Academic literature on the topic 'Claudius family'

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Journal articles on the topic "Claudius family"

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Spawforth, A. J. S. "Families at Roman Sparta and Epidaurus: Some Prosopographical Notes." Annual of the British School at Athens 80 (November 1985): 191–258. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0068245400007589.

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The purpose of this article is to correct and expand our understanding of an interrelated group of socially prominent families from Roman Sparta and Epidaurus. Part I publishes an inscription from Sparta, dating to about 240, which attests new members of the Spartan families of the Claudii and the Pomponii: respectively Claudia Tyrannis, a great-granddaughter of the senator Tib. Claudius Brasidas, and C. Pomponius Aristeas qui et Pericles, her husband. At the same time, a revised account is offered of the Claudii and of a further four Spartan families to which they were related: the Memmii, the Voluseni, the Aelii, and the Pompeii. Part II re-examines the evidence for the Epidaurian family of the Statilii. Apart from the new inscription, more recent work on the epigraphic corpora from Sparta and the Asclepieum, the possibility of reinterpreting the older material, and the need to take hitherto neglected documents into account, together seem to justify a fresh treatment of these families. The resulting study, as well as providing up-to-date family histories, includes many corrections on detailed points of local epigraphy, chronology, and prosopography.
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Camargo, Carlos Henrique Ferreira, and Hélio Afonso Ghizoni Teive. "Searching for neurological diseases in the Julio-Claudian dynasty of the Roman Empire." Arquivos de Neuro-Psiquiatria 76, no. 1 (January 2018): 53–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/0004-282x20170174.

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ABSTRACT The gens Julia was one of the oldest families in ancient Rome, whose members reached the highest positions of power. They made history because Julius Caesar, perpetual dictator, great-uncle of the first emperor, Augustus, passed his name on to the Julio-Claudian dynasty with the emperors Tiberius, Caligula, Claudius and Nero. Descriptions of the diseases of these emperors and some of his family members may indicate diagnoses such as epilepsy, dystonia, dementia, encephalitis, neurosyphilis, peripheral neuropathies, dyslexia, migraine and sleep disorders. In the historical context of ancient Rome, the possibility of infectious diseases related to the libertine way of life is quite large. However, there is a possibility that some of these diseases occurred from genetic transmission.
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Stavek, Jiri. "Trigonometric Functions at a Crossroads." Applied Physics Research 9, no. 3 (May 31, 2017): 40. http://dx.doi.org/10.5539/apr.v9n3p40.

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In the history of physics trigonometric functions played several times a very critical role at crossroads. This time we are at a crossroads with the interpretation of correlation events of entangled particles. In this approach we propose to describe the experimental data of Alice and Bob using not so known trigonometric functions. Claudius Theorem (based on the trigonometric family of Sagitta and Cosagitta) evalutes the probabilistic occurrence of correlated and anticorrelated events. David Theorem (based on the trigonometric family of Hacoversine) describes the probability of the following identical events and gaps between the following identical events. In this trigonometric concept the Team of Alice, Bob, Claudius and David formulated a camouflage legend for Eve – “spooky action at a distance”. Merlin (with unbounded computational ability) should verify the truth of this statement. Trent (a trusted arbitrator, who acts as a neutral third party) should analyze these data and this trigonometric concept. Victor (a verifier) should make his decision which way we should continue in our future research: either through the Niels Bohr avenue or through the Albert Einstein sidewalk.
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Rich, J. W. "Drusus and the spolia opima." Classical Quarterly 49, no. 2 (December 1999): 544–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/cq/49.2.544.

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According to Suetonius, Nero Claudius Drusus, the younger of Augustus' two stepsons, was said to have aspired to win spolia opima, that is, spoils taken from an enemy commander killed in battle. The aim of this paper is to consider what substance there may be in this claim and what light it may throw on Augustus’ relationship with the princes of the imperial family.
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Retief, Francois P., and Louise C. Cilliers. "Claudius, the handicapped Caesar (41-54 A.D.)." Suid-Afrikaanse Tydskrif vir Natuurwetenskap en Tegnologie 29, no. 2 (January 13, 2010): 39–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.4102/satnt.v29i2.8.

