The Ancients - Livia: Empress of Rome
Episode Date: August 3, 2025Powerful, cunning, uncompromising, even murderous (allegedly)... meet Rome’s first empress and one of ancient history’s ultimate power players.Livia Drusilla has long been cast as the bloodthirsty... matriarch of the early Roman Empire — wife of Augustus, mother of Tiberius, and alleged poisoner of rivals. But how much of this infamous image is fact and how much is fantasy? In this episode, Tristan Hughes is joined by Dr Emma Southon to peel back the layers of scandal and explore the real story behind Livia’s complex legacy. Was she a scheming killer, or simply a shrewd survivor in a ruthless world?MOREZenobia: Queen of Palmyrahttps://open.spotify.com/episode/4o7gMb5tLk8f6nF0QirzcvThe Assassination of Julius Caesar:https://open.spotify.com/episode/0xKUDPitfx3rN1kN1hPI4HPresented by Tristan Hughes. Audio editor is Aidan Lonergan and the producer is Joseph Knight. The senior producer is Anne-Marie Luff.All music courtesy of Epidemic SoundsThe Ancients is a History Hit podcast.LIVE SHOW: Buy tickets for The Ancients at the London Podcast Festival here: https://www.kingsplace.co.uk/whats-on/words/the-ancients-2/Sign up to History Hit for hundreds of hours of original documentaries, with a new release every week and ad-free podcasts. Sign up at https://www.historyhit.com/subscribe. You can take part in our listener survey here: https://insights.historyhit.com/history-hit-podcast-always-on
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Hey guys, Tristan here and I have an exciting announcement.
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Hey guys, I hope you're doing well.
I'm Allgood here, I'm recording this intro right next to a loch in central Scotland for
a very special upcoming Ancients episode, stay tuned for that.
Today's episode is all about one of the most extraordinary women from
early imperial Rome. The Empress Livia, the wife of Augustus, the mother of his successor Tiberius,
and a woman who's developed quite an infamous reputation down through the centuries.
But what's the fact and what's the fiction? That is what we're delving into today. I knew very little about Livia's story so it was fascinating to learn more from our
wonderful guest Dr Emma Southern. I really do hope you enjoy. Let's go. She was one of the most powerful women in the early Roman Empire. The wife of Augustus,
first Empress of Rome, Livia Giusella. Throughout history, Livia has had quite the infamous
reputation. Ever since ancient times, she's been portrayed as scandalous and
manipulative. A murderous villainess who oversaw the deaths of multiple members
of Augustus's family to ensure that her son, Tiberius, became the next emperor.
There were even rumours that she poisoned Augustus. But how much should we
believe of these rumours? Who was the real Olivia? Our guest is Dr Emma
Southern.
Emma, welcome back to the podcast. It's a pleasure to have you back on The Ancients.
Emma Southern It is such a pleasure to be back. It feels
like it's been ages. I've missed you. I've missed your audience. I am thrilled whenever
I get asked back.
Toby Haldeman Well, it has been too long. I've missed your audience. I am thrilled whenever I get asked about. Will Barron Well, it has been too long. I've missed you
too. It's been over a year since we did Zenobia together. And now we're back to talk about
another extraordinary woman from the ancient Roman world. I guess it's fair to say with
Livia quite a scandalous reputation today, doesn't she? But do you feel, big question
to start off, more of a villain or more of a victim when it comes
to Livia?
Anna Orwell I don't think she's a victim. I will
say that. I don't know that she's that much of a villain. The villain reputation that
she has comes very much from Robert Graves, but she's definitely not a victim either
because she is seemingly in control of everything that is happening and she has
genuinely astonishing power in the Roman Empire. And if anything, I don't think that she is
the serial killer that some portrayals of Livia have her being like a kind of creeping
evil black widow in the center of a web of matters. But I don't ever see her as a victim
and I think that she would hate to be seen as a victim.
Mason. So with the sources that we have for Livia, can you explain them first of all? Because if this
is the reign of Augustus, the beginning of the Roman Empire period, it feels like there are
probably quite a lot of sources to play with. Livia.
There are because you cannot talk about Augustus really without talking about Livia,
not least because Livia's son from her marriage before Augustus becomes Augustus's heir.
And so nobody is able to talk about him without talking about her.
So all of the sources which discuss him, so all of the histories of the period, the Tacitus, the Suetonius, the Plutarch and Dio,
all of them have at least something about Livia.
And then anything that covers the kind of last gasping few breaths of the Roman Republic
and it's a quote unquote restoration by Augustus have to include how
Livia comes into his life, how Livia becomes such an important part of his reign and then how it
comes about that she becomes so important in the next reign because she covers two. So anything
that's on Tiberius also has to cover her because she's so important in his reign as well. And he's so like, mom, about
everything. And she just will not step back out of the position that she has held in Augustus's reign.
So we have tons of sources on her. And most of them are baffled by her position, because it's so
unique. Nobody has ever had a position before her like that. And it's
a tough act for anybody to follow because she is simultaneously very, very private.
Everything that she does technically is very much within the acceptable realm of Roman
womanhood. And she never takes any position that she shouldn't take. She's very good at
that. But at the same time, she obviously has so much power. She can grant consulships. She can get people
a good job. She can make sure that people get the good legions or give them money or
sponsor them so that they can do whatever they want to do. And so she does have genuine
political power and that freaks people out. So they talk about her a lot.
