In this paper the relationship between Julius Caesar Octavianus, i.e., Emperor Augustus, and Livia is examined. This is an unusually long-lasting relationship (which will come to an end only with Augustus' death in 14 A.D.), despite its lack of offspring and, therefore, in open contrast with the policies of demographic growth promoted by Augustus himself by way of his controversial legislation. With regard to this, the interpersonal relationship between the two spouses has been inspected and also their inner relational dynamics, drawing on the scant (and ultimately contradictory) sources available to us. In particular, it has been investigated: the stability of power ensured through this marriage, the legacy of the marriage, the impact of t...
At the end of the year 48 A.D., the emperor Claudius decided to marry his niece Agrippina. However, ...
Sextus Pompeius, the son of Pompey and still a renegade general following Julius Caesar's victory ov...
none1noIn this paper some women belonging to the Julio-Claudian domus are examined: Livia, Julia, Ag...
In this paper the relationship between Julius Caesar Octavianus, i.e., Emperor Augustus, and Livia i...
Amor plays a curious and complicated role in the Augustan regime, and especially in Augustus’s secre...
The emperor Claudius got married four times; his last two wives, Messalina and Agrippina the Younger...
A.A. Barret, in his book of 2002, describes Livia as the ‘First Lady of Imperial Rome’, in order to...
This paper examines the social reforms implemented during the reign of Augustus and the influencing ...
Because Livia\u27s prominence was based largely upon the same factors--family and property--that bro...
In the Tristia and Epistulae ex Ponto one can fnd some elegies dedicated to Livia, Augustus’ wife. T...
There were two major Augustan enactments on marriage and childbearing, the lex lulia de maritandis o...
Julius Caesar’s murder opened the way to the rise of Octavianus, the nephew of Julia the younger –...
Property relations of spouses in the period of the Emperors Augustus and Justinian I. Abstract The t...
Whereas many aspects of the Augustan age continue to enjoy ongoing or renewed interest, the early ca...
This chapter offers a first survey of the phenomenon of the “power couple” in Greco-Roman antiquity....
At the end of the year 48 A.D., the emperor Claudius decided to marry his niece Agrippina. However, ...
Sextus Pompeius, the son of Pompey and still a renegade general following Julius Caesar's victory ov...
none1noIn this paper some women belonging to the Julio-Claudian domus are examined: Livia, Julia, Ag...
In this paper the relationship between Julius Caesar Octavianus, i.e., Emperor Augustus, and Livia i...
Amor plays a curious and complicated role in the Augustan regime, and especially in Augustus’s secre...
The emperor Claudius got married four times; his last two wives, Messalina and Agrippina the Younger...
A.A. Barret, in his book of 2002, describes Livia as the ‘First Lady of Imperial Rome’, in order to...
This paper examines the social reforms implemented during the reign of Augustus and the influencing ...
Because Livia\u27s prominence was based largely upon the same factors--family and property--that bro...
In the Tristia and Epistulae ex Ponto one can fnd some elegies dedicated to Livia, Augustus’ wife. T...
There were two major Augustan enactments on marriage and childbearing, the lex lulia de maritandis o...
Julius Caesar’s murder opened the way to the rise of Octavianus, the nephew of Julia the younger –...
Property relations of spouses in the period of the Emperors Augustus and Justinian I. Abstract The t...
Whereas many aspects of the Augustan age continue to enjoy ongoing or renewed interest, the early ca...
This chapter offers a first survey of the phenomenon of the “power couple” in Greco-Roman antiquity....
At the end of the year 48 A.D., the emperor Claudius decided to marry his niece Agrippina. However, ...
Sextus Pompeius, the son of Pompey and still a renegade general following Julius Caesar's victory ov...
none1noIn this paper some women belonging to the Julio-Claudian domus are examined: Livia, Julia, Ag...