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Claudius, fourth Caesar of the Roman Empire, proved himself an able administrator, but physically and emotionally handicapped from birth. His parents, members of the imperial family, considered him mentally deficient and he was isolated from the general public and put in the care of an uneducated tutor who firmly disciplined the youngster. The historians report that he had a weak constitution caused by frequent illness, and when he appeared in public he was muffled in a protective cloak. To avoid possible embarrassment the ceremony of the toga virilis, at approximately 14 years of age, was a secretive affair held at midnight and devoid of the traditional procession. His grandfather, Augustus Caesar, had some sympathy for the young lad, but did not consider him capable of managing any position of public office appropriate for his age and position. This would also be the approach of the succeeding emperor, Tiberius. Claudius spent the fi rst four decades of his life in relative idleness, isolated from his family and upper class Romans, consorting with the lower classes, playing dice and revelling in excessive eating and drinking. He did, however, also involve himself seriously in a study of the sciences, literature, Greek and history – his role model in the latter being Livy. During his life time he published quite extensively, including dramas, an autobiography, a work in defence of Cicero, histories of Rome, Carthage and Etruria, and a book on dice. His first public office (besides an augurship under Augustus) was at the age of 47 years when the new emperor, Gaius (Caligula) made him a consul for two months. The Knights and a section of Senate now warmed towards Claudius, but Gaius and the majority of aristocratic Romans still despised him as dull-witted. After the assassination of Gaius, the Praetorian Guard in an extraordinary step, proclaimed a protesting Claudius (50 years old) as emperor, and convinced an astounded Senate to endorse this action. In spite of having had no significant preparation for the task, Claudius proved a most sensible and effective manager, improving the effectivity of Senate, putting the legal system on a sound footing, enlarging the borders of the Empire (including the conquest of England), extending citizenship to some of the provincials, foreigners and freedmen. Sensible building programs were initiated as well as the upgrading of roads and communication systems and the ensuring of an efficient food supply to Rome. Grand and regular gladiatorial games and other forms of public entertainment endeared him to the people. But he was also periodically responsible for mismanagement, corruption and brutality; much of this was subsequently blamed on the inordinate influence of people near him, and his trusted freedmen and wives in particular. The last two of his six wives (Messalina and Agrippina) were particularly guilty, and his death of poisoning at the age of 64 years (54 A.D.) was engineered by Agrippina. Through his life Claudius showed evidence of significant physical and psychological/emotional impediments. By many he was considered mentally deficient, but his impressive record as student of literature and history, and his administrative skill as emperor are ample evidence of his intellectual abilities. Physical abnormalities included an ungainly gait due to weakness of his right leg and probably arm. He had a tremor of the limbs and involuntary shaking of the head. He spoke indistinctly in a coarse, stuttering way, his mouth often drooled, his nose tended to run, and he had an uncouth laugh. He was emotionally labile, and when upset the above symptoms worsened and he became prone to irresponsible actions. We suggest that this symptom complex fits in with the diagnosis of cerebral palsy, and probably its extrapyramidal variant, although one-sided weakness suggests an additional component of hemiplegic paresis.
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LÓPEZ GÓMEZ, Helena. "Las últimas emperatrices julio-claudias: estudio de sus imágenes públicas." STUDIA ANTIQUA ET ARCHAEOLOGICA 28, no. 2 (2022): 354–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.47743/saa-2022-28-2-7.

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Despite the importance they had in their time, many of the women of the Roman imperial families share a bad image that continues to this day. The pejorative description, present in the accounts of ancient historians, has made these female characters largely unintelligible and it is practically impossible to reach an objective conclusion about their true role in history. The present article aims to offer an analysis of the images of the last empresses of the Julio-Claudian dynasty. We will focus on the wives of Caligula, Claudius and Nero by analyzing the literary evidence we possess about them in order to try to reach a conclusion free of the powerful misogynistic impressions about them that have been provided in the past. To this end, we have taken into account not only the life trajectories of the empresses, but also those of the main men in their lives, the emperors, to try to glimpse if their family relationships could have had some kind of impact on the way women were portrayed by the sources.
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Rubel Parvez, Md, and Md Mehedi Hassan. "William Shakespeare’s Hamlet and Eliot’s The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock: Procrastinator of ‘To Be or Not To Be’." Shanlax International Journal of English 11, no. 1 (December 1, 2022): 13–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.34293/english.v11i1.5279.

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This paper will explore the procrastination of the protagonists of William Shakespeare’s “Hamlet” and T.S Eliot’s “The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock”. Both protagonists of Hamlet &The Love Song Of J. Alfred Prufrock were in procrastination, The protagonist of “Hamlet” play is Hamlet who was informed supernaturally that his uncle Claudius killed his father and he was planning to take the revenge but was procrastinating to kill King Claudius. This thesis paper also demonstrates the conspiracy of the palace of Hamlet’s royal family. This play had a tragedy in the end. On the other hand, the protagonist of “The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock” is Prufrock who fell in love with a young lady but he was also procrastinating to expose his feeling to that lady as he was old also a bald spot on his head. That is why he was afraid to express his feeling to that woman if he gets rejected. This paper also contains critical analysis; feminist elements, compare and contrasts of these two texts.
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Mancini, Willian, and Fábio Faversani. "Laudationes et Iniuriae: debate sobre um aspecto da construção da imagem do governante em Sêneca." Nuntius Antiquus 6 (December 31, 2010): 28. http://dx.doi.org/10.17851/1983-3636.6.0.28-40.

