Britannicus, a tragedy in verse in five acts by Jean Racine, performed in French in 1669 and published the following year. The play, a political drama, is set in imperial Rome. It centres on the machinations of the emperor Nero, who, though he has been placed on the throne by his mother, Agrippina (Agrippine), fears his half brother Britannicus as a rival for the throne.
Britannicus is considered to be one of Racine’s noble tragedies. Its plot is said to have been derived from the writings of the Roman historian Tacitus.