Third wife of the Roman emperor Claudius, notorious for licentious behaviour and instigating murderous court intrigues. Born into a patrician family, she was married to Claudius before he became emperor. They had two children, Octavia (later Nero's wife) and Britannicus. Early sources maintain that Messalina allied herself with Claudius' freedmen secretaries to dominate the Emperor and to gratify her avarice and lust. In 42, Messalina caused Claudius to condemn to death a senator, Appius Silanus, who had slighted her advances. This heightened tension between Emperor and Senate and prepared the way for a reign of terror in which many senators were executed after they had been denounced by Messalina. When she caused the death of Claudius' freedman secretary, Polybius, however, the other freedmen turned against her. The correspondence secretary, Narcissus, managed to have her put to death by convincing Claudius that she and her lover, Gaius Silius, had secretly married and were plotting to seize power.
(Encyclopedia Britannica)