A remarkable woman by the standards of any time or place, Julia Mamaea was the true power behind the throne during her son's reign. Later historians looked askance at this...
A remarkable woman by the standards of any time or place, Julia Mamaea was the true power behind the throne during her son's reign. Later historians looked askance at this breach of convention, but history has shown that the Roman Empire was probably the better for it. The intelligence and ambition of this empress show through in this sensitive portrait.
Julia Mamaea was the eldest daughter of Julia Maesa, that intrepid strong woman of Roman politics during the Severan period. Her son became the emperor Severus Alexander after his brother, the degenerate Elagabalus, was deposed and murdered by the Praetorian Guard. Severus Alexander was the exact opposite of his brother. He gave all the signs of turning out to be a responsible emperor who would govern wisely and not fall into the depravity that characterized his brother’s reign. Both he and his mother were under the control of the powerful Maesa until she died in A. D. 226. At this time Mamaea, last of the strong Severan women, took over the role of dominating and directing the man who occupied the throne. Julia was killed by Roman army officers along with her son in 235 A. D.