Pythagoras (freedman)

[1][2][3][4][5] Little is known about Pythagoras' background except that he was a freedman who accompanied Nero.

In the year 64, during the Saturnalia, Tigellinus offered a series of banquets to Nero, after a few days of which Nero performed a marriage to Pythagoras:[5] ... he stooped to marry himself to one of that filthy herd, by name Pythagoras, with all the forms of regular wedlock.

The bridal veil was put over the emperor; people saw the witnesses of the ceremony, the wedding dower, the couch and the nuptial torches; everything in a word was plainly visible, which, even when a woman weds, darkness hides.Suetonius tells the story of Nero's being the bride to a freedman named "Doryphorus".

According to Champlin, it is improbable that a second imperial wedding occurred without being noted, and the simplest solution is that Suetonius mistook the name.

[6] Doryphorus, one of the wealthiest and most powerful of Nero's freedmen, died in the year 62 before the banquets of Tigellinus,[6] where Nero, covered with skins of wild animals, was let loose from a cage and attacked the private parts of men and women bound to stakes, after which he was dispatched by his freedman "Doryphorus".