for brilliant answer
THE LIMITS OF ERASURE: RECOGNISING REUSE IN ROMAN IMPERIAL IMAGERY
Abstract
Over the course of approximately 350 years, erasure transformed likenesses into effigies,
remnants of one figure in another’s guise, and emendations to history. The focus of this paper
is the intersection of preservation and change in Roman imperial imagery. The principal aim
is to discern the mechanisms by which honour and dishonour were linked in a transfer of
power premised on the joining of imperial likenesses. Addressing referents and the revised
roles imposed on such visually transformed figures, this investigation considers well-known
examples of visual alteration in tandem with a production-led typology of erasure, including
palimpsests and partial to incomplete excision. The act of reusing imperial images as spolia
meant that the figure depicted was publicly re-presented as his power was waxing or waning.
This analysis examines the delicate balance of unmaking and remaking as iterations in the
relational nature of viewing and Roman imperial reuse.
Figure 1: Portrait bust re-carved Domitian/Nerva, First century CE. Marble, DIMENSIONS. Rome: Museo Nazionale Romano, Palazzo Massimo alle Terme. Inventory number 106538. Photo: CREDIT.
Figure 2: Severan family painted tondo, c. 199-200 CE. Tempera, diameter 305 mm (12 in). Staatlichen Museen zu Berlin. Inventory number 31329. Photo: Antikensammlung der Staatlichen Museen zu Berlin - Preußischer Kulturbesitz. Photo by Johannes Laurentius.
•© Foto: Antikensammlung der Staatlichen Museen zu Berlin - Preußischer Kulturbesitz •Fotograf/in: Johannes Laurentius
Figure 3: Triumph of Marcus Aurelius and Commodus, c. 176 CE, Marble, DIMENSIONS. Rome: Palazzo dei Conservatori. Inventory number: 808. Photo: CREDIT.
Figure 4: Hadrian re-carved as Constantine, Arch of Constantine, Rome. Marble, DIMENSIONS. Rome: American Academy in Rome Digital Humanities Center, Arch of Constantine: tondi of Hadrian, second roundel, the sacrifice to Apollo (Rome, Italy). Identifier: 138913. Photo: CREDIT.
Figure 5: Marcus Aurelius re-carved as Constantine, Arch of Constantine, Rome. Marble, DIMENSIONS. American Academy in Rome Digital Humanities Center, Arch of Constantine: Marcus Aurelius Attic Panel, North, detail from the Liberalitas frieze centred upon Marcus Aurelius and his (excised) son Commodus after their joint victory of 176 (Rome, Italy). Identifier: 138983. Photo: CREDIT.
4. (Nearly) Complete Erasure Spolium-as-framework - Remains on display - Excised from a group
1. No Alterations to the Original Not spolia
Figure 6: Typology of Erasure
2. Partial Erasure Spolium-as-trophy - Highlight dishonour - Image is a surrogate for the body - Decapitations, attacks and mutilation
3. Palimpsest Spolium-as-trophy *&* Spolium-as-framework - Remains on display - Visible traces of an earlier iteration remain in re-carving - Double re-carving is known
Figure 7.1 (above) and 7.2 (below). Cancelleria Reliefs, Rome.
FIGS 8.1-8.4 Nero/Domitian/Nerva, - recut on two separate occasions excavated from the Julio-Claudian Basilica at Velleia, Italy Museo Nazionale d’Antichità, Parma. Inv. 146 (1870), 827 (1954)
FIG 9.1
FIG 9.2
THE LIMITS OF ERASURE: RECOGNISING REUSE IN ROMAN IMPERIAL IMAGERY*
I. Introduction
A palimpsest is, by definition, an alteration with visible traces of an earlier iteration.
The focus is, therefore, on the present incarnation. However, the process of changing a
likeness so that it is altered and, concurrently, recognisable leads to intriguing questions
concerning the boundaries of preservation and change. Reuse among Roman imperial
portraiture developed diachronically.2 Accretions gradually transformed likenesses into
effigies, remnants of one figure in another’s guise, and emendations to history. Over the
course of approximately 350 years, from Augustus through to Constantine, erasure acquired a
myriad of distinguishable visual forms and meanings.3 A typology of erasure has the potential
to shed light on Roman conceptual distinctions between categories of visual reuse and
excision, and corresponding social messages targeting posthumous commemorations of
emperors. These commemorations often took extreme forms, such as reviling or celebrating.
There is, however, nuanced meaning evident in palimpsests, for example, which comment on
a past and present emperor by their reciprocal absence and presence.
Roman imperial portraiture sought to convey continuity by incorporating visual
similarities.4 This practice resulted in approaching public imagery as equivalent to the
emperor incarnate.5 The principal aim of this paper is to discern the mechanism by which
honour and dishonour were linked in a transfer of power premised on the joining of imperial
likenesses. Focusing on the intersection of preservation and change in Roman imperial
imagery, this work addresses original referents and the revised roles imposed on such visually
transformed figures. Considering well-known examples of visual alteration to Roman
2
imperial imagery, this investigation examines the delicate balance of unmaking and remaking
as iterations in an open-ended sequence; in a typology of erasure.
II. Pieces Joined to Create a Whole
Underpinning the variations evident in the typology of erasure is the projection of
revised and corrected socially-constructed meaning.6 Drawing upon the posthumous
treatment of representations from among Roman imperial likenesses, an ekphrastic rendition
of a Roman imperial statue survives in Prokopios’s Anekdota (Secret History).7 Woven into
the narrative is a union of past and present emperors entwined through their visual forms.
Prokopios likens the current emperor to his vivid rendition of a violently mutilated statue
from over 450 years earlier. This suggestion of a palimpsest not only merges the destinies of
both figures through their physical forms but also hints at the historic validation offered by
the predecessor in the guise of a statue.
Prokopios’s ghastly description of an early imperial statue reflects responses and
para-narratives expressed in descriptions of statuary in its social context.8 Offering a physical
counterpart to sixth-century emperor Justinian, by way of an indirect comparison to first-
century ruler Domitian, Prokopios evokes a vivid representation before the minds’ eye
conjoining two emperors as elements visually representing a whole:
If I had to capture his whole appearance in one image I would say that he was most
similar to Domitian…whose foul character the Romans…hacked him into pieces,9 so
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that the Senate passed a decree that the name of this emperor should never again be
carved in an inscription and no image of him should be allowed to survive.10
Whilst a great deal of Prokopios’ description of the statue appears to be a fiction11 –
most likely intended to foreshadow Justinian’s fate rather than faithfully reporting the
appearance of a 450-year old statue – a number of details are commensurate with what is
widely known about memory sanctions, today referred to as damnatio memoriae.12 This term
was invented in the twentieth-century to explain a Roman practice which, fundamentally,
according to the visual evidence, is not limited to condemnation of memory but rather
highlights the removal of one leader whilst, often concurrently, ushering in and celebrating
his successor.13 Scholars whose focus is epigraphic iterations of damnatio memoriae have
argued that memory sanctions reveal more about the politics behind those rewriting history
than about the subject.14 As expressions of political authority and prestige, beginning in the
republican period, sanctions of the kind referred to as damnation of memory offered the
means by which the legacy of an individual was invalidated.15 Alterations to memory existed
on a continuum of post-production visual change.16 According to the surviving evidence,
imperial likenesses were manipulated to underscore ignominy or exultation and the range of
permutations was fairly restricted.
