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Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa

Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa[a] (/əˈɡrɪpə/; c. 63 BC[1] – 12 BC) was a Roman general, statesman and architect who was a close friend, son-in-law and lieutenant to the Roman emperor Augustus.[3] Agrippa is well known for his important military victories, notably the Battle of Actium in 31 BC against the forces of Mark Antony and Cleopatra. He was also responsible for the construction of some of the most notable buildings of his era, including the original Pantheon.

Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa
Bust of Agrippa in the Louvre, Paris, ca. 25–24 BC.
Bornc. 63 BC[1]
Uncertain location, possibly Arpino, Istria or Asisium,[2] Roman Republic
Died12 BC (aged 50–51)
Resting placeMausoleum of Augustus
NationalityRoman
Occupation(s)Military commander, politician
Notable workPantheon (original)
OfficeConsul (37, 28–27 BC)
Spouses
Children
Familygens Vipsania
Military service
AllegianceAugustus
Years of service45–12 BC
Battles/wars

Born to a plebeian family c. 63 BC, in an uncertain location in Roman Italy, he met the future emperor Augustus, then known as Octavian, at Apollonia, in Illyria. Following the assassination of Octavian's great-uncle Julius Caesar in 44 BC, Octavian returned to Italy. Around this time, Agrippa was elected tribune of the plebs. He served as a military commander, fighting alongside Octavian and Caesar's former general and right-hand man Mark Antony in the Battle of Philippi. In 40 BC, he was praetor urbanus and played a major role in the Perusine war against Lucius Antonius and Fulvia, respectively the brother and wife of Mark Antony. In 39 or 38 BC, Agrippa was appointed governor of Transalpine Gaul. In 38 BC, he put down a rising of the Aquitanians and fought the Germanic tribes. He was consul for 37 BC, well below the usual minimum age of 43, to oversee the preparations for warfare against Sextus Pompey, who had cut off grain shipments to Rome.

Agrippa defeated Pompey in the battles of Mylae and Naulochus in 36 BC. In 33 BC, he served as curule aedile. Agrippa commanded the victorious Octavian's fleet at the Battle of Actium in 31 BC. Following the victory at Actium, Octavian became emperor and took the title of Princeps, while Agrippa remained as his close friend and lieutenant. Agrippa assisted Augustus in making Rome "a city of marble". Agrippa renovated aqueducts to provide Roman citizens from every social class access to the highest quality public services, and was responsible for the creation of many baths, porticoes, and gardens. He was also awarded powers almost as great as those of Augustus. He had veto power over the acts of the Senate and the power to present laws for approval by the People. He died in 12 BC at the age of 50–51. Augustus honored his memory with a magnificent funeral and spent over a month in mourning. His remains were placed in Augustus' own mausoleum.

Agrippa was also known as a writer, especially on geography. Under his supervision, Julius Caesar's design of having a complete survey of the empire made was accomplished. From the materials at hand he constructed a circular chart, which was engraved on marble by Augustus and afterwards placed in the colonnade built by his sister Vipsania Polla. Agrippa was also husband to Julia the Elder (who had later married the second Emperor Tiberius), and was the maternal grandfather of Caligula and the maternal great-grandfather of the Emperor Nero.

Early life, family, and early career edit

Early life and family edit

Agrippa was born c. 63 BC,[1][4] in an uncertain location.[2] His father was called Lucius Vipsanius.[5] His mother's name is not known and Pliny the Elder claimed that his cognomen "Agrippa" derived from him having been born breech[6] so it is possible that she died in childbirth.[7] Pliny also stated that he suffered from lameness as a child.[8] He had an elder brother whose name was also Lucius Vipsanius, and a sister named Vipsania Polla. His family originated in the Italian countryside, and was of humble and plebeian origins. They had not been prominent in Roman public life.[9] According to some scholars, including Victor Gardthausen, R. E. A. Palmer, and David Ridgway, Agrippa's family was originally from Pisa in Etruria.[10][11]

Early career edit

Agrippa was the same age as Octavian (the future emperor Augustus), and the two were educated together and became close friends. Despite Agrippa's association with the family of Julius Caesar, his elder brother chose another side in the civil wars of the 40s BC, fighting under Cato against Caesar in Africa. When Cato's forces were defeated, Agrippa's brother was taken prisoner but freed after Octavian interceded on his behalf.[12]

It is not known whether Agrippa fought against his brother in Africa, but he probably served in Caesar's campaign of 46 to 45 BC against Gnaeus Pompeius, which culminated in the Battle of Munda.[13] Caesar regarded him highly enough to send him with Octavius in 45 BC to study in Apollonia (on the Illyrian coast) with the Macedonian legions, while Caesar consolidated his power in Rome.[14] In the fourth month of their stay in Apollonia the news of Julius Caesar's assassination in March 44 BC reached them. Agrippa and another friend, Quintus Salvidienus Rufus, advised Octavius to march on Rome with the troops from Macedonia, but Octavius decided to sail to Italy with a small retinue. After his arrival, he learned that Caesar had adopted him as his legal heir.[15] Octavius at this time took Caesar's name, but modern historians refer to him as "Octavian" during this period.

Rise to power edit

Friend to Octavian edit

After Octavian's return to Rome, he and his supporters realised they needed the support of legions. Agrippa helped Octavian to levy troops in Campania.[16] Once Octavian had his legions, he made a pact with Mark Antony and Lepidus, legally established in 43 BC as the Second Triumvirate. Octavian and his consular colleague Quintus Pedius arranged for Caesar's assassins to be prosecuted in their absence, and Agrippa was entrusted with the case against Gaius Cassius Longinus.[17] It may have been in the same year that Agrippa began his political career, holding the position of tribune of the plebs, which granted him entry to the Senate.[18]

In 42 BC, Agrippa probably fought alongside Octavian and Antony in the Battle of Philippi.[19] After their return to Rome, he played a major role in Octavian's war against Lucius Antonius and Fulvia, respectively the brother and wife of Mark Antony, which began in 41 BC and ended in the capture of Perusia in 40 BC. However, Salvidienus remained Octavian's main general at this time.[20] After the Perusine war, Octavian departed for Gaul, leaving Agrippa as urban praetor in Rome with instructions to defend Italy against Sextus Pompeius, an opponent of the Triumvirate who was now occupying Sicily. In July 40 BC, while Agrippa was occupied with the Ludi Apollinares that were the praetor's responsibility, Sextus began a raid in southern Italy. Agrippa advanced on him, forcing him to withdraw.[21] However, the Triumvirate proved unstable, and in August 40 BC both Sextus and Antony invaded Italy (but not in an organized alliance). Agrippa's success in retaking Sipontum from Antony helped bring an end to the conflict.[22] Agrippa was among the intermediaries through whom Antony and Octavian agreed once more upon peace. During the discussions Octavian learned that Salvidienus had offered to betray him to Antony, with the result that Salvidienus was prosecuted and either executed or committed suicide. Agrippa was now Octavian's leading general.[23]

