Both Antony and Octavian are vying for …

Years: 40BCE - 40BCE
August

Both Antony and Octavian are vying for an alliance with Sextus, who is ironically a member of the republican party, not the Caesarian faction.

Octavian succeeds in a temporary alliance when in 40 BC he wins agreement to marry Sextus’s relative Scribonia, a daughter of Lucius Scribonius Libo and Cornelia Sulla, the granddaughter of Pompey the Great and Lucius Cornelius Sulla; Libo is a follower of Pompeius as well as his father-in-law.

Scribonia’s first two marriages had been to former consuls.

Her first husband is unknown, though it had been suggested that he was Gnaeus Cornelius Lentulus Marcellinus (consul 56 BCE), as there is an inscription that refers to freedmen (post 39 BCE) of Scribonia and her son Cornelius Marcellinus, indicating that she had a son from her previous marriage and that he was living with her after she divorced her third husband.

He may have died young and been ignored by historians.

With her second husband, Publius Cornelius Scipio Salvito, she had a daughter, Cornelia Scipio; she may have also been the mother to Publius Cornelius Scipio, who would become consul in 16 BCE.

Salvito had been a supporter of Pompey.

In 40, Scribonia is forced to divorce her husband and marry Octavian, who is younger than her by several years.

Octavian in turn divorces his wife Clodia, marrying Scribonia to cement the political alliance with her uncle Sextus.

Related Events

Filter results