The Digital Ark: Early Modern Collections of Curiosities in England and Scotland, 1580-1700

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Caracalla, Roman Emperor (04 Apr 188 - 08 Apr 217)

Roman Emperor who co-ruled with his brother Geta before assassinating him in 211. Known as Lucius Septimius Bassianus (from birth to 195); Marcus Aurelius Antoninus Caesar (195 to 198); Caesar Marcus Aurelius Antoninus Augustus(198 to 211); Caesar Marcus Aurelius Severus Antoninus Pius Augustus (211 to death). Dictionary of National Biography entry: https://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780199545568.001.0001/acref-9780199545568-e-986?rskey=vUk7TA&result=6 Other biography: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caracalla Relationships: Caracalla was a son of Julia Domna (170-217)
Caracalla was a brother of Publius Septimius Geta (07 Mar 189-26 Dec 211)
Caracalla was a son of Septimius Severus (11 Apr 145-4 Feb 211)

Elagabalus (203-11 Mar 222) was a relative of Caracalla
Publius Septimius Geta (07 Mar 189-26 Dec 211) was a brother of Caracalla
Julia Avita Mamaea (after 180-Mar 235) was a relative of Caracalla
Publia Fulvia Plautilla (c. 185-212) was a wife of Caracalla
Alexander Severus (c. 209-235) was a relative of Caracalla
References in Documents:
Consolidated catalogue of 1695: The Book of the Vice-Chancellor (MacGregor, ed.) 288 AYTOK. KAI. M. AYRHΛ. ANTONEINOC. ΛOY. CEΠTIMIOC ΓΕTAC. KAIC. Capita Antonini et Getæ EΠICT. PATHΓOYΛIPPIOY. ΕΛAITΩN. Figura Equestris juxta Trophæum Ær. Elaea (Aeolis), Caracalla and Geta. An equestrian figure, beside a trophy.
Consolidated catalogue of 1695: The Book of the Vice-Chancellor (MacGregor, ed.) 343 Antoninus August. – Caracalla. Rector Orbis. Figura nuda stans dext. globum, sin. Pilum. Ar. Caracalla. Master of the world. A standing naked figure, with a globe in the right hand and a spear in the left.
Consolidated catalogue of 1695: The Book of the Vice-Chancellor (MacGregor, ed.) Caracalla. Master of the world. A standing naked figure, with a globe in the right hand and a spear in the left.
Consolidated catalogue of 1695: The Book of the Vice-Chancellor (MacGregor, ed.) Caracalla. Standing Victory, with a staff in her right hand and a shield before her feet.
Consolidated catalogue of 1695: The Book of the Vice-Chancellor (MacGregor, ed.) Antoninus Pius Aug. Brit. P.M. TR.P.XVI. COS. IIII.P.P. Figura stolata stans, dextrã protendens, sin. hastam tenens. Ar. Caracalla
Consolidated catalogue of 1695: The Book of the Vice-Chancellor (MacGregor, ed.) Caracalla. A standing robed figure, her right hand extended, holding a spear in her left.
Consolidated catalogue of 1695: The Book of the Vice-Chancellor (MacGregor, ed.) 492 Plautilla Augusta – Anton. Caracallæ Uxor. Venus victrix. Venus et Cupido uterque pomũdextrã Venus autem sinistra ramũpalmæ tenet, scuto innixa. Ar. Plautilla, wife of Caracalla. Venus and Cupid, each with an apple in the right hand, but Venus, leaning on a shield, holds a palm leaf in her left hand.
Consolidated catalogue of 1695: The Book of the Vice-Chancellor (MacGregor, ed.) Antoninus Pius Aug. Brit P.M. TR.P. XVI. Cos. IIII. PP. Figura stolata dextrã sursum tollens, sinistra hastam purã per transversum. Ar. Caracalla
Consolidated catalogue of 1695: The Book of the Vice-Chancellor (MacGregor, ed.) 186 Plautilla Augusta (Anton. Caracallæ uxor) Venus Victrix. Venus et Cupido, uterque pomũdextra ferens. Venus sinistra palmam. Ar. Plautilla, wife of Caracalla. Venus and Cupid, each holding an apple in the right hand; Venus has a palm leaf in her left.
Bargrave's catalogue: Rara, Antiqua, et Numismata Bargraviana (Canterbury Cathedral Lit MS E 16a)