Generally speaking, with the people who do talk about Livia, if you've got almost that kind of,
I don't want to say contrast, but as you say, very private but also clearly has a lot of power,
if they're a bit baffled by Livia, generally how do these people writing about her, how do they
portray her? Generally not brilliantly. They veer between neutral and outright hostility. The most famous
ones really are from Tacitus, who primarily covers her in the reign of Tiberius because
he doesn't really cover Augustus at all. He is very, very good at insinuating that
she with the odd little descriptor. So he'll just
say things like through the treachery of a stepmother and therefore imply that she was
involved with things. And then Dio, who is writing 250 years after Livia, so he's writing
in about the 230s and working from Tacitus very clearly. And then he embellishes a lot. So a lot of the stories that
you get, which are a bit more detailed about terrible things that Olivia did, tend to come
from Dio. And those two sources are very hostile towards her. Like in those, she is the wickedest
stepmother of all wicked stepmothers. She is the worst wife of all wives. She is basically just a malevolent
woman at the centre of power and the fact that she is at the centre of power is very,
is in and of itself bad. But other people when they write about her, unless she was
alive at the time, in which case they're unbelievably flattering. So there's a bit with Ovid, the
poet Ovid was exiled by Augustus and then while in exile right a lot of very flattering poems and a desperate attempt to come back and at one point he says that she is the.
Face of juna with the body of art to miss like i'm gonna be honest this is a woman who's in her sixties and a roman sixties as well like that i think that you're just being at the that's the best thing you can say about it, then that's not great. But it's so, they're either very, very flattering or very,
very cruel.
Will Barron You also mentioned there, of course, I mean,
big names like Tacitus and Cassius Dio, those are two of the most recognisable Roman historian
names that come down to us today. So I mean, they're negative portrayals. Do you think
their agendas when they're writing their stories that haveals, do you think their agendas when they're writing
their stories that have survived, do you think they have significantly influenced why Livia's
name, you know, sometimes today, does have a more infamous scandalous reputation?
Yes, definitely.
Because they're so important in understanding that period and people like Suetonius, who
give us most of the gossip about the emperors,
he's not that interested in her
because he's writing a biography of Augustus
and a biography of Tiberius.
So she doesn't really appear that much.
But with the people who are writing histories of the period,
like Tacitus and Dio,
she therefore can appear a lot
because they can attach her to everything that happens and specifically those two attach her to the deaths of.
Every man in the julio claudian family of which there are like a distressing amount like it's a very unlucky family to be born into if you're a boy the girls seem to do okay but the boys die with a terrifying frequency
and it does eventually work out to be quite convenient for Livia. So they attach to her
every possible death including eventually the death of Augustus who they suggest she might have
had a hand in as well, just in order, and then they create from this,
this narrative of her, and they never say it outright,
they just imply it by bringing it up over and over again,
that she murdered her way through the Julio-Claudian family
or the Julian family in order to make sure
that her son would be the next emperor,
and therefore she would hold onto her power.
And so, and then eventually when Augustus
is on his deathbed, and he's kind of maybe thinking about making somebody else the earth,
she kills Augustus in order to make sure that her plan will continue. And that's what you get then
in I Claudius, the TV show and the book. And then that is the one that becomes like cemented in
people's image of her.
It's the I Claudius portrayal isn't it that is really
Yeah, the Sean Phillips is
Exactly that is endured for decades hasn't it. I mean, and we will explore some of those
stories, but it was important to highlight this straight away to understand, you know,
why you get those portrayals and where they originated from with with certain of our sources.
I must also ask then, Livia,
she's very important at the time of Augustus and of her son Tiberius. With the wealth of
sources that you have, it's not just written sources, is it? Do you also have archaeology
that helps historians understand, sort fact from fiction with the actual figure of Livia? Livia We do tons of it and interesting types of
it as well. So we have all of her public statuary. So she is the female face of Augustus' reign and
he is like recreating Roman culture from scratch really. So she gets put out as this kind of unaging
vision ideal of feminine virtue over and over again in all of his statuary. On his coins,
she appears over and over again as kind of various female virtues of chastity and fecundity and all
of these other things. And she is put out as this idea of family and continuity and female virtue
that he wishes to portray.
But then we also have the archaeology of her actual life.
So we have things like her palaces that she lived in.
So Livia's house on the Palatine is still there and various homes that she owned all
over Italy, which you can see because of the bricks which have been stamped with her name
on. CB Wow. KS And there's a mausoleum in Rome, which is a columbaria. So it's a private mausoleum,
which was a place for people who were enslaved in the house of Livia to be buried. So it's
exclusively people who were in her household and very often just their names and job titles, but we can kind of reconstruct
what it was like inside her house from knowing that there was somebody in her house whose job
was exclusively to look after her white dresses and someone whose job it was to just look after
her gold cups. Somebody whose job is very like, it's a word that has never been used before or again in
Latin and nobody knows what it means, but either means somebody who had looked after
her handbags or someone who folded her clothes.
And that was their job.
So we have all of like this huge amount of archaeology of how she is portrayed by Augustus
and by his regime, which is as modest and always young, always very kind of neat and tidy,
and the kind of feminine virtue of wool spinning and that kind of thing. And then we have this
what her life was actually like, which is that she had a whole load of people, a whole
load of clothes and a whole load of cups. Like a lot of stuff and buildings and holiday homes and yeah, she was extraordinarily rich.
So it's nice to be able to see multiple sides of her.
That's an extraordinary clothes and cups.
There you go.
Yeah.
If we go back to the beginning then, so pre the Emperor Augustus in the late Roman Republic,
I mean, do we know much about Olivia's early
years, Emma?
EMMA We do, because they're unbelievable. She
had a whole life in the first 20 years of her life. She did more in the first 20 years
than I've managed in about 40. Because she's married by the time she's 15. So she gets
married in 43 BCE, so the year after Julius Caesar is executed and she marries a guy
called Tiberius Nero, who is very much on the anti Julius Caesar side of things.
Oh, okay.
