Livia, Empress of Rome

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Livia, Empress of Rome Page 35

by Matthew Dennison


  triple triumph celebration (29 BC)

  victory against Antony at battle of Mutina

  wealth of and property owned

  will

  writing of autobiography

  Aurelia (Julius Caesar’s mother)

  Baiae

  Balbus, Marcus Atius

  birthrate

  Bona Dea Subsaxana, Temple of

  Brutus, Decimus

  Caecilia Attica

  Caecilia Metella

  Caelius Rufus, Marcus

  Caesar, Julius

  and Augustus

  and Cleopatra

  divine status of

  eminence of

  murder of

  will

  Caligula, Gaius (emperor)

  Calpurnia

  Cassius

  Catiline Conspiracy

  Cato the Censor

  Cato the Younger

  Catullus, Gaius Valerius

  childbirth

  father’s attendance at

  children, Roman

  centrality of to marriage

  limited number born to families

  mortality rates

  relationship with parents

  Cicero

  buying of Marcus’s garden

  and Caesar

  and daughter’s marriage

  dispute with Clodius

  on Augustus

  on Nero

  Second Philippic

  victim of Proscriptions

  Circus Flaminius

  Claudia (daughter of Clodius Pulcher)

  Claudia Quinta

  Claudii

  Claudius, Appius

  Claudius Caecus, Appius

  Claudius, Emperor

  Claudius Pulcher, Appius

  Clausis, Attius

  Cleopatra VII, Queen

  and Antony

  commits suicide

  divine status of in Egypt

  transformation of Roman percepion of and contrasting of to Livia by Augustus

  Cleopatra Selene (daughter of Antony and Cleopatra)

  Clivus Victoriae (Rome)

  Clodia Metelli

  Clodius Pulcher, Publius

  conception, theories of

  concordia

  Corinthian bronze

  Cornelia of the Gracchi

  Cornelia (Pompey’s wife)

  Cornelia (stepdaughter of Augustus)

  Cotta Maximus

  Crassus

  cubiculum

  Cybele (goddess)

  deliciae

  depositio barbae

  dies lustricus

  Dio, Cassius

  Roman History

  Diodorus Siculus

  dispensator

  Doryphoros

  dowry

  Drusus (Claudius Drusus Nero, Livia’s younger son)

  birth

  death

  early years and education

  funeral

  and Gaul campaign

  marriage to Antonia Minor

  senatorial career

  Drusus the Younger

  education, Roman

  Eleusinian Mysteries

  Eleusis

  epidemics

  Etna, eruption of

  fashion

  Feast of the Divine Twelve

  First Triumvirate

  Fortuna Muliebris, Temple of

  Forum of Augustus

  Forum Julium

  Fulvia (Antony’s wife)

  Fundanius

  Fundi

  Gaius Caesar

  adoption of as heir by Augustus

  death

  Gallus, Asinius

  Gaul campaign

  Gellius, Aulus

  Athenian Nights

  Germanicus

  death

  marriage to Agrippina

  Gibbon, Edward

  Glaucia (slave)

  Graves, Robert

  I, Claudius

  Gytheum

  Herod the Great

  Hispania Ulterior

  homosexuality

  Horace (Quintus Horatius Flaccus)

  Odes

  Hortensius Hortalus, Quintus

  houses, Roman

  I, Claudius (tv series)

  imagines maiorum

  infant mortality

  Ionian League

  Isis cult

  jewellery

  Judaea

  Julia (Agricola’s mother)

  Julia (Augustus’s daughter)

  banishment to Pandateria by Augustus

  death

  marriage to Agrippa and birth of children

  marriage to Marcellus

  marriage to Tiberius

  popularity of in Rome

  relationship with Livia

  sexual misdemeanours and fall from grace

  Julia (Caesar’s sister)

  Julia Livilla (daughter of Germanicus)

  Julia the Younger

  Julians

  Juno Sospita, cult of

  Juvenal

  Kind Hearts and Coronets

  Kunsthistorisches Museum (Vienna)

  Laelia

  lead poisoning

  Lepidus, Marcus Aemilius

  expulsion from Triumvirate

  member of Second Triumvirate

  storming of house by of pro-Clodian plebs

  Leptis Magna (Libya)

  lex Iulia de adulteriis coercendis

  lex Iulia de maritandis ordinibus

  Lex Papia Poppaea

  Libo, Marcus Livius Drusus

  Licinia (wife of Cato the Elder)

