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  1. Location of death: Capri, Italy Cause of death: Murder
    www.nndb.com/people/932/000087671/
    They captured him, strangled him, and dumped his body in the river Tiber.
    www.pbs.org/empires/romans/empire/tiberius.html
    The cause was ascribed to his mother, who, having been repeatedly repulsed in her overtures, had at last by her arts and seductions driven him to an extremity from which he could find no escape but death.
    www.thelatinlibrary.com/historians/tacitus/tacitus7.…
    Fears of Tiberius' popularity and his willingness to break political norms led to his death, along with many supporters, in a riot instigated by his enemies.
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tiberius_Gracchus
    Tiberius Gracchus was murdered not necessarily because of his political beliefs (land reform bills were not a novel creation, nor were generally populist political platforms) but instead, it was his methods that got him killed (Bernstein, 227). The precedent set by his murder was immediately felt across the Roman world.
    sites.psu.edu/tiberiussemproniusgracchus/what-wa…
  2. People also ask
    Emperor Tiberius passed away on March 16, 37 AD in Misenum (present-day Miseno in the Italian Province of Naples). He died just a few months before his 78 th birthday. His body was cremated and then his ashes laid to rest in the Mausoleum of Augustus. He was given a funeral befitting his position. Tiberius was astute diplomat and general.
    In 37 the Praetorian Guard declared its support for Caligula and killed Tiberius when he was on his sickbed. Emperor, title designating the sovereign of an empire, conferred originally on rulers of the ancient Roman Empire and on various later European rulers, though the term is also applied descriptively to some non-European monarchs.
    After Lucius Caesar died in 2 CE, Tiberius' mother Livia arranged for his recall, but to do that, Tiberius had to renounce all political aspirations. However, in 4 CE after all other likely successors had died, Augustus adopted his step-son Tiberius, who in turn had to adopt his nephew Germanicus.
    With the sale of his spoils, he restored the temples of Concord and Castor and Pollux. As a result, in 12 CE, the consuls awarded Tiberius joint control of the provinces (co-princeps) with Augustus. When Augustus died, Tiberius, as tribune, convened the Senate where a freedman read Augustus' will naming Tiberius as successor.
  3. Tiberius | Biography, Accomplishments, Facts, & Death

  4. Tiberius: the man who didn't want to be emperor - History Skills

  5. Tiberius summary | Britannica

  6. Tiberius - World History Encyclopedia

  7. On this day in 37AD the Roman emperor Tiberius died

  8. Roman Emperor Tiberius: History, Facts & Major Accomplishments

  9. What was the impact of the Emperor Tiberius on the Roman Empire

  10. Biography of Tiberius, 1st Century Roman Emperor - ThoughtCo

  11. BBC - History - Historic Figures: Tiberius (42 BC - 37 AD)