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  1. Ulpia Severina was Roman empress as the wife of Roman emperor Aurelian from c. 270 to 275. Severina is unmentioned in surviving literary sources and known only from coinage and inscriptions and as a result, very little is known about her.

  2. Feb 25, 2021 · Ulpia Severina (r. 270-275) was the wife of Aurelian and may have ruled briefly after him, making her a rare occurrence of a Roman empress who ruled alone. Based partly on coin portraits of Ulpia Severina, as well as a gender-shifted bust of her husband, Aurelian (270-275).

    • Arienne King
  3. Overview. Authors: Margherita Cassia. Considers the life of Ulpia Severina, wife of Aurelian. Uses little-known epigraphic sources, alongside the better known literary and numismatic record. Sheds light on third-century Roman politics. Part of the book series: Queenship and Power (QAP) 214 Accesses.

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  5. Ulpia Severina was the emperor Aurelian's (q.v.) wife; little is known about her. She became Augusta late in his reign (274), and her coinage continued well after the death of her husband. She probably retired into private life after some sort of interregnum before the reign of Tacitus (q.v.). 124 related objects.

  6. Oct 25, 2020 · by Daniel Voshart. published on 25 October 2020. Download Full Size Image. A imaginative reconstruction of what the Roman empress Ulpia Severina (r. 275 CE) may have looked like. Based partly on coin portraits of Ulpia Severina, as well as a gender-shifted bust of her husband, Aurelian (270-275).

  7. Ulpia Severina, spouse of Aurelian, and . Magnia Urbica, wife of Carinus—and are listed in Anne Kolb’s seminal prosopography published in 2010, 1. Ulpia Severina. is certainly one of the most enigmatic and least known, even if, on the basis of the substantial coinage in her name, many scholars

  8. Ancestry Of Aurelian's Wife: Ulpia Severina. Paper demonstrating the descent of Ulpia Severina, Emperor Aurelian's wife, from Arrius Calpurnius Piso, who was the common ancestor of all Roman Emperors post Hadrian. Arrius C. Piso, being the main creator of the Christian religion, and its first bishop of Rome, "St. Peter".

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