Carney & Wehofer Family
 Genealogy Pages

King Marius Meurig Of BRITAIN, King Of Siluria

King Marius Meurig Of BRITAIN, King Of Siluria

Male Bef 74 - 125  (~ 51 years)

Generations:      Standard    |    Vertical    |    Compact    |    Box    |    Text    |    Ahnentafel    |    Fan Chart    |    Media    |    PDF

Generation: 1

  1. 1.  King Marius Meurig Of BRITAIN, King Of Siluria was born before 74 in Britain (son of King Arviragus Gweirydd Of BRITAIN and Genissa (Genuissa) Vanessa Of ROME); died in 125 in Colchester, Britain.

    Other Events:

    • _UID: 02969B028C0040CDA59B66B46F9F6D31D4B4

    Notes:

    Called Coel Hen, Brought Corn Into Britain.

    Family/Spouse: Julia Of The ICENI. Julia (daughter of Pratsutagus King Of ICENI and Boudicca Queen Of ICENI) was born about 70; died before 135. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. King Coel Hen "Old King Coel" Of The BRITAINS was born in 94 in Britain; died in 170.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  King Arviragus Gweirydd Of BRITAIN was born about 0015 (son of Cynfelyn Of BRITAIN); died in 74.

    Other Events:

    • FamilySearch ID: GDCZ-KWW
    • _UID: D2A4AF232B7C4D589EF91494408A7DADC7E7

    Notes:

    0044 . ?slew the Roman called Hanno, avenging his brother

    Arviragus married Genissa (Genuissa) Vanessa Of ROME. Genissa (daughter of Tiberius Claudius Drusus Nero GERMANICUS and Julia Agrippina MINOR, II) was born in in Rome, Italy; died about 50. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Genissa (Genuissa) Vanessa Of ROME was born in in Rome, Italy (daughter of Tiberius Claudius Drusus Nero GERMANICUS and Julia Agrippina MINOR, II); died about 50.

    Other Events:

    • _UID: 598C891E2E294109BD8E325313979F9AE00C

    Children:
    1. 1. King Marius Meurig Of BRITAIN, King Of Siluria was born before 74 in Britain; died in 125 in Colchester, Britain.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Cynfelyn Of BRITAIN (son of Tenefan Ap Lludd Of BRITAIN); died in 0017.

    Other Events:

    • _UID: 96E12D7657E94CA1B4DBD9FD28A1ED3193ED

    Notes:

    0014 . ?a favorite of Caesar Augustus (B.C. 27 - A.D. 14) ||This association with the Romans greatly promoted the peace with Britain and much civilized his people. aka: Cunobelinus of the Trinovantes 1 , 2 ., King (The Trinobantes were the most powerful of the Briton states. )

    Children:
    1. 2. King Arviragus Gweirydd Of BRITAIN was born about 0015; died in 74.

  2. 6.  Tiberius Claudius Drusus Nero GERMANICUS was born in 1 Aug 0009 B.C. in Lungudum, Gaul, Roman Empire (son of Nero Claudius Drucus GERMANICUS, Governor of Gaul and Antonia MINOR); died on 13 Oct 54 in Miseno, Bacoli, Naples, Italy; was buried on 13 Aug 54 in Mausoleum Of Augustus, Rome, Roma, Lazio, Italy.

    Other Events:

    • Cause of Death: ; poisoned by his wife, Agrippina
    • FamilySearch ID: L6GQ-6PC
    • TitleOfNobility: ; Emperor of Rome
    • Name: Tiberius Claudius Caesar Augustus Drusus Nero Germanicus of GAUL
    • _UID: E72E9DE551C54ADFBFB67D890A2E6DC5BB35
    • TitleOfNobility: Between 24 Jan 41 and 13 Oct 54; Emperor of the Roman Empire - (13 years and 9 months)

    Notes:

    Death 13 Oct 0055.?"The ancient accounts are confused -- as is habitual in the cases of hidden and dubious deaths of emperors -- but their general drift is that Claudius was poisoned with a treated mushroom, that he lingered a while and had to be poisoned a second time." event 1 Jul 0038.?promoted to a suffect consulship"Claudius's fortunes changed somewhat when his unstable nephew, Gaius (Caligula), came to power in the spring of 37 A.D. Gaius, it seems, liked to use his bookish, frail uncle as the butt of cruel jokes and, in keeping with this pattern of behavior, promoted him to a suffect consulship on 1 July 37 A.D. At 46 years of age, it was Claudius's first public office. Despite this sortie into public life, he seemed destined for a relatively quiet and secluded dotage when, in January 41, events overtook him." event 0038?not all as he seemed"His family members mistook these physical debilities as reflective of mental infirmity and generally kept him out of the public eye as an embarrassment. A sign of this familial disdain is that he remained under guardianship, like a woman, even after he had reached the age of majority. Suetonius, in particular, preserves comments of Antonia, his mother, and Livia, his grandmother, which are particularly cruel in their assessment of the boy. From the same source, however, it emerges that Augustus suspected that there was more to this "idiot" than met the eye. Nevertheless, Claudius spent his entire childhood and youth in almost complete seclusion. The normal rites de passage of an imperial prince came and went without official notice, and Claudius received no summons to public office or orders to command troops on the frontiers. When he assumed the toga virilis, for instance, he was carried to the Capitol in a litter at night; the normal procedure was to be led into the Forum by one's father or guardian in full public view. How he spent the voluminous free time of his youth is revealed by his later character: he read voraciously. He became a scholar of considerable ability and composed works on all subjects in the liberal arts, especially history; he was the last person we know of who could read Etruscan. These skills, and the knowledge of governmental institutions he acquired from studying history, were to stand him in good stead when he came to power." birth 0010 B.C. , in August 1, Lugdunum, Gaul.

    Tiberius married Julia Agrippina MINOR, II in 49. Julia (daughter of Caeser Germanicus CAESER and Vipsania Agrippina MAJOR) was born on 6 Nov 0015 in Oppidum Ubiorum, Germania, Roman Empire; died on 23 Mar 59 in Naples, Italy, Roman Empire; was buried in 59 in Miseno, Bacoli, Naples, Italy. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  3. 7.  Julia Agrippina MINOR, II was born on 6 Nov 0015 in Oppidum Ubiorum, Germania, Roman Empire (daughter of Caeser Germanicus CAESER and Vipsania Agrippina MAJOR); died on 23 Mar 59 in Naples, Italy, Roman Empire; was buried in 59 in Miseno, Bacoli, Naples, Italy.

    Other Events:

    • FamilySearch ID: LK62-7Q8
    • Name: Agrippina MINOR "THE YOUNGER"
    • _UID: C352E284E38548CF8D7015EC6ED06CDD7FEF
    • TitleOfNobility: Between 49 and 54, Roma, Roman Empire; Empress of the Roman Empire

    Notes:

    Agrippina and Claudius married on New Year's Day, 49. This marriage caused widespread disapproval. This was a part of Agrippina's scheming plan to make her son Lucius the new emperor. Her marriage to Claudius was not based on love, but on power. She quickly eliminated her rival Lollia Paulina. Shortly after marrying Claudius, Agrippina persuaded the emperor to charge Paulina with black magic. Claudius stipulated that Paulina did not receive a hearing and her property was confiscated. She left Italy, but Agrippina was unsatisfied. Allegedly on Agrippina's orders, Paulina committed suicide.

    In the months leading up to her marriage to Claudius, Agrippina's maternal second cousin, the praetor Lucius Junius Silanus Torquatus, was betrothed to Claudius' daughter Claudia Octavia. This betrothal was broken off in 48, when Agrippina, scheming with the consul Lucius Vitellius the Elder, the father of the future emperor Aulus Vitellius, falsely accused Silanus of incest with his sister Junia Calvina. Agrippina did this hoping to secure a marriage between Octavia and her son. Consequently, Claudius broke off the engagement and forced Silanus to resign from public office.