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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 0cm 0cm 0pt; text-align: justify; line-height: normal; mso-layout-grid-align: none;"><span style="font-family: 'Aldine401BT-RomanA','serif'; font-size: 10pt; mso-bidi-font-family: Aldine401BT-RomanA; mso-ansi-language: EN-US;" lang="EN-US">ABSTRACT: The article aims to understand specific aspects of the </span><span style="font-family: 'Aldine401BT-RomanA','serif'; font-size: 10pt; mso-bidi-font-family: Aldine401BT-RomanA; mso-ansi-language: EN-US;" lang="EN-US">relations between emperors and aristocrats, especially regarding the </span><span style="font-family: 'Aldine401BT-RomanA','serif'; font-size: 10pt; mso-bidi-font-family: Aldine401BT-RomanA; mso-ansi-language: EN-US;" lang="EN-US">role of clemency in the making of these relationships. The authors </span><span style="font-family: 'Aldine401BT-RomanA','serif'; font-size: 10pt; mso-bidi-font-family: Aldine401BT-RomanA; mso-ansi-language: EN-US;" lang="EN-US">analyse this issue in the context of the principates of Claudius and </span><span style="font-family: 'Aldine401BT-RomanA','serif'; font-size: 10pt; mso-bidi-font-family: Aldine401BT-RomanA; mso-ansi-language: EN-US;" lang="EN-US">Nero in three works of Seneca (</span><em><span style="font-family: 'Aldine401BT-ItalicA','serif'; font-size: 10pt; mso-bidi-font-family: Aldine401BT-ItalicA; mso-ansi-language: EN-US;" lang="EN-US">De consolatione ad Polybium, </span></em><em><span style="font-family: 'Aldine401BT-ItalicA','serif'; font-size: 10pt; mso-bidi-font-family: Aldine401BT-ItalicA;">Apolococintosis, De clementia</span></em><span style="font-family: 'Aldine401BT-RomanA','serif'; font-size: 10pt; mso-bidi-font-family: Aldine401BT-RomanA;">).</span></p><p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 0cm 0cm 0pt; text-align: justify; line-height: normal; mso-layout-grid-align: none;"> </p><p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 0cm 0cm 0pt; text-align: justify; line-height: normal; mso-layout-grid-align: none;"><span style="font-family: 'Aldine401BT-RomanA','serif'; font-size: 10pt; mso-bidi-font-family: Aldine401BT-RomanA; mso-ansi-language: EN-US;" lang="EN-US">KEYWORDS: Seneca; Claudius; Nero; clemency; Roman empire; </span><span style="line-height: 115%; font-family: 'Aldine401BT-RomanA','serif'; font-size: 10pt; mso-bidi-font-family: Aldine401BT-RomanA; mso-ansi-language: EN-US;" lang="EN-US">aristocracy.</span></p>
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Flower, Harriet I. "The Tradition of the Spolia Opima: M. Claudius Marcellus and Augustus." Classical Antiquity 19, no. 1 (April 1, 2000): 34–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/25011111.

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This paper aims to reexamine how traditions about the spolia opima developed with special emphasis on two crucial phases of their evolution, the time of Marcus Claudius Marcellus' dedication in 222 BC and the early years of Augustus' principate, following the restoration of the temple of Jupiter Feretrius on the Capitol. In particular, I will argue that Marcellus invented the spolia opima, that his feat shaped the entire tradition about such dedications, and that this tradition was later enhanced and "reinvented" by Augustus, probably following upon renewed interest under Julius Caesar. Through an evaluation of the surviving evidence about the three canonical dedicators (Romulus, A. Cornelius Cossus, and Marcellus) the possibility is explored that the spolia opima, rather than being an archaic ritual dating back to the regal period, represent a tradition invented (and reinvented) by specific individuals at certain well-defined moments in Roman history. Augustus himself, beginning while he was still a child, was influenced by traditions about the career and achievements of M. Claudius Marcellus. Augustus' interest in Marcellus helps to explain his special focus on the spolia opima as a significant and hallowed Roman tradition. Consequently, in the late first century B.C., spolia opima were associated both with old-fashioned "republican" aspirations and also with the iconography and self-definition of the new ruling family. In this context other leading Romans of the age considered dedicating such spolia, notably M. Licinius Crassus, grandson of the triumvir, and the elder Drusus, brother of Tiberius. In addition, Virgil included the spolia opima as a recurring theme in the second half of the Aeneid. The poem reaches its climax when Aeneas kills his rival Italian leader Turnus in a duel which would have entitled him to dedicate spolia opima.
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Sumi, Geoffrey S. "Nero and Britannicus in the pompa circensis: The Circus Procession as Dynastic Ceremony in the Court of Claudius." Klio 102, no. 2 (November 26, 2020): 617–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/klio-2019-1008.

