Livius Drusus, the
the Senones at the time when the Capitol was be patronus senatus of B.
the Senones at the time when the Capitol was be patronus senatus of B.
William Smith - 1844 - Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities - a
Vatic.
xxi.
p.
49, ed.
Dind.
;
Moerlin, de Panegyricis veterum programma, 4to. , Strab. vii. pp. 302, 305 ; Plut. Demetr. 39, 52;
Noremb. 1738; and Heyne, Censura XII Pare- Polyaen. vii. 25; Memnon, c. 5, ed. Orell. ) Pau-
gyricorum veterum, in his Opuscula Academica, vol. sanias, indeed, gives a different account of the
vi. p. 80.
transaction, according to which Lysimachus him-
(Sidon. Apollin. Epist. viii. 12; comp. Panegyr. I self escaped, but his son Agathocles having fallen
## p. 1075 (#1095) ##########################################
DRUSILLA.
1075
DRUSUS.
into the power of the enemy, he was compelled to what to do. It was impiety to mourn the goddess,
purchase his liberation by concluding a treaty on and it was death not to mourn the woman. Seve-
the terms already mentioned. (Paus. i. 9. § 6. ) ral suffered death for entertaining a relative or
The dominions of Dromichaetes appear to have ex- guest, or saluting a friend, or taking a bath, in the
tended from the Danube to the Carpathians, and days that followed her funeral
. (Dion Cass. lix. ll;
his subjects are spoken of by Pausanias as both Senec. Consol. ad Polyb. 36. )
numerous and warlike. (Paus. I. c. ; Strab. vii. 3. JULIA DRUSILLA, the daughter of the
pp. 304, 305; Niebuhr, Kleine Schriften, p. 379; emperor Caius (Caligula) by his wife Caesonia.
Droysen, Nachfolg. Alex. p. 589. )
She was born, according to Suetonius (Caligula,
2. A leader of Thracian mercenaries (probably 25), on the day of her mother's marriage, or, ac-
of the tribe of the Getae) in the service of Antio- cording to Dio (lix. 29), thirty days afterwards.
chus II. (Polyaen. iv. 16. )
On the day of her birth, she was carried by her
3. One of the generals of Mithridates, probably father round the temples of all the goddesses, and
a Thracian by birth, who was sent by him with an placed upon the knee of Minerva, to whose patron-
army to the support of Archelaus in Greece. (Ap- age he commended her maintenance and educa-
pian. Mithr. 32, 41. )
(E. H. B. ] tion. Josephus (Ant. Jud. xix. 2) relates, that
DROMOCLEIDES (Apopokleions) of Sphetius, Caligula pronounced it to be a doubtful question
an Attic orator of the time of Demetrius Phalereus, whether he or Jupiter had the greater share in her
who exercised a great influence upon public affairs paternity. She gave early proof of her legiti-
at Athens by his servile fattery of Demetrius macy by the ferocity and cruelty of her disposition,
Poliorcetes. (Plut. Demetr. 13, 14, Praecept. Polit. for, while yet an infant, she would tear with her
p. 798. )
(L. S. ] little nails the eyes and faces of the children who
DROMOCRIDES, or, as some read, Dro- played with her. On the day that her father was
mocleides, is mentioned by Fulgentius (Mythol. i. assassinated, she was killed by being dashed
17) as the author of a Theogony, but is otherwise against a wall, A. D. 41, when she was about two
unknown. (Fabric. Bibl. Graec. i. p. 30. ) [L. S. ] years old.