    Silanus committed suicide on the day that Agrippina married her uncle, and Calvina was exiled from Italy in early 49. Calvina was called back from exile after the death of Agrippina. Towards the end of 54, Agrippina would order the murder of Silanus' eldest brother Marcus Junius Silanus Torquatus without Nero's knowledge, so that he would not seek revenge against her over his brother's death.

    On the day that Agrippina married her uncle Claudius as her third husband/his fourth wife, she became empress. She also was a stepmother to Claudia Antonia, Claudius' daughter and only child from his second marriage to Aelia Paetina, and to the young Claudia Octavia and Britannicus, Claudius' children with Valeria Messalina. Agrippina removed or eliminated anyone from the palace or the imperial court who she thought was loyal and dedicated to the memory of the late Messalina. She also eliminated or removed anyone who she considered was a potential threat to her position and the future of her son, one of her victims being Lucius' second paternal aunt and Messalina's mother Domitia Lepida the Younger.

    Griffin describes how Agrippina "had achieved this dominant position for her son and herself by a web of political alliances," which included Claudius's chief secretary and bookkeeper Pallas, his doctor Xenophon, and Afranius Burrus, the head of the Praetorian Guard (the imperial bodyguard), who owed his promotion to Agrippina. Neither ancient nor modern historians of Rome have doubted that Agrippina had her eye on securing the throne for Nero from the very day of the marriage? if not earlier. Dio Cassius's observation seems to bear that out: "As soon as Agrippina had come to live in the palace she gained complete control over Claudius."

    In 49, Agrippina was seated on a dais at a parade of captives when their leader the Celtic King Caratacus bowed before her with the same homage and gratitude as he accorded the emperor. In 50, Agrippina was granted the honorific title of Augusta. She was only the third Roman woman (Livia Drusilla and Antonia Minor received this title) and only the second living Roman woman (the first being Antonia) to receive this title.

    In her capacity as Augusta, Agrippina quickly became a trusted advisor to Claudius. And by AD 54, She exerted a considerable influence over the decisions of the emperor. A statues had been erected in her honor in the in all empire, and in the Senate, her followers were advanced with public offices and governorships. However this privileged position caused resentment among the senatorial class and the imperial family.


    Children:
    1. 3. Genissa (Genuissa) Vanessa Of ROME was born in in Rome, Italy; died about 50.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Tenefan Ap Lludd Of BRITAIN (son of Lludd Llaw Ereint Of BRITAIN and Anna of CORNWALL); died in 0026 B.C..

    Other Events:

    • _UID: 3ED8EBC12F8B4C7E8670EF819D6BFEC97B9B

    Notes:

    aka: Theomantius of the Trinovantes 1 ., Tenancius

    Children:
    1. 4. Cynfelyn Of BRITAIN died in 0017.

  2. 12.  Nero Claudius Drucus GERMANICUS, Governor of Gaul was born in 14 Jan 37 B.C. in BC, Roma, Roman Republic (son of Tiberius Claudius NERO, Germanicus and Livia DRUSILLA); died in 0008 B.C. in BC, Germania, Roman Empire; was buried in Killed In Fall From Horse.

    Other Events:

    • FamilySearch ID: L8FB-T94
    • _UID: 858FB1C6D53045AE902DADCE60DF246E8CEB

    Notes:

    Killed in fall from horse

    Nero married Antonia MINOR in 0018 B.C.. Antonia (daughter of Emperor Marcus Antonius Triumvar Of ROME and Octavia MAJOR) was born in 31 Jan 35 B.C. in Athens, Attica, Greece; died on 1 May 37 in Rome, Italy, Roman Empire; was buried in Mausoleum of Augustus, Rome, Italy, Roman Empire. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  3. 13.  Antonia MINOR was born in 31 Jan 35 B.C. in Athens, Attica, Greece (daughter of Emperor Marcus Antonius Triumvar Of ROME and Octavia MAJOR); died on 1 May 37 in Rome, Italy, Roman Empire; was buried in Mausoleum of Augustus, Rome, Italy, Roman Empire.

