Showing posts with label Roman Empire. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Roman Empire. Show all posts

Monday, December 16, 2013

Nero Claudius Caesar Drusus


Born Lucius Domitius Ahenobarbus in 37 AD, Nero was the son of the notorious Julia Agrippina and Gnaeus Domitius Ahenobarbus. After his father died and Agrippina married Emperor Claudius, he was officially adopted by his stepfather and renamed Nero Claudius Caesar Drusus.

In 54 AD Claudius died and Nero, who was older than the emperor’s own son Britannicus, was installed on the Roman throne at just seventeen years of age. By all accounts, the first years of Nero’s reign were considered to be very good, his administrative practices benefiting the poor by cutting taxes and restricting fines. One sore point was that the Emperor remained under the influence of his mother and that caused some trouble with his advisors. However Nero began to worry about his step-brother Britannicus, believing that the boy might be considered as Claudius’s rightful heir once the boy reached adulthood, and so had him assassinated.

Nero’s relationship with his mother Agrippina was a very sordid story. As Nero grew older he began to grow tired of his mother’s meddling, and Agrippina sensed that she was losing her son’s affections and resorted towards seducing him. Eventually Nero concluded that only death would free him from his mother, and so orchestrated a series of “accidents” for her to fall victim to. When those failed, he took a more direct approach and sent assassins to murder her outright.

The other woman who seemed to be cramping his style was his wife Octavia. He divorced her and sent her into exile, only to be faced with public protest. He was soon forced to allow her back into Rome and was being pressured into reuniting with her. However, Nero had already made plans to marry his mistress Poppaea, and so he arranged for Octavia to be murdered as well. Shortly after Octavia’s death the public grew very discontent with Nero and the Senate. As a response, Nero ordered many executions to silence anyone who dared speak against him. Later on in his reign, Nero developed a severe case of megalomania, which first amused and later terrified the Roman people. Considering himself to be the greatest patron of the arts, it soon became commonplace to see the Emperor performing in plays or singing to crowds of “admirers” who had often been bribed or intimidated into attending their performances.

Nero’s great claim to infamy was his persecutions of Christians, whom he accused of starting the Great Fire of Rome in July of 64 AD. It is widely rumored that Nero himself ordered the fire to be set, although it is known that he did rush back to Rome to begin relief efforts and that gained him a good amount of popularity with the common people. In need of a villain, Nero pointed at the Christians who were already considered to be a strange sect, and made sure that his public knew they were responsible for all the devastation. The mass executions of Christians were turned into public circus spectacles as victims were crucified, burned to death, and thrown into the arena with wild animals.

In 68 AD, the Senate had grown fearful of Nero and voted to replace him with Galba, who was then governor of Spain. Although still very popular with the public, Nero was then declared to be an enemy of Rome by the Senate and was condemned to be executed by literally being whipped to death. Horrified at his apparent fate, Nero decided to die rather by his own hand. Before he could be captured, he stabbed himself in the neck with a dagger. His last words were reported to have been “What an artist dies in me!”



ABOUT THE DOLL

Our version of the Emperor Nero is a very large reworked vinyl doll that is 30” tall and is able to stand upright without aid. A golden leaf crown sits atop his unruly blonde hair, and his eyes are glazed and teary.

Nero wears a white tunic with fancy gold accents over an authentically-wrapped toga of purple satin. In his right hand he holds a golden lyre, a tribute to the rumor that Nero played a ballad while Rome burned. (Contrary to popular belief, fiddles had not yet been invented.)

The gaping wound from the sword is clearly visible, and blood pours down his neck and stains his clothing. His beard is also matted with blood that he would presumably have spit up as a result of his injuries.

See all the Headless Historicals dolls for sale on Etsy.com


Valeria Messalina


The third wife of the Roman Emperor Claudius. Valeria was married to Claudius at the time of his nephew Caligula's assassination and her husband was installed as the successor to the throne. She was only sixteen when their union took place in 38 AD, and bore him two children.

Valeria found great freedom and power in her role as Rome's empress, but was not particularly fond of her aging husband. She began numerous affairs behind his back, and at one point is said to have dressed as a prostitute and challenged the leading woman in the trade to a contest to see who could service the most men.

In 48 AD she turned her attention to her favorite lover, a well-connected man named Caius Silius, and decided that she would much rather have him at her side than her unpopular and dull husband. The two soon began a plot to murder the Emperor. Valeria convinced Claudius that a fortune-teller had forseen that her husband would die, and proposed a plan that he "temporarily" divorce her so that she could take another husband who would surely be victim of the fate. Claudius agreed to this, and Valeria staged a grand public marriage ceremony to Silius.

Word of his wife's true intentions soon reached the ear of Claudius, and though heart-broken, he ordered the execution of both his wife and her lover. It is said that Valeria was given the opportunity to commit suicide, but lacked the courage to do so and was promptly beheaded.


ABOUT THE DOLL

Messalina is a vinyl doll approx. 10" tall. She wears a red chiffon gown with gold cord trimmings. A gold metal and faux ruby ornament is worn on her chest, and strands of faux pearls and gold beads encircle her wrists and ankles as well as a cord that hangs from her belt.

Her headdress is made with metallic gold netting and accented with a strand of faux pearls around her hair.

See all the Headless Historicals dolls for sale on Etsy.com


Cleopatra VII Thea Philopator

One of Egypt’s most famous and charismatic rulers, Cleopatra first co-ruled with Ptolemy XIII, who was both her husband and her brother. When the ambitious Cleopatra tried to nudge her brother out of power, she was removed from power and exiled from Egypt.

