Born in
Corduba, Hispania (the
Iberian Peninsula), about 3 B.C., Seneca was the second son of Helvia and Marcus (Lucius) Annaeus Seneca, a wealthy
rhetorician known as
Seneca the Elder. Both his gens name (Annaeus) and the names of his notable relatives, (e.g.,
Lucan) indicate his family was originally of Southern Italian, Oscan extraction, most likely hailing from the confluence of modern Apulia, Calabria and Basilicata. Many Southern Italian families, once obtaining Roman citizenship, participated in the colonization of Roman Hispania.
Seneca's older brother,
Gallio, became
proconsul at
Achaia. Seneca was uncle to the poet
Lucan by his younger brother Annaeus Mela.
Tradition relates that he was a sickly child and that he was taken to Rome for schooling. He was trained in
rhetoric and was introduced into
Stoic philosophy by Attalos and Sotion. Due to his illness, Seneca stayed in Egypt (from 25-31) for treatment.
After his return, he established a successful career as an
advocate. Around
37, he was nearly killed as a result of a conflict with the Emperor
Caligula who only spared him because he believed the sickly Seneca would not live long anyway. In
41, Messalina, wife of the Emperor
Claudius, persuaded Claudius to have Seneca banished to Corsica on a charge of adultery with
Julia Livilla. He spent his exile in philosophical and natural study and wrote the
Consolations. He has greatly influenced people like
Maya Angelou and others.
In AD
49, Claudius' new wife
Agrippina had Seneca recalled to Rome to tutor her son who was to become the emperor
Nero. On Claudius' death in
54, Agrippina secured the recognition of Nero as emperor over Claudius' son,
Britannicus.
Seneca acted as Nero's advisor for eight years from
54 to
62. Seneca's influence was said to be especially strong in the first year. Many historians consider Nero's early rule with Seneca and the
praetorian prefect Sextus Afranius Burrus to be quite competent. Over time, Seneca and Burrus lost their influence over Nero. With the death of Burrus in
62 and accusations of embezzlement, Seneca retired and devoted his time to more study and writing.
In
65, Seneca was charged with being a co-conspirator in the
Pisonian conspiracy, a plot to kill Nero. Rather than face execution, Seneca slit his wrists, as did his wife who chose to share his fate.
Tacitus gives an account of the suicide in his Annals (Book XV, Chapters 60 through 64). Nero ordered that Seneca's wife,
Pompeia Paulina, be saved. The wounds were bound up, and she did not make a second attempt. Unfortunately for Seneca, his old age and diet caused the blood to flow slowly, thus causing pain instead of a quick death. He then took poison, but it didn't work. He dictated his last words to a scribe, and then jumped into a hot pool. He did not try to drown, but instead, it appears, tried to make the blood flow faster.
Tacitus wrote in his
Annals of Imperial Rome that Seneca died from suffocation from the steam rising from the pool.