Aemilia tertia biography samples
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Talk:Aemilia Tertia
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I have a query about some of the categories used for "Aemilia Tertia", the article. While I recognize her importance, inom am not sure the categories used for her husband Scipio Africanus should also be used here.
For example, Second Punic War commanders | Ancient lÄngnovell generals| Roman Republican consuls
We do not have categories like this for the entries on women in Imperial Rome such as Livia, no
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Aemilia Dovahsos Tertia | |
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Race | Imperial |
Gender | Female |
Player | Nelthro |
Date of Birth | 4E |
Status | Alive |
Titles | Empress |
Factions | New Dragonborn Empire |
Place of Birth | Imperial City, Cyrodiil |
Family | Vortigernus Dovahsos Tertia (Son) Minerva Dovahsos Tertia (Daughter) Cassian Nelthar (Son) |
Stop screaming my nickname! | ||
Aemilia after becoming Ysmir |
Aemilia Dovahsos Tertia is the Empress of Tamriel and the leader of the New Dragonborn Empire.
Personality[]
The Empress is a very convincing woman and often strikes fear into the heart of dock, this being evident in how she was able to convince Ulfric Stormcloak and General Tullius to lay aside their difference for good and take the throne of Tamriel for herself.
Ancestry[]
Much of Aemilia's ancestry fryst vatten unknown, she is often felaktigt presumed to be a descendant of Tiber Septim.
History[]
Aemilia was born to Imperial Noblemen
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Aemilia Tertia
Wife of Scipio Africanus
Aemilia Tertia (d. or BC), properly Aemilia,[2] was the wife of Scipio Africanus.
Life
[edit]She was a member of the gens Aemilia, one of the ancient Roman patrician families, and the daughter of the Lucius Aemilius Paullus who was consul in and BC.[5] Paullus died in at the Battle of Cannae[6] and she married Africanus, then known only as Publius Cornelius Scipio, some time around the battle.[7]
In life she was known for her ostentatious displays of wealth. Polybius, for example, noted in his narrative how Aemilia "display[ed] great magnificence whenever she left her house to take part in the ceremonies that women attend, having participated in the fortune of Scipio when he was at the height of his prosperity" before describing the large size of her retinue, gold and silver adorned carriage, and expensive sacrificial instruments.[8] These ostentatious displays of wealth re