Governor of Transalpine Gaul edit

 
Bust of Agrippa, Pushkin Museum

In 39 or 38 BC, Octavian appointed Agrippa governor of Transalpine Gaul, where in 38 BC he put down a rising of the Aquitanians. He also fought the Germanic tribes, becoming the next Roman general to cross the Rhine after Julius Caesar.[24] He was summoned back to Rome by Octavian to assume the consulship for 37 BC. He was well below the usual minimum age of 43, but Octavian had suffered a humiliating naval defeat against Sextus Pompey and needed his friend to oversee the preparations for further warfare. Agrippa refused the offer of a triumph for his exploits in Gaul – on the grounds, says Dio, that he thought it improper to celebrate during a time of trouble for Octavian.[25]

Since Sextus Pompeius had command of the sea on the coasts of Italy, Agrippa's first care was to provide a safe harbour for Octavian's ships. He accomplished this by cutting through the strips of land which separated the Lacus Lucrinus from the sea, thus forming an outer harbour, while joining the lake Avernus to the Lucrinus to serve as an inner harbor.[26] The new harbor-complex was named Portus Julius in Octavian's honour.[27] Agrippa was also responsible for technological improvements, including larger ships and an improved form of grappling hook.[28] About this time, he married Caecilia Pomponia Attica, daughter of Cicero's friend Titus Pomponius Atticus.[29]

War with Sextus Pompeius edit

In 36 BC, Octavian and Agrippa set sail against Sextus. The fleet was badly damaged by storms and had to withdraw; Agrippa was left in charge of the second attempt. Thanks to superior technology and training, Agrippa and his men won decisive victories at Mylae and Naulochus, destroying all but seventeen of Sextus' ships and compelling most of his forces to surrender. Octavian, with his power increased, forced the triumvir Lepidus into retirement and entered Rome in triumph.[30] Agrippa received the unprecedented honour of a corona navalis decorated with the beaks of ships; as Dio remarks, this was "a decoration given to nobody before or since".[31]

Public service edit

Agrippa participated in smaller military campaigns in 35 and 34 BC, but by the autumn of 34 BC he had returned to Rome.[32] He rapidly set out on a campaign of public repairs and improvements, including renovation of the aqueduct known as the Aqua Marcia and an extension of its pipes to cover more of the city. He became the first Curator Aquarum of Rome in 33 BC.[33] Through his actions after being elected in 33 BC as one of the aediles (officials responsible for Rome's buildings and festivals), the streets were repaired and the sewers were cleaned out, and lavish public spectacles were held.[34] Agrippa signalled his tenure of office by effecting great improvements in the city of Rome, restoring and building aqueducts, enlarging and cleansing the Cloaca Maxima, constructing baths and porticos, and laying out gardens. He also gave a stimulus to the public exhibition of works of art. It was unusual for an ex-consul to hold the lower-ranking position of aedile,[35] but Agrippa's success bore out that break with tradition. As emperor, Augustus would later boast that "he had found the city of brick but left it of marble" in part because of the great services provided by Agrippa under his reign.

Battle of Actium edit

Agrippa was again called away to take command of the fleet when the war with Antony and Cleopatra broke out. He captured the strategically important city of Methone at the southwest of the Peloponnese, then sailed north, raiding the Greek coast and capturing Corcyra (modern Corfu). Octavian then brought his forces to Corcyra, occupying it as a naval base.[36] Antony drew up his ships and troops at Actium, where Octavian moved to meet him. Agrippa meanwhile defeated Antony's supporter Quintus Nasidius in a naval battle at Patrae.[37] Dio relates that as Agrippa moved to join Octavian near Actium, he encountered Gaius Sosius, one of Antony's lieutenants, who was making a surprise attack on the squadron of Lucius Tarius, a supporter of Octavian. Agrippa's unexpected arrival turned the battle around.[38]

As the decisive battle approached, according to Dio, Octavian received intelligence that Antony and Cleopatra planned to break past his naval blockade and escape. At first he wished to allow the flagships past, arguing that he could overtake them with his lighter vessels and that the other opposing ships would surrender when they saw their leaders' cowardice. Agrippa objected, saying that Antony's ships, although larger, could outrun Octavian's if they hoisted sails, and that Octavian ought to fight now because Antony's fleet had just been struck by storms. Octavian followed his friend's advice.[39]

On 2 September 31 BC, the Battle of Actium was fought. Octavian's victory, which gave him the mastery of Rome and the empire, was mainly due to Agrippa.[40] Octavian then bestowed upon him the hand of his niece Claudia Marcella Major in 28 BC. He also served a second consulship with Octavian the same year.[41] In 27 BC, Agrippa held a third consulship with Octavian,[41] and in that year, the Senate also bestowed upon Octavian the imperial title of Augustus.

In commemoration of the Battle of Actium, Agrippa built and dedicated the building that served as the Roman Pantheon before its destruction in AD 80. Emperor Hadrian used Agrippa's design to build his own Pantheon, which survives in Rome. The inscription of the later building, which was built c. 125, preserves the text of the inscription from Agrippa's building during his third consulship. The years following his third consulship, Agrippa spent in Gaul, reforming the provincial administration and taxation system, along with building an effective road system and aqueducts.[citation needed]

Later life edit

 
The theatre at Merida, Spain; it was promoted by Agrippa, built between 16 and 15 BC.

Agrippa's friendship with Augustus seems to have been clouded by the jealousy of Augustus's nephew and son-in-law Marcus Claudius Marcellus.[42] Traditionally it is said the result of such jealousy was that Agrippa left Rome, ostensibly to take over the governorship of eastern provinces – a sort of honourable exile, but he only sent his legate to Syria, while he himself remained at Lesbos and governed by proxy,[42] though he may have been on a secret mission to negotiate with the Parthians about the return of the Roman legions' standards which they held.[43] On the death of Marcellus, which took place within a year of his exile, he was recalled to Rome by Augustus, who found he could not dispense with his services. However, if one places the events in the context of the crisis of 23 BC it seems unlikely that, when facing significant opposition and about to make a major political climb down, the emperor Augustus would place a man in exile in charge of the largest body of Roman troops. What is far more likely is that Agrippa's 'exile' was actually the careful political positioning of a loyal lieutenant in command of a significant army as a backup plan in case the settlement plans of 23 BC failed and Augustus needed military support.[44]

Moreover, after 23 BC, as part of what became known as Augustus's Second Constitutional Settlement, Agrippa's constitutional powers were greatly increased to provide the Principate of Augustus with greater constitutional stability by providing for a political heir or replacement for Augustus if he were to succumb to his habitual ill health or was assassinated. In the course of the year, proconsular imperium, similar to Augustus's power, was conferred upon Agrippa for five years. The exact nature of the grant is uncertain but it probably covered Augustus's imperial provinces, east and west, perhaps lacking authority over the provinces of the Senate. That was to come later, as was the jealously guarded tribunicia potestas, or powers of a tribune of the plebeians.[45] These great powers of state are not usually heaped upon a former exile. It is said that Maecenas advised Augustus to attach Agrippa still more closely to him by making him his son-in-law.[46] Accordingly, by 21 BC, he induced Agrippa to divorce Marcella and marry his daughter, Julia the Elder—the widow of Marcellus,[47] equally celebrated for her beauty, abilities, and her shameless extravagance. In 19 BC, Agrippa was employed in putting down a rising of the Cantabrians in Hispania (Cantabrian Wars).[42]

In 18 BC, Agrippa's powers were even further increased to almost match those of Augustus. That year his proconsular imperium was augmented to cover the senatorial provinces. More than that, he was finally granted tribunicia potestas, or powers of a tribune of the plebeians. As was the case with Augustus, Agrippa's grant of tribunician powers was conferred without his having to actually hold that office.[48] These powers were considerable, giving him veto power over the acts of the Senate or other magistracies, including those of other tribunes, and the power to present laws for approval by the People. Just as important, a tribune's person was sacred, meaning that any person who harmfully touched them or impeded their actions, including political acts, could lawfully be killed.[49] After the grant of these powers Agrippa was, on paper, almost as powerful as Augustus was. However, there was no doubt that Augustus was the man in charge.