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SummaryAs part of the events marking Nero’s assumption of the toga virilis in 51 CE, he along with Britannicus led the circus procession (pompa circensis) in advance of games in the Circus Maximus. The aim of this paper is to reconstruct this pompa circensis, both in its processional elements and route through the city. The presence of potential successors along with images of the deified and honored dead of the imperial family shows how this ceremony evolved and expanded in the Principate to become a dynastic ceremony. The route of the newly modified pompa circensis, marked by monuments built by or dedicated to members of the imperial family, also had become increasingly dynastic. An essential element of the pompa circensis was the participation of the senate and equestrian order as well as the urban plebs, an act of performed consensus fully realized when the procession ended in the Circus Maximus. This circus procession, as reconstructed here, has further implications for the larger question of the imperial succession under Claudius.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Claudius family"

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Whitacre, Amanda Joree. "Disability and Ability in the Accounts of the Emperor Claudius." Kent State University / OhioLINK, 2018. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=kent1532088905482623.

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Morita, Kazumasa. "Claudin multigene family encoding four-transmembrane domain protein components of tight junction strands." Kyoto University, 1999. http://hdl.handle.net/2433/181737.

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Kubota, Koji. "Ca^[++]-independent cell-adhesion activity of claudins, a family of integral membrane proteins localized at tight junctions." Kyoto University, 2000. http://hdl.handle.net/2433/180839.

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Alleva, Claudia [Verfasser]. "Role of extracellular gate in cation coupling in the glutamate transporter family / Claudia Alleva." Düsseldorf : Universitäts- und Landesbibliothek der Heinrich-Heine-Universität Düsseldorf, 2021. http://d-nb.info/1241326916/34.

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MISSAGLIA, SARA. "Molecular genetics of familial tubulopathiens: claudin -16 and claudin-19 mutations in familal hypomagnesemia, hypercalciuria and nephrocalcinosis." Doctoral thesis, Università degli Studi di Milano-Bicocca, 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/10281/18919.

