Cornelia (daughter of Sulla)

Cornelia Sulla was the eldest daughter of the Roman statesman and general Lucius Cornelius Sulla and his first wife, Ilia (or Julia).[1]

Biography

Early life

It is believed that she was Sulla's daughter by his first wife Julia.[2] She likely had a full brother named Lucius Cornelius Sulla.[3] Her mother died while she was young, and her father would remarry four times, from these marriages Cornelia had three siblings; Faustus Cornelius Sulla, Fausta Cornelia and Cornelia Postuma.

Marriages

Cornelia married Quintus Pompeius Rufus, the son of Sulla's consular colleague in 88 BC, Quintus Pompeius Rufus. The marriage produced two children, Pompeia (who became Julius Caesar's second or third wife) and Quintus Pompeius Rufus. Her husband was killed during a riot led by the tribune Publius Sulpicius Rufus in 88 BC. She remarried Mamercus Aemilius Lepidus Livianus, who became consul in 77 BC, a year after the death of Sulla.

Violent upheavals soon ensued out of the ongoing rivalry between Sulla and his former mentor the ageing Gaius Marius. In 86 BC, while Sulla was in Asia Minor pursuing his war against King Mithridates VI of Pontus, he was stripped of his imperium by Marius and his colleagues, and forced into exile.

Cornelia and her new husband took rapid steps to safeguard Sulla's estates from the resulting mock trials and proscriptions during Marius's seventh consulship. She then joined her father in exile.

Cornelia appears in Colleen McCullough's series, Masters of Rome.

gollark: Of course, if you do this, *you* know about human rights…
gollark: Human rights exist only in the minds of humans. Eliminate everyone who knows about them and they're gone.
gollark: You might be able to just approximate the humans, like in statistical mechanics.
gollark: Another angle might be high fidelity simulations of societies, but that has ethical issues too, and practical ones (simulating humans well enough is probably hard?).
gollark: The issue with stuff like having volunteers only and having a contingency government is that it'd shift the mindset of people there and may invalidate the results.

See also

  • Cornelia (gens)

References

  1. Keaveney, Arthur (1986). Sulla: The Last Republican. Dover, New Hampshire: Croom Helm. pp. 9–10.
  2. McKay, Alexander Gordon (1972). Ancient Campania: Naples and coastal Campania. Vergilian Society. p. 15.
  3. Telford, Lynda (2014). Sulla: A Dictator Reconsidered. Pen and Sword. ISBN 9781473834507.
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