Triaria

She is mentioned on the funeral monument of her favourite slavewoman, Tyrannis, in Tibur:[1] According to Tacitus, when former praetor Marcus Plancius Varus implied treasonable behaviour by Dolabella, she terrified the City Prefect, Titus Flavius Sabinus, warning him not to seek a reputation for clemency by endangering the Emperor[which?].

[2][3] She was accused of wearing a soldier's sword and behaving with insolent cruelty after the capture of the town of Tarracina.

[4] In On Famous Women, Boccaccio praised Triaria for her bravery.

[5][6][7] An early French manuscript of this work[8] contains a plate f. 63v (captioned "Miniature showing a bloody slaughter inside a walled city, with Triaria prominent among the wounded warriors.")

Christine de Pizan's The Book of the City of Ladies (early 15th century) discusses Triaria as well.