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L’ipomagnesemia, ipercalciuria e nefrocalcinosi familiare (FHHNC; OMIM 248250) è una tubulopatia renale rara a trasmissione autosomica recessiva, caratterizzata da perdita della funzione di riassorbimento del magnesio, ipercalciuria, nefrocalcinosi, formazione di calcoli renali, ricorrenti infezioni renali e progressiva insufficienza renale (i pazienti sono candidati a trapianto renale). I pazienti sono anche soggetti a spasmi muscolari, convulsioni e anomalie oculari. Sono inoltre stati osservati alti livelli dell’ormone paratiroideo (PTH) nel corso della malattia. Fino ad oggi la FHHNC è stata diagnosticata in circa 200 individui sparsi in tutto il mondo. Nelle famiglie FHHNC finora indagate la sindrome cosegrega con mutazioni nei geni CLDN16 e CLDN19. Questi due geni codificano per due proteine appartenenti alla famiglia delle claudine, le claudine 16 e 19, espresse nelle tight junctions nel tratto ascendente spesso dell’ansa di Henle. Attualmente si hanno poche informazioni sulla struttura e funzione di queste due proteine. È stato però ipotizzato che, interagendo tra loro, formerebbero dei pori attraverso cui passerebbe il magnesio secondo gradiente elettrochiminco. Lo scopo principale di questo studio è stato quello di (1) espandere lo spettro delle mutazioni nei geni CLDN16 e CLDN19 nelle famiglie FHHNC e indagare la loro distribuzione all’interno di popolazioni differenti e diverse aree geografiche, (2) cercare di stabilire una correlazione genotipo-fenotipo nei pazienti affetti dalla patologia e contribuire all’analisi della relazione struttura-funzione delle claudine 16 e 19, (3) identificare altri eventuali geni coinvolti nell’insorgenza della FHHNC, (4) e, poiché recenti studi hanno associato la sovraespressione di CLDN16 con una diminuzione dell’aggressività del carcinoma al seno, indagare se le mutazioni in CLDN16 identificate come causa dell’insorgenza della FHHNC possano influire sulle eventuali capacità antitumorali della proteina. Lo studio presentato in questa tesi di dottorato è stato condotto su 27 famiglie FHHNC non consanguinee, per un totale di 33 pazienti sottoposti ad analisi genetica. Per ciascuno di questi pazienti e per alcuni parenti sani abbiamo raccolto campioni di sangue dai quali sono stati estratti DNA, RNA totale e proteine. Per ciascuno dei 33 pazienti FHHNC l’analisi genetica è iniziata con il sequenziamento diretto dell’intera regione codificante e dei siti di regolazione dello splicing del gene CLDN16. In 12 pazienti abbiamo identificato complessivamente tre nuove mutazioni non senso (R214X, W217X, Y213X), quattro nuove variazioni presumibilmente associabili all’insorgenza della malattia (L116F, C120Y, G239V, E294K) e cinque mutazioni già precedentemente descritte (S110R, N123fs, L145P, R149X, L151F). Per i 21 pazienti FHHNC, risultati negativi per mutazioni nel gene CLDN16, la caratterizzazione molecolare è proseguita con l’analisi della sequenza codificante e dei siti di regolazione dello splicing del gene CLDN19. In 12 pazienti abbiamo identificato complessivamente una mutazione già descritta in precedenza (G20D) e una delezione che interessa gli esoni 1-4 del gene (è il primo caso noto di delezione quasi totale del gene CLDN19). Risultano tuttora in corso la caratterizzazione molecolare di 9 pazienti per i quali non sono state identificate mutazioni associabili all’insorgenza della malattia nei geni CLDN16 e CLDN19 e le analisi per valutare se mutazioni che comportano una completa o parziale scomparsa della funzione di claudina-16 nel rene possano causare anche diminuzione o scomparsa della sua ipotetica capacità antitumorale nelle cellule di tumori del seno. I risultati di questo lavoro espandono lo spettro delle mutazioni patogenetiche di CLDN16 e CLDN19 nei pazienti FHHNC, contribuendo a fornire informazioni relative alla patogenesi della sindrome e allo studio della relazione struttura-funzione nelle claudine 16 e 19. Saranno tuttavia necessari ulteriori approfondimenti sperimentali per comprendere meglio l’effetto di ciascuna mutazione sulla funzionalità delle due proteine.
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Martina, Gabriele. "Nommer les femmes de la famille Julio-Claudienne : témoignages littéraires et épigraphiques." Thesis, Université Grenoble Alpes (ComUE), 2016. http://www.theses.fr/2016GREAL008.

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L’objet de cette thèse de doctorat est l’étude systématique des mentions, des appellations et des titres des femmes de la dynastie Julio-Claudienne, dans les sources littéraires et épigraphiques. L’étude des appellations des femmes impériales durant la première époque du Principat s’insère dans l’axe de la recherche contemporaine qui vise à définir les espaces et les modalités d’action des femmes pendant l’antiquité classique, et en particulier pendant la phase délicate de transition entre la République romaine et le Principat. En effet, le passage entre la République et la nouvelle forme de gouvernement a également marqué un changement important dans la situation des femmes, car les modalités d’action des femmes, jusqu’alors confinées dans une sphère domestique et privée, évoluèrent. Cette thèse est organisée en deux parties : une première partie dédiée à l’étude et à l’analyse des appellations des femmes impériales et une deuxième partie, intitulée annexe, qui recueille et organise systématiquement tous les témoignages littéraires et épigraphiques pour chaque femme de la famille Julio-Claudienne. Notre but a été, par notre recherche doctorale sur les appellations des femmes de la dynastie Julio-Claudienne, d’avancer dans la définition des espaces d’action de ces femmes au début de l’Empire ainsi que dans la connaissance du rôle des femmes au sein de la cour impériale ; cette étude permet d’analyser en détail les rapports de parenté complexes qui lient les figures féminines concernées aux personnages masculins de la domus impériale ou à des figures qui s’y rapportent
The aim of this thesis is to investigate the appellations, names and titles of the women of Julio-Claudian family in literary and epigraphic sources. The analysis and study of the appellations of these imperial women during the first period of the Roman Empire, is part of the contemporary research that seeks to define the spaces and action modalities of women during the time of classical antiquity and in particular, the period of transition from the Roman Republic to the Roman Empire. In fact, the passage of the Roman Republic to a new form of government marked a significant change in the situation of women, especially for the women of the imperial domus. Women, who until then were normally confined to a domestic and private sphere, acquired and exercised new action modalities within new spheres of action. This thesis is organized in two sections: the first part of the study analyses the names, appellations and titles of imperial women and the second part collates and organizes all the literary and epigraphic evidences of each woman of the Julio-Claudian family. The purpose of this research on the appellations and names of the women of Julio-Claudian dynasty has been to advance the study of feminine spaces at the beginning of the Roman Empire and to illuminate of the new actions modalities for the imperial women during this period. Furthermore, this doctoral research contributes to deepening our understanding of the changes of the role and status of imperial women and the complex relative relationships of these women to the men of imperial family, such as the emperors and other male figures in Julio-Claudian dynasty, or to eminent personages in the Roman imperial society
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Kohno, Yoshiki. "Expression of claudin7 is tightly associated with epithelial structures in synovial sarcomas and regulated by an Ets family transcription factor, ELF3." Kyoto University, 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/2433/135811.