Agrippa was appointed governor of the eastern provinces a second time in 17 BC, where his just and prudent administration won him the respect and good-will of the provincials, especially from the Jewish population.[42] Agrippa also restored effective Roman control over the Cimmerian Chersonnese (Crimean Peninsula) during his governorship.

Death edit

Agrippa's last public service was his beginning of the conquest of the upper Danube River region, which would become the Roman province of Pannonia in 13 BC.[50] He died at Campania in 12 BC at the age of 50–51. His posthumous son, Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa Postumus, was named in his honor. Augustus honoured his memory by a magnificent funeral and spent over a month in mourning. Augustus personally oversaw all of Agrippa's children's educations. Although Agrippa had built a tomb for himself, Augustus had Agrippa's remains placed in his own mausoleum.[51]

Legacy edit

 
The Maison Carrée at Nîmes, modern France, built in 19 BC; Agrippa was its patron.

Agrippa was not only Augustus' most skilled subordinate commander but also his closest companion, serving him faithfully for over three decades. Historian Glen Bowersock says of Agrippa:

Agrippa deserved the honours Augustus heaped upon him. It is conceivable that without Agrippa, Octavian would never have become emperor. Rome would remember Agrippa for his generosity in attending to aqueducts, sewers, and baths.[52]

Agrippa was also a writer, especially on the subject of geography.[42] Under his supervision, Julius Caesar's dream of having a complete survey of the Empire made was carried out. Agrippa constructed a circular chart, which was later engraved on marble by Augustus, and afterwards placed in the colonnade built by his sister Polla.[42] Amongst his writings, an autobiography, now lost, is referenced.[42]

Agrippa established a standard for the Roman foot in 29 BC,[53] and thus a definition of a pace as 5 feet. An imperial Roman mile denotes 5,000 Roman feet. The term Via Agrippa is used for any part of the network of roadways in Gaul built by Agrippa. Some of these still exist as paths or even as highways.

The Roman tribe Agrippia was named in his honor.[54]

In popular culture edit

 
An Audience at Agrippa's, by Lawrence Alma-Tadema

Drama edit

  • Agrippa is a character in William Shakespeare's play Antony and Cleopatra.
  • A fictional version of Agrippa in his later life played a prominent role in the 1976 BBC Television series I, Claudius. Agrippa was portrayed as a much older man though he would have been only 39 years old at the time of the first episode (24/23 BC). He was played by John Paul.
  • Agrippa is the main character in Paul Naschy's 1980 film Los cántabros, played by Naschy himself. It is a highly fictionalized version of the Cantabrian Wars in which Agrippa is depicted as the lover of the sister of Cantabrian leader Corocotta.
  • Agrippa appears in several film versions of the life of Cleopatra. He is normally portrayed as an old man, rather than a young one. Among the actors to portray him are Philip Locke, Alan Rowe, and Andrew Keir, as well as Francis de Wolff in the 1964 film Carry on Cleo.
  • Agrippa is also one of the principal characters in the British/Italian joint project Imperium: Augustus (2003) featuring flashbacks between Augustus and Julia about Agrippa, which shows him in his youth on serving in Caesar's army up until his victory at Actium and the defeat of Cleopatra. He is portrayed by Ken Duken.
  • In the 2005 series Empire the young Agrippa (played by Christopher Egan) becomes Octavian's sidekick after saving him from an attempted poisoning.
  • Marcus Agrippa, a highly fictional character based on Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa's early life, is part of the BBC-HBO-RAI television series Rome. He is played by Allen Leech. He describes himself as the grandson of a slave. The series creates a romantic relationship between Agrippa and Octavian's sister Octavia Minor, for which there is no historical evidence.
  • In the TV series Domina (2021), Agrippa was played by Oliver Huntingdon and Ben Batt.

Literature edit

Marriages and issue edit

Agrippa married three times:

