72-607: Tiberius Julius Caesar Nero , known as Tiberius Gemellus (10 October AD 19 – 37/38), was the son of Drusus and Livilla , the grandson of the Emperor Tiberius , and the cousin of the Emperor Caligula . Gemellus is a nickname meaning "the twin". His twin brother, Germanicus Gemellus, died as a young child in AD 23. His father and older cousins died, and are suspected by contemporary sources as having been systematically eliminated by
144-692: A battle against the Hermunduri , and he too was granted asylum. The Senate decreed that Drusus be given an ovation for his success, which he received on his return to Rome on 28 May 20. While Drusus was in Illyricum, his adoptive brother Germanicus had died in Syria of illness or poison on 10 October 19. The death of Germanicus made Drusus the new heir, for which Germanicus' wife Agrippina suspected murder. She believed Tiberius had her husband murdered to allow Drusus to become his heir. Historian Barbara Levick says this
216-483: A eulogy before the rostra at his funeral. The next month, on 17 September, the senate met to confirm his father as princeps . Among his first acts as emperor, Tiberius instituted the Sodales Augustales , a priesthood of the cult of Augustus which members of the imperial family, such as Drusus, joined. This was not his first religious post though, as he had been a pontifex since AD 7/8 - an important step to
288-477: A eulogy for Germanicus during a Senate meeting, and he gave a eulogy the next meeting. It was decided that their eulogies would both be inscribed in bronze: that of Tiberius for future generations, but the libellus (eulogy) of Drusus to demonstrate the devotion of Drusus for his adoptive brother in a show of pietas (piety). Several changes affected his father's reign following the death of Germanicus. In addition to losing his adoptive son and heir, Tiberius lost
360-539: A first cousin once removed of Nero – all future emperors of Rome. Before Tiberius, the heirs of Augustus were the sons of Julia the Elder and Marcus Agrippa, Gaius and Lucius Caesar , whom he adopted and made heir. They advanced through their careers at the same pace and were going to rule together; however, they died young, forcing Augustus to draw another line of succession. In AD 4, Augustus adopted Tiberius on condition that Tiberius adopt Germanicus. This made Tiberius
432-460: A friend: Gnaeus Piso, whose family had been close supporters of the principate since the early days of Augustus. The loss of Germanicus and the trial of Piso dealt a significant blow to Tiberius' popularity, and he came to resent the role of princeps. Maintaining the same interval of three years between Germanicus' and Drusus' first and second term as consul, Drusus was given the consulship again in AD 21, which he held with his father. The hardship of
504-467: A lunar eclipse before dawn convinced the soldiery that their mutiny was doomed, and order was restored by daybreak as a result. Drusus was allowed into the camp by Blaesus before an assembly of the troops in which Drusus commended the controlled behavior of the soldiery and promised to write a letter to his father addressing their demands. If Drusus' letter was dispatched on 28 September, it should have reached Rome by 3 or 4 October. Having gained control of
576-489: A message for the emperor: his son had been murdered by his wife Livilla and her lover, Sejanus. The story should be read with caution. Levick says that Sejanus must have murdered Drusus in self-defense because only Tiberius stood between the Praetorian Prefect and the end of his career at the hands of Drusus. Furthermore, he says it is even less likely that Livilla would have been complicit in the destruction of her family,
648-521: A rebellion in Gaul led by Sacrovir and Florus, Gauls with Roman citizenship, but the rebellion was settled by Gaius Silius (commander of the legions of the Lower Rhine) without the intervention of Tiberius or Drusus. After praising the loyalty of the legions in Gaul, Tiberius defended the statement he had made in 14, that neither he nor Drusus should have to "quit the capital" in response to every minor revolt in
720-429: A region that lay away from the routes explored by a group of her male contemporaries, although she was the only one to publish a book as a result of research from these expeditions. In 1959, Levick was appointed a university fellow and tutor for Roman History at St Hilda's College, Oxford , and in 1967 published her first monograph , drawing on material from her doctoral thesis, which forty years after its publication
