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Agrippa, Marcus
Vipsanius
b. 63 BCE; d. 12 BCE Roman
statesman, supporter, friend and most able general of Augustus. He came from a
well to do but not a noble family, and was a fellow-student of Octavian at Apollonia
when Julius Caesar was murdered. He went to Rome with Octavian, and helped him
to raise an army from Caesar's veterans and supporters. He did not play a prominent
part in the campaign against Brutus and Cassius, but was thereafter the architect
of Octavian's decisive victories at sea, first over Sextus Pompeius (36BCE), then
over Mark Antony (31BCE). His political advancement was irregular but rapid. He
was praetor in 40BCE, consul in 37BCE, aedile for 33BCE, then consul again in
28BCE and again in 27BCE-violating the rule which specified 10 years between consulships.
In 29BCE he also helped Augustus to carry our a reform of the Senate, expelling
some members and co-opting new ones.
Agrippa remained loyal to Augustus
throughout his life; however he was an ambitious man, and his aims are uncertain.
When Augustus thought he was dying in 23BCE, it was to Agrippa that he gave his
signet ring, presumably intending thereby to make him his successor. On his recovery,
however, Augustus began to groom M. Marcellus for the succession. This seems to
have offended Agrippa, for in the same year, as compensation, Augustus sent him
to govern the eastern half of the Empire. The possibility of a rift between them,
however, was averted by the death of Marcellus at the end of 23BCE. Augustus finally
solved the problem by marrying his daughter Julia to Agrippa, and making it clear
that Agrippa's sons, Caius and Lucius Caesar, would be his heirs. Meanwhile, Agrippa
became virtually joint-ruler with Augustus in 18BCE, when he was given the power
of a tribune in addition to his proconsular command. He died in 12 BCE and was
buried in the Mausoleum of Augustus.
By his first marriage to Attica (daughter
of Atticus)), Agrippa became a very rich man, using his wealth to the advantage
of the Roman people and Augustus' regime. He built the Pantheon, a new bridge
of the Tiber, and the first public baths, rebuilt the sewers, and greatly improved
the water supply of Rome with aqueducts and a new distribution network. He left
the remainder of his fortune, which included the entire Gallipoli peninsular,
to Augustus.
Agrippa also wrote an autobiography, and assembled the materials,
(later used by Strabo) from which the first map of the Empire was drawn. His great
ability seems to have descended through the female, rather than the male, line,
to his daughter, and granddaughter, Agrippina, rather than to his grandson Caius
and great-grandson Nero. © JM Dent/Historybookshop.com |  |  |
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