Fausta Cornelia

Fausta Cornelia (also called Cornelia Fausta) was a daughter of the Roman Dictator Sulla.

Fausta Cornelia
Spouse(s)Gaius Memmius
Titus Annius Milo
ChildrenGaius Memmius
Parents

Biography

Early life

Fausta and her twin brother Faustus were the children of their father's fourth wife Caecilia Metella. They had one older half-sister, Cornelia and a younger half-sister named Postuma Cornelia. She and her brother were both raised by their father's good friend Lucullus.[1]

Marriages

Several men were interested in marrying Fausta, among them Quintus Pompeius Macula, a friend of Cicero who had an intense rivalry with a Fulvius for her hand, but she ultimately married the poet Gaius Memmius.[2] They had one son together, also named Gaius Memmius. The marriage with Memmius went sour as he started to develop a disdain for her former guardian Lucullus and his family, in the end it was Fausta who paid the price as he divorced her soon after. After this she went on to marry Titus Annius Milo.[3]

She possibly cheated on Milo, as the historian Sallust was prosecuted for adultery with her, unfaithfulness was common in Rome, and such a slight against good morals might have otherwise gone unrecorded had she, Milo and Sallust not all three been distinguished persons. The event seemingly did not dissuade her from further affairs, as a man named Villius was caught and beaten by Milo for having slept with Fausta.[4]

Cultural depictions

Fausta appears as a major character in the SPQR series by John Maddox Roberts.

gollark: It's a thing which accelerates conductive projectiles using something something electromagnetism.
gollark: TNT *isn't* as far as I know, *plus* you can fire it at anyone trying to 1337 h4xx you.
gollark: No, TNT is much cooler.
gollark: Sure?
gollark: You would have to very precisely aim it and/or set up arrow relays.

See also

References

  1. Fratantuono, Lee (September 30, 2017). "Lucullus: The Life and Campaigns of a Roman Conqueror". Pen and Sword via Google Books.
  2. Cicero, Epistulae ad Familiares, vi. 19.
  3. Telford, Lynda (February 11, 2014). "Sulla: A Dictator Reconsidered". Pen and Sword via Google Books.
  4. "C. Sallusti Crispi Catilina Et Jugurtha". Whittaker. March 31, 1860 via Google Books.
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