  life expectancy

  Livia, Empress of Rome

  Early Years and Marriage to Tiberius Claudius Nero birth

  birth of Drusus

  birth of Tiberius

  childhood and upbringing

  divorce from Nero

  education

  engagement to Nero

  as fugitive during Nero’s flight

  marriage to and relationship with Nero

  return to Rome after husband’s flight

  surrenders children to Nero after divorce

  wedding to Nero and ceremonies

  Marriage to Augustus

  ambitions for Tiberius and promoting cause of

  and Augustus’s affairs

  bestowing of sacrosanctity on to by Augustus

  charity activities

  contrasting of image with Cleopatra by Augustus

  courtship and engagement

  and death of Augustus

  dependence on survival of

  divine status of and road to deification

  dress and championing of the stola

  eastern tour with Augustus

  failure to conceive and stillbirth of third pregnancy

  friendship with Salome of Judaea and bequest of three cities of Judaea from

  household management

  and ill health of Augustus

  influence on Augustus

  influence and power

  involvement in Augustus’s adoption of Tiberius as heir

  and Julia’s downfall

  and marriage of Drusus to Antonia

  and marriage of Tiberius to Julia

  maternal ambitions

  maternal role

  murder of Augustus allegations

  as personification of Augustus’s concept of exemplary womanhood and moral regeneration of Rome

  pleads Tiberius’s case to Augustus during Tiberius’s absence in Rhodes

  poisoning of Marcellus allegation

  portraits of

  recognizes restrictions of position

  relationship with Augustus

  relationship with Julia

  relationship with Octavia

  religious activities

  restoration of shrines and temples in Rome

  suspected of murdering Agrippa Postumus

  suspected of murdering Gaius and Lucius Caesar

  and Tiberius’s marriage to Vipsaniar />
  and Tiberius’s self-imposed exile to Rhodes

  tour of provinces with Augustus

  Life after Death of Augustus

  adoption of as daughter by Augustus in will

  appointed Augustus’s priestess by Senate

  and Augustus’s funeral

  banishment to the Black Sea

  and death of Germanicus

  granting of ‘Augusta’ title by Augustus

  honours bestowed on

  illness

  and Piso/Plancina trials

  refusal by Tiberius to take ‘son of Julia’ appellation on accession

  relationship with son (Tiberius)

  and Tiberius’s accession

  wealth and land holdings

  Personal Life

  ancestry and family background

  appearance and beauty of

  cameos of

  cultivation of laurels and poultry

  and death of Drusus

  decorative murals at villa

  depiction of in I, Claudius

  fondness of gardening

  funeral

  indulgence in Pucine wine

  intellect

  long life and robust health

  and nodus hairstyle

  only-child status

  posthumous deification of

  reuniting of with sons after Nero’s death

  vilification of by ancient sources

  villa and gardens at Prima Porta

  wealth

  will

  Livia (great-aunt)

  Liviana figs

  Livii Drusi

  Livilla

  Livius Drusus, Marcus

  Livius Drusus Claudianus, Marcus(Livia’s father)

  adoption of a son

  death

  finances

  marriage to Alfidia

  opposition to forces loyal to Caesar’s memory

  politics

  praetorship

  proscribed

  selling of garden to Cicero

  wealth of

  Livy

  Lollia Paulina

  Longus, Lucilius

  loom, Roman

  Lucius Antonius

  Lucius Caesar (son of Julia)

  death

  Lucretius

  Lupercalian Festival

  Macrobius

  Maecenas

  Marcella (Octavia’s daughter)

  Marcellus (Octavia’s son)

  death

  favouring of by Augustus as heir

  funeral

  marriage to Julia

  rivalry with Agrippa

  rumours over Livia committing murder of

  Marcia

  Marius, Gaius

  marriage, Roman

  age of girls

  arrangement of aristocratic

  centrality of children to concept of

  childlessness as source of acrimony in

  wedding ceremony

  Mars Ultor, Temple of

  Martial

  Messalla, Vipstanus

  Metella, Caecilla

  Metellus Celer, Quintus

  Misenum, Treaty of (39 BC)

  mortality rates, children

  motherhood, Roman

  Munatia

  Murena, Lucius Licinius

  Musa, Antonius

  Musonius Rufus, Gaius

  Mutina, battle of

  Nepos, Cornelius

  Nero, Emperor

  Nero, Tiberius Claudius (Livia’s first husband)

  allegiance to Antony and active opposition to Augustus

  and Caesar

  career

  character

  Cicero on

  death and funeral

  divorce from Livia and her remarriage to Augustus

  engagement to Livia

  flight of and life as a fugitive

  marriage to and relationship with Livia

  politics

  praetorship

  and proscripti list

  return to Rome after flight

  Nestor of Tarsus

  Nicolaus of Damascus

  Nicostratus

  On Marriage

  nodus hairstyle

  Obodas, King

  Octavia (Augustus’s sister)

  adoption of nodus hairstyle

  and ambition for son (Marcellus)

  bestowing of sacrosanctity by Augustus on

  death and funeral

  and death of Marcellus

  and marriage of Julia to Marcellus

  marriage to Antony

  relationship with Augustus

  relationship with Livia

  Octavian see Augustus (emperor) Octavii

  Octavius, Gaius (father of Augustus)

