18 Facts About Lucretia

1.

Lucretia was the daughter of magistrate Spurius Lucretius and the wife of Lucius Tarquinius Collatinus.

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2.

Lucretia entered Lucretia's room while she lay naked in her bed and started to wash her belly with water, which woke her up.

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3.

In Dionysius of Halicarnassus' account, the following day Lucretia dressed in black and went to her father's house in Rome and cast herself down in the supplicant's position, weeping in front of her father and husband.

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4.

Lucretia's died in her father's arms, while the women present lamented her death.

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5.

Lucretia was a candidate for the throne if anything should happen to Superbus.

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6.

Lucretia held her, kissed her, called her name and spoke to her.

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7.

Lucretia passed the dagger around and each mourner swore the same oath by it.

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8.

Lucretia began by revealing that his pose as a fool was a sham designed to protect him against an evil king.

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9.

Lucretia levelled a number of charges against the king and his family: the outrage against Lucretia, whom everyone could see on the dais, the king's tyranny, the forced labor of the plebeians in the ditches and sewers of Rome.

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10.

Lucretia "solemnly invoked the gods as the avengers of murdered parents.

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11.

Lucretia proposed Brutus and Collatinus as the first two consuls and that choice was ratified by the curiae.

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12.

Livy contrasts the virtue of the Roman Lucretia, who remained in her room weaving, with the Etruscan ladies who feasted with friends.

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13.

Story of Lucretia was a popular moral tale in the later Middle Ages.

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14.

Lucretia appears to Dante in the section of Limbo, reserved for the nobles of Rome and other "virtuous pagans", in Canto IV of the Inferno.

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15.

Lucretia calls for her father and husband, but Chaucer's tale has her call for her mother and attendants as well, whereas Livy's has both her father and husband bring a friend as witness.

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16.

Lucretia's is mentioned in the poem "Appius and Virginia" by John Webster and Thomas Heywood, which includes the following lines:.

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17.

Since the Renaissance, the suicide of Lucretia has been an enduring subject for visual artists, including Titian, Rembrandt, Durer, Raphael, Botticelli, Jorg Breu the Elder, Johannes Moreelse, Artemisia Gentileschi, Damia Campeny, Eduardo Rosales, Lucas Cranach the Elder, and others.

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18.

Subject of Lucretia spinning with her ladies, is sometimes depicted, as in a series of four engravings of her story by Hendrick Goltzius, which includes a banquet.

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