Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - The Julio-Claudian Dynasty
Episode Date: December 7, 2024The Roman Empire was ruled by a single family for its first century. The family was actually a merger of two of the most distinguished clans in Roman history. This family included some of the best a...nd worst emperors in Rome's history. It also included a host of potential emperors who showed great potential but were killed under mysterious circumstances. Ultimately, paranoia and poor leadership caused the family to collapse. Learn more about the Julio-Claudian Dynasty and how they came to rule Rome on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Sponsors MasterClass Get up to 50% off at MASTERCLASS.COM/EVERYWHERE. Quince Go to quince.com/daily for 365-day returns, plus free shipping on your order! ButcherBox New users that sign up for ButcherBox will receive 2lbs of grass fed ground beef in every box for the lifetime of their subscription + $20 off your first box when you use code daily at checkout! Subscribe to the podcast! https://everything-everywhere.com/everything-everywhere-daily-podcast/ -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Ben Long & Cameron Kieffer Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Update your podcast app at newpodcastapps.com Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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The Roman Empire was ruled by a single family for most of its first century.
The family was actually a merger of two of the most distinguished clans in Roman history.
This family included some of the best and worst emperors in Rome's history.
It also included a host of potential emperors who showed great potential, but were killed under mysterious circumstances.
Ultimately, paranoia and poor leadership caused the family to collapse.
Learn more about the Giulio-Claudean dynasty and how they came to rule Rome on this episode of
everything everywhere daily.
What if your perceptions about the past were wrong?
ThruLine is a podcast that takes you back in time to uncover the parts of the story that may
have gone unnoticed.
It effectively turned day into night.
And how it shaped the world now.
Time travel with us every week on the ThruLine podcast from NPR.
In previous episodes, I covered many of the topics that I'll be covering in this episode.
In this episode, I want to zoom out and try to put many of these disparate topics together
to try and explain the events of the first century of imperial rule and how they all fit together.
Historians used the term Julio-Claudian dynasty to describe the first five emperors of Rome,
who were all related.
The Giulio-Claudians were representative of two separate gens or clans in Rome.
The first was the Giuliai.
The Giuliai claimed divine descent and were one of the oldest patrician families in Rome.
They traced their lineage to Ulius, the son of the Trojan hero Aeneas, who was said to be the son of the goddess Venus.
This divine connection became a key element of the family's prestige and propaganda, especially under the rule of Augustus.
Members of the Giuliai held high offices throughout the term of the Republic, including many consuls and military commanders.
The Giuliai are even a part of this discussion because of Julius Caesar.
I've told the story about his rise to power and his victory in the Civil War against the Senate before.
He was declared dictator for life, which was an actual office in the Roman Republic, but
traditionally only held for a maximum of six months.
After Caesar was assassinated, in his will, he posthumously adopted his 18-year-old great-nephew
Octavius, who was also made his primary heir.
To cut through a lot of history,
young Octavius turned out to be an absolutely brilliant politician, defeated Caesar's
Lieutenant Mark Antony in another civil war, and is granted the title of Augustus and becomes
the first Roman emperor. As I explained in a previous episode, there really wasn't a position
per se called emperor, rather it was a collection of titles and powers that were passed from
person to person. That was how the Giuliae came to power. The Claudiae entered the pitcher
through marriage, in particular the marriage of Augustus to Livia Drusilla.
And I should warn you that the story from here on out is going to sound a whole lot like a soap opera,
a very violent soap opera.
Augustus had been twice married, once to Claudia, Mark Anthony's stepdaughter, and then to Scribonia,
with whom he had his only child, Julia.
Augustus divorced Scribonia and married Livia Drusilla, a member of the Claudiae.
Livya, too, had been previously married to her cousin, who was also a member of the Claudiae,
Tiberius Claudius Nero.
And all three of those names should ring a bell.
She had two sons with Tiberius Claudius Nero, Tiberius and Drusus.