Cleopatra came back into power over Egypt after Julius Caesar, who had plans to annex Egypt, grew angry with Ptolemy XIII after the Egyptian king had ordered the death of his political enemy Pompey. After a short civil war, Ptolemy XIII was killed and Caesar restored Cleopatra to the throne along with her younger brother Ptolemy XIV. Caesar and Cleopatra also had a more personal relationship, which resulted in Cleopatra giving birth to his son, whom she named Caesarion. While Cleopatra wanted Julius Caesar to name her son as his heir, Caesar named his nephew Octavian instead. After her brother Ptolemy XIV died, she installed Caesarion as her co-regent in Egypt.

When Julius was assassinated in 44 BC, Cleopatra was summoned to meet with Marc Anthony and used all her charms on him in much of the same manner as she had with Caesar. Anthony was one of the men who ruled over Rome after Caesar’s death, alongside Octavian and Marcus Lepidus. By 37 BC Cleopatra and Marc Anthony conducted their relationship like a marriage, despite the fact that Anthony was married to Octavian’s sister, and living in the palace at Alexandria with their three children.

This did not go over very well with the Romans, and the ever-present threat that Caerarion could lay a claim on Julius Caesar’s legacy weighed heavily on Octavian. War soon ensued, and by 30 BC the Roman army advanced on Alexandria. Marc Anthony committed suicide after being told that Cleopatra had died, a deception thought to have been engineered by Cleopatra in order to appease Octavian. After realizing that Octavian planned to dethrone and humiliate her, it is widely believed that Cleopatra committed suicide by coaxing a deadly asp to bite her breast.


ABOUT THE DOLL

Our commemorative doll of this famous Egyptian Queen stands 19” tall and is dressed in a creamy silk gown with hand-beaded belt ornament and collar. Her hair is fixed in a classic style and adorned with a bird-design headdress in gold and blue beads.

All of her features are hand-painted, and her exposed breast shows the fatal snakebite. A small amount of blood and spittle is smeared around her lips.

See all the Headless Historicals dolls for sale on Etsy.com




Gaius Julius Ceasar

Rome's most famous dictator was born around 100 BC. Beginning his career in the army, he led an invasion into England and greatly glorified the Roman Republic. In 65 BC he developed an interest in politics and was appointed to organize public entertainment in Rome. He took well to this task and won the approval of the common citizens who enjoyed the various festivals and circuses he arranged.

In 58 BC he was appointed to be governor of Gaul, where he successfully conquered more land for the expanding republic. He was well-respected and loved by the soldiers he commanded, but his growing ambitions earned him the resentment and suspicions of the politicians.

In 49 BC the Roman Senate ordered him to return control of his army to them, and order that he refused. Instead he advanced with his army into Italy and then onto Rome itself, and in 45 BC he took the position of dictator of Rome.

After he removed some of the Senators that opposed him with men who were loyal to him, the displaced politicians grew fearful and resentful of his ever-growing ego and plotted his downfall. In 44 BC they stabbed him to death in the Senate House.

ABOUT THE DOLL

Julius Caesar is a reworked vinyl doll that stands approx. 15" tall and wears an authentically wrapped white cotton toga with a burgundy satin ribbon and hand stitched gold trim.

Over a dozen stab wounds of varying depths are visible on his face, arms, and through tears in the fabric. His toga is stained with blood from his ordeal.

See all the Headless Historicals dolls for sale on Etsy.com


Julia Agrippina

JULIA AGRIPPINA

Also known as "Agrippina the Younger", Julia was the wife of the Roman Emperor Claudius and mother to the infamous Emperor Nero.

Known throughout history for being a woman of exceptional ambition and cunning, she helped orchestrate the downfall of the former Empress before taking her place at the widower Emperor's side.

To ensure herself a long-term position of power, Agrippina convinced her husband to adopt Nero (her son from a previous marriage) and name him as his heir after marrying him to Claudius's daughter Octavia. When Claudius began to have second thoughts about leaving the Empire to Nero, Agrippina had him murdered.

The epitome of a stage mother, Agrippina was never far from her son's ear when it came to ruling over Rome. When his attentions waned, it is widely rumored that she even seduced him in order to keep him loyal to her. Eventually Nero grew tired of his mother's meddling and schemed to have her killed by staging a series of "accidents" - all of which Agrippina successfully avoided. Finally Nero did away with the subtleties and sent some assassins to her house where she was stabbed to death.

There are two stories that account for the ghastly mutilation of her lower abdomen. Some claim that Agrippina herself ordered her murderers to strike her in the stomach, distraught over the thought of her son calling for her death. Another account, which is certainly not uncharacteristic of Nero, was that the upon viewing her body the Emperor ordered that her womb be cut open so that he might see where he came from.


ABOUT THE DOLL

Agrippina is a reworked vinyl doll that stands approx. 14" tall and has hand-painted features. She wears a white satin gown and palla with royal purple ribbon trim. She has brown painted shoes and wears amber and gold beaded bracelets and a necklace with a tiny coin ornament.

Agrippina's face has been deeply slashed with a sword, and her hands are also blooded. Her gown is ripped open to reveal the gory wound and partial disembowelment of the stomach and womb.

SOLD

See all the Headless Historicals dolls for sale on Etsy.com