  Oppian Law

  Ostia

  Ovid

  Ars Amatoria

  Fasti

  Pannonia

  parenthood, Roman

  Parthians

  Roman campaign against

  paterfamilias

  Patrician and Plebian Chastity, cults of

  Pedius

  Petronius

  Philippi, battle of

  Philippus

  Philippus (Augustus’s stepfather)

  Phillips, Siân

  Philo

  pietas

  Pisaurum

  Piso, Gnaeus Calpurnius

  Piso/Plancina trials

  Planasia

  Plautia Urgulania

  Plautus

  Casina

  The Pot of Gold

  Pliny the Elder

  Natural History

  Pliny the Younger

  Plutarch

  Advice to Bride and Groom

  poetry

  place of in Augustan court life

  Pollio, Romilius

  Polybius

  Polyclitus

  Pompeia (Pompey’s daughter)

  Pompey the Great

  Porcia

  Porticus of Livia

  Prima Porta villa

  Proculeius, Gaius

  Propertius

  Proscriptions

  Ptolemy

  Quintus (Cicero’s son)

  Quintillian

  religion

  religious cults

  Res Gestae Divi Augusti (Acts of the Divine Augustus)

  Rome

  attempt at moral renewal of by Augustus

  curtailment of female aspiration

  defeat of Republic

  disapproval of luxury in

  famine

  flooding of the Tiber

  fragmentation of

  plague

  spread of disease and epidemics in

  Romulus and Remus

  Saecular Games

  Sallust

  Conspiracy of Catiline

  Salome of Judaea

  salutatio

  Samos

  sardonyx

  Scipio Aemilianus, Publius Cornelius (also known as Scipio Africanus)

  Scipio Nasica, Publius Cornelius

  Scribonia

  Scribonius Libo, Lucius

  Second Punic War

  Second Triumvirate

  growing divisions

  instituting of Proscription

  Sextus’s pact with (39 BC)

  Sejanus

  Semo Sancus, Temple of

  Sempronia

  Seneca

  Servilia

  Severus, Aulus Caecina

  Sextus Pompey

  Shrine of August Concord

  Sibylline Books

  Sicily

  slaves

  Social War (90 BC)

  Spain

  Augustus’s campaign in

  Sparta

  stola

  Strabo

  Studius

  Suetonius

  Sulla (dictator)

  Sulla, Lucius Cornelius (son)

  Syllaeus

  tablinum

  Tacitus

  Annals

  Dialogues />
  Tennyson, Alfred

  Teos

  Terentia (wife of Cicero)

  Terentia (wife of Maecenas)

  Tertullian

  Thrasyllus

  Tiber

  Tiberius, Emperor

  abandons Rome for second retirement on Capri

  accession as emperor

  accompanies Augustus to provinces and campaigns involved in

  adoption of by Augustus as heir

  awards from Senate

  birth of

  childhood and upbringing

  education

  eulogy to father

  holds consulship

  houses of

  Livia’s ambition for and promotion of cause

  marriage to Julia

  marriage to Vipsania and love for

  opposition to role of women in public life

  policy of quashing cult fervour

  privileges granted to by Augustus

  refrains from using ‘Augustus’ title

  refusal of appellation ‘son of Julia’ on accession

  relationship with Augustus

  relationship with mother

  return to Rome after exile and retirement from public life

  rites of passage

  self-imposed exile in Rhodes

  senatorial career

  Tigranes, King

  toga praetexta

  toga virilis

  Tremiti Islands

  triclinium

  Triumvirate

  First

  Second see Second Triumvirate

  Tubero, Quintus

  Tullia (Cicero’s daughter)

  Tutia

  Twelve Tables

  Valerius Maximus

  Valerius (tribune)

  Varro, Marcus Terentius

  Velleius Paterculus

  Venus Genetrix

  Venus Genetrix, Temple of

  Vestal Virgins

  Via Appia

  Vipsania Agrippina (daughter of Agrippa)

  birth of son

  marriage to Tiberius

  portrait of

  relations with Livia

  Virgil

  Aeneid

  Georgics

  virtus

  Vitruvius

  De Architectura

  weaving, household

  wet-nursing

  Wicar, Jean-Baptiste Joseph

  women

  and Augustan legislation

  and education

  and religion

  restrictions on and exclusion from political life

  role of in Rome’s wellbeing

  seen as intellectually and temperamentally different from men

  statues of

  supervisory role in children’s education

  wanting reform of the Oppian Law

  and weaving

  LIVIA, EMPRESS OF ROME. Copyright © 2010 by Matthew Dennison.

  All rights reserved. For information, address St. Martin’s

  Press, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10010.

  www.stmartins.com

  ISBN: 978-1-4299-8919-0

  First published in Great Britain in 2010 by Quercus

 

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