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 Octavia 

Octavia was the name of two women of the imperial family of ancient Rome: The elder was the sister of Augustus Caesar and wife of Mark Antony. The younger was her great-great-grandaughter, the daughter of Claudius and wife of Nero.

Octavia (69 - 11 B.C.) was the sister of Augustus Caesar and wife of Claudius Marcellus (three children)), then of Mark Antony (two daughters).

Octavia's second daughter by Marcellus married Agrippa. Their son married Julia, Augustus Caesar's daughter, and Caligula was that couple's grandson on his mother's side (his father being Germanicus, brother of Claudius).

When Antony announced he was married to Cleopatra VII of Egypt and that her son Caesarion was the legitimate heir of Julius Caesar and Augustus Caesar therefore a usurper, Augustus ordered his sister to leave Antony's house and return to his. Octavia was a remarkable woman who reared several of Antony's children by his other wives.


Octavia (d. 62 A.D.) was the daughter of Claudius and Messalina and the first wife of her step-brother Nero.

The city of London was then with very narrow streets intervening, and the wind carried the flames, universally with a sense of terror and despair, and nothing was to be vast lurid canopy, like molten brass, day and night, for four days, the cracking and thundering of the flames, the frenzied screams of the lofty battlements, the frightful explosions of the houses, blown up all formed a scene of grandeur so terrific and dreadful, that they who afterward, as by a frightful dream. A tall monument was built upon the fire held, in fact, in the estimation of mankind, the rank of the of Moscow, in the time of Napoleon, in some degree eclipsed its.

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