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17 Αυγ 2021 · According to the Roman historian Tacitus, in AD 65 Poppaea Sabina was killed by her husband, Emperor Nero, who had lost his temper with her. She was heavily pregnant and a kick in the belly was enough to end her life.
He died in late December of AD 35 from natural causes. After his death, Poppaea Sabina the Younger assumed the name of her maternal grandfather. After Titus Ollius's death, Poppaea's mother married Publius Cornelius Lentulus Scipio the Elder, suffect consul, in 24 AD.
28 Φεβ 2024 · In 44 BCE, she was married to a Praetorian prefect, Rufrius Crispinius, with whom she had a son. After Poppaea's death, Nero would have the young boy's slaves drown him while on a fishing trip.
A papyrus published in 2011 (P. Oxy. 77.5105) containing 84 partially preserved hexameters describes the catasterism of a pregnant wife of Nero. She is presumed to be Poppaea Sabina, who died while pregnant (Tac. Ann. 16.6; Suet.
Poppaea Sabina, the second wife of emperor Nero, was said to have died heavily pregnant from a kick in the belly inflicted by her husband in a fit of rage. A recently published papyrus provides the remnants of a Greek poem where Poppaea Sabina is taken away by Aphrodite to heaven (an apotheosis).
18 Απρ 2019 · His new wife was Statilia Messallina. Otho, Poppaea's first husband, helped in Galba's successful revolt against Nero, and made himself emperor after Galba was killed. Otho was then defeated by Vitellius' forces, and he subsequently killed himself.
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.