When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Agrippina the Younger - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agrippina_the_Younger

    During the remainder of Nero's reign, Agrippina's grave was not covered or enclosed. Her household later on gave her a modest tomb in Misenum. [48] 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 ...

  3. Nero - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nero

    However, Nero's "conduct became far more egregious" after his mother's death. [4] Miriam T. Griffins suggests that Nero's decline began as early as AD 55 with the murder of his stepbrother Britannicus, but also notes that "Nero lost all sense of right and wrong and listened to flattery with total credulity" after Agrippina's death. Griffin ...

  4. Nero's Mistress - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nero's_Mistress

    Agrippina then takes advantage of a poetic and theatrical failure of Nero to kill him and take over the government of Rome. Seneca initially supports the woman, but then plays a double game and warns Nero about the conspiracy. Agrippina smartly lays the blame on the Christians and on Seneca, who could be sentenced to death.

  5. Acerronia Polla - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acerronia_Polla

    Der Schiffbruch der Agrippina, by Gustav Wertheimer, showing the drowning of Acerronia. Acerronia Polla was a servant and friend of Agrippina the Younger, the mother of Nero. She was drowned in AD 59, when an unsuccessful attempt was made at the same time to drown Agrippina. She may have been the daughter of Gnaeus Acerronius Proculus, consul ...

  6. Matricide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matricide

    In AD 59, the Roman Emperor Nero is said to have ordered the murder of his mother Agrippina the Younger, supposedly because she was conspiring against him. Mary Anne Lamb , the mentally ill sister of essayist Charles Lamb , killed their invalid mother during an episode of mania in 1796.

  7. Anicetus (freedman) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anicetus_(freedman)

    Nero put this strategy into action, though the collapsing boat failed to kill Agrippina. Afterwards, on 23 March AD 59, Anicetus himself stabbed Agrippina to death in her villa, on orders from Nero. [3] [4] [5] Anicetus was subsequently induced by Nero to confess having committed adultery with Nero's wife, Claudia Octavia. [1] [6] As punishment ...

  8. Nero Julius Caesar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nero_Julius_Caesar

    Nero (on the left), saluting Tiberius (seated, on the right) (detail of the Great Cameo of France).. Nero's mother Agrippina believed her husband was murdered to promote Drusus the Younger as heir, and feared that the birth of his twin sons would give him a motive to displace her own sons.

  9. Britannicus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Britannicus

    The games were seen as the introduction of Agrippina and Domitius to public life, and Britannicus' mother, Messalina, must have been aware of that and been envious of Agrippina. Tacitus writes that Messalina was too busy engaging in an "insane" affair to plot the destruction of Agrippina. [14] He says: [15]