Augustus adopted Tiberius and Drus, but they were not of his blood.
When he was making plans for who was going to succeed him after his death,
his first choice was his nephew, Marcellus, the son of his sister.
Marcellus was married to Augustus's daughter, Julia, and was adopted by Augustus, which was
totally a normal thing in Rome. However, Marcellus unexpectedly died at the age of 19, probably due to an
illness such as typhoid, but there was always lingering suspicion about his death. In 9 BC,
Drus, who was an accomplished military commander, fell off his horse and died. Julia was then married
to Augustus's right-hand man, Marcus Vipsani.
Agrippa. Julia and Agrippa had five children, three boys and two girls. The two eldest boys
and grandsons of Augustus were Gaius and Lucius. Gaius and Lucius became the next heir as a parent.
Lucius died in the year two at the age of 18 and he simply fell ill and died. 18 months later,
his brother Gaius fell ill and died at the age of 24. Both boys showed great potential and were
extremely popular in Rome, and their deaths were considered to be highly suspicious.
As Augustus was getting older, the need for a successor became more pressing. At this point,
he really only had two choices. His grandson and the third son of Julia and Agrippa, Agrippa Pospomis,
and his stepson, the son of Livia, Tiberius. Agrippa Postumus was initially a potential error
of Augustus. However, he was exiled in the year six, most likely due to erratic and embarrassing behavior.
Eight years later, when Augustus died in the year 14, Tiberius was left as the only one standing
and became the second emperor of Rome. Agrippa posthumus was summarily executed while he was in exile.
And just to stress how soap opera like this family was, Augustus exiled his own daughter Julia in the year
1 BC, and she never again returned to Rome. And before that, she was forced to marry Tiberius,
his stepson, after the death of Agrippa. With Tiberius now emperor, the issue of succession
came up again. Tiberius basically had two choices. The first of them was his natural son,
Drusus the younger, who was not to be confused with Tiberius's brother, Drusus the elder,
the one who died after falling off a horse. His second option was his nephew, Germanicus, the son
of his brother, Drusus the Elder.
Drus the Elder also had another son named Claudius, who wasn't seriously considered because
the family thought him to be dim-witted.
More on him in a bit.
Dramaticus was an extremely popular military commander who died in the year 19 at the age of
34.
Dramacus was so popular with the public he was arguably more popular than Tiberius.
He believed that he had been poisoned by Nias Calpurnius Pizzo, the governor of Syria,
possibly acting on Tiberius' orders.
Pizzo eventually committed suicide rather than face trial, and Tiberius was never implicated.
That left Tiberius' son, Drusus the younger.
Fortunately for Drusus, Tiberius had a very ambitious right-hand man named Cajanus,
who I covered in a previous episode.
Sejianus basically ran the government while Tiberius was holed up in his pleasure palace on the island of Capri.
Sejianus began an affair with the wife of Drus, and eventually poisoned Drus
so he would become next in line for the imperial throne after Tiberius died.
Tiberius caught wind of Sejanus' role in the death of his son
and had him condemned to death on the floor of the Senate in a very dramatic turn of events.
Tiberius' options were now extremely limited.
If he were to keep the imperial throne in the family,
his only real options were the son of his nephew Germanicus, Caligula,
and his grandson, Gamelis, the son of Drusus the younger.
The reason why these were his options was because Tiberius previously exiled both Dermanicus's wife
and other son, Drusus, who both died in exile.
And by the way, that Drus is the third Drus of this story.
Tiberius died in the year 37 under suspicious circumstances.
Many people believe that Caligula may have had a hand in his death.
At the time of Tiberius' death, Caligula was 24 years old and Gamalus was just 17.
Caligula was proclaimed emperor, in part because Gamalus was too young, and also because
Tiberius hated Gamalus because he thought he was the product of an affair.
By this time, the Giuliai had connected again with the Claudi eyes, as Germanicus's wife and
Caligula's mother, was the daughter of Julia, the daughter of Augustus.
