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Nero Claudius Drusus

Nero Claudius Drusus Germanicus (38–9 BC), also called Drusus the Elder, was a Roman politician and military commander. He was a patrician Claudian on his birth father's side but his maternal grandmother was from a plebeian family. He was the son of Livia Drusilla and the legal stepson of her second husband, the Emperor Augustus. He was also brother of the Emperor Tiberius, father to both the Emperor Claudius and general Germanicus, paternal grandfather of the Emperor Caligula, and maternal great-grandfather of the Emperor Nero.

Nero Claudius Drusus
Consul
Bust of Nero Claudius Drusus, in the Capitoline Museums, Rome
BornDecimus Claudius Drusus[1] or Decimus Claudius Nero[2]
14 January[3] 38 BC
Rome, Italy, Roman Republic
DiedSummer of 9 BC[4] (aged 29)
Germania
Burial
SpouseAntonia the Younger
Issue
Detail
Posthumous name
Nero Claudius Drusus Germanicus
DynastyJulio-Claudian
FatherTiberius Claudius Nero
MotherLivia Drusilla
Bronze bust of Nero Claudius Drusus in the National Archaeological Museum, Naples

Drusus launched the first major Roman campaigns across the Rhine and began the conquest of Germania, becoming the first Roman general to reach the Weser and Elbe rivers. In 12 BC, he led a successful campaign into Germania, subjugating the Sicambri. Later that year he led a naval expedition against Germanic tribes along the North Sea coast, conquering the Batavi and the Frisii, and defeating the Chauci near the mouth of the Weser. In 11 BC, he conquered the Usipetes and the Marsi, extending Roman control to the Upper Weser. In 10 BC, he launched a campaign against the Chatti and the resurgent Sicambri, subjugating both. The following year, while serving as consul, he conquered the Mattiaci and defeated the Marcomanni and the Cherusci, the latter near the Elbe. His Germanic campaigns were cut short in the summer of 9 BC by his death after a riding accident.

Drusus was a very able commander. His death slowed the northward expansion of the Roman empire, and foreshadowed the disastrous Battle of the Teutoburg Forest. He was enormously popular among his men, who erected the Drususstein in his honor; his memory was elevated during the reign of his son Claudius. Drusus' accomplishments in battle were considerable. He fought numerous Germanic chiefs in single combat, and was likely the fourth and final Roman to achieve the spolia opima (for taking the armor and weapons of an enemy king after defeating them in single combat), though he died before he could be honored for it.

Early life edit

Childhood edit

Drusus was the youngest son of Livia Drusilla from her marriage to Tiberius Claudius Nero, who was legally declared his father before the couple divorced. Drusus was born between mid-March and mid-April 38 BC, three months after Livia married Augustus on 17 January.[5] Gerhard Radke has proposed the date of 28 March as his most likely birthday,[3] while Lindsay Powell interprets Ovid's Fasti as indicating a date of 13 January.[1] Rumors arose that Augustus was the child's real father, although impossible as Livia was already pregnant when she met her future husband (Emperor Claudius nonetheless encouraged the rumor during his reign to create an impression of more direct lineage from Augustus).

Drusus was raised in Claudius Nero's house with his brother, the future emperor Tiberius, until his legal father's death. The two brothers developed a famously close relationship that would last the rest of their lives. Tiberius named his eldest son after his brother, although eldest sons were usually named after their father or grandfather. Drusus named his second son (future emperor Claudius) after Tiberius.

Name edit

According to Suetonius, Drusus was originally given the name Decimus as his praenomen, but his full name was later changed to Nero Claudius Drusus. It is not known when or why the change occurred. The names were unusual at the time, both putting heavy emphasis on his maternal ancestry by using Livia's father's cognomen instead of that of her husband; in his original name the use of the praenomen Decimus was also atypical for prevalent families of the late Republic (especially for a patrician).[a][9] The eventual use of his father's cognomen Nero as a praenomen was highly unconventional as well.[6] His full name given at his Dies lustricus is generally assumed to have been Decimus Claudius Drusus, but some historians such as Andrew Pettinger, Pierre Grimal, T. P. Wiseman, Greg Rowe, Barbara Levick and Eric D. Huntsman believe it may have been Decimus Claudius Nero, Decimus Claudius Nero Drusus or Decimus Claudius Drusus Nero instead.[2][10][11][12][13][14][15]

Livia may have passed down her father's cognomen to her son simply because, besides her adoptive brother Marcus Livius Drusus Libo, there was no one else to pass it down for the future.[2] In 1988 C. J. Simpson asserted that there are three moments in history where the name change is probable to have happened; when his brother Tiberius was adopted by Marcus Gallius, when their father died in 33 BC, or when he assumed the toga virilis. Simpson personally argued against the time of adoption of his brother as a plausible time for his name change since Simpson believed the event may even have happened before Drusus was born; he also rejected the point of death of their father as likely since it would have probably have brought attention to the circumstances surrounding Livia's divorce and remarriage, which had become a part of Mark Antony's propaganda at the time.[16] Simpson stated that in his opinion Livia chose the names Decimus and Drusus for her younger son to minimize association with her ex-husband after she married Octavian due to the former's poor status at the time, but that several years after the man's death it was opportune to emphasize her younger son's connection with his elder brother and that the name change was probably done upon him assuming the toga virilis.[17] Levick believed the adoption of Tiberius necessitated Drusus wearing the name of the Nerones.[18] Simpson responded 1993 in that he believes that Levick's interpretation is incompatible with Suetonius account as he can not accept that Livia and Octavian (once married) would have allowed the adoption of the boy to take place at all, due to Gallius opposition of Octavian. Since Seutonius makes it clear that Tiberius did use Gallius name (although briefly) but dropped it out of respect for his step-father the adoption must have happened before Drusus was born.[19]

Jean Mottershead proposed in her commentary of Suetonius's Divus Claudius that Drusus' praenomen derived from his father's maternal side of the family, possibly the Junii or Laelii as they were the only senatorial families who regularly used the praenomen "Decimus". She also believes that the name change happened when his father died and he moved into Octavian's household.[20] Klaus Scherberich is critical of Mottershead's proposal, he argues that there are no examples of a conservative patrician family like the Claudii Nerones adopting a completely new praenomen from a maternal ancestor, especially when said gentes were non-patrician. Scherberich is also sceptical of Simpson's explanation.[8]

Lindsay Powell believes that Drusus personally (despite his young age) may have changed his name directly after his father's death to preserve and honor his memory. In her opinion another motivation for the boy may have been the meaning of the name Nero, which in ancient Sabine (the language of the people which the Claudii descended from) meant "strong" or "valiant", a fitting name for a boy from such a distinguished clan.[21]

Marriage edit

 
The Juno Ludovisi, a 1st-century AD depiction of Drusus' wife Antonia Minor as Juno

Drusus married Antonia Minor, the daughter of Mark Antony and Augustus' sister, Octavia Minor, and gained a reputation of being completely faithful to her.[22] Their children were Germanicus, Claudius, a daughter named Livilla ('little Livia'), and at least two others who did not survive childhood.[23] After Drusus' death, Antonia never remarried, though she outlived him by nearly five decades. Three emperors were direct descendants of Drusus: his son Claudius, his grandson Caligula, and his great-grandson Nero.

