<p>Sabina Augusta (ca. 85-ca. 137) wife of the emperor Hadrian (reigned 117-38) accumulated more public honors in Rome and the provinces than any imperial woman had enjoyed since the first empress Augustus&#39; wife Livia. Indeed Sabina is the first woman whose image features on a regular and continuous series of coins minted at Rome. She was the most travelled and visible empress to date. Hadrian also deified his wife upon her death.</p><p>In synthesizing the textual and massive material evidence for the empress T. Corey Brennan traces the development of Sabina&#39;s partnership with her husband and shows the vital importance of the empress for Hadrian&#39;s own aspirations. Furthermore the book argues that Hadrian meant for Sabina to play a key role in promoting the public character of his rule and details how the emperor&#39;s exaltation of his wife served to enhance his own claims to divinity. Yet the sparse literary sources on Sabina instead put the worst light on the dynamics of her marriage.</p><p>Brennan fully explores the various and overwhelmingly negative notions this empress stirred up in historiography from antiquity through the modern era; and against the material record proposes a new and nuanced understanding of her formal role. This biographical study sheds new light not just on its subject but also more widely on Hadrian-including the vexed question of that emperor&#39;s relationship with his apparent lover Antino�s-and indeed Rome&#39;s imperial women as a group.</p>
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