    Other Events:

    • FamilySearch ID: L2RF-5FG
    • Name: Julia Antonia Minor
    • _UID: C8D2C28E9B0E4040B401748412DF5DC4D294

    Notes:

    Wikipedia-

    Antonia Minor[a] (31 January 36 BC - 1 May AD 37) was the younger of two surviving daughters of Mark Antony and Octavia Minor. She was a niece of the Emperor Augustus, sister-in-law of the Emperor Tiberius, paternal grandmother of the Emperor Caligula and Empress Agrippina the Younger, mother of the Emperor Claudius, and maternal great-grandmother of the Emperor Nero. She outlived her husband Drusus, her oldest son, her daughter and several of her grandchildren.

    Biography
    Birth and early life
    She was born in Athens, Greece, and after 36 BC was taken to Rome by her mother with her siblings. She was the youngest of five: her mother had three children, named Claudia Marcella Major, Claudia Marcella Minor, and Marcus Claudius Marcellus, from her first marriage and another daughter, named Antonia Major by the same father. Antonia never knew her father, Mark Antony, who divorced her mother in 32 BC and committed suicide in 30 BC. She was raised by her mother, her uncle, and her aunt, Livia Drusilla. Having inherited properties in Italy, Greece, and Egypt, she was a wealthy and influential woman, who often received visitors to Rome. She had many male friends, including Alexander the Alabarch, a wealthy Jew, and Lucius Vitellius, a consul and the father of Aulus Vitellius, a future emperor.

    Marriage and family
    In 16 BC, she married the Roman general and future consul (9 BC) Nero Claudius Drusus. Drusus was the stepson of her uncle Augustus, second son of Livia Drusilla and brother of future Emperor Tiberius. They had many children, but only three survived: the famous general Germanicus, Livilla and the Roman Emperor Claudius.[1] A poem by Crinagoras of Mytilene mentions Antonia's first pregnancy, which may be of a child before Germanicus whom must have died in infancy or early childhood.[1][2][3] Drusus died in June 9 BC in Germany, due to complications from injuries he sustained after falling from a horse. After his death, although pressured by her uncle to remarry, she never did.

    Antonia raised her children in Rome. Tiberius adopted Germanicus in AD 4.[4] Germanicus died in 19 AD, allegedly poisoned through the handiwork of Gnaeus Calpurnius Piso and Munatia Plancina. Tacitus suggests but does not outright say in Annals 3.3 that, on the orders of Tiberius and Livia Drusilla, Antonia was forbidden to go to his funeral. When Livia Drusilla died in June 29 AD, Antonia took care of her younger grandchildren Caligula, Agrippina the Younger, Julia Drusilla, Julia Livilla and later Claudia Antonia.

    Conflict with Livilla
    In 31 AD, a plot by her daughter Livilla and Tiberius' notorious Praetorian prefect, Sejanus, was exposed by Apicata, the estranged ex-wife of Sejanus, to murder the Emperor Tiberius and Caligula and to seize the throne for themselves. Livilla allegedly poisoned her husband, Tiberius' son, Drusus Julius Caesar (nicknamed "Castor"), in 23 AD to remove him as a rival. Sejanus was executed before Livilla was implicated in the crime. After Apicata's accusation, which came in the form of a letter to the emperor, several co-conspirators were executed while Livilla was handed over to her formidable mother for punishment. Cassius Dio states that Antonia imprisoned Livilla in her room until she starved to death.[5]

    Succession of Caligula and death
    When Tiberius died, Caligula became emperor in March 37 AD. Caligula awarded her a senatorial decree, granting her all the honors that Livia Drusilla had received in her lifetime. She was also offered the title of Augusta, previously only given to Augustus's wife Livia, but rejected it.