When I was at Rome, 1646, this obelisk lay broken in 4 or 5 pieces, with the fall of it, in the Circle of the Emperor Caralla Emperor Caracalla.[*]It is now called the Circus of Maxentius, or of his son Romulus. near St. Sebastian and Metella's Tomb, now a noble antiquity, and called Capo di Bove. I took another stone, and with it broke off of the butt end of it this piece and as much more, and had this polished. The obelisk, as it lay then and as it is now, is full of Egyptian hyeroglifficks, of which Father Kercherius, that eminent Jesuit, and of my acquaintance, hath writt a large folio. All the other guglios,[*]The word is properly not guglio, but guglia. or obeliscs, at Rome seem to be all of the same sort of stone, and are stupendious to imagine how they could possibly be hewn in that bigness and hight out of any rock, though it may be they might afterward be hewn into that pyramidical proportion and shape that they now bear. All full of Egyptian hyroglificks, that largest of all before St. Peter at the Vatican excepted, which is one intyre precious stone -- at least, better than marble, and I think (by my piece) a jasper; and yet is esteemed to be higher by 3 or 4 foot than the maypole in the Strand at London. Another is dexterously placed on the Via Flaminia, at the Porto dell Populo, in a poynt to be seen from 3 of the great streets of Rome. Another dispute is, how it was possible to transport so vastly weighty things from Egypt to Rome as one of those stones are, they having then no such ships as we have now, their byremes and tryremes being but pittiful boats, yet sufficient to make them masters of the seas in those times. There are several treatises on this subject; and the most probable that I find is, that they were brought upon warffs or raffts of many pines and firs, fastened by art together, and, the stones being laid upon them, they, with a stearer or 2 or 3 at the end of those raffts, came terra, terra, terra (as the Italians term it) along the coast, or, at least, from promontory to promontory, until they came to Ostia, and so 10 miles up the Tyber to Rome. Many long and large warfes or rafts of these fir and pine trees I have found troublesome to our boats on the Danube, the Rone or Rhodanus, on the Rhine, and Elve, down which rivers an infinite abundance of that tymber passeth daily thus fastened together, and on some of them they build 2 or 3 little hutts or cabans and dress their meat. Thus as to these pyramids' transport.

18th-c coin catalogue (Canterbury Cathedral Lit MS E 16d)
Caracalla"> Coins of M: Aurelius Antoninus Caracalla.
165 Head of Caracalla. ANTONINVS PIVS. AVG BRIT. Reverse a Figure sitting holding in its Hand a Scepter. SECVRITATI PERPETVAE. In the Exergue S.C. Casaubon
Sale Catalogue of Musaeum Thoresbyanum (1764) 45 Sept. Severus 8, Julia Domna 5, Caracalla 13, vide N° 487 to 494, 496 to 513 25
Sale Catalogue of Musaeum Thoresbyanum (1764) 105 Augustus, Tiberius, Vitellius, Vespasian, Titus, Nerva, Trajan, Hadrian, Ælius, Antonius, Faustina, Verus, Caracalla" ref="303">Caracalla, and Julia Pia 25
Sale Catalogue of Musaeum Thoresbyanum (1764) 106 Vespasian, Titus, Domitian, Nerva, Trajan, Hadrian, Antoninus, Faustina, Aurelius, Verus, Caracalla" ref="303">Caracalla, Geta, S. Severus, and Julia Domna 26
Musaeum Tradescantianum (1656) M. Aurel: Antoninus Caracalla.
Musaeum Tradescantianum (1656) Caracallæ Caput barbatum.
Musaeum Tradescantianum (1656) M. Aur: Ant: Caracalla. 1. 2.