Career edit

Augustus bestowed many honors on his stepsons. In 19 BC, Drusus was granted the ability to hold all public offices five years before the minimum age. When Tiberius left Italy during his term as praetor in 16 BC, Drusus legislated in his place. He became quaestor the following year, fighting against Raetian bandits in the Alps. Drusus repelled them, gaining honors, but was unable to smash their forces, and required reinforcement from Tiberius. The brothers easily defeated the local Alpine tribes.

Drusus arrived in Gaul in late 15 BC to serve as legatus Augusti pro praetore (governor on Augustus' behalf with the authority of a praetor) of the three Gaulish provinces.[24] His contribution to the ongoing building and urban development in Gaul can be seen in the establishment of the pes Drusianus, or ‘Drusian foot’, of about 33.3 cm (13.1 in), which was in use in Samarobriva (modern Amiens) and among the Tungri.[25] From 14 to 13 BC, Augustus himself was also active in Gaul, whether in Lugdunum (modern Lyon) or along the Rhine frontier.[26]

As governor of Gaul, Drusus made his headquarters at Lugdunum, where he decided to establish the concilium Galliarum or ‘council of the Gaulish provinces’ sometime between 14 and 12 BC.[27] This council would elect from its members a priest to celebrate games and venerate Rome and Augustus as deities[28] every 1 August at the altar of the three Gauls that Drusus established at Condate in 10 BC.[29] Drusus' son Tiberius—the future emperor Claudius—was born in Lugdunum on the same day that this altar was inaugurated.[30]

Germanic campaigns edit

 
Map of Drusus' campaigns against the Germanic tribes, 12-9 BC

Starting in 14 BC, Drusus built a string of military bases along the Rhine—fifty according to Florus—and established an alliance with the Batavi in preparation for military action in Germania Libera.[31] He is likely to have had seven legions under his command.[32] In spring of 12 BC, he embarked an expeditionary force, perhaps consisting of the Legiones I Germanica and V Alaudae, by ship from the vicinity of modern Nijmegen, making use of one or more canals he had built for the purpose.[33] Drusus sailed to the mouth of the Ems and penetrated into the territory of the Chauci in present-day Lower Saxony.[34] The Chauci concluded a treaty acknowledging Roman supremacy, and would remain allies of Rome for years to come.[35] As they continued to ascend the Ems, the Romans were attacked by the Bructeri in boats.[36] Drusus' forces defeated the Bructeri, but, as it was now late in the campaign season, turned back for their winter quarters in Gaul, taking advantage of their new alliance with the Frisii to navigate through the difficult conditions on the North Sea.[37]

As a reward for the successes of his campaign in 12 BC, Drusus was made praetor urbanus for 11 BC when he returned to Rome for the winter.[37] News of Drusus' achievements—navigating the North Sea, carrying the Roman eagles into new territory, and fixing new peoples into treaty relations with Rome—caused considerable excitement in Rome and were commemorated on coins.[37]

In the spring of his term as praetor urbanus, he set out for the German border once more. This time, he assembled a force consisting of all or part of five legions in addition to auxiliaries and, setting out from Vetera on the Rhine, ascended the River Lippe. Here he encountered the Tencteri and Usipetes, whom he defeated in two separate engagements.[38] He reached the Werra Valley before deciding to turn back for the season, as winter was coming on, supplies were dwindling, and the omens were unfavorable.[39] While his forces were making their way back through the territory of the Cherusci, the latter tribe laid an ambush for them at Arbalo.[40] The Cherusci failed to capitalize on their initial advantage, whereupon the Romans broke through their lines, defeated the Germanic attackers, and acclaimed Drusus as imperator.[40] To show his continued mastery of the ground, Drusus garrisoned a number of positions within Germania during the winter of 11–10 BC, including one somewhere in Hesse[41] and one in Cheruscan territory, probably either the camp at Haltern or that at Bergkamen-Oberaden,[42] both in present-day North Rhine–Westphalia.

He rejoined his wife Antonia and two children for a time in Lugdunum before the family returned to Rome, where Drusus reported to Augustus.[41] Drusus was given the honor of an ovation, and for the third time, Augustus closed the doors of the Temple of Janus, signifying that the whole Roman world was then at peace.[43] [44] Drusus was granted the office of proconsul for the following year. In 10 BC, the Chatti joined with the Sicambri and attacked Drusus' camp, but they were driven back. Drusus pursued them, proceeding from the sites of present-day Mainz and Rödgen, where he set up a base of supply, to Hedemünden, where a strong new camp was established.[45] Around this time, the canny Marcomannic king Maroboduus responded to the Roman incursion by relocating his people en masse to Bohemia.[46] In summer of 10 BC, Drusus left the field in order to return to Lugdunum, where he inaugurated the sanctuary of the Three Gaulish provinces at Condate on 1 August.[47] Augustus and Tiberius were in Lugdunum for this occasion (when Drusus' youngest son Claudius was born), and afterwards Drusus accompanied them back to Rome.[30]

Drusus easily won election as consul for the year 9 BC.[48] Once more he left the city before assuming office. His consulship conferred the chance for Drusus to attain Rome's highest and rarest military honor, the spolia opima, or spoils of an enemy chieftain slain personally by an opposing Roman general who was fighting (as consuls did) under his own auspices.[49] He quickly returned to the field, stopping to confer with his staff at Lugdunum and to dedicate a temple to Caesar Augustus at Andemantunnum, before rejoining his command at Mainz, from which the year's expedition departed in early spring.[50] Drusus led the army via Rödgen through the territories of the Marsi and Cherusci until he even crossed the river Elbe.[51] Here he is said to have seen an apparition of a Germanic woman who warned him against proceeding farther and that his death was near. Drusus turned back,[52] erecting a trophy to commemorate his reaching the Elbe, perhaps on the site of Dresden or Magdeburg.[53]

Drusus had sought out multiple Germanic (at least three) chieftains during his campaigns in Germany (12 BC–9 BC), engaging them in "dazzling displays of single combat".[46] The sources are ambiguous, but suggest that he could have potentially taken the spolia opima from a Germanic king, thus becoming the fourth and final Roman to gain this honor.[54] Regardless of whether he was actually able to take them in combat, however, Drusus' untimely death would prevent him from ever going through with the official ceremony. Notably, after Drusus' death, Augustus deposited the laurels from his fasces not in the Temple of Jupiter Optimus Maximus as he had done in the past, but in the Temple of Jupiter Feretrius. J.W. Rich suggests that this action was done as an affirmation to Drusus' memory; had the young commander lived, he would have placed spolia opima in the temple himself.[55]