And that's where she's up. The next year she gives birth to Tiberius, so she's 16 when she
gives birth to him and immediately gets caught up in the civil wars that happen in the aftermath
of Julius Caesar's assassination on the opposite side to Octavian, who then becomes Augustus.
So one of the first things we know about her is that she has to escape from a town in Italy,
which Octavian is besieging because she joins the, or her husband joins the rebellion against
him basically and against his land conviscations. And they have to escape and they almost have
to leave Fiberius, the baby behind because he is crying so much that he is going to give
them away. And it's only that she manages to calm him down, but it's literally an escape
from by night in order to get to Greece.
They then go to Greece where they have to, for some reason, possibly her husband just upset some people, they have to escape from Sparta as well when the house is burned down.
But she has to flee across the empire.
By the time she is like 19, she has already had to travel around in a civil war, choosing the wrong
side basically. And then at some point, when she is pregnant with her second child, she
meets Octavian in person and he just falls head over heels in love with her. And he's
a few years older than her. And he's also calling himself Julius Caesar and has a big army and is scary. And essentially, he is like, I would like to marry you. And she's like, well, I'm married and pregnant. He's like, I see no problems.
has her second child, Drusus, and then get married like days later. And he just steals her from her husband basically. And we kind of have to assume by how incredibly dedicated
she is to his cause after that, that she was also into him, or at least learned to be into
him. Because she, you know, genuinely spends the next 50 years of her life supporting him
in every possible way
and wait like above and beyond what she would need to. But it is an extraordinary, and she's 20
when she marries Octavian and she's on her second marriage, her second child had like,
second flee from opposing armies. And then she has this whole life of becoming and being an Empress ahead of her.
And she comes from this very, very ancient, very noble family.
Right. That's what I was going to ask. How prestigious a background did she have? That
could have also made her very attractive to Octavian.
This also is potentially one of the reasons why he grabs her, although there's no shortage
of Claudian women around. But she comes from this Claudian family who are incredibly ancient.
They have hundreds of consuls and very famous names going right the way back to the time
of Romulus in their family. And they have things like the Appian Way is named after
a Claudian, Claudius Appius, and they're the first aqueducts in Rome are
Claudian. They are the family of Rome really. Until Augustus comes along and gloms onto
them and makes them the Julio Claudians. So she has this real weight of kind of old, traditional
Republican power behind her in this little 20-year-old buddy.
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wherever you get your podcasts. American History Hit, a podcast from History Hit. So this is the time he said the civil wars are there.
It's before Octavian becomes the Emperor Augustus and you've still got the likes of Mark Antony
and Leopold, so this is the 30s BC.
Do we know during that period where Octavian is rising but you've still got the likes of Mark
Antony opposing him, kind of the turbulent relationship that they have, do we know much
about the dynamic between young Livia and young Octavian during that decade, whilst it is before he becomes the Emperor, before
he becomes Augustus.
CW We know less so, other than generic things.
Suetonius says that whenever he would talk to her about important things, he would always
make notes so that he wouldn't say the wrong thing, which makes her sound like if he did
say the wrong thing, she'd give him a kick. But we don't know a huge amount about what they're up to, other than the fact that they
were trying to have children.
And they desperately want a child.
And they do, they have a child who is either stillborn or dies very early, and then are
unable to have any of their own.
They've both got children from their previous marriages, but neither of them, they're not,
for whatever genetic reason, able to have children together. And so that seems to be the main focus because
Augustus, particularly in those era, in that time is using marriage and children as a way
to legitimize himself, to legitimize his reign, to try to stabilize everything. So he's marrying
his sister off, he's marrying his daughter off, he's marrying his daughter off,
he's marrying everyone to everyone in an attempt to create the kind of a web of alliances that
eventually falls apart. But the main focus of those early years seems to be wanting children.
And is Octavian faithful to Livia in this early stage of his life?
No. No Roman man was ever faithful. If they had been, they would have thought they were weird.
Now, apparently he has a predilection for virgins. And one of the things that gets thrown at her
actually is that she would procure them for him, but in his younger years. But no, very much not.
He has a thing for writing like horrible poetry around women as well. And there's the very classic or quite famous letter
that Mark Antony writes to Octavia. I was thinking about this letter. Yes. Please tell us about this
letter. Yeah. Basically it's after he has run off with Cleopatra and abandoned Octavia, who is Augustus
his sister. And he has said, so what if I'm having sex with the queen? Like, are you telling me that
you haven't had sex with every woman in Rome?
And then he lists off a load of names.
Like, why do I have to keep it in my toga if you don't have to keep it in yours, basically?
And he's not wrong, but the difference is that Octavian Augustus sees a PR opportunity,
whereas Mark Antony only sees the reality of what's in front of him. He
never understands that Octavian doesn't really care that he's having sex with Cleopatra.
What he cares about is that it looks bad and he can use it.
Mason. Is it after then that final showdown between Octavian and Mark Antony and Cleopatra,
the Battle of Actium and then the Battle of Alexandria, when Octavian is the top dog, Mark Anthony is out of the
picture and we get to the 20s BC, is this really when we start getting more information about
Livia too in the sources and just in her story?
CK Yeah. So this is when we start to get, because Augustus then makes the family and
the Julio-Claudian family so central to his propaganda and reshaping what the Roman family
is that he starts to bring her to the fore and starts to put her way more in in his statuary and
his coinage on his art and he starts to pull her out so that he can parade around their wonderful
marriage and he reshapes himself because
he's been a warlord up until this point. He's been a general and now he can't be a general
anymore because there's no one left to fight. So he has to be a statesman and a statesman
has a wife. And so all of a sudden he becomes very interested in making sure that she and
his daughter as well are presenting themselves and are being presented as idealized women.
