Sunday, July 20, 2008

Hadrian

Hadrian is probably emperor of whom people in Britain are most likely to have heard, through his association with the Wall that runs across Northumberland and Cumbria. But not many people will know much more than that about him. His biography has not really seeped into the public consciousness. I can't, for instance, think of a single screen portrayal of Hadrian off the top of my head, whereas I can immediately think of at least two or three for the likes of Augustus, Claudius, Nero, Vespasian, and other first century AD rulers. I'm sure such portrayals of Hadrian exist, and if anyone wants to point them out I'll be happy to hear of them, but it doesn't change my point. The fact that I can't think of any shows how little Hadrian is known in this respect.

The British Museum's new exhibition clearly means to change that. I'll be talking about the exhibition itself after I go on August 3rd. What I want to write about now is the media commentary that's appeared in advance of the opening. There have been articles in The Guardian, The Telegraph and Sunday Telegraph, Times and Sunday Times. The BBC repeated a somewhat superficial Timewatch programme on Hadrian's Wall, featured the exhibition on Newsnight Review, and showed a not-too bad, if occasionally overheated, documentary by Dan Snow (all of which are still available, if you're in the UK, on the BBC's iPlayer page, though they'll gradually disappear over the next week). And that no doubt only scratches the surface.

What strikes me is how pro-Hadrian almost all of this coverage has been. A good example is this Guardian editorial; faults are noted, but overall he's seen as a good thing. Snow, though not ignoring such things as the suppression of Jewish identity, in an event as traumatic as the destruction of the Temple at Jerusalem in AD 70, cannot hide his admiration of the man. Articles talk admiringly of how Hadrian pulled out of a war in Mesopotamia, modern Iraq (take heed, America's new president, seems to be the message).

But are these pieces all treating him as too modern, too much the benevolent dictator, too much someone we can identify with? After all, this was a man who was so hated by the Senate that only the threat of civil war forced through approval of his deification. His relationship with Antinoos always seems accompanied in these modern reports by a comment to the effect that such a liaison would not raise an eyebrow in the Roman world. Well, yes the ancients had different attitudes to sex between men than those we have, but, as Dan Snow reveals as he reads a passage from Aurelius Victor (De Caesaribus 14), reporting rumours attacking Hadrian for his lasciviousness, there were some Romans who though Hadrian went too far in this respect. I don't particularly want to go on about this, not least because I've already written on the subject, but I do wonder if we still can't see this emperor clearly.

Fortunately, we still have Mary Beard. She concludes a lengthy piece in The Guardian by pointing out how Hadrian's image is something that we have invented for ourselves, the modern version going back I would say to when he was canonized by Gibbon (whom Beard does not mention) as one of the good emperors. She points out how the goalposts are moved, partly because of the state of the evidence. Where Nero can only be seen as a tyrant, she says, if Hadrian does the same thing, it gets a much more favourable spin put on it. She's absolutely right.

3 comments:

Gavin Burrows said...

I'd been wondering a similar thing. How come Hadrian warrants a blockbuster show when he never gets his face in any films? Here's my take...

He's basically the guy that built that wall, you know the one that kept out them barbaric Picts and their claims for bogus asylum. Since the one thing we know him for is supposed to have benefited us English, he must have been a good guy. Which obviously also makes him a bit dull.

Compare the statue image of him on the show's poster to almost any received image of Nero. He's sober, bearded and maybe slightly stern - a face you could do business with. Nero's almost always portrayed as jowelly and licentious. Nero on the other hand could probably throw a wicked party! (Has any actor ever played Nero as less than middle aged, when he actually died at thirty.)

Best thing about Snow's documentary - no cheapskate re-enactments! Most confusing thing - I didn't really get was Rome's attitude to homosexuality was at the time. Was it supposed to be a bit like Britain in the Sixties, don't ask, don't tell? Or okay for affairs but not for public civic partnerships?

Tony Keen said...

He is certainly treated as an honorary Englishman. The truth is probably that he could throw just as wild a party as Nero, but we don't think of him that way.

Charles Laughton and Peter Ustinov were both about the right age and the right build when they played Nero - others tend to be either too old (Derek Francis), too thin (Michael Sheen), or both (Patrick Cargill).

Yes, no reenactments is good. They actually eat up budgets far more than traipsing around the Mediterranean in a sunhat.

Bearing in mind that, of course, there were as many attitudes to individual sexuality in the Roman period as there are now, I think it was mostly understood that men did engage in sexual relationships with other men, though it wasn't considered seemly to be the penetrated rather than the penetratee. And there was a sense of decorum expected, which many felt that Hadrian transgressed.

Gavin Burrows said...

He is certainly treated as an honorary Englishman.

Perhaps even his name helps. It sounds so much more accessible than Trajan,Tiberius or Caligula. It'll be interesting to see how well attended the exhibition is. (I'm cynically assuming that won't be a result of its quality or otherwise.)

Yes, no reenactments is good. They actually eat up budgets far more than traipsing around the Mediterranean in a sunhat.

There even seemed the funds for a very fetching white scarf.

I think it was mostly understood that men did engage in sexual relationships with other men, though it wasn't considered seemly to be the penetrated rather than the penetratee.

So push a chair against the door and don't get lumbered with the girly role?