Through his numerous children, Agrippa would become ancestor to many subsequent members of the Julio-Claudian dynasty, whose position he helped to attain, as well as many other distinguished Romans.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ He discarded his nomen Vipsanius and was called simply Marcus Agrippa for most of his public career and in official inscriptions, possibly to mask his lowborn origin. Reinhold Marcus Agrippa pp. 6–8
  2. ^ However, it is uncertain whether they had also one or more sons who died young[58]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Reinhold, Meyer (1933). Marcus Agrippa: A Biography. New York: The W.F. Humphrey Press. p. 1. Based on primary sources regarding his death, scholars have agreed upon the year of Agrippa's birth to have occurred during the consulship of M. Tullius Cicero, in 63 BC, the same year Octavian was born.
  2. ^ a b Reinhold, p. 9; Roddaz, p. 23.
  3. ^ Plate, William (1867). "Agrippa, Marcus Vipsanius". In Smith, William (ed.). Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology. Vol. 1. Boston: Little, Brown and Company. pp. 77–80.
  4. ^ Dio 54.28.3 places Agrippa's death in late March 12 BC, while Pliny the Elder 7.46 states that he died "in his fifty-first year". Depending on whether Pliny meant that Agrippa was aged 50 or 51 at his death, this gives a date of birth between March 64 and March 62. A calendar from Cyprus or Syria includes a month named after Agrippa beginning on November 1, which may reflect the month of his birth. See Reinhold, pp. 2–4; Roddaz, pp. 23–26.
  5. ^ cf Pantheon inscription "M·AGRIPPA·L·F·COS·TERTIVM·FECIT" [1].
  6. ^ Reinhold, Meyer (1965). Marcus Agrippa: A Biography (new ed.). L'Erma di Bretschneider. p. 10.
  7. ^ Everitt, Anthony (2006). The First Emperor: Caesar Augustus and the Triumph of Rome (illustrated ed.). John Murray. p. 19. ISBN 9780719554940.
  8. ^ Barrett, Anthony A.; Fantham, Elaine; Yardley, John C. (2016). The Emperor Nero: A Guide to the Ancient Sources. Princeton University Press. p. 5. ISBN 9780691156514.
  9. ^ Velleius Paterculus 2.96, 127.
  10. ^ Hall, John Franklin (1996). Etruscan Italy: Etruscan Influences on the Civilizations of Italy from Antiquity to the Modern Era. Indiana University Press. p. 188. ISBN 978-0842523349.
  11. ^ Ridgway, David (2002). The World of the Early Etruscans. Stockholm: Paul Astrèoms Fèorlag. p. 37. ISBN 9789170811890.
  12. ^ Nicolaus of Damascus, Life of Augustus 7.
  13. ^ Reinhold, pp. 13–14.
  14. ^ Suetonius, Life of Augustus 94.12.
  15. ^ Nicolaus of Damascus, Life of Augustus 16–17; Velleius Paterculus 2.59.5.
  16. ^ Nicolaus of Damascus, Life of Augustus 31. It has been speculated that Agrippa was among the negotiators who won over Antony's Macedonian legions to Octavian, but there is no direct evidence for this; see Reinhold, p. 16.
  17. ^ Velleius Paterculus 2.69.5; Plutarch, Life of Brutus 27.4.
  18. ^ Mentioned only by Servius auctus on Virgil, Aeneid 8.682, but a necessary preliminary to his position as urban praetor in 40 BC. Roddaz (p. 41) favours the 43 BC date.
  19. ^ Pliny the Elder 7.148 cites him as an authority for Octavian's illness on the occasion.
  20. ^ Reinhold, pp. 17–20.
  21. ^ Dio 48.20; Reinhold, p. 22.
  22. ^ Dio 48.28; Reinhold, p. 23.
  23. ^ Reinhold, pp. 23–24.
  24. ^ Dio, 48.49
  25. ^ Dio 48.49; Reinhold, pp. 25–29. Agrippa's youth is noted by Lendering, "From Philippi to Actium 2014-07-10 at the Wayback Machine".
  26. ^ Reinhold, pp. 29–32.
  27. ^ Suetonius, Life of Augustus 16.1.
  28. ^ Appian, Civil Wars 2.106, 118–119; Reinhold, pp. 33–35.
  29. ^ a b Reinhold, pp. 35–37.
  30. ^ Reinhold, pp. 37–42.
  31. ^ Dio 49.14.3.
  32. ^ Reinhold, pp. 45–47.
  33. ^ The World Book encyclopedia. World Book, Inc. Chicago: World Book. 1987. p. 580. ISBN 0716600889. OCLC 15063621.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  34. ^ Dio 49.42–43.
  35. ^ Lendering, "From Philippi to Actium 2014-07-10 at the Wayback Machine".
  36. ^ Orosius, History Against the Pagans 6.19.6–7; Dio 50.11.1–12.3; Reinhold, pp. 53–54.
  37. ^ Dio 50.13.5.
  38. ^ Dio 50.14.1–2; cf. Velleius Paterculus 2.84.2 ("Agrippa ... before the final conflict had twice defeated the fleet of the enemy"). Dio is wrong to say that Sosius was killed, since he in fact fought at and survived the Battle of Actium (Reinhold, p. 54 n. 14; Roddaz, p. 163 n. 140).
  39. ^ Dio 50.31.1–3.
  40. ^ Reinhold, pp. 57–58; Roddaz, pp. 178–181.
  41. ^ a b c Attilio Degrassi, I fasti consolari dell'Impero Romano dal 30 avanti Cristo al 613 dopo Cristo (Rome, 1952), p. 3
  42. ^ a b c d e f g Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Agrippa, Marcus Vipsanius" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 1 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 425–426.
  43. ^ David Magie, "The Mission of Agrippa to the Orient in 23 BC", Classical Philology, Vol. 3, No. 2 (Apr., 1908), pp. 145–152
  44. ^ Syme (1939), 342.
  45. ^ Syme (1939), 337–338.
  46. ^ Cassius Dio 54.6
  47. ^ a b Suetonius, The Life of Augustus 63; Dio, 6.5; Reinhold, Marcus Agrippa. A biography, pp. 67–68, 86–87.
  48. ^ Dio, Roman History 54.12.4.
  49. ^ Everett (2006), 217.
  50. ^ Dio, 28
  51. ^ Cassius Dio 54.28.5
  52. ^ "Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa | Roman leader | Britannica". www.britannica.com. 14 July 2023.
  53. ^ Soren (1999), p. 184.
  54. ^ Chow, John K. (1992). Patronage and Power: A Study of Social Networks in Corinth. The Library of New Testament Studies. Vol. 75. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 44. ISBN 9780567111869.
  55. ^ Virgil, The Aeneid, trans. Robert Fitzgerald, Vintage Classics, p. 252.
  56. ^ Ronald Syme, The Augustan Aristocracy (1987), 314.
  57. ^ Syme, Ronald (1989). The Augustan Aristocracy (illustrated and revised ed.). Clarendon Press. p. 504. ISBN 9780198147312.
  58. ^ Ronald Syme, Augustan Aristocracy, Clarendon Press, 1989, pp.144-145, ISBN 978-0-19-814731-2
  59. ^ Wells, Peter S. (2004). The Battle That Stopped Rome: Emperor Augustus, Arminius, and the Slaughter of the Legions in the Teutoburg Forest. W. W. Norton & Company. p. 81. ISBN 9780393352030.
  60. ^ Syme, Ronald (1989). The Augustan Aristocracy (illustrated and revised ed.). Clarendon Press. p. 125. ISBN 9780198147312.
  61. ^ Suetonius, Augustus, 64.

Sources edit

  • Badian, E. (1981). "Notes on the Laudatio of Agrippa". Classical Journal. 76: 97–109.
  • Buchan, J. (1937). Augustus. Boston: Houghton Mifflin.
  • Evans, H.B. (1982). "Agrippa's Water Plan". American Journal of Archaeology. 86 (3): 401–411. doi:10.2307/504429. JSTOR 504429. S2CID 193123951.
  • Firth, J.B. (1903). Augustus Caesar and the Organization of the Empire of Rome. New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons.
  • Gray, E.W. (1970). "The Imperium of M. Agrippa: A Note on P. Colon. Inv. No. 4701". Zeitschrift für Papyrologie und Epigraphik. 6: 227–238.
  • Lendering, Jona. . Livius. Archived from the original on 16 April 2007. Retrieved 22 April 2007.
  • McKechnie, P. (October 1981). "Cassius Dio's Speech of Agrippa: A Realistic Alternative to Imperial Government?". Greece and Rome. 28 (2): 150–155. doi:10.1017/S0017383500033258. S2CID 154924374.
  • Reinhold, Meyer (1933). Marcus Agrippa: A Biography. Geneva: W. F. Humphrey Press.
  • Roddaz, Jean-Michel (1984). Marcus Agrippa (in French). Rome: École Française de Rome.
  • Shipley, Frederick W. (1933). Agrippa's Building Activities in Rome. St. Louis: Washington University.
  • Soren, D.; et al. (1999), "A Roman villa and a late Roman infant cemetery : excavation at Poggio Gramignano, Lugnano in Teverina", Bibliotheca Archaeologica, Rome: L'Erma di Bretschneider.