Death and legacy edit

 
 
The Drususstein, the funerary monument in Mogontiacum (Mainz) erected by legionaries in Drusus' honor. Left, a reconstruction of its original appearance; right, its current appearance.[56]

Drusus was returning from his advance to the Elbe when he fell from his horse,[57] by which point Tiberius had joined him. Though he survived the initial accident, infection set in, and he died about a month later.[58] Shortly before his death he wrote a letter to Tiberius complaining about the style in which Augustus ruled and discussed forcing him to restore the republic.[59] Suetonius reports that he had refused to return to Rome just before his death. Drusus' body was brought back to the city, and his ashes were deposited in the Mausoleum of Augustus. He remained extremely popular with the legionaries, who erected a monument (the Drususstein) in Mogontiacum (modern Mainz) on his behalf. Remnants of this are still standing.

The Senate raised an arch on the Appian Way in his memory[60] (unrelated to the Arch of Drusus) which read "DE GERM" and depicted his Elbe trophy as well as him fighting on horseback, a testament to his personal bravery.[55] They also posthumously granted him the hereditary honorific title "Germanicus", which was given to his eldest son before passing to his youngest. It would be used by many members of the Julio-Claudian dynasty, including its last three emperors: his grandson Caligula, his son Claudius, and his great-grandson Nero. Augustus later wrote a biography of him which does not survive. By Augustus' decree, festivals were held in Mogontiacum at Drusus' death day and probably also on his birthday.[60]

Drusus' mother Livia, much affected by the death of her second son, took the advice of the philosopher Areus to put up many statues and images of Drusus and speak often about him.[61] The surviving Latin work Consolatio ad Liviam is framed as an Ovidian message of consolation to Livia on this occasion, though it is generally considered a literary exercise "composed between the death of Livia [AD 29] and that of Tiberius [AD 37]".[62]

Augustus noted the successes of Drusus' campaigns—for which, as Drusus' superior, he took credit—in his Res Gestae Divi Augusti, written in 14 AD:

I restored peace to the provinces of Gaul and Spain, likewise Germany, which includes the ocean from Cadiz to the mouth of the river Elbe. [...] I sailed my ships on the ocean from the mouth of the Rhine to the east region up to the borders of the Cimbri, where no Roman had gone before that time by land or sea, and the Cimbri and the Charydes and the Semnones and the other Germans of the same territory sought by envoys the friendship of me and of the Roman people.

— Augustus, Res Gestae Divi Augusti[63]

Upon Claudius' accession to the principate in 41 AD, his late father Drusus received new public honors, including annual games in the Circus Maximus on 14 January for Drusus' birthday, coin issues depicting Drusus' likeness and his commemorative arch, and the restoration of a monument near the Ara Pacis Augustae that featured a statue of Drusus.[64] Claudius also completed a road from Italy into Raetia that followed the route Drusus had taken and whose road-markers commemorated Drusus' achievements in the Alpine war.[65] Such Claudian commemorations of Drusus' memory are thought to have become less prominent once Claudius had his own British triumph to celebrate.[66]

Historian Michael McNally considers Drusus to have been the most able of the various Roman commanders who attempted to conquer Germania, as well as the most successful. While the furthest extent of territorial gains would be realized the year after his death, under Tiberius, Drusus' death marked a slowing of Roman expansion. Drusus' successors would prove unfit for the task of conquering Germania, with disastrous results. Drusus was succeeded as commander in Germania by Tiberius, but Tiberius fell out of imperial favor, and chose self exile in 6 BC. Command then fell to Lucius Domitius Ahenobarbus. Ahenobarbus was partly successful, becoming the first and last Roman general to cross the Elbe river, but was generally bogged down in suppressing revolts. Command then fell to Publius Quinctilius Varus, under whom the Battle of the Teutoburg Forest (also called the Varian disaster) would occur. The destruction of Varus' entire army marked the end of northward Roman expansion. The Rhine became the de facto border of the Roman empire, rendering moot much of Drusus' life work.[58]

Family tree edit

In popular culture edit

  • He is a minor character in Robert Graves' historical novel I, Claudius, as well as the BBC's adaptation of the same title in which he was played by Ian Ogilvy.
  • The annual festival celebrating Drusus' death is a main plot element in the second volume of the Romanike series by Codex Regius (2006–2014).
  • He is a prominent character in the Hrabam Chronicles by Alaric Longward (2016).
  • Drusus is also featured in the 2021 SFX TV series Domina, which portrays him in his early teenage years.
  • A bust of Drusus was purchased in 2018 from a Goodwill shop in Texas for $34.99, being later identified as an authentic antique. It is presumed that the bust was taken by American soldiers during World War II from Aschaffenburg, Germany, where it will be returned in 2023.[67]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ In the past historians such as Theodor Mommsen assumed that Decimus had been a well used praenomen for the Claudii Nerones, but this has later come to be rejected by modern historians.[6] Besides Tiberius the only praenomina known to have been used by this stirps is Gaius, Appius and Publius, each only attested twice. These praenomina (except Tiberius) were also common among the other patricians of the gens,[7] while Decimus was neither used by patrician or plebeian Claudii. The entirely plebeian Livii, including the equestrian nobiles the Livii Drusi, did not use Decimus either.[8]