792-635: A rest from military duties to mourn the death of Augustus. There was a breakdown in discipline, and the soldiers stopped obeying orders as a result. They soon became restless and lashed out against their officers, including Blaesus and a prefect named Aufidienus Rufus. Having been dispatched with two Praetorian cohorts, Drusus and Praetorian prefect Sejanus reached the Pannonian legions at Emona on 26 September. The soldiers met with him upon his arrival and let Drusus into their entrenchments. The soldiers were rowdy, but as Tacitus says: At last, in an interval of
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#1732845595782864-501: A sword and had to help him, because he is said not to have known how to kill himself with it. Dio notes that Gemellus was charged with praying for and anticipating Caligula's death. The historian Anthony Barrett observes that Gemellus would have represented Caligula during his illness at nonpolitical events with his uncle Claudius representing the emperor at games. He suggests that Caligula viewed anything that Gemellus did in his name with paranoia although Gemellus's only named supporter (to
936-567: A time) as a prophylactic against drunkenness. Barbara Levick Barbara Mary Levick (21 June 1931 – 6 December 2023) was a British historian and epigrapher , focusing particularly on the Late Roman Republic and Early Empire. She was recognised within her field as one of the leading Roman historians of her generation. Barbara Mary Levick was born in London on 21 June 1931, the daughter of Frank Thomas and Mary (née Smart) Levick. She
1008-617: Is possible that his adoption meant an official recognition and acceptance as Caligula's heir. Philo saw this as a ploy to put Gemellus under Caligula's patria potestas (power of a father), and perhaps to convince the Senate to go along with nullifying Tiberius' will. Adopting Gemellus gave Caligula time to deal with the succession issue. Following an illness suffered by Caligula, Gemellus was put to death in late 37 or early 38. Cassius Dio places his death, and that of Caligula's father-in-law, Marcus Junius Silanus , in late 37. Their replacements in
1080-415: Is unlikely given the advancement of her son Nero 's career the following year. Also on 10 October 19, his wife Livilla had given birth to twin sons, Tiberius Gemellus and Germanicus, whom he named after his adoptive brother. Their birth was celebrated by his father who claimed that never before in the history of Rome had twins been born to a man as high in rank as Drusus, and the event was commemorated on
1152-589: The Roman Empire following the death of his adoptive brother Germanicus in AD 19. He was born at Rome to a prominent branch of the gens Claudia , the son of Tiberius and his first wife, Vipsania Agrippina . His name at birth was Nero Claudius Drusus after his paternal uncle, Drusus the Elder . In AD 4, he assumed the name Julius Caesar following his father's adoption into the Julii by Augustus , and became Drusus Julius Caesar. Drusus first entered politics with
1224-492: The Arval Brethren were not found until 24 May 38. He goes on to explain that Gemellus waited for a chance to benefit from Caligula's illness. According to Philo, Caligula's pretended reason was a conspiracy. Suetonius says that Gemellus took medicine for a chronic cough and that the smell was detected, leading to accusations of taking an antidote for poison. He was ordered by Caligula to commit suicide, for which soldiers gave him
1296-504: The Marcomanni were vulnerable. During the summer of 18, Drusus received intelligence from a former captive of Maroboduus, Catualda , that Maroboduus was weak and that it was a good time to attack. Hence, Drusus led a powerful force into the heart of the Marcomanni, and stormed their royal stronghold. Maroboduus fled, but was forced to seek asylum in Rome, which Tiberius granted. Later, Catualda lost
1368-486: The Praetorian Prefect and the end of his career at the hands of Drusus. Furthermore, she says it is even less likely that Livilla would have been complicit in the destruction of her family, the key to her children's future. Levick dismisses the accusation of Apicata as the revenge of a woman whose husband left her for another. The deaths of his cousins elevated Gemellus and his older cousin Gaius Caesar (Caligula). As there
1440-604: The Senate in terms that treated him as his partner in power. For Drusus, the heir of that exact position, this was a legitimate cause for concern. At the time, Tiberius was in his sixties, so there was a realistic possibility of Drusus succeeding his father in the near future. In the account of Tacitus, Sejanus began plotting against Drusus in secrecy to secure his position. After seducing Drusus' wife Livilla, Sejanus convinced her that he loved her and went as far as to divorce his own wife, Apicata . They involved Livilla's physician, Eudemus, whom they met in secret for some time. With
