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  1. Flavia Domitilla (nata ignoto anno, mortua ante annum 69) uxor imperatoris Vespasiani fuit. Origo [ recensere | fontem recensere ] Pater eius Flavius Liberalis Ferentii natus scriba quaestoris erat.

  2. St. Flavia Domitilla, Virgin and Martyr. S HE was niece to the consul and martyr St. Flavius Clemens, being the daughter of his sister as Eusebius testifies; 1 consequently she was little niece of the Emperor Domitian, who, having put to death her illustrious uncle, banished her for her faith into Pontia. There she lived with her holy eunuchs ...

  3. Flavia Domitilla was the third woman in three generations of her family to bear the same name. Her grandmother, Flavia Domitilla (fl. 39 ce), was the daughter of Flavius Liberalis (a Roman freedman, meaning freed slave), who attracted an offer of marriage from Titus Flavius Vespasianus. Vespasian was a general when he married Flavia Domitilla ...

  4. 1. Nov. 2021 · Recently I have been thinking about Flavia Domitilla’s life. Perhaps her biography would suggest why she produced it. This post approaches the play from her point of view. Biography of Flavia Domitilla. Flavia Domitilla the Younger was a granddaughter of Vespasian and a niece of Titus and Domitian. She was born approximately 63 CE to their ...

  5. 1. Juli 2019 · Saint Flavia Domitilla of Terracina Roman noble laywoman and granddaughter of Emperor Vespasian, niece of Emperors Titus and Domitian. Flavia married Titus Flavius Clemens and when her husband was martyred in 96, She was banished to the island of Pandataria in the Tyrrhenian. Flavia died at Terracina, Italy.

  6. Flavia Domitilla (fl. 39 ce)Roman noblewoman. Flourished 39 ce; daughter of Flavius Liberalis (a Roman freedman, meaning freed slave) and a mother who was the daughter of a Roman freedman; married Titus Flavius Vespasianus (Vespasian), a general and emperor of Rome (r. 69–79 ce), in 39 ce; children: Flavia Domitilla (fl. 60 ce); Titus, Roman emperor (r. 79–81 ce); Domitian (51–96), Roman ...

  7. Statius (Silvae 1.1), however, Flavian aurei and denarii with the tide "Diva Domitilla." refers to a deified "sister" of Domitian, suggesting that. She was the first of three women to appear in the official Diva Domitilla was Vespasian's daughter (hereafter imagery of a family that had unexpectedly risen from Domitilla II).