| |||||||||
  | Marcus Licinius Crassus Frugi|Consul |   | |||||||
  | birt: ABT 0001 plac: Rome deat: DECEASED | ||||||||
  | Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus |   | |||||||
birt: ABT 0030 plac: Rome deat: DECEASED Claudia Antonia (daughter of Claudius) marr: birt: ABT 0030 plac: Rome deat: 0066 |   | ||||||||
  | Scribonia (granddaughter of Pompeia Magna) |   | |||||||
birt: ABT 0001 plac: Rome deat: DECEASED |   | ||||||||
  |   | Faustus Cornelius Sulla I|Senator |   | ||||||
  |   | birt: ABT 0078 BC plac: Arrentium, Italy deat: 0047 BC | |||||||
  | Descendants of Pompeia Magna |   | |||||||
birt: Rome deat: DECEASED |   | ||||||||
  |   | Gnaeus Magnus Pompeius (Pompey)|General|Pompey the Great | |||||||
  |   | birt: 0106 BC plac: Rome||Pompey by Plutarch|75 AD|POMPEY|106-48 B.C.|by Plutarch|translated by John Dryden||POMPEY -|THE people of Rome seem to have entertained for Pompey from his childhood the same affectio|n that Prometheus, in the tragedy of Aeschylus, expresses for Hercules, speaking of him as th|e author of his deliverance, in these words: "Ah cruel Sire! how dear thy son to me!||The generous offspring of my enemy!" - For on the one hand, never did the Romans give such de|monstrations of a vehement and fierce hatred against any of their generals as they did agains|t Strabo, the father of Pompey; during whose lifetime, it is true, they stood in awe of his m|ilitary power, as indeed he was a formidable warrior, but immediately upon his death, which h|appened by a stroke of thunder, they treated him with the utmost contumely, dragging his corp|se from the bier, as it was carried to his funeral. On the other side, never had any Roman th|e people's good-will and devotion more zealous throughout all the changes of fortune, more ea|rly in its first springing up, or more steadily rising with his prosperity, or more constan|t in his adversity than Pompey had. In Strabo, there was one great cause of their hatred, hi|s insatiable covetousness; in Pompey, there were many that helped to make him the object of t|heir love; his temperance, his skill and exercise in war, his eloquence of speech, integrit|y of mind, and affability in conversation and address; insomuch that no man ever asked a favo|ur with less offence, or conferred one with a better grace. When he gave, it was without assu|mption; when he received, it was with dignity and honour.|...[MUCH MORE]|(http://www.4literature.net/Plutarch/Pompey/) deat: 0048 BC plac: Murder marr: ABT 0079 BC marr: Apr 0059 BC marr: 0052 BC | |||||||
  | Pompeia Magna (daughter of Pompey) |   | |||||||
birt: ABT 0075 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED |   | ||||||||
  | Mucia Tertia | ||||||||
birt: ABT 0100 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED marr: ABT 0079 BC |
< Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus birt: ABT 0030 plac: Rome deat: DECEASED marr: Piso Licinianus birt: ABT 0030 plac: Rome deat: DECEASED |
  | ||||||
  | Marcus Licinius Crassus Frugi|Consul |   | |||||
birt: ABT 0001 plac: Rome deat: DECEASED Scribonia (granddaughter of Pompeia Magna) marr: birt: ABT 0001 plac: Rome deat: DECEASED |
< Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus birt: ABT 0030 plac: Rome deat: DECEASED marr: Piso Licinianus birt: ABT 0030 plac: Rome deat: DECEASED |
  | ||||||||
  | Scribonia (granddaughter of Pompeia Magna) |   | |||||||
birt: ABT 0001 plac: Rome deat: DECEASED Marcus Licinius Crassus Frugi|Consul marr: birt: ABT 0001 plac: Rome deat: DECEASED |   | ||||||||
  |   | Faustus Cornelius Sulla I|Senator |   | ||||||
  |   | birt: ABT 0078 BC plac: Arrentium, Italy deat: 0047 BC | |||||||
  | Descendants of Pompeia Magna |   | |||||||
birt: Rome deat: DECEASED |   | ||||||||
  |   | Marcus Antonius* Creticus Praetor of Rome|Creticus Praetor of Rome | |||||||
  |   | birt: 0103 BC plac: Crete, Greece deat: 0074 BC plac: Crete, Greece marr: | |||||||
  |   | Gnaeus Magnus Pompeius (Pompey)|General|Pompey the Great |   | ||||||
  |   | birt: 0106 BC plac: Rome||Pompey by Plutarch|75 AD|POMPEY|106-48 B.C.|by Plutarch|translated by John Dryden||POMPEY -|THE people of Rome seem to have entertained for Pompey from his childhood the same affectio|n that Prometheus, in the tragedy of Aeschylus, expresses for Hercules, speaking of him as th|e author of his deliverance, in these words: "Ah cruel Sire! how dear thy son to me!||The generous offspring of my enemy!" - For on the one hand, never did the Romans give such de|monstrations of a vehement and fierce hatred against any of their generals as they did agains|t Strabo, the father of Pompey; during whose lifetime, it is true, they stood in awe of his m|ilitary power, as indeed he was a formidable warrior, but immediately upon his death, which h|appened by a stroke of thunder, they treated him with the utmost contumely, dragging his corp|se from the bier, as it was carried to his funeral. On the other side, never had any Roman th|e people's good-will and devotion more zealous throughout all the changes of fortune, more ea|rly in its first springing up, or more steadily rising with his prosperity, or more constan|t in his adversity than Pompey had. In Strabo, there was one great cause of their hatred, hi|s insatiable covetousness; in Pompey, there were many that helped to make him the object of t|heir love; his temperance, his skill and exercise in war, his eloquence of speech, integrit|y of mind, and affability in conversation and address; insomuch that no man ever asked a favo|ur with less offence, or conferred one with a better grace. When he gave, it was without assu|mption; when he received, it was with dignity and honour.|...[MUCH MORE]|(http://www.4literature.net/Plutarch/Pompey/) deat: 0048 BC plac: Murder marr: ABT 0079 BC marr: Apr 0059 BC marr: 0052 BC |   | ||||||
  |   |   | Julia Caesaris | ||||||
  |   | birt: ABT 0104 BC plac: Rome deat: marr: | |||||||
  | Pompeia Magna (daughter of Pompey) |   | |||||||
birt: ABT 0075 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED |   | ||||||||
