The 12 months AD 126 opened below the consulships of Marcus Annius Verus and Gaius Eggius Ambibulus, marking the formal starting of the civic 12 months in Rome. Over the next months, a number of modifications in workplace occurred, reflecting the customary rotation of consular appointments and Hadrian’s continued efforts to honour each established figures and constant supporters inside his circle.
Each males had been outstanding figures inside Hadrian’s circle. Marcus Annius Verus, a outstanding senator from Baetica in Spain, was an in depth affiliate of the emperor and grandfather of the longer term emperor Marcus Aurelius. His third consulship (106, 121, and 126) was a major honour and uncommon distinction, equalling that of Hadrian himself. It mirrored the emperor’s favour in the direction of the Annii Veri household, additional evidenced by his look after the younger Marcus Aurelius, whom he affectionately known as “Verissimus”. His colleague, Gaius Eggius Ambibulus, got here from Aeclanum in southern Italy (CIL IX, 1123) and likewise benefited from imperial patronage, as Hadrian granted his hometown the standing of colonia and supported enhancements alongside the By way of Appia between Aeclanum and Beneventum.

Lucius Valerius Propinquus, who had been governor of Gallia Aquitania from 123 to 125 (Birley, 1981), changed Verus on 1 March and served as his colleague for the rest of the primary nundinium of that 12 months. This courting and alternative are confirmed by proof from brick stamps bearing the pairing “Propinquus et Ambibulus”. One other pair, Lucius Cuspius Camerinus and Gaius Saenius Severus, are attested on army diplomas as consuls on 1 July (ZPE-194-231). Extra potential consuls for 126 embrace Sextus Julius Main (presumably legate of Legio III Augusta in 126) and Tiberius Iulius Iulianus Alexander (governor of Arabia in 125). This fast succession of consular pairs mirrored Hadrian’s efforts to fulfil obligations to advertise each conventional office-holders and his political allies (Eck & Weiss, 2005).
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Having lately returned from his in depth travels throughout the empire, together with Greece and the japanese provinces, Hadrian devoted a lot of 126 to Rome itself. The 12 months was marked by main constructing initiatives, non secular duties, and administrative reforms. Among the many most notable occasions was the dedication of the Templum Divorum, a big sacred precinct initially constructed by Domitian within the Campus Martius to honour his deified father, Vespasian, and brother, Titus. Hadrian celebrated the event with video games within the Circus, as recorded within the Fasti Ostienses, that includes 1,835 pairs of gladiators, making it an exceptionally massive spectacle (Smallwood, #24).

Imp(erator) Caesar Traianus Hadri]anus Aug(ustus) munu[s] / [edidit 3 t]emplum divoru[m] / [3 dedicavit ob quam] causam in circo / [3 munus editu]m et consumm[at(um)] / [3 pp(aribus)] MDCCCXXXV
[The emperor Hadrian] produced a present of gladiators . . . the Temple Divorum he devoted, for which purpose within the circus . . . the [a?] present of gladiators was produced and delivered to perfection with 1835 pairs of gladiators
The Templum Divorum was a big sacred complicated that included an open central courtyard, colonnaded porticoes, and shrines devoted to the imperial cult. It’s represented on a number of fragments of the Forma Urbis, which permits for a reasonably correct description. The enclosed portico, often known as the Porticus Divorum, was rectangular, about 200 metres lengthy and 55 broad and featured roughly thirty columns alongside the longer sides and sixteen alongside the shorter sides. On the north facet of the complicated, there have been two small tetrastyle prostyle temples dealing with one another: one devoted to the divine Titus (Aedes Divi Titi) and the opposite to the divine Vespasian (Aedes Divi Vespasiani). The doorway to the complicated was positioned on the centre of the north facet and consisted of a three-bay arch flanked by two buildings of unknown operate, constructed based on a megaron plan. The portico encircled a tree-lined esplanade, which included an altar on the south facet that could be recognized because the Altar of Mars, though it’s potential that this was a separate construction.
By the point of Hadrian, the complicated had both fallen into partial disrepair or remained unfinished, and Hadrian formally devoted (or rededicated) it, marking the event with lavish public video games recorded within the Fasti Ostienses.