And so we start to get more of her, you know, walking around and people worrying about who she's friends with, people.
But also that means that she gets to have much more control over things like who she wants to sponsor.
You know, she starts taking in children that she can raise
who will be the next generation of Roman senators. Which sounds like she's collecting children,
which is kind of. But they start looking to the future at that point basically. And as a unit,
they start to build what we now know of as the Julia Claudian family and the system and she's
very much a part of that.
You mentioned the portrayals in art and coinage and I'm guessing architecture as well. Can
you explain a few examples of that and how they're portrayed together, you know, in this
next chapter in Octave, I guess we should say now Augustus's story if he's now been
proclaimed Augustus. Can you explain a bit about how they portray themselves together in this next chapter of their life?
Anna So they now start to portray themselves as kind of the parents of the, the parents of the
state essentially, he becomes the father of the country and as a result she becomes kind of by
default the mother of the country and you start to get lots of these portraits of them being very pious. So lots of them with their head
covered, lots of statues of them being. So she always has very, very tied up, neat, modest
hair basically, because she is, there are all of these ideas of control and modesty
that are around women that are very tied up to hair. So she always has this very specific
haircut and hair, but in a little bun that is not dissimilar from how my hair is at the
moment, now thinking about it. And she's always in a mantle like a proper Roman woman, married Roman woman.
She often will have her hair covered in some way.
And she is always being presented as a kind of Republican ideal of a perfect,
chaste, modest, pious wife.
And then you hear stories about her and she sounds terrifying.
And so how does she exercise power differently during this period? You mentioned that the
gathering of children, but is she also kind of like a patron of arts and stuff like that?
Is there a way through which she can really show her power in a very different way than
Augustus does? You this very public, overt
leader of the people?
CWOVBEEK Yes. Well, she has her own moments of public
overt. She has the portico of Livia is built quite early on, which is a big space which
is built in the forum and then named after her and is a real big statement of her importance to the regime.
Because then everybody has to say, oh, do you want to meet for board games at the Porta Cape
Bolivia? And it's a real statement. But what she does is she largely does everything in the way that
she is supposed to, which is that she has dinners with people, she meets people, she talks to people, she maneuvers people around. So for example, the Emperor Galba,
who is emperor for like eight months in 68 to 69 after the death of Nero, his career
is sponsored almost entirely by Livia at the beginning. So she pays for him, she makes sure that he gets positions
at the beginning, she is responsible for him eventually becoming a very bad emperor.
There's also this wonderful moment that actually happens in Tiberius' reign, but I think that it's
telling of what she's used to doing, which is that she basically draws up a list of people that she wants for a particular set of magistracies. So to be praetor, to be consul or whatever.
She's like, these are the guys that I want for the next round. And he says no. And she
gets so furious at Tiberius that she starts pulling out all of these letters that Augustus
has written about him and chasing him around the house and is like, when you were 18, Augustus has written about him and chasing him around the house and is like, when you were 18, Augustus said you were horrible. And basically that's her, she's so used to
being able to say, well, I want Galba to have the console ship and have Augustus say, okay.
When Tiberius says no, she's just completely thrown by it. So that is how she is able to exercise this power.
And it's through advising Augustus and saying, well, I think we should do this.
And I think that Galba should be greater and she can do this so much.
But Emma, I guess that's of course that's important to highlight, isn't it?
Because it is still quite an experimental time.
Of course, Augustus has seen Julius Caesar die a horrific death because he pushed the boundaries a bit too much.
So I guess is Livia really helping and advising Augustus, especially in these early stages, to make sure he doesn't take a wrong step, particularly when you've got these senators and probably got quite a few hawks looming around him in
the Senate and in Rome at the time.
Yeah. And having her there as a partner almost makes him look more reasonable in what he's
doing. She's almost a kind of legitimising cover because he's like, you know, look, I'm
just acting like any guy would. It's not me out here being like, I'm not a dictator. I'm not console
for life. I'm not a military guy. I'm now just a man with his wife and we're just giving
you advice. She gives me advice. I give you advice. It just so happens that you all agree
100% of the time that our advice is the best. So they're able to present themselves as just
a normal family. Like everyone's wife gives them advice.
It just so happens that my wife gives the best advice.
And just so happens that my wife knows all of the senators.
Another thing that we see in the reign of Tiberius, which is never mentioned during
the reign of Augustus, but is again a thing that Tiberius stops her doing, so we know
that she was doing it, is she would have
dinners at her house with the senators. So she would have them over for dinner in her private
residence rather than in the emperor's private, in the emperor's kind of public residence. So,
which Tiberius says she's not allowed to do anymore, she's only allowed to meet with women,
but she's like, if she's there, she's also not just advising Augustus, she's
also talking to all the senators. It might be a great idea. What if you tell me and I'll
tell Augustus? It would be a lovely idea if you all listen to what I had to say. So she's
very involved from quite early on in building what Augustus builds from the ground up.
Mason And as you say, she's helping certain figures.
You mentioned the future emperor, Galba, there earlier. But as you say, she's helping certain figures. You mentioned the future Emperor Galba there
earlier. But with Augustus, I sometimes think of he had a few intellectuals around him as
well, didn't you? Virgil with the Aeneid and so on. Do we think that Livia had her
own circle of intellectuals or people she really valued, philosophers and so on in her
own circle?
She does have philosophers around her, although it's never considered to be
particularly feminine to surround yourself with philosophers.
So it's not something that they ever make a big deal of for her.
