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  2. Nero - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nero

    Domitius died in AD 41. A few years before his father's death, his father was involved in a serious political scandal. [6] His mother and his two surviving sisters, Agrippina and Julia Livilla, were exiled to a remote island in the Mediterranean Sea. [7] His mother was said to have been exiled for plotting to overthrow the emperor Caligula. [4]

  3. Agrippina the Younger - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agrippina_the_Younger

    Nero would have his mother's death on his conscience. He felt so guilty he would sometimes have nightmares of her, even seeing his mother's ghost and getting Persian magicians to ask her for forgiveness. [27] Years before she died, Agrippina had visited astrologers to ask about her son's future. The astrologers had rather accurately predicted ...

  4. Nero Julius Caesar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nero_Julius_Caesar

    In AD 29, Tiberius wrote a letter to the Senate attacking Nero and his mother, and the Senate had them both exiled. Two years later, he died in exile on the island of Ponza. His brother Drusus also died in exile in AD 33. Their deaths allowed for the adoption and ascension of their younger brother, Caligula, following the death of Tiberius in ...

  5. Nero’s theater — where audience may have sat on ‘pain of ...

    www.aol.com/nero-theater-where-audience-may...

    The Roman elite despised Emperor Nero’s “artistic endeavors,” a historian said. Nero’s theater — where audience may have sat on ‘pain of death’ — discovered in Rome Skip to main ...

  6. Sporus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sporus

    Nymphidius treated Sporus as a wife and called him "Poppaea". Nymphidius tried to make himself emperor but was killed by his own guardsmen. [12] [13] In 69 CE, Sporus became involved with Otho, the second of a rapid, violent succession of four emperors who vied for power during the chaos that followed Nero's death. Otho had once been married to ...

  7. Julio-Claudian dynasty - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julio-Claudian_dynasty

    Ancient historians describe Nero's early reign as being strongly influenced by his mother Agrippina the Younger, his tutor Seneca, and the Praetorian Prefect Burrus, especially in the first year. In the first year of his reign, Nero had left all of the day-to-day running of the Empire to his mother Agrippina the Younger.

  8. Claudia Octavia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Claudia_Octavia

    Claudia Octavia (late 39 or early 40 – June 9, AD 62) was a Roman empress.She was the daughter of the Emperor Claudius and Valeria Messalina.After her mother's death and father's remarriage to her cousin Agrippina the Younger, she became the stepsister of the future Emperor Nero.

  9. Nero's Law ceremonially signed in Yarmouth, on ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/neros-law-ceremonially-signed...

    Nero's Law was ceremonially signed Tuesday in Yarmouth, on the four-year anniversary of Yarmouth police Sgt. Sean Gannon's death.