Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Two portraits of Agrippa Postumus in the British Museum

View through CrossRef
AbstractTwo damaged and partially restored Roman portraits in the collection of the British Museum, previously identified as either the emperor Caligula or an unknown “Julio-Claudian prince,” are here reassessed and identified as Agrippa Postumus, the youngest grandson and adopted heir of Augustus. The first portrait, from southern Britain, may have come from a temple dedicated to the worship of the Julio-Claudian house, while the second was probably part of an equestrian group standing outside the Aedes Castoris in Rome. This is a significant reinterpretation, providing potential evidence not only for links between Rome's first family and the rulers of a distant client kingdom, but also for the framing of imperial power and the uncertain nature of the Augustan succession in the early years of the 1st c. CE.
Title: Two portraits of Agrippa Postumus in the British Museum
Description:
AbstractTwo damaged and partially restored Roman portraits in the collection of the British Museum, previously identified as either the emperor Caligula or an unknown “Julio-Claudian prince,” are here reassessed and identified as Agrippa Postumus, the youngest grandson and adopted heir of Augustus.
The first portrait, from southern Britain, may have come from a temple dedicated to the worship of the Julio-Claudian house, while the second was probably part of an equestrian group standing outside the Aedes Castoris in Rome.
This is a significant reinterpretation, providing potential evidence not only for links between Rome's first family and the rulers of a distant client kingdom, but also for the framing of imperial power and the uncertain nature of the Augustan succession in the early years of the 1st c.
CE.

Related Results

Iulius Agrippa (2) II, Marcus (53–94/95 CE)
Iulius Agrippa (2) II, Marcus (53–94/95 CE)
Agrippa II (c. 27/28 ce–94/95 ce) was the last monarch of the Herodian dynasty. He was the son of Agrippa I and his wife and first cousin Cypros, and great-grandson of Herod the Gr...
"Postumus" w "Noctes Atticae" Aulusa Gelliusa
"Postumus" w "Noctes Atticae" Aulusa Gelliusa
Dalle informazioni trasmesse da Gellio da un lato risulta che la legge delle dodici tavole considerava postumus un bambino nato al massimo nel decimo mese. Dall’altro, pero, egli r...
Tiberius Claudianus contre Agrippa Postumus : autour de la dédicace du temple des Dioscures
Tiberius Claudianus contre Agrippa Postumus : autour de la dédicace du temple des Dioscures
Résumé Il est possible de faire remonter aux années 7 et 6 avant notre ère l’origine des tensions qui, à l’intérieur de la famille impériale, opposent les Claudiens (Tibère et Livi...
The Adoption of Agrippa Postumus and the Friends of Gaius Caesar
The Adoption of Agrippa Postumus and the Friends of Gaius Caesar
Abstract This chapter explains Augustus’ decision to adopt Agrippa Postumus in ad 4 by proposing that Augustus and Tiberius were concerned Agrippa was being courted ...
T. Pomponius Atticus, M. Vipsanius Agrippa, and the Marriage Between Caecilia Attica And Agrippa
T. Pomponius Atticus, M. Vipsanius Agrippa, and the Marriage Between Caecilia Attica And Agrippa
Abstract: This article examines the marriage between Atticus’ daughter Caecilia Attica and Agrippa, with a focus on why Atticus and Agrippa agreed upon it. I argue that political c...
Corneille Agrippa
Corneille Agrippa
Described by one modern scholar as a 'classic biography' of Agrippa, Prost's two-volume work (1881–1882) charts the life of one of the most renowned humanists of Renaissance Europe...
Agrippa Postumus
Agrippa Postumus
Abstract Agrippa Postumus (12 bce –14 ce ) was the last of five children born to Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa and...
Autour des travaux d’Hercule : Postume et Gallien
Autour des travaux d’Hercule : Postume et Gallien
After first attempting to eliminate Postumus in AD 261, Gallienus reopened war with him in AD 266. But the Gothic invasion forced Gallienus to the Balkans in AD 267, and he was not...

Back to Top