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MARCUS VIPSANIUS AGRIPPA

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Originally appearing in Volume V01, Page 426 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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MARCUS VIPSANIUS AGRIPPA  •(63—12 B.c.),
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Roman states-man and general, son-in-law and minister of the emperor Augustus, was of humble origin . He was of the same age as Octavian (as the emperor was then called), and was studying with him at
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Apollonia when
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news of
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Julius Caesar's. assassination (44) arrived . By his advice Octavian at once set out for Rome . Agrippa played a conspicuous
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part in the war against
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Lucius,
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brother of Mark Antony, which ended in the capture of Perusia (40) . Two years later he put down a rising of the Aquitanians in Gaul, and crossed the Rhine to punish the aggressions of the Germans . On his return he refused a triumph but accepted the consulship (39) . At this time Sextus Pompeius, with whom war was imminent, had command of the sea on the coasts of Italy . Agrippa's first care was to provide a safe harbour for his
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ships, which he accomplished by cutting through the strips of
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land which separated the Lacus Lucrinus from the sea, thus forming an
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outer harbour; an inner one was also made by joining the lake
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Avernus to the Lucrinus (Dio Cassius xlviii . 49 ; Pliny, Nat . Hist.
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xxxvi . 24) . About this time Agrippa married Pomponia, daughter of
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Cicero's friend Pomponius Atticus .

Having been appointed

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naval
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commander-in-chief he put his crews through a course of training, until he felt in a position to meet the
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fleet of Pompeius . In 36 he was victorious at Mylae and Naulochus, and received the honour of a naval
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crown for his services . In 33 he was chosen aedile and signalized his tenure of office by effecting
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great improvements in the city of Rome, restoring and
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building aqueducts, enlarging and cleansing the sewers, and constructing
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baths and porticos, and laying out gardens, He also first gave a stimulus to the public
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exhibition of
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works of
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art . The emperor's boast that he had found the city of brick but
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left it of marble ("marmoream se relinquere, quam latericiam accepisset," Suet . Aug . 29) might with greater propriety have been uttered by Agrippa . He was again called away to take command of the fleet when the war with Antony broke out . The victory at Actium (31), which gave the mastery of Rome and the
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empire of the
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world to Octavian, was mainly due to Agrippa . As a token of
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signal regard Octavian bestowed upon him the hand of his niece Marcella (28) . We must suppose that his wife Pomponia was either dead or divorced . In 27 Agrippa was consul for the third time, and in the following
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year the senate bestowed upon Octavian the emperial title of Augustus . Probably in
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commemoration of the
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battle of Actium, Agrippa built and dedicated the Pantheum still in existence as La Rotonda .

The inscription on the

portico states that it was erected by him during his third consulship . His friendship with Augustus seems to have been clouded by the jealousy of his
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father-in-law
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Marcellus, which was probably fomented by the intrigues of Livia, the second wife of Augustus, who feared his influence with her
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husband . The result was that Agrippa left Rome, ostensibly to take over the governor-
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ship of Syria—a sort of honourable exile; but as a
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matter of fact he only sent his legate to the East, while he himself remained at Lesbos . On the
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death of Marcellus, which took place within a year, he was recalled to Rome by Augustus, who found he could not dispense with his services . It is said that by the advice of Maecenas he resolved to attach Agrippa still more closely to him by making him his son-in-law . He accordingly induced him to
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divorce Marcella and marry his daughter Julia (21), the widow of Marcellus, equally celebrated for her beauty and abilities and her shameless profligacy . In 19 Agrippa was employed in putting down a rising of the Cantabrians in Spain . He was appointed governor of
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Syria a second time (17), where his just, and prudent administration won him the respect and good-will of the provincials, especially the
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Hebrew population . His last public service was the bloodless suppression of an insurrection in
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Pannonia (13) . He died at
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Campania in March of the year following his fifty-first year . Augustus honoured his memory by a magnificent funeral . Agrippa was also known as a writer, especially on geography .

Under his supervision Julius Caesar's

design of having a
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complete survey of the empire made was carried out . From the materials at hand he constructed a circular chart, which was engraved on marble by Augustus and afterwards placed in the
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colonnade built by his
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sister Polla . Amongst his writings an autobiography, now lost, is referred to . Agrippa left several children; by Pomponia, a daughter Vipsania, who became the wife of the emperor Tiberius; by Julia three sons,
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Gaius and Lucius Caesar and Agrippa Postumus, and two daughters,
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Agrippina the elder, afterwards the wife of Germanicus, and Julia, who married Lucius Aemilius Paullus . See Dio Cassius xlix.-liv.; Suetonius, Augustus; Velleius Paterculus ii.; Josephus, Antiq . Jud. xv . Io, xvi . 2; Turnbull, Three
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Dissertations, one of thecharacters of Horace, Augustus and Agrippa (174o); Frandsen,
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Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa (1836); Motte, Etude sur Marcus Agrippa (1872); Nispi-Landi, Marcus Agrippa e i suoi tempi (19oI); D . Detlefsen, Ursprung, Einrichtung and Bedeutung der Erdkarte Agrippas (1906); V . Gardthausen, Augustus and seine Zest, vol. i . 762
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foil., ii . 432 foil .

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