DROMON (Apouwv). 1. An Athenian comic 4. DRUSILLA, daughter of Herodes Agrippa I. ,
poet of the middle comedy, from whose Yártpia king of the Jews, by his wife Cypros, and sister
two fragments are quoted by Athenaeus (vi. p. of Herodes Agrippa II. , was only six years old
240, d. , ix. p. 409, e. ). In the former of these when her father died in A. D. 44. She had been
fragments mention is made of the parasite Tithy- already promised in marriage to Epiphanes, son of
mallus, who is also mentioned by Alexis, Timocles, Antiochus, king of Comagene, but the match was
and Antiphanes, who are all poets of the middle broken off in consequence of Epiphanes refusing
comedy, to which therefore it is inferred that Dro- to perform his promise of conforming to the Jewish
mon also belonged. A play of the same title is religion. Hereupon Azizus, king of Emesa, ob-
ascribed to EUBULUS. (Meineke, Frag. Com. tained Drusilla as his wife, and performed the
Graec. i. p. 418, iii. pp. 541, 542. )
condition of becoming a Jew. Afterwards, Felix,
2. A slave of the Peripatetic philosopher, Stra- the procurator of Judaea, fell in love with her,
ton, who emancipated him by his will. (Diog. and induced her to leave Azizus-a course to
Laërt. v. 63. ) He is included in the lists of the which she was prompted not only by the fair
Peripatetics. (Fabric. Bibl. Graec. iii. p. 492. ) (P. S. ] promises of Felix, but by a desire to escape the
DRUSILLA. 1. Livia DRUSILLA, the mo- annoyance to which she was subjected by the envy
ther of the emperor Tiberius and the wife of Au- of her sister Berenice, who, though ten years
gustus. (Livia. ]
older, vied with her in beauty. She thought, per-
2. DRUSILLA, a daughter of Germanicus and haps, that Felix, whom she accepted as a second
Agrippina, was brought up in the house of her busband, would be better able to protect her than
grandmother Antonia. Here she was deflowered Azizus, whom she divorced. In the Acts of the
by her brother Caius (afterwards the emperor Apostles (xxiv. 24), she is mentioned in such a
Caligula), before he was of age to assume the toga manner that she may naturally be supposed to have
virilis, and Antonia had once the misfortune to be been present when St. Paul preached before her
an eye-witness of the incest of these her grand second husband in A. D. 60. Felix and Drusilla
children. (Suet. Caligula, 24. ) In A. D. 33, the had a son, Agrippa, who perished in an eruption
emperor Tiberius disposed of her in marriage to of Vesuvius. (Josephus, Ant. Jud. xix. 7, xx. 5. )
L. Cassius Longinus (Tac. Ann. ri. 15), but her Tacitus (Hist. v. 9) says, that Felix married
brother soon afterwards carried her away from her Drusilla, a granddaughter of Cleopatra and Antony.
husband's house, and openly lived with her as if The Drusilla he refers to, if any such person ever
she were liis wife. In the beginning of his reign, existed, must have been a daughter of Juba and
we find her married to M. Aemilius Lepidus, one Cleopatra Selene, for the names and fate of all the
of his minions. The emperor had debauched all other descendants of Cleopatra and Antony are
his sisters, but his passion for Drusilla exceeded known from other sources; but the account giren
all bounds. When seized with illness, he appointed by Josephus of the parentage of Drusilla is more
her heir to his property and kingdom ; but she consistent than that of Tacitus with the statement
died early in his reigu, whereupon his grief became of Holy Writ, by which it appears that Drusilla
frantic. "He buried her with the greatest pomp, was a Jewess. Some have supposed that Felix
gave her a public tomb, set up her golden image in married in succession two Drusillae, and counten-
the forum, and commanded that she should be ance is lent to this otherwise improbable conjecture
worshipped, by the name Panthea, with the same by an expression of Suetonius (Claud. 28), who
honours as Venus. Livius Geminius, a senator, calls Felix trium reginarum maritum. (J. T. G. ]
swore that he saw her ascending to heaven in the DRUSUS, the name of a distinguished family
company of the gods, and was rewarded with a of the Livia gens. It is said by Suetonius (Tilia
million sesterces for his story. Men knew not | 3), that the first Livius Drusus acquired the cogno
3 2 2
## p. 1076 (#1096) ##########################################
1076
DRUSUS.
DRUSUS.
men Drusue for himself and his descendants, by pian, Gall. iv. fr. 11, ed. Schweigh. ), that they
having slain in close combat one Drausus, a chief- seem to have been annihilated as an independent
tain of the enemy. This Livius Drusus, he goes people, and we never afterwards read of them as
on to say, was propractor in Gaul, and, according being engaged in war against Rome. On this
to one tradition, on his return to Rome, brought supposition, however, according to the ordinary
from his province the gold which had been paid to duration of human life, M.
Livius Drusus, the
the Senones at the time when the Capitol was be patronus senatus of B. c. 122, must have been, not
sieged. This account seems to be as little deserving the almepos, but the odnepos, or grandson's grand-
of credit as the story that Camillus prevented the son's son, of the first Drusus, and hence Pighius
gold from being paid, or obliged it to be restored (l. c. ) proposes to read in Suetonius adnepos in
in the first instance.
place of abnepos.