History has painted Caligula as being crazy, and he probably was, but he was also known
as being intelligent and a good orator. However, as Lord Acton has noted, power corrupts and
absolute power corrupts absolutely. And Caligula prove this true. Once after taking power,
Caligula had Gamalas killed. And then he had his father-in-law, Marcus Junius Salonis,
killed. And then he had Macro, the Praetorian Prefect, who had help him come to power, killed.
Caligula accused numerous senators and wealthy citizens of treason, executing them or forcing their
suicides. There were a host of things that he did that angered the Senate, and eventually he was
assassinated in the year 41 at the age of 28. The Britorian guards, who needed an emperor to guard
to keep their jobs, eventually selected the brother of Germanicus, Claudius, the one that everyone
thought was a dimwit. Clonius was not a dimwit. It turns out he was probably the smartest of the
bunch. While accounts, he was a wise and just ruler.
I've previously done an episode devoted to Claudius, which I'll refer you to for a more
detailed overview of his life. But with regards to succession, he had two sons, Tiberius, Claudius
Drusus, who died as a teenager, and a younger son, Britannicus. He also had a stepson from his
fourth wife, Agrippina the Younger, who also happened to be his niece. His stepson was
named Nero. Agrippina of the Younger was very ambitious and watching
wanted her son to become emperor.
Claudius died in the year 54 at the age of 63.
His death was under suspicious circumstances.
Most historians believe that Claudius was poisoned by his wife,
who had given him poisoned mushrooms.
That left Nero to be proclaimed emperor at the age of just 16.
And it should not surprise you to hear that Britannicus was killed
soon after Nero came to power.
Nero's mother sought to rule the empire herself by controlling
her son, and Nero was very aware of this. In the year 59, Nero arranged for his mother to die
in a boating accident, but she survived. She swam to shore where she was killed by one of Nero's
associates, who then claimed that she had killed herself. Nero divorced his first wife and
step-sister Octavia, and exiled her on false charges of adultery, later ordering her execution
in the year 62 to ensure that she posed no threat to his reign. Nero's second wife,
Papaya Sabina allegedly died after being kicked by Nero during a fit of rage in the year 65.
However, some accounts suggest her death may have been due to complications during pregnancy.
Nero had several more wives, but only had one child, a daughter who died as an infant.
He reigned for 14 years, and while he too was probably crazy, he wasn't nearly as bad as Caligula.
While accounts, he was very popular with the common people.
However, he eventually earned the wrath of the Senate and was declared an enemy of Rome and then committed
suicide in the year 68 at the age of 30. With Nero dead, Rome had a problem. For the last century,
Rome had been ruled by the five emperors of the Julio-Claudian dynasty. No one alive knew any other
system of government, and no one was around who could remember the Republic. After multiple
emperors had eliminated all of their potential rivals, and because Nero had no children,
there was no one from the family who was around to take up the mantle of emperor.
In the uprising against Nero, the Senate proclaimed a 70-year-old childless governor of
Hispania, emperor, Galba.
The problem was, if somebody outside of the imperial family could now be emperor,
then why couldn't someone else be emperor?
The power vacuum left by the collapse of the Giulio-Claudean dynasty became known as the
year of the four emperors, because of the four men who were all proclaimed emperor,
all of which whom attempted to seize the throne by violence.
The 95-year reign of the Giulio-Claudian dynasty
was matched only by the 96-year reign of the Nerva-Anthonine dynasty.
While this particular family eventually died out,
there were other more distant branches of both the Giuliai and Claudiae
clans who continued to exist.
In fact, centuries later, there were other distant members of the Giuliai
who became emperor.
For centuries,
The Romans feared one thing more than anything else, the establishment of a king.
And yet, in the end, that's basically what they ended up with.
Complete with a royal family filled with intrigue and murder.
The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel.
The associate producers are Benji Long and Cameron Kiever.
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