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b Powell (2011), p. 3.
  2. ^ a b c Pettinger, Andrew (2012). The Republic in Danger: Drusus Libo and the Succession of Tiberius. OUP Oxford. p. 224. ISBN 9780199601745.
  3. ^ a b At Divus Claudius 11.3, Suetonius says that Claudius as emperor commemorated the birthday (dies natalis) of his father Drusus on the same date as that of Mark Antony, his maternal grandfather, whose birthday on 14 January, ca. 83 BC, had been decreed as a "defective" day (dies vitiosus) by Augustus (Cassius Dio 51.9.3). However, since Drusus's birth is also recorded as occurring within the third month after Livia's marriage to Augustus on 17 January, Radke proposes that Claudius used the astronomical discrepancies between the pre-Julian calendar under which Antony was born and the Julian calendar in effect at the time of Drusus' birth, to show that had the two been born under the same calendar, they would have shared a birthday. Gilbert Rodke (1978), "Der Geburtstag des älteren Drusus," Würzburger Jahrbücher für die Altertumswissenschaft 4 (1978), pp. 211–213. Reviewing these theories, Anthony A. Barrett still considers 14 January the most probable birthdate, explaining the apparent three-month discrepancy as referring to Livia's betrothal, not her marriage (Barrett 2002, pp. 313–314).
  4. ^ Suetonius, The Twelve Caesars, Claudius, 1
  5. ^ Donna W. Hurley, Suetonius: Divus Claudius (Cambridge University Press, 2001), p. 106
  6. ^ a b Simpson, C. J. (1988). "The Change in "Praenomen" of Drusus Germanicus". Phoenix. Classical Association of Canada. 42 (2): 173–175, (1). doi:10.2307/1088232. JSTOR 1088232 – via JSTOR.
  7. ^ Claudius patrician. Stemma by Strachan.
  8. ^ a b Scherberich, Klaus (1995). Untersuchungen zur vita Claudii des Sueton (in German). Universität zu Köln. p. 40.
  9. ^ Simpson, C. J. (1988). "The Change in "Praenomen" of Drusus Germanicus". Phoenix. Classical Association of Canada. 42 (2): 173–175, (2). doi:10.2307/1088232. JSTOR 1088232 – via JSTOR.
  10. ^ Grimal, Pierre (1963). The Civilization of Rome. Allen & Unwin. p. 458.
  11. ^ Wiseman, Timothy Peter (1987). Roman Studies: Literary and Historical. F. Cairns. p. 47. ISBN 9780905205625.
  12. ^ Rowe, Greg (2002). Princes and Political Cultures: The New Tiberian Senatorial Decrees. University of Michigan Press. p. 178. ISBN 9780472112302.
  13. ^ Levick, Barbara (2003). Tiberius the Politician. Taylor & Francis. p. 188. ISBN 9781134603794.
  14. ^ Huntsman, Eric D. (2009). "Livia before Octavian". Ancient Society. 39: 121–169. doi:10.2143/AS.39.0.2042609. JSTOR 44079922 – via JSTOR.
  15. ^ Akveld, Willem Frederik (1961). Germanicus (in Dutch). J. B. Wolters. p. 4.
  16. ^ Simpson, C. J. (1988). "The Change in "Praenomen" of Drusus Germanicus". Phoenix. Classical Association of Canada. 42 (2): 173–175, (3). doi:10.2307/1088232. JSTOR 1088232 – via JSTOR.
  17. ^ Simpson, C. J. (1988). "The Change in "Praenomen" of Drusus Germanicus". Phoenix. Classical Association of Canada. 42 (2): 173–175, (1–3). doi:10.2307/1088232. JSTOR 1088232 – via JSTOR.
  18. ^ Levick, Barbara (2003). Tiberius the Politician. Taylor & Francis. p. 8. ISBN 9781134603794.
  19. ^ Simpson, C. J. (1993). "Tiberius' adoption by M. Gallius and the elder Drusus' change in praenomen". Liverpool Classical Monthly. John Pinsent. 18 (8–10): 154–155.
  20. ^ Mottershead, Jean (1986). Suetonius: Claudius. Bristol Classical Press. p. 28. ISBN 9780862920807.
  21. ^ Powell (2011).
  22. ^ Valerius Maximus, Factorum ac dictorum memorabilium libri IX IV.3.3 (Latin text). Cited in Powell (2011), p. 91.
  23. ^ Kokkinos, Nikos (1992). Antonia Augusta: Portrait of a Great Roman Lady. Psychology Press. p. 11. ISBN 9780415080293.
  24. ^ Powell (2011), pp. 48–49.
  25. ^ Powell (2011), pp. 53–54.
  26. ^ Powell (2011), pp. 48, 61, 70.
  27. ^ Powell (2011), p. 56.
  28. ^ Powell (2011), pp. 56–57.
  29. ^ Powell (2011), pp. 97–99.
  30. ^ a b Powell (2011), p. 99.
  31. ^ Powell (2011), pp. 62–64.
  32. ^ These were, according to Powell (2011), p. 61, Legiones I Germanica, V Alaudae, XIII Gemina, XIV Gemina, XVI Gallica, XVII, XVIII, and XIX (the last three being the legions that would later be destroyed while under the command of Varus).
  33. ^ Powell (2011), pp. 64–65, 70.
  34. ^ Powell (2011), pp. 74, 77.
  35. ^ Powell (2011), p. 78.
  36. ^ Powell (2011), pp. 78–79.
  37. ^ a b c Powell (2011), p. 79.
  38. ^ Powell (2011), p. 81. The legions in question this time were the I Germanica, the V Alaudae, the XVII, the XVIII, and the XIX.
  39. ^ Powell (2011), pp. 83–84.
  40. ^ a b Powell (2011), p. 89.
  41. ^ a b Powell (2011), p. 91.
  42. ^ Powell (2011), p. 90.
  43. ^ Gaius Stern, Women, Children, and Priests on the Ara Pacis Augustae (2006 Berk. diss.) Chapter 2, 4, 9, followed by Powell, et. al. Note that Augustus closed Janus in 29 and 25 BC before this 13/12 BC closure.
  44. ^ Powell (2011), p. 92.
  45. ^ Powell (2011), pp. xxvii, 93.
  46. ^ a b Powell (2011), p. 94.
  47. ^ Powell (2011), p. 97.
  48. ^ Powell (2011), p. 100.
  49. ^ Powell (2011), p. 95.
  50. ^ Powell (2011), p. 102.
  51. ^ Powell (2011), pp. 102–104.
  52. ^ Powell (2011), p. 104.
  53. ^ Powell (2011), p. 105.
  54. ^ Powell (2011), p. 96 and note 155 on p. 199, citing Suetonius Claudius I.4.
  55. ^ a b Rich, J. W. “Drusus and the Spolia Opima.” The Classical Quarterly, vol. 49, no. 2, 1999, pp. 544–555. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/639878. Accessed 10 August 2020.
  56. ^ Kersting, Hans (2003). MAINZ - tours on foot (in German). Vol. 4. Bayerische Verlagsanstalt. ISBN 3-89889-078-3.
  57. ^ Barbara Levick, Claudius (Yale University Press, 10 September 1993), p. 11.
  58. ^ a b McNally, Michael (2011). Teutoburg Forest, AD 9 : the destruction of Varus and his legions. Peter Dennis. Oxford: Osprey Publishing. pp. 11–13. ISBN 978-1-84603-581-4. OCLC 610837226.
  59. ^ Suetonius, Tiberius, 50
  60. ^ a b Suetonius, Claudius I.1.3
  61. ^ Barrett (2002), p. 44.
  62. ^ Arnold M. Duff (1935). "Review of Consolatio ad Liviam by Arnold Witlox". The Classical Review. 49 (4): 155–156. doi:10.1017/s0009840x00068323. JSTOR 699709. S2CID 163623198.
  63. ^ Augustus, Res Gestae Divi Augusti 26. Translated by Thomas Bushnell (2011) and placed by his permission on Wikisource. Passage also quoted in Powell (2011), p. 80.
  64. ^ Osgood (2011), pp. 60–61.
  65. ^ Osgood (2011), p. 188.
  66. ^ Osgood (2011), p. 93.
  67. ^ O'Caine, Caitlin (5 May 2022). "A woman bought a statue for $34.99 at a Goodwill in Texas. It turned out to be an ancient Roman artifact — and likely looted". CBS News. Retrieved 5 May 2022.

