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Heliogabalus, born Varius Avitus Bassianus, ''c.'' 203 CE, was well known in the works of Roman historians and Elizabethan moralists for his imperial reign of terror, 218-222 CE, and his debauchery. He acquired the name, Elagabalus, for his worship of the Syrian sun god of that name, whose worship he promoted over that of Jupiter when he became emperor. He was killed by his own Praetorian Guard, who dragged his body through the streets and threw it in the Tiber River. | Heliogabalus, born Varius Avitus Bassianus, ''c.'' 203 CE, was well known in the works of Roman historians and Elizabethan moralists for his imperial reign of terror, 218-222 CE, and his debauchery. He acquired the name, Elagabalus, for his worship of the Syrian sun god of that name, whose worship he promoted over that of Jupiter when he became emperor. He was killed by his own Praetorian Guard, who dragged his body through the streets and threw it in the Tiber River. | ||
===Roman Sources=== | ===Selected Roman Sources=== | ||
:Heriodian | :Heriodian |
Revision as of 12:58, 11 February 2011
Historical Records
On 19 June 1594, the following entry was made in the Stationers' Register: "an other enterlude of the lyfe and deathe of Heliogabilus." John Danter paid the fee to enter the play.
Theatrical Provenance
Information welcome.
Probable Genre(s)
Classical Tragedy
Possible Narrative and Dramatic Sources or Analogues
Heliogabalus, born Varius Avitus Bassianus, c. 203 CE, was well known in the works of Roman historians and Elizabethan moralists for his imperial reign of terror, 218-222 CE, and his debauchery. He acquired the name, Elagabalus, for his worship of the Syrian sun god of that name, whose worship he promoted over that of Jupiter when he became emperor. He was killed by his own Praetorian Guard, who dragged his body through the streets and threw it in the Tiber River.
Selected Roman Sources
- Heriodian
- Dio
Sixteenth-Century English Sources
- Thomas Elyot
- George Whetstone
- Richard Rainolde
- Richard Robinson
References to the Play
Robert Greene, in the preface to Peremedies the Blacke-Smith (1588), complains about "two Gentlemen Poets, made two mad men of Rome beate it out of their paper bucklers: & [who] had it in derision, for that I could not make my verses iet vpon the stage in tragicall buskins, euerie worde filling the mouth like the faburden of Bo-Bell, daring God out of heauen with that Atheist Tamburlan, or blaspheming with the mad preest of the sonne .... " (A3).
Critical Commentary
E. K. Chambers W. W. Greg Charles Nichol Tom Rutter Greene scholars??
For What It's Worth
In the Roman History of Cassius Dio, Heliogabalus is called "Sardanapalus," confusing him thus with a semi-fictional king of Assyria. Gutenberg In sixteenth-century commentators, the mythical king (Sardanapalus) and the historical emperor (Heliogabalus) are more frequently cited as similarly debauched.
Works Cited
Site created and maintained by Roslyn L. Knutson, Professor Emerita, University of Arkansas at Little Rock, 8 February 2011.