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Roßig, Claudia [Verfasser], and Christiane [Akademischer Betreuer] Reinbothe. "Members of the Preprotein and Amino Acid Transporter Family Constitute Components of Novel Protein Import Pathways into Chloroplasts / Claudia Roßig. Betreuer: Christiane Reinbothe." Bayreuth : Universitätsbibliothek Bayreuth, 2011. http://d-nb.info/1016670494/34.

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Winter, Claudia [Verfasser], and Nicole [Akademischer Betreuer] Duenker. "Zur Regulation der Genexpression von Trefoil Factor Family (TFF) Peptiden in humanen Retinoblastomzelllinien und zur Bedeutung von TFF3 für das Zellverhalten / Claudia Winter ; Betreuer: Nicole Duenker." Duisburg, 2017. http://d-nb.info/1123495254/34.

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Bonnet, Renate [Verfasser], Thomas [Akademischer Betreuer] [Gutachter] Paulsen, and Lorenz [Gutachter] Rumpf. "Kommunikationsprobleme des behinderten Kaisers Claudius mit Familie, "Urbs" und Kaiserhof im Spiegel der römischen Satire, Biographie und Historiographie / Renate Bonnet ; Gutachter: Thomas Paulsen, Lorenz Rumpf ; Betreuer: Thomas Paulsen." Frankfurt am Main : Universitätsbibliothek Johann Christian Senckenberg, 2017. http://d-nb.info/1147672628/34.

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Books on the topic "Claudius family"

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Chambers, Mildred Aldrich. The Claudius Pegues family. [Midland, Tex.]: M.A. Chambers, 1986.

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Vallentine, John F. Wilson and the allied families of Foor, Tatman, Chapman, Fenton, Morris, and Oliver, and the John Claudius (Curley) Wilson family. Springville, Utah (1081 S. 700 E., Springville 84663): J.F. Vallentine, 1986.

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ill, Garvey Brann, ed. Advice about family: Claudia Cristina Cortez uncomplicates your life. Minneapolis, Minn: Stone Arch Books, 2010.

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Brann, Garvey, ed. Advice about family: Claudia Cristina Cortez uncomplicates your life. Minneapolis, Minn: Stone Arch Books, 2010.

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M, Martin Ann. Claudia and crazy Peaches. London: Hippo, 1996.

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Ann, Fleming. Jacob Aloysius Dorf and Florence Claudine Maxwell: A family history and scrapbook. Knoxville, TN: Tennessee Valley Pub., 1991.

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M, Martin Ann. Claudia and mean Janine. Lakeville, Conn: Grey Castle Press, 1988.

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M, Martin Ann. Claudia and mean Janine. New York: Scholastic Inc., 1987.

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M, Martin Ann. Claudia and mean Janine. Lakeville, CT: Grey Castle Press, 1988.

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M, Martin Ann. Claudia and Mean Janine. New York: Scholastic Inc., 1987.

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Book chapters on the topic "Claudius family"

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Simske, Jeffrey S., and Jeff Hardin. "Claudin Family Proteins in Caenorhabditis elegans." In Methods in Molecular Biology, 147–69. Totowa, NJ: Humana Press, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-61779-185-7_11.

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Treggiari, Susan. "Brutus (85–49)." In Servilia and her Family, 145–60. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198829348.003.0008.

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Servilia’s only son, Brutus, was probably born in 85. By 59 he had taken the name Q. Caepio Brutus, either by adrogation or by taking the name of Servilius Caepio as a condition of inheriting. The adopter may have been Servilia’s full brother. In 58–56 he served under Cato in Cyprus. About 55 he married Claudia, daughter of the rich and influential Ap. Claudius Pulcher. He held a quaestorship (?54) and served under Claudius in Cilicia. He lent money to foreigners at usurious rates. In 49 he joined his father’s enemy Pompey.
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Stothard, Peter. "Of unshakable loyalty to his emperor." In Palatine, 163–70. Oxford University Press, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197555286.003.0034.

