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                    <TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><text xml:base="urn:cts:pdlrefwk:viaf88890045.003.perseus-eng1"><body xml:lang="eng" n="urn:cts:pdlrefwk:viaf88890045.003.perseus-eng1"><div type="textpart" subtype="alphabetic_letter" n="E"><div type="textpart" subtype="entry" xml:id="elagabalus-bio-1" n="elagabalus_1"><head><persName xml:lang="la"><surname full="yes">Elaga'balus</surname></persName></head><p>The Roman emperor commonly known by this name, was the son of Julia Soemias and Sextus
      Varius Marcellus, and first cousin once removed to Caracalla. [See genealogical table prefixed
      to the article <hi rend="smallcaps">CARACALLA.</hi>] He was born at Emesa about <date when-custom="205">A. D. 205</date>, and was originally called <hi rend="smallcaps">VARIUS</hi>
      <hi rend="smallcaps">AVITUS</hi>
      <hi rend="smallcaps">BASSIANUS</hi>, a series of appellations derived from his father
      (Varius), maternal grandfather (Avitus), and maternal greatgrandfather (Bassianus). While yet
      almost a child he became, along with his first cousin Alexander Severus, priest of Elagabalus,
      the Syro-Phoenician Sun-god, to whose worship a gorgeous temple was dedicated in his native
      city. The history of his elevation to the purple, to which in the earlier portions of his life
      he was not supposed to possess any claim, was effected in a very singular manner by his
      grandmother, Julia Maesa. She had long enjoyed the splendors and dignities of the imperial
      court in the society of her sister, Julia Domna, the wife of Septimius Severus and the mother
      of Geta and Caracalla. But after the murder of the latter by Macrinus, Maesa was compelled to
      return to Syria, there to dwell in unhonoured retirement. While still smarting under a reverse
      peculiarly galling to her haughty temper, she received intelligence that the army was already
      disgusted by the parsimony and rigid discipline of their new ruler, and was sighing for the
      luxury enjoyed under his predecessor. Maesa, skilled in court intrigues and familiar with
      revolutions, quickly perceived that this feeling might be turned to her own advantage. A
      report was circulated with industrious rapidity that Elagabalus was not the son of his reputed
      father, but the offspring of a secret commerce between Soemias and Caracalla. The troops
      stationed in the vicinity to guard the Phoenician border had already testified their
      admiration of the youth, whom they had seen upon their visits to Emesa gracefully performing
      the imposing duties of his priesthood, and, having been further propitiated by a liberal
      distribution of the wealth hoarded by Maresa, were easily persuaded to receive Elagabalus with
      his whole family into the camp, and to salute him as their sovereign by the title of M.
      Aurelius Antoninus, as if he had really been the undoubted progeny and lawful heir of their
      late monarch. These proceedings took place on the 16th of May, <date when-custom="213">A. D.
       213</date>. Macrinus having received <pb n="7"/> information of what had happened, despatched
      Julianus with a body of troops to quell the insurrection. But these, instead of obeying the
      orders of their general, were prevailed upon to join the mutineers. Whereupon Macrinus
      advanced in person to meet his rival, was signally defeated in a battle fought on the borders
      of Syria and Phoenicia, and having escaped in disguise was soon afterwards discovered, brought
      back, and put to death. [<hi rend="smallcaps">MACRINUS.</hi>] The conqueror hastened to
      Antioch, from whence he forwarded a letter to the senate, in which he at once assumed, without
      waiting for the form of their consent, all the designations of Caesar, Imperator, son of
      Antoninus, grandson of Severus, Pius, Felix, Augustus, and Proconsul, together with the
      tribunitian authority. At the same time he inveighed against the treachery of Macrinus towards
      his master, his low birth, and his presumption in daring to adopt the title of emperor,
      concluding with a promise to consult the best interests of all classes of the community, and
      declaring that he intended to set up Augustus, whose age when he first grasped the reins of
      power he compared with his own, as a model for imitation. No resistance to these claims was
      testified on the part of the senate or people, for we find from a curious inscription,
