught” in bed
with another man by Hierocles, who then beat the emperor (who apparently
enjoyed “rough trade”), at times so badly that ‘he had black eyes’ for days
afterward.
Probably
transsexual, Elagabalus seemed obsessed with becoming more like a woman, not
with just taking men to bed. The Historia Augusta reports that the emperor “had
the whole of his body depilated,” and according to the disapproving
contemporary historian and senator Dio Cassius, Elagabalus “had planned,
indeed, to cut off his genitals altogether,” but settled for having himself
circumcised as “a part of the priestly requirements” of his cult.
By the time
Elagabalus turned seventeen his continual nose-thumbing at Rome’s religious,
social and sexual norms began to take a toll on his public image. In 221 two different legions mutinied and
just barely missed proclaiming their respective generals “augustus” (“emperor”)
in his stead.
The formidable Julia Maesa |
She opted to
advance Bassianus Alexianus, another of her grandsons, as Elagabalus’ co-ruler
and “heir” (he was only four years younger than Elagabalus) with the ruling
name “Severus Alexander.” He too had a
strong-willed mother named “Julia” (Julia Mamea), who “guided his actions.”
At first
Elagabalus and his mother went along with the move. Within weeks, however, the senior emperor had
changed his mind and tried to have his younger cousin killed. A power struggled ensued. The modest, retiring Alexander was popular
with the people, and especially with the army.
It all finally
came to a head in March of 222, when Elagabalus flew into a rage during a
meeting with the commanders of his personal bodyguard (the Praetorian Guard,
which also acted as the city of Rome’s police force). Having been reminded again and again of the
“virtues” of his younger cousin, Elagabalus once more called for Alexander’s
arrest and execution, bitterly denouncing the Praetorians for preferring his
cousin to himself.
It was not a
smart thing to do this while still standing in the middle of their camp.
The emperor, only
just eighteen years old, was chased down by his own bodyguard and killed in one
of the camp latrines. Supposedly his
last words were, “Leave my mother alone!”
If those actually were his final wishes, they were ignored. His mother was killed right alongside
him. Their bodies were beheaded, and
dragged through the streets of Rome. The
corpse of Elagabalus wound up in the Tiber River: the sort of burial that
contemporary Roman law reserved for criminals.
Later historians
(especially Christians) whipped up improbable tales of human sacrifice
conducted by this teenaged demagogue, and speculated wildly about the various
depravities in which he might have indulged.
This speculation included the unlikely story of how “Heliogabalus” (sic)
invited several very important people to a dinner party only to have them
smothered to death under the weight of several hundred pounds of flowers. This painting trades upon that myth.
The truth as we
can divine it about Elagabalus is far more interesting. After all, what gender-confused, hormonally
addled teenager wouldn’t go off the rails if handed the literal “keys to the
kingdom”? It sure makes for one
fascinating bastard.
A modern artist's (rather tame) vision of Elagabalus' entry into Rome, complete with dancing girls and his big stone god |
See you in two weeks!
He sounds like a piece of work, but the Julias sound like a great story, too.
ReplyDeleteAbsolute power did - and does - make for some crazy emperors. And at least Elagabalus was less blood thirsty than, say, Caligula.
ReplyDeleteJudging from Granny Julia's scowl, she wasn't one to mess with. I like Roman history, but I wasn't familiar with this chapter. But what ripe pickings!
ReplyDeleteOh, my gosh! "I quote in elegiacs all the crimes of Elagabalus." I've known that lyric for forty years and I never looked him up! (Gilbert & Sullivan's "Major Generals Song.")
ReplyDeleteDang! I missed that one, Jeff!
ReplyDeleteWhy does this article admit that Empress Elagabalus is a trans woman and then refuse to call her the proper pronouns? She was the only Roman Empress in history. Shouldn't we respect that?
ReplyDeleteHe didnt finish the "surgery "/ trans ition. He opted only for circumcision You want the pronouns you got to make the commitment.
ReplyDelete