Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Poppaea Sabina" ¶ 5
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Poppaea and Sabina
Through Nero, Agrippina was the paternal great-grandmother of Claudia Augusta, ( Nero's only child through his second marriage to Poppaea Sabina ).
According to Tacitus, in 58, Nero became involved with the noble woman Poppaea Sabina.
* Holztrattner, Franz, Poppaea Neronis Potens: Studien zu Poppaea Sabina, Berger & Söhne: Graz-Horn, 1995
This friendship was brought to an end in 58 because of his wife, the noblewoman Poppaea Sabina.
* Emperor Nero marries for the second time, to Poppaea Sabina, ex-wife of Marcus Salvius Otho.
Due to his devotion to her, Messalina was able to manipulate Claudius into ordering the exile or execution of various people: the Roman philosopher Seneca the Younger ; Claudius ’ nieces Julia Livilla and Julia ; Marcus Vinicius ( husband of Julia Livilla ); consul Gaius Asinius Pollio II ( see Vipsania Agrippina ); the elder Poppaea Sabina ( mother of Empress Poppaea Sabina, second wife of Nero ); consul Decimus Valerius Asiaticus ; and Polybius.
In 65, during the investigation into the abortive conspiracy of Gaius Calpurnius Piso, he and Poppaea Sabina formed a kind of imperial privy council, accusing the courtier and novelist Petronius Arbiter of treason ; Petronius did not wait for a sentence, but instead chose to commit suicide by repeatedly slitting and rebinding his wrists until he was drained of blood.
Nero then married his pregnant mistress Poppaea Sabina, whom he kicked to death for criticizing him.
* Poppaea Sabina ( historical ), the wife of Nero.
Paetina's daughter Antonia was executed in AD 65 or AD 66, shortly after the death of Nero's second wife Poppaea Sabina.
Poppaea Sabina ( after AD 63 known as Poppaea Augusta Sabina ) ( 30 – 65 ) and sometimes referred to as Poppaea Sabina the Younger to differentiate her from her mother of the same name, was a Roman Empress as the second wife of the Emperor Nero.
Poppaea Sabina the Younger was born in Pompeii in AD 30 as the daughter of Titus Ollius and Poppaea Sabina the Elder.

Poppaea and Elder
The father of Poppaea Sabina the Elder was a certain Gaius Poppaeus Sabinus.
After the emperor himself, the Mausoleum hosted the ashes of Livia ( Augustus ' wife ), Germanicus, Agrippina the Elder, Agrippina's daughter Julia Livilla, Nero ( son of Germanicus ), Drusus Caesar ( son of Germanicus ), Caligula, Tiberius, Drusus Julius Caesar ( son of Tiberius ), Nero Claudius Drusus and Antonia Minor ( parents of Claudius ), Claudius, Britannicus ( the son of Claudius ), the embalmed body of Poppaea Sabina wife of Nero, Julia Domna ( later moved to Mausoleum of Hadrian ), and Nerva, the last emperor for whom the mausoleum was opened.

Poppaea and was
With the reasoning that a divorce from Octavia and a marriage to Poppaea was not politically feasible with Agrippina alive, Nero decided to kill Agrippina.
Additionally, Suetonius reveals that Poppaea's husband, Otho, was not sent away by Nero until after Agrippina's death in 59, making it highly unlikely that already married Poppaea would be pressing Nero.
In the 1932 historical epic, The Sign of the Cross, she was cast opposite Fredric March as the Roman empress Poppaea.
Some modern historians believe that Poppaea died from a miscarriage or childbirth, and that the story was exaggerated to vilify Nero.
Even though a Roman villa in nearby Torre Annunziata ( formerly known as Oplontis ), located not far from Pompeii, is referred to as the Villa Poppaea as though it were certain, it is most likely that this villa was not hers.
Passed during his consulship was the Lex Papia Poppaea, a law meant to strengthen and encourage marriage.
They married in 44, when Poppaea was 14 years old.
Poppaea then married Otho, a good friend of the new Emperor Nero, who was seven years younger than she was.
According to Tacitus, Poppaea was ambitious, ruthless, and bisexual.
Tacitus claims that Poppaea was the reason that Nero murdered his mother.
During his eight year marriage to Claudia Octavia, Nero had produced no children, and in AD 62, around the time that he divorced Octavia, Poppaea was pregnant.

