Galeria Fundana | |||||
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Roman empress | |||||
Tenure | 69 | ||||
Spouse | Vitellius | ||||
Issue | Vitellius Vitellia | ||||
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Galeria Fundana (c. 40 – aft. 69) was a Roman empress and the second wife of Roman emperor Vitellius.
Biography
Early life
Suetonius tells us that Galeria was the daughter of an ex-praetor and bore two children during her marriage: a son and a daughter.[1][2] Gwyn Morgan assumes she was related to Publius Galerius Trachalus, "Otho's alleged speechwriter".[3]
Empress
Tacitus, who writes unfavourably about Vitellius, claims that Galeria was a woman of "exemplary virtue" who "took no part in [Vitellius's] horrors."[4] Tacitus specifically notes she protected Galerius Trachalus from her husband when he purged the supporters of his defeated rival Otho.[5]
Later life
Her son Vitellius, renamed Germanicus by his father in 69, was killed after supporters of Vespasian took control of Rome, together with Vitellius himself. Galeria's life was spared and she was allowed to bury her husband. Her daughter Vitellia married twice: Decimus Valerius Asiaticus was her first husband, and after his death in 69 AD she was helped by Vespasian to make a good marriage to an unnamed man.[6] Historian Settipani has proposed that her second son-in-law was Libo Rupilius Frugi and that his daughter Rupilia Faustina was also Vitellia's daughter, thus explaining the use of the nomen Galeria among female members of the Nerva–Antonine dynasty.[7][8]
References
- ↑ Life of Vitellius chapter 6
- ↑ Vitellius Archived 2014-04-28 at the Wayback Machine, livius.org.
- ↑ Morgan, 69 A.D., the Year of Four Emperors (Oxford: University Press, 2006), p. 77
- ↑ Tacitus, Histories, II.64
- ↑ Tacitus, Histories, II.60
- ↑ John Xiphilinus, Epitome Historiarum Dionis Cassii, 201-202
- ↑ Rupilius. Strachan stemma.
- ↑ Settipani, Christian (2000). Continuité gentilice et continuité familiale dans les familles sénatoriales romaines à l'époque impériale: mythe et réalité. Prosopographica et genealogica (in Italian). Vol. 2 (illustrated ed.). Unit for Prosopographical Research, Linacre College, University of Oxford. p. 278. ISBN 9781900934022.