Offering a personal response, the ‘foul character’ of Emperor Domitian (r. 81-96 AD)
is presented as a contributing factor in the eventual mutilation of his likeness. By senatorial
decree his memory was damned and he was murdered. He, therefore, suffered the removal of
honorific images and inscriptions bearing his name.17 In the text, Prokopios claims the first-
century statue remained. He reports the motivations behind the very specific choice of
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depiction for the commissioned statue by Domitian’s wife, Domitia Longina, in the following
lines:
[Domitia Longina’s] intention was to leave for posterity a memorial to the inhumanity
of those who had butchered her husband…She gathered up all the carvings of
Domitian’s flesh, fitted them together by placing each in its exact position in relation
to the others, and then sewed up the whole body. She showed it to the sculptors and
bid them to produce a bronze imitation of the fate that befell her husband…From that
time on it has depicted the appearance and the fate of Domitian.18
The invocation of the fate of the earlier ruler obliquely suggests an equally grim end
for Justinian. In his ekphrastic depiction of the bronze statue, Prokopios presents a body made
up of pieces which together create a whole. The notion of a likeness visually articulating the
current social role of the ruler underlies transformations in Roman imperial imagery and is
evident in surviving reuse via re-carving. Extant as surrogates, re-workings and obliterations,
palimpsests, and the varied meanings expressed by differentiable alterations, are the primary
focus of this investigation.
Whether removed from circulation, decapitated or re-carved, these likenesses were
treated as spolia.19 The reuse of imperial imagery re-presents altered likenesses as models for
the beholder. As Prokopios states, since the bronze statue was erected it depicts not only the
appearance but also the fate of Domitian. This evocative rendering of a bronze statue
highlights the role of Roman imperial imagery in uniting past and present in visual form.
5
Instead of obliterating damned emperors, Roman imperial imagery superimposed meaning,
by altering an image into a transformed union of old and new.
At the core of this investigation is a two-fold argument. First, a typology of erasure
underscores conceptual differences between: re-carving as palimpsest, mutilation as partial
erasure and annihilation as partial, or nearly complete erasure. These were varying degrees of
erasure. Each one visually conveying an emendation; a socio-political reappraisal that was a
product of its time.
Second, fundamentally memory sanctions are about a transfer of power. Inscriptions
and imagery were expedient means by which public portraiture in particular was used to
confer praise, or convey ignominy. Alterations to Roman imperial imagery highlight this
phenomenon.
III. Celebrating and Deriding Simultaneously: A Production-Led Approach to
Alterations in Roman Imperial Portraiture
The act of rewriting history is typically intended to achieve one of two oppositional
aims: to decimate or to elevate. Alterations to Roman imperial portraiture, principally in the
form of palimpsests, have the potential to achieve derision and praise concurrently. Although
there are a number of related – yet distinct – examples of alterations to memory articulated
and exhibited in Roman imperial imagery, currently there is no production-led taxonomy of
memory sanctions in imperial portraiture for this wide-ranging concept.
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The number of remaining imperial palimpsests strongly supports the conclusion that
such re-carvings convey the transfer of power from the absorbed emperor (shown partially
erased) to the inaugurated successor (whose likeness is created and prominent in the re-
carving). Thereby, the nearly complete erasure of Domitian’s imperial portrait (fig. 1)20 as a
palimpsest, which re-carves Domitian as Nerva, confirms Domitian’s memory even as it
dishonours it.21 The Palazzo Massimo alle Terme bust of Nerva re-carved from an image of
Domitian intentionally preserves vestiges of the damned Domitian whilst honouring Nerva as
his successor.22 Telling signs revealing a palimpsest were consistently retained in Roman
portraiture. On this bust, for example, Domitian’s distinctive hair has not been altered in the
re-carving. Instead his hair has been left largely intact. Thus, when viewed from the front or
sides, Nerva’s present incarnation is in fact Nerva’s face with Domitian’s signature locks.
Despite deliberately eliminating all remnants of Domitian’s youthful face, traces of
Domitian’s distinguishable hairstyle, combed forwards, is evident framing the successor’s
face on both sides of the palimpsest.23 Given the large numbers of re-carved first-century
portraits betraying the dualistic nature of a re-carved likeness, such imperial palimpsests
appear to represent subjugation and eradication of the ousted emperor, with concomitant
victory and (literal as well as metaphoric) re-formation into the likeness of the celebrated
successor.24 Thus, evidence of reuse in the form of a palimpsest suggests that the visual
transfer of power is premised on the joining of imperial likenesses, eliciting concomitant
honour and dishonour.
If the aim had been to reuse the material, then evidence of the past iteration would
surely have been excised. In contrast, ‘[e]rasures and recarved portraits are reminders of what
is beneath. They do not eradicate memory; instead, they foster it.’25 Such entwined
palimpsests display vestiges of the condemned emperor, visually announcing the joining of
7
distinct characters in a single block of marble. The superimposed nature of this portrait and
the simultaneity of both likenesses underscores the importance not only of praising the
successor but also the concurrent expression of the defeat and removal of his derided
predecessor retained, and therefore remembered, in the bust. In contrast to violent mutilations
(in the form of partial erasure) or emendations to history (in the form of nearly complete
erasure), such re-carvings proffer a radically different fused social message and legacy
preserved in visual form.
A fragmented form of dishonour is expressed in the partial erasure of imperial
portraiture via decapitations, blinding’s and other mutilations to images as surrogates for the
person represented. Perhaps the most well-known imperial example is the second-century CE
decapitation of Geta in two-dimensional form in the Severan family painting (fig. 2).26 The
portrait includes Septimius Severus and Julia Domna along with their two sons Caracalla and
Geta c. 199 CE. Geta, however, has been damned by the removal of his face. The choice to
retain his body highlights his dishonour. Unlike surviving portraits of Nero, an earlier
example of a boy from an imperial family who was later disgraced, Geta’s altered likeness
shows the violent act targeting the young boy before he became emperor. The antithetical
treatment of images of Nero and Geta in their youth, before assuming the title princeps,
reveals a great deal about the contrasting treatment of imperial imagery in the first and third-
centuries CE.27 Whilst the history of alterations to Roman imperial likenesses may have
developed piecemeal, diachronic patterns are evident when the evidence is considered using a
production-led approach. This is true not only of partial erasure, but also for nearly complete
excision.
8
Revisionist history remains in the form of nearly complete erasure targeting Roman
imperial likenesses. Emperors involved in benefaction, for example, have been stricken from
history through erasure. Thereby, historic reliefs offer a corrected version of events. A well-
known example is a late-second century CE nearly complete elimination of Commodus’s
presence from an historic relief honouring him in a military triumph alongside his co-ruler,
and father, Marcus Aurelius (fig. 3).28 Originally, the relief portrayed both men in the triumph
of 176 over the Marcomanni and Quadi, standing in a chariot celebrating a joint honour.29
There is extensive evidence of re-carving to convincingly remove Commodus from this
relief. Column bases and stairs, for example, have been re-cut with quickly rendered rough
chisel marks remaining. Such architectural elements indicate the intentional excision of
Commodus from the historic scene. Moreover, Victory and Marcus Aurelius have also been
recut, awkwardly, to obscure Commodus’s removal. The explanation for altering a goddess,
an imperial portrait but leaving evidence of post-production removal appears to be due to the
perspective of the viewer. When seen from below, the beholder is unaware of the retained
elements in the relief.30 Even if the untidied marks resulted in a less realistic relief, the
principal aim was clearly to obliterate Commodus from the historic relief. The selective
excision and amendments to remaining figures and architecture suggest that the decision to
keep remnants of the alterations indicates that speed was crucial to underscore the post-
production intent to annihilate Commodus and to nullify him and his place in history.
