Monday, January 19, 2026

No room for Antoninus Pius

 


 

by

 

Damien F. Mackey

 

 

 

“The only intact account of his life handed down to us is that of the Augustan History, an unreliable and mostly fabricated work”. 

 

Wikipedia

 

 

Within my revised context of the Hadrianic era, it does not seem at all possible to accommodate the textbook history’s long-reigning emperor, Antoninus Pius (c. 138-161 BC, conventional dating), who is thought to have succeeded Hadrian.

 

Emperor Hadrian is, as according to my own view of things, Caesar Augustus, as well as the notorious Seleucid tyrant king, Antiochus ‘Epiphanes’:

 

Time to consider Hadrian, that ‘mirror-image’ of Antiochus Epiphanes, as also the census emperor Augustus

 

(10) Time to consider Hadrian, that 'mirror-image' of Antiochus Epiphanes, as also the census emperor Augustus

 

The successor of Antiochus ‘Epiphanes’ (so-called IV) was, according to I Maccabees 6, the king’s son Antiochus, named ‘Eupator’ (vv. 16-17): “King Antiochus died there in the year 149. When Lysias learned that the king had died, he made the young Antiochus king in place of his father. He had brought up Antiochus from childhood and now gave him the name Eupator”.

 

We know this young and very short-reigned (c. 161-163 BC, conventional dating) ruler as Antiochus V.

 

So, with Antiochus IV ‘Epiphanes’ succeeded by a son of his (‘Eupator’) who reigned for only about two years, then it does not seem at all possible to accommodate conventional history’s long-reigning emperor, Antoninus Pius (c. 138-161 BC), who is thought to have succeeded Hadrian.

 

And, given the almost complete lack of source material for Antoninus Pius (see the Wikipedia quote above), it may not even be necessary to try fitting him in.

Antoninus Pius may be just another of those many vague characters of ancient history in need of an alter ego.

 

And, just as Hadrian’s supposed predecessor, Trajan, of virtually the same name, has to (my view) be merged with Hadrian:

 

Hadrianus Traianus Caesar – Trajan transmutes to Hadrian

 

(10) Hadrianus Traianus Caesar – Trajan transmutes to Hadrian

 

so might the same apply to Hadrian’s supposed successor, of very similar name – not to mention of very similar appearance – Titus Aelius Hadrianus Antoninus Pius.

 

Moreover, the designation Antoninus Pius is too close for my comfort to Antinous the Pious, the supposed teenaged boyfriend of the emperor Hadrian.

 

Considering that Hadrian lived at the time of the Infancy of Jesus Christ, and the portentous Star of the Magi, Antinous the Pious may simply have been (and I realise that this is extremely controversial) a later made-up religious cult figure, albeit greatly honoured, based heavily upon Jesus Christ - like Apollonius of Tyana:

 

Jesus Christ appropriated by Greece as Apollonius of Tyana

 

(10) Jesus Christ appropriated by Greece as Apollonius of Tyana

 

Antinous: the Man-God Who Rivaled Jesus in the 2nd Century CE | The Autarkist

 

….

Within a few years, thanks to Hadrian’s very active promotion of the cult, the face of Antinous became the best preserved–and probably the most beautiful–face from antiquity that we can still behold via sculpture. The Antinous Mondragone is still considered one of the most beautiful and highly-appraised sculptures on Earth. 

 

The remains of one ancient, Roman Antinous bust recently sold for 23 million dollars, and coins and other paraphernalia to this gay icon remain in circulation now that Antinous has been re-sacralized and has a small following of modern polytheists.

 

Many Christians (and others) have questioned the sincerity of ancient faith in Antinoos, but the fact is that his cult was in actuality serious competition for early Christianity, and that it survived for centuries long after the death of Hadrian in the year 138 [sic]. If the faith had been feigned out of fear of the emperor, the cult would not have enjoyed such a long-standing history after Hadrian was gone.

 

Some of the ancient Christians who criticized Antinous’ cult for its “debauchery” (code for the homosexual nature of Hadrian and Antinous’ relationship), admitted the supposed miracles of the god and had to resort to peculiar kinds of apologetics, a fact which demonstrates a vitality and credibility that other Pagan cults apparently lacked. Origen even admitted that Antinous was a real spirit (though not a god) who could perform miracles, and that his followers merely had not had the “luck” to know Jesus. Trevor Thompson, in the conclusion of his Antinoos, The New God, said:

 

The cult of the new god Antinoos swept across the Mediterranean basin in less than a decade and continued to exist into the fourth century. For Origen, Antinoos was a real “daimon” with actual power.

 

Belief in Antinoos or Jesus depended in most cases on the circumstances of one’s birth and the training received. Very few have the opportunity to examine religious claims. Most believe what they have been told.

 

The pagan philosopher Celsus also criticised it for what he perceived as the debauched nature of its Egyptian devotees, arguing that it led people into immoral behaviour, in this way comparing it to the cult of Christianity, which demonstrates that both the Jesus and the Antinous cults were perceived in a similar light.

….

One of the reasons for Antinous’ cultic success had to do with the intense syncretism, which is based on being abducted into the Osirian mythical cycle–according to which there was a perpetual war between the green god of vegetation who brought life to the Nile and the red desert god Set–and based also on the foundational document of his cult, the Obelisk, which says:

 

All Gods and Goddesses
Give Him the Breath of Eternal Life
That He might breathe
As One Who Is Eternally Young!

 

One of my initial assertions in this article was that Antinous represented a real and legitimate threat and competition to early Christianity. I realize that this may be unthinkable to some people today, but one piece of archaeology remains to be considered here. This relief from the Man-God’s holy city demonstrates the extent to which the highly-syncretistic cult in Antinoopolis wove both Dionysian elements (the grapes on his left hand, and keep in mind that Dionysus was believed to have been resurrected like Osiris and Jesus) as well as Christian elements (the cross on his right hand) into itself. Here, we see the youthful Antinous (identifiable by his typical hairstyle) holding both symbols.

 

It seems like, for some time, the versatile Antinous was also being interpreted as a Christ figure. In fact, all the resurrected Men-God were considered Savior figures who secured afterlife benefits for their followers who were initiated into their mysteries. ….

 

Just as we learn that the city that Hadrian had allegedly built in honour of Antinous in Egypt has, by now, unfortunately, “vanished”, so, too, do we find that the reasonably abundant architecture said to have been constructed by Antoninus Pius has largely “disappeared”.

 

For thus we read in Steven L. Tuck’s A History of Roman Art, p. 253:

 

Compared to the amount of work under Trajan and [sic] Hadrian, very few large-scale buildings were constructed in Rome under the Antonines. Antoninus Pius lived quietly out of Rome at a villa while Marcus Aurelius spent most of his twenty years of rule fighting massive wars along Rome’s frontiers. Those buildings we know of were mostly tombs, temples, altars, columns, arches, and other such forms designed to commemorate the lives and achievements of emperors. The vast majority of these have disappeared or survive only in ruins leaving behind only their decorative sculpture to give a sense of their original forms and political statements.

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