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  • Fulvia - Wikipedia
    Fulvia was a member of the Fulvia gens, which hailed from Tusculum The Fulvii were one of the most distinguished Republican plebeian wealthy families in Rome; various members of the family achieved consulship and became senators, though no member of the Fulvii is on record as a consul after 125 BC [9]
  • Fulvia: The Woman Who Broke All the Rules in Ancient Rome
    Fulvia was still in Rome and could still have perhaps drawn on a lot of power and influence to continue to support Antony at that time But she died and Antony lost his best asset
  • Fulvia: The Roman Woman Who Would Be King - History Today
    Fulvia is most familiar as the wife of Mark Antony, but that label does not do her justice Antony was her third husband and, by the time they married in 44 BC, she was already a well-known figure in Roman public life
  • Fulvia: The “Fourth” Triumvir - Femmina Classica
    History has long been unkind to Fulvia (85 80 BCE-40 BCE)—the notoriously jilted wife whom Mark Antony abandoned for the Queen of the Nile The ancient chroniclers portray Fulvia as a jealous and vengeful wife, claiming that she committed numerous atrocities
  • Fulvia: The Woman Who Broke All the Rules in Ancient Rome on JSTOR
    Using Fulvia as a guide, she invites readers to visit an unfamiliar Rome, one in which women played a crucial role during Rome’s violent transition from a republic to the dictatorship of the Roman Empire
  • Fulvia | Biography Legacy | Britannica
    Fulvia (died 40 bc, Sicyon, Greece) was the wife of Mark Antony, and a participant in the struggle for power following the death of Julius Caesar Fulvia was the daughter of Marcus Fulvius Bambalio of Tusculum
  • Fulvia (c. 85 80–40 BCE) - Encyclopedia. com
    The daringly ambitious, sometimes outrageous, Roman aristocrat, known to history as Fulvia, lived during the Late Roman Republic, a chaotic era lasting from 130 bce to 31 bce that was characterized by turmoil and strife
  • Fulvia: The Woman Who Broke all the Rules in Ancient Rome (J. ) Draycott . . .
    Jane Draycott’s study of Fulvia is a fascinating illustration of the value of female-centric biographies for antiquity, although it has to be admitted that relatively few women are as well-documented as Fulvia – and those who are typically come from the same sort of social group
  • Fulvia: Playing for Power at the End of the Roman Republic
    Born into a less prestigious branch of an aristocratic Roman clan in the last decades of the Roman Republic, Fulvia first rose to prominence as the wife of P Clodius Pulcher, scion of one of the city’s most powerful families and one of its most infamous and scandalous politicians
  • Fulvia: The “Fourth” Triumvir - Ancient Origins
    Ancient sources omit that Fulvia was once the most revered woman in Rome—she was the first non-mythological female depicted on Roman coins—exerting such considerable influence that she was mockingly referred to as the "fourth" triumvir





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