Of the time when the first Livius Drusus flou- Suetonius (Tib. 2) mentions a Claudius Drusus,
rished, nothing more precise is recorded than that who erected in his own honour a statue with a
M. Livius Drusus, who was tribune of the plebs diadem at Appii Forum, and endeavoured to get
with C. Gracchus in B. c. 122, was his abnepos. This all Italy within his power by overrunning it with
word, which literally means grandson's grandson, his clientelae. If we may judge from the position
may possibly mean indefinitely a more distant de which this Claudius Drusus occupies in the text of
scendant, as atavus in Horace (Carm. i. 1) is used Suetonius, he was not later than P. Claudius
indefinitely for an ancestor.
Pulcher, who was consul in B. C. 249. It is not
Pighius (Annales, i. p. 416) conjectures, that easy to imagine any rational origin of the cogno-
the first Livius Drusus was a son of M. Livius men Drusus in the case of this early Claudius,
Denter, who was consul in B. C. 302, and that which would be consistent with the account of the
Livius Denter, the son, acquired the agnomen of origin of the cognomen given by Suetonius in the
Drusus in the campaign against the Senones under case of the first Livius Drusus. The asserted
Cornelius Dolabella, in B. C. 283. He thinks that origin from the chieftain Drausus may be, as Bayle
the descendants of this Livius Denter Drusus (Dictionnaire, s. v. Drusus) surmises, one of those
assumed Drusus as a family cognomen in place of fables by which genealogists strive to increase the
Denter. There is much probability in this conjec- importance of families. The connexion of the
ture, if the origin of the name given by Suetonius family of Drusus with the first emperors probably
be correct; for the Senones were so completely reflected a retrospective lustre upon its republican
subdued by Dolabella and Domitius Calvinus (Ap- Igreatness. (Virg. Aen. vi. 825. )
STEMMA DRUSORUM.
1. M. Livius Drusus.
1
2. M. Livius Drusus Aemilianus (qu. Mamilianus).
3. C. Livius Drusus, Cos. B. c. 147.
4. M. Livius Drusus, Cos. B. c. 112;
married Cornelia.
5. C. Livius Drusus.
6. M. Livius Drusus, Livia ; married 1. ? Q. Servilius Caepio. =married 2. ? M. Porcius Cato.
Trib. Pl. ; killed B. C.
1
91 ; married Servilia,
1
sister of Q. Servilius
Q. Servilius Servilia ; married 1. M. Servilia ; M. Cato Porcia ;
Caepio.
Caepio, Junius Brutus (m. 2. D. married Utic. married
Trib. Mil. Junius Silanus).
Lucullus.
L. Domit,
B. C. 72.
i
Aheno-
7. Livius Drusus Claudianus.
M. Junius Brutus, tyrannic.
barbus.
adopted by No. 6. :
1
8. M. Livius Drusus Libo, Consul B. c. 15;
adopted by No. 7? ; married Pompeia?
9. Livia Drusilla, afterwards named Julia Augusta ;
m. 1. Tiberius Claudius Nero [2. Augustus Caesar).
20. L. Scribonius Libo Drusus,
son of No. 8. ?
11. Nero Claudius Drusus
(senior), afterwards Drusus
Germanicus; married An-
tonia, minor.
i
12. Tiberius Nero Caesar
(emperor TIBERIUS); m.
1. Vipsania Agrippina.
13. Germanicus
Caesar; married
Agrippina.
14. Livia; 15. Ti. Claudius Drusus Caesar
m. 1. C. Caesar; (emperor CLAUDIUS); married
2. No. 16. 1. Urgulanilla.
16. Drusus Caesar (ju-
nior); died A. D. 23,
leaving a daugh. Julia
3
## p. 1077 (#1097) ##########################################
DRUSUS.
1077
DRUSUS.
a
Julia
20. Agrippi-
|
17. Nero,
m. Julia,
daughter
of No. 16;
died A D. 30.
18. Dru-
sus; died
A. D. 33.
19. Caius Cae-
sar (emperor
CALIGULA);
m. 3. Cacsonia.
na, mother of
21. Drusilla ;
m. 1. L. Cassius,
2. M. Lepidus;
died A. D. 38.
22. Julia Livilla.
a 22. Three other
children; died
young.
23. Drusus;
died A. D.
20.
24. Claudia.
the emperor
Nexo.
Julia
25. Julia Drusila ; died A. D. 4).
OTHER DRUSI.