A production-led classification identifies distinguishable strategies employed through
excision. Thereby, partial erasure (in the form of violent attacks) is understood as distinct
from palimpsests (imperial re-formed likenesses dishonouring one ruler and elevating his
successor) and nearly complete erasure (a visual form of rewriting history in historic reliefs,
9
for example). During the imperial period, each form of erasure was a discrete option
projecting a dissimilar social message.
From Augustan through to Constantinian times, these varied forms of erasure relied
on reuse. Initially, portraiture was made to publically confer honour upon an emperor.31 This
substitute for the original offered beholders the opportunity to be in the presence of a
powerful figure. Alterations to such honorific imagery visually allowed a public revision,
reflecting social developments in real time.32 Roman imperial portraiture’s power, therefore,
was two-fold. First, honorific imagery portrayed the referent in a form visually sanctioned by
the emperor and thus, familiar. Second, subsequent reuse was intentionally limited.
Effectively serving as spolia, the altered image maintained widespread recognition and – at
the same time – exhibited a transformation to that figure’s power.
IV. Visual Transfer of Imperial Power: The Evidence
Visual representations of the transfer of power were achieved through diachronic
alterations to and unions between imperial likenesses. Addressing fundamental differences
between two types of relational meaning, that are often conflated, on reused Roman imperial
portraits found throughout the Roman Empire, Paolo Liverani has presented the case for ‘two
historical significations of the concept spolium.’33 Liverani identified an important conceptual
distinction between two categories of spolia, one class serving as a sign for a particular
conquest, and the latter class functioning as a generalised type verifying modifications to
added material. Building upon this excellent taxonomy, I shall refer to spolium-as-trophy and
spolium-as-framework as key to understanding the means by which partial erasure,
10
palimpsests and nearly complete erasure visually convey alterations to imperial power
through distinguishable forms of reuse.
Spolium-as-trophy, the first class, announces its connection to the point of origination.
Already considered in absentia, a figural representation stands in place of the person
depicted. A visual depiction in the form of a statue is ideal because the individual is
unambiguously represented. The likeness can withstand punishment and serves as an example
to viewers, often a negative one. Thus, the act of seizing and publically displaying a captured
likeness can be celebrated as a victory and the statue treated like a trophy, as in the British
Museum’s decapitated portrait of Augustus from Meroë.34 This severed head was excavated
beneath steps leading to a shrine. Thereby, Augustus was effectively a prisoner of war,
permanently placed below the feet of his captors. The aim of such a trophy is to visually
communicate to beholders who was vanquished and when. Therefore, degrading the severed
head as a trophy demonstrates the power of the captors.
Applying the concept of spolium-as-trophy to Roman imperial imagery, this translates
specifically to imperial likenesses that were decapitated, violently attacked and mutilated.
Spolia of this type are effectively relics or remnants of the original referents. Since images
were considered surrogates for the imperial body, imprisoning or abusing the likeness was
equivalent to treating the emperor himself in this manner. Thus, this denigrating class of
spolia treats the original referent as debased and disgraced in effigy.
Later, a second class of spolia developed. Liverani refers to this type as fragments,
however it provides a structure within which to understand a recast narrative. I, therefore,
11
refer to this category of spolium-as-framework whereby fragments sever any direct
connections to the original through the act of reconfiguring ruler portraits in the present. The
specific and individual link to the original referent is lost, instead a mixture of reused
fragments creates an authentic or legitimising framework updating social meaning.
Perhaps the most well-known example is Constantine’s reuse of earlier imperial
spolia on the Arch of Constantine.35 In these reliefs, the portraits of emperors Hadrian and
Marcus Aurelius were re-carved to represent Constantine (figs. 4-5).36 Constantine’s arch is
most closely aligned with the Diocletianic Arcus Novus and the Arco di Portogallo, both of
which offer precedents in the laudatory reuse of Roman imperial portraiture.37 Thus,
Constantine’s choice to superimpose his own likeness over that of beloved, or at least good,
emperors is a variation on the well-established palimpsestic re-carving. What is novel,
however, is the selection of reliefs from good emperors as the source for the reformed
carving.38
Moreover, on the Arch of Constantine fragments from earlier respected emperors
were combined to form a framework within which to understand Constantine’s fourth-
century historic reliefs as celebratory.39 Whereas imperial authority derives from the reuse of
earlier imagery, the specific narrative on the Arch of Constantine stems exclusively from the
content found in his 4th-century reliefs. Thus, framing the new emperor’s particular, historic
imagery is the generalised imperial framework of validation. The aim underlying the reuse of
spolium-as-framework is the use of traditional forms as familiar visual scaffolding with
which to articulate and to project authenticated and individuated content for the current
emperor.
12
Where does re-carving fall in this binary? The evidence suggests that it is a
combination of spolium-as-trophy and spolium-as-framework. That is, re-carved portraits
serve to provide spolium as the framework within which to identify and to interpret reused
imperial trophies. Throughout the imperial period, erasure took many forms. Although the ad
hoc nature of these alterations contributed to their variation, this typology of erasure suggests
a limited number of dissimilar approaches to emendations and annihilations in the first
through early fourth centuries AD.
V. Types of Erasure
According to extant evidence in the form of reused Roman imperial portraiture,
likenesses could undergo one of four principal alterations (fig. 6). In order of the level of re-
carving, from least to most extensive, the first is marked by an absence, that is, no alteration
to the original. The second is partial erasure, that is, an alteration to perhaps only one part of
the image. The third is a palimpsest, marked by the re-working of a bust or portrait into the
recognisable likeness of another. The fourth is (nearly) complete excision. This last category
must remain incomplete in order to be identifiable as an erasure.
1. No Alterations to the Original
A number of imperial likenesses have been preserved unchanged; in part, or entirely.
In such cases there may be no alteration to the original. This includes images that were placed
in warehouses, stored, hidden or removed by some other means.40 Many of these images
portray individual emperors rather than group portraits. Such images, therefore, are typically
found taken out of circulation and display. Examples are known to have been hidden
13
immediately following a senatorial damnation, only to undergo a rehabilitation of memory
with a succeeding emperor’s support.41 For example, the damned emperor Commodus’s
memory was not only rehabilitated by Septimius Severus, subsequently Commodus was
deified.42 Surviving evidence makes it clear that many portraits were not necessarily
destroyed, but simply removed from circulation. A senatorial decree dishonouring the elder
Piso at the time of Tiberius did not order the destruction of his image. Instead it forbade its
display.43 His images were – perhaps temporarily – stored in a warehouse44 until his
rehabilitation of memory. In contrast, group portraits may have required the nearly complete
erasure of a lone figure to excise an offending emperor without altering the likeness of those
who were permitted to publically remain on display.
A renowned pair of imperial narrative reliefs, one a palimpsest and the other
unaltered, are a testament to the sustained practice of storing high-quality carvings despite
depicting damned emperors. Known as the Cancelleria Reliefs, the two imperial reliefs were
originally made to honour Domitian by visually chronicling events from his reign (figs. 7.1-
7.2).45 Each panel originally portrayed Domitian as the principal focus, surrounded by deities.