  | Mucia Tertia |   | |||||||
birt: ABT 0100 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED marr: ABT 0079 BC |
  | |||||||||
  | Marcus Licinius Crassus Frugi|Consul |   | |||||||
  | birt: ABT 0001 plac: Rome deat: DECEASED marr: | ||||||||
  | Piso Licinianus |   | |||||||
birt: ABT 0030 plac: Rome deat: DECEASED |   | ||||||||
  | Scribonia (granddaughter of Pompeia Magna) |   | |||||||
birt: ABT 0001 plac: Rome deat: DECEASED marr: |   | ||||||||
  |   | Faustus Cornelius Sulla I|Senator |   | ||||||
  |   | birt: ABT 0078 BC plac: Arrentium, Italy deat: 0047 BC | |||||||
  | Descendants of Pompeia Magna |   | |||||||
birt: Rome deat: DECEASED |   | ||||||||
  |   | Gnaeus Magnus Pompeius (Pompey)|General|Pompey the Great | |||||||
  |   | birt: 0106 BC plac: Rome||Pompey by Plutarch|75 AD|POMPEY|106-48 B.C.|by Plutarch|translated by John Dryden||POMPEY -|THE people of Rome seem to have entertained for Pompey from his childhood the same affectio|n that Prometheus, in the tragedy of Aeschylus, expresses for Hercules, speaking of him as th|e author of his deliverance, in these words: "Ah cruel Sire! how dear thy son to me!||The generous offspring of my enemy!" - For on the one hand, never did the Romans give such de|monstrations of a vehement and fierce hatred against any of their generals as they did agains|t Strabo, the father of Pompey; during whose lifetime, it is true, they stood in awe of his m|ilitary power, as indeed he was a formidable warrior, but immediately upon his death, which h|appened by a stroke of thunder, they treated him with the utmost contumely, dragging his corp|se from the bier, as it was carried to his funeral. On the other side, never had any Roman th|e people's good-will and devotion more zealous throughout all the changes of fortune, more ea|rly in its first springing up, or more steadily rising with his prosperity, or more constan|t in his adversity than Pompey had. In Strabo, there was one great cause of their hatred, hi|s insatiable covetousness; in Pompey, there were many that helped to make him the object of t|heir love; his temperance, his skill and exercise in war, his eloquence of speech, integrit|y of mind, and affability in conversation and address; insomuch that no man ever asked a favo|ur with less offence, or conferred one with a better grace. When he gave, it was without assu|mption; when he received, it was with dignity and honour.|...[MUCH MORE]|(http://www.4literature.net/Plutarch/Pompey/) deat: 0048 BC plac: Murder marr: ABT 0079 BC marr: Apr 0059 BC marr: 0052 BC | |||||||
  | Pompeia Magna (daughter of Pompey) |   | |||||||
birt: ABT 0075 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED |   | ||||||||
  | Mucia Tertia | ||||||||
birt: ABT 0100 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED marr: ABT 0079 BC |
AKA (Gnaeus) Pompey the Great birt: 0106 BC plac: Rome deat: 0048 BC AKA General (Pompey) Pompeius the Triumvir birt: 0106 BC plac: Rome deat: 0048 BC |
  | ||||||
  | Antistia (wife of Pompey) |   | |||||
birt: ABT 0100 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED Gnaeus Magnus Pompeius (Pompey)|General|Pompey the Great marr: birt: 0106 BC plac: Rome||Pompey by Plutarch|75 AD|POMPEY|106-48 B.C.|by Plutarch|translated by John Dryden||POMPEY -|THE people of Rome seem to have entertained for Pompey from his childhood the same affectio|n that Prometheus, in the tragedy of Aeschylus, expresses for Hercules, speaking of him as th|e author of his deliverance, in these words: "Ah cruel Sire! how dear thy son to me!||The generous offspring of my enemy!" - For on the one hand, never did the Romans give such de|monstrations of a vehement and fierce hatred against any of their generals as they did agains|t Strabo, the father of Pompey; during whose lifetime, it is true, they stood in awe of his m|ilitary power, as indeed he was a formidable warrior, but immediately upon his death, which h|appened by a stroke of thunder, they treated him with the utmost contumely, dragging his corp|se from the bier, as it was carried to his funeral. On the other side, never had any Roman th|e people's good-will and devotion more zealous throughout all the changes of fortune, more ea|rly in its first springing up, or more steadily rising with his prosperity, or more constan|t in his adversity than Pompey had. In Strabo, there was one great cause of their hatred, hi|s insatiable covetousness; in Pompey, there were many that helped to make him the object of t|heir love; his temperance, his skill and exercise in war, his eloquence of speech, integrit|y of mind, and affability in conversation and address; insomuch that no man ever asked a favo|ur with less offence, or conferred one with a better grace. When he gave, it was without assu|mption; when he received, it was with dignity and honour.|...[MUCH MORE]|(http://www.4literature.net/Plutarch/Pompey/) deat: 0048 BC plac: Murder |
  | |||||||
  | Aemilia Scaura |   | |||||
birt: ABT 0100 BC plac: Rome deat: 0082 BC Gnaeus Magnus Pompeius (Pompey)|General|Pompey the Great marr: birt: 0106 BC plac: Rome||Pompey by Plutarch|75 AD|POMPEY|106-48 B.C.|by Plutarch|translated by John Dryden||POMPEY -|THE people of Rome seem to have entertained for Pompey from his childhood the same affectio|n that Prometheus, in the tragedy of Aeschylus, expresses for Hercules, speaking of him as th|e author of his deliverance, in these words: "Ah cruel Sire! how dear thy son to me!||The generous offspring of my enemy!" - For on the one hand, never did the Romans give such de|monstrations of a vehement and fierce hatred against any of their generals as they did agains|t Strabo, the father of Pompey; during whose lifetime, it is true, they stood in awe of his m|ilitary power, as indeed he was a formidable warrior, but immediately upon his death, which h|appened by a stroke of thunder, they treated him with the utmost contumely, dragging his corp|se from the bier, as it was carried to his funeral. On the other side, never had any Roman th|e people's good-will and devotion more zealous throughout all the changes of fortune, more ea|rly in its first springing up, or more steadily rising with his prosperity, or more constan|t in his adversity than Pompey had. In Strabo, there was one great cause of their hatred, hi|s insatiable covetousness; in Pompey, there were many that helped to make him the object of t|heir love; his temperance, his skill and exercise in war, his eloquence of speech, integrit|y of mind, and affability in conversation and address; insomuch that no man ever asked a favo|ur with less offence, or conferred one with a better grace. When he gave, it was without assu|mption; when he received, it was with dignity and honour.|...[MUCH MORE]|(http://www.4literature.net/Plutarch/Pompey/) deat: 0048 BC plac: Murder |