26. D. Drusus, Consul suffectus B. C. 137. ? (Dig. 1. tit. 13. §. 2. )
27. C. Drusus, historian. (Suet. Augustus, 94. )
sons
1.
Moerlin, de Panegyricis veterum programma, 4to. , Strab. vii. pp. 302, 305 ; Plut. Demetr. 39, 52;
Noremb. 1738; and Heyne, Censura XII Pare- Polyaen. vii. 25; Memnon, c. 5, ed. Orell. ) Pau-
gyricorum veterum, in his Opuscula Academica, vol. sanias, indeed, gives a different account of the
vi. p. 80.
transaction, according to which Lysimachus him-
(Sidon. Apollin. Epist. viii. 12; comp. Panegyr. I self escaped, but his son Agathocles having fallen
## p. 1075 (#1095) ##########################################
DRUSILLA.
1075
DRUSUS.
into the power of the enemy, he was compelled to what to do. It was impiety to mourn the goddess,
purchase his liberation by concluding a treaty on and it was death not to mourn the woman. Seve-
the terms already mentioned. (Paus. i. 9. § 6. ) ral suffered death for entertaining a relative or
The dominions of Dromichaetes appear to have ex- guest, or saluting a friend, or taking a bath, in the
tended from the Danube to the Carpathians, and days that followed her funeral
. (Dion Cass. lix. ll;
his subjects are spoken of by Pausanias as both Senec. Consol. ad Polyb. 36. )
numerous and warlike. (Paus. I. c. ; Strab. vii. 3. JULIA DRUSILLA, the daughter of the
pp. 304, 305; Niebuhr, Kleine Schriften, p. 379; emperor Caius (Caligula) by his wife Caesonia.
Droysen, Nachfolg. Alex. p. 589. )
She was born, according to Suetonius (Caligula,
2. A leader of Thracian mercenaries (probably 25), on the day of her mother's marriage, or, ac-
of the tribe of the Getae) in the service of Antio- cording to Dio (lix. 29), thirty days afterwards.
chus II. (Polyaen. iv. 16. )
On the day of her birth, she was carried by her
3. One of the generals of Mithridates, probably father round the temples of all the goddesses, and
a Thracian by birth, who was sent by him with an placed upon the knee of Minerva, to whose patron-
army to the support of Archelaus in Greece. (Ap- age he commended her maintenance and educa-
pian. Mithr. 32, 41. )
(E. H. B. ] tion. Josephus (Ant. Jud. xix. 2) relates, that
DROMOCLEIDES (Apopokleions) of Sphetius, Caligula pronounced it to be a doubtful question
an Attic orator of the time of Demetrius Phalereus, whether he or Jupiter had the greater share in her
who exercised a great influence upon public affairs paternity. She gave early proof of her legiti-
at Athens by his servile fattery of Demetrius macy by the ferocity and cruelty of her disposition,
Poliorcetes. (Plut. Demetr. 13, 14, Praecept. Polit. for, while yet an infant, she would tear with her
p. 798. )
(L. S. ] little nails the eyes and faces of the children who
DROMOCRIDES, or, as some read, Dro- played with her. On the day that her father was
mocleides, is mentioned by Fulgentius (Mythol. i. assassinated, she was killed by being dashed
17) as the author of a Theogony, but is otherwise against a wall, A. D. 41, when she was about two
unknown. (Fabric. Bibl. Graec. i. p. 30. ) [L. S. ] years old.