Further reading edit

  • Goldsworthy, Adrian (2014), Augustus: From Revolutionary to Emperor, London, UK: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, ISBN 9780297864257
  • Powell, Lindsay (2015), Marcus Agrippa: Right-hand man of Caesar Augustus, Barnsley, UK: Pen & Sword, ISBN 9781848846173
  • Geoffrey Mottershead, The Constructions of Marcus Agrippa in the West, University of Melbourne, 2005
  • Augustus' Funeral Oration for Agrippa
  • Marcus Agrippa, article in historical sourcebook by Mahlon H. Smith

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Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa a e ˈ ɡ r ɪ p e c 63 BC 1 12 BC was a Roman general statesman and architect who was a close friend son in law and lieutenant to the Roman emperor Augustus 3 Agrippa is well known for his important military victories notably the Battle of Actium in 31 BC against the forces of Mark Antony and Cleopatra He was also responsible for the construction of some of the most notable buildings of his era including the original Pantheon Marcus Vipsanius AgrippaBust of Agrippa in the Louvre Paris ca 25 24 BC Bornc 63 BC 1 Uncertain location possibly Arpino Istria or Asisium 2 Roman RepublicDied12 BC aged 50 51 Campania Roman Italy Roman EmpireResting placeMausoleum of AugustusNationalityRomanOccupation s Military commander politicianNotable workPantheon original OfficeConsul 37 28 27 BC SpousesCaecilia Attica Claudia Marcella Maior Julia the ElderChildrenList Vipsania AgrippinaVipsania AtticaVipsania MarcellaVipsania MarcellinaGaius CaesarJulia the YoungerLucius CaesarAgrippina the ElderAgrippa PostumusFamilygens VipsaniaMilitary serviceAllegianceAugustusYears of service45 12 BCBattles warsBattle of Munda 45 BC Battle of Mutina 43 BC Battle of Philippi 42 BC Perusine War 41 40 BC Battle of Mylae 36 BC Battle of Naulochus 36 BC Battle of Actium 31 BC Battle of Alexandria 30 BC Cantabrian Wars 29 19 BC Born to a plebeian family c 63 BC in an uncertain location in Roman Italy he met the future emperor Augustus then known as Octavian at Apollonia in Illyria Following the assassination of Octavian s great uncle Julius Caesar in 44 BC Octavian returned to Italy Around this time Agrippa was elected tribune of the plebs He served as a military commander fighting alongside Octavian and Caesar s former general and right hand man Mark Antony in the Battle of Philippi In 40 BC he was praetor urbanus and played a major role in the Perusine war against Lucius Antonius and Fulvia respectively the brother and wife of Mark Antony In 39 or 38 BC Agrippa was appointed governor of Transalpine Gaul In 38 BC he put down a rising of the Aquitanians and fought the Germanic tribes He was consul for 37 BC well below the usual minimum age of 43 to oversee the preparations for warfare against Sextus Pompey who had cut off grain shipments to Rome Agrippa defeated Pompey in the battles of Mylae and Naulochus in 36 BC In 33 BC he served as curule aedile Agrippa commanded the victorious Octavian s fleet at the Battle of Actium in 31 BC Following the victory at Actium Octavian became emperor and took the title of Princeps while Agrippa remained as his close friend and lieutenant Agrippa assisted Augustus in making Rome a city of marble Agrippa renovated aqueducts to provide Roman citizens from every social class access to the highest quality public services and was responsible for the creation of many baths porticoes and gardens He was also awarded powers almost as great as those of Augustus He had veto power over the acts of the Senate and the power to present laws for approval by the People He died in 12 BC at the age of 50 51 Augustus honored his memory with a magnificent funeral and spent over a month in mourning His remains were placed in Augustus own mausoleum Agrippa was also known as a writer especially on geography Under his supervision Julius Caesar s design of having a complete survey of the empire made was accomplished From the materials at hand he constructed a circular chart which was engraved on marble by Augustus and afterwards placed in the colonnade built by his sister Vipsania Polla Agrippa was also husband to Julia the Elder who had later married the second Emperor Tiberius and was the maternal grandfather of Caligula and the maternal great grandfather of the Emperor Nero Contents 1 Early life family and early career 1 1 Early life and family 1 2 Early career 2 Rise to power 2 1 Friend to Octavian 2 2 Governor of Transalpine Gaul 2 3 War with Sextus Pompeius 3 Public service 3 1 Battle of Actium 4 Later life 4 1 Death 5 Legacy 5 1 In popular culture 5 1 1 Drama 5 1 2 Literature 6 Marriages and issue 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Sources 11 Further readingEarly life family and early career editEarly life and family edit Agrippa was born c 63 BC 1 4 in an uncertain location 2 His father was called Lucius Vipsanius 5 His mother s name is not known and Pliny the Elder claimed that his cognomen Agrippa derived from him having been born breech 6 so it is possible that she died in childbirth 7 Pliny also stated that he suffered from lameness as a child 8 He had an elder brother whose name was also Lucius Vipsanius and a sister named Vipsania Polla His family originated in the Italian countryside and was of humble and plebeian origins They had not been prominent in Roman public life 9 According to some scholars including Victor Gardthausen R E A Palmer and David Ridgway Agrippa s family was originally from Pisa in Etruria 10 11 Early career edit Agrippa was the same age as Octavian the future emperor Augustus and the two were educated together and became close friends Despite Agrippa s association with the family of Julius Caesar his elder brother chose another side in the civil wars of the 40s BC fighting under Cato against Caesar in Africa When Cato s forces were defeated Agrippa s brother was taken prisoner but freed after Octavian interceded on his behalf 12 It is not known whether Agrippa fought against his brother in Africa but he probably served in Caesar s campaign of 46 to 45 BC against Gnaeus Pompeius which culminated in the Battle of Munda 13 Caesar regarded him highly enough to send him with Octavius in 45 BC to study in Apollonia on the Illyrian coast with the Macedonian legions while Caesar consolidated his power in Rome 14 In the fourth month of their stay in Apollonia the news of Julius Caesar s assassination in March 44 BC reached them Agrippa and another friend Quintus Salvidienus Rufus advised Octavius to march on Rome with the troops from Macedonia but Octavius decided to sail to Italy with a small retinue After his arrival he learned that Caesar had adopted him as his legal heir 15 Octavius at this time took Caesar s name but modern historians refer to him as Octavian during this period Rise to power editFriend to Octavian edit After Octavian s return to Rome he and his supporters realised they needed the support of legions Agrippa helped Octavian to levy troops in Campania 16 Once Octavian had his legions he made a pact with Mark Antony and Lepidus legally established in 43 BC as the Second Triumvirate Octavian and his consular colleague Quintus Pedius arranged for Caesar s assassins to be prosecuted in their absence and Agrippa was entrusted with the case against Gaius Cassius Longinus 17 It may have been in the same year that Agrippa began his political career holding the position of tribune of the plebs which granted him entry to the Senate 18 In 42 BC Agrippa probably fought alongside Octavian and Antony in the Battle of Philippi 19 After their return to Rome he played a major role in Octavian s war against Lucius Antonius and Fulvia respectively the brother and wife of Mark Antony which began in 41 BC and ended in the capture of Perusia in 40 BC However Salvidienus remained Octavian s main general at this time 20 After the Perusine war Octavian departed for Gaul leaving Agrippa as