Bibliography edit

  • Barrett, Anthony A. (2002). Livia: First Lady of Rome. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-09196-6.
  • Osgood, Josiah (2011). Claudius Caesar: Image and Power in the Early Roman Empire. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-88181-4.
  • Powell, Lindsay (2011). Eager for Glory: The Untold Story of Drusus the Elder, Conqueror of Germania. Barnsley, South Yorkshire: Pen & Sword Books. ISBN 978-1-84884-333-2.
  • Rich, J. W. “Drusus and the Spolia Opima.” The Classical Quarterly, vol. 49, no. 2, 1999, pp. 544–555. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/639878. Accessed 10 August 2020.

External links edit

nero, claudius, drusus, this, article, about, tiberius, younger, brother, nephew, with, birthname, drusus, julius, caesar, germanicus, also, called, drusus, elder, roman, politician, military, commander, patrician, claudian, birth, father, side, maternal, gran. This article is about Tiberius younger brother For his nephew with Nero Claudius Drusus as his birthname see Drusus Julius Caesar Nero Claudius Drusus Germanicus 38 9 BC also called Drusus the Elder was a Roman politician and military commander He was a patrician Claudian on his birth father s side but his maternal grandmother was from a plebeian family He was the son of Livia Drusilla and the legal stepson of her second husband the Emperor Augustus He was also brother of the Emperor Tiberius father to both the Emperor Claudius and general Germanicus paternal grandfather of the Emperor Caligula and maternal great grandfather of the Emperor Nero Nero Claudius DrususConsulBust of Nero Claudius Drusus in the Capitoline Museums RomeBornDecimus Claudius Drusus 1 or Decimus Claudius Nero 2 14 January 3 38 BCRome Italy Roman RepublicDiedSummer of 9 BC 4 aged 29 GermaniaBurialMausoleum of AugustusSpouseAntonia the YoungerIssueDetailGermanicusLivillaEmperor ClaudiusPosthumous nameNero Claudius Drusus GermanicusDynastyJulio ClaudianFatherTiberius Claudius NeroMotherLivia Drusilla Bronze bust of Nero Claudius Drusus in the National Archaeological Museum NaplesDrusus launched the first major Roman campaigns across the Rhine and began the conquest of Germania becoming the first Roman general to reach the Weser and Elbe rivers In 12 BC he led a successful campaign into Germania subjugating the Sicambri Later that year he led a naval expedition against Germanic tribes along the North Sea coast conquering the Batavi and the Frisii and defeating the Chauci near the mouth of the Weser In 11 BC he conquered the Usipetes and the Marsi extending Roman control to the Upper Weser In 10 BC he launched a campaign against the Chatti and the resurgent Sicambri subjugating both The following year while serving as consul he conquered the Mattiaci and defeated the Marcomanni and the Cherusci the latter near the Elbe His Germanic campaigns were cut short in the summer of 9 BC by his death after a riding accident Drusus was a very able commander His death slowed the northward expansion of the Roman empire and foreshadowed the disastrous Battle of the Teutoburg Forest He was enormously popular among his men who erected the Drususstein in his honor his memory was elevated during the reign of his son Claudius Drusus accomplishments in battle were considerable He fought numerous Germanic chiefs in single combat and was likely the fourth and final Roman to achieve the spolia opima for taking the armor and weapons of an enemy king after defeating them in single combat though he died before he could be honored for it Contents 1 Early life 1 1 Childhood 1 2 Name 2 Marriage 3 Career 3 1 Germanic campaigns 4 Death and legacy 5 Family tree 6 In popular culture 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 9 1 Citations 9 2 Bibliography 10 External linksEarly life editChildhood edit Drusus was the youngest son of Livia Drusilla from her marriage to Tiberius Claudius Nero who was legally declared his father before the couple divorced Drusus was born between mid March and mid April 38 BC three months after Livia married Augustus on 17 January 5 Gerhard Radke has proposed the date of 28 March as his most likely birthday 3 while Lindsay Powell interprets Ovid s Fasti as indicating a date of 13 January 1 Rumors arose that Augustus was the child s real father although impossible as Livia was already pregnant when she met her future husband Emperor Claudius nonetheless encouraged the rumor during his reign to create an impression of more direct lineage from Augustus Drusus was raised in Claudius Nero s house with his brother the future emperor Tiberius until his legal father s death The two brothers developed a famously close relationship that would last the rest of their lives Tiberius named his eldest son after his brother although eldest sons were usually named after their father or grandfather Drusus named his second son future emperor Claudius after Tiberius Name edit Further information Roman naming conventions According to Suetonius Drusus was originally given the name Decimus as his praenomen but his full name was later changed to Nero Claudius Drusus It is not known when or why the change occurred The names were unusual at the time both putting heavy emphasis on his maternal ancestry by using Livia s father s cognomen instead of that of her husband in his original name the use of the praenomen Decimus was also atypical for prevalent families of the late Republic especially for a patrician a 9 The eventual use of his father s cognomen Nero as a praenomen was highly unconventional as well 6 His full name given at his Dies lustricus is generally assumed to have been Decimus Claudius Drusus but some historians such as Andrew Pettinger Pierre Grimal T P Wiseman Greg Rowe Barbara Levick and Eric D Huntsman believe it may have been Decimus Claudius Nero Decimus Claudius Nero Drusus or Decimus Claudius Drusus Nero instead 2 10 11 12 13 14 15 Livia may have passed down her father s cognomen to her son simply because besides her adoptive brother Marcus Livius Drusus Libo there was no one else to pass it down for the future 2 In 1988 C J Simpson asserted that there are three moments in history where the name change is probable to have happened when his brother Tiberius was adopted by Marcus Gallius when their father died in 33 BC or when he assumed the toga virilis Simpson personally argued against the time of adoption of his brother as a plausible time for his name change since Simpson believed the event may even have happened before Drusus was born he also rejected the point of death of their father as likely since it would have probably have brought attention to the circumstances surrounding Livia s divorce and remarriage which had become a part of Mark Antony s propaganda at the time 16 Simpson stated that in his opinion Livia chose the names Decimus and Drusus for her younger son to minimize association with her ex husband after she married Octavian due to the former s poor status at the time but that several years after the man s death it was opportune to emphasize her younger son s connection with his elder brother and that the name change was probably done upon him assuming the toga virilis 17 Levick believed the adoption of Tiberius necessitated Drusus wearing the name of the Nerones 