Adjective
Antonine (not comparable)
Of or pertaining to the Roman emperor Antoninus Pius (86-161) or his reign or of the emperors in his dynasty
A 19th-century engraving depicts the Angel of Death descending on Rome during the Antonine plague. Source: Internet
Galen compliments Severus and Caracalla on keeping a supply of drugs for their friends and mentions three cases in which they had been of use in 198. The Antonine Plague main The Antonine Plague was named after Marcus Aurelius’ family name of Antoninus. Source: Internet
D. J. Breeze, The Antonine Wall (John Donald, 2006), p. 167. The Romans retreated to the line of Hadrian's Wall. Moffat, Before Scotland, pp. 297–301. Source: Internet
Cf., e.g.: Ronald Mellor, review of Edward Champlin's Fronto and Antonine Rome, The American Journal of Philology 103:4 (1982): 461 and passim. Source: Internet
Strategic walls across open country were far rarer, and Hadrian's Wall (from 122) and the Antonine Wall (from 142, abandoned only 8 years after completion) are the most significant examples, both on the Pictish frontier. Source: Internet
J. F. Gilliam believes that the Antonine plague probably caused more deaths than any other epidemic during the empire before the mid-3rd century. Source: Internet