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Saturday, July 19, 2025 |
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British Museum display presents coins and other objects that were defaced |
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Bronze medallion of Commodus struck from two alloys and set in a wider rim, showing his facing bust, whose face has been erased; Rome, AD 191. © The Trustees of the British Museum.
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LONDON.- Defacing the past: damnation and desecration in imperial Rome presents coins and other objects that were defaced, either to condemn the memory of deceased Roman emperors or to contest the power of living ones. Images of power have always been used as a medium for propaganda; the power that they convey could backfire if they were used against the authority by which they had been designed and propagated.
The display examines Roman history from the view of the defacer, looking at objects from Sejanus in the rule of Tiberius to the decadent Caligula and Nero, and from the disastrous Domitian and Commodus to the soldier emperors of the later empire.
Like many rulers, Roman emperors used inscriptions, sculptures and coins to project their authority. The imperial image conveyed through these media could be contested and subverted for political and religious reasons.
The memory of Roman emperors and high-ranking officials could be officially condemned after their death through a process known as damnatio memoriae, meaning that a persons memory was attacked and largely erased through physically erasing names and defacing portraits. This affected in particular rulers who were overthrown and murdered or executed. Imperial images were also mutilated and destroyed by Romes enemies to contest the imperial authority.
The free display shows the history of the custom of mutilating and subverting images of powerwith objects from Egypt, Mesopotamia and Greece, focusing on the Roman Empire.
Objects include coins of Caligula and Nero, the first emperors who suffered from damnation after their death, as a consequence of their unpopularity with the Roman Senate and the army. Other coins on display show examples of defacement of images of Domitian and Commodus, both killed in conspiracies as a result of their authocratic and extravagant behaviours. For example, the bust and name of emperor Domitian were erased from bronze coins on which he was portrayed face-to-face with his wife Domitia, who is believed to have been involved in the plot to kill him.
The show also offers a broad range of examples of defacement of Geta, son of the emperor Septimius Severus, whose memory was fiercely erased after his murder by order of his brother and co-ruler Caracalla. These include several coins from the provinces of the Empire and Egyptian papyri on which his name was deleted. Lastly, a marble Latin inscription dedicated to Septimius Severus, Caracalla and Geta, on which the names of Geta and Plautilla, Carcallas wife, have been removed is also on display.
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