DROMON (Apouwv). 1. An Athenian comic 4. DRUSILLA, daughter of Herodes Agrippa I. ,
poet of the middle comedy, from whose Yártpia king of the Jews, by his wife Cypros, and sister
two fragments are quoted by Athenaeus (vi. p. of Herodes Agrippa II. , was only six years old
240, d. , ix. p. 409, e. ). In the former of these when her father died in A. D. 44. She had been
fragments mention is made of the parasite Tithy- already promised in marriage to Epiphanes, son of
mallus, who is also mentioned by Alexis, Timocles, Antiochus, king of Comagene, but the match was
and Antiphanes, who are all poets of the middle broken off in consequence of Epiphanes refusing
comedy, to which therefore it is inferred that Dro- to perform his promise of conforming to the Jewish
mon also belonged. A play of the same title is religion. Hereupon Azizus, king of Emesa, ob-
ascribed to EUBULUS. (Meineke, Frag. Com. tained Drusilla as his wife, and performed the
Graec. i. p. 418, iii. pp. 541, 542. )
condition of becoming a Jew. Afterwards, Felix,
2. A slave of the Peripatetic philosopher, Stra- the procurator of Judaea, fell in love with her,
ton, who emancipated him by his will. (Diog. and induced her to leave Azizus-a course to
Laërt. v. 63. ) He is included in the lists of the which she was prompted not only by the fair
Peripatetics. (Fabric. Bibl. Graec. iii. p. 492. ) (P. S. ] promises of Felix, but by a desire to escape the
DRUSILLA. 1. Livia DRUSILLA, the mo- annoyance to which she was subjected by the envy
ther of the emperor Tiberius and the wife of Au- of her sister Berenice, who, though ten years
gustus. (Livia. ]
older, vied with her in beauty. She thought, per-
2. DRUSILLA, a daughter of Germanicus and haps, that Felix, whom she accepted as a second
Agrippina, was brought up in the house of her busband, would be better able to protect her than
grandmother Antonia. Here she was deflowered Azizus, whom she divorced. In the Acts of the
by her brother Caius (afterwards the emperor Apostles (xxiv. 24), she is mentioned in such a
Caligula), before he was of age to assume the toga manner that she may naturally be supposed to have
virilis, and Antonia had once the misfortune to be been present when St. Paul preached before her
an eye-witness of the incest of these her grand second husband in A. D. 60. Felix and Drusilla
children. (Suet. Caligula, 24. ) In A. D. 33, the had a son, Agrippa, who perished in an eruption
emperor Tiberius disposed of her in marriage to of Vesuvius. (Josephus, Ant. Jud. xix. 7, xx. 5. )
L. Cassius Longinus (Tac. Ann. ri. 15), but her Tacitus (Hist. v. 9) says, that Felix married
brother soon afterwards carried her away from her Drusilla, a granddaughter of Cleopatra and Antony.
husband's house, and openly lived with her as if The Drusilla he refers to, if any such person ever
she were liis wife. In the beginning of his reign, existed, must have been a daughter of Juba and
we find her married to M. Aemilius Lepidus, one Cleopatra Selene, for the names and fate of all the
of his minions. The emperor had debauched all other descendants of Cleopatra and Antony are
his sisters, but his passion for Drusilla exceeded known from other sources; but the account giren
all bounds. When seized with illness, he appointed by Josephus of the parentage of Drusilla is more
her heir to his property and kingdom ; but she consistent than that of Tacitus with the statement
died early in his reigu, whereupon his grief became of Holy Writ, by which it appears that Drusilla
frantic. "He buried her with the greatest pomp, was a Jewess. Some have supposed that Felix
gave her a public tomb, set up her golden image in married in succession two Drusillae, and counten-
the forum, and commanded that she should be ance is lent to this otherwise improbable conjecture
worshipped, by the name Panthea, with the same by an expression of Suetonius (Claud. 28), who
honours as Venus. Livius Geminius, a senator, calls Felix trium reginarum maritum. (J. T. G. ]
swore that he saw her ascending to heaven in the DRUSUS, the name of a distinguished family
company of the gods, and was rewarded with a of the Livia gens. It is said by Suetonius (Tilia
million sesterces for his story. Men knew not | 3), that the first Livius Drusus acquired the cogno
3 2 2
## p. 1076 (#1096) ##########################################
1076
DRUSUS.
DRUSUS.
men Drusue for himself and his descendants, by pian, Gall. iv. fr. 11, ed. Schweigh. ), that they
having slain in close combat one Drausus, a chief- seem to have been annihilated as an independent
tain of the enemy. This Livius Drusus, he goes people, and we never afterwards read of them as
on to say, was propractor in Gaul, and, according being engaged in war against Rome. On this
to one tradition, on his return to Rome, brought supposition, however, according to the ordinary
from his province the gold which had been paid to duration of human life, M.
Livius Drusus, the
the Senones at the time when the Capitol was be patronus senatus of B. c. 122, must have been, not
sieged. This account seems to be as little deserving the almepos, but the odnepos, or grandson's grand-
of credit as the story that Camillus prevented the son's son, of the first Drusus, and hence Pighius
gold from being paid, or obliged it to be restored (l. c. ) proposes to read in Suetonius adnepos in
in the first instance.
place of abnepos.
