Caracalla was an emperor of the Roman Empire. He made a few reforms, but he wasn't the best of leaders. When Caracalla was only eight years old, his father, the emperor Lucius Septimius Severus, made Caracalla his joint ruler. In 209, Caracalla's younger brother Geta as well became a emperor. For the first time in history, there were three emperors ruling over the Roman empire.
On Severus's deathbed, he wanted is two sons to rule together as joint emperors. Caracalla and Geta incomprehensibly hated each other, therefore they did not take their father's words of wisdom to heart. They constantly plotted to assassinate each other.
In December 211, Caracalla had a plan to make sure all the power was solely in his control. He told his mother, Julia Domna, that he wanted to be reconciled with Geta and have peace. They arranged to meet in Julia Domna's apartment in the palace; Caracalla and Geta could not bring any guards. They came to the designation, and before any conversation could begin five centurions, who had been hired and hidden by Caracalla, rushed to the scene and began stabbing Geta. Julia tried to help him, but her hand got injured in the process. To her utmost Horror, Caracalla rushed to the scene and made the final blow on his brother, and Geta fell back in his mother's arms.
It remains a mystery if Julia Domna ever forgave Caracalla, but shortly after Caracalla lied to the Senate and said that Geta had tried to kill him, and that he had acted in self defense. Caracalla was now the only emperor of Rome, and he ruled as a tyrant, feasting on gore and making the lives of many miserable. In 217, when he was only 29 years old, 4 days after his birthday, he was assassinated on the side of a road in Syria. Not too long after that, Julia Domna also died; it remains a mystery if she starved herself to death, or died of a broken heart because her husband and only children had brutally deceased.
The only amiable things Caracalla accomplished during his reign was in 212: he passed a reform that all free-born males in the Roman empire become citizens; at the start of his reign, he began a project for the Baths of Caracalla, and they were not completed until after his death. His reforms changed history forever, and he didn't persecute Christians, but he was still a vile fellow. He massacred and ravaged the entire metropolis of Alexandria just because of a few protesters; he ravaged the Parthian empire just so he could be called Parthianicus, he put to death 20,000 of his brother's followers after Geta's death, and he executed countless other people for ideological reasons, including the brother of the man who assassinated him. (Ironic, isn't it?)
As the name indicates, the Baths of Trajan were built by the emperor Trajan.
Caracalla was the 22nd Roman emperor. He reigned form 198 to 217.
The Baths of Caracalla created because the Emperor Caracalla wanted an elaborate public bath. It was a huge complex and a place for citizens to socialize.
The successors of Caracalla was the Praetorian Praefect, Macrinus, and Macrinus's 10 year old son Diadumenian. They reigned barely a year when they were both killed in battle. After them the sadist Heliogabulous reigned, in which a false story states he was Caracalla's son but it was simply a lie to get him into power.
He wasn't an emperor.
As the name indicates, the Baths of Trajan were built by the emperor Trajan.
Caracalla was the 22nd Roman emperor. He reigned form 198 to 217.
The Baths of Caracalla created because the Emperor Caracalla wanted an elaborate public bath. It was a huge complex and a place for citizens to socialize.
It was built during the reign of emperor Caracalla between the years 211 and 224.
The successors of Caracalla was the Praetorian Praefect, Macrinus, and Macrinus's 10 year old son Diadumenian. They reigned barely a year when they were both killed in battle. After them the sadist Heliogabulous reigned, in which a false story states he was Caracalla's son but it was simply a lie to get him into power.
he was a good emperor
He was assassinated by a disaffected soldier in 217 CE.
individuals or entire communities as rewards for good service. In 212 CE the emperor Caracalla granted citizenship to all free, adult, male inhabitants of the empire
He wasn't an emperor.
terrible.
he was good and bad
Roman emperors wore the tunic and toga just like any other man. The difference was in the fabric and in the purple coloring. When the emperor Caracalla came to power the toga was banned and the emperor and all men were required to wear the "caracalla" which was a cloak-type outer garment.