Like unlike later emperors, when it's become a bit more acceptable for women
to be intellectual at the time that she is like, she has philosophers who are
like her personal philosophers, but they are always
her personal philosophers. She's never like sponsoring their careers in a public way,
like the way that, you know, Augustus has Mycenas and then he's paying for Virgil and
he's promoting the works of certain people like Horace as being kind of fundamental to
his project. For her to do that, it would not be considered
appropriate feminine behavior. That would be considered to be a bit too public to be
intellectual. And coming out of the late Republican tradition where it's considered to be, that's
the kind of thing that a Clodia or a Fulvia would do, would be to hang out with artists.
And therefore it's a bit libertine. and she is never a libertine woman.
The veneer of conservativism which is disguising the amount of radical politics that they are doing.
I certainly would never call myself an expert on this period but it always feels to me almost
looking in that the 20s BC is this kind of transitional period where Augustus and Livia are trying to make sure they don't have a step the mark but increase in their power making sure they don't follow in caesar's footsteps.
Do we know how libya also balances that out with raising her two sons at the moment of time of course the both teenagers on day and then now finding themselves not actually.
Not a lot actually. Fair enough. Okay.
It is not something that aristocratic women really do, which is raise their own children
particularly. They get them teachers and they get them wet nurses and it would be considered
quite weird for her to be overly involved in the raising of her children. They get involved
with them when they're adults and then they suddenly become very invested. But aristocratic women and children don't necessarily go, like you just farm them out
until they're eight.
Shall we move on to the year 23 BC?
Because this is quite a big year for Augustus and Livia, isn't it?
You've got illness and you also have a death, like the first big death of the family?
Stesha It is the first big death of the family
and it's huge for Olivia and huge for Augustus. This is the death of Marcellus, who is the son
of Octavia from her first marriage and is at that time the 16-year-old husband of Julia, who is
Augustus' daughter from his previous marriage.
And Octavia is Augustus' sister.
Is his sister, yeah. So he has basically been marked out as the person that Augustus seems to
be choosing as his successor. So he is giving him lots of privileges, he's giving him lots of space,
he has been giving him commands in the army already, even though he's a teenager, he's giving him lots of space, he has been giving him commands in the army already,
even though he's a teenager, he's married, he's made him a son-in-law, which is quite a big deal.
And all of a sudden, there is a plague that runs through Rome. Augustus, he's Augustus by now,
gets sick from it. Marcellus gets sick from it, but Marcellus dies dies and he is then given a huge public funeral and this is treated.
This is the first time that the Julio Claudian family is treated like they are a royal family
really because his death is not just a private death, it's now a death for the empire. He's
written into the Aeneid all of a sudden, then everybody kind of mourns him. And then because
he has died so young, he has a teenager, rumors start to swirl that this was maybe not a natural
death. And then although that doesn't seem to have happened that much at the time, people
start to look back on it afterwards and say, include him in the list of suspicious deaths in the
Julia and Claudian family. But it's the point at which all of the good luck that they have
had up until this point, like Octavian's run up until 23 is kind of fairly flawless. Like
he wins everything, he has eliminated all of his enemies, everybody loves him, almost
no one's trying to kill him.
And then 23, Marcellus dies and it's the first time that one of his plans has kind of not
gone through.
And from there, things start to kind of hurdle a little bit.
It kind of doesn't it?
And I can imagine what Livy is thinking at the same time because over the following years as you've hinted out there.
This isn't the first Marcellus sadly is not the first I mean Augustus is plan seem to just full left right and centre like dominoes.
They do and that point it starts to become like within a few years being marked out as his air seems to be like a curse. So then having kind of run out of nephews, Augustus then adopts two of his own grandchildren.
So his daughter, he then marries off to Marcus Agrippa, his best friend, and they have a
load of children and he adopts the oldest two and takes them as his sons.
And then he starts raising them as his children and to
be his heirs. So he's clearly grooming them from a very young age to take over the empire
there called Gaius and Lucius. Marcus Agrippa dies, but he is in his 50s, so that's not
considered to be so terrible. But then in very rapid succession within six years of each other, Gaius dies of illness
in Marseille and then Lucius dies.
He's stabbed to death because he's not very clever and he's at war with an enemy in the
East and they say to him, do you want to come over and we'll just have a sit down and talk
about this?
And he goes, yeah, all right.
And they were like, oh, jokes on you.
This is actually an assassination.
Um, yeah, it's actually really easy.
So they stab him and he dies of his stab wounds.
And then he adopts his final grandson who's called a gripper posthumous, who
then turns out to be a bit odd or a bit violent in some way, and he has to exile
him because he just can't be trusted to be like
in the city. And at this point, it's just getting a bit like this is kind of four guys
who have been made his heir and who have died. And he adopts Tiberius, who is Livia's oldest
son, who is basically the only adult man left around, everyone else is a baby, and by the time you
get to about 4 CE there's no one left. And so he has to make Tiberius his heir. And Tiberius
is a perfectly fine heir, but people around who don't really want there to be another
emperor who are still kind of getting used to
this idea that there's one guy who is in charge of everything in an extra judicial, extra legal
fashion. It looks incredibly suspicious that all of these young men have just keeled over as soon
as Augustus starts to like them. And then Augustus dies and that doesn't help either.
And then Augustus dies and that doesn't help either. And then the final one is Germanicus who was a big favourite of Augustus, who he seems to have wanted to make a co-heir possibly with Tiberius and he forces Tiberius to adopt him, but he also dies when he's very young in mysterious circumstances, quite early
on in Tiberius' reign while Livyra is still alive.
So everybody, by the end of this, and by the time you get to people like Tacitus and Dio
writing 150 to 100 years later, they're like, there's coincidence and there's coincidence.
Mason.
Because if we focus on those figures who died whilst Augustus was still alive, you know, and it ultimately ends up with Tiberius being named his successor.
Is that the fact that it is Livia's son that you do ultimately later get these stories that suggest, oh, given that these other intended heirs of Augustus die unusually young, Livia must have been involved some way or something like that.
