Later authors, such as Appian and Dio, may have been influenced by these earlier, hostile accounts of Fulvia. This thesis is divided into five chapters. The first provides an introduction to the topic and a biography of Fulvia. The second is a review of the modern scholarship on Fulvia. The third focuses on the contemporary sources, both the literary evidence from Cicero, Cornelius Nepos and Martial, as well as the surviving material evidence, namely the sling bullets found at Perusia and a series of coins that may depict Fulvia in the guise of Victoria.
Perseus provides credit for all accepted changes, storing new additions in a versioning system. Plutarch, Antony Bernadotte Perrin, Ed. This text is part of: Greek and Roman Materials. View text chunked by: chapter : section. Table of Contents: chapter 1 section 1. Current location in this text. Enter a Perseus citation to go to another section or work. Full search options are on the right side and top of the page. These things are also thought to have augmented the discord, and to have incited the soldiery to deeds of violence and rapacity.
For this reason, too, when Caesar came back, he pardoned Dolabella, and, on being chosen consul for the third time, selected Lepidus as his colleague, and not Antony. And he says himself that this was the reason why he did not go with Caesar on his African campaign, since he got no recompense for his previous successes.
Her second husband was Gaius Scribonius Curio, a promising politician near the start of his career. He instantly became a lot more promising, switching from the aristocratic to the popular faction and showing a decisiveness and purpose of mind that had previously been lacking. Curio died on military service in Africa only a couple of years later and Fulvia married Mark Antony, with whom according to rumours spread by the orator Cicero she had been sexually involved while she was still married to Clodius.
Antony was young, ambitious and close to Julius Caesar, but he lacked self-control and decisiveness — qualities that Fulvia could supply. But Fulvia was not content with a supporting role. Coins from the time, with her image on them in the form of a winged Victory, show how serious this bid was; Fulvia was the first living woman ever to have her face on Roman coinage.
The only other people putting their faces on Roman coins at this time were the triumvirs Octavian, Antony and Lepidus — the three rulers of Rome. Fulvia and her brother-in-law, Lucius, gathered military forces and seized the towns of Perusia modern Perugia and Praeneste Palestrina. Octavian finally succeeded in taking the town, but he spared the lives of the wife and brother of Antony, with whom he was still ostensibly in alliance.
Fulvia was not daunted; she travelled to Greece, where Antony was stationed, to persuade him to sail on Italy.
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