Claudia Octavia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Roman imperial dynasties
Julio-Claudian dynasty

Augustus
Children
   Natural - Julia the Elder
   Adoptive - Gaius Caesar, Lucius Caesar, Agrippa Postumus, Tiberius
Tiberius
Children
   Natural - Julius Caesar Drusus
   Adoptive - Germanicus
Caligula
Children
   Natural - Julia Drusilla
   Adoptive - Tiberius Gemellus
Claudius
Children
   Natural - Claudia Antonia, Claudia Octavia, Britannicus
   Adoptive - Nero
Nero
Children
   Natural - Claudia Augusta

Claudia Octavia or Octavia Neronis (Classical Latin: CLAVDIA•OCTAVIA[1]) (Late 39 or early 40-9 June 62) was a Roman Empress, step-sister and first wife to Roman Emperor Nero.

Contents

[edit] Life

[edit] Family

Octavia was the only daughter of Roman Emperor Claudius by his third marriage to his second cousin and Roman Empress Valeria Messalina. She was named in honor of her great-grandmother, Octavia Minor, the elder sister of Emperor Augustus. Her elder half-sister was Claudia Antonia and her full sibling was Britannicus.

[edit] Early Life

She was born in Rome. As a young girl, her father betrothed her to future praetor Lucius Junius Silanus Torquatus, who was a descendant of Augustus.

[edit] Rise of Nero

Octavia's mother was executed in 48, for conspiring to murder her father. Claudius later remarried her paternal first cousin and his own niece Agrippina the Younger. Agrippina the Younger had a son from her first marriage, Lucius Domitius Ahenobarbus (future Emperor Nero).

Agrippina the Younger, through her plotting and manipulating, ended the engagement between Octavia and Lucius Silanus and persuaded Claudius to adopt Nero as his son and heir and arranged for Octavia and Nero to marry on 9 June 53.

[edit] Life as Empress

Claudius died on 13 October 54 and Nero acceded to the throne, possibly poisoning Octavia's full brother Britannicus in early 55 in order to do so. Tacitus states that from this moment Octavia became very unhappy, but learned to hide her affections and feelings around her husband. Octavia was caught up between the power struggles between Nero and his mother, which concluded when Nero murdered his mother in March 59.

Although she was admired as empress by the Roman citizen body, the marriage was unhappy. 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. He excused this treatment of her when at one point his friends showed their concerns about it. When Poppaea became pregnant with Nero's child, Nero divorced Octavia, claiming she was barren, and married Poppaea twelve days after the divorce.

[edit] Banishment and Death

Nero and Poppaea then banished Octavia to the island of Pandateria (modern Ventotene) on a false charge of adultery. When Octavia complained at this treatment, her maids were tortured to death.

Octavia's banishment became so unpopular that the citizens of Rome protested loudly, openly parading through the streets with statues of Octavia decked with flowers and calling for her return. Nero (badly frightened) nearly agreed to remarry Octavia, but Poppaea intervened and forced him instead to sign Octavia's death warrant.

A few days later, Octavia was bound and her veins were opened in a traditional Roman suicide ritual. Her terror was so great that the flow of blood was retarded and so she was suffocated in an exceedingly hot vapor bath. Octavia’s head was cut off and sent to Poppaea. Her death brought much sorrow to Rome. According to Suetonius, years later Nero would have nightmares about his mother and Octavia.

[edit] In later Fiction

The events of the divorce are dramatised in Octavia by Seneca the Younger and, more recently, in Handel's lost opera Nero, Octavia (opera, 1705) by Keiser, and Claudio Monteverdi's L'incoronazione di Poppea. Octavia is a character in the novel and television series I Claudius and Claudius the God.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ E. Groag, A. Stein, L. Petersen - e.a. (edd.), Prosopographia Imperii Romani saeculi I, II et III (PIR), Berlin, 1933 - C 1110

[edit] Sources

  • Suetonius - The Twelve Caesars - Claudius and Nero.
  • Tacitus - The Annals of Imperial Rome.

[edit] References

  • E. Groag, A. Stein, L. Petersen - e.a. (edd.), Prosopographia Imperii Romani saeculi I, II et III, Berlin, 1933 - . (PIR2)
  • Levick, Barbara, Claudius. Yale University Press, New Haven, 1990.
  • Barrett, Anthony A., Agrippina: Sex, Power and Politics in the Early Roman Empire. Yale University Press, New Haven, 1996.
Preceded by
Agrippina the Younger
Empress of Rome
54-62
Succeeded by
Poppaea Sabina