Hadrian was especially famous for his love affair with a young servant boy named Antinous. While touring Egypt, Antinous was killed, or perhaps killed himself, by drowning in the Nile. Stricken with grief, Hadrian founded the Egyptian city of Antinopolis[?]. For the rest of his life, Hadrian would have commissioned many hundred (thousands) of sculptures of Antinous in the manner of a Greek youth. The passion and depth of Hadrian's love for the boy was shown in busts and statues to be found all over Europe, featuring the boy's full lips and round cheeks.
A fragment from the Roman History of Dio Cassius as translated by Earnest Cary[?] in 1925:
A fascinating account of Hadrian's life and times, written in the form of a fictional autobiography, but based on a careful study of the authentic sources, is Marguerite Yourcenar, Mémoires d'Hadrien (1951); English translation Memoirs of Hadrian (New York 1954).
Preceded by: Trajan (98 - 117) |
Roman emperors |
Followed by: Antoninus Pius (138 - 161) |
Search Encyclopedia
|
Featured Article
|