After Domitian was condemned by the Senate, to honour his immediate successor, Nerva,
one of Domitian’s two likenesses was re-carved, depicting Nerva.46 Tool marks are evident
from this palimpsestic re-carving of Nerva’s portrait. In addition, due to the subtractive
nature of re-carving, Nerva’s head is disproportionately small. It is believed that Nerva died
before the re-carving of the second relief panel was begun. Re-carving was, therefore,
stopped and the accompanying relief portrait of Domitian was left untouched. Thus, the
unaltered panel preserves a youthful Domitian addressing his father Vespasian. With re-
carving limited to that of one palimpsestic head, abandoned before the second imperial
portrait was transformed into Nerva, this pair of reliefs appears to have been stored in a
14
warehouse for re-use at a later date. It would appear, therefore, that alongside unaltered
imperial portraits, palimpsests were also stored in warehouses.
2. Partial Erasure
The aim of partial erasure was to highlight dishonour by means of an effigy. Based on
extant evidence, a partially maimed likeness was often treated as a proxy, in particular with
the practice of corpse abuse.47 These symbolic mutilations could take the form of
decapitations, or attacked sensory organs – such as the place of identification and power of
eyes, ears, nose or mouth.
Written accounts remain of emperors and elite figures Sejanus and Vitellius forced to
witness the mutilation of their own images.48 These acts served to visually preview the
destruction to one’s own corpse, which was subsequently abused by the masses before it was
discarded in the Tiber. Such violent acts of disfigurement were sometimes displayed
posthumously, as was likely for the altered Severan family portrait in which Geta’s likeness
is annihilated and his body preserved untouched to underscore his ignominy (fig. 2).49 The
beheading rendered in two-dimensional form in this painting parallels decapitations found in
three-dimensional representations, such as statuary. It, therefore, represents a widespread
practice in the treatment of imperial imagery.
Although the physical form may be different, the underlying brutality is the same. The
partial erasure of a Roman imperial likeness serves as a means of dishonouring an individual
whose portrait is violently incapacitated.50 Partial erasure is, therefore, spolium-as-trophy
whereby the particular figure represented is mutilated in effigy. Violent mutilations were
15
most common in the turbulent late second and third centuries. Earlier, however, in the first-
century, a censured emperor’s likeness was surprisingly often re-carved into the likeness of
his successor.51
3. Palimpsests
Roman imperial palimpsests are perhaps the most varied type of reuse in the typology
of erasure. These reconfigured or recycled images often depict individuals, such as busts, or
groups, as, for example, on the Arch of Constantine.52 Visible traces of an earlier iteration
remain as part of these re-carved portraits. Recognition, and the preservation of identifiable
material, is a key element integral to imperial palimpsests.53 Re-worked likenesses may
indicate a deliberate palimpsest through successive re-carvings. It has been argued that the
purpose of a recognisable transfer from a condemned emperor to his successor was to
confirm the memory of both, the former as a deterrent and the latter as a celebrant.54 Thus,
the goal is viewer participation to fill the gap.55 A visual means of conveying a transfer of
power was through a recognisable visual transference in the form of a palimpsest.
This type of erasure is effectively a combination of spolium-as-trophy and spolium-as-
framework. The reigning emperor was ousted by his successor, thereby his likeness served as
a trophy for the victor. In addition, the earlier, re-formed emperor was transformed into his
successor. The trophy became the framework for the successor’s portrait. Imperial
palimpsests were in large-scale use from as early as in the first-century and into the second
century. By the time of Domitian’s damnation in 98 AD, ‘sculptural recycling had become an
entrenched response to imperial damnationes’.56 The succeeding emperor must have
approved of appropriating the likeness of a predecessor, perhaps considered a form of
conquest and subjugation.57 By retaining and deliberately betraying traces of the earlier
16
imperial likeness in the successor’s portrait, a reviled emperor’s image is treated as both a
trophy and a legitimising framework for the latter.
Imperial palimpsests were so prevalent in the first-century that at least one double re-
carving survives. This Nero/Domitian/Nerva statue from Velleia, Italy is a noteworthy
example since it contains pronounced visual elements from two earlier incarnations – all
representations of emperors from the first-century CE (figs. 8.1-8.4).58 The original portrait of
Nero was carved c. 64-8 CE with a clear militaristic emphasis represented by the high-quality
cuirass. Nero’s head was subsequently re-carved into that of Domitian’s, and once again re-
carved into Nerva’s likeness. The imagery on the breastplate of almost identical winged
victories flanking a thymeterium is Neronian.59 Despite re-working the portrait into a new
likeness, on two separate occasions, the body retains its initial form from the mid-60s CE.
Similar to other palimpsestic transformations of Domitian into Nerva, Domitian’s
distinguishable hairstyle is evident on the statue which now bears Nerva’s likeness (cf. fig.
1). Thus, conspicuous signs of earlier imperial portraits visually conveyed the transfer of
power to beholders. Such portraits appear to exhibit signs of their transformation, identifiable
by first-century Roman viewers.
Imperial palimpsests typically portrayed damned emperors re-carved into their good
successors. After a break, however, in the second and third centuries, this continued in the
early fourth-century. The colossal portrait of Constantine from the Basilica Nova was re-
carved from that of his adversary Maxentius.60 By the late third-century, Diocletian may have
reused imperial imagery from good emperor Claudius on the Arcus Novus, just as
Constantine went on to do on his Arch in Rome, re-carving the portraits of his good
predecessors (i.e. Trajan, Hadrian and Marcus Aurelius) into his own. The choice to
17
intentionally include traces of an earlier iteration as part of a visual union was part of broader
Roman visual culture.61 It has been demonstrated that ‘the Romans were used to, and even
had an appreciation for, images that had two sides to them and to the discourse that would
result from such juxtapositions.’62 Imperial palimpsests were, therefore, part of a rich and
layered nexus; a visual means of expressing reciprocal meaning. Images do remain, however,
in which complete, and nearly complete, erasure was limited to spolium-as-framework.
4. Nearly Complete Erasure
Nearly complete erasure is a form of visual annihilation.63 Partial erasure is akin to
spolium-as-trophy, with the identity of the disgraced figure prominently on display. This
generally takes the form of a decapitation or violent mutilation. In contrast, nearly complete
erasure serves as spolium-as-framework. The act of excising an individual, typically from a
group, results in the ‘deliberate rewriting of the visual record of Roman history and
society.’64 Images may intentionally be almost entirely erased or revised, for example, if one
of two co-rulers was disgraced. Often, therefore, nearly complete erasure continues to be
displayed after the condemned emperor’s removal.
As a result of a half-century of military, social, political and economic instability, the
late-second and third centuries marked an apex in mutilations via partial erasure in Roman
imperial portraiture and violent acts of nearly complete excision and obliteration. The Arch of
the Argentarii in the Forum Boarium in Rome, Italy, is a well-known monumental gift given
to Septimius Severus in 204 CE with an inscription and several reliefs amended using
complete erasure (fig. 9.1-9.2).65 Caracalla’s brother, Geta, Caracalla’s wife, Plautilla,66 and
Caracalla’s father-in-law, Plautianus, were all entirely excised from the reliefs and inscription
originally included on the arch. Each of the two reliefs on the interior of the arch originally
18
contained three figures. Emperor Septimius Severus was shown alongside his wife, Julia
Domna, and their younger son Geta (fig. 9.1). Their elder son Caracalla was shown along
with his wife Plautilla and his father-in-law (fig. 9.2). Whilst Plautilla and her father were
obliterated from one relief, excepting empty space, the only tell-tale sign of the missing
figure of Caracalla in the relief with his mother and father is the altered arm of Caracalla’s
mother to hide this visual form of annihilation (fig. 9.1). Awkward recutting is evident on
other examples, such as the nearly complete removal of Commodus on the joint triumph with
Marcus Aurelius in CE 176 (fig. 3). Were complete, and nearly complete, excision invariably
coupled with recutting? Perhaps, since carving in marble is a subtractive process (cf. figs. 3,
4, 5, 7.1, 7.2, 9.1, 9.2). A more fruitful question may be the extent to which earlier nearly
complete erasures were taken as authentic source material for spolia-as-framework.