18 Simpson responded 1993 in that he believes that Levick s interpretation is incompatible with Suetonius account as he can not accept that Livia and Octavian once married would have allowed the adoption of the boy to take place at all due to Gallius opposition of Octavian Since Seutonius makes it clear that Tiberius did use Gallius name although briefly but dropped it out of respect for his step father the adoption must have happened before Drusus was born 19 Jean Mottershead proposed in her commentary of Suetonius s Divus Claudius that Drusus praenomen derived from his father s maternal side of the family possibly the Junii or Laelii as they were the only senatorial families who regularly used the praenomen Decimus She also believes that the name change happened when his father died and he moved into Octavian s household 20 Klaus Scherberich is critical of Mottershead s proposal he argues that there are no examples of a conservative patrician family like the Claudii Nerones adopting a completely new praenomen from a maternal ancestor especially when said gentes were non patrician Scherberich is also sceptical of Simpson s explanation 8 Lindsay Powell believes that Drusus personally despite his young age may have changed his name directly after his father s death to preserve and honor his memory In her opinion another motivation for the boy may have been the meaning of the name Nero which in ancient Sabine the language of the people which the Claudii descended from meant strong or valiant a fitting name for a boy from such a distinguished clan 21 Marriage edit nbsp The Juno Ludovisi a 1st century AD depiction of Drusus wife Antonia Minor as JunoDrusus married Antonia Minor the daughter of Mark Antony and Augustus sister Octavia Minor and gained a reputation of being completely faithful to her 22 Their children were Germanicus Claudius a daughter named Livilla little Livia and at least two others who did not survive childhood 23 After Drusus death Antonia never remarried though she outlived him by nearly five decades Three emperors were direct descendants of Drusus his son Claudius his grandson Caligula and his great grandson Nero Career editAugustus bestowed many honors on his stepsons In 19 BC Drusus was granted the ability to hold all public offices five years before the minimum age When Tiberius left Italy during his term as praetor in 16 BC Drusus legislated in his place He became quaestor the following year fighting against Raetian bandits in the Alps Drusus repelled them gaining honors but was unable to smash their forces and required reinforcement from Tiberius The brothers easily defeated the local Alpine tribes Drusus arrived in Gaul in late 15 BC to serve as legatus Augusti pro praetore governor on Augustus behalf with the authority of a praetor of the three Gaulish provinces 24 His contribution to the ongoing building and urban development in Gaul can be seen in the establishment of the pes Drusianus or Drusian foot of about 33 3 cm 13 1 in which was in use in Samarobriva modern Amiens and among the Tungri 25 From 14 to 13 BC Augustus himself was also active in Gaul whether in Lugdunum modern Lyon or along the Rhine frontier 26 As governor of Gaul Drusus made his headquarters at Lugdunum where he decided to establish the concilium Galliarum or council of the Gaulish provinces sometime between 14 and 12 BC 27 This council would elect from its members a priest to celebrate games and venerate Rome and Augustus as deities 28 every 1 August at the altar of the three Gauls that Drusus established at Condate in 10 BC 29 Drusus son Tiberius the future emperor Claudius was born in Lugdunum on the same day that this altar was inaugurated 30 Germanic campaigns edit Further information Early Imperial campaigns in Germania nbsp Map of Drusus campaigns against the Germanic tribes 12 9 BCStarting in 14 BC Drusus built a string of military bases along the Rhine fifty according to Florus and established an alliance with the Batavi in preparation for military action in Germania Libera 31 He is likely to have had seven legions under his command 32 In spring of 12 BC he embarked an expeditionary force perhaps consisting of the Legiones I Germanica and V Alaudae by ship from the vicinity of modern Nijmegen making use of one or more canals he had built for the purpose 33 Drusus sailed to the mouth of the Ems and penetrated into the territory of the Chauci in present day Lower Saxony 34 The Chauci concluded a treaty acknowledging Roman supremacy and would remain allies of Rome for years to come 35 As they continued to ascend the Ems the Romans were attacked by the Bructeri in boats 36 Drusus forces defeated the Bructeri but as it was now late in the campaign season turned back for their winter quarters in Gaul taking advantage of their new alliance with the Frisii to navigate through the difficult conditions on the North Sea 37 As a reward for the successes of his campaign in 12 BC Drusus was made praetor urbanus for 11 BC when he returned to Rome for the winter 37 News of Drusus achievements navigating the North Sea carrying the Roman eagles into new territory and fixing new peoples into treaty relations with Rome caused considerable excitement in Rome and were commemorated on coins 37 In the spring of his term as praetor urbanus he set out for the German border once more This time he assembled a force consisting of all or part of five legions in addition to auxiliaries and setting out from Vetera on the Rhine ascended the River Lippe Here he encountered the Tencteri and Usipetes whom he defeated in two separate engagements 38 He reached the Werra Valley before deciding to turn back for the season as winter was coming on supplies were dwindling and the omens were unfavorable 39 While his forces were making their way back through the territory of the Cherusci the latter tribe laid an ambush for them at Arbalo 40 The Cherusci failed to capitalize on their initial advantage whereupon the Romans broke through their lines defeated the Germanic attackers and acclaimed Drusus as imperator 40 To show his continued mastery of the ground Drusus garrisoned a number of positions within Germania during the winter of 11 10 BC including one somewhere in Hesse 41 and one in Cheruscan territory probably either the camp at Haltern or that at Bergkamen Oberaden 42 both in present day North Rhine Westphalia He rejoined his wife Antonia and two children for a time in Lugdunum before the family returned to Rome where Drusus reported to Augustus 41 Drusus was given the honor of an ovation and for the third time Augustus closed the doors of the Temple of Janus signifying that the whole Roman world was then at peace 43 44 Drusus was granted the office of proconsul for the following year In 10 BC the Chatti joined with the Sicambri and attacked Drusus camp but they were driven back Drusus pursued them proceeding from the sites of present day Mainz and Rodgen where he set up a base of supply to Hedemunden where a strong new camp was established 45 Around this time the canny Marcomannic king Maroboduus responded to the Roman incursion by relocating his people en masse to Bohemia 46 In summer of 10 BC Drusus left the field in order to return to Lugdunum where he inaugurated the sanctuary of the Three Gaulish