< Gnaeus Pompeius|General birt: ABT 0075 BC plac: Rome deat: 12 Apr 0045 BC < Pompeia Magna (daughter of Pompey) birt: ABT 0075 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED < Sextus Pompeius birt: ABT 0075 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED |
  | ||||||
  | Mucia Tertia |   | |||||
birt: ABT 0100 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED Gnaeus Magnus Pompeius (Pompey)|General|Pompey the Great marr: ABT 0079 BC birt: 0106 BC plac: Rome||Pompey by Plutarch|75 AD|POMPEY|106-48 B.C.|by Plutarch|translated by John Dryden||POMPEY -|THE people of Rome seem to have entertained for Pompey from his childhood the same affectio|n that Prometheus, in the tragedy of Aeschylus, expresses for Hercules, speaking of him as th|e author of his deliverance, in these words: "Ah cruel Sire! how dear thy son to me!||The generous offspring of my enemy!" - For on the one hand, never did the Romans give such de|monstrations of a vehement and fierce hatred against any of their generals as they did agains|t Strabo, the father of Pompey; during whose lifetime, it is true, they stood in awe of his m|ilitary power, as indeed he was a formidable warrior, but immediately upon his death, which h|appened by a stroke of thunder, they treated him with the utmost contumely, dragging his corp|se from the bier, as it was carried to his funeral. On the other side, never had any Roman th|e people's good-will and devotion more zealous throughout all the changes of fortune, more ea|rly in its first springing up, or more steadily rising with his prosperity, or more constan|t in his adversity than Pompey had. In Strabo, there was one great cause of their hatred, hi|s insatiable covetousness; in Pompey, there were many that helped to make him the object of t|heir love; his temperance, his skill and exercise in war, his eloquence of speech, integrit|y of mind, and affability in conversation and address; insomuch that no man ever asked a favo|ur with less offence, or conferred one with a better grace. When he gave, it was without assu|mption; when he received, it was with dignity and honour.|...[MUCH MORE]|(http://www.4literature.net/Plutarch/Pompey/) deat: 0048 BC plac: Murder |
AKA General (Gnaeus Pompeius) Pompey the Younger birt: ABT 0075 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED |
  | ||||||||
  | Gaius Antonius* | ||||||||
  | birt: 0170 BC deat: | ||||||||
  | Marcus Antonius I* |   | |||||||
  | birt: 143 B.C. deat: 87 B.C. marr: | ||||||||
  | Marcus Antonius* Creticus Praetor of Rome|Creticus Praetor of Rome |   | |||||||
  | birt: 0103 BC plac: Crete, Greece deat: 0074 BC plac: Crete, Greece marr: |   | |||||||
  |   | ?* |   | ||||||
  | birt: deat: marr: | ||||||||
  | Gnaeus Magnus Pompeius (Pompey)|General|Pompey the Great |   | |||||||
  | birt: 0106 BC plac: Rome||Pompey by Plutarch|75 AD|POMPEY|106-48 B.C.|by Plutarch|translated by John Dryden||POMPEY -|THE people of Rome seem to have entertained for Pompey from his childhood the same affectio|n that Prometheus, in the tragedy of Aeschylus, expresses for Hercules, speaking of him as th|e author of his deliverance, in these words: "Ah cruel Sire! how dear thy son to me!||The generous offspring of my enemy!" - For on the one hand, never did the Romans give such de|monstrations of a vehement and fierce hatred against any of their generals as they did agains|t Strabo, the father of Pompey; during whose lifetime, it is true, they stood in awe of his m|ilitary power, as indeed he was a formidable warrior, but immediately upon his death, which h|appened by a stroke of thunder, they treated him with the utmost contumely, dragging his corp|se from the bier, as it was carried to his funeral. On the other side, never had any Roman th|e people's good-will and devotion more zealous throughout all the changes of fortune, more ea|rly in its first springing up, or more steadily rising with his prosperity, or more constan|t in his adversity than Pompey had. In Strabo, there was one great cause of their hatred, hi|s insatiable covetousness; in Pompey, there were many that helped to make him the object of t|heir love; his temperance, his skill and exercise in war, his eloquence of speech, integrit|y of mind, and affability in conversation and address; insomuch that no man ever asked a favo|ur with less offence, or conferred one with a better grace. When he gave, it was without assu|mption; when he received, it was with dignity and honour.|...[MUCH MORE]|(http://www.4literature.net/Plutarch/Pompey/) deat: 0048 BC plac: Murder marr: marr: marr: ABT 0079 BC marr: Apr 0059 BC marr: 0052 BC |   | |||||||
  |   |   | Lucius Julius III Caesaris |   | |||||
  |   |   | birt: deat: | ||||||
  |   | Julia Caesaris |   | ||||||
  | birt: ABT 0104 BC plac: Rome deat: marr: | ||||||||
  | Gnaeus Pompeius|General |   | |||||||
birt: ABT 0075 BC plac: Rome deat: 12 Apr 0045 BC |   | ||||||||
  | Mucia Tertia |   | |||||||
birt: ABT 0100 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED marr: ABT 0079 BC |
  | |||||||||
  | Marcus Antonius I* | ||||||||
  | birt: 143 B.C. deat: 87 B.C. marr: | ||||||||
  | Marcus Antonius* Creticus Praetor of Rome|Creticus Praetor of Rome |   | |||||||
  | birt: 0103 BC plac: Crete, Greece deat: 0074 BC plac: Crete, Greece marr: |   | |||||||
  |   | ?* | |||||||
  | birt: deat: marr: | ||||||||
