Nerva Marcus Cocceius Nerva Roman emperor Bust of Nerva Reign September 18 96 - 27 January 98 Born November 8 30   ? Narni Died 27 January 98 Rome ( ? Gardens of Sallust ) Buried Mausoleum of Augustus , Rome Predecessor Domitian Successor Trajan Issue Trajan ( adoptive ) Dynasty Nervan-Antonine Roman imperial dynasties Nervo-Trajanic Dynasty Nerva Children    Natural - ( none )    Adoptive - Trajan Trajan Children    Natural - ( none )    Adoptive - Hadrian Hadrian Children    Natural - ( none )    Adoptive - Lucius Aelius    Adoptive - Antoninus Pius For other uses , see Nerva ( disambiguation ) . Marcus Cocceius Nerva ( November 8 , 30 – January 27 , 98 ) was a Roman Emperor ( 96 -98 ) . He was the first emperor to select his successor from among the most deserving men and to adopt him , a practice that led to a line of Emperors that is known as the `` Five Good Emperors `` . Life Early life Marcus Cocceius Nerva was a member of the Italian nobility rather than one of the elite of Rome ; in this he was like Vespasian , the founder of the Flavian dynasty . The place of his birth is not known , although the Epitome of Aurelius Victor gives it as Narni . Members of his family had held high office ; his great-grandfather was consul in 36 BC , and his grandfather was in the imperial entourage at the time of Nerva 's birth . Nerva was connected with the Julio-Claudian dynasty , as his uncle Octavius Laenas had married Rubellia Bassa , the great-granddaughter of Tiberius . Nerva was the first of the Five Good Emperors , and the last emperor who was Italian both by family and by birth . He had not pursued the usual administrative career , although he had been consul with Vespasian in 71 and with Domitian in 90 . Emperor After Domitian 's assassination in 96 following his reign of terror , Nerva was elevated to emperor on September 18 , 96 . The Fasti Ostienses , the Ostian Calendar , records `` Fourteenth day before Kalends of October : Domitian killed . On the same day , Marcus Cocceius Nerva proclaimed emperor. '' According to Cassius Dio he was approached by the conspirators against Domitian because he was elderly ( 61 ) and childless - that is , a safe pair of hands . This also had the effect of saving his own life , which was under threat from Domitian . After his accession , Nerva went to set a new tone : he released those imprisoned for treason , banned future prosecutions for treason , granted amnesty to many whom Domitian had exiled , restored much confiscated property , and involved the Roman Senate in his rule . He probably did so as a means to remain relatively popular ( and therefore alive ) , but this did not completely aid him . Support for Domitian in the army remained strong , and in October 97 the Praetorian Guard laid siege to the Imperial Palace on the Palatine Hill and took Nerva hostage . He was forced to submit to their demands , agreeing to hand over those responsible for Domitian 's death and even giving a speech thanking the rebellious Praetorians . Petronius and Parthenius , blamed by the Praetorians for Domitian 's death , were killed . Nerva was unharmed in this assault , but his authority was damaged beyond repair . He had no natural children , but found salvation in the idea of adopting someone who would have the support of both the army and the people . He adopted Trajan , a commander of the armies on the German frontier , as his successor shortly thereafter in order to bolster his own rule . Casperius Aelianus , the Guard Prefect responsible for the mutiny against Nerva , was later executed under Trajan . The Epitome de Caesaribus reports that Nerva was struck by a fever and chills and died shortly afterwards ; Jerome places his death in the Gardens of Sallust in Rome ( originally developed by the historian Sallust ) . He was deified by the Senate shortly afterwards , and his ashes were laid to rest in the Mausoleum of Augustus . On the day of his burial there was an eclipse of the sun . Statues An ancient bronze equestrian statue of Domitian , now on display at Misenum , had its face reworked into that of Nerva There is an equestrian statue of Nerva astride a horse at Gloucester , England at the entrance to Southgate Street . There is a statue of Nerva also at Narni town in Italy at Cocceio Nerva street . References Wend , David , `` Nerva ( 96-98 A.D. ) `` , De Imperatorbus Romanis External links Nerva in the Wikicommons . Notes ^ Aurelius Victor records the year as 35 ( Caes. 12.11 ) , Dio ( 68.4.4 ) as 30 . The latter has been more widely accepted . Preceded by : Vespasian and Titus Consul of the Roman Empire with Vespasian 71 Succeeded by : Vespasian and Titus Preceded by : Titus Aurelius Fulvus and Marcus Asinius Atratinus Consul of the Roman Empire with Domitian 90 Succeeded by : Manius Acilius Glabrio and Trajan Preceded by : – Five Good Emperors 96 –180 Succeeded by : Trajan Nervan-Antonian Dynasty 96 –192 Nervo-Trajanic Dynasty 96 –138 Preceded by : Domitian Roman Emperor 96 – 98 Succeeded by : Trajan Preceded by : Gaius Manlius Valens and Gaius Antistius Vetus Consul of the Roman Empire 97 - 98 Succeeded by : Aulus Cornelius Palma Frontonianus and Quintus Sosius Senecio Categories : Nervo-Trajanic Dynasty | 35 births | 98 deaths | Natives of Umbria | Roman emperors | Cocceii | Deified Roman emperors In other languages : Български | Català | Česky | Dansk | Deutsch | Eesti | Español | Esperanto | Euskara | Français | Galego | 한국어 | Hrvatski | Italiano | עברית | ქართული | Latina | Magyar | Nederlands | 日本語 | Norsk ( bokmål ) | Polski | Português | Română | Русский | Slovenčina | Српски / Srpski | Suomi | Svenska | 中文 Marcus Cocceius Nerva Bust of Nerva September 18 96 - 27 January 98 Domitian Trajan Trajan ( adoptive ) Nervan-Antonine November 8 30 ? Narni 27 January 98 Rome ( ? Gardens of Sallust ) Mausoleum of Augustus , Rome Nerva Consul of the Roman Empire with Vespasian Vespasian and Titus Vespasian and Titus 71 Consul of the Roman Empire with Domitian Titus Aurelius Fulvus and Marcus Asinius Atratinus Manius Acilius Glabrio and Trajan 90 Roman Emperor 96 – 98 Domitian Trajan Consul of the Roman Empire Gaius Manlius Valens and Gaius Antistius Vetus Aulus Cornelius Palma Frontonianus and Quintus Sosius Senecio 97 - 98 