    Six months into his reign, Caligula became seriously ill. Antonia would often offer Caligula advice, but he once told her, "I can treat anyone exactly as I please!" Caligula was rumored to have had his young cousin Gemellus beheaded, to remove him as a rival to the throne. This act was said to have outraged Antonia, who was grandmother to Gemellus as well as to Caligula.

    Having had enough of Caligula's anger at her criticisms and of his behavior, she committed suicide. Suetonius Caligula 23, relates how he might have poisoned her.

    When his grandmother Antonia asked for a private interview, he refused it except in the presence of the prefect Macro, and by such indignities and annoyances he caused her death; although some think that he also gave her poison. After she was dead, he paid her no honour, but viewed her burning pyre from his dining-room.

    Antonia died on 1 May 37.[6]

    When Claudius became emperor after his nephew's assassination in 41 AD, he gave his mother the title of Augusta. Her birthday became a public holiday, which had yearly games and public sacrifices held. An image of her was paraded in a carriage.


    Children:
    1. Caeser Germanicus CAESER was born in 24 May 0014 B.C. in Rome, Roman Republic; died on 10 Oct 0019 in Antioch, Roman Republic.
    2. 6. Tiberius Claudius Drusus Nero GERMANICUS was born in 1 Aug 0009 B.C. in Lungudum, Gaul, Roman Empire; died on 13 Oct 54 in Miseno, Bacoli, Naples, Italy; was buried on 13 Aug 54 in Mausoleum Of Augustus, Rome, Roma, Lazio, Italy.
    3. Claudia Livia Julia "Livilla", of Rome was born in 0012 B.C. in Lugdunum, Gaul, Roman Empire; died in 0031 in Gaul, Roman Empire.

  4. 14.  Caeser Germanicus CAESERCaeser Germanicus CAESER was born in 24 May 0014 B.C. in Rome, Roman Republic (son of Nero Claudius Drucus GERMANICUS, Governor of Gaul and Antonia MINOR); died on 10 Oct 0019 in Antioch, Roman Republic.

    Other Events:

    • FamilySearch ID: L254-1P9
    • _UID: A7E3A040C46746EAB44E988B46B404967E2B

    Notes:

    Germanicus Caesar (15 BC-AD19) Roman general, son of the general Nero Claudius Drusus, and nephew and adopted son of Emperor Tiberius. Germanicus took part in campaigns against the Pannonian, Dalmatian, and Germanic tribes in eastern and northern Europe. In AD12 he was consul, and the following year Emperor Augustus appointed him to command the eight Roman legions on the Rhine. In AD14, on the death of Augustus, the legions mutinied, but Germanicus quelled the insurrection, after which he led the soldiers into battle. He routed the Marsi, a German tribe, and the next year met the German leader Arminius (Hermann), chief of the Cherusci, who in AD 9 had destroyed three Roman legions and driven their general, Publius Quintilius Varus, to suicide. The engagement was indecisive, but in AD 16 Germanicus, at great risk to his own troops, won two victories over Arminius and claimed Germany for Rome. Emperor Tiberius recalled Germanicus to Rome in AD17 because he felt the Germans could most successfully be dealt with through diplomacy. The young general was received with great enthusiasm and honored with a triumph, the traditional celebration for victorious generals. Tiberius then dispatched him to settle a dispute that had arisen in the eastern provinces of Armenia and Parthia. On this mission, Germanicus was stricken with a fatal illness at Antioch. His friends charged that he had been poisoned on orders from Tiberius, who was supposed to have been jealous of his popularity. Germanicus, widely mourned in the provinces and in Rome, was survived by his wife Agrippina and six children. These included Caligula, later emperor, and a daughter, Agrippina the Younger, who became the mother of Emperor Nero.

    Germanicus married Vipsania Agrippina MAJOR. Vipsania (daughter of Marcus Vipsanius AGRIPPA and Julia MAJOR) was born in 0013 B.C.; died on 18 Oct 33 in Pandateria. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  5. 15.  Vipsania Agrippina MAJOR was born in 0013 B.C. (daughter of Marcus Vipsanius AGRIPPA and Julia MAJOR); died on 18 Oct 33 in Pandateria.