  | Gnaeus Magnus Pompeius (Pompey)|General|Pompey the Great |   | |||||||
  | birt: 0106 BC plac: Rome||Pompey by Plutarch|75 AD|POMPEY|106-48 B.C.|by Plutarch|translated by John Dryden||POMPEY -|THE people of Rome seem to have entertained for Pompey from his childhood the same affectio|n that Prometheus, in the tragedy of Aeschylus, expresses for Hercules, speaking of him as th|e author of his deliverance, in these words: "Ah cruel Sire! how dear thy son to me!||The generous offspring of my enemy!" - For on the one hand, never did the Romans give such de|monstrations of a vehement and fierce hatred against any of their generals as they did agains|t Strabo, the father of Pompey; during whose lifetime, it is true, they stood in awe of his m|ilitary power, as indeed he was a formidable warrior, but immediately upon his death, which h|appened by a stroke of thunder, they treated him with the utmost contumely, dragging his corp|se from the bier, as it was carried to his funeral. On the other side, never had any Roman th|e people's good-will and devotion more zealous throughout all the changes of fortune, more ea|rly in its first springing up, or more steadily rising with his prosperity, or more constan|t in his adversity than Pompey had. In Strabo, there was one great cause of their hatred, hi|s insatiable covetousness; in Pompey, there were many that helped to make him the object of t|heir love; his temperance, his skill and exercise in war, his eloquence of speech, integrit|y of mind, and affability in conversation and address; insomuch that no man ever asked a favo|ur with less offence, or conferred one with a better grace. When he gave, it was without assu|mption; when he received, it was with dignity and honour.|...[MUCH MORE]|(http://www.4literature.net/Plutarch/Pompey/) deat: 0048 BC plac: Murder marr: marr: marr: ABT 0079 BC marr: Apr 0059 BC marr: 0052 BC |   | |||||||
  |   |   | Lucius Julius III Caesaris | ||||||
  |   |   | birt: deat: | ||||||
  |   | Julia Caesaris |   | ||||||
  | birt: ABT 0104 BC plac: Rome deat: marr: | ||||||||
  | Gnaeus Pompeius|General |   | |||||||
  | birt: ABT 0075 BC plac: Rome deat: 12 Apr 0045 BC |   | |||||||
  |   | Mucia Tertia |   | ||||||
  | birt: ABT 0100 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED marr: ABT 0079 BC | ||||||||
  | AKA General (Gnaeus Pompeius) Pompey the Younger |   | |||||||
birt: ABT 0075 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED |
< Faustus Cornelius Sulla II birt: ABT 0049 BC plac: Arrentium, Italy deat: DECEASED Lucius Cornelius Sulla Felix Ahenobarbus birt: ABT 0050 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED Cornelia Sulla birt: ABT 0050 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED AKA Senator (Faustus Cornelius Sulla I) Faustus birt: ABT 0078 BC plac: Arrentium, Italy deat: 0047 BC < Descendants of Pompeia Magna birt: Rome deat: DECEASED |
  | ||||||||
  | Gaius Antonius* | ||||||||
  | birt: 0170 BC deat: | ||||||||
  | Marcus Antonius I* |   | |||||||
  | birt: 143 B.C. deat: 87 B.C. marr: | ||||||||
  | Marcus Antonius* Creticus Praetor of Rome|Creticus Praetor of Rome |   | |||||||
  | birt: 0103 BC plac: Crete, Greece deat: 0074 BC plac: Crete, Greece marr: |   | |||||||
  |   | ?* |   | ||||||
  | birt: deat: marr: | ||||||||
  | Gnaeus Magnus Pompeius (Pompey)|General|Pompey the Great |   | |||||||
  | birt: 0106 BC plac: Rome||Pompey by Plutarch|75 AD|POMPEY|106-48 B.C.|by Plutarch|translated by John Dryden||POMPEY -|THE people of Rome seem to have entertained for Pompey from his childhood the same affectio|n that Prometheus, in the tragedy of Aeschylus, expresses for Hercules, speaking of him as th|e author of his deliverance, in these words: "Ah cruel Sire! how dear thy son to me!||The generous offspring of my enemy!" - For on the one hand, never did the Romans give such de|monstrations of a vehement and fierce hatred against any of their generals as they did agains|t Strabo, the father of Pompey; during whose lifetime, it is true, they stood in awe of his m|ilitary power, as indeed he was a formidable warrior, but immediately upon his death, which h|appened by a stroke of thunder, they treated him with the utmost contumely, dragging his corp|se from the bier, as it was carried to his funeral. On the other side, never had any Roman th|e people's good-will and devotion more zealous throughout all the changes of fortune, more ea|rly in its first springing up, or more steadily rising with his prosperity, or more constan|t in his adversity than Pompey had. In Strabo, there was one great cause of their hatred, hi|s insatiable covetousness; in Pompey, there were many that helped to make him the object of t|heir love; his temperance, his skill and exercise in war, his eloquence of speech, integrit|y of mind, and affability in conversation and address; insomuch that no man ever asked a favo|ur with less offence, or conferred one with a better grace. When he gave, it was without assu|mption; when he received, it was with dignity and honour.|...[MUCH MORE]|(http://www.4literature.net/Plutarch/Pompey/) deat: 0048 BC plac: Murder marr: marr: marr: ABT 0079 BC marr: Apr 0059 BC marr: 0052 BC |   | |||||||
  |   |   | Lucius Julius III Caesaris |   | |||||
  |   |   | birt: deat: | ||||||
  |   | Julia Caesaris |   | ||||||
  | birt: ABT 0104 BC plac: Rome deat: marr: | ||||||||
  | Pompeia Magna (daughter of Pompey) |   | |||||||
birt: ABT 0075 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED Faustus Cornelius Sulla I|Senator marr: birt: ABT 0078 BC plac: Arrentium, Italy deat: 0047 BC |   | ||||||||
  | Mucia Tertia |   | |||||||
birt: ABT 0100 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED marr: ABT 0079 BC |
AKA (Sextus Pompeius) Sextus Pompeius Magnus Pius birt: ABT 0075 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED |
  | ||||||||
  | Gaius Antonius* | ||||||||
  | birt: 0170 BC deat: | ||||||||
  | Marcus Antonius I* |   | |||||||
  | birt: 143 B.C. deat: 87 B.C. marr: | ||||||||
  | Marcus Antonius* Creticus Praetor of Rome|Creticus Praetor of Rome |   | |||||||