      discovered some years ago at Rome, that the Fratres Arvales assembled in the Capitol on the
      14th of July, that is scarcely more than five weeks after the decisive victory over Macrinus,
      in order to offer up their annual vows for the health and safety of their young prince, who is
      distinguished by all the appellations enumerated above.</p><p>Elagabalus entered upon his second consulship in <date when-custom="219">A. D. 219</date>, at
      Nicomedeia, and from thence proceeded to Rome, where he celebrated his accession by
      magnificent games, by prodigal largesses, and by laying the foundation of a sumptuous shrine
      for his tutelary deity. Two years afterwards, when he had rendered himself alike odious and
      contemptible by all manner of follies and abominations, he was persuaded by the politic Maesa
      to adopt his first cousin, Alexander Severus, to proclaim him Caesar, and nominate him
      consul-elect. Soon after, having repented of these steps, he endeavoured to procure the death
      of his kinsman, but was frustrated, partly by the watchfulness of his grandmother and partly
      by the zeal of the soldiers, with whom Alexander was a great favourite A repetition of a
      similar attempt the year following (A. D. 222) proved his own destruction; for a mutiny having
      arisen among the praetorians in consequence, he was slain along with Soemias in the camp while
      endeavouring to appease their fury. The two bodies were dragged through the streets and cast
      into the Tiber, and hence the epithet or nickname of <hi rend="ital">Tiberinus,</hi> one of
      the many applied in scorn to the tyrant after his death.</p><p>The reign of this prince, who perished at the age of eighteen, after having occupied the
      throne for three years, nine months, and four days, dating from the battle of Antioch, was
      characterised throughout by an accumulation of the most fantastic folly, and tire most frantic
      superstition, together with impurity so bestial that the particulars almost trauscend time
      limits of credibility. Had he confined himself to the absurd practical jokes of which so many
      have been recorded; had he been satisfied within shipping on the tongues of peacocks and
      nightingales, with feeding lions on pheasants and parrots, with assembling companies of guests
      who were all fat, or all lean, or all tall, or all short, oi all bald, or all gouty, and
      regaling them with mock repasts; had he been content to occupy his leisure hours in
      solemnizing the nuptials of his favourite deity with the Trojan Pallas or the African Urania,
      and in making matches between the gods and goddresses all over Italy, men might have laughed
      goodnaturedly, anticipating an increase of wisdom with increasing years. But unhappily even
      these trivial amusements were not unfrequently accompanied with cruelty and bloodshed. His
      earnest devotion to that god whose minister he had been, and to whose favour he probably
      ascribed his elevation, might have been regarded as excusable or even justifiable had it not
      been attended with persecution and tyranny. The Roman populace would with easy toleration have
      admitted and worshipped a new divinity, but they beheld with disgust their emperor appearing
      in public, arrayed in the attire of a Syrian priest, dancing wild measures and chanting
      barbaric hymns; they listened with horror to the tales of magic rites, and of human victims
      secretly slaughtered; they could scarcely submit without indignation to the ordinance that an
      outlandish idol should take precedence of their fathers' gods and of Jupiter himself, and
      still less could they consent to obey the decree subsequently promulgated, that it should not
      be lawful to offer homage at Rome to any other celestial power. Buut by far the blackest of
      his offences were his sins against the decencies of both public and private life, the details
      of which are too horrible and too disgusting to admit of description. (<bibl n="D. C. 77.30">D. C. 77.30</bibl>-<bibl n="D. C. 77.41">41</bibl>, lxxix.; Herodian, 5.4-23 ; Lamprid. <hi rend="ital">Elagab.;</hi> Capitolin. <hi rend="ital">Macrin. ;</hi>
      <bibl n="Eutrop. 8.13">Eutrop. 8.13</bibl>; Aurel. Vict. <hi rend="ital">de Caes.</hi> xxiii.,
       <hi rend="ital">Epit.</hi> xxiii.) A coin of Elagabalus is given under <hi rend="smallcaps">PAULA</hi>, the wife of Elagabalus. </p><byline>[<ref target="author.W.R">W.R</ref>]</byline></div></div></body></text></TEI>
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