Although the extent to which imperial re-carving was identifiable in antiquity is not
always clear, the evidence suggests Constantine intentionally re-used one of Marcus
Aurelius’s historical reliefs with nearly complete erasure for the Arch of Constantine. Marcus
Aurelius’s likeness is re-carved as Constantine in a palimpsest on the Arch of Constantine
(fig. 5). In this re-used relief, now on the Arch of Constantine, next to Marcus Aurelius re-
carved as Constantine is a blank space formerly occupied by Commodus in a depiction
originally honouring Marcus Aurelius and Commodus’s joint distribution of a largitio in
177.67 After his damnation, Commodus was nearly completely excised. This is an example of
incomplete excision because the foot of his distinctive chair, the sella curule, remained along
with his foot. Perhaps due to the placement of this relief at a considerable height, or because
the amount of empty space suggests omission, complete erasure was not considered essential
to this emendation to history. The layered meaning offered in this Constantinian iteration is
made more complex by joining a late second-century nearly complete erasure with an early
19
fourth-century palimpsest. From spolium-as-trophy/partial erasure, to spolium-as-trophy and
spolium-as-framework concurrently/palimpsest, to spolium-as-framework/(nearly) complete
excision, the development of the typology of erasure is commensurate with the need to
amend, correct and visually clarify changes to imperial power.
Conclusion
The extent of post-production excision in Roman imperial portraiture disambiguated
transfers of power. The removal of one leader was often entwined with the inauguration of
his replacement. The act of reusing imperial images as spolia meant that the figure depicted
was publicly re-presented as his power was waxing or waning. Carving and erasure were the
means by which shifts in power were communicated visually.
In this typology of erasure, each type of re-carving reuses spolia with a distinct
purpose – and resulting message – concerning the transfer of power. (1) Unaltered imperial
portraiture was often stored for later re-use. Depictions of good and bad emperors appear to
have received uniform treatment since both were warehoused. (2) Re-carved palimpsests are
laudatory, simultaneously installing a successor whilst deriding his predecessor. (3)
Disfigurements in the form of partial erasure are violent attacks denigrating a reviled ruler.
(4) Complete, or nearly complete, erasure rewrites past events to suit the victors.
Returning to Prokopios’ colourful rendering of a 450-year old statue used to herald
Justinian’s appearance. The statue’s body was composed of pieces which together created a
whole to depict ‘the appearance and the fate of Domitian’.68 In his secret history, Prokopios’
aim appears to have been to do what so many Roman imperial statues have done visually,
20
that is, to convey a connection; a transfer of power from one emperor to another. Prokopios
offers a vivid rendition of a statue to represent a palimpsest metaphorically, thereby uniting
Domitian and Justinian. Unlike any surviving example of altered imperial portraiture,
however, Prokopios’ ekphrastic rendition used artistic license to join a damned emperor with
one he anticipated might share the same fate. Created before the minds’ eye, Prokopios’
bronze statue is a testament to the dynamic nature of the transfer of power via alterations to
Roman imperial likenesses.
21
* An earlier version of this paper was presented at Brown University as part of a panel on
‘Reuse Reconsidered’ in 2017. I wish to thank the conveners and Michael F. Thomas for
comments on an earlier draft of this paper.
2 See: M. Bergmann and P. Zanker, “Damnatio Memoriae’ Umgearbeitete Nero- und
Domitiansporträts. Zur Ikonographie der flavischen Kaiser und des Nerva’, Jahrbuch des
deutschen archäologischen Instituts, 96, 1981, 317-412; Dale Kinney, ‘Spolia: Damnatio and
Renovatio Memoriae,’ Memoirs of the American Academy in Rome, 42, 1997, 117-48; Peter
Stewart, ‘The Destruction of Statues in Late Antiquity,’ in Constructing Identities in Late
Antiquity, ed. R. Miles, 159-89, London and New York, 1999; Charles W. Hedrick Jr.,
History and Silence: Purge and Rehabilitation of Memory in Late Antiquity, Austin, 2000;
Eric R. Varner, and Sheramy D. Budrick, eds, From Caligula to Constantine: Tyranny and
Transformation in Roman Portraiture, Atlanta, 2000; S. Benoist, and A. Daguet-Gagey, eds,
Un Discours en images de la condemnation de la mémoire, Metz, 2008; K. Galinsky,
‘Recarved Imperial Portraits: Nuances and Wider Contexts,’ Memoirs of the American
Academy in Rome, 53, 2008, 1-25; Richard Brilliant, and Dale Kinney, eds, Reuse Value:
Spolia and Appropriation in Art and Architecture from Constantine to Sherrie Levine,
Farnham, 2011.
3 Although numerous women and non-imperial figures suffered memory sanctions and other
alterations, the focus of this paper is restricted to a survey of Roman imperial images. On
Roman women, see for example, D. E. E. Kleiner, and Susan B. Matheson, eds, I Claudia II:
Women in Roman Art and Society, New Haven, 2000; E. Varner, ‘Portraits, Plots and
Politics: Damnatio Memoriae and the Image of Imperial Women,’ Memoirs of the American
Academy in Rome, 46, 2001, 41-93; Harriet I. Flower, ‘Public Sanctions against Women: A
Julio-Claudian Innovation’, The Art of Forgetting: Disgrace and Oblivion in Roman Political
22
Culture, 160-96, Chapel Hill, 2006; Eve D’Ambra, Roman Women, Cambridge, 2007; Sharon
L. James, and Sheila Dillon, eds, A Companion to Women in the Ancient World, Chichester,
2012; Jennifer Trimble, ‘Corpore enormi: The Rhetoric of Physical Appearance in Seutonius
and Imperial Portrait Statuary,’ in Art and Rhetoric in Roman Culture, eds, Jaś Elsner and
Michael Meyer, 115-54, Cambridge, 2014.
4 Cf., for example, the longevity of Augustus’s comma-shaped locks on imperial portraits
from the Julio-Claudians through to Gallienus in the third-century. See, for example, P.
Zanker, Studien zu den Augustus-Porträts I. Der Actium-Typus, Göttingen, 1973; J. D.
Breckenridge, ‘Roman Imperial Portraiture from Augustus to Gallienus,’ Aufstieg und
Niedergang der römischen Welt, 2: 12, 2, 1981, 483-86, 495; R. R. R. Smith, ‘Typology and
Diversity in the Portraits of Augustus,’ Journal of Roman Archaeology, 9, 1996, 31-47. On
the stylization of beards on imperial statues mirroring that of earlier dynasties as a visual
means of articulating tradition and continuity, see, for example, Septimius Severus’s
appropriation of Antonine facial hair, H. P. L’Orange, ‘Severus-Sarapis,’ Bericht über den
VI: Internationalen Kongress für Archäologie, Berlin 21-26 August 1939, Berlin, 1940, 495-
96; A. M. McCann, The Portraits of Septimius Severus A. D. 193-211, Memoirs of the
American Academy in Rome, 30, 1968; D. Soechting, Die Porträts des Septimius Severus,
Bonn, 1972.
