Servilia (wife of Marcus Aemilius Lepidus)


Servilia was an ancient Roman woman who was at one time engaged to Octavian. Octavian broke off the betrothal to marry Clodia Pulchra, so instead she married Marcus Aemilius Lepidus Minor, the son of Octavian's fellow triumvir Marcus Aemilius Lepidus.

Biography

Early life

Servilia was the daughter of Caesarian consul Publius Servilius Vatia Isauricus and Junia Prima, the eldest daughter of Servilia Caepionis, a mistress of Julius Caesar and prominent woman of the late republic. This made her the niece of Junia Secunda, Junia Tertia, Marcus Junius Silanus and Marcus Junius Brutus, Caesar's assassin.

Marriage plans

Servilia was engaged to Octavian. This was likely a politically-motivated betrothal, since her father was one of Octavian's supporters and her mother, Junia Prima, was a sister-in-law of the triumvir Lepidus, thus the marriage would