1512-670: The Senate with homosexuality for which he was exiled to the island of Ponza . Germanicus' son Drusus was imprisoned within the dungeon under the Imperial palace on the Palatine Hill , where he starved to death not long after. Nero died in exile in 33. Suetonius says Tiberius promoted the rise of Sejanus to secure the succession of Gemellus, his natural grandson, at the expense of Germanicus' sons Nero and Drusus. Sejanus remained powerful until his sudden downfall and summary execution in October 31,
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#17328455957821584-442: The Senate, a clear sign that Drusus was Tiberius' heir. However, the following year marked a turning point for his father when his dispute with the powerful praetorian prefect Lucius Aelius Sejanus reached a critical point. In the account of Tacitus , Sejanus began plotting against Drusus to secure his position. On 14 September 23, his father died from what passed as natural causes. According to Cassius Dio and Tacitus, his father
1656-404: The Senate, which ought to have a voice in showing either favour or severity. Their demands were: a discharge from military service after only sixteen years (down from twenty), a reward for service, an increase of pay to one denarius a day, and that the veterans not be detained under a standard. However, negotiations broke down and the soldiers began stoning members of Drusus' party. Next morning,
1728-408: The abuse of the protection afforded by icons of the princeps, in which the emperor's images were being used to shield the guilty. Gaius Cestius Gallus brought a complaint into the Senate, and claimed he was being abused under this safeguard by Annia Rufilla. Drusus was soon brought in to weigh on the matter, for the Senate felt only a member of the imperial family could speak on such a delicate issue. At
1800-480: The aid of Praetorian prefect Macro and the consuls of 37 who agreed to nullify Tiberius' will, thereby allowing him to inherit all of the estates which otherwise would have been divided with Gemellus. Gemellus was formally granted his toga virilis (toga of manhood), was adopted by Caligula, co-opted into the Arval Brethren , and given the title of princeps iuventutis (leader of the youth). His tirocinium ,
1872-406: The dispute between ex-praetor Gnaeus Domitius Corbulo and Lucius Cornelius Sulla . Cornelius failed to give his seat to Corbulo at a gladiatorial show, and the incident sparked a debate between the rights of age and the defenders of tradition, in which Drusus argued a rapprochement. In another, it was proposed by Caecina Severus that the wives of governors be banned from joining their husbands in
1944-446: The empire. Thus the consulship of Drusus was successful, but at the end of the year he fell ill. His illness prompted the equestrian, Clutorius Priscus , believing his life to be in jeopardy, to write his elegy. Priscus had previously written an elegy for Germanicus for which he was paid. He thought that he would be rewarded again, and so recited his elegy before an audience in preparation for Drusus' death. An unamused informer brought
2016-579: The episode "Zeus, by Jove!" of the 1976 BBC TV series I, Claudius . Gemellus is played by Leon Wadham in Season 3 of the Netflix TV series Roman Empire . Gemellus is played by Bruno Brive in the 1979 film Caligula . Drusus Julius Caesar Drusus Julius Caesar (7 October c. 14 BC – 14 September AD 23), also called Drusus the Younger , was the son of Emperor Tiberius , and heir to
2088-414: The exact reasons for which remain unclear. On 26 October 31, just eight days after his death, his wife Apicata committed suicide. According to Cassius Dio, she left a message for the emperor: his son had been murdered by his wife Livilla and her lover, Sejanus. The story should be read with caution. Barbara Levick says that Sejanus must have murdered Drusus in self-defense because only Tiberius stood between
2160-421: The extent that he should co-rule with Caligula) was Aulus Avilius Flaccus , the prefect of Egypt . No mention of his death was made by Caligula to the Senate, and Gemellus's tomb makes no mention of his adoptive relation to the emperor, simply reading: Ti(berius) Caesar / Drusi Caesaris f(ilius) / hic situs est "Here lies Tiberius Caesar, son of Drusus Caesar." Gemellus is played by Douglas Melbourne in
