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1 (1960) THE ROMAN REVOLUTION
us (P-W V, 1327 f.), the brother of the consul of 54. Ahenobarbus had married a daughter of Cinna (Orosius 5, 24, 16). PageBo
e the Bellum Italicum, left no son of his blood. His sister was twice married , to a NotesPage=>020 1 As Scipio Aemilianu
f.; J. Carcopino, Sylla ou la monarchie manquée (1931), 120 ff. Sulla married Caecilia Metella, daughter of Delmaticus and prev
r. 56) and P. Clodius Pulcher (tr. pl. 58). Of the daughters, one was married to Q. Marcius Rex (cos. 68), the second and best
barbus (cos. 54). 2 The sister of Q. Lutatius Catulus (cos. 78) was married to Q. Hortensius (cos. 69). For the stemma, Münze
adopted by a M. Terentius Varro, cf. P-W XIII, 414 f. L. Lucullus was married first to a Clodia, then to a Servilia, cf. above,
ily of his wife Tertulla is not known. But his elder son, M. Crassus, married Caecilia Metella, daughter of Creticus (ILS 881),
and Q. Metellus Nepos (cos. 57). 3 Cf. Varro, RR 3, 16, 1 f. He was married to a Servilia (Ad Alt. 12, 20, 2). 4 He served
that accident. She cast about for other allies. About this time Cato married Marcia, the granddaughter of Philippus, and gave
, Divus Iulius 6, 2): the son of Q. Pompeius Rufus (cos. 88 B.C.) had married Sulla’s eldest daughter. 5 His competitors were
. The dynastic marriage pointed the way. Sulla, as was expedient, had married a Metella: the aspirant to Sulla’s power, Notes
; Pliny, NH 9, 171. 2 For example, M. Atius Balbus from Aricia, who married Caesar’s sister Julia (Suetonius, Divus Aug. 4, 1
ed Caesar’s sister Julia (Suetonius, Divus Aug. 4, 1); and Hirrus was married to a daughter of L. Cossinius (Varro, RR 2, 1, 2)
e pact by taking in marriage Caesar’s daughter, Julia; and Caesar now married a daughter of Piso. Gabinius and Piso in their tu
arcellinus, were not strong political men. But Philippus had recently married Caesar’s niece Atia, widow of C. Octavius (his da
ot only through his elder son (ILS 881). The younger, P. Crassus, was married by now to Cornelia, daughter of that P. Scipio wh
of the Optimates, T. Annius Milo, a brutal and vicious person who had married Fausta, the dissolute daughter of Sulla. 2 His en
inship between these two families, above, p. 44, n. 1. Spinther’s son married a Caecilia Metella (Ad Att. 13, 7, 1). 3 Brutus
Pompeius probably about the same time (ib.). The younger son, Sextus, married the daughter of L. Scribonius Libo (cos. 34 B.C.)
e, the young Q. Cornificius (Catullus 38), of a senatorial family: he married a step-daughter of Catilina (Ad fam. 8, 7, 2). On
C., L. Cornelius Cinna (pr. 44), to whose sister Caesar had once been married , and C. Carrinas, son of the Marian general. On N
. 90. 3 For nobiles of the Marian faction, above, p. 19. 4 He was married to a Julia (Val. Max. 6, 7, 3). This P. Sulpicius
. 1 Ambition broke out in the son, a model of all the virtues. 2 He married Atia, the daughter of M. Atius Balbus, a senator
Octavius. Of the two children of Atia, the daughter was subsequently married to C. Marcellus (cos. 50 B.C.); the son, in any e
bout Pansa. Yet Pansa was no declared enemy of Antonius; 4 and he had married the daughter NotesPage=>133 1 Below, p. 23
used to concur in the hounding down of the family of Lepidus, who had married his own half-sister. Family ties had prevailed ag
o (Val. Max. 6, 8, 6) may have been a Marrucine: an Urbinia certainly married the Marrucine Clusinius (Quintilian 7, 2, 26), an
Caninius Gallus (cos. 37 B.C.) nothing is known, save that his father married a first cousin of M. Antonius (Val. Max. 4, 2, 6)
ia,4 who was the sister of that Libo whose daughter Sex. Pompeius had married . But Pompeius, as was soon evident, was already i
Mucia, Pompeius’ third wife, by her second husband. Sex. Pompeius had married a daughter of L. Scribonius Libo c. 55 B.C. 3 T
was a Claudius adopted in infancy by the tribune Livius Drusus),2 she married a kinsman, Ti. Claudius Nero, who had fought for
