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  1. Tiberius
    Second Roman emperor

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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › TiberiusTiberius - Wikipedia

    Tiberius Julius Caesar Augustus [b] ( / taɪˈbɪəriəs /, ty-BEER-ee-əs; 16 November 42 BC – 16 March AD 37) was Roman emperor from AD 14 until 37. He succeeded his stepfather Augustus, the first Roman emperor. Tiberius was born in Rome in 42 BC to Roman politician Tiberius Claudius Nero and his wife, Livia Drusilla.

    • He Had A Controlling Mother
    • Alternate History: Augustus Courted Livia
    • Tiberius Was Forced to Divorce His First Wife For Another
    • Tiberius Against His Mother
    • Tiberius Helped Found The Julio-Claudian Dynasty
    • A Long Military Career
    • He Was Once A Respected Emperor
    • Just One Memorial
    • The Emperor Flees Rome
    • In Rome, A New Leader

    It is suspected that Tiberius’ mother Livia Drusilla(58 BC – AD 29) had grand aspirations for her son and was therefore highly controlling. When she divorced her first husband, she married Emperor Augustus, which some saw as a manipulative move to make her son heir to the throne. Some even say she eventually murdered Augustus to speed along the pro...

    In another version of history, others say it was Augustus who hunted Livia, divorcing his then wife, Scribonia, just after their daughter was born, and forcing Livia to divorce Tiberius’ father so they could marry.

    Tiberius was pushed out of his first marriage by his step-father Augustus, who was the Emperor. Married to his first love, Vipsania Agrippina, they already had a child together, while Agrippa was pregnant with their second. But he was forced to divorce her and marry Augustus’s daughter Julia instead, becoming step-father to her two children instead...

    After reluctantly becoming Emperor, one of the first decisive moves he made was to push out his controlling mother. He banned her from public affairs, forbid her to host a wake for Augustus, and refused all future contact with her. Even when she was dying, he refused to visit her, and had little involvement in her funeral.

    Tiberius ruled under the Julio-Claudian dynasty, along with the first four emperors of the Roman Empire: Augustus, Claudius, Caligula and Nero. The name came from the two primary families to which these emperors belonged – the Julia and the Claudia.

    Before becoming Emperor, Tiberius was an impressive army general, leading with distinction in a series of military campaigns, including securing Pannonia in the east and stabilising the area surrounding the Rhine in the North. In fact, he already had a long career in the military, and did not become Emperor until he was 55 years old.

    In his early years as Emperor, Tiberius’ reign ran smoothly. He followed his stepfather’s example, granting the Roman Senaterespect and authority and was a diligent and scrupulous administrator. He even avoided any major conflicts, wars or campaigns and maintained the city’s borders and finances well. But unfortunately, his sour demeanour, paranoid...

    Unlike many Roman Emperors, who left behind vast monuments, statues and temples in their honour, Tiberius had only one temple built in commemoration of his name, once located in the Greek city of Smyrna, now modern-day Turkey.

    When Tiberius’ son with his first beloved wife died, Tiberius made a retreat to the Island of Capri. Moving into a villa complex, he remained there for the rest of his reign in a form of semi-retirement, while the Empire was still under his name. But this retreat from Rome was seen by the public as a form of desertion, and he soon became despised b...

    While in exile, Tiberius left his trusted ally Lucius Aelius Sejanus, head of the Praetorian Guard, virtually in charge of Rome, in all but name. Tyrannical and unpredictable, Sejanus killed anyone who threatened his newfound power. But when it was discovered that Sejanus was having an affair with the emperor’s niece, and was planning to overthrow ...

    • Rosie Lesso
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  3. 3 days ago · May 26, 2024. Introduction. When we think of the great emperors of Rome, names like Augustus, Trajan, and Marcus Aurelius often come to mind. But one ruler who deserves a place in that pantheon is Tiberius, the second emperor of the Julio-Claudian dynasty who reigned from 14 to 37 AD.

  4. The Roman Empire. Emperors. Tiberius | PBS. Bust of Emperor Tiberius. Never the preferred heir, Tiberius (42 BC – 37 AD / reigned 14 – 37 AD) soon showed why Augustus had wanted someone else....

  5. Tiberius - Roman Empire, Successor, Augustus: Although the opening years of Tiberius’s reign seem almost a model of wise and temperate rule, they were not without displays of force and violence, of a kind calculated to secure his power. The one remaining possible contender for the throne, Postumus, was murdered, probably at Tiberius’s orders.

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