  | birt: 0103 BC plac: Crete, Greece deat: 0074 BC plac: Crete, Greece marr: |   | |||||||
  |   | ?* |   | ||||||
  | birt: deat: marr: | ||||||||
  | Gnaeus Magnus Pompeius (Pompey)|General|Pompey the Great |   | |||||||
  | birt: 0106 BC plac: Rome||Pompey by Plutarch|75 AD|POMPEY|106-48 B.C.|by Plutarch|translated by John Dryden||POMPEY -|THE people of Rome seem to have entertained for Pompey from his childhood the same affectio|n that Prometheus, in the tragedy of Aeschylus, expresses for Hercules, speaking of him as th|e author of his deliverance, in these words: "Ah cruel Sire! how dear thy son to me!||The generous offspring of my enemy!" - For on the one hand, never did the Romans give such de|monstrations of a vehement and fierce hatred against any of their generals as they did agains|t Strabo, the father of Pompey; during whose lifetime, it is true, they stood in awe of his m|ilitary power, as indeed he was a formidable warrior, but immediately upon his death, which h|appened by a stroke of thunder, they treated him with the utmost contumely, dragging his corp|se from the bier, as it was carried to his funeral. On the other side, never had any Roman th|e people's good-will and devotion more zealous throughout all the changes of fortune, more ea|rly in its first springing up, or more steadily rising with his prosperity, or more constan|t in his adversity than Pompey had. In Strabo, there was one great cause of their hatred, hi|s insatiable covetousness; in Pompey, there were many that helped to make him the object of t|heir love; his temperance, his skill and exercise in war, his eloquence of speech, integrit|y of mind, and affability in conversation and address; insomuch that no man ever asked a favo|ur with less offence, or conferred one with a better grace. When he gave, it was without assu|mption; when he received, it was with dignity and honour.|...[MUCH MORE]|(http://www.4literature.net/Plutarch/Pompey/) deat: 0048 BC plac: Murder marr: marr: marr: ABT 0079 BC marr: Apr 0059 BC marr: 0052 BC |   | |||||||
  |   |   | Lucius Julius III Caesaris |   | |||||
  |   |   | birt: deat: | ||||||
  |   | Julia Caesaris |   | ||||||
  | birt: ABT 0104 BC plac: Rome deat: marr: | ||||||||
  | Sextus Pompeius |   | |||||||
birt: ABT 0075 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED |   | ||||||||
  | Mucia Tertia |   | |||||||
birt: ABT 0100 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED marr: ABT 0079 BC |
< Faustus Cornelius Sulla II birt: ABT 0049 BC plac: Arrentium, Italy deat: DECEASED Lucius Cornelius Sulla Felix Ahenobarbus birt: ABT 0050 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED Cornelia Sulla birt: ABT 0050 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED AKA Senator (Faustus Cornelius Sulla I) Faustus birt: ABT 0078 BC plac: Arrentium, Italy deat: 0047 BC < Descendants of Pompeia Magna birt: Rome deat: DECEASED |
  | ||||||
  | Faustus Cornelius Sulla I|Senator |   | |||||
birt: ABT 0078 BC plac: Arrentium, Italy deat: 0047 BC Pompeia Magna (daughter of Pompey) marr: birt: ABT 0075 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED |
  | |||||||||
  | Marcus Antonius I* | ||||||||
  | birt: 143 B.C. deat: 87 B.C. marr: | ||||||||
  | Marcus Antonius* Creticus Praetor of Rome|Creticus Praetor of Rome |   | |||||||
  | birt: 0103 BC plac: Crete, Greece deat: 0074 BC plac: Crete, Greece marr: |   | |||||||
  |   | ?* | |||||||
  | birt: deat: marr: | ||||||||
  | Gnaeus Magnus Pompeius (Pompey)|General|Pompey the Great |   | |||||||
  | birt: 0106 BC plac: Rome||Pompey by Plutarch|75 AD|POMPEY|106-48 B.C.|by Plutarch|translated by John Dryden||POMPEY -|THE people of Rome seem to have entertained for Pompey from his childhood the same affectio|n that Prometheus, in the tragedy of Aeschylus, expresses for Hercules, speaking of him as th|e author of his deliverance, in these words: "Ah cruel Sire! how dear thy son to me!||The generous offspring of my enemy!" - For on the one hand, never did the Romans give such de|monstrations of a vehement and fierce hatred against any of their generals as they did agains|t Strabo, the father of Pompey; during whose lifetime, it is true, they stood in awe of his m|ilitary power, as indeed he was a formidable warrior, but immediately upon his death, which h|appened by a stroke of thunder, they treated him with the utmost contumely, dragging his corp|se from the bier, as it was carried to his funeral. On the other side, never had any Roman th|e people's good-will and devotion more zealous throughout all the changes of fortune, more ea|rly in its first springing up, or more steadily rising with his prosperity, or more constan|t in his adversity than Pompey had. In Strabo, there was one great cause of their hatred, hi|s insatiable covetousness; in Pompey, there were many that helped to make him the object of t|heir love; his temperance, his skill and exercise in war, his eloquence of speech, integrit|y of mind, and affability in conversation and address; insomuch that no man ever asked a favo|ur with less offence, or conferred one with a better grace. When he gave, it was without assu|mption; when he received, it was with dignity and honour.|...[MUCH MORE]|(http://www.4literature.net/Plutarch/Pompey/) deat: 0048 BC plac: Murder marr: marr: marr: ABT 0079 BC marr: Apr 0059 BC marr: 0052 BC |   | |||||||
  |   |   | Lucius Julius III Caesaris | ||||||
  |   |   | birt: deat: | ||||||
  |   | Julia Caesaris |   | ||||||
  | birt: ABT 0104 BC plac: Rome deat: marr: | ||||||||
  | Sextus Pompeius |   | |||||||
  | birt: ABT 0075 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED |   | |||||||
  |   | Mucia Tertia |   | ||||||
  | birt: ABT 0100 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED marr: ABT 0079 BC | ||||||||
  | AKA (Sextus Pompeius) Sextus Pompeius Magnus Pius |   | |||||||
birt: ABT 0075 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED |
  | |||||||
  | Cornelia Metella |   | |||||
