AFRICAN EMPERORS OF ROME:
Caracalla was the eldest son of
Septimius Severus, the first black African-born Emperor of Rome. But
before Septimius Severus, there had been other Roman-born black Emperors
of Rome. This story of the other black emperors of Rome will be explored in another write-up, but for now we focus on Caracalla.
Unlike his father Septimius Severus, Caracalla was born and raised in
Italy. After the death of his father, he ruled jointly with his younger
brother Geta until the latter’s death in 211.
Caracalla’s reign
was notable for the Constitutio Antoniniana, granting Roman citizenship
to freemen throughout the Roman Empire. That act laid a foundation for a
peaceful multi-ethnic, multi-cultural Empire that Rome was to become.
Caracalla was mean towards the military incursions of the Goths, the
Parthians and the Tartars, and he took brutal and extreme steps to
suppress those invaders from Turkemenistan that were sorely troubling
the cohesion of the Roman state.
A modern-day British historian
Edward Gibbon, a descendant of the Goths, referred to him as, “the
common enemy of mankind” because of the massacres he authorized in
various parts of the empire.
In AD 213, Caracalla went north to
the German frontier and subdued the Alamanni tribesmen who were causing
trouble in the Agri Decumates. Due to that feat the Senate conferred
upon him the title of “Germanicus Maximus”.
In AD 216,
Caracalla took on the Parthians, a related tribe of the Goths, (the
Parthians are the ancestors of the modern day Farsi-Iranians) who were
causing problems on the southernmost flank of the empire. He tricked the
Parthians into believing that he accepted a marriage and peace
proposal, but then launched a series of blistering attacks on the
Parthians when their guards were down. The thereafter ongoing conflict
and skirmishes became known as the Parthian war of Caracalla.
The baths of Caracalla were the largest public baths ever built in
ancient Rome. To put it in historical perspective, the central room of
the baths was larger than St. Peter’s Basilica. It could easily
accommodate over 2,000 Roman citizens. The bath house opened in 216,
complete with libraries, private rooms and outdoor tracks. Caracalla
ordered the building of those baths that are named in his honour.
Caracalla was assasinated by his body-guard while travelling from
Edessa to continue the war against Parthian. He died on April 8, AD 217.
It is important that Africans should remember and celebrate Caracalla
and his family line, i.e. the Severan Dynasty, because as black
Africans, they were us and we are them.
By the dint of their
heritage, they were part of our legacy, and their attainments
represented part of our unfolding tale of greatness, of towering
historical achievements, of courage, regency and inimitable genius.
The descendants of the Goths who conquered Rome, and now control
historical narratives, would want you to believe that they were the real
Romans. Through centuries of selective narration and faking of
historical artefacts, they have largely succeeded in hiding the central
role of the Africans in the defunct Roman empire.
They hide the
facts that the Goths and the Parthians (the ancestors of the present
day Germans, Russians, British, Spanish, Italians, and Iranians…the
Aryans!!!) were the mortal enemies of the dark Ibero-Maurisian Romans,
Greeks, Egyptians, Libyans, and Numidians, Mauritanians, and Saharans,
the original owners of western Europe. They promote a fake and false
notion that Rome was a so-called white created civilization affiliated
with their Gothic ancestry. But this is a lie!
Black Roman Emperor Karakala
The memorials of Caracalla, Septimius Severus, Geta, Maximinus, and a
long line of Black, Moorish, African Emperors of Rome reject this lie.
We must revisit the Roman Empire and salvage the Black ancestors and
Emperors that have been covered by the global western academic
conspiracy.
Again we chant, blessings on the memorial of the Severan Dynasty, they were the “naigre” Emperors of Rome, from Africa.
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