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Abstract Claudius would at some point need a new wife. The issue was who it should be, the kind of question where senior freed slaves, intimates of the family, had a stronger responsibility than those, like Lucius, who had their own families. The whole household needed clarity on who would succeed to the throne. The prospects of Messalina’s son, Britannicus, were dimming with the demise of his mother. Three men, Narcissus, Callistus and Pallas, played the main parts in a marital selection story that became both theatrical and mythical in its retellings. Lucius was weakened too by Messalina’s fall but died a natural death and received a bust of himself in the Forum to show Claudius’s gratitude.
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"Livy And Other Augustans." In An Anthology of Latin Prose, edited by D. A. Russell, 89–110. Oxford University PressOxford, 1990. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198147466.003.0004.

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Abstract We owe two of these letters to the biographer Suetonius, who had access to Augustus’ own copies (‘litterae … autographae’, Aug 87) and one to Aulus Gellius. But books of them were in circulation earlier; the emperor had the reputation of an entertaining letter-writer. We give (a) a letter (Suet. Claudius 3) to his wife Livia on an important family matter, the career of the future emperor Claudius; (b) a note to his favourite grandson Gaius (Aulus Gellius 15.7); (c) a letter to the poet Horace (Suet, vita Horati) (cf. E. Fraenkel, Horace (Oxford, 1957) 20).
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Bunson, Matthew. "X." In A Dictionary Of the Roman Empire, 458. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195102338.003.0024.

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Abstract XANTHUS Ancient, chief city of the province of LYCIA, near the mouth of the XANTHUS RIVER; besieged in 42 B.C. by Marcus BRUTUS, who wished to exact from the Lycians tribute for his war with ANTONY and Octavian (AUGUSTUS). The proud Lycians refused him, killed themselves and burned down the city. Marc Antony subsequently exempted the impoverished Lycians from TAXATION and invited them to rebuild Xanthus. They apparently refused. XANTHUS RIVER The most important river in the province of LYCIA; rose in the Taurus Mountains and cut its way across the country to the south. Because of its size and location, the Xanthus was used as part of the waterborne trade system of ROME. XENOPHON (fl. 1st century A.D.) Imperial physician to Emperor CLAUDIUS in the last years of his reign (c. 5354 A.O.). Xenophon was originally from Cos (Kos), where his family was held in high esteem. As a gift to him in 53, Claudius granted a special IMMUNITAS (tax exemption) to the entire island. TACITUS (1) wrote that Xenophon had been bought by AGRIPPINA and was part of the murder of Claudius in 54. When the poisoned mushrooms failed to bring about the emperor’s death, Xenophon was summoned to use a feather dipped in poison to ensure that Claudius died rapidly.
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Shannon-Henderson, Kelly E. "Conclusions." In Religion and Memory in Tacitus' Annals, 351–62. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198832768.003.0009.

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This chapter summarizes the conclusions that emerge from the analysis conducted in previous chapters. While the reign of each emperor described in the Annals has its own unique religious character, Tacitus nevertheless highlights certain problems that afflict them all: emperor cult, and the way it encourages religious commemoration of living members of the Imperial family; the prosecution of rivals on religious charges; religious flattery; increasing disregard for the cultic traditions of Rome; and the gods’ anger as manifested in prodigies. Tacitus also shows that there is no convincing alternative approach available, since rivals to the emperors’ conduct (such as Germanicus or the Pisonian conspirators) are also plagued by religious problems, and Claudius’ attempt to revive cultic traditions does not make any real difference. A brief consideration of the Histories suggests that, while the Flavians come off better than the Julio-Claudians, Tacitus also does not seem to have considered them to be a real solution to Rome’s religious problems, either. The best Tacitus can offer is his own works, as a conduit that can preserve religious memory in their own right.
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Stothard, Peter. "New courts for old." In Palatine, 272–78. Oxford University Press, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197555286.003.0054.

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Abstract This book has been the story of a hill and its people, of a palace and a mostly forgotten palace family. The family name, Vitellius, was as quickly degraded as the body at the bottom of the Groaning Steps. Yet the system of government did not – and could not – change for long. The Palatine’s empty rooms rapidly refilled, many previous flatterers and gluttons returning to their old places or to promotions. Vespasian soon used courtiers, favourites, slaves and former slaves, to run the empire as Claudius and Nero had done. For centuries afterwards Rome held its empire. The bureaucracy of Rome spread just like its aqueducts and its literature, though less proudly remembered.
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Stothard, Peter. "God-given mushrooms." In Palatine, 171–74. Oxford University Press, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197555286.003.0035.

