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Heliogabalus is best known for the acts of debauchery that were supposed to have characterised his regime. After his death many stories circulated about his sexual perversities - including the claim that he had an artificial vagina cut into his body. He was also supposed to have smothered to death guests at a dinner with a mass of sweet-smelling rose petals dropped from above (see The Roses of Heliogabalus).
For these reasons Heliogabalus became something of a hero to the Decadent movement in the late nineteenth century. He appears in many paintings and poems as the epitome of an amoral aesthete. Various famous works were inspired by the life and character of Heliogabalus and they include:
Preceded by: Macrinus (217 - 218) |
Roman emperors |
Followed by: Alexander Severus (222 - 235) |
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