    Other Events:

    • FamilySearch ID: L6MJ-NGY
    • _UID: 84548F2506974BFF94EA89176417CCB9915E

    Notes:

    Vipsania Agrippina was the daughter of Augustus' invaluable ally, Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa, and of Julia, Augustus' only daughter. She was thus raised intimately within Rome's first imperial family under the stern eye of her step-grandmother, Livia. As a member of that family, Agrippina would have been expected to embody the same strict Roman virtues as her mother and grandmother; frugality, chastity, and domesticity. Insofar as the traditional values described above applied to her mother, Julia failed spectacularly at all three and was banished by the Emperor; yet to the end of her days, Agrippina arrogantly prized her descent from the divine Augustus. In 11 BC, after Agrippa's death (by whom Julia had five children), Augustus forced Julia into a political marriage with her stepbrother, Tiberius, Livia's son. Agrippina was 3 years old when Augustus became her stepfather. The marriage, initially tranquil, became deeply dysfunctional. Tiberius left Rome for Rhodes, allegedly to avoid the scandal of his wife's sexually infidelities. In 2 BC, when Agrippina was only 12, Augustus discovered that his daughter was whiling away her spare time by committing adulteries on a notorious scale. The fact that Julia had been forced into not one, but three, loveless political marriages at her father's behest was no excuse. Augustus had passed severe laws against adultery in his attempts at moral reform. Allegedly he learned of her behavior through her sons (and his adopted children), Gaius and Lucius, Agrippina's brothers, who protested that their mother's behavior was notorious. Augustus banished Julia for life to the island of Pandateria off the western Italian coast, although she was later permitted to move to slightly easier house arrest at Rhegium. Agrippina never saw her mother again. It would be yet another source of friction between Agrippina and her former stepfather when, after Augustus' death, Tiberius effectively starved Julia to death by stopping her allowance. After Julia's exile, Agrippina and her remaining siblings were raised by Augustus and Livia. One wonders at the psychological impact on the daughter of her mother's passive fate. She could not have imagined that the same fate would befall her. Life With Germanicus, 5-19 AD At the age of 18 or 19, Agrippina was married to Nero Claudius Drusus "Germanicus", Livia's grandson, probably in 5 AD. It is important to understand that Germanicus, son of Livia's son Drusus (brother of Tiberius), was an attractive, educated general with genuine star-power popularity with the Roman people. She bore him nine children, half of whom would die in the imperial power-struggles following the death of Augustus. She was by all accounts a loyal and affectionate wife and supported her husband while on campaign in the approved manner.

    Children:
    1. Tiberius Julius CAESAR and died.
    2. Nero Julius CAESAR GERMANICUS was born in 0006 in Rome, Lazio, Italy; died in 0031 in Ponza, Latina, Lazio, Italy.
    3. Drusus Caesar was born in 0008 in Roma, Roman Empire; died in 33 in Roma, Roman Republic.
    4. Cal?gula Gaius Iulius Caesar Augustus GERMANICUS IMPERATOR OF ROME was born on 31 Aug 0012 in Anzio, Roma, Lazio, Italia; died on 24 Jan 41 in Palatine Hill, Rome; was buried in Mausoleum of Augustus, Rome.
    5. 7. Julia Agrippina MINOR, II was born on 6 Nov 0015 in Oppidum Ubiorum, Germania, Roman Empire; died on 23 Mar 59 in Naples, Italy, Roman Empire; was buried in 59 in Miseno, Bacoli, Naples, Italy.
    6. Julia DRUSILLA was born on 16 Sep 0016 in Koblenz, Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany; died on 10 Jun 38 in Rome, Lazio, Italy; was buried in 38 in Rome, Citt? Metropolitana di Roma Capitale, Lazio, Italy.
    7. Julia LIVILLA was born in 0018 in L?svos, Greece; died in 42 in Isola Ventotene, Italy.