Aulus Terentius Varro Murena

For other men named Aulus Terentius Varro, see Terentius Varro.

Aulus Terentius Varro Murena (died 24 BC) was a Roman general and politician of the 1st century BC.

Biography

Murena was the natural born son of Aulus Terentius Varro,[1] and adopted brother to Lucius Lucinius Varro Murena. He was well connected to the Augustan regime,[2] with his sister, Terentia, married to Gaius Maecenas, the prominent adviser and friend of Augustus and patron of the arts,[3] while his half-brother, Gaius Proculeius, was an intimate friend of Augustus during his rise to power.[4]

Augustus dispatched Murena to lead an expedition against the Salassi tribe of the Aosta Valley region in the northwestern Alps in 25 BC.[5] The Salassi had proved troublesome to Roman armies using the Great St Bernard pass, which, as the shortest route from Italy to the Upper Rhine river, had become strategically vital to the Romans since the completion of Julius Caesar's conquest of Gaul in 51 BC. The Salassi were utterly defeated and, according to Strabo, Murena deported and sold into slavery 44,000 tribespeople. According to Cassius Dio, he sold only males of military age and only for an indenture-term of 20 years.[6] In 24 BC, Murena established a Roman colony of 3,000 settlers in the heart of Salassi country - Augusta Praetoria Salassorum (Aosta, Italy).[7]

Murena was nominated to be Consul, with Augustus, for the year 23 BC, but died shortly before his term in office began.[8] His replacement was Gnaeus Calpurnius Piso.[9] Shortly after Murena's death, his brother by adoption, Lucius Lucinius Varro Murena, was accused of conspiring with Fannius Caepio against Augustus.[10]

Sources

Ancient

Modern

References

  1. Smith's Biography Murena
  2. Wells, pg. 53
  3. Lightman, A to Z of ancient Greek and Roman women, pg. 312
  4. Syme, pg. 358
  5. Davies, pg. 257
  6. Dio 53.25
  7. Strabo IV.6.7; Davies, pg. 257
  8. Swan, pg. 240
  9. Raaflaub, pg. 426
  10. Clifford Ando, Imperial ideology and provincial loyalty in the Roman Empire, pg. 140 140


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