2232-493: The format of the Monumenta Asiae Minoris Antiqua series, directing two volumes of its publication. Her biographies of Roman emperors and Imperial women are widely known and receive largely positive reviews from their critics. Her portrait was painted for St Hilda's College by Jane Cursham . Levick died on 6 December 2023, at the age of 92. A fuller bibliography of her works up to 2007 can be found in
Tiberius Gemellus - Misplaced Pages Continue
2304-577: The heart of his kingdom in the forests of Bohemia. Before that, two tribes (the Semnones and Langobardi ) had defected to Arminius. Realizing his situation, Maroboduus requested Roman aid. It had been two years since the Marcommani refused to help the Romans against the forces of Arminius, and so Tiberius refused to send aid. Instead, Tiberius sent Drusus to further Roman interests at Maroboduus' expense as he knew
2376-537: The heir of Augustus, and Germanicus the heir of Tiberius. Like the sons of Agrippa, it was the intention of Augustus that Germanicus and Drusus would rule together. Later that year, Drusus was married to his paternal cousin, Livilla, to bring him closer to the Julians. Tacitus says she was unattractive as a child, but grew up to be beautiful. Their daughter Julia was born not long after the marriage, and they had twin sons: Tiberius Gemellus and Germanicus Gemellus in 19,
2448-479: The help of Livilla, Drusus was poisoned and died of what passed as natural causes. Cassius Dio says the actions of Sejanus were revealed in a letter by Apicata following his death in 31 October. Unlike Germanicus, Drusus was given a full funeral, and his body was interred in the Mausoleum of Augustus , alongside other deceased members of the imperial family. Like Germanicus, stories of poison abounded, with Sejanus as
2520-572: The key to her children's future. Levick dismisses the accusation of Apicata as the revenge of a woman whose husband left her for another. The deaths of Germanicus' oldest sons elevated his third son, Gaius Caesar (Caligula), to successor and he became princeps when Tiberius died in AD 37. Drusus' son Tiberius Gemellus was summoned to Capri by his father Tiberius, where he and Gaius Caligula were made joint heirs. When Caligula assumed power, he made Gemellus his adopted son, but Caligula soon had Gemellus killed for plotting against him. He features under
2592-409: The last two years on his father had made him reclusive. For Tiberius, Drusus holding the consulship was a welcome sight, and with the state of his health, he retreated to Campania , leaving Drusus alone in carrying out the obligations of the consulship. Tiberius' retreat lasted about twenty months. As consul he took part in a number of Senate debates. His first chance to shine in the Senate came in
2664-435: The latter of whom died while still an infant in 23. The birth of his sons was commemorated on coins. Just as Agrippa's sons were, Drusus was about the same age as Germanicus, and both of them also followed parallel careers. Drusus and Germanicus held all their offices at the same age, and progressed through the cursus honorum at the same pace. Both held the office of quaestor at the same age, both were exempted from holding
2736-427: The marriage was prevented when the boy accidentally died a few days later of asphyxiation . Regardless, his ambition to further expand his power was clear. By AD 23, Sejanus had come to exert considerable influence over the emperor. Such was his relationship with the emperor that he was referred to by Tiberius as Socius Laborum ("my partner in my toils"). Sejanus' influence and position allowed him to be elevated to
2808-576: The matter before the Senate, and it was voted that he be executed. His execution was decreed and carried out without first consulting the emperor. This induced Tiberius to introduce a law where the Senate must wait 10 days after such condemnations before making such decrees public as to allow him to learn of their decisions first. The following year, Tiberius asked the Senate of Rome to grant Drusus tribunicia potestas ( tribunician power ), which they responded to elatedly. The Senate decreed statues, shrines, temples, an arch, and other "customary honors" upon
2880-445: The murderer. Modern historians like Ronald Syme believe that he may simply have died of illness. His death not only devastated Tiberius but also challenged the future of the principate. Tiberius still trusted Sejanus and had no suspicion. Since Drusus' son was too young, Tiberius adopted his grandchildren by Germanicus, Nero and Drusus, and recommended them to the Senate. Nero was given the office of quaestor five years in advance and