linus (cos. 56 B.C.). The second is a problem. Her daughter Cornelia, married to Paullus Aemilius Lepidus (cos. 34 B.C.), had S
ipio became consul suffect in 35 B.C.: perhaps he had been previously married to Scribonia, before 40 B.C. PageBook=>230
onsular P. Servilius carried little weight if still alive. 1 Lepidus, married to a half-sister of Brutus, was connected with ce
t Octavianus and the war. NotesPage=>230 1 Lepidus’ son Marcus married Servilia, the daughter of P. Servilius (Velleius
for dynastic alliances. It is not known whom Cn. Domitius Ahenobarbus married ; but his grand-daughter, child of L. Domitius and
was the half-brother of Murena, to whose sister Terentia Maecenas was married (Dio 54, 3, 5). Other persons later prominent, su
was a sign and pledge of political success. Paullus Aemilius Lepidus married a Cornelia, as was fitting, of the stock of the S
s of Taurus, Calvisius, Cornificius and Laronius. Agrippa had already married an heiress, Caecilia, the daughter of Atticus. 8
L. Sempronius Atratinus (cos. suff. 34 B.C.), whose sister Poplicola married , could recall a distant and dissipated youth in t
l, along with Saxa, in the campaign of Philippi. Norbanus himself was married to a great heiress in the Caesarian party, the da
2 Dio 51, 23, 1. 3 Above, pp. 189 and 268. His son may have been married to a granddaughter of Cn. Domitius Calvinus, cf.
wn. There was another bond. Tiberius was betrothed, perhaps already married , to Agrippa’s daughter Vipsania. The match had be
os. 58 B.C.) was a business man from Placentia; 4 a patrician Manlius married a woman from Asculum; 5 NotesPage=>357 1 J
truria but Seius became Prefect of the Guard and Viceroy of Egypt; he married a wife from the patrician family of Cornelius Mal
rmy as an equestrian officer:6 his son became a senator, his daughter married the tax-gatherer T. Flavius Sabinus. With these f
nius knew each a single husband only. Of the two Marcellas, the elder married Agrippa and then Iullus Antonius; the two husband
Princeps. C. Octavius his father and his mother Atia were each twice married . Hence another Octavia, Augustus’ half-sister: he
e evidence about the two Marcellas, PIR2 C 1102 and 1103. The younger married Paullus after the death of his wife Cornelia in 1
e richest heiress of Rome, Caecilia, the daughter of Atticus. Then he married Marcella, the niece of Augustus, and lastly the d
aurus, Lollius, Vinicius and Tarius, elude detection; 1 and P. Silius married the daughter of a respectable municipal man, a se
the elderly Quirinius. NotesPage=>379 1 Taurus’ son, however, married the daughter of a Cornelius Sisenna, his grandson
. 5 A kinsman of the poet Propertius entered the Senate. This man had married well his wife was Aelia Galla, the daughter, it m
of Seius Strabo, L. Aelius Seianus. Seius, the son of a Terentia, had married a wife from a patrician family. Seianus had broth
Divus Claudius 26, 2). 1 Suetonius, Galba 5, 2. Galba’s father had married a second wife, Livia Ocellina, from a distant bra
Marcella, all of whom except the daughters of M. Antonius were twice married , the ramifications of the dynasty grew ever more
rom Agrippa the one Marcella, P. Quinctilius Varus (cos. 13 B.C.) had married the daughter of the other. 1 Paullus Fabius Maxim
other; so the young Claudius, after losing his bride Livia Medullina, married Urgulanilla, the daughter of M. Plautius Silvanus
3 1 Messalla’s family-relations are exceedingly complicated. He was married at least twice (one of his wives was probably a C
vi homines M. Lollius (Tacitus, Ann. 12, 22) and Taurus: his daughter married T. Statilius Taurus, cos. A.D. 11 (P-W 111 A, 220
ius Saturninus will not have forgotten altogether that his father had married a relative of Tiberius. 4 Many men of merit had s
f Messalla, is a nexus of difficult problems. Presumably he was twice married . M. Licinius Crassus Frugi (cos. A.D. 27) was one
facing p. 54. See also Table V at end. 2 His daughter (PIR2, C 323) married L. Nonius Asprenas, cos. suff. A.D. 6, of a famil