birt: ABT 0100 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED Gnaeus Magnus Pompeius (Pompey)|General|Pompey the Great marr: 0052 BC birt: 0106 BC plac: Rome||Pompey by Plutarch|75 AD|POMPEY|106-48 B.C.|by Plutarch|translated by John Dryden||POMPEY -|THE people of Rome seem to have entertained for Pompey from his childhood the same affectio|n that Prometheus, in the tragedy of Aeschylus, expresses for Hercules, speaking of him as th|e author of his deliverance, in these words: "Ah cruel Sire! how dear thy son to me!||The generous offspring of my enemy!" - For on the one hand, never did the Romans give such de|monstrations of a vehement and fierce hatred against any of their generals as they did agains|t Strabo, the father of Pompey; during whose lifetime, it is true, they stood in awe of his m|ilitary power, as indeed he was a formidable warrior, but immediately upon his death, which h|appened by a stroke of thunder, they treated him with the utmost contumely, dragging his corp|se from the bier, as it was carried to his funeral. On the other side, never had any Roman th|e people's good-will and devotion more zealous throughout all the changes of fortune, more ea|rly in its first springing up, or more steadily rising with his prosperity, or more constan|t in his adversity than Pompey had. In Strabo, there was one great cause of their hatred, hi|s insatiable covetousness; in Pompey, there were many that helped to make him the object of t|heir love; his temperance, his skill and exercise in war, his eloquence of speech, integrit|y of mind, and affability in conversation and address; insomuch that no man ever asked a favo|ur with less offence, or conferred one with a better grace. When he gave, it was without assu|mption; when he received, it was with dignity and honour.|...[MUCH MORE]|(http://www.4literature.net/Plutarch/Pompey/) deat: 0048 BC plac: Murder |
Faustus Cornelius Sulla III birt: ABT 0025 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED < Lucius Cornelius Sulla III birt: ABT 0025 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED Fausta Sulla birt: ABT 0025 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED Proculus Cornelius Sulla Faustus birt: ABT 0025 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED Cossus Cornelius Sulla Faustus birt: ABT 0025 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED Gnaeus Ulpius Trajanus birt: ABT 0025 plac: Rome deat: DECEASED Illyricus Cornelius Sulla birt: ABT 0025 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED |
  | ||||||||
  | Faustus Cornelius Sulla I|Senator |   | |||||||
  | birt: ABT 0078 BC plac: Arrentium, Italy deat: 0047 BC marr: | ||||||||
  | Faustus Cornelius Sulla II |   | |||||||
birt: ABT 0049 BC plac: Arrentium, Italy deat: DECEASED Junia Albina marr: birt: ABT 0050 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED Caecilia Nepos marr: birt: ABT 0050 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED Ulpia marr: birt: ABT 0050 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED |   | ||||||||
  |   | Marcus Antonius I* | |||||||
  |   | birt: 143 B.C. deat: 87 B.C. marr: | |||||||
  |   | Marcus Antonius* Creticus Praetor of Rome|Creticus Praetor of Rome |   | ||||||
  |   | birt: 0103 BC plac: Crete, Greece deat: 0074 BC plac: Crete, Greece marr: |   | ||||||
  |   |   | ?* | ||||||
  |   | birt: deat: marr: | |||||||
  |   | Gnaeus Magnus Pompeius (Pompey)|General|Pompey the Great |   | ||||||
  |   | birt: 0106 BC plac: Rome||Pompey by Plutarch|75 AD|POMPEY|106-48 B.C.|by Plutarch|translated by John Dryden||POMPEY -|THE people of Rome seem to have entertained for Pompey from his childhood the same affectio|n that Prometheus, in the tragedy of Aeschylus, expresses for Hercules, speaking of him as th|e author of his deliverance, in these words: "Ah cruel Sire! how dear thy son to me!||The generous offspring of my enemy!" - For on the one hand, never did the Romans give such de|monstrations of a vehement and fierce hatred against any of their generals as they did agains|t Strabo, the father of Pompey; during whose lifetime, it is true, they stood in awe of his m|ilitary power, as indeed he was a formidable warrior, but immediately upon his death, which h|appened by a stroke of thunder, they treated him with the utmost contumely, dragging his corp|se from the bier, as it was carried to his funeral. On the other side, never had any Roman th|e people's good-will and devotion more zealous throughout all the changes of fortune, more ea|rly in its first springing up, or more steadily rising with his prosperity, or more constan|t in his adversity than Pompey had. In Strabo, there was one great cause of their hatred, hi|s insatiable covetousness; in Pompey, there were many that helped to make him the object of t|heir love; his temperance, his skill and exercise in war, his eloquence of speech, integrit|y of mind, and affability in conversation and address; insomuch that no man ever asked a favo|ur with less offence, or conferred one with a better grace. When he gave, it was without assu|mption; when he received, it was with dignity and honour.|...[MUCH MORE]|(http://www.4literature.net/Plutarch/Pompey/) deat: 0048 BC plac: Murder marr: marr: marr: ABT 0079 BC marr: Apr 0059 BC marr: 0052 BC |   | ||||||
  |   |   |   | Lucius Julius III Caesaris | |||||
  |   |   |   | birt: deat: | |||||
  |   |   | Julia Caesaris |   | |||||
  |   | birt: ABT 0104 BC plac: Rome deat: marr: | |||||||
  | Pompeia Magna (daughter of Pompey) |   | |||||||
birt: ABT 0075 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED marr: |   | ||||||||
  | Mucia Tertia |   | |||||||
birt: ABT 0100 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED marr: ABT 0079 BC |
  | |||||||||
  | Faustus Cornelius Sulla I|Senator |   | |||||||
  | birt: ABT 0078 BC plac: Arrentium, Italy deat: 0047 BC marr: | ||||||||
  | Lucius Cornelius Sulla Felix Ahenobarbus |   | |||||||
birt: ABT 0050 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED |   | ||||||||
  |   | Marcus Antonius I* | |||||||
  |   | birt: 143 B.C. deat: 87 B.C. marr: | |||||||