2952-503: The name Castor in the novel I, Claudius by Robert Graves , and in its BBC adaptation (in which he was played by Kevin McNally ). He was also portrayed in the 1968 TV series The Caesars by William Corderoy. He is associated with the gourmand Apicius . Under Apicius' influence he disdained a certain vegetable of the cabbage family, earning a reprimand from Tiberius. Drusus is also recorded as using bitter almonds (five or six at
Tiberius Gemellus - Misplaced Pages Continue
3024-411: The office of quaestor in AD 10. His political career mirrored that of Germanicus, and he assumed all his offices at the same age as him. Following the model of Augustus, it was intended that the two would rule together. They were both popular, and many dedications have been found in their honor across Roman Italy . Cassius Dio calls him "Castor" in his Roman History , likening Drusus and Germanicus to
3096-413: The office of quaestor five years in advance and was married to Gemellus' sister Livia to combine the families of both possible successors. However, neither would live to succeed Tiberius. By 26, the emperor had withdrawn from politics altogether and moved to Capri , leaving the management of the empire to Sejanus who then began eliminating other members of the imperial family. In 28/29, Nero was charged by
3168-521: The other spectators. He reportedly carried out his duties as consul well, although he was prone to violence and earned the nickname "Castor" from fighting an equestrian . There was also an incident at a theater between the Praetorians and claqueurs ("actors") in which Drusus reportedly sided with the actors, preventing the Praetorian Guard from punishing unruly actors. In Annals 1.77, Tacitus says
3240-691: The powerful praetorian prefect Sejanus . Their removal allowed Gemellus and Caligula to be named joint-heirs by Tiberius in 35, a decision that ultimately resulted in Caligula assuming power and having Gemellus killed (or forced to kill himself) in late 37 or early 38. Gemellus was born the son of Drusus Julius Caesar and Livilla on 10 October AD 19, the same day his uncle Germanicus died in Syria . His paternal grandparents were emperor Tiberius and his wife, Vipsania Agrippina , with his maternal grandparents being general Nero Claudius Drusus and Antonia Minor . He
3312-536: The praetorship, they held their first and second consulships at the same age, and both were given proconsular imperium maius when they were sent to govern Germania and Illyricum respectively. Drusus' first office was that of quaestor in AD 10. Being politically inclined, he was made a permanent member of the committee Augustus had founded in AD 13 to draw up the Senate 's daily business. In August of 14 his adoptive grandfather Augustus died. In his honor, Drusus read
3384-559: The prestigious pontifex maximus . Since 14 May AD 14, he was a member of the Fratres Arvales as well. Drusus had little time to mourn the death of Augustus or celebrate the ascendance of his father Tiberius: the legions in the Rhine and Illyricum were in mutiny. They had not received the bonuses promised to them by Augustus, and when it became clear a response from Tiberius was not forthcoming, they revolted. On 17 or 18 September, Drusus
3456-412: The princeps and his son. Thus in the spring of AD 22 Drusus received tribunicia potestas , a distinction no senator could then aspire to, as the honor was reserved exclusively for the emperor and his immediate successors. Only two men had been honored this way by Augustus—first Marcus Agrippa and then Tiberius himself—but Tiberius had never bestowed the power on Germanicus. It was then that Drusus shared
3528-470: The provinces. Caecina delivered a speech in support of the bill, followed with speeches by both Valerius Messalinus and Drusus in opposition to it. The proposal was then abandoned, not because of the arguments made, but because of the intervention of an external force (the auctoritas of Drusus)--the same reason for the later repeal of the Oppian law ( lex Oppia ). Drusus then settled an incident involving
3600-463: The public ceremony where young men donned the toga and became eligible for military service, was held in July 37, and a congiarium of 75 denarii was distributed to each citizen by Caligula. Comments by Tacitus and Suetonius that Gemellus was still a child this year, despite the fact that he was 18, may refer to his mental development. This would explain why he had not yet received the toga of manhood. It
3672-462: The rank of praetor , a position rarely attained by members of the equestrian order. His supporters in the Senate were given advancement in their offices, and statues were being erected in his honor, such as the one in the Theatre of Pompey . By this time the enmity between Drusus and Sejanus had reached a critical point: Drusus had struck the prefect with his fist, and openly lamented that "a stranger
