born January 24, ad 76, Italica, Baetica? [now in Spain] died July 10, 138, Baiae [Baia], near Naples [Italy]
The artistic temperament of Hadrian manifested itself in his poetry, his architectural designs, his very style of life. Four complete poems of his composition survive; they illustrate an exceptional technical mastery of versification, although the manner of expression is often artificial and the subjects are slight. His most famous verses are the lines addressed to his soul and reportedly uttered as he lay dying. In architecture, the Emperor had a notorious quarrel with a leading contemporary architect, Apollodorus of Damascus, whom it is even alleged Hadrian had put to death. His ultimate artistic achievement was undoubtedly the villa he created for himself at Tivoli, outside Rome. Here the Emperor surrounded himself with elegant evocations of his travels; by landscaping and superior reproductions, he re-created the sights he most loved and thereby managed in his last years to experience the satisfactions of travel without ever leaving the shores of Italy.
Hadrian was not the best of patrons. Latin literature did not progress during his reign. The greatest Hadrianic authors, Suetonius the biographer, Juvenal the satirist, and Tacitus the historian, were all, in a sense, only survivors of the Trajanic age. They had no immediate literary heirs. Suetonius, although elevated to the important literary post of ab epistulis in the court during Hadrian’s first years, was summarily dismissed about 122. Probably there had been a literary quarrel. Of two eminent orators, Dionysius of Miletus and Favorinus of Arelate (in Gaul), Hadrian openly favoured and advanced the former; he then tried to overthrow him. Favorinus was living in exile toward the end of Hadrian’s reign. The Emperor’s tastes dominated the world.
In Rome itself, during his brief sojourns there, Hadrian left his memorial in several imposing buildings. Designs for the Temple of Rome and Venus provoked the conflict with Apollodorus. He completely rebuilt the Pantheon, which had been destroyed by fire in the reign of his predecessor. His own great tomb (the modern Castel Sant’Angelo) was inspired by an Augustan precedent, the Julio–Claudian mausoleum, at Rome.
Hadrian-bust-in-the-National-Archaeological-Museum-NaplesHadrian, bust in the National Archaeological Museum, Naples.[Credits : Anderson—Alinari/Art Resource, New York]
Hadrians-villa-Tivoli-ItalyHadrian’s villa, Tivoli, Italy[Credits : SCALA/Art Resource, New York]
This-head-of-a-statue-of-the-Roman-emperor-HadrianThis head of a statue of the Roman emperor Hadrian was excavated at Sagalassos, a site in Turkey.[Credits : Marc Waelkens/Sagalassos Archaeological Research Project]
The Emperor Hadrian ordered a wall to be built to separate the Romans from the barbarians of …[Credits : Acquired from Vast Video]
The emperor Hadrian ordered the construction of this wall during a visit to Britain in ad 120.[Credits : Acquired from Vast Video]
The Pantheon has undergone several changes over the centuries.[Credits : Acquired from Vast Video]
Hadrian’s Villa (Villa Adriana).[Credits : Copyright © 2004 AIMS Multimedia (www.aimsmultimedia.com)]
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