JULALPUR', a t. of India, capital of the pergunnah of the same name, 100 m. s.w. of Lucknow, on the river Betwa. It is said to be a place of some importance, and to con tain a pop. of 10,000. The country to the south is wild and sterile, being much cut up by ravines.
ItrLIA, the only child of the Roman emperor Augustus, was his daughter by his second wife, Scribonia, and was b. 39 B.C. She was only a few days old when her mother was divorced. She was educated with great strictness; was distinguished for her beauty, talents, accomplishments, and agreeable manners; she was married at a very early age, 25 B.C., to her cousin, Marcus Claudius Marcellus, the sister's son of Augustus. After his death she was again married, when little more than 17 years of age, to Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa, to whom she bore three sons and two daughters. lie dying, 12 B.C., Julia was given in marriage, 11 B.C. to Tiberius, his mother, Livia, the step mother of Julia, persuading Augustus to this, in order to secure the succession of Tiberius to the throne. The marriage vas an unhappy one, and the conduct of Julia far from irreproachable; but Livia's hatred induced her to make exaggerated accusa tions to Augustus, and she so wrought upon his mind that he astonished all Rome by suddenly declaring, 2 B.C., that his daughter had so far forgotten herself as to be guilty
of the most shameless adulteries, making even the forum the scene of her nightly vice. In this charge there seems to have been too much truth; but it is doubtful if there was any truth in the allegation further made that Julia and her paramours had entered into a conspiracy against the life of the emperor. Julia was banished to the isle of Panda taria (now Ventotiene), near Naples, and.a number of persons of high rank were put to death or banished. for their alleged participation in her guilt. From Paudataria, whither her mother, Scribonia, accompanied her, she was removed to Rhegium (now Reggio), where she was allowed by Tiberius to remain, destitute even of common com forts, till her death, 14 A.D. Her son Agrippa, was put to death by Tiberius in 14 A.D., shortly before the death of his mother. Her other sons died in early age. Her daugh ters survived her. The elder, Julia, died, 28 A D., in the isle of Trimetus, on the coast of Apulia, whither she had been banished by Augustus 20 years before for adultery. The younger, the virtuous Agrippina (q.v.), died in 33 A.D., in Pandataria, to which she had been banished by Tiberius.