urban praetor in Rome with instructions to defend Italy against Sextus Pompeius an opponent of the Triumvirate who was now occupying Sicily In July 40 BC while Agrippa was occupied with the Ludi Apollinares that were the praetor s responsibility Sextus began a raid in southern Italy Agrippa advanced on him forcing him to withdraw 21 However the Triumvirate proved unstable and in August 40 BC both Sextus and Antony invaded Italy but not in an organized alliance Agrippa s success in retaking Sipontum from Antony helped bring an end to the conflict 22 Agrippa was among the intermediaries through whom Antony and Octavian agreed once more upon peace During the discussions Octavian learned that Salvidienus had offered to betray him to Antony with the result that Salvidienus was prosecuted and either executed or committed suicide Agrippa was now Octavian s leading general 23 Governor of Transalpine Gaul edit nbsp Bust of Agrippa Pushkin MuseumIn 39 or 38 BC Octavian appointed Agrippa governor of Transalpine Gaul where in 38 BC he put down a rising of the Aquitanians He also fought the Germanic tribes becoming the next Roman general to cross the Rhine after Julius Caesar 24 He was summoned back to Rome by Octavian to assume the consulship for 37 BC He was well below the usual minimum age of 43 but Octavian had suffered a humiliating naval defeat against Sextus Pompey and needed his friend to oversee the preparations for further warfare Agrippa refused the offer of a triumph for his exploits in Gaul on the grounds says Dio that he thought it improper to celebrate during a time of trouble for Octavian 25 Since Sextus Pompeius had command of the sea on the coasts of Italy Agrippa s first care was to provide a safe harbour for Octavian s ships He accomplished this by cutting through the strips of land which separated the Lacus Lucrinus from the sea thus forming an outer harbour while joining the lake Avernus to the Lucrinus to serve as an inner harbor 26 The new harbor complex was named Portus Julius in Octavian s honour 27 Agrippa was also responsible for technological improvements including larger ships and an improved form of grappling hook 28 About this time he married Caecilia Pomponia Attica daughter of Cicero s friend Titus Pomponius Atticus 29 War with Sextus Pompeius edit Further information Bellum Siculum In 36 BC Octavian and Agrippa set sail against Sextus The fleet was badly damaged by storms and had to withdraw Agrippa was left in charge of the second attempt Thanks to superior technology and training Agrippa and his men won decisive victories at Mylae and Naulochus destroying all but seventeen of Sextus ships and compelling most of his forces to surrender Octavian with his power increased forced the triumvir Lepidus into retirement and entered Rome in triumph 30 Agrippa received the unprecedented honour of a corona navalis decorated with the beaks of ships as Dio remarks this was a decoration given to nobody before or since 31 Public service editAgrippa participated in smaller military campaigns in 35 and 34 BC but by the autumn of 34 BC he had returned to Rome 32 He rapidly set out on a campaign of public repairs and improvements including renovation of the aqueduct known as the Aqua Marcia and an extension of its pipes to cover more of the city He became the first Curator Aquarum of Rome in 33 BC 33 Through his actions after being elected in 33 BC as one of the aediles officials responsible for Rome s buildings and festivals the streets were repaired and the sewers were cleaned out and lavish public spectacles were held 34 Agrippa signalled his tenure of office by effecting great improvements in the city of Rome restoring and building aqueducts enlarging and cleansing the Cloaca Maxima constructing baths and porticos and laying out gardens He also gave a stimulus to the public exhibition of works of art It was unusual for an ex consul to hold the lower ranking position of aedile 35 but Agrippa s success bore out that break with tradition As emperor Augustus would later boast that he had found the city of brick but left it of marble in part because of the great services provided by Agrippa under his reign Battle of Actium edit Agrippa was again called away to take command of the fleet when the war with Antony and Cleopatra broke out He captured the strategically important city of Methone at the southwest of the Peloponnese then sailed north raiding the Greek coast and capturing Corcyra modern Corfu Octavian then brought his forces to Corcyra occupying it as a naval base 36 Antony drew up his ships and troops at Actium where Octavian moved to meet him Agrippa meanwhile defeated Antony s supporter Quintus Nasidius in a naval battle at Patrae 37 Dio relates that as Agrippa moved to join Octavian near Actium he encountered Gaius Sosius one of Antony s lieutenants who was making a surprise attack on the squadron of Lucius Tarius a supporter of Octavian Agrippa s unexpected arrival turned the battle around 38 As the decisive battle approached according to Dio Octavian received intelligence that Antony and Cleopatra planned to break past his naval blockade and escape At first he wished to allow the flagships past arguing that he could overtake them with his lighter vessels and that the other opposing ships would surrender when they saw their leaders cowardice Agrippa objected saying that Antony s ships although larger could outrun Octavian s if they hoisted sails and that Octavian ought to fight now because Antony s fleet had just been struck by storms Octavian followed his friend s advice 39 On 2 September 31 BC the Battle of Actium was fought Octavian s victory which gave him the mastery of Rome and the empire was mainly due to Agrippa 40 Octavian then bestowed upon him the hand of his niece Claudia Marcella Major in 28 BC He also served a second consulship with Octavian the same year 41 In 27 BC Agrippa held a third consulship with Octavian 41 and in that year the Senate also bestowed upon Octavian the imperial title of Augustus In commemoration of the Battle of Actium Agrippa built and dedicated the building that served as the Roman Pantheon before its destruction in AD 80 Emperor Hadrian used Agrippa s design to build his own Pantheon which survives in Rome The inscription of the later building which was built c 125 preserves the text of the inscription from Agrippa s building during his third consulship The years following his third consulship Agrippa spent in Gaul reforming the provincial administration and taxation system along with building an effective road system and aqueducts citation needed Later life edit nbsp The theatre at Merida Spain it was promoted by Agrippa built between 16 and 15 BC Agrippa s friendship with Augustus seems to have been clouded by the jealousy of Augustus s nephew and son in law Marcus Claudius Marcellus 42 Traditionally it is said the result of such jealousy was that Agrippa left Rome ostensibly to take over the governorship of eastern provinces a sort of honourable exile but he only sent his legate to Syria while he himself remained at Lesbos and governed by proxy 42 though he may have been on a secret mission to negotiate with the Parthians about the return of the Roman legions standards which they held 43 On the death of Marcellus which took place within a year of his exile he was recalled to Rome by Augustus who found he could not dispense with his services However if one places the events in the context of the crisis of 23 BC it seems unlikely that when facing significant opposition and about to make a major political climb down the emperor Augustus would place a man in exile in charge of the largest body of Roman troops What is far more likely is that Agrippa s exile was actually the careful political positioning of a loyal lieutenant in command of a significant army as a backup plan in case the settlement plans of 23 BC failed and Augustus needed military support 44 Moreover after 