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#17328455957823744-454: The request of many senators, Drusus had Rufilla arrested and imprisoned. Later, he was given credit for the condemnation of two Roman equites , Considius Aequus and Coelius Cursor, who had attacked the praetor, Magius Caecilianus, with false charges of maiestas . It is unlikely that he himself was responsible, for every verdict was given by the Senate with Tiberius' authority, but this did not prevent his popularity. Meanwhile, there had been
3816-506: The reverse of coins. Tiberius had hoped that Drusus would keep the imperial family together and entrusted him with the guardianship of Germanicus' sons, Nero and Drusus . He returned to Rome in December, and was present in 20 March when Agrippina arrived with Germanicus' ashes. He was also present for the trial of Gnaeus Calpurnius Piso , who was posthumously found guilty for the crime of maiestas (treason). On 16 December, his father gave
3888-412: The rumors, Tiberius did not suspect Sejanus and the two remained friends until Sejanus's fall from grace in 31. He was born around 14 BC in Rome with the name Nero Claudius Drusus. He is often referred to by historians as "Drusus II", "Drusus the Younger" or "Drusus Minor" to distinguish him from his paternal uncle, Nero Claudius Drusus , the younger brother of Tiberius after whom Drusus was named. Drusus
3960-459: The soldiers, his next move, according to Tacitus, was executing the leaders of the mutiny. He sent out a search party into the surrounding forest to kill those leaders not present for the assembly. Having settled these matters, Drusus returned to Rome. In AD 15 he held the consulship alongside Gaius Norbanus Flaccus . It was this year that he hosted the gladiatorial games in his and Germanicus' name, which he enjoyed in such excess that it disturbed
4032-447: The state. Germanicus' son Drusus was imprisoned within the dungeon under the Imperial palace on the Palatine Hill , where he starved to death not long after. Nero died in exile in 33. Sejanus remained powerful until his sudden downfall and summary execution in 31 October, the exact reasons for which remain unclear. On 26 October 31, just eight days after his death, his wife Apicata committed suicide. According to Cassius Dio, she left
4104-459: The symbol of supreme power with his father. While it was officially Drusus who was the heir to Tiberius, in practice, it was the Praetorian prefect Sejanus who was the second man in the empire. As early as AD 20, Sejanus had sought to strengthen his ties to the imperial family by betrothing his daughter Junilla to the son of Claudius, Claudius Drusus . At the time the girl was only 4 years old but
4176-400: The twins, Castor and Pollux , of Roman mythology. Drusus died suddenly on 14 September 23. Ancient historians, such as Tacitus and Suetonius , claim that he died amid a feud with the powerful Sejanus , Praetorian prefect of Rome. They allege that Drusus was murdered. In their account, Sejanus had seduced his wife Livilla , and with the help of a doctor she had poisoned Drusus. Despite
4248-428: The unruly behavior of actors and the crowds were later addressed by the Senate which passed measures allowing the praetors to punish riotous spectators. Such were his excesses that Tiberius decided to make him governor of Illyricum the following year, both to give him experience in war and bolster his popularity with the troops - perhaps also to keep him away from the indulgences of city life. For those reasons, Drusus
4320-461: The uproar, Drusus read his father's letter, in which it was fully stated that he had a special care for the brave legions with which he had endured a number of campaigns; that, as soon as his mind had recovered from its grief, he would lay their demands before the Senators; that meanwhile he had sent his son to concede unhesitatingly what could be immediately granted, and that the rest must be reserved for
4392-518: Was a close relative of all five Julio-Claudian emperors. On his father's side, he was the grandson of emperor Tiberius, and his adoptive great-grandfather was the founder of the Roman Empire, Augustus . On his mother's side, he was also Augustus' great-grandnephew, the nephew of Claudius , the cousin of Caligula , and the first cousin once removed of Nero . In the spring of 22, his father Drusus received tribunicia potestas ( tribunician power ) from
