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Hadrian Empire and Conflict
24 July to 26 October 2008

About.com Rating 3.5

By Laura Porter, About.com

Statue of Hadrian as Mars, AD125-130. Rome, Italy. On loan from the Musei Capitolini, Rome.

Statue of Hadrian as Mars, AD125-130. Rome, Italy. On loan from the Musei Capitolini, Rome.

© Copyright Musei Capitolini
This special exhibition at the British Museum explores the life, love, and legacy of Rome's most enigmatic emperor, Hadrian (reigned AD 117–138).

Visitor Information

Tickets

Adults: £12
See full ticket information, including booking details, on the British Museum Hadrian website.

Tickets are also available from Superbreak.

Events

Highlights include late nights lectures, debates and films, family activities throughout August, and various workshops, performances, and food demonstrations. Pick up an events program or see the British Museum Hadrian website.

Find Out More at The British Museum

Galleries
  • Room 23 -- Greek and Roman sculpture
  • Room 49 -- Roman Britain
  • Room 69 -- Greek and Roman life
  • Room 70 -- Roman Empire
Free Daily Eye-Opener Tours
  • 11.15am -- Gods and goddesses of Roman Britain, Room 49
  • 3.15pm -- Ancient Rome, Room 70

Hadrian Hands On Desk
Daily 11am - 4pm, Room 1
Handle authentic objects from the time of the Emperor Hadrian.
Free. No need to book, just drop in.

Download audio and video podcasts on Hadrian and selected galleries at www.britishmuseum.org/hadrian.

About the Roman Emperor Hadrian

Marble Bust of Hadrian in military dress 125-130 AD.

Marble Bust of Hadrian in military dress 125-130 AD

© Trustees of the British Museum
The Roman Emperor Hadrian (117 to 138AD) is best known for his passion for Greek culture, interest in architecture, his love for Antinous, and of course the eponymous wall he built between England and Scotland, then called Caledonia. This exhibition looks beyond this established image and offers new perspectives on his life and legacy, exploring the sharp contradictions of his personality and his role as a ruthless military commander. Incorporating recent scholarship and the latest spectacular archaeological discoveries, the exhibition will feature over 180 objects from 28 lenders from Italy to Georgia, from Israel to Newcastle. Loans of dramatic sculpture, exquisite bronzes and architectural fragments have been brought together and displayed for the first time in the UK, alongside famous objects from the Museum's own collection such as the iconic bronze head of Hadrian and the Vindolanda tablets. This exhibition is being held in the Round Reading Room, often compared to one of Hadrian's architectural masterpieces, the Pantheon in Rome.
Hadrian's family were originally from Spain. As the Roman Empire expanded and became more diverse in the 1st and 2nd century AD it became possible for people outside the traditional elite to come to power. Hadrian was adopted by his predecessor Trajan, also a Spaniard, on his deathbed. By the time of Hadrian's accession, the Roman Empire covered much of Europe, northern Africa and the Middle East. But Hadrian recognized imperial overstretch and acted quickly to re-draw the empire's borders, to consolidate and strengthen rather than continuing the expansive campaigns of his predecessor. His first act on coming to power was to withdraw the Roman forces from Mesopotamia, present- day Iraq. Another example of this consolidation was the wall he had built in the north of England to mark the furthest reach of his empire. Hadrian was remarkable in that he traveled extensively across his empire, meeting more of his people than any other emperor before him.

Military Man and a Homosexual

Coin with portrait of young Hadrian. Romulus on the reverse. (BMC Hadrian 528)

Coin with portrait of young Hadrian. Romulus on the reverse. (BMC Hadrian 528)

© Trustees of the British Museum
Hadrian was a man of great contradiction in both his personality and reign: a military man and homosexual, he combined ruthless suppression of dissent with cultural tolerance. He reacted with great ferocity against the Jewish Revolt in 132 AD (examples of poignant objects belonging to Jewish rebels hiding in caves near Jerusalem are included in the exhibition), but he was also a dedicated philhellene, passionate about Greek culture. He took a young Greek male lover, Antinous, who accompanied him on his travels around the empire. In AD 130, Antinous drowned in mysterious circumstances in Egypt. Consumed by grief, Hadrian founded a new city, Antinoupolis, close to the spot where he died and had Antinous declared a god, linked to the Egyptian deity Osiris. A cult of Antinous-Osiris sprang up resulting in statues, busts and silverware featuring the image of the newly deified youth.

A central theme of Hadrian's life and his legacy can be found in his strong personal interest in architecture. Under his patronage, highly innovative, iconic buildings were constructed throughout the empire and form a major part of his legacy. The most famous are the Pantheon in Rome and his magnificent residence at Tivoli, a few miles east of the capital. The villa was like a small city, the empire in miniature. It evoked famous sites in Greece and Egypt and was a playground for new architecture, filled with exquisite works of art. The villa is still being excavated and exciting new finds and research are being presented in the exhibition.

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