By 126, a number of different necessary constructions commissioned by Hadrian within the Campus Martius had both been accomplished or had been nearing completion. As indicated by brick stamps, these included the Pantheon, the Basilica Neptuni immediately south of the Pantheon, the Baths of Agrippa and the Saepta Julia with its monumental gateway. Evidence for these restorations additionally comes from the Historia Augusta, and according to his coverage of modesty, he didn’t inscribe his personal identify on the restored constructing. As an alternative, he preserved the unique dedications to their founders. These restorations shaped a part of a broader effort by Hadrian to revive the reminiscence of Augustus and to affiliate himself with the Augustan legacy, particularly within the northern Campus Martius (Birley 1997).
He constructed public buildings in every single place and with out quantity, however he inscribed his personal identify on none of them besides the temple of his father Trajan. At Rome, he restored the Pantheon, the Voting-enclosure, the Basilica of Neptune, very many temples, the Discussion board of Augustus, the Baths of Agrippa, and devoted all of them within the names of their unique builders. Additionally, he constructed the bridge named after himself, a tomb on the banks of the Tiber, and the temple of the Bona Dea. HA, Hadr. 19.Sep 11

As well as, Hadrian raised the bottom degree within the northern Campus Martius, constructed embankments, and improved drainage to guard the realm from flooding. These efforts, largely accomplished by the mid-120s, additionally improved entry and visitors circulate and harmonised the realm’s ranges with the brand new pomerium line he established in 121. Across the Ara Pacis, Hadrian constructed a retaining wall (dated by brick stamps to 123 and later) and raised the bottom degree by about 1.80 to 1.88 metres on all sides, bringing the realm roughly degree with the higher friezes of the altar. This intervention required the creation of recent staircases to entry the altar, thereby enhancing the monument’s visibility and accessibility. He additionally constructed embankments alongside the Tiber River, as evidenced by inscribed embankment cippi dated from 121 to 124, and constructed new residential insulae and utilitarian horrea (storehouses) alongside the By way of Lata/Flaminia (Boatwright, 1987).
Different important initiatives nonetheless underway included the Temple of Venus and Roma (begun round 121–125), the Palazzo of the Gardens of Sallust (Horti Sallustiani), and the Athenaeum, a monumental centre for studying. The Horti Sallustiani, which had been imperial property, had been positioned on the northeastern fringe of Rome and lined elements of the Pincian and Quirinal hills. Essentially the most notable Hadrianic addition was the development of a monumental backyard constructing often known as the “Nymphaeum of the Horti Sallustiani” (often known as the “Aula Adrianea”). This constructing, dated by brick stamps to after 126, was a big, brick-faced concrete construction, nonetheless preserved to 4 tales in some locations. It featured a big, dome-covered round corridor designed for eating, flanked by rectangular rooms and annexes richly adorned with marble revetment, opus sectile flooring, stucco, and black-and-white mosaic pavements. Its architectural design intently resembled components of Hadrian’s Villa at Tivoli.
The Athenaem was a posh, consisting of a collection of huge auditoria organized alongside a curving plan, the place members of the Roman elite gathered to take heed to speeches, poetry, and philosophical discourse. These halls had been outfitted with tiers of marble seating dealing with a central area for declamation, reflecting a rigorously designed setting for efficiency and mental change. Constructed of brick and as soon as clad in marble, the Athenaeum shaped a part of Hadrian’s programme to advertise Rome as a centre of Greek and Latin studying.


Illustration by Simone Boni, Studio Inklink. © Soprintendenza Speciale Archeologia Belle Arti e Paesaggio di Roma.
Additionally, the Temple of the Deified Trajan and Plotina, which Hadrian commissioned to honour his adoptive father, Trajan, and Trajan’s spouse, Plotina, after their deification, was nonetheless below development, with Hadrian personally overseeing its progress. It was to be one of many few monuments on which he allowed his personal identify to seem, alongside these of Trajan and Plotina (HA, Hadr. 19.9). The temple was positioned north of Trajan’s Discussion board, between Trajan’s Column and the By way of Lata/Flaminia (fashionable By way of del Corso). It was of appreciable measurement, with architectural fragments indicating a scale even larger than that of the Pantheon. It probably had an octastyle (eight-column) façade and was flanked by porticoes, presumably with granite columns and white marble paving, although the precise plan is debated attributable to restricted archaeological stays.
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Whereas in Rome, Hadrian most likely resided within the Domus Augustiana, the imperial palace complicated on the Palatine Hill, in the course of the winter. Hadrian undertook important renovations to this palace to make it extra comfy in winter, notably between 126 and 132. The renovations centered on enhancing consolation, notably for winter use by putting in a hypocaust system for heating within the Cenatio Jovis, and altering the palace’s exterior to enhance its accessibility and look. Cenatio Jovis was a grand, formal eating area used for imperial banquets and necessary gatherings. Architecturally, the room was massive and imposing, designed to impress guests with the emperor’s energy and the grandeur of the imperial residence. The corridor featured an apse (a semicircular recess), and its ornament included engaged granite columns. The unique ground was lined by a brand new ground supported on brick pillars about 60 centimetres excessive. Nonetheless, the opus sectile ground dates to a later, Maxentian redecoration.


