(Lyon, 10 bf. J.-C. - Rome, 54 af. J.-C.)
Exhibition from 1st december 2018 to 4 march 2019
Tiberius Claudius Drusus was born in Lugdunum. He lived there only a few months before going to Rome and came back only occasionally throughout his life. Yet his memory is still deeply linked to the city's history, especially through an exceptional object, the Claudian Tablet, which is an inscription on bronze of a speech that the emperor gave to the Senate in 48 AD requesting that citizens of Gaul have access to high-level positions as Roman magistrates. The exhibition traces Claudius' life from his birth in Lyon on August 1, 10 BC until his death in Rome on October 13, 54 AD. This tale is quite different from the dark and unflattering version presented by ancient authors that is still expressed in fiction and film today. This new narrative is based on recent work by historians and archaeologists who, in addition to studying new archaeological and epigraphical discoveries, cast a critical eye on the ancient sources, placing them into the political and social context of the early Empire. The result is a revised image of an emperor who cared for his people, promoted useful reforms, and was a good manager, and to whom the Empire owes the foundation of an organization that reached its height a few decades later.
1. The Julio-Claudian Empire
2. Birth in Lyon
3. His Brother Germanicus
4. His Nephew Caligula
5. Claudius, from the Shadows into the Light
6. His Elevation to Emperor
7. The Empire
8. Dynastic Legitimacy
9. Government
10. The Claudian Tablet
11. Signs of Power
12. The End of an Emperor, the Birth of a God