23 BC as part of what became known as Augustus s Second Constitutional Settlement Agrippa s constitutional powers were greatly increased to provide the Principate of Augustus with greater constitutional stability by providing for a political heir or replacement for Augustus if he were to succumb to his habitual ill health or was assassinated In the course of the year proconsular imperium similar to Augustus s power was conferred upon Agrippa for five years The exact nature of the grant is uncertain but it probably covered Augustus s imperial provinces east and west perhaps lacking authority over the provinces of the Senate That was to come later as was the jealously guarded tribunicia potestas or powers of a tribune of the plebeians 45 These great powers of state are not usually heaped upon a former exile It is said that Maecenas advised Augustus to attach Agrippa still more closely to him by making him his son in law 46 Accordingly by 21 BC he induced Agrippa to divorce Marcella and marry his daughter Julia the Elder the widow of Marcellus 47 equally celebrated for her beauty abilities and her shameless extravagance In 19 BC Agrippa was employed in putting down a rising of the Cantabrians in Hispania Cantabrian Wars 42 In 18 BC Agrippa s powers were even further increased to almost match those of Augustus That year his proconsular imperium was augmented to cover the senatorial provinces More than that he was finally granted tribunicia potestas or powers of a tribune of the plebeians As was the case with Augustus Agrippa s grant of tribunician powers was conferred without his having to actually hold that office 48 These powers were considerable giving him veto power over the acts of the Senate or other magistracies including those of other tribunes and the power to present laws for approval by the People Just as important a tribune s person was sacred meaning that any person who harmfully touched them or impeded their actions including political acts could lawfully be killed 49 After the grant of these powers Agrippa was on paper almost as powerful as Augustus was However there was no doubt that Augustus was the man in charge Agrippa was appointed governor of the eastern provinces a second time in 17 BC where his just and prudent administration won him the respect and good will of the provincials especially from the Jewish population 42 Agrippa also restored effective Roman control over the Cimmerian Chersonnese Crimean Peninsula during his governorship Death edit Agrippa s last public service was his beginning of the conquest of the upper Danube River region which would become the Roman province of Pannonia in 13 BC 50 He died at Campania in 12 BC at the age of 50 51 His posthumous son Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa Postumus was named in his honor Augustus honoured his memory by a magnificent funeral and spent over a month in mourning Augustus personally oversaw all of Agrippa s children s educations Although Agrippa had built a tomb for himself Augustus had Agrippa s remains placed in his own mausoleum 51 Legacy edit nbsp The Maison Carree at Nimes modern France built in 19 BC Agrippa was its patron Agrippa was not only Augustus most skilled subordinate commander but also his closest companion serving him faithfully for over three decades Historian Glen Bowersock says of Agrippa Agrippa deserved the honours Augustus heaped upon him It is conceivable that without Agrippa Octavian would never have become emperor Rome would remember Agrippa for his generosity in attending to aqueducts sewers and baths 52 Agrippa was also a writer especially on the subject of geography 42 Under his supervision Julius Caesar s dream of having a complete survey of the Empire made was carried out Agrippa constructed a circular chart which was later engraved on marble by Augustus and afterwards placed in the colonnade built by his sister Polla 42 Amongst his writings an autobiography now lost is referenced 42 Agrippa established a standard for the Roman foot in 29 BC 53 and thus a definition of a pace as 5 feet An imperial Roman mile denotes 5 000 Roman feet The term Via Agrippa is used for any part of the network of roadways in Gaul built by Agrippa Some of these still exist as paths or even as highways The Roman tribe Agrippia was named in his honor 54 In popular culture edit nbsp An Audience at Agrippa s by Lawrence Alma TademaDrama edit Agrippa is a character in William Shakespeare s play Antony and Cleopatra A fictional version of Agrippa in his later life played a prominent role in the 1976 BBC Television series I Claudius Agrippa was portrayed as a much older man though he would have been only 39 years old at the time of the first episode 24 23 BC He was played by John Paul Agrippa is the main character in Paul Naschy s 1980 film Los cantabros played by Naschy himself It is a highly fictionalized version of the Cantabrian Wars in which Agrippa is depicted as the lover of the sister of Cantabrian leader Corocotta Agrippa appears in several film versions of the life of Cleopatra He is normally portrayed as an old man rather than a young one Among the actors to portray him are Philip Locke Alan Rowe and Andrew Keir as well as Francis de Wolff in the 1964 film Carry on Cleo Agrippa is also one of the principal characters in the British Italian joint project Imperium Augustus 2003 featuring flashbacks between Augustus and Julia about Agrippa which shows him in his youth on serving in Caesar s army up until his victory at Actium and the defeat of Cleopatra He is portrayed by Ken Duken In the 2005 series Empire the young Agrippa played by Christopher Egan becomes Octavian s sidekick after saving him from an attempted poisoning Marcus Agrippa a highly fictional character based on Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa s early life is part of the BBC HBO RAI television series Rome He is played by Allen Leech He describes himself as the grandson of a slave The series creates a romantic relationship between Agrippa and Octavian s sister Octavia Minor for which there is no historical evidence In the TV series Domina 2021 Agrippa was played by Oliver Huntingdon and Ben Batt Literature edit Agrippa is mentioned by name in book VIII of Virgil s The Aeneid where Aeneas sees an image of Agrippa leading ships in the Battle of Actium on the shield forged for him by Vulcan and given to him by his mother Venus 55 Agrippa is a main character in the early part of Robert Graves novel I Claudius He is a main character in the later two novels of Colleen McCullough s Masters of Rome series He is a featured character of prominence and importance in the historical fiction novel Cleopatra s Daughter by Michelle Moran He also features prominently in John Edward Williams historical novel Augustus In the backstory of Gunpowder Empire the first volume in Harry Turtledove s Crosstime Traffic alternate history series Agrippa lived until AD 26 conquering all of Germania for the Empire and becoming the second Emperor when Augustus died in AD 14 Marriages and issue editAgrippa married three times Cecilia Pomponia Attica 29 They married in 37 BC and divorced before 28 BC By her he had two daughters Vipsania Agrippina She was the first wife of Tiberius 56 Vipsania Attica She married the orator Quintus Haterius 57 Claudia Marcella Maior 41 Daughter of Octavia Minor and niece of Augustus They married in 28 BC and divorced in 21 BC By her he had at least two daughters b Vipsania Marcella She married the general Publius Quinctilius Varus 59 Vipsania Marcellina She married Marcus Aemilius Lepidus consul in 6 60 Julia the Elder 47 Daughter of Augustus They married in 21 BC By her he had three sons and two daughters 61 Gaius Caesar He was adopted by Augustus as heir but died prematurely Julia the Younger She married Lucius Aemilius Paullus consul in 1 Lucius Caesar He was adopted by Augustus as heir but died prematurely Vipsania Agrippina