Writer: Cristiano64 (Wikimedia)
There have been additionally structural reinforcements, corresponding to buttressing within the Basilica of the Domus Augustiana and the addition of spur partitions and new rooms alongside the peristyle and porticoes, which modified each the operate and the visible impression of the palace’s facades. The renovations additionally included the development of tabernae (outlets or rooms) alongside the By way of Nova and the Clivus Victoriae, bringing the palace’s facade nearer to the Discussion board and enhancing communication between the palace and town beneath (Boatwright, 1987). The chronology of Hadrian’s renovations is established primarily by the evaluation of brick stamps discovered within the palace’s partitions and substructures, which point out that the principle section of Hadrianic renovation started round 126, with some later work dated by stamps to 129 (Boatwright, 1987).
Whereas Hadrian resided within the Domus Augustiana in the course of the winter months, he used his villa at Tivoli (Villa Adriana) as his summer season residence. In 126, the Tiburtine villa was nonetheless below lively development and being remodeled right into a grand imperial palace. Brick stamps and inscriptions point out that main constructing exercise continued by the 120s, with important work persevering with after 125. Throughout this era, his villa noticed the addition of extra conventional villa gildings, corresponding to pavilions, groves, and exedrae, in addition to main complexes, together with the Piazza d’Oro, the Small Baths, the Accademia, and the Roccabruna (Boatwright, 1987). Nonetheless, in the course of the summers of 126–128, Hadrian might already get pleasure from a wide selection of accomplished, luxurious buildings such because the Maritime Theatre and a number of tub complexes.


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In 126, Hadrian served as magister (grasp) of the Arval Brethren (Fratres Arvales), presiding over their rituals and paying for the erection of a constructing for the school in Rome. This was a mark of his munificence and non secular involvement. This position concerned main the annual rituals on the sacred grove of the Dea Dia, goddess of progress and fertility worshipped by the Arval Brethren, on 19 Might. As magister, he would have carried out the ceremonies, invited the school to the palace for sacrifices and a banquet, and funded the development of a small monument in Rome, maybe a shrine devoted to Dea Dia (Alföldy, 1994). A fragmentary inscription celebrates his motion as a ‘file of his extraordinary generosity’ and, with the emperor’s authorisation (CIL VI 970).
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[collegium fratrum Arvalium]
[per]missu Hadr[iani Augusti]
[aedicul?]am fecit Imp(eratore) Caes(are) [Hadriano Aug(usto) mag(istro)],
M(arco) Annio Vero III C(aio) Egg[io Ambibulo co(n)s(ulibus)],
[ut docume]ntum esset Romae inso[litae munificentiae eius]
5 [erga fratres Arvales, q]uos Imp(eratoris) Hadriani magazine[isterio —]
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The school of the Arval Brethren, with the permission of Hadrian Augustus, constructed a small shrine, below the Emperor Caesar Hadrian Augustus, serving as magister,
within the consulship of Marcus Annius Verus for the third time and Gaius Eggius Ambibulus, in order that it’d stand at Rome as a file of his extraordinary generosity towards the Arval Brethren, whom, below the management (magisterium) of the Emperor Hadrian …
Moreover, a fraction from the Acts of the Arval Brethren, courting to 126, data the cautious non secular practices of the Arval Brethren, who had been chargeable for sustaining rituals linked to agricultural fertility and the goddess Dea Dia. The fragmented inscription describes expiatory sacrifices (piacula) carried out in Might to purify the sacred grove earlier than iron instruments could possibly be introduced in to carve the official data of the earlier 12 months. As a result of the grove was thought of holy, even sensible duties required ritual approval.

