Dominae and fashion: the dynastic ambition of Lucilla Augusta
However, this decision had political consequences within the Domus Augusta itself, as the imperial couple also had a daughter, Annia Aurelia Galeria Lucilla, probably born on March 7, 148 AD.
At the age of sixteen, Lucilla was married to Lucius Verus, who was then emperor alongside Marcus Aurelius in the first diarchy in the history of the empire. The wedding was celebrated in Ephesus, given that Lucius Verus was simultaneously engaged in a campaign against the Parthians, and Lucilla immediately obtained the title of Augusta (which she retained even after the deaths of her husband and father), likely becoming the mother of three children.

Immediately thereafter, Lucilla was remarried to the general Tiberius Claudius Pompeianus, despite her disappointment and that of her mother, Faustina Minor. Marcus Aurelius had indeed chosen a man loyal to him but who could not aspire to the imperial throne. Lucilla also bore children to Pompeianus, and her prestige still allowed her to aspire to important positions within the dynasty. However, some sources, including Cassius Dio, paint a dissolute and ambitious portrait of her, following a well-established pattern that suggests her demands must have been much higher.
The combination of these factors perhaps led to her being credited with masterminding the conspiracy of 181-182 AD against her brother Commodus, who had become sole emperor two years earlier after the death of Marcus Aurelius.

Lucilla’s profile, immortalized on coins and marble busts, bears notable similarities to contemporary portraits of her mother, despite her rounder, softer, girlish features.
Her hairstyle was characterized by a chignon at the nape of the neck: a long-lasting fashion inaugurated in 147 by Faustina Minor herself and subsequently sported by her daughter, as well as by Bruzia Crispina, even after 180.
The obverse of our coin features Lucilla’s simplest hairstyle, with her hair parted in the center and flowing wavy backward . This hair is gathered in a braid that, twisted three times at the nape of the neck, forms a chignon.
This type is similar to the marble bust preserved in the British Museum and dates to between 165 and 167 AD, presumably the period following the birth of her first daughter. The portrait is accompanied by a legend in the form of a dedication: LVCILLAE AVG ANTONINI AVG F, whereas the shortened title (AVG) highlights her position as daughter of the reigning emperor Marcus Aurelius: a factor that was probably intended to underline the importance of her father compared to that of Lucilla’s husband.
Michele Gatto
Patricia Caprino
Bibliography
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