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#17328455957824464-492: Was another factor in the advancement of Caligula, who was made quaestor in 33. The two were summoned by Tiberius to Capri in 35 where they were made joint-heirs to his estates. Tacitus records that while they were in Capri, Tiberius looked at Caligula in tears, with Gemellus in his arms, and told him: You will kill him, and another will kill you. Tiberius died on 16 March 37, and Caligula became Emperor. He accomplished this with
4536-522: Was described as a "resilient classic of Roman history". The importance of this work came from both its focus on the Roman impact on Asia Minor, and the drawing together of both epigraphic and numismatic evidence. In this work she used the discoveries she made at Yalvaç in Turkey, and considered again material that had been neglected since the 1920s. Levick was an influential editor of inscriptions who shaped
4608-526: Was educated at Brighton and Hove High School and St Hugh's College, Oxford . Her DPhil , on the subject of Roman colonies in South Asia Minor was undertaken in the mid-1950s and supervised by Ronald Syme . For this research she made two solo trips to Turkey , placing herself in a tradition at this time of largely Scottish and male epigraphers travelling in Anatolia . She focused, however, on Pisidia ,
4680-504: Was invited to assist in the government while the emperor's son was alive". According to Levick, there is nothing to suggest bad relations between the two before this point, especially not as far back as 14, during their expedition to Pannonia. She says, however, it may have been the clash between theatrical claqueurs and the Praetorian Guard in 15 that began the quarrel, but not enough is known to say for certain. Of more concern to Drusus was, perhaps, that in 20 his father mentioned Sejanus to
4752-419: Was married to Julia Livia , the daughter of Drusus, to combine the families of both possible successors. However, neither would live to succeed Tiberius. By 26, the emperor had withdrawn from politics altogether and moved to Capri , leaving the management of the empire to Sejanus who then began eliminating other members of the imperial family. In 28/29, Nero was exiled to the island of Ponza as an enemy of
4824-451: Was no formal mechanism for succession of the imperial office, the only legal way in which Tiberius could promote an heir who was too young to assume the political powers of emperor was to bequeath to him his own estate upon which much of the Roman state had come to depend. According to Suetonius, Tiberius had suspicions of Gaius but he detested Gemellus as he believed him to be the result of an adulterous affair by his mother. Gemellus' young age
4896-403: Was poisoned by his wife Livilla at the behest of Sejanus. The exact cause of the feud is unknown. His father's death not only devastated Tiberius but also challenged the future of the principate. Tiberius still trusted Sejanus and had no suspicion. Since Gemellus was too young, Tiberius adopted his great-nephews by Germanicus, Nero and Drusus , and recommended them to the Senate. Nero was given
4968-630: Was sent to Illyricum with proconsular imperium maius , and would be governor there from AD 17 to 20. Since Germanicus had left the Rhine in AD 16, the German tribes that formerly fought alongside each other against the Romans had turned on each other. The two major forces in the region, the Marcomanni under king Maroboduus and the Cherusci under Arminius clashed and, after an indecisive battle, Maroboduus withdrew to
5040-450: Was sent to deal with the troops in Illyricum, and a delegation was sent to confer proconsular imperium maius upon Germanicus, who dealt with the situation on the Rhine. Drusus did not require proconsular powers because he was consul designate. The three legions in Pannonia ( VIII Augusta , XIX Hispana , and XV Apollinaris ) were under the command of Junius Blaesus , who allowed his men
5112-479: Was the maternal grandson of Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa , a close friend of Augustus, and his first wife Caecilia Attica . As a member of the Julio-Claudian dynasty , he was a close relative of all five Julio-Claudian emperors. His father was emperor, and his adoptive grandfather was the founder of the Roman Empire, Augustus. On his mother's side, he was the cousin of Caligula , a paternal cousin of Claudius , and
5184-416: Was the twin brother of Germanicus Gemellus and the younger brother of his sister Julia . The birth of Gemellus and his twin were celebrated by Tiberius, who claimed that never before in the history of Rome had twins been born to a man as high in rank as Drusus, and the event was commemorated on the reverse of coins. His twin died while still a child in 23. As a member of the Julio-Claudian dynasty , Gemellus
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