in luco deae Diae piaculum factum porca et agna opima, suovetaurilibus fertis,
ob ferrum inlatum scripturae et scalpturae magisteri consummati …
eisdem consulibus … in luco deae Diae
piaculum factum porca et agna opima, suovetaurilibus fertis, ob ferrum
inlatum scripturae
et scalpturae magisteri s(upra) s(cripti).
M. Annio Vero
III
… Eggio Ambibulo co(n)s(ulibus).
Within the grove of Dea Dia, an expiatory sacrifice was carried out—a selection sow and ewe, with suovetaurilia choices—as a result of iron had been introduced in for writing and carving after the magister’s time period had been accomplished. Below the identical consuls, within the grove of Dea Dia, an expiatory sacrifice was carried out—a selection sow and ewe, with suovetaurilia choices—as a result of iron had been introduced in for the writing and carving related to the aforesaid magister. Marcus Annius Verus, for the third time, and Egigius Ambibulus, consuls.
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In 126, Hadrian additionally held the workplace of duumvir (chief Justice of the Peace) at Ostia for the second time. The workplace of duumvir was the very best native magistracy in Roman colonial and municipal cities, together with Ostia. As duumvir, Hadrian would have presided over the native council, administered justice, overseen public works, and managed town’s funds and administration. The position of duumvir additionally included organising and presiding over native festivals, video games, and non secular ceremonies, in addition to making certain the graceful functioning of town’s each day affairs. The Fasti Ostienses file his tenure for that 12 months. Although it isn’t sure that he carried out the duties in individual, he was actively concerned in restoring and enhancing Ostia throughout this era (Birley,1997).
[IIvir(i) c(ensoria) p(otestate) q(uinquennales) Imp(erator) Caesar Traianus Hadr]ianus Aug(ustus) II
The duumviri with censorial energy, performing as quinquennales: Emperor Caesar Hadrian Augustus (for the second time) …
In the course of the reign of Hadrian, Ostia underwent a serious, coordinated constructing programme (Boatwright, 1989). Round c. 120, he rebuilt the central a part of town between the Discussion board and the Tiber, together with a lot of the Discussion board itself. This space was raised to a better degree and monumentalised with new porticoes, outlets, and the imposing brick Capitolium. On the similar time, massive public facilities, together with main tub complexes, had been added, and the industrial hub of the Sq. of the Firms was additional developed, with ornamental and structural updates, together with mosaics and alterations to the portico. The Cardo Maximus (predominant avenue) was widened and lined with porticoes, enhancing each the ceremonial and industrial elements of town.
Extra particularly, Hadrian financed the development of the Baths of the Marine Gate with 2,000,000 sesterces, though they had been accomplished below his successor, Antoninus Pius, with further cash and marble. A constructing inscription, unearthed by Gavin Hamilton and now housed within the Vatican Museums, data this act of generosity (CIL XVI 98). The inscription is dated to late December AD 138 or 139. A statue of Antinous was excavated in 1774 (see right here). Extra imperial portraits had been discovered of Trajan, his spouse Plotina (see right here), his sister Marciana (see right here), Hadrian (see right here), and Antoninus Pius.
The Emperor Caesar, son of the deified Hadrian, grandson of Trajanus Parthicus and great-grandson of the deified Nerva, Titus Aelius Hadrianus Antoninus Augustus, pontifex maximus, wth the facility of tribune for the second time, consul for the second time, delivered the baths for the development of which his divine father had promised 2,000,000 sesterces, after including more cash than was wished for and likewise marble for all the ornament.
Likewise, the Hadrianic masonry of the Baths of Neptune, with its measurement and site, suggests imperial sponsorship. A statue of Sabina within the guise of the goddess Ceres (see right here) was discovered within the baths’ palaestra. Ostia was later to publicly categorical gratitude to Hadrian in a dedicatory inscription from 132/133, declaring town “preserved and enlarged by Hadrian’s each indulgence and liberality (CIL VI 972).
colonia conservata et aucta omni indulgentia et liberalitate eius
Past monumental works, most of Ostia was rebuilt or reorganised with standardised avenue grids, insulae (condo blocks), and mixed-use buildings. Quite a few constructions documented on the location, such because the Caserma dei Vigili, the Caseggiato dei Triclini, and a number of other shop-and-housing complexes in Regio I and II, skilled a Hadrianic constructing increase. These buildings type a part of a city-wide transformation within the second quarter of the 2nd century AD (c. 120–140), when Ostia reached its architectural and financial peak.



Throughout his tenure as duumvir at Ostia in 126, Hadrian assigned land to settlers, following the precedent of Vespasian and Trajan. The precise identification of those recipients is unclear, however they had been probably imperial tenants or presumably the landless poor from Rome, fairly than army veterans. This may increasingly have been an try to encourage settlement and agricultural productiveness close to Rome, or a gesture of imperial generosity (Boatwright, 1989).
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Regardless of his concentrate on Italy, Hadrian maintained lively correspondence with Greek cities and continued to handle imperial affairs throughout the empire. The emperor wrote a letter to the Koinon (Council) of the Achaians in 126, copies of which have been discovered at each Athens and Olympia (Ol. 78 A-B). The inscriptions file a decree of the Achaian League honouring Hadrian after an embassy requested him to simply accept varied honours. In his reply, Hadrian accepts some honours however rejects others as extreme, whereas praising the League’s goodwill. The honours included festivals, sacrifices, and public proclamations, displaying the standard sample of emperor worship negotiated between Greek communities and the Roman ruler. Hadrian refused “divine honours” (i.e. being handled as a god whereas alive), which elevated him too far, however accepted extra average honours, corresponding to statues and dedications in sanctuaries.
By the tip of 126, Hadrian was nonetheless in Rome, dividing his time between the Palatine and his villa at Tivoli, whereas remaining intently concerned in constructing initiatives and imperial administration. He would proceed to answer Greek ambassadors and attend to provincial affairs as he ready for additional travels in Italy and past.
Sources and references:
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- Oliver, J. H. (1989). Greek constitutions of early Roman emperors from inscriptions and papyri. American Philosophical Society.
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- Smallwood, E. M. (1966). Paperwork illustrating the principates of Nerva, Trajan and Hadrian. Cambridge College Press.






