History of Europe

Commodus, the murderer of Máximo Décimo Meridio, also had a heart

Those of you who have seen the movie Gladiator (2000), directed by Ridley Scott, you will remember how bad the emperor Commodus was (Joaquin Phoenix) and the dirty tricks he did to our beloved Máximo Décimo Meridio (Russell Crowe). There is a moment in the film that seems brutal to me:when Commodus descends into the arena to meet the masked gladiator, Russell Crowe takes off his helmet and says:

My name is Maximus Tenth Meridio, Commander of the Armies of the North, General of the Phoenix Legions, loyal servant of the true emperor Marcus Aurelius [father of Commodus], father of a murdered son, husband of a murdered woman, and I will achieve my revenge in this life or the other.

The film has historical brushstrokes, nothing more, and one of those brushstrokes of the film that coincides with reality is to paint Commodus as paranoid and ruthless... but even these types of individuals have a little heart.

As in the film, although with a different script, Commodus had to face a conspiracy to kill him hatched by his own sister Lucilla . They were unsuccessful and the emperor took his revenge on him. One of the second-order conspirators managed to save his life, but not his possessions. All his property, including slaves, passed into the hands of the Emperor. Among this group of slaves was Marcia , a very beautiful young woman who left the service to go directly to Commodus's bed. Marcia had been an abandoned girl picked up on the street by the priest Jacinto and, logically, educated in the Christian faith. It is not known how or why, but the fact is that she began to serve as a slave in the house of the conspirator. Since Marcia came into the life of the Emperor, she tried to favor the Christians as much as she could, who at that time, and depending on the will of each of the emperors, were persecuted to a greater or lesser extent. As she could and secretly, she managed to meet with Pope Victor I and asked him to compile a list of Christians from Rome sentenced to forced labor in the mines of Sardinia. She with the list in hand she left and, after a night of pleasure, she got everyone's forgiveness. That day, Commodus showed that he had a heart... or that it was impossible to deny Marcia anything. One of the convicts who was released was the future Pope Calixtus I.

On December 31, 192, Emperor Commodus was strangled to death at the hands of the freedman Narcisco , after the poison supplied by Marcia had no effect. The new conspiracy had achieved his objective and the day after his death the Senate declared Commodus a public enemy, decreeing against him a damnatio memoriae (All statues of him were torn down and his name was removed from all public records.)