The Empress Who Walked with Armies: Julia Domna
The room was supposed to be safe.
Silk curtains. Marble floors. The quiet illusion of control.
And yet, in that moment, everything collapsed.
Caracalla stood over his brother, breathing hard, the violence still echoing in the walls. Geta, dead or dying, had fallen not on a battlefield, not in some grand imperial clash, but in their mother’s private chamber. In her arms.
And there she was: Julia Domna.
Empress of Rome. Adviser to emperors. Mother of the Camp.
Witness.
It’s one of those moments history doesn’t quite know what to do with. Too intimate. Too brutal. Too human. An empire built on conquest, and yet its fate pivoted on a family argument that escalated beyond repair.
But here’s the thing: this wasn’t the story of a woman undone by tragedy. It was the story of a woman who had already helped build the stage on which it played out.
Because long before the blood hit the marble, Julia Domna had been shaping Rome itself.
To understand Julia Domna, you have to leave Rome for a moment and travel east. To Emesa, a wealthy and culturally vibrant city in Roman Syria.
This wasn’t the edge of civilisation. It was a crossroads. Greek philosophy, Roman politics, and local religious traditions all collided here, often over dinner.
Julia was born into privilege, but not the Roman kind. Her father, Julius Bassianus, was the high priest of the sun god Elagabal, a position that came with influence, wealth, and just enough mystique to make Rome nervous.
She grew up multilingual, likely fluent in Greek and Aramaic, and possibly in Latin as well. In other words, she was already more globally minded than many of the men who would later try to outmanoeuvre her.
But Rome wasn’t exactly designed for women like Julia Domna. Power there was public, male, and aggressively competitive. Women, especially foreign-born women, were expected to remain in the background, influencing quietly, if at all.
Julia did not get that memo.
Instead, she stepped into a world where emperors were assassinated with alarming regularity, loyalty was negotiable, and survival required more than just a famous husband.
It required a strategy.
The story goes that Septimius Severus didn’t just marry Julia Domna for love; he married her because of a horoscope.
Somewhere in Syria, he heard of a woman destined to marry a king. Being an ambitious Roman general with excellent timing, he thought: that’ll do nicely.
They married in 187 CE. Within a few years, Severus wasn’t just a governor. He was the emperor.
Coincidence? Possibly.
Good judgement? Almost certainly.
From the beginning, Julia was more than a political accessory. When Severus marched on Rome and seized power, she didn’t stay behind. She travelled with him, through military campaigns, across provinces, into the uncertain mechanics of empire-building.
In 195 CE, she was given the title Mater Castrorum: ‘Mother of the Camp.’ Not a ceremonial flourish, but a recognition of her presence among the legions, her influence, and her ability to command respect in spaces where women simply weren’t expected to exist.
But power invites opposition.
Enter Fulvius Plautianus, a man who treated political intrigue less like a duty and more like a hobby. He spread rumours about Julia, accused her of infidelity, and even tortured noblewomen to manufacture evidence against her.
In Rome, that sort of thing could end a career. Or a life.
Julia’s response? She pivoted.
Around 200 CE, she built something far more enduring than political alliances: an intellectual circle. Philosophers, writers, and thinkers gathered around her, including Philostratus, who later credited her with inspiring his works.
It wasn’t escapism. It was a strategy.
If power could be unstable, culture could be controlled.
She debated philosophy, commissioned texts, and supported scholars, effectively turning the imperial court into a centre of learning. In a world obsessed with conquest, she invested in ideas.
Meanwhile, back in the family…
Her sons, Caracalla and Geta, had developed a relationship best described as ‘historically catastrophic.’ Their rivalry escalated from tension to outright hatred, culminating in Geta’s murder in Julia’s own chambers.
It’s difficult to imagine the emotional toll. But what’s remarkable is this: Julia didn’t disappear.
Under Caracalla, she remained a central figure in governance. Her name appeared on official correspondence. She administered the empire during his absences. In a system that barely acknowledged female authority, she made herself indispensable.
Even as the empire fractured around her, Julia Domna endured.
Until, finally, she couldn’t.
In 217 CE, after Caracalla’s assassination, she faced a world she could no longer influence. Already ill, possibly with cancer, she chose to end her life.
It was a quiet ending for someone who had lived at the centre of everything.
Julia Domna didn’t rule Rome in the traditional sense.
She didn’t lead armies into battle (though she was there). She didn’t sit on the throne alone (though she came close to its power). Instead, she operated in the spaces history often overlooks. The advisory roles, the intellectual salons, the administrative decisions that keep empires functioning.
And yet, for more than twenty years, two emperors relied on her.
That alone reshapes how we think about power.
Her legacy isn’t just political, it’s cultural. By fostering philosophy, supporting writers, and engaging in intellectual life as an equal, she helped preserve ideas that outlasted the empire itself.
She also challenges a familiar narrative: that influence must be loud to be real.
Today, her story resonates in quieter ways. In leadership that doesn’t fit traditional moulds. In people navigating systems not designed for them and reshaping those systems anyway.
And perhaps most importantly, in the reminder that resilience isn’t always about winning.
Sometimes, it’s about standing in a world that keeps shifting beneath your feet.
Julia Domna lived in a world that expected her to be silent, and instead, she became essential.
She advised emperors, outlasted rivals, nurtured ideas, and stood at the centre of one of history’s most volatile families. Not untouched by tragedy, but never defined by it either.
It’s tempting to ask what she could have done differently. But perhaps the better question is this:
How do you hold power in a world that doesn’t quite believe you should have it?
And, more quietly, what kind of legacy do you leave when you do?
Did You Know?
- Julia Domna was one of the few Roman empresses to travel regularly with military campaigns.
- She was given the title Mother of the Camp—a rare honour.
- Her intellectual circle may have helped shape pagan responses to early Christianity.
- Both she and her sister, Julia Maesa, were later deified.
- Roughly 20% of her known influence comes not from official records, but from the writings of the philosophers she supported.
Julia Domna. Source.
Sources
yorkmuseumstrust.org.uk/blog/julia-domna-by-ellie-carrier/
medium.com/cliophilia/romes-philosopher-empress-julia-domna-fd8213d0ee65
syriawise.com/julia-domna-roman-empress-from-syria/
wikipedia.org/wiki/Julia_Domna
diotima-doctafemina.org/translations/anthologies/womens-life-in-greece-and-rome-selections/vi-public-life/180-the-family-of-julia-domna/
brewminate.com/julia-domna-a-captivating-ancient-roman-empress-from-syria/
harvardartmuseums.org/collections/object/312252
britannica.com/biography/Julia-Domna
ebsco.com/research-starters/history/julia-domna
thecollector.com/julia-domna-empress-ancient-rome-wife-septimius-severus/
Which historical figure do you think deserves a second look, reader?
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