There's no evidence. It's just that rumour starts to emerge that she's involved in their demises. Right.
She's basically, it's kind of a, you know, qui bono who benefits situation, which is that young
people dying is always upsetting and they are all very young. You know, they're all teenagers. I
think that Lucius is the oldest at about 21. And when young people die, everyone thinks there must
be something that could have prevented
it. Like these are, these must be some kind of preventable death. So there's actually a line in
Plutarch, which is completely not to do with this at all. But he says in a epitaph, he says like,
when a young person dies, we always assume poison. And that is what happens here. Like they, even
though, you know, Marcellus dies of something that Augustus is also sick from, he just doesn't
recover. Geist dies in Marseilles and so if Livia can poison from Rome to Marseilles then
that's pretty impressive. Lucius dies of a stab wound which you can't call poison no
matter how hard you try and if you think that she was involved in it then you have to think
that she was in with the Parthians, Rome's great enemy, making plots to secretly kill people,
which again very impressive but I don't think so. It's a cascade of bad luck that people perceive
her to be benefiting from it, which in a way she does, but it would be harder for her to have done
it than for her to not have done it. That's an absolutely fair point.
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American History Hit, a podcast from History Hit. Shall we explore another relationship Livia has during the reign of Augustus? One which
I think is really interesting to cover because I guess we can also use it to explore her relations with women in this emerging imperial family, which
is of course Augustus' young daughter, Julia. Now Emma, can you give us a bit of a backstory
to Julia? You mentioned how she was married to Marcellus, who died young in 23 BC, and
then marries the much older Agrippa, Augustus's best friend.
But can you explain a bit more about who she was and her character,
and how she ultimately comes to blows with Livia?
She does. So she is the daughter of Augustus's first wife, Scribonia, and they don't get on
at all, and Augustus divorces her on the day that Julia is born.
Mason- That's not good.
That's not good for the child, I must say.
Steele- It's not.
And then he kind of abandons them, and you get the feeling that he probably would have
kept them in, like had little to no interest in her for most of the time, except that he
didn't have any children with Livia.
And so he takes her and takes her into the palace and then starts to raise her and uses her
as a proxy for a son basically as a way of making sons in law. So her job is that she marries men
and has children and then the men that she marries have been marked as his successor.
So she marries Marcellus when she is a teenager. When he dies, she marries Marcus Agrippa.
When they have six children, when Marcus Agrippa dies, then she is married to Tiberius.
And that's when things start to go wrong because they absolutely despise each other.
And in fairness to Julia, she's very well behaved up until that point.
So for like first 30 years of her life, she does exactly as she is told. She has the children, she marries the men, she doesn't cause too much
trouble. But she is married to Tiberius. They despise each other quite violently and they
both go off the rails at the same point. But she basically, her revenge or her rebellion
against her father is that she just starts having sex with absolutely everybody. And it seems that she's always had quite a kind of lively personality. Like
she's always been interested in having parties and telling jokes and looking pretty and hanging
out with fun people, much to the disapproval of Livia on Augustus. There's this fourth
century collection by a guy called Macrobius, which has all of these
jokes that they tell. And it's always Augustus being like, why can't you have better friends
like Livia? Why do you have to be surrounded by handsome young men? Why can't you be more like
your stepmother who is always surrounded by old wise men? Why do you have to pluck out all of your gray hairs?
Why are you wearing makeup?
Why are you wearing such a pretty dress?
That kind of thing.
And she just kind of goes a bit wild.
And the stories are of her having an affair with Mark Anthony's surviving son.
Yes.
Yeah.
So, which is a real kind of like two fingers up to dad.
So which is a real kind of like two fingers up to dad. And then real wild stories about her having sex on the rostra in the forum. So in like the center of the Roman Republic of having sex on
or nearby a statue of liberty, which opponents to Augustus used, like really publicly and flagrantly and quite aggressively, like flaunting
the fact that she's really angry at her dad. And when he finds out about it, which is quite
quickly, he has her exiled to an island and says that she is never allowed to speak to
a man ever again, unless they're very ugly. Is that line really in there?
Unless they are very ugly, she cannot speak to a man.
Yeah.
So eventually he relents and after five years she is allowed to move back to mainland Italy
and live in a town, but he still will not allow men to visit her.
And with Livi, do you think Livi is involved in that at all?
It doesn't sound like they had a very good relationship.
They did not have a particularly good relationship, but everything that you get actually is Augustus
being furious.
Because the people, and Livia seems to largely stay out of it.
Although there's a question over whether she owned the house that he, that she was exiled
to.
But she certainly doesn't feel any sympathy towards Julia because when Augustus
dies, she does nothing to help her. And Augustus is furious. And I suspect Livia is equally
furious. Like whenever people say, won't you let Julia come back to Rome? He's like, no,
I'd literally rather die. He never ever forgives her.
Will let's move on then to 14 AD. This is the death of Augustus and Livia is still around.
But even Augustus's death, this is also a story where Livia, that more scandalous side
of Livia that has survived to us today, thanks to the likes of Tacitus and Cassius Dio, it
rears its head here as well.
