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Porcia (c. 73 BC – June 43 BC), [2] [3] occasionally spelled Portia, especially in 18th-century English literature, [4] was a Roman woman who lived in the 1st century BC. She was the daughter of Marcus Porcius Cato Uticensis (Cato the Younger) and his first wife Atilia.
Porcia M. f. M. n., eldest daughter of Cato the Younger, married first Marcus Calpurnius Bibulus, and second Marcus Junius Brutus. After the murder of Caesar and the flight of her husband, the triumvirs allowed her to remain at Rome, but when she learned of Brutus' death at the Battle of Philippi, she took her own life.
Marcus Calpurnius Bibulus (c. 102 – 48 BC) was a politician of the Roman Republic. He was a conservative and upholder of the established social order who served in several magisterial positions alongside Julius Caesar and conceived a lifelong enmity towards him.
Lucius Calpurnius Bibulus; Appius Claudius Pulcher (consul 54 BC) G. ... Servilia (mother of Brutus) Servilia (wife of Lepidus) Quintus Servilius Caepio (adoptive ...
(Gaius) Calpurnius M. f. C. n. Bibulus, [ii] the fourth son of the consul Marcus Calpurnius Bibulus, and the only attested son by his second wife, Porcia, became the stepson of Marcus Junius Brutus upon her remarriage. [47] Gaius (Calpurnius) Bibulus, aedile in AD 22, may have been the son of Gaius Calpurnius Bibulus, Brutus' stepson. [50] [47]
Lucius Bibulus was the son of Julius Caesar's implacable enemy Marcus Calpurnius Bibulus.His mother could possibly have been Porcia Catonis (daughter of Cato the Younger), although it is disputed, most likely he was a son by his father's first unknown wife.
First wife, Atilia (divorced) Porcia, married first to Marcus Calpurnius Bibulus, then to Marcus Junius Brutus; Marcus Porcius Cato, later killed in the Second Battle of Philippi; Second (and third) wife Marcia.
Kate Steavenson-Payne as Portia, wife of Brutus; Ian Duncan as Brutus, Senator and friend of Caesar who is the most famous for turning on Caesar and participating in his murder; Jay Rodan as Mark Antony, a cousin, friend, and military commander of Caesar who would eventually get revenge on Caesar's murderers