Quintus Servilius Caepio (adoptive father of Brutus)
Quintus Servilius Caepio (fl. 68–58 BC) was a Roman aristocrat, and the adoptive father of
Biography
Geiger conjectured that Caepio was a son of Quintus Servilius Caepio, from an unknown wife before Livia. This would make the younger Caepio an elder half-brother of Servilia the mother of Brutus, and a different man from Cato the Younger's half brother Servilius Caepio.[1] Marshall found Geiger's argument compelling,[2] as did Strachan,[3] but Treggiari was skeptical.[4]
According to a tentative reconstruction of his life, Caepio may have held the quaestorship by about 69 BC, which would have given him senatorial rank. He then served as a deputy (legatus) to the general Pompey in the campaign against the Cilician pirates and then in the Mithridatic War.
By 59 BC, he had adopted his relative
Identification with Julia's fiancé
In 59 BC a Servilius Caepio supported
Notes
- ^ Only one is known, Pompeia Magna.
References
Sources
- Geiger, Joseph (1973). "The Last Servilii Caepiones of the Republic". Ancient Society. 4: 143–156. JSTOR 44080221.
- Marshall, Bruce A. (1987). "The Engagement of Faustus Sulla and Pompeia". Ancient Society. 18: 91–101. JSTOR 44034973.
- ISBN 978-0-19-882934-8.