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Cologne, Germany
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MummyChunk
2024-09-19 17:47:55 UTC
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In A.D. 15, a baby girl was born in a legionary encampment on th
banks of the Rhine River. Her father, the famous Roman genera
Germanicus, was engaged in warfare with the barbarians at that time
intent on recovering the lost eagles of Varus. The girl is known t
history as Agrippina the Younger. She was the granddaughter o
Augustus’ faithful lieutenant Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa. She was als
granddaughter by adoption to the Emperor Tiberius

Another grandfather was Drusus the Elder who died fighting barbarian
in Germania Superior in 9 B.C. On her mother’s side, she was directl
descended from Augustus himself. Her brother, Caligula, became a
emperor and she was the mother of Nero. She later married her uncle
the Emperor Claudius. In her honor, her birthplace was renamed Coloni
Claudia Ara Agrippinensium

Today the place is called Cologne, Germany (Köln). Some of the Roma
walls of Colonia Claudia still stan

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Kyonshi
2024-09-24 22:08:19 UTC
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In A.D. 15, a baby girl was born in a legionary encampment on the
banks of the Rhine River. Her father, the famous Roman general
Germanicus, was engaged in warfare with the barbarians at that time,
intent on recovering the lost eagles of Varus. The girl is known to
history as Agrippina the Younger. She was the granddaughter of
Augustus’ faithful lieutenant Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa. She was also
granddaughter by adoption to the Emperor Tiberius.
Another grandfather was Drusus the Elder who died fighting barbarians
in Germania Superior in 9 B.C. On her mother’s side, she was directly
descended from Augustus himself. Her brother, Caligula, became an
emperor and she was the mother of Nero. She later married her uncle,
the Emperor Claudius. In her honor, her birthplace was renamed Colonia
Claudia Ara Agrippinensium.
Today the place is called Cologne, Germany (Köln). Some of the Roman
walls of Colonia Claudia still stand
http://www.jlaforums.com/viewtopic.php?p=674236879#674236879
I have often been thinking about that. It's quite the tenuous
connection, isn't it? I mean, she was born there, and convinced her
husband to name it after himself when promoting it, but the way it often
is told is that it was named after her, when it really wasn't.
People in Germany often seem to misunderstand it as the city being named
after her (Colonia Claudia), when that was just the declinated form of
her husband's name. I mean, ok, I guess she is named in the last word as
one of the people the altar there was used by, but still.

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