Poppaea and Tacitus
According to Tacitus, Poppaea divorced Otho in 58 and focused her attentions solely on becoming empress of Rome and Nero's new wife.
Still, Tacitus claims that, with Agrippina gone, Poppaea pressured Nero to divorce and later execute his first wife and stepsister Claudia Octavia in order to marry Poppaea.
Modern historians, though, keep in mind Suetonius, Tacitus and Cassius Dio's severe bias against Nero and the impossibility of them knowing private events, and hence recognize that Poppaea may have simply died due to fatal miscarriage complications or in childbirth ( in which case the second child also did not survive ).
Tacitus mentions several leges Iuliae ( Julian Laws ) pertaining to morals and marriage, and the Lex Papia Poppaea as a separate later law, refining the Julian Laws ( Annals, 3. 25 )
Octavia was an ‘ aristocratic and virtuous wife ' ( in Tacitus's words ), whereas Nero hated her and grew bored with her ( according to both Tacitus and Suetonius ), trying on several occasions to strangle her ( according to Suetonius ) and having affairs with a freedwoman called Claudia Acte and then with Poppaea Sabina.

Poppaea and .
Yet, Nero did not marry Poppaea until 62, calling into question this motive.
It starts again with Poppaea as the motive behind the murder.
* In order to increase the number of marriages, and ultimately the population, the Lex Papia Poppaea is adopted in Rome.
The Lex Papia Poppaea extended and modified these laws in relation to intermarriage between social classes and inheritance.
However, it should be noted that reconstruction began in 62 AD, a possible result of seismic activity having damaged the villa or a result of the marriage between Poppaea and the Emperor Nero.

Sabina and was
Faustina was the daughter of consul Marcus Annius Verus and Rupilia Faustina ( a half-sister to Roman Empress Vibia Sabina ).
Towards the end of 1356 Albornoz was appointed as bishop of Sabina.
His rise was rapid: in 1257, he was appointed Bishop of Le Puy ; in 1259, he was appointed Archbishop of Narbonne ; and in December 1261, he became the first cardinal created by Pope Urban IV, for the See of Sabina.
In 1238 he was made cardinal bishop of Sabina.
The cardinal bishop of Sabina was finally elected Pope Celestine IV by seven cardinals only on 25 October 1241.
The name of Sixtus is often connected with a great building boom in Rome: Santa Sabina on the Aventine Hill was dedicated during his pontificate and he built Santa Maria Maggiore, whose dedication to Mary the Mother of God reflected his acceptance of the Ecumenical council of Ephesus which closed in 431.
When Pope Benedict IX was driven from Rome in September 1044, John, bishop of Sabina, was elected after fierce and protracted infighting.
This sentence was obviously suspended because he continued to function and was recognized as Bishop of Sabina until at least 1062, having occupied that see for over twenty years ( from 1041 ).
They secured the consecration of Eugene, who was the archpriest of St Sabina on the Aventine, although by a decree of the Roman Council of 769, under Stephen IV, they had no right to a real share in a papal election.
He was born in Sabina, Italy.
Released in 1988, this was Binoche's first English language role and was a worldwide success with critics and audiences alike Set against the Russian invasion of Prague in 1968, the film tells the story of the relationships a Czech surgeon, Tomas ( Daniel Day-Lewis ), has with his wife Tereza and his lover Sabina ( Lena Olin ).
He was consecrated as bishop by Bartolomeo Pacca, Cardinal Bishop of Ostia and Velletri and dean of the Sacred College of Cardinals, with Pier Francesco Galleffi, Cardinal Bishop of Porto e Santa Rufina and sub-dean of the Sacred College of Cardinals, and Tommasso Arezzo, Cardinal Bishop of Sabina, acting as co-consecrators.
The name Abruzzo appears to derive from the Latin " Aprutium ", although in Roman times the region was known at various times as Picenum, Sabina et Samnium, Flaminia et Picenum and / or Campania et Samnium.
The folklorist Sabina Magliocco has theorised that prior to being used in Leland's Gospel, Aradia was originally a supernatural figure in Italian folklore, who was later merged with other folkloric figures such as the sa Rejusta of Sardinia.

0.141 seconds.