Lucius Antonius
Born20 BC
Died25 AD
ChildrenMarcus Antonius Primus (possibly)[lower-alpha 1]
Parents
RelativesOctavia Minor, maternal grandmother
FamilyJulio-Claudian dynasty

Lucius Antonius (20 BC AD 25) was the son of Iullus Antonius (son of Mark Antony) and Claudia Marcella Major (niece of emperor Augustus).

Biography

Early life

From his mother’s earlier marriage to Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa he had two older attested siblings, two half-sisters named Vipsania Marcella and Vipsania Marcellina. Some epigraphic evidence suggests he had a sister named Iulla Antonia[lower-alpha 2][6] and a brother named Iullus.[7] Around 1 BC he had probably already been betrothed to a girl of high birth.[8]

In 2 BC his father was charged with adultery with Julia (daughter of Augustus) and was forced to commit suicide. Lucius was sent to Marseille as a result of his father's indiscretion. Lucius was described as a adulescentulus at the time, meaning that he was quite young.[8] He was sent there under the pretence of "studying", and it was not an official exile but was in practise the same as one.[9] Once there he studied law.

Later life

G. V. Sumner proposed that Lucius may have been a progenitor of a Junius Blaesus who was descended from Marcus Antonius.[8]

Tacitus records his death in AD 25 at Ann. 4.44.4-5.[10] Despite his father's actions the senate decreed that he should be honoured with a burial at the Tomb of the Octavii, which was the tomb of his maternal grandmother Octavia Minor. This was likely done at the request of a relative (or relatives) in the imperial family, possibly his mother Marcella if she was still alive at the time.[9]

Cultural depictions

A boy on the Ara Pacis has been identified by some to possibly be Lucius.[11][12]

Notes

  1. Renaissance historians sometimes believed based on a misreading of Tacitus that Lucius had a son (or nephew) named Sextus Antonius Africanus.[1][2][3][4][5]
  2. There has been some speculation that Iulla was actually Lucius daughter, but this seems unlikely as he left Rome while young and it is improbable that he had fathered a child already. It is possible that his sister was allowed to stay in the city because she had already married an important man by the time of their fathers downfall, (as noble Roman women married before their male counterparts), or it is possible that the writing was created before Iullus was disgraced and if so then the epigraph could not be referring to a daughter of Lucius.

References

  1. Corneliszoon Hooft, Pieter (1684). C. Cornelius Tacitus Jaarboeken en Historien, ook zyn Germanië, en 't Leeven van J. Agricola (in Dutch). Hendrik Boom, en de Weduwe van Dirk Boom.
  2. Cornelius Tacitus: Books I-VI. Cornell University: F. & J. Rivington. 1852. p. 171.
  3. Boetticher, Wilhelm; Smith, William (1861). Tacitus Germania, Agricola, and first book of the Annales. With notes, and Bötticher's remarks on the style of Tacitus. Walton and Maberly. p. 360.
  4. de Marolles, Michel (1661). P. Ovidii Nasonis De Ponto libri quatuor cum interpretatione gallica... (in French). Louys Billaine. p. 496.
  5. Anderson, James (1736). Royal Genealogies: Or the Genealogical Tables of Emperors, Kings and Princes from Adam to These Times. p. 349.
  6. CIL VI, 11959. She must have survived infancy if a freedman set up an inscription about her.
  7. Antonius. Stemma by Strachan
  8. 1 2 3 Syme, Ronald (1989). The Augustan Aristocracy. Clarendon Press. p. 144. ISBN 9780198147312.
  9. 1 2 Phoenix. Vol. 18–19. University of Michigan: University of Toronto Press. 1964. p. 143.
  10. Tacitus, Cornelius (1904). "The Annals of Tacitus ...: Books I-VI - Cornelius Tacitus - Google Books". Retrieved 2015-08-17.
  11. Rehak, Paul (2009). Imperium and Cosmos: Augustus and the Northern Campus Martius. Univ of Wisconsin Press. p. 131. ISBN 9780299220143.
  12. Pollini, John (1987). The Portraiture of Gaius and Lucius Caesar. Fordham University Press. p. 28. ISBN 9780823211272.

Sources

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