Julia Flavia
Roman imperial dynasties | |||
Flavian dynasty | |||
Marble bust of Julia Titi Flavia | |||
Chronology | |||
Vespasian | 69 AD – 79 AD | ||
Titus | 79 AD – 81 AD | ||
Domitian | 81 AD – 96 AD | ||
Family | |||
Gens Flavia Flavian tree Category:Flavian dynasty | |||
Succession | |||
Preceded by Year of the Four Emperors |
Followed by Nerva–Antonine dynasty |
Flavia Julia Titi (13 September 64 – 91) was the daughter and only child to Emperor Titus from his second marriage to the well-connected Marcia Furnilla. Her parents divorced when Julia was an infant, due to her mother's family being connected to the opponents of Roman Emperor Nero. In 65, after the failure of the Pisonian conspiracy, the family of Marcia Furnilla was disfavored by Nero. Julia's father, Titus considered that he didn't want to be connected with any potential plotters and ended his marriage to Marcia Furnilla. Julia was raised by her father. Julia had been born in Rome and Titus conquered Jerusalem on Julia's sixth birthday.
When growing up, Titus offered her in marriage to his brother Domitian, but he refused because of his infatuation with Domitia Longina. Later she married her second paternal cousin T. Flavius Sabinus, brother to consul T. Flavius Clemens, who married her first cousin Flavia Domitilla. By then Domitian had seduced her.
When her father and husband died, in the words of Dio, Domitian:
- "lived with [her] as husband with wife, making little effort at concealment. Then upon the demands of the people he became reconciled with Domitia, but continued his relations with Julia nonetheless."[1]
Juvenal condemns this liaison as follows:
- "Such a man was that adulterer [i.e. Domitian] who, after lately defiling himself by a union of the tragic style, revived the stern laws that were to be a terror to all men – ay, even to Mars and Venus – just as Julia was relieving her fertile womb and giving birth to abortions that displayed the likeness of her uncle."[2]
Becoming pregnant, Julia died of what was rumored (though unlikely) to be a forced abortion. Julia was deified and her ashes were later mixed and smoked with Domitian's by an old nurse secretly in the Temple of the Flavians.[3]
Ancestry
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Nerva–Antonine family tree
Nerva–Antonine family tree | |
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Notes:
Except where otherwise noted, the notes below indicate that an individual's parentage is as shown in the above family tree.
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References:
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Notes
- ↑ Cassius Dio, 67.3
- ↑ Juvenal, Satires ii.32.
- ↑ Suetonius, Domitian 17.3
Further reference
- Suetonius, The Twelve Caesars – Titus & Domitian 17, 22.
- Dio Cassius, lxvii. 3.
- Pliny, Ep. iv. 11. § 6.
- Philostratus, Vit. Apoll. Tyan. vii. 3.
Media related to Julia Titi at Wikimedia Commons