Livia It does. I actually kind of love this story,
because basically it seems that the core of it is that when Augustus died, he's like
80, 86, I think, she didn't let the information out of the palace for a little while. She
made sure that everybody was on board with Tiberius before she told anybody
that he was dead. And as a result, this kind of then spirals into stories. And the earliest
sources are kind of a bit tiptoe-y about it. So they'll be like, oh, maybe I'm not 100%
make, there were rumors and suspicions. And Pliny says something, Pliny the Elder, who
is a natural historian, polymath, he says that there was kind of suspicions and Pliny says something, Pliny the Elder, who is a natural historian, polymath,
he says that there was suspicions that there were intrigues involved. So you get this kind of innuendo
about it. And then you get Cassius Dio, who has no time for innuendo whatsoever. And he's like,
right, this is what happened. She knew that he was going to make his adopted son Agrippa Postumus, he was going to bring him back from exile
and he was going to make him emperor instead of Tobias. And she wasn't having any of that and she
found out about it. But she knew that he had tasters and that she couldn't poison him, so they
went for a walk around their garden and picked figs from the tree. But beforehand, she had painted
poison on some of the figs. So she picked
one that she knew there wasn't poison on and ate it and then picked a poisoned one and
gave it to him and that's how she killed him. Which, you know, as a story is great. And
if she did also great, but also he was 86 years old, she probably could have just waited
a minute.
I'm glad that we mentioned the poison fig story because it's quite an image to think
about. And I guess also we should mention the weird Agrippa Postimus. I mean, he doesn't
survive long after Augustus' death anyway. Do you think Livy is involved? I don't want
to say understandable, but if you're in their mindset, Tiberius is the new emperor. You
don't want a potential rival there. So do you think
she is potentially involved in sending someone to get rid of, to do away with Agripposthumus
when Augustus dies?
CW I think probably yes. There is much more likely that she would at least approved of
that. And I think she probably also approved because Julia also dies that year. They starved Julia to death.
Oh, goodness.
Yes, is extremely cruel. But they're, and I think that, yeah, they either she or she and Tiberius together agree that they can't have any rivalry to his claim. And so these are the two adults who
are of Augustus's bloodline because Tiberius isn't.
They make him part of a bloodline by posthumously adopting Livia.
So the moment that Augustus dies, Livia becomes his sister.
Like legally she is then Julia Augusta, his sister, wife, which makes then it totally
fine that Tiberius is his son.
Very weird.
The idea that you need to get rid of these two adult rivals who might be able to say
that they have a better claim to Augustus's inheritance than Livia and Tiberius do is
extremely reasonable to me.
The things that Augustus does while they are married, some
of them are incredibly brutal, and she clearly has no problem with eliminating rivals if
you need to. She doesn't do it in the Mr. Burns way that we imagine people doing it.
She's not like Fulvia, Mark Antony's wife who sticks pins in Cicero's tongue and
stuff like that. She is just much more like, you know, we'll get it done, kill them. I
don't need to. And I think that she would be extremely fine with that happening.
She's incredibly experienced of the early Imperial life by that time, isn't she? Of
several decades married to Augustus and the like. I guess we should also mention perhaps something that may well also motivate her, the fact that it's now,
you mentioned earlier, she has two sons, Tiberius and Drusus. By this time Drusus though, he's
dead. So it is just Tiberius, her only son left.
Yeah. So Drusus dies well off on campaign in Germany. And so Tiberius is everything. And he only has one son as well. But so there
is a very slim margin for her family to survive really, or her direct line to survive and
thrive. And so it's very important. And I do also think that after what she lived through,
she did experience the civil wars too. And a large part of why
everybody accepts Augustus' claim to suddenly be a king who isn't a king and then Tiberius' claim
to be a successor that isn't a successor is that nobody wants that again. Nobody wants the
prescriptions, nobody wants the battles, nobody wants Romans killing Romans, and she can
justify that to herself and everybody can justify it to themselves that if you have to kill kind of
one difficult man on an island in order to prevent a civil war then maybe it's okay and she can and
in order to keep this peace going maybe we need to make some sacrifices.
And whether you agree with her or not is up to you, but you can see how she could, you
know, she has been chased as a young woman while holding her baby twice out of burning
cities and you can see how she would not want either herself or anyone else to experience
that.
So Tiberius, when he succeeds or gusts his, oh his 50s or 60s, isn't he? Olivia's in
her 60s or thereabouts. So how does she fare in the early years of Tiberius then, if she's
left in a prominent position as Augusta by Augustus when he dies? How important a role
does she play in Tiberius' reign, let's say in the early years first
of all?
A much more important role than Tiberius would like.
Because Tiberius is very conservative and I think that what he would like is for quite
a conservative version of the Principate whereby he genuinely is just the first man who gives
advice and everybody takes it if they want
to. And the fact that nobody will, like everybody keeps treating him like he is an emperor and
he kind of struggles to understand that he is. So he really does try immediately to get
Livia out of the more political side of her life. So he starts vetoing her choices. He tries to stop her from having so much contact with senators and with
prominent men and with political figures. He shuts down her parties and tries to force
her into a much more passive role. Her response is to get out these letters and say, you're only there because of me basically. Your stepdad
never liked you anyway and I have saved these letters for decades just in case they ever
needed them and to chase them around the house. She clearly is by that point very settled
into her position as a powerful woman, as a woman who knows what she's doing, who can
and should be able to advise her son who doesn't know what he's doing and does go on to mess
it up quite badly. So like, nobody remembers Tiberius with any great love. And one wonders
if they might have liked him more if he'd taken his mother's advice because she knew
a thing or two about public opinion and how to shape it.
So is there a moment early on, a few years in when Tiberius is just like, right, I'm fed up,
they'll go away, or I'm removing certain honours from you or whatever, I'm going to do it my way.
And you know, it all goes horribly wrong. But I know it's always so kind of like, people always
want to find a moment where it all starts going wrong or where Olivia's influence with her son starts to diminish.
Is there a rough time where we can see that change in their opinion almost?
Well, eventually he quits Rome altogether in order to get away from.
Is it to get away from his mum?
Pretty much.
To get away from everybody, but he does badly want to get away from his mum as well.
