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==Biography== ===Birth and early life=== [[File:(Venice) Antonia Minore in Museo Archeologico Nazionale.jpg|thumb|Antonia Minor in Museo Archeologico Nazionale of Venice, second half of the 1st century AD]] She was born in Athens, and after 36 BC was taken to Rome by her mother with her siblings. She was the youngest of five. Her mother had three children, named [[Claudia Marcella Major]], [[Claudia Marcella Minor]], and [[Marcus Claudius Marcellus (nephew of Augustus)|Marcus Claudius Marcellus]], from her first marriage and another daughter, named [[Antonia Major]], by the same father (Mark Antony). Antonia never knew her father; Mark Antony divorced her mother in 32 BC and committed suicide in 30 BC. She was raised by her mother, her uncle, and her aunt, [[Livia]] Drusilla and inherited properties in [[Roman Italy|Italy]], [[Roman Greece|Greece]], and [[Roman Egypt|Egypt]].{{Citation needed|date=January 2025}} She was said to have received visitors to her house, such as [[Decimus Valerius Asiaticus|Valerius Asiaticus]] and [[Lucius Vitellius]], a consul and the father of the future emperor [[Vitellius|Aulus Vitellius]].<ref>Tacitus, ''Annals'' 11.3</ref> ===Marriage and family=== In 16 BC, she married the Roman general and future consul (9 BC) [[Nero Claudius Drusus]]. Drusus was the stepson of her uncle Augustus, second son of Livia Drusilla, and brother of future Emperor [[Tiberius]]. They had many children, but only three survived: the famous general [[Germanicus]], [[Livilla]], and the Roman Emperor [[Claudius]].<ref name=Kikkinos11>{{Cite book|title=Antonia Augusta: Portrait of a Great Roman Lady|last=Kokkinos|first=Nikos|publisher=Psychology Press|year=1992|isbn=9780415080293|pages=11}}</ref> A poem by [[Crinagoras of Mytilene]] mentions Antonia's first pregnancy, which may be of a child before Germanicus who must have died in infancy or early childhood.<ref name=Kikkinos11/><ref>{{Cite book|title=Matrona Docta: Educated Women in the Roman Élite from Cornelia to Julia Domna|last=Hemelrijk|first=Emily Ann|publisher=Psychology Press|year=2004|isbn=9780415341271|pages=109}}</ref><ref>{{cite thesis|url=https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/10098742/1/out.pdf |title=An Edition with Commentary of the Selected Epigrams of Crinagoras|last=Ypsilanti|first=Maria|year=2003|publisher=University College London}}</ref> Drusus died in June 9 BC in [[Germany]], due to complications from injuries he sustained after falling from a horse. After his death, although pressured by her uncle to remarry, she never did. Antonia raised her children in Rome. Tiberius adopted Germanicus in 4 AD.<ref>(Suetonius Tiberius 15, Gai. 1., Div. Claudius 2)</ref> Germanicus died in 19 AD, allegedly poisoned through the handiwork of [[Gnaeus Calpurnius Piso (consul 7 BC)|Gnaeus Calpurnius Piso]] and [[Munatia Plancina]]. Tacitus suggests but does not outright say in ''Annals'' 3.3 that, on the orders of [[Tiberius]] and Livia Drusilla, Antonia was forbidden to go to his funeral. When Livia Drusilla died in June of [[29 AD]], Antonia took care of her younger grandchildren Caligula, Agrippina the Younger, [[Julia Drusilla]], [[Julia Livilla]], and later [[Claudia Antonia]].{{citation needed|date=October 2021}} ===Conflict with Livilla=== In 31 AD, a plot by her daughter [[Livilla]] and Tiberius’ notorious Praetorian prefect, [[Sejanus]], to murder the Emperor Tiberius and Caligula and to seize the throne for themselves, was exposed by [[Apicata]], the estranged ex-wife of Sejanus. Livilla allegedly poisoned her husband, Tiberius' son, [[Drusus Julius Caesar]] (nicknamed "Castor"), in 23 AD to remove him as a rival. Sejanus was executed before Livilla was implicated in the crime. After Apicata's accusation, which came in the form of a letter to the emperor, several co-conspirators were executed while Livilla was handed over to her mother for punishment. [[Cassius Dio]] states that Antonia imprisoned Livilla in her room until she starved to death.<ref>Cassius Dio Histories 58.11.7</ref> ===Succession of Caligula and death=== When [[Tiberius]] died, [[Caligula]] became emperor in March 37 AD. Caligula awarded her a senatorial decree, granting her all the honors that [[Livia Drusilla]] had received in her lifetime. She was also offered the title of ''[[Augusta (honorific)|Augusta]]'', previously only given to Augustus's wife Livia, but rejected it. Antonia died on 1 May 37. Suetonius and Cassius Dio claim she was driven to suicide by Caligula. According to Barrett,<ref>Barrett, A. A., 1989, ''Caligula. The Corruption of Power'', 62. The date is derived from the ''Fasti Ostienses'' which states that Antonia died on the Kalends of May, 'K. Mais Antonia diem suum obit', supplied by Smallwood, E., 1967, ''Documents Illustrating The Principates of Gaius, Claudius and Nero'', Cambridge University Press, no. 31, p. 28.</ref> <blockquote>But since he had not reached Rome until 28 March, and was absent from the city for much of April, collecting the remains of his mother and brother, there would hardly have been much time to drive Antonia to her death by insulting behaviour. It is also difficult to imagine that he would have paid her no honours on her death, as Suetonius implies. She died at a time when the euphoria of the beginning of his reign was still rampant, and quite apart from any question of personal affection, a public slight at this time to the most respected woman in Rome, whose death was marked in local Fasti, would have been politically unimaginable.</blockquote> When Claudius became emperor after his nephew's assassination in 41 AD, he gave his mother the title of ''Augusta''. Her birthday became a public holiday, which had yearly games and public sacrifices held. An image of her was paraded in a carriage.
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