5 Cf. Codex Theodosianus IX.44.1. On the unassailable nature of the imperial image, see R.
Browning, ‘The Riot of A.D. 387 in Antioch. The Role of the Theatrical Claques in the Later
Roman Empire,’ Journal of Roman Studies, 42, 1952, 13-20, esp. 20.
6 The use of the terms ‘revised and corrected’ here refer to responses which may have been
expressed by mob action, see Stewart, ‘The Destruction of Statues’, 159-89, esp. note 8.
7 On Procopius’ Anekdota, see: R. Scott, ‘Malalas, The Secret History, and Justinian’s
Propaganda’, Dumbarton Oaks Papers, 39, 1985, 99-109; A. Kaldellis, ‘The Date and
23
Structure of Prokopios’ Secret History and His Projected Work on Church History’, Greek,
Roman, and Byzantine Studies, 49, 2009, 585-616.
8 See Peter Stewart, Statues in Roman Society. Representation and Response, Oxford, 2003.
For a discussion of additional, related illustrative examples, such as the Riot of the Statues,
see Stewart, ‘The Destruction of Statues’, 159-89.
9 In his description of the destruction of Domitian’s portrait, Pliny the Younger recounts the
public joy in treating imperial likenesses as effigies: ‘to smash those arrogant faces to pieces’,
‘to threaten them with the sword’, ‘savagely attack them with axes as if blood and pain would
follow every single blow’, ‘his likeness hacked into mutilated limbs and pieces’. Moreover,
the notion of recycling Domitian’s golden statues is underscored ‘portraits hurled into the
flames and burned up, in order that they might be transformed from things of such terror and
menace into something useful and pleasing,’ Pan. 52.4-5. Trans. E. Varner, Mutilation and
Transformation, 112-3.
10 Anekdota, VIII.12-14, trans. A. Kaldellis, Prokopios: The Secret History, Indianapolis and
Cambridge, 2010.
11 For example, Domitian was not hacked to pieces but rather died as a result of stabbing.
12 On the complexities of this modern term, see, for example, F. Vittinghoff, Der Staatsfiend
in der römischen Kaiserzeit. Untersuchungen zur Damnatio Memoriae, Berlin, 1936;
Hedrick, History and Silence; Varner, Mutilation and Transformation; Harriet I. Flower, The
Art of Forgetting: Disgrace and Oblivion in Roman Political Culture, Chapel Hill, 2006; S.
Benoist, ed, Mémoire et Histoire. Les procédures de condamnation dans l’Antiquité romaine,
Metz, 2007; S. Benoist, and A. Daguet-Gagey, eds, Un Discours en images de la
condemnation de la mémoire, Metz, 2008.
13 Since the Julio-Claudians, Roman imperial imagery has sought to convey continuity
through visual means such as similar hair and beards. For example the transplanting of
24
Augustus’ hair onto Julio-Claudian imperial likenesses, see supra note 4. Or centuries later,
similarities among imperial beards, such as the Severan emulation of Antonine beards, see,
Paul Zanker, The Mask of Socrates: The Image of the Intellectual in Antiquity, trans. Alan
Shapiro, Berkeley, 1996.
14 See, for example, Harriet I. Flower, ‘Damnatio Memoriae and Epigraphy,’ in From
Caligula to Constantine: Tyranny and Transformation in Roman Portraiture, eds Eric R.
Varner and Sheramy D. Bundrick, 58-69, esp. 59, Atlanta, 2000.
15 Varner, Mutilation and Transformation, 1.
16 Cf. Peter Stewart, ‘The Destruction of Statues’, 159-89.
17 Domitian’s popularity in Greece and Asia Minor is documented in the continuous display
of a togate portrait of the damned emperor at a theatre in Aphrodisias in Caria, Turkey until
an earthquake during the reign of Heraclius (610-41 CE), Varner, Mutilation and
Transformation, 134. See also K. Erim, Aphrodisias, City of Venus Aphrodite, New York,
1986, 87.
18 Anekdota, VIII.18-20, trans. Kaldellis, 2010.
19 On spolia, see: Dale Kinney, ‘Rape or Restitution of the Past? Interpreting Spolia,’ in The
Art of Interpreting. Papers in Art History from the Pennsylvania State University, 53-67,
1995; Dale Kinney, ‘Spolia: Damnatio and Renovatio Memoriae,’ Memoirs of the American
Academy in Rome, 42, 1997, 117-48; Anthony Cutler, ‘Use or Reuse? Theoretical and
Practical Attitudes toward Objects in the Early Middle Ages,’ in Ideologie e Pratiche del
Reimpiego nell’alto Medioevo: 16 - 21 Aprile 1998, 1055-83, Spoleto, 1999; Maria Fabricius
Hansen, The Eloquence of Appropriation: Prolegomena to an Understanding of Spolia in
Early Christian Rome, Rome, 2003; B. Kiilerich, ‘Antiquus et modernus: Spolia in Medieval
Art - Western, Byzantine and Islamic,’ in Medioevo: Il tempo degli antichi. Atti del
25
Convegno internazionale di studi, Parma, 24 - 28 Settembre 2003, ed. A. C. Quintaville, 135-
45, Milan, 2006; Brilliant and Kinney, Reuse Value.
20 Fig 1: Domitian re-carved as Nerva, Rome, Museo Nazionale Romano, Palazzo Massimo
alle Terme, Rome. Inventory number: 106538. See Varner, Mutilation and Transformation,
fig. 121a-d.
21 Hedrick, History and Silence, xii.
22 This re-carved portrait was discovered at the Temple of Hercules Victor complex in Tivoli
during excavations of an apsidal hall originally dedicated to Augustus. V. Pacifici, ‘Notes on
Some Recent Discoveries at Tivoli,’ Journal of Roman Studies, 10, 1920, 91-3, figs. 8-9. It
has been suggested that the original portrait of Domitian may have been associated with the
imperial cult, Varner, Mutilation and Transformation, 118.
23 Varner, Mutilation and Transformation, 118.
24 This has also been referred to as a cannibalization, see Eric R. Varner, ‘Violent Discourses:
Visual Cannibalism and Portraits of Rome’s ‘Bad’ Emperors,’ in The Archaeology of
Violence, Interdisciplinary Approaches, ed. Sarah Ralph, 121-42, Bristol, 2013.
25 Galinsky, ‘Recarved Imperial Portraits’, 20; Hedrick, History and Silence, 113.
26 Fig 2: Severan family painted tondo, from upper left: Julia Domna, Septimius Severus (r.
193-211 CE), from lower left: Geta (decapitated), Caracalla, c. 199-200 CE, tempera,
discovered in Egypt, diameter 305 mm (12 in), Staatliche Museen in Berlin. Inventory
number: 31.329. Cf: http://www.smb-
digital.de/eMuseumPlus?service=ExternalInterface&module=collection&objectId=681547&
viewType=detailView
Accessed 9th November 2017. See: K. Parlasca, Ritratti di mummie, Repertorio d’arte
dell’Egitto greco-romano serie B, II, Rome, 1977, 64-5, no. 390, pl. 95.1, with earlier
literature; H. Heinen, ‘Herrscherkult im römischen Ägypten und Damnatio Memoriae Getas.
26
Überlegungen zum Berliner Severertondo und zu Papyrus Oxryhynchus XII 1449,’
Mitteilungen des Deutschen Archäologischen Instituts, Römische Abteilung, 98, 1991, 263-
98, colour pl. 68; Varner, Mutilation and Transformation, 181-2, fig. 187. More than a
century later, Eusebius of Caesarea describes a similar practice of applying dark paint over
the painted likeness of Maximinus Daia and his children to render them powerless, Eccl.
