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Nero (Nero Claudius Caesar), A.D. 37–A.D. 68, Roman emperor (A.D. 54–A.D. 68).
He was originally named Lucius Domitius Ahenobarbus and was the son of Cnaeus
Domitius Ahenobarbus (consul in A.D. 32) and of Agrippina the Younger, who was
the great-granddaughter of Augustus. Agrippina married (A.D. 49) Claudius I and
persuaded him to adopt Nero. In A.D. 55, Agrippina saw the bonds of her
domination of Nero loosening and intrigued in favor of Claudius' son, Britannicus,
but Nero poisoned the boy. Poppaea Sabina, the wife of his friend Otho, became
his mistress; according to rumor she was to blame for the worst of Nero's
behavior. In A.D. 59 he murdered his mother and in A.D. 62, his wife Octavia. He later
married Poppaea. When half of Rome was burned in a fire (A.D. 64), Nero
accused the Christians of starting it and began the first Roman persecution. In A.D.
65 there was a plot to make Caius Calpurnius Piso emperor. The detection of
this plot began a string of violent deaths, e.g., of Seneca, Lucan, and Thrasea
Paetus. Nero had ambitions to be a poet and artist. In A.D. 68 a series of
revolts, including one by his own Praetorian Guard, caused him to commit suicide.
Among his last words were, "What an artist the world is losing in me!" His memory
was publicly execrated.
See biography by M. Griffin, Nero: The End of a Dynasty (1985).
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