provinces at Condate on 1 August 47 Augustus and Tiberius were in Lugdunum for this occasion when Drusus youngest son Claudius was born and afterwards Drusus accompanied them back to Rome 30 Drusus easily won election as consul for the year 9 BC 48 Once more he left the city before assuming office His consulship conferred the chance for Drusus to attain Rome s highest and rarest military honor the spolia opima or spoils of an enemy chieftain slain personally by an opposing Roman general who was fighting as consuls did under his own auspices 49 He quickly returned to the field stopping to confer with his staff at Lugdunum and to dedicate a temple to Caesar Augustus at Andemantunnum before rejoining his command at Mainz from which the year s expedition departed in early spring 50 Drusus led the army via Rodgen through the territories of the Marsi and Cherusci until he even crossed the river Elbe 51 Here he is said to have seen an apparition of a Germanic woman who warned him against proceeding farther and that his death was near Drusus turned back 52 erecting a trophy to commemorate his reaching the Elbe perhaps on the site of Dresden or Magdeburg 53 Drusus had sought out multiple Germanic at least three chieftains during his campaigns in Germany 12 BC 9 BC engaging them in dazzling displays of single combat 46 The sources are ambiguous but suggest that he could have potentially taken the spolia opima from a Germanic king thus becoming the fourth and final Roman to gain this honor 54 Regardless of whether he was actually able to take them in combat however Drusus untimely death would prevent him from ever going through with the official ceremony Notably after Drusus death Augustus deposited the laurels from his fasces not in the Temple of Jupiter Optimus Maximus as he had done in the past but in the Temple of Jupiter Feretrius J W Rich suggests that this action was done as an affirmation to Drusus memory had the young commander lived he would have placed spolia opima in the temple himself 55 Death and legacy edit nbsp nbsp The Drususstein the funerary monument in Mogontiacum Mainz erected by legionaries in Drusus honor Left a reconstruction of its original appearance right its current appearance 56 Drusus was returning from his advance to the Elbe when he fell from his horse 57 by which point Tiberius had joined him Though he survived the initial accident infection set in and he died about a month later 58 Shortly before his death he wrote a letter to Tiberius complaining about the style in which Augustus ruled and discussed forcing him to restore the republic 59 Suetonius reports that he had refused to return to Rome just before his death Drusus body was brought back to the city and his ashes were deposited in the Mausoleum of Augustus He remained extremely popular with the legionaries who erected a monument the Drususstein in Mogontiacum modern Mainz on his behalf Remnants of this are still standing The Senate raised an arch on the Appian Way in his memory 60 unrelated to the Arch of Drusus which read DE GERM and depicted his Elbe trophy as well as him fighting on horseback a testament to his personal bravery 55 They also posthumously granted him the hereditary honorific title Germanicus which was given to his eldest son before passing to his youngest It would be used by many members of the Julio Claudian dynasty including its last three emperors his grandson Caligula his son Claudius and his great grandson Nero Augustus later wrote a biography of him which does not survive By Augustus decree festivals were held in Mogontiacum at Drusus death day and probably also on his birthday 60 Drusus mother Livia much affected by the death of her second son took the advice of the philosopher Areus to put up many statues and images of Drusus and speak often about him 61 The surviving Latin work Consolatio ad Liviam is framed as an Ovidian message of consolation to Livia on this occasion though it is generally considered a literary exercise composed between the death of Livia AD 29 and that of Tiberius AD 37 62 Augustus noted the successes of Drusus campaigns for which as Drusus superior he took credit in his Res Gestae Divi Augusti written in 14 AD I restored peace to the provinces of Gaul and Spain likewise Germany which includes the ocean from Cadiz to the mouth of the river Elbe I sailed my ships on the ocean from the mouth of the Rhine to the east region up to the borders of the Cimbri where no Roman had gone before that time by land or sea and the Cimbri and the Charydes and the Semnones and the other Germans of the same territory sought by envoys the friendship of me and of the Roman people Augustus Res Gestae Divi Augusti 63 Upon Claudius accession to the principate in 41 AD his late father Drusus received new public honors including annual games in the Circus Maximus on 14 January for Drusus birthday coin issues depicting Drusus likeness and his commemorative arch and the restoration of a monument near the Ara Pacis Augustae that featured a statue of Drusus 64 Claudius also completed a road from Italy into Raetia that followed the route Drusus had taken and whose road markers commemorated Drusus achievements in the Alpine war 65 Such Claudian commemorations of Drusus memory are thought to have become less prominent once Claudius had his own British triumph to celebrate 66 Historian Michael McNally considers Drusus to have been the most able of the various Roman commanders who attempted to conquer Germania as well as the most successful While the furthest extent of territorial gains would be realized the year after his death under Tiberius Drusus death marked a slowing of Roman expansion Drusus successors would prove unfit for the task of conquering Germania with disastrous results Drusus was succeeded as commander in Germania by Tiberius but Tiberius fell out of imperial favor and chose self exile in 6 BC Command then fell to Lucius Domitius Ahenobarbus Ahenobarbus was partly successful becoming the first and last Roman general to cross the Elbe river but was generally bogged down in suppressing revolts Command then fell to Publius Quinctilius Varus under whom the Battle of the Teutoburg Forest also called the Varian disaster would occur The destruction of Varus entire army marked the end of northward Roman expansion The Rhine became the de facto border of the Roman empire rendering moot much of Drusus life work 58 Family tree editFamily of Nero Claudius DrususTiberius Claudius NeroUnknownMarcus Livius Drusus ClaudianusAlfidiaTiberius Claudius NeroLiviaTiberiusNero Claudius DrususAntonia MinorGermanicusLivillaClaudiusIn popular culture editHe is a minor character in Robert Graves historical novel I Claudius as well as the BBC s adaptation of the same title in which he was played by Ian Ogilvy The annual festival celebrating Drusus death is a main plot element in the second volume of the Romanike series by Codex Regius 2006 2014 He is a prominent character in the Hrabam Chronicles by Alaric Longward 2016 Drusus is also featured in the 2021 SFX TV series Domina which portrays him in his early teenage years A bust of Drusus was purchased in 2018 from a Goodwill shop in Texas for 34 99 being later identified as an authentic antique It is presumed that the bust was taken by American