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Abstract When Lucius Vitellius died in 51 CE, his elder son had already achieved as much as his family had expected of him and more. Aulus was 39, a courtier who was also a former consul and senator. His father had been three times consul. This was a record which Aulus showed no wish to match. He did not live in the past, even the very recent past. He did not ape his older senate colleagues in distant nostalgia. Aulus lived in the present, with a survivor’s eye on the near future. He was a large and genial man with a limp, a low-slung belly and a long experience of watching his superiors. When Claudius died of mushroom-poisoning and Nero became emperor, he knew what the newly powerful boy wanted. In that respect, if not in intellectual range and subtlety, he was his father’s son.
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lembke, Janet, and kenneth J. Reckford. "Introduction." In Euripides Electra, 3–17. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 1994. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195085761.003.0001.

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Abstract A revenge play gone askew, Shakespeare’s Hamlet has misled numberless theatergoers, readers, and critics into seeking some definite answer to what seemed the obvious question: why doesn’t Hamlet get on with the job? After Hamlet learns from his father’s ghost how Claudius poisoned his brother the king and stole his queen-wife (Hamlet’s mother), and after Hamlet confirms that tale by staging the play-murder and play-sequction, all he need do is kill his uncle. Surely Elsinor will support him, so why delay? Is it because Hamlet has a flawed character? Is he overly intellectual and given to melancholy brooding? Or is it because his Oedipal strivings lead him to identify unconsciously with Claudius? All these possibilities may be correct, for Shakespeare gives wide scope to directors, actors, and critics to superimpose their own interpretation. But this odd tragedy of hesitation, of vengeance delayed, has other underlying motivations. Shakespeare’s Hamlet is no hothead, no Laertes. He is a thoughtful, self-aware person in a thoughtless world. Uneasily he finds himself cast in what might have been-in what in an earlier period was the typical revenge play, where the hero outwits and kills the usurper. Hamlet rushes into nothing. He probes and tests. Very sensibly he demands reassurances that his informant was an honest ghost, not a tempting devil. Wisely, too, he forbears killing a villain at his (seeming) prayers. Certainly his mind is clouded-by shock, by sexual disturbance, and by a madness only half feigned; it only clears in Act 5, when resolution is still outpaced by events. But he has also been thinking all this time-about himself, about family and friends, about Denmark, and about what May nard Mack has called the “pervasive inscrutability” of things. It is not just that Hamlet is unready for revenge, but that, for this intelligent and sensitive hero, the call to revenge opens up a host of questions that require but do not receive a simple answer.
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Patricia Rendón-Huerta, Erika, Carlos Abraham García-García, and Luis Felipe Montaño Estrada. "Effect of Helicobacter pylori on Tight Junctions in Gastric Epithelia." In Helicobacter pylori - From First Isolation to 2020 [Working Title]. IntechOpen, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/intechopen.96607.

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Molecular complexes grouped under the names of tight, adherent or gap junction regulate the flow of water, ions and macromolecules through epithelium paracellular spaces. The main constituents of tight junctions are claudins, a family of 26 different proteins whose expression and distribution are tissue specific but varies in tumors. A change in claudin 1, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 9 and 18 expression, that contributes to lose epithelial cohesion, has been associated to enhanced cell proliferation, migration, and invasiveness in gastric neoplastic tissue. Chronic inflammation process induced by H. pylori infection, a major risk factor for gastric cancer development, disrupts tight junctions via CagA gene, Cag pathogenicity island, and VacA, but the effect upon the epithelial barrier of H. pylori lipopolysaccharides or H. pylori-induced up-regulation of mTOR and ERK signaling pathways by microRNA-100 establishes new concepts of proof.
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Conference papers on the topic "Claudius family"

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Martin, Tracey Amanda, Gregory M. Harrison, Robert E. Mansel, Kefer Mokbel, Eleri Davies, and Wen G. Jiang. "Abstract PS4-44: Expression of the claudin transmembrane tight junction protein family (CLDN) and the prediction value of a claudin subset to the clinical outcome of patients with breast cancer." In Abstracts: 2020 San Antonio Breast Cancer Virtual Symposium; December 8-11, 2020; San Antonio, Texas. American Association for Cancer Research, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/1538-7445.sabcs20-ps4-44.

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Bao, Y., JQ Chen, Y. Wu, X.-H. Leng, E. Wang, F. Marincola, and LG Radvanyi. "Abstract P6-08-14: TRPS-1, a New GATA Family Transcription Factor, Regulates Epithelial-Mesenchymal Transition and Maintains an Estrogen Responsive, Claudin-Positive Phenotype in Breast Cancer Cells." In Abstracts: Thirty-Third Annual CTRC‐AACR San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium‐‐ Dec 8‐12, 2010; San Antonio, TX. American Association for Cancer Research, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/0008-5472.sabcs10-p6-08-14.

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