Αποτελέσματα Αναζήτησης
20 Οκτ 2023 · But not all Nero did was meant to honor Poppea’s memory. For example, he had Crispinus, the teenage son Poppaea had with his first husband, drowned during a fishing trip.
3 Ιαν 2024 · Nero went on to kill himself after Poppaea’s second husband (Otho) aided Galba in overthrowing the universally despised despot. Otho would then go on to become ruler himself for roughly eight...
Poppaea Sabina - Wikipedia. Poppaea Sabina (30 AD – 65 AD), also known as Ollia, [1] was a Roman empress as the second wife of the emperor Nero. She had also been wife to the future emperor Otho. The historians of antiquity describe her as a beautiful woman who used intrigues to become empress. [2]
The use of a mise-en-abyme technique brilliantly makes Poppaea’s dream narrative mirror the actual setting and lets the double-layered wedding-funeral imagery find its culmination in the ambiguous murder-suicide scene involving Poppaea’s former and present husbands, Crispinus and Nero.
After the divorce, the newly married Poppaea claims to fear Octavia’s supporters, who temporarily remove her likenesses from the Capitoline, and alleges that she is planning a rebellion (Ann. 14.60.5-61).
Poppaea Sabina (pŏpē´ə səbī´nə), d. AD 65, Roman empress, wife of Nero. While married to Otho, her second husband, she became mistress of Nero, whom she finally married in AD 62. Source for information on Poppaea Sabina: The Columbia Encyclopedia, 6th ed. dictionary.
Poppaea is believed to have induced Nero to murder Agrippina Jr. in 59 AD so that she could marry him. Nero finally engineered Agrippina’s death in 59AD by stabbing, after several unsuccessful attempts, including a staged shipwreck (she was a very good swimmer).