He spends more and more time outside of Rome because she
won't leave him alone, essentially. He doesn't even come back to Rome when she dies. He doesn't
go to her funeral or anything. He won't deify her. Eventually he does quit Rome in order to
get away from her, which is quite a big deal. So during the reign of Tiberius Emma, Livia, she's getting older. But you did mention
earlier, there's another big death that happens at this time with the death of Germanicus
and that Livia, I don't want to say involved, but she's mentioned in this story. Can you
explain this story and how it affects Livia?
Yes. So Germanicus is the husband of Augustus' granddaughter Agrippina, Agrippina the younger,
and is very, very popular. He's like the Princess Diana of the early Roman world. People absolutely
will flock to see him. He's handsome, he's successful, he's got loads of children. Everyone
adores him. Augustus adored him and people basically love him more than they love Tiberius. And so when he goes off
on a mission to the east and goes to Syria and then dies of some mysterious illness,
everyone, including his wife, believe that Tiberius and Livia conspired to kill him.
And they believe that he was poisoned by a guy called Piso and his wife Erganilla. And so when Piso and Erganilla come back to Rome,
they are prosecuted for this murder. And it is like the most high profile, you know,
it is imperial family against imperial family, like mega tabloid thing. And Piso is taken to trial.
He's a, you know, a very close friend of Tiberius's, but he is taken to trial
and eventually kills himself.
But Livia takes his wife Ergonila into her house and won't let her be prosecuted.
And whenever people come by and say, we would like to arrest her on suspicion of
murder, she's just like, no, I don't think you are actually.
And she protects her. she just will not allow
her to be prosecuted. And it is a real flex on her part that Tiberius doesn't feel he
can do for his friend. But Livia feels no compunction by this stage. She's in her seventies
and she's like 20 CE ish and she's just feels she's got nothing left to care about this stage like what are you gonna do to me it does make have very unpopular that also because they refuse to come to Germanic is funeral basically they just want leave the palace for it.
And so this feels this idea that she paid for them to kill Germanicicus because he was more popular than her son.
But on a base level, it is a real like right at the end of her life, she has become more
powerful even like in terms of what she can get away with than even the Emperor because
he can't make her do it. No one can make her give up her friend and her friend goes on
to live a very happy life for
another couple of decades.
It's interesting trying to imagine that Emma, you know, all of those decades that she's
walked the tightrope really well with Augustus, you know, rising to this position of prominence
by the time she's in her seventies, just like, no, not as fast about popularity anymore.
I'm in this prestigious position.
I'm going to the car after my friend kind of thing and happy to sacrifice some of that. So it's interesting how that you see that emerge more
in the later stages of her life. I will ask quickly because we don't have too much time,
but of course she doesn't live too long after that. What do we know about the final years
and ultimately the death of Livia? So her power wanes because Tiberius leaves Rome, a bit after that, and moves to Capri
and starts communicating with the Empire via letter, which allows his right-hand man, Serjanus
Yianus, to really take control of everything.
And Livia is by that time quite elderly and quite frail and has without having her son there as her kind of conduit to power,
she has no conduit to power. He has isolated her from a lot of the Senate. So she does
spend the last few years of her life in a much less powerful position, in a kind of
very much a figurehead position within the family and with no access to any real power anymore because Ser Janus has
taken it all. This is what happens when you have a monarch, the person who has the most access to
him gets the most power and when she dies, Tiberius is not heartbroken really. He won't come back for
the funeral. He refuses to deify her. He gives her kind of the smallest funeral that he can get away
with giving her, given how incredibly important that she is. And
then everyone thinks that he's a terrible son and makes him even less popular and leaves
Ser Janus to kind of go rampaging through the state until such a time as Antonia stops
him actually. But yeah, so it's not a sad really because she still dies in her palace pretty much at
the top of her game.
And eventually she is deified by her great grandson.
But she is, I suspect that if she had let her she would have been like Augustus, like
still writing letters and still deciding who was going to be the praetor and the urban
prefect right up until the moment she drew her last breath, but she just wasn't quite able to do it.
It is quite something indeed. Well, what a life she lived, what an extraordinary figure she is, and it's ultimately Claudius. Is it the Emperor Claudius who's her grandson or whoever who deifies her? Finally. And lastly, how do you think we should ultimately remember Livia today?
Not a villain, not a victim.
I mean, how should we think of Livia?
I think that you should remember Livia as an incredibly political woman.
I think that her womanhood often gets in the way of how incredibly savvy she was.
Because of the way that the world worked in the Roman Empire, she was only able to access
her position because of who she was married to.
She would never have had that by herself.
But of all of the women who have access to the amount of power that she had, she works
it so much better than everyone else.
Before her you have Fulvia and Cleopatra and
after her you have people like Agrippina the Younger and Messalina who try to be Augustuses.
She is the only one who does it well. I think that she would be an unbelievable Margaret Thatcher
fix if she had been allowed to. I think that's probably
how you should think of her as a politician more than anything else, who is very invested in her
political project, which is allied with her husband's political project.
Mason- Emma, this has been absolutely fantastic. Last but certainly not least, your most recent
book – it's one of
your recent books isn't it, which explores the stories of many extraordinary women from ancient
Rome, including Livia?
It doesn't include Livia because Livia already has two biographies and I wanted to do women
who didn't have their own biographies. It does include Julia, so it has got Julia Caesar in there.
But it's the history of the Roman Empire in 21 women and goes from the beginning to the
end of the Western Empire through 21 women that you've probably never heard of.
Well, Emma, just goes to me to say, as always, thank you so much for taking the time to come
back on the podcast.
It's always my pleasure.
Well there you go.
There was Dr Emma Southern returning to the podcast to talk through the
extraordinary story of Livia, the first Empress of Rome. I hope you enjoyed the episode.
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