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Domnina (daughter of Nero)

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22: 162:', as the lady who is the subject of the poet's affections. Such tales often blend fact with fiction and freely conflate and combine items from different eras of history, without regard for the actual chronology. 136:. According to the tradition, Domnina ordered that all the tempting gold jewelry she and her servants had to be sold and the money distributed to the poor. In one version the converted Domnina took the name 282: 159: 39: 86: 58: 120: 65: 253: 221: 190: 72: 105: 54: 302: 277: 43: 287: 272: 133: 79: 297: 143:
Domnina is not recorded in historical sources, and the story is likely a Christian myth dating to
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Master Virgil, the author of the Aeneid, as he seemed in the Middle Ages, a series of studies
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A daughter of Nero's is also mentioned in some versions of the medieval fable of '
152: 144: 132:, was converted in to Christianity along with her hundred slave girls, by the 266: 148: 21: 237:. Cincinnati: Robert Clarke & Co – via Internet Archive. 245:
From the Critic's Workbench: Essays in Literature and Semiotics
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The Virgilian Tradition: The First Fifteen Hundred Years
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Converts to Christianity from ancient Roman religions
46:. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. 210:Ziolkowski, Jan M.; Putnam, Michael C. J. (2008). 182:Longing for God: Seven Paths of Christian Devotion 264: 209: 118:According to a Christian tradition, recorded in 179:Foster, Richard J.; Beebe, Gayle D. (2009). 178: 151:. Nero's only recorded daughter was named 106:Learn how and when to remove this message 241: 230: 121:The Posthumous Miracles of St. Photeine 265: 216:. Yale University Press. p. 877. 44:adding citations to reliable sources 15: 185:. InterVarsity Press. p. 298. 13: 231:Tunison, Joseph Salathiel (1890). 14: 314: 203: 128:, daughter of the Roman emperor 20: 55:"Domnina" daughter of Nero 31:needs additional citations for 172: 1: 165: 7: 10: 319: 248:. Peter Lang. p. 72. 242:Shapiro, Marianne (2005). 303:Mythological characters 278:1st-century Roman women 155:, and died in infancy. 134:samaritan woman Photina 160:Virgil in the basket 40:improve this article 288:Christian mythology 273:1st-century Romans 255:978-0-8204-7915-6 223:978-0-300-10822-4 192:978-0-8308-3514-0 116: 115: 108: 90: 310: 298:Legendary Romans 259: 238: 227: 197: 196: 176: 111: 104: 100: 97: 91: 89: 48: 24: 16: 318: 317: 313: 312: 311: 309: 308: 307: 263: 262: 256: 224: 206: 201: 200: 193: 177: 173: 168: 153:Claudia Augusta 112: 101: 95: 92: 49: 47: 37: 25: 12: 11: 5: 316: 306: 305: 300: 295: 293:Family of Nero 290: 285: 280: 275: 261: 260: 254: 239: 228: 222: 205: 204:External links 202: 199: 198: 191: 170: 169: 167: 164: 145:late antiquity 114: 113: 28: 26: 19: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 315: 304: 301: 299: 296: 294: 291: 289: 286: 284: 281: 279: 276: 274: 271: 270: 268: 257: 251: 247: 246: 240: 236: 235: 229: 225: 219: 215: 214: 208: 207: 194: 188: 184: 183: 175: 171: 163: 161: 156: 154: 150: 146: 141: 139: 135: 131: 127: 123: 122: 110: 107: 99: 96:February 2014 88: 85: 81: 78: 74: 71: 67: 64: 60: 57: –  56: 52: 51:Find sources: 45: 41: 35: 34: 29:This article 27: 23: 18: 17: 244: 233: 212: 181: 174: 157: 147:, or to the 142: 137: 125: 119: 117: 102: 93: 83: 76: 69: 62: 50: 38:Please help 33:verification 30: 149:Middle Ages 267:Categories 166:References 66:newspapers 138:Anthousa 126:Domnina 80:scholar 252:  220:  189:  82:  75:  68:  61:  53:  87:JSTOR 73:books 250:ISBN 218:ISBN 187:ISBN 130:Nero 59:news 42:by 269:: 140:. 124:, 258:. 226:. 195:. 109:) 103:( 98:) 94:( 84:· 77:· 70:· 63:· 36:.

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verification
improve this article
adding citations to reliable sources
"Domnina" daughter of Nero
news
newspapers
books
scholar
JSTOR
Learn how and when to remove this message
The Posthumous Miracles of St. Photeine
Nero
samaritan woman Photina
late antiquity
Middle Ages
Claudia Augusta
Virgil in the basket
Longing for God: Seven Paths of Christian Devotion
ISBN
978-0-8308-3514-0
The Virgilian Tradition: The First Fifteen Hundred Years
ISBN
978-0-300-10822-4
Master Virgil, the author of the Aeneid, as he seemed in the Middle Ages, a series of studies
From the Critic's Workbench: Essays in Literature and Semiotics
ISBN
978-0-8204-7915-6
Categories
1st-century Romans

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