Hist., IX.XI.2. Cf. Stewart, ‘The Destruction of Statues’, 179.
27 On perceived differences between Nero as emperor and Nero before assuming this title, see
Flower, The Art of Forgetting, 197-233, esp. 212-23.
28 Fig. 3: Triumph of Marcus Aurelius in 176 CE. Palazzo dei Conservatori, Rome. Inventory
number: 808. http://capitolini.info/scu00808/?lang=en. Accessed 9th November 2017. Cf.
Varner, Mutilation and Transformation, figs 142a-c. Twelve related relief panels all appear to
have originally honoured Marcus Aurelius alongside Commodus. Eight panels have been
preserved in the form of palimpsests reused in the early fourth century on the Arch of
Constantine, Rome. Three panels were retained until the early sixteenth-century in the
Church of S. Martina in the Forum Romanum and are now housed in the Palazzo dei
Conservatori, Rome. The final panel is a fragmentary portrait of Marcus Aurelius, Ny
Carlsberg Glyptotek, Copenhagen, 701, inv. 1471. See: Vittinghoff, Der Staatsfiend in der
römischen Kaiserzeit, 64-74; I. S. Ryberg, The Panel Reliefs of Marcus Aurelius,
Monographs on Archaeology and Fine Arts, 14, New York, 1967; E. Angelicoussis, ‘The
Panel Reliefs of Marcus Aurelius,’ Mitteilungen des Deutschen Archäologischen Instituts,
Römische Abteilung, 91, 1984, 141-205 (with earlier literature); E. La Rocca, ed, Relievi
storici capitolini. Il restauro dei panelli di Adriano e di Marco Aurelio nel Palazzo dei
Conservatori, Rome, 1986, 38-52, pls. 1-3, pls. 23-47; D.E.E. Kleiner, Roman Sculpture,
New Haven, 1992, 288-95, figs. 256-62. See also Varner, Mutilation and Transformation,
142, esp. note 59; M. Cagiano de Azevedo, ‘Relievi storici aureliani,’ Mitteilungen des
27
Deutschen Archäologischen Instituts, Römische Abteilung, 60-1, 1953-4, 207-10.
29 See HA Marc. 16.1 and Comm. 2.3-5; 12.4-5; E. Angelicoussis, ‘The Panel Reliefs of
Marcus Aurelius,’ 152.
30 E. Angelicoussis, ‘The Panel Reliefs of Marcus Aurelius,’ 152, n. 52.
31 See, for example: C. H. Hallett, The Roman Nude: Heroic Portrait Statuary, 200 BC-AD
300, Oxford, 2005; R. R. R. Smith, et. al., Roman portrait statuary from Aphrodisias, Mainz
am Rhein, 2006; J. Ma, ‘Observations on Honorific Statues at Oropos (and Elsewhere),’
Zeitschrift für Papyrologie und Epigraphik, 160, 2007, 89-96; J. Ma, Statues and Cities:
Honorific Portraits and Civic Identity in the Hellenistic World, Oxford, 2015.
32 On mass action undertaken to update the sculptural landscape in an early form of social
media, see Stewart, ‘The Destruction of Statues’, 159-89, esp. notes 8, 9 and 13.
33 Paolo Liverani, ‘Reading Spolia in Late Antiquity and Contemporary Perception,’ in Reuse
Value: Spolia and Appropriation in Art and Architecture from Constantine to Sherrie Levine,
eds, Richard Brilliant and Dale Kinney, Farnham, 2011, 33-52, esp. 45.
34 Excavated beneath the steps leading to a shrine of Victory in the Sudan, Northern Nile,
Meroë (archaic Nubia), c. 27-25 BCE. Made of plaster, glass, calcite and bronze.
Measurements: height 46.2 cm, width 26.5 cm, depth 29.4 cm, weight c. 17 kg. British
Museum, London inventory number: BM 1911.0901.1.
35 See Liverani’s convincing interpretation of the Arch and early fourth century
interpretations of the reused imagery, ‘Reading Spolia’, esp. 35-41.
36 Fig. 4: American Academy in Rome Digital Humanities Center, Arch of Constantine: tondi
of Hadrian, second roundel, the sacrifice to Apollo (Rome, Italy). Identifier: 138913.
Accessed 6th November 2017, http://dhc.aarome.org/collections/bini/item/47576. Fig. 5:
American Academy in Rome Digital Humanities Center, Arch of Constantine: Marcus
Aurelius Attic Panel, North, detail from the Liberalitas frieze centred upon Marcus Aurelius
28
and his (excised) son Commodus after their joint victory of 176 (Rome, Italy). Identifier:
138983. Accessed 6th November 2017, http://dhc.aarome.org/collections/bini/item/47603.
The scholarship on the Arch of Constantine is vast. See: Hans Peter L’Orange, and Armin
von Gerkan, Der spätantike Bildschmuck des Konstantinsbogens, Berlin, 1939; J. Elsner,
‘From the Culture of Spolia to the Cult of Relics: The Arch of Constantine and the Genesis of
Late Antique Forms,’ Papers of the British School at Rome, 68, 149-184; Paolo Liverani,
‘Reimpiego senza ideologia. La lettura antica degli spolia, dall’Arco di Costantino all’età di
Teodorico,’ Mitteilungen des Deutschen Archäologischen Instituts, Römische Abteilung, 111,
2004, 383-444; Liverani, ‘Reading Spolia’, 33-52.
37 See: Hans Peter Laubscher, ‘Arcus Novus und Arcus Claudii, zwei Triumpfbögen an der
Via Lata in Rom,’ Nachrichten der Akademie der Wissenschaften in Göttingen, Philologisch-
Historische Klasse, Jahrg., 1976, 3, Göttingen, 1976; Paolo Liverani, ‘Arco di Onorio - Arco
di Portogallo,’ Bullettino della Commissione archeologica comunale di Roma, 105, 2004,
351-70; Paolo Liverani, ‘The Fragments in Late Antiquity. A Functional View,’ in The
Fragment. An Incomplete History, ed. W. Tronzo, 23-36, Los Angeles, 2009.
38 See Galinsky, ‘Recarved Imperial Portraits’, 1-25; Liverani, ‘Reading Spolia’, 33-52.
39 Liverani refers to the reused reliefs as integral to the creation of an ‘established and
traditional’ context for Constantine’s new imagery, ‘Reading Spolia’, 37.
40 For first-century examples, Otho allowed Nero’s portraits and statues to be re-erected,
Suet. Otho 7.1; Tacitus Hist. 1.78. Sculpted portraits of Caligula were stored in large numbers
in warehouses, Varner, Mutilation and Transformation, 45. See also H. Brandenburg, ‘The
Use of Older Elements in the Architecture of Fourth- and Fifth-century Rome: A
Contribution to the Evaluation of Spolia,’ in Reuse Value: Spolia and Appropriation in Art
and Architecture from Constantine to Sherrie Levine, eds, Richard Brilliant and Dale Kinney,
53-73, Farnham, 2011.
29
41 Not only was Nero the first princeps to be officially condemned, but he was also the first
whose one to have his memory and images subsequently rehabilitated (under Otho and
Vitellius and again in the mid-third and the end of the fourth centuries), Varner, Mutilation
and Transformation, 85.
