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This article is about the nephew of Augustus. For the Second Punic War general from whom this man was descended, see Marcus Claudius Marcellus.
[edit] Life[edit] AdvancementSince Augustus had no sons, Marcellus was one of his closest relatives - already at the age of three, when his uncle needed to make peace with Sextus Pompeius, Marcellus was engaged to a daughter of Sextus (though the engagement was forgotten when Sextus Pompeius was defeated). As he grew older, Marcellus was seen often in public with Augustus, including at his triumphs over Mark Antony and Ptolemaic Greek Queen Cleopatra VII of Egypt and a campaign against the Cantabri. [edit] The successionIn 25 BC, Marcellus married Augustus' only daughter, Julia the Elder, with Agrippa officiating in Augustus's absence.[1] On Augustus's falling ill at this period "all were expecting that Marcellus would be preferred for Augustus's successor", according to Dio.[2] Velleius, a pro-Augustan source, states that:
This passage supports the suggestion in Tacitus and other historians that other potential heirs such as Tiberius and Agrippa felt threatened by Marcellus's rise. After the marriage Agrippa set out for Asia "on the pretext of commissions from the emperor, but, according to current gossip, was in fact withdrawing for the time being, on account of his secret animosity for Marcellus".[4] In addition, Dio states that:
[edit] AedileshipAugustus began to encourage Marcellus' political career, in 23 BC gaining him the right to be a senator among the ex-praetors, to stand for the consulship ten years earlier than was customary, and his election as aedile that year.[6] To celebrate, he gave what Velleius calls "a magnificent spectacle" (with assistance from Augustus[7]) and also funded the theatre that bears his name. [edit] College Of PontiffsAccording to Tacitus, Marcellus was appointed to the College of Pontiffs by Augustus.[8] [edit] DeathMarcellus did not live to see the theatre completed, however,[9] becoming ill in the year of his aedileship, and soon dying in Baiae. His death is ascribed by hearsay to Livia, [10], the line which is also followed by the novel, I, Claudius. Dio states:
Augustus also had funerary statues of Marcellus set up, such as the Marcellus as Hermes Logios. Agrippa swiftly returned from Asia after Marcellus's death, and Marcellus's widow Julia was soon married to him. Marcellus was added by Virgil at the end of the list of illustrious future Romans whom Aeneas sees in the underworld in Book VI of the Aeneid. This passage - recounting Marcellus's life, connecting him to his illustrious ancestor Marcellus the Elder, and lamenting his tragically early death - is said to have caused Octavia to faint with grief when it was read to her and Augustus.[12] [edit] Notes
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