  |   | Marcus Antonius* Creticus Praetor of Rome|Creticus Praetor of Rome |   | ||||||
  |   | birt: 0103 BC plac: Crete, Greece deat: 0074 BC plac: Crete, Greece marr: |   | ||||||
  |   |   | ?* | ||||||
  |   | birt: deat: marr: | |||||||
  |   | Gnaeus Magnus Pompeius (Pompey)|General|Pompey the Great |   | ||||||
  |   | birt: 0106 BC plac: Rome||Pompey by Plutarch|75 AD|POMPEY|106-48 B.C.|by Plutarch|translated by John Dryden||POMPEY -|THE people of Rome seem to have entertained for Pompey from his childhood the same affectio|n that Prometheus, in the tragedy of Aeschylus, expresses for Hercules, speaking of him as th|e author of his deliverance, in these words: "Ah cruel Sire! how dear thy son to me!||The generous offspring of my enemy!" - For on the one hand, never did the Romans give such de|monstrations of a vehement and fierce hatred against any of their generals as they did agains|t Strabo, the father of Pompey; during whose lifetime, it is true, they stood in awe of his m|ilitary power, as indeed he was a formidable warrior, but immediately upon his death, which h|appened by a stroke of thunder, they treated him with the utmost contumely, dragging his corp|se from the bier, as it was carried to his funeral. On the other side, never had any Roman th|e people's good-will and devotion more zealous throughout all the changes of fortune, more ea|rly in its first springing up, or more steadily rising with his prosperity, or more constan|t in his adversity than Pompey had. In Strabo, there was one great cause of their hatred, hi|s insatiable covetousness; in Pompey, there were many that helped to make him the object of t|heir love; his temperance, his skill and exercise in war, his eloquence of speech, integrit|y of mind, and affability in conversation and address; insomuch that no man ever asked a favo|ur with less offence, or conferred one with a better grace. When he gave, it was without assu|mption; when he received, it was with dignity and honour.|...[MUCH MORE]|(http://www.4literature.net/Plutarch/Pompey/) deat: 0048 BC plac: Murder marr: marr: marr: ABT 0079 BC marr: Apr 0059 BC marr: 0052 BC |   | ||||||
  |   |   |   | Lucius Julius III Caesaris | |||||
  |   |   |   | birt: deat: | |||||
  |   |   | Julia Caesaris |   | |||||
  |   | birt: ABT 0104 BC plac: Rome deat: marr: | |||||||
  | Pompeia Magna (daughter of Pompey) |   | |||||||
birt: ABT 0075 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED marr: |   | ||||||||
  | Mucia Tertia |   | |||||||
birt: ABT 0100 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED marr: ABT 0079 BC |
  | |||||||||
  | Faustus Cornelius Sulla I|Senator |   | |||||||
  | birt: ABT 0078 BC plac: Arrentium, Italy deat: 0047 BC marr: | ||||||||
  | Cornelia Sulla |   | |||||||
birt: ABT 0050 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED |   | ||||||||
  |   | Marcus Antonius I* | |||||||
  |   | birt: 143 B.C. deat: 87 B.C. marr: | |||||||
  |   | Marcus Antonius* Creticus Praetor of Rome|Creticus Praetor of Rome |   | ||||||
  |   | birt: 0103 BC plac: Crete, Greece deat: 0074 BC plac: Crete, Greece marr: |   | ||||||
  |   |   | ?* | ||||||
  |   | birt: deat: marr: | |||||||
  |   | Gnaeus Magnus Pompeius (Pompey)|General|Pompey the Great |   | ||||||
  |   | birt: 0106 BC plac: Rome||Pompey by Plutarch|75 AD|POMPEY|106-48 B.C.|by Plutarch|translated by John Dryden||POMPEY -|THE people of Rome seem to have entertained for Pompey from his childhood the same affectio|n that Prometheus, in the tragedy of Aeschylus, expresses for Hercules, speaking of him as th|e author of his deliverance, in these words: "Ah cruel Sire! how dear thy son to me!||The generous offspring of my enemy!" - For on the one hand, never did the Romans give such de|monstrations of a vehement and fierce hatred against any of their generals as they did agains|t Strabo, the father of Pompey; during whose lifetime, it is true, they stood in awe of his m|ilitary power, as indeed he was a formidable warrior, but immediately upon his death, which h|appened by a stroke of thunder, they treated him with the utmost contumely, dragging his corp|se from the bier, as it was carried to his funeral. On the other side, never had any Roman th|e people's good-will and devotion more zealous throughout all the changes of fortune, more ea|rly in its first springing up, or more steadily rising with his prosperity, or more constan|t in his adversity than Pompey had. In Strabo, there was one great cause of their hatred, hi|s insatiable covetousness; in Pompey, there were many that helped to make him the object of t|heir love; his temperance, his skill and exercise in war, his eloquence of speech, integrit|y of mind, and affability in conversation and address; insomuch that no man ever asked a favo|ur with less offence, or conferred one with a better grace. When he gave, it was without assu|mption; when he received, it was with dignity and honour.|...[MUCH MORE]|(http://www.4literature.net/Plutarch/Pompey/) deat: 0048 BC plac: Murder marr: marr: marr: ABT 0079 BC marr: Apr 0059 BC marr: 0052 BC |   | ||||||
  |   |   |   | Lucius Julius III Caesaris | |||||
  |   |   |   | birt: deat: | |||||
  |   |   | Julia Caesaris |   | |||||
  |   | birt: ABT 0104 BC plac: Rome deat: marr: | |||||||
  | Pompeia Magna (daughter of Pompey) |   | |||||||
birt: ABT 0075 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED marr: |   | ||||||||
  | Mucia Tertia |   | |||||||
birt: ABT 0100 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED marr: ABT 0079 BC |
  | |||||||||
  | Faustus Cornelius Sulla I|Senator |   | |||||||
  | birt: ABT 0078 BC plac: Arrentium, Italy deat: 0047 BC marr: | ||||||||
  | AKA Senator (Faustus Cornelius Sulla I) Faustus |   | |||||||
birt: ABT 0078 BC plac: Arrentium, Italy deat: 0047 BC |   | ||||||||
  |   | Marcus Antonius I* | |||||||
  |   | birt: 143 B.C. deat: 87 B.C. marr: | |||||||
  |   | Marcus Antonius* Creticus Praetor of Rome|Creticus Praetor of Rome |   | ||||||
  |   | birt: 0103 BC plac: Crete, Greece deat: 0074 BC plac: Crete, Greece marr: |   | ||||||