soldiers during World War II from Aschaffenburg Germany where it will be returned in 2023 67 See also editArch of DrususNotes edit In the past historians such as Theodor Mommsen assumed that Decimus had been a well used praenomen for the Claudii Nerones but this has later come to be rejected by modern historians 6 Besides Tiberius the only praenomina known to have been used by this stirps is Gaius Appius and Publius each only attested twice These praenomina except Tiberius were also common among the other patricians of the gens 7 while Decimus was neither used by patrician or plebeian Claudii The entirely plebeian Livii including the equestrian nobiles the Livii Drusi did not use Decimus either 8 References editCitations edit a b Powell 2011 p 3 a b c Pettinger Andrew 2012 The Republic in Danger Drusus Libo and the Succession of Tiberius OUP Oxford p 224 ISBN 9780199601745 a b At Divus Claudius 11 3 Suetonius says that Claudius as emperor commemorated the birthday dies natalis of his father Drusus on the same date as that of Mark Antony his maternal grandfather whose birthday on 14 January ca 83 BC had been decreed as a defective day dies vitiosus by Augustus Cassius Dio 51 9 3 However since Drusus s birth is also recorded as occurring within the third month after Livia s marriage to Augustus on 17 January Radke proposes that Claudius used the astronomical discrepancies between the pre Julian calendar under which Antony was born and the Julian calendar in effect at the time of Drusus birth to show that had the two been born under the same calendar they would have shared a birthday Gilbert Rodke 1978 Der Geburtstag des alteren Drusus Wurzburger Jahrbucher fur die Altertumswissenschaft 4 1978 pp 211 213 Reviewing these theories Anthony A Barrett still considers 14 January the most probable birthdate explaining the apparent three month discrepancy as referring to Livia s betrothal not her marriage Barrett 2002 pp 313 314 Suetonius The Twelve Caesars Claudius 1 Donna W Hurley Suetonius Divus Claudius Cambridge University Press 2001 p 106 a b Simpson C J 1988 The Change in Praenomen of Drusus Germanicus Phoenix Classical Association of Canada 42 2 173 175 1 doi 10 2307 1088232 JSTOR 1088232 via JSTOR Claudius patrician Stemma by Strachan a b Scherberich Klaus 1995 Untersuchungen zur vita Claudii des Sueton in German Universitat zu Koln p 40 Simpson C J 1988 The Change in Praenomen of Drusus Germanicus Phoenix Classical Association of Canada 42 2 173 175 2 doi 10 2307 1088232 JSTOR 1088232 via JSTOR Grimal Pierre 1963 The Civilization of Rome Allen amp Unwin p 458 Wiseman Timothy Peter 1987 Roman Studies Literary and Historical F Cairns p 47 ISBN 9780905205625 Rowe Greg 2002 Princes and Political Cultures The New Tiberian Senatorial Decrees University of Michigan Press p 178 ISBN 9780472112302 Levick Barbara 2003 Tiberius the Politician Taylor amp Francis p 188 ISBN 9781134603794 Huntsman Eric D 2009 Livia before Octavian Ancient Society 39 121 169 doi 10 2143 AS 39 0 2042609 JSTOR 44079922 via JSTOR Akveld Willem Frederik 1961 Germanicus in Dutch J B Wolters p 4 Simpson C J 1988 The Change in Praenomen of Drusus Germanicus Phoenix Classical Association of Canada 42 2 173 175 3 doi 10 2307 1088232 JSTOR 1088232 via JSTOR Simpson C J 1988 The Change in Praenomen of Drusus Germanicus Phoenix Classical Association of Canada 42 2 173 175 1 3 doi 10 2307 1088232 JSTOR 1088232 via JSTOR Levick Barbara 2003 Tiberius the Politician Taylor amp Francis p 8 ISBN 9781134603794 Simpson C J 1993 Tiberius adoption by M Gallius and the elder Drusus change in praenomen Liverpool Classical Monthly John Pinsent 18 8 10 154 155 Mottershead Jean 1986 Suetonius Claudius Bristol Classical Press p 28 ISBN 9780862920807 Powell 2011 Valerius Maximus Factorum ac dictorum memorabilium libri IX IV 3 3 Latin text Cited in Powell 2011 p 91 Kokkinos Nikos 1992 Antonia Augusta Portrait of a Great Roman Lady Psychology Press p 11 ISBN 9780415080293 Powell 2011 pp 48 49 Powell 2011 pp 53 54 Powell 2011 pp 48 61 70 Powell 2011 p 56 Powell 2011 pp 56 57 Powell 2011 pp 97 99 a b Powell 2011 p 99 Powell 2011 pp 62 64 These were according to Powell 2011 p 61 Legiones I Germanica V Alaudae XIII Gemina XIV Gemina XVI Gallica XVII XVIII and XIX the last three being the legions that would later be destroyed while under the command of Varus Powell 2011 pp 64 65 70 Powell 2011 pp 74 77 Powell 2011 p 78 Powell 2011 pp 78 79 a b c Powell 2011 p 79 Powell 2011 p 81 The legions in question this time were the I Germanica the V Alaudae the XVII the XVIII and the XIX Powell 2011 pp 83 84 a b Powell 2011 p 89 a b Powell 2011 p 91 Powell 2011 p 90 Gaius Stern Women Children and Priests on the Ara Pacis Augustae 2006 Berk diss Chapter 2 4 9 followed by Powell et al Note that Augustus closed Janus in 29 and 25 BC before this 13 12 BC closure Powell 2011 p 92 Powell 2011 pp xxvii 93 a b Powell 2011 p 94 Powell 2011 p 97 Powell 2011 p 100 Powell 2011 p 95 Powell 2011 p 102 Powell 2011 pp 102 104 Powell 2011 p 104 Powell 2011 p 105 Powell 2011 p 96 and note 155 on p 199 citing Suetonius Claudius I 4 a b Rich J W Drusus and the Spolia Opima The Classical Quarterly vol 49 no 2 1999 pp 544 555 JSTOR www jstor org stable 639878 Accessed 10 August 2020 Kersting Hans 2003 MAINZ tours on foot in German Vol 4 Bayerische Verlagsanstalt ISBN 3 89889 078 3 Barbara Levick Claudius Yale University Press 10 September 1993 p 11 a b McNally Michael 2011 Teutoburg Forest AD 9 the destruction of Varus and his legions Peter Dennis Oxford Osprey Publishing pp 11 13 ISBN 978 1 84603 581 4 OCLC 610837226 Suetonius Tiberius 50 a b Suetonius Claudius I 1 3 Barrett 2002 p 44 Arnold M Duff 1935 Review of Consolatio ad Liviam by Arnold Witlox The Classical Review 49 4 155 156 doi 10 1017 s0009840x00068323 JSTOR 699709 S2CID 163623198 Augustus Res Gestae Divi Augusti 26 Translated by Thomas Bushnell 2011 and placed by his permission on Wikisource Passage also quoted in Powell 2011 p 80 Osgood 2011 pp 60 61 Osgood 2011 p 188 Osgood 2011 p 93 O Caine Caitlin 5 May 2022 A woman bought a statue for 34 99 at a Goodwill in Texas It turned out to be an ancient Roman artifact and likely looted CBS News Retrieved 5 May 2022 Bibliography edit Barrett Anthony A 2002 Livia First Lady of Rome New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 09196 6 Osgood Josiah 2011 Claudius Caesar Image and Power in the Early Roman Empire Cambridge England Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 88181 4 Powell Lindsay 2011 Eager for Glory The Untold Story of Drusus the Elder Conqueror of Germania Barnsley South Yorkshire Pen amp Sword Books ISBN 978 1 84884 333 2 Rich J W Drusus and the Spolia Opima The Classical Quarterly vol 49 no 2 1999 pp 544 555 JSTOR www jstor org stable 639878 Accessed 10 August 2020 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Drusus Maior Political officesPreceded byAfricanus Fabius Maximus and Iullus Antonius Consul of the Roman Empire9 BCwith Titus Quinctius Crispinus Sulpicianus Succeeded byGaius Marcius Censorinus and Gaius Asinius Gallus Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nero Claudius Drusus amp oldid 1195089384, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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