Maior She married Germanicus Julius Caesar and was the mother of emperor Caligula and grandmother of Nero Agrippa Postumus Born after his father s death he was killed soon after the death of Augustus The motive and instigator of his killing are disputed Through his numerous children Agrippa would become ancestor to many subsequent members of the Julio Claudian dynasty whose position he helped to attain as well as many other distinguished Romans See also editVipsania gens Julio Claudian family treeNotes edit He discarded his nomen Vipsanius and was called simply Marcus Agrippa for most of his public career and in official inscriptions possibly to mask his lowborn origin Reinhold Marcus Agrippa pp 6 8 However it is uncertain whether they had also one or more sons who died young 58 References edit a b c Reinhold Meyer 1933 Marcus Agrippa A Biography New York The W F Humphrey Press p 1 Based on primary sources regarding his death scholars have agreed upon the year of Agrippa s birth to have occurred during the consulship of M Tullius Cicero in 63 BC the same year Octavian was born a b Reinhold p 9 Roddaz p 23 Plate William 1867 Agrippa Marcus Vipsanius In Smith William ed Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology Vol 1 Boston Little Brown and Company pp 77 80 Dio 54 28 3 places Agrippa s death in late March 12 BC while Pliny the Elder 7 46 states that he died in his fifty first year Depending on whether Pliny meant that Agrippa was aged 50 or 51 at his death this gives a date of birth between March 64 and March 62 A calendar from Cyprus or Syria includes a month named after Agrippa beginning on November 1 which may reflect the month of his birth See Reinhold pp 2 4 Roddaz pp 23 26 cf Pantheon inscription M AGRIPPA L F COS TERTIVM FECIT 1 Reinhold Meyer 1965 Marcus Agrippa A Biography new ed L Erma di Bretschneider p 10 Everitt Anthony 2006 The First Emperor Caesar Augustus and the Triumph of Rome illustrated ed John Murray p 19 ISBN 9780719554940 Barrett Anthony A Fantham Elaine Yardley John C 2016 The Emperor Nero A Guide to the Ancient Sources Princeton University Press p 5 ISBN 9780691156514 Velleius Paterculus 2 96 127 Hall John Franklin 1996 Etruscan Italy Etruscan Influences on the Civilizations of Italy from Antiquity to the Modern Era Indiana University Press p 188 ISBN 978 0842523349 Ridgway David 2002 The World of the Early Etruscans Stockholm Paul Astreoms Feorlag p 37 ISBN 9789170811890 Nicolaus of Damascus Life of Augustus 7 Reinhold pp 13 14 Suetonius Life of Augustus 94 12 Nicolaus of Damascus Life of Augustus 16 17 Velleius Paterculus 2 59 5 Nicolaus of Damascus Life of Augustus 31 It has been speculated that Agrippa was among the negotiators who won over Antony s Macedonian legions to Octavian but there is no direct evidence for this see Reinhold p 16 Velleius Paterculus 2 69 5 Plutarch Life of Brutus 27 4 Mentioned only by Servius auctus on Virgil Aeneid 8 682 but a necessary preliminary to his position as urban praetor in 40 BC Roddaz p 41 favours the 43 BC date Pliny the Elder 7 148 cites him as an authority for Octavian s illness on the occasion Reinhold pp 17 20 Dio 48 20 Reinhold p 22 Dio 48 28 Reinhold p 23 Reinhold pp 23 24 Dio 48 49 Dio 48 49 Reinhold pp 25 29 Agrippa s youth is noted by Lendering From Philippi to Actium Archived 2014 07 10 at the Wayback Machine Reinhold pp 29 32 Suetonius Life of Augustus 16 1 Appian Civil Wars 2 106 118 119 Reinhold pp 33 35 a b Reinhold pp 35 37 Reinhold pp 37 42 Dio 49 14 3 Reinhold pp 45 47 The World Book encyclopedia World Book Inc Chicago World Book 1987 p 580 ISBN 0716600889 OCLC 15063621 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Dio 49 42 43 Lendering From Philippi to Actium Archived 2014 07 10 at the Wayback Machine Orosius History Against the Pagans 6 19 6 7 Dio 50 11 1 12 3 Reinhold pp 53 54 Dio 50 13 5 Dio 50 14 1 2 cf Velleius Paterculus 2 84 2 Agrippa before the final conflict had twice defeated the fleet of the enemy Dio is wrong to say that Sosius was killed since he in fact fought at and survived the Battle of Actium Reinhold p 54 n 14 Roddaz p 163 n 140 Dio 50 31 1 3 Reinhold pp 57 58 Roddaz pp 178 181 a b c Attilio Degrassi I fasti consolari dell Impero Romano dal 30 avanti Cristo al 613 dopo Cristo Rome 1952 p 3 a b c d e f g Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Agrippa Marcus Vipsanius Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 1 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 425 426 David Magie The Mission of Agrippa to the Orient in 23 BC Classical Philology Vol 3 No 2 Apr 1908 pp 145 152 Syme 1939 342 Syme 1939 337 338 Cassius Dio 54 6 a b Suetonius The Life of Augustus 63 Dio 6 5 Reinhold Marcus Agrippa A biography pp 67 68 86 87 Dio Roman History 54 12 4 Everett 2006 217 Dio 28 Cassius Dio 54 28 5 Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa Roman leader Britannica www britannica com 14 July 2023 Soren 1999 p 184 Chow John K 1992 Patronage and Power A Study of Social Networks in Corinth The Library of New Testament Studies Vol 75 Bloomsbury Publishing p 44 ISBN 9780567111869 Virgil The Aeneid trans Robert Fitzgerald Vintage Classics p 252 Ronald Syme The Augustan Aristocracy 1987 314 Syme Ronald 1989 The Augustan Aristocracy illustrated and revised ed Clarendon Press p 504 ISBN 9780198147312 Ronald Syme Augustan Aristocracy Clarendon Press 1989 pp 144 145 ISBN 978 0 19 814731 2 Wells Peter S 2004 The Battle That Stopped Rome Emperor Augustus Arminius and the Slaughter of the Legions in the Teutoburg Forest W W Norton amp Company p 81 ISBN 9780393352030 Syme Ronald 1989 The Augustan Aristocracy illustrated and revised ed Clarendon Press p 125 ISBN 9780198147312 Suetonius Augustus 64 Sources editBadian E 1981 Notes on the Laudatio of Agrippa Classical Journal 76 97 109 Buchan J 1937 Augustus Boston Houghton Mifflin Evans H B 1982 Agrippa s Water Plan American Journal of Archaeology 86 3 401 411 doi 10 2307 504429 JSTOR 504429 S2CID 193123951 Firth J B 1903 Augustus Caesar and the Organization of the Empire of Rome New York G P Putnam s Sons Gray E W 1970 The Imperium of M Agrippa A Note on P Colon Inv No 4701 Zeitschrift fur Papyrologie und Epigraphik 6 227 238 Lendering Jona Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa Livius Archived from the original on 16 April 2007 Retrieved 22 April 2007 McKechnie P October 1981 Cassius Dio s Speech of Agrippa A Realistic Alternative to Imperial Government Greece and Rome 28 2 150 155 doi 10 1017 S0017383500033258 S2CID 154924374 Reinhold Meyer 1933 Marcus Agrippa A Biography Geneva W F Humphrey Press Roddaz Jean Michel 1984 Marcus Agrippa in French Rome Ecole Francaise de Rome Shipley Frederick W 1933 Agrippa s Building Activities in Rome St Louis Washington University Soren D et al 1999 A Roman villa and a late Roman infant cemetery excavation at Poggio Gramignano Lugnano in Teverina Bibliotheca Archaeologica Rome L Erma di Bretschneider Further reading edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa Goldsworthy Adrian 2014 Augustus From Revolutionary to Emperor London UK Weidenfeld amp Nicolson ISBN 9780297864257 Powell Lindsay 2015 Marcus Agrippa Right hand man of Caesar Augustus Barnsley UK Pen amp Sword ISBN 9781848846173 Geoffrey Mottershead The Constructions of Marcus Agrippa in the West University of Melbourne 2005 Augustus Funeral Oration for Agrippa Marcus Agrippa article in historical sourcebook by Mahlon H SmithPolitical officesPreceded byL Cornelius LentulusL Marcius Philippusas suffecti Roman consul37 BC With Lucius Caninius GallusTitus Statilius Taurus Succeeded byL Gellius PoplicolaM Cocceius NervaPreceded byAugustusPotitus Valerius Messalla Roman consul28 27 BC With Augustus Succeeded byAugustus VIIIT Statilius Taurus II Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa amp oldid 1195283339, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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