42 On Commodus’s consecratio – the process whereby a deceased emperor was declared a
god of the Roman state – see S. R. F. Price, ‘From Noble Funerals to Divine Cult: The
Consecration of the Roman Emperor,’ in Rituals of Royalty. Power and Ceremonial in
Traditional Societies, eds, D. Cannadine and S. R. F. Price, Cambridge, 1987, 56-105, esp.
93.
43 Galinsky, ‘Recarved Imperial Portraits’, 17, with references.
44 On warehousing, see Varner and Bundrick, From Caligula to Constantine, 16-17; Varner,
Mutilation and Transformation, 5-6; Brandenburg, ‘The Use of Older Elements’, 53-73. On
workshops specialising in re-carving (Umarbeitungsateliers), see H. Jucker, ‘Iulisch-
claudische Kaiser- und Prinzenporträts als Palimpseste’, Jahrbücher des Instituts, 96, 1981,
236-316, esp. 248.
45 Fig. 7.1: Panel with portrait of Domitian re-carved as Nerva, Musei Vaticani, Museo
Gregoriano Profano, Rome. Fig. 7.2: Panel with portrait of a youthful Domitian and his father
Vespasian, Musei Vaticani, Museo Gregoriano Profano, Rome. See: F. Ghedini, ‘Riflessi
della politica domizianea nei rilievi flavi di Palazzo della Cancelleria,’ Bullettino della
Commissione archeologica comunale di Roma, 91, 1986, 292-309; Varner, Mutilation and
Transformation, figs. 122 a-b.
46 ‘Almost every single one of Nerva’s extant marble and bronze images have, in fact, been
reworked from Domitianic representations,’ Varner, Mutilation and Transformation, 135.
47 The process of poena post mortem entailed the disfigurement of imperial likenesses and
was linked to the desecration of the corpses of capital offenders, Varner, Mutilation and
30
Transformation, 3. For Julia Soemias, the only imperial woman known to have received such
treatment, Varner, Mutilation and Transformation, 199.
48 Dio 58.11.3; Juvenal 10.56-64 (Sejanus); Tac. Hist. 3.85 (Vitellius); Varner, Mutilation
and Transformation, 92-3; 105-110. See also, D. G. Kyle, ‘Disposal of Victims from Roman
Arenas,’ American Journal of Archaeology, 97, 1998, 155-83.
49 Coinage from the late second-century CE, however, shows another version of what the
family portrait may have originally looked like. See, Harold Mattingly and Edward A.
Sydenham, The Roman Imperial Coinage, IV: 1, London, 1936, plate VI, no. 12.
50 For examples, see Varner and Bundrick, From Caligula to Constantine.
51 ‘[O]ver time there is a development and a shift in emphasis from sculptural recycling to
disfigurement,’ Stewart, ‘The Destruction of Statues’, 161, 164. After the first-century zenith
in imperial palimpsests, subsequently, when imperial likenesses are recycled there is a delay.
‘[N]one of the portraits from this period [the late second and early third centuries] were
reconfigured immediately following condemnations’, Varner, Mutilation and
Transformation, 154.
52 ‘[R]ecyling, rather than mutilations, was the preferred methodology for the repression of
Caligula’s sculpted representations,’ Varner, Mutilation and Transformation, 44. ‘More
portraits of Nero were reconfigured than for any other emperor and into a wider variety of
new identities,’ Varner, Mutilation and Transformation, 85. Cf. Galinsky, ‘Recarved Imperial
Portraits’, 11, 21. Cf. Flower, The Art of Forgetting, 280-1; Eric R. Varner, ‘Tyranny and the
Transformation of the Roman Visual Landscape,’ in From Caligula to Constantine: Tyranny
and Transformation in Roman Portraiture, eds, Eric R. Varner, and Sheramy D. Bundrick, 9-
26, esp. 14-16, Atlanta, 2000; Varner, Mutilation and Transformation, esp. 136, 154, 270-85.
53 Galinsky, ‘Recarved Imperial Portraits’, 4. Cf. Varner, Mutilation and Transformation, for
example, 9 and 154.
31
54 Galinsky, ‘Recarved Imperial Portraits’, 20.
55 ‘Absence, in fact, can translate into an even stronger presence because it asks for a greater
participatory effort on the part of the viewer,’ Galinsky, ‘Recarved Imperial Portraits’, 17.
56 Varner, Mutilation and Transformation, 135.
57 ‘A way of artistically and metaphorically signalling [one emperor’s displacement of a
previous emperor’s power]…’, Varner and Bundrick, From Caligula to Constantine, 136; ‘to
profile the change’, Galinsky, ‘Recarved Imperial Portraits’, 4.
58 Figs. 8.1-8.4: Nero’s honorific portrait with likeness (only) re-carved as Domitian, then re-
carved as Nerva. Museo Nazionale d’Antichità, Parma. Inventory number: 146 (1870), 827
(1954). Discovered in 1761 during excavations of the Julio-Claudian Basilica at Velleia,
Italy. See Varner, Mutilation and Transformation, catalogue 5.13.
59 C. Saletti, ‘Il ciclo statuario della basilica di Velleia’, Milan, 1968, 54-5; Varner,
Mutilation and Transformation, 58, esp. note 115.
60 See Varner, Mutilation and Transformation, 217-18; figs. 209 a-d. Palazzo dei
Conservatori, Rome, inventory number: 1622. C. Evers, ‘Remarques sur l’iconographie de
Constantin,’ Mélanges de l'Ecole française de Rome. Antiquité, 103, 1991, 785-806; P.
Pensabene, ‘New Archeometric Investigations on the Fragments of the Colossal Statue of
Constantine in the Palazzo dei Conservatori,’ in Asmosia 5. Interdisciplinary Studies on
Ancient Stone, eds. J. J. Herrmann, Jr., N. Herz, and R. Newman, London, 2002, 250-5.
61 Galinsky, ‘Recarved Imperial Portraits’, 1-25.
62 Galinsky, ‘Recarved Imperial Portraits’, 19. Cf. ‘union of the incompatible’, H. Wrede
Consecratio in Formam Deorum, Mainz, 1981, 103; Kinney, ‘Spolia: Damnatio and
Renovatio Memoriae’, 139; an aesthetic of discontinuity’, Elsner, ‘From the Culture of
Spolia’, 176-7. See also visual examples such as portraits of older women on the body of the
nude figure of Venus, Eve D’Ambra, ‘Nudity and Adornment in Female Portrait Sculpture of
32
the Second Century A.D.,’ in I Claudia II, eds, D. Kleiner and S. Matheson, 101-14, Austin,
2000.
63 I refer to this category as ‘nearly’ complete erasure, as opposed to complete erasure,
because if the removal had been complete, then there would be no way of verifying excision.
64 Varner, Mutilation and Transformation, 7.
65 Fig. 9.1: panel depicting Septimius Severus and Julia Domna performing a libation, DAI
Rome, 70.993. Fig. 9.2: panel depicting a youthful Caracalla performing a libation, DAI
Rome, 70.1000. On the Arch of the Argentarii, see: D. E. L. Haynes and P. E. D. Hirst, Porta
Argentariorum, London, 1939; M. Pallottino, L’arco degli argentarii, Rome, 1946; J. Elsner,
‘Sacrifice and Narrative on the Arch of the Argentarii at Rome,’ Journal of Roman
Archaeology, 18, 2005, 83-98.
66 On Caracalla’s feelings of abhorrence towards his new spouse, see early third-century
historians, Dio 76 (77).2.5-3.1; Herodian 3.10.8.
67 See Varner, Mutilation and Transformation, figs. 143 a-b.
68 Anekdota, VIII.21, trans. Kaldellis, 2010.
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