Of the time when the first Livius Drusus flou- Suetonius (Tib. 2) mentions a Claudius Drusus,
rished, nothing more precise is recorded than that who erected in his own honour a statue with a
M. Livius Drusus, who was tribune of the plebs diadem at Appii Forum, and endeavoured to get
with C. Gracchus in B. c. 122, was his abnepos. This all Italy within his power by overrunning it with
word, which literally means grandson's grandson, his clientelae. If we may judge from the position
may possibly mean indefinitely a more distant de which this Claudius Drusus occupies in the text of
scendant, as atavus in Horace (Carm. i. 1) is used Suetonius, he was not later than P. Claudius
indefinitely for an ancestor.
Pulcher, who was consul in B. C. 249. It is not
Pighius (Annales, i. p. 416) conjectures, that easy to imagine any rational origin of the cogno-
the first Livius Drusus was a son of M. Livius men Drusus in the case of this early Claudius,
Denter, who was consul in B. C. 302, and that which would be consistent with the account of the
Livius Denter, the son, acquired the agnomen of origin of the cognomen given by Suetonius in the
Drusus in the campaign against the Senones under case of the first Livius Drusus. The asserted
Cornelius Dolabella, in B. C. 283. He thinks that origin from the chieftain Drausus may be, as Bayle
the descendants of this Livius Denter Drusus (Dictionnaire, s. v. Drusus) surmises, one of those
assumed Drusus as a family cognomen in place of fables by which genealogists strive to increase the
Denter. There is much probability in this conjec- importance of families. The connexion of the
ture, if the origin of the name given by Suetonius family of Drusus with the first emperors probably
be correct; for the Senones were so completely reflected a retrospective lustre upon its republican
subdued by Dolabella and Domitius Calvinus (Ap- Igreatness. (Virg. Aen. vi. 825. )
STEMMA DRUSORUM.
1. M. Livius Drusus.
1
2. M. Livius Drusus Aemilianus (qu. Mamilianus).
3. C. Livius Drusus, Cos. B. c. 147.
4. M. Livius Drusus, Cos. B. c. 112;
married Cornelia.
5. C. Livius Drusus.
6. M. Livius Drusus, Livia ; married 1. ? Q. Servilius Caepio. =married 2. ? M. Porcius Cato.
Trib. Pl. ; killed B. C.
1
91 ; married Servilia,
1
sister of Q. Servilius
Q. Servilius Servilia ; married 1. M. Servilia ; M. Cato Porcia ;
Caepio.
Caepio, Junius Brutus (m. 2. D. married Utic. married
Trib. Mil. Junius Silanus).
Lucullus.
L. Domit,
B. C. 72.
i
Aheno-
7. Livius Drusus Claudianus.
M. Junius Brutus, tyrannic.
barbus.
adopted by No. 6. :
1
8. M. Livius Drusus Libo, Consul B. c. 15;
adopted by No. 7? ; married Pompeia?
9. Livia Drusilla, afterwards named Julia Augusta ;
m. 1. Tiberius Claudius Nero [2. Augustus Caesar).
20. L. Scribonius Libo Drusus,
son of No. 8. ?
11. Nero Claudius Drusus
(senior), afterwards Drusus
Germanicus; married An-
tonia, minor.
i
12. Tiberius Nero Caesar
(emperor TIBERIUS); m.
1. Vipsania Agrippina.
13. Germanicus
Caesar; married
Agrippina.
14. Livia; 15. Ti. Claudius Drusus Caesar
m. 1. C. Caesar; (emperor CLAUDIUS); married
2. No. 16. 1. Urgulanilla.
16. Drusus Caesar (ju-
nior); died A. D. 23,
leaving a daugh. Julia
3
## p. 1077 (#1097) ##########################################
DRUSUS.
1077
DRUSUS.
a
Julia
20. Agrippi-
|
17. Nero,
m. Julia,
daughter
of No. 16;
died A D. 30.
18. Dru-
sus; died
A. D. 33.
19. Caius Cae-
sar (emperor
CALIGULA);
m. 3. Cacsonia.
na, mother of
21. Drusilla ;
m. 1. L. Cassius,
2. M. Lepidus;
died A. D. 38.
22. Julia Livilla.
a 22. Three other
children; died
young.
23. Drusus;
died A. D.
20.
24. Claudia.
the emperor
Nexo.
Julia
25. Julia Drusila ; died A. D. 4).
OTHER DRUSI.
26. D. Drusus, Consul suffectus B. C. 137. ? (Dig. 1. tit. 13. §. 2. )
27. C. Drusus, historian. (Suet. Augustus, 94. )
sons
1.