prenas, cf. the stemma, Table VII at end. Further, one of the Volusii married a Nonia Polla (OGIS 468). 3 Varus was related t
3, 31; E. Groag, PIR2, A 1130. 4 T. Statilius Taurus, cos. A.D. 11, married a daughter of Messalla Corvinus. See further abov
likewise P. Quinctilius Varus, a person of consequence at Rome he had married Claudia Pulchra, the daughter of Marcella. Varus
heir prominence, cf. above, p. 425. 3 See above, p. 429. He was now married to an Aemilia Lepida. 4 Above, p. 424. L. Noniu
a composite or rather an imaginary figure. The poet himself, who had married three times, was not unhappy in his last choice,
ounger Julia. They were destined never to grasp it. The last of them, married to a sister of Caligula and designated by Caligul
unius Silanus, grandson of the renegade who became consul in 25 B.C., married Aemilia Lepida, the daughter of L. Aemilius Paull
led, not only among themselves, as when a Piso, adopted by a Crassus, married a Scribonia descended from Pompeius, but also wit
the descendants of Pompeius and Crassus. A son of L. Calpurnius Piso married Scribonia, a female descendant of Pompeius; 6 hen
C 354: his wife was a Cornelia (Dio 59, 18, 4). 2 Balbus’ daughter married C. Norbanus Flaccus, cos. 25 B.C. (PIR2, C 1474);
ed C. Norbanus Flaccus, cos. 25 B.C. (PIR2, C 1474); Sosius’ daughter married Sex. Nonius Quinctilianus, cos. A.D.8 (ILS 934).
of M. Lollius. 4 Her end too was violent. The grandson of M. Vinicius married a princess, Julia Livilla, the daughter of German
Vetus (cos. suff. 30 B.C.) lasted longer. 6 PageNotes. 499 1 She married the obscure T. Ollius (Tacitus, Ann. 13, 45), of
4), Beiblatt 425 ff. If Groag is correct, the maternal uncle of Nerva married Rubellia Bassa, daughter of that Rubellius Blandu
us was the most versatile politician since Plancus. 3 One of his sons married Junia Calvina, of the blood of Augustus; 4 the ot
me, C. Sallustius Crispus Passienus, cf. L’ann. ép., 1924, 72. He was married first to Nero’s aunt, Domitia, then to Nero’s mot
’ Passienus is mentioned in the following section. 4 L. Vitellius, married to Calvina, cf. Tacitus, Ann. 12, 4. 5 Tacitus,
into the bargain. Trajan was the first provincial emperor, a Spaniard married to a woman from Nemausus. 3 Hadrian, his nearest
od. 7 NotesPage=>511 1 C. Sulpicius Galba (cos. suff. 5 B.C.), married to Mummia Achaica and then to the beautiful and w
he dignity as well as the fortunes of his family. Pollio’s son Gallus married Vipsania, his daughter the son of a nobleman, alm
mmius Regulus, a pillar of the Roman State and secure himself, though married for a time to Lollia Paullina, and the venerable
f Pompeius Magnus, 31 f. Aemilia Lepida, betrothed to L. Caesar and married to Quirinius, 379, 478; marries Mam. Aemilius Sca
, 332; his descendants, 499. Antium, conference at, 116. Antonia, married to Pythodorus, 262. Antonia (Major), 220; marri
, 116. Antonia, married to Pythodorus, 262. Antonia (Major), 220; married to L. Domitius Ahenobarbus, 378, 421. Antonia (
220; married to L. Domitius Ahenobarbus, 378, 421. Antonia (Minor), married to Drusus, 378; her court, 386; her three childre
, 357 f.; literary preferences, 489; ashamed of Vipsanian blood, 499; married to Lollia Paullina, 499. Callaecia, 401. Calp
Caesar, 34, 36, 38, 58, 100. Julia, daughter of Augustus, 358, 378; married to Marcellus, 341; to Agrippa, 389; to Tiberius,
22. Licinius Crassus, P., younger son of M. Crassus (cos. 70 B.C.), married to Cornelia, 22, 36, 40. Licinius Crassus Frugi
Servilia, daughter of Isauricus, betrothed to Octavianus, 182, 189; married to Lepidus’ son, 230; her death, 298. Servilii,
stepson of Augustus and Emperor (Ti. Claudius Nero), 229, 341, 39 f.; married to Vipsania, 247, 345; married to Julia, 416; in
(Ti. Claudius Nero), 229, 341, 39 f.; married to Vipsania, 247, 345; married to Julia, 416; in the Alps and in Illyricum, 390
ania, daughter of Agrippa, marries Tiberius, 257, 345; divorced, 378; married to Asinius Gallus, 416, 512. Vipsanius Agrippa,
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