This paper aimed to examine the positions adopted by Antonia Minor and dictated by political reasons on the occasion of the death of her oldest son, Germanicus and her only daughter, Livilla. The presence of Antonia during her son’s public funeral and posthumous honours is attested by the epigraphic evidences of the Tabula Siarensis and the SC de Cn. Pisone Patre, although Tacitus records her absence (Ann., III 1-3). Allegedly, the daughter Livilla helped her lover Sejanus in poisoning her husband Drusus the Younger and, according to Cassius Dio (LVIII 11, 7), Tiberius handed Livilla over to her mother, who starved her to death: in this act, Antonia Minor seems to exercise a right of the paterfamilias, the power of life and death ov...
This paper will examine the posthumous representation of Battista Sforza, countess of the court of U...
Among the ancient authors who narrated the reign of Augustus and Tiberius, Cassius Dio is surely the...
The paper analyses Pliny the Younger’s two descriptions of women, his letter VII 24, written after t...
This short article aims to examine, in light of recent historiographical investigations, the death o...
A.A. Barret, in his book of 2002, describes Livia as the ‘First Lady of Imperial Rome’, in order to...
Because Livia\u27s prominence was based largely upon the same factors--family and property--that bro...
Constantina, emperor Tiberius Il's daughter and emperor Mauricius' wife was born most probably befo...
Empress Livia – Murderer or wrongfully accused? An overview of the ancient sources on the empress Li...
This chapter takes into consideration six women, chosen because they represent the continuity of the...
International audienceClaudia Livia Julia is the daughter of Drusus the Elder and Antonia Minor, and...
Empress Antonia Minor. Marble c. AD 45. Italy. baia Castello Antonia (36 BC - AD 37) was daughter of...
This paper deals with Livilla and Agrippina, Caligula's sisters, and their political opposition to C...
none1noIn this paper some women belonging to the Julio-Claudian domus are examined: Livia, Julia, Ag...
This paper concerns the figure of Servilia, a matrona who lived in the late Roman Republic and who ...
This paper analizes the new role of women in the new domus Augusta and at the beginning of the Roma...
This paper will examine the posthumous representation of Battista Sforza, countess of the court of U...
Among the ancient authors who narrated the reign of Augustus and Tiberius, Cassius Dio is surely the...
The paper analyses Pliny the Younger’s two descriptions of women, his letter VII 24, written after t...
This short article aims to examine, in light of recent historiographical investigations, the death o...
A.A. Barret, in his book of 2002, describes Livia as the ‘First Lady of Imperial Rome’, in order to...
Because Livia\u27s prominence was based largely upon the same factors--family and property--that bro...
Constantina, emperor Tiberius Il's daughter and emperor Mauricius' wife was born most probably befo...
Empress Livia – Murderer or wrongfully accused? An overview of the ancient sources on the empress Li...
This chapter takes into consideration six women, chosen because they represent the continuity of the...
International audienceClaudia Livia Julia is the daughter of Drusus the Elder and Antonia Minor, and...
Empress Antonia Minor. Marble c. AD 45. Italy. baia Castello Antonia (36 BC - AD 37) was daughter of...
This paper deals with Livilla and Agrippina, Caligula's sisters, and their political opposition to C...
none1noIn this paper some women belonging to the Julio-Claudian domus are examined: Livia, Julia, Ag...
This paper concerns the figure of Servilia, a matrona who lived in the late Roman Republic and who ...
This paper analizes the new role of women in the new domus Augusta and at the beginning of the Roma...
This paper will examine the posthumous representation of Battista Sforza, countess of the court of U...
Among the ancient authors who narrated the reign of Augustus and Tiberius, Cassius Dio is surely the...
The paper analyses Pliny the Younger’s two descriptions of women, his letter VII 24, written after t...