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| - Claudia Livia Julia was evaluated to be conceived around 13 BC and died on 31 AD, was the only daughter of Nero Claudius Drusus and Antonia Minor and sister of the Roman Emperor Claudius and general Germanicus, and in this manner the fatherly auntie of the head Caligula and maternal extraordinary close relative of sovereign Nero. She was named after her grandma, Augustus' wife Livia Drusilla, and generally known by her family epithet Livilla ("little Livia"). She was conceived after Germanicus and before Claudius.
- Like all wives of the imperial family before her, Livilla was selected because of her looks rather than her personality, and like all wives of the imperial family before her, she despised her husband with a passion. Up until the death of Pepin's father, she spent most of her days working as a handmaiden for Empress Berengaria, performing increasingly torturous chores for the goddess's amusement; following Berengaria's disgrace and Pepin's ascendance to the throne, Livilla was declared Empress and Goddess — much to her delight.
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abstract
| - Like all wives of the imperial family before her, Livilla was selected because of her looks rather than her personality, and like all wives of the imperial family before her, she despised her husband with a passion. Up until the death of Pepin's father, she spent most of her days working as a handmaiden for Empress Berengaria, performing increasingly torturous chores for the goddess's amusement; following Berengaria's disgrace and Pepin's ascendance to the throne, Livilla was declared Empress and Goddess — much to her delight. However, Pepin doubted that he was a god and, refusing to lie to his subjects, ultimately admitted to not being a god in his coronation speech — ensuring that both he and Livilla would be executed in a coup led by Childeric. However, the Sixth Doctor and Frobisher landed amongst them in a move quickly declared a miracle by the populace, unwittingly saving their lives. To Livilla's frustration, Pepin refused to agree that the appearance had been caused by him, and were only rescued from further execution attempts by the intervention of Eugene Tacitus, who claimed that past kings had experienced mental fatigue following their coronation.
- Claudia Livia Julia was evaluated to be conceived around 13 BC and died on 31 AD, was the only daughter of Nero Claudius Drusus and Antonia Minor and sister of the Roman Emperor Claudius and general Germanicus, and in this manner the fatherly auntie of the head Caligula and maternal extraordinary close relative of sovereign Nero. She was named after her grandma, Augustus' wife Livia Drusilla, and generally known by her family epithet Livilla ("little Livia"). She was conceived after Germanicus and before Claudius. She was twice hitched to the potential successor in the Julio-Claudian dynasty, first to Augustus's grandson Gaius Caesar (died 4 AD) and later to Tiberius's child Drusus the Younger (passed on 23 AD). Professedly, she helped her significant other Sejanus in harming her spouse and died not long after Sejanus tumbled from power in 31 AD.
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