Pomponia Graecina

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Pomponia Graecina was a noble Roman woman of the 1st century who was related to the Julio-Claudian dynasty. She was the wife of Aulus Plautius, the general who led the Roman conquest of Britain in 43, and was renowned as one of the few people who dared to publicly mourn the death of a kinswoman killed by the Imperial family. She was probably an early Christian, and is identified by some as Lucina or Lucy, a saint honoured by the Roman Catholic Church.

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[edit] Family Background

Pomponia's background is not entirely certain, but can be reconstructed as follows. Her father was probably Gaius Pomponius Graecinus, who was suffect consul in 16 BC and a correspondent of Ovid.[1] Graecinus' wife was Asinia, daughter of Gaius Asinius Pollio,[citation needed] and through her Pomponia was related to the Imperial family.

Asinia's father Pollio was the eldest son of Gaius Asinius Gallus, who was consul in 8 BC, and his wife Vipsania, daughter of the general and politician Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa.[2] By her former husband, the future emperor Tiberius, Vipsania was also the mother of Drusus the Younger. Vipsania's half-siblings, from her father's marriage to Augustus' daughter Julia, included Agrippina the Elder, mother of the emperor Caligula and Agrippina the Younger, who was the mother of Nero and wife of Claudius.

Other notable ancestors on her mother's side include Cicero's friend Titus Pomponius Atticus - Vipsania's mother was Atticus's daughter Caecilia - and the historian and senator Gaius Asinius Pollio, who was consul in 40 BC.

[edit] Biography

Pomponia married Aulus Plautius (d. by 65), a senator and general who led the Roman conquest of Britain in 43, for which he later received later a military ovation, and governed Roman Britain until 47. A younger Aulus Plautius, probably their son, was murdered by the emperor Nero, supposedly because Nero's mother Agrippina had fallen in love with him and encouraged him to bid for the throne.[3]

In 43, Pomponia's relative Julia, daughter of her uncle Julius Caesar Drusus, was executed on the orders of her maternal uncle, the emperor Claudius, apparently on the instigation of the empress Valeria Messalina. Pomponia spent the next forty years in open mourning in defiance of successive emperors. She escaped punishment for this, possibly as a result of her own illustrious ancestry and her husband's sterling military reputation, which gave her prestige. According to Tacitus, Pomponia lived a long, unhappy life, possibly as a result of her son's murder and the deaths of several relatives associated with the Imperial family. In 57 Pomponia was charged with practicing a "foreign superstition", usually understood to mean conversion to Christianity. According to ancient Roman tradition, she was tried by her husband before her kinsmen, and acquitted.[4]

Inscriptions in the catacombs of Saint Callistus in Rome suggest that members of Pomponia’s family were indeed Christians. The archaeologist Battista de Rossi identifies her with Saint Lucina, the purported donor of the part of the catacombs where the inscriptions were found, and suggests that Lucina was Pomponia's baptismal name.[5] Saint Lucina is honored by the Roman Catholic Church on the 30 June.[6] She is said to have visited the martyrs Martinian and Processus, the two former guards at the Mamertine Prison who had been converted by their prisoner Saint Peter, in prison, and buried their bodies after their execution.[7]

[edit] Fictional depictions

Pomponia Graecina and her husband Aulus Plautius are informal adoptive parents of Ligia, the heroine of Henryk Sienkiewicz's 1895 historical novel Quo Vadis. The novel presents both Pomponia and her adoptive daughter as secret Christians, something that Plautius either does not know or chooses to ignore. In the 1951 film adaptation she was played by Nora Swinburne.

[edit] References

  1. ^ William Smith, Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, 1870, Vol 3 p. 492
  2. ^ William Smith, Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, 1870, Vol. 3 p. 438
  3. ^ Suetonius, Nero 35
  4. ^ Tacitus, Annals 13.32
  5. ^ "Crypt of Lucina" in the 1913 Catholic Encyclopedia.
  6. ^ St. Lucina - Catholic Online
  7. ^ St. Luke Orthodox Church - Saints, April 11th