Title
Imperial Procession
Subject
Augustus, Emperor of Rome, 63 B.C.-14 A.D.
Description
Detail of a relief on the south side of the Ara Pacis. The bored but well-behaved youngster pulling at Agrippas robeand being restrained gently by the hand of the man behind himis probably Agrippas son Gaius Caesar. The heavily swathed woman next to Agrippa on the right may be Augustus wife, Livia, followed by Tiberius, who would become the next emperor. Behind Tiberius could be Antonia, the niece of Augustus, looking back at her husband, Drusus, Livias younger son. She may grasp the hand of Germanicus, one of her younger children. The depiction of children and real women in an official relief was new to the Augustan period and reflects Augustus desire to promote private family life as well as to emphasize his potential heirs. The figures in this frieze represent members of Augustus extended family, and scholars have proposed some specific identifications. The middle-aged man with the shrouded head at the far left may be Marcus Agrippa, who would have been Augustus successor had he not predeceased him in 12 ce.
Source
Stokstad, Marilyn
Art History, 4th ed., Upper Saddle River, N. J.: Pearson Education, 2010 (9780205800377)
Publisher
Department of Visual Studies
University at Buffalo
Contributor
Joe Easterly
Rights
Type
altars (religious building fixtures)
architectural elements
reliefs (sculptures)
sculpture (visual work)
Still Image
Identifier
VS4562951
vw-20100831-1
Date Created
2011-08-18
Date Modified
2011-08-18
Is Part Of
Visual Resources Collection
VS001
Extent
Height 5'2
Spatial Coverage
Museo dell'Ara Pacis (Rome, Italy)
Temporal Coverage
Ancient Roman
Audience
AHI101
UB Only
Collection
Citation
“Imperial Procession,” Digital Collections - University at Buffalo Libraries, accessed April 22, 2025, https://digital.lib.buffalo.edu/index.php/items/show/29930.