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Gnaeus Domitius Ahenobarbus (consul 32) : ウィキペディア英語版
Gnaeus Domitius Ahenobarbus (consul 32)

Gnaeus Domitius Ahenobarbus (11 December (? ca. 2 BC) – January 40 AD) was a close relative of the five Roman Emperors of the Julio-Claudian dynasty. Domitius was the only son of Antonia Major (niece of the emperor Augustus and daughter of Augustus' sister Octavia Minor who was married to triumvir Mark Antony) and Lucius Domitius Ahenobarbus (consul 16 BC). His only siblings were Domitia Lepida the Elder and Domitia Lepida the Younger, mother of the Empress Valeria Messalina (third wife of the Emperor Claudius). He was a great-nephew of the Emperor Augustus, brother-in-law and second cousin of the Emperor Caligula; maternal cousin of the Emperor Claudius and the biological father to the Emperor Nero.
==Life==
Domitius was born ca. 2 BC based on his consulship in AD 32. Other opinions place his birth ca. 20 BC in order to allow him sufficient age to accompany Gaius Caesar on the Eastern Campaign of AD 2. The discrepancies are not reconcilable. But the fact that his two nephews were born ca. AD 18 supports the late birth argument.
Domitius was closely related to several notable figures who would dominate the Roman Empire during the 1st century. Suetonius describes him as ‘despicable and dishonest’. Suetonius says that as a young man, Domitius was serving on the staff of his second cousin Gaius Caesar in the East, but this seems odd because Domitius appears to have been born ca. 2 BC, and Gaius went East in AD 2. Gaius was a son of Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa and Julia the Elder, daughter to the previously mentioned Augustus. Domitius fortified their friendship by killing his freedman for refusing to drink as much as he was told.〔Suetonius〕 The reported reason was that the freedman did not get as drunk as Domitius did. On the Appian Way, Domitius was reported of having deliberately run over a child who was playing with his doll. At the Roman Forum, Domitius reportedly pulled out an eye of an equestrian because the equestrian openly criticized him. Gaius Stern claims that the Eastern expedition is actually that of Germanicus in AD 17-19, in keeping with the late birth date ca. 2 BC.〔Gaius Stern, "Nero's Father, the Ara Pacis, and the Ravenna Relief," CAAS 2015.〕
Domitius cheated on bankers for purchases he made. When he was Praetor, Domitius would swindle the prize money of victorious charioteers. Managers would complain, but Domitius decreed that future prizes would be paid on the spot. Domitius was also considered a serious womanizer. The Emperor Tiberius charged him with treason, adultery and incest with his sister and also with adultery with another noblewoman, but the ascension of Caligula saved him.
Domitius married his second cousin Agrippina the Younger, Caligula's sister, after her thirteenth birthday in 28.〔Tac. ''Ann''. 4.75.〕 He was 30 years old at the time. Tiberius arranged and ordered the marriage which was celebrated in Rome. Domitius was wealthy but apparently he and Agrippina chose to live between Antium (Anzio) and Rome.
Domitius was Consul in 32 and appointed by Tiberius as a commissioner in early 37. His son Lucius Domitius Ahenobarbus, later Emperor Nero, was born on 15 December 37 in Antium. According to Suetonius, he was congratulated by his friends for the birth of his son and Domitius said any child born to him and Agrippina would have a detestable nature and become a public danger, a fact that became true during the second part of Nero's reign. When Nero castrated a boy named Sporus and married him as a wife, Suetonius quoted one Roman who lived around this time who remarked that the world would have been better off if Nero's father had married someone more like the castrated boy.〔(Ancient History Sourcebook: Suetonius: De Vita Caesarum--Nero, c. 110 C.E. )〕
He died of edema at Pyrgi (an ancient Etruscan city) in January 40. In Domitius' will, Nero inherited 1/3 of his estate. But Caligula, who was also mentioned in the will, took Nero's inheritance for himself. When Claudius became Emperor, Nero's inheritance was restored.〔Suetonius, ''Nero'' 5, 6〕〔Tacitus, ''Annales'' iv. 75, vi. 1, 47, xii. 64〕〔Marcus Velleius Paterculus ii. 72〕〔Cassius Dio, lviii. 17〕

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