  |   |   | ?* | ||||||
  |   | birt: deat: marr: | |||||||
  |   | Gnaeus Magnus Pompeius (Pompey)|General|Pompey the Great |   | ||||||
  |   | birt: 0106 BC plac: Rome||Pompey by Plutarch|75 AD|POMPEY|106-48 B.C.|by Plutarch|translated by John Dryden||POMPEY -|THE people of Rome seem to have entertained for Pompey from his childhood the same affectio|n that Prometheus, in the tragedy of Aeschylus, expresses for Hercules, speaking of him as th|e author of his deliverance, in these words: "Ah cruel Sire! how dear thy son to me!||The generous offspring of my enemy!" - For on the one hand, never did the Romans give such de|monstrations of a vehement and fierce hatred against any of their generals as they did agains|t Strabo, the father of Pompey; during whose lifetime, it is true, they stood in awe of his m|ilitary power, as indeed he was a formidable warrior, but immediately upon his death, which h|appened by a stroke of thunder, they treated him with the utmost contumely, dragging his corp|se from the bier, as it was carried to his funeral. On the other side, never had any Roman th|e people's good-will and devotion more zealous throughout all the changes of fortune, more ea|rly in its first springing up, or more steadily rising with his prosperity, or more constan|t in his adversity than Pompey had. In Strabo, there was one great cause of their hatred, hi|s insatiable covetousness; in Pompey, there were many that helped to make him the object of t|heir love; his temperance, his skill and exercise in war, his eloquence of speech, integrit|y of mind, and affability in conversation and address; insomuch that no man ever asked a favo|ur with less offence, or conferred one with a better grace. When he gave, it was without assu|mption; when he received, it was with dignity and honour.|...[MUCH MORE]|(http://www.4literature.net/Plutarch/Pompey/) deat: 0048 BC plac: Murder marr: marr: marr: ABT 0079 BC marr: Apr 0059 BC marr: 0052 BC |   | ||||||
  |   |   |   | Lucius Julius III Caesaris | |||||
  |   |   |   | birt: deat: | |||||
  |   |   | Julia Caesaris |   | |||||
  |   | birt: ABT 0104 BC plac: Rome deat: marr: | |||||||
  | Pompeia Magna (daughter of Pompey) |   | |||||||
birt: ABT 0075 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED marr: |   | ||||||||
  | Mucia Tertia |   | |||||||
birt: ABT 0100 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED marr: ABT 0079 BC |
Faustus Cornelius Sulla III birt: ABT 0025 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED < Lucius Cornelius Sulla III birt: ABT 0025 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED Fausta Sulla birt: ABT 0025 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED Proculus Cornelius Sulla Faustus birt: ABT 0025 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED Cossus Cornelius Sulla Faustus birt: ABT 0025 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED |
  | ||||||
  | Junia Albina |   | |||||
birt: ABT 0050 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED Faustus Cornelius Sulla II marr: birt: ABT 0049 BC plac: Arrentium, Italy deat: DECEASED |
  | |||||||||
  | Faustus Cornelius Sulla I|Senator |   | |||||||
  | birt: ABT 0078 BC plac: Arrentium, Italy deat: 0047 BC marr: | ||||||||
  | Faustus Cornelius Sulla II |   | |||||||
  | birt: ABT 0049 BC plac: Arrentium, Italy deat: DECEASED marr: marr: marr: |   | |||||||
  |   |   | Marcus Antonius* Creticus Praetor of Rome|Creticus Praetor of Rome | ||||||
  |   |   | birt: 0103 BC plac: Crete, Greece deat: 0074 BC plac: Crete, Greece marr: | ||||||
  |   |   | Gnaeus Magnus Pompeius (Pompey)|General|Pompey the Great |   | |||||
  |   |   | birt: 0106 BC plac: Rome||Pompey by Plutarch|75 AD|POMPEY|106-48 B.C.|by Plutarch|translated by John Dryden||POMPEY -|THE people of Rome seem to have entertained for Pompey from his childhood the same affectio|n that Prometheus, in the tragedy of Aeschylus, expresses for Hercules, speaking of him as th|e author of his deliverance, in these words: "Ah cruel Sire! how dear thy son to me!||The generous offspring of my enemy!" - For on the one hand, never did the Romans give such de|monstrations of a vehement and fierce hatred against any of their generals as they did agains|t Strabo, the father of Pompey; during whose lifetime, it is true, they stood in awe of his m|ilitary power, as indeed he was a formidable warrior, but immediately upon his death, which h|appened by a stroke of thunder, they treated him with the utmost contumely, dragging his corp|se from the bier, as it was carried to his funeral. On the other side, never had any Roman th|e people's good-will and devotion more zealous throughout all the changes of fortune, more ea|rly in its first springing up, or more steadily rising with his prosperity, or more constan|t in his adversity than Pompey had. In Strabo, there was one great cause of their hatred, hi|s insatiable covetousness; in Pompey, there were many that helped to make him the object of t|heir love; his temperance, his skill and exercise in war, his eloquence of speech, integrit|y of mind, and affability in conversation and address; insomuch that no man ever asked a favo|ur with less offence, or conferred one with a better grace. When he gave, it was without assu|mption; when he received, it was with dignity and honour.|...[MUCH MORE]|(http://www.4literature.net/Plutarch/Pompey/) deat: 0048 BC plac: Murder marr: marr: marr: ABT 0079 BC marr: Apr 0059 BC marr: 0052 BC |   | |||||
  |   |   |   | Julia Caesaris | |||||
  |   |   | birt: ABT 0104 BC plac: Rome deat: marr: | ||||||
  |   | Pompeia Magna (daughter of Pompey) |   | ||||||
  | birt: ABT 0075 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED marr: |   | |||||||
  |   | Mucia Tertia |   | ||||||
  | birt: ABT 0100 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED marr: ABT 0079 BC | ||||||||
  | Faustus Cornelius Sulla III |   | |||||||
birt: ABT 0025 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED |   | ||||||||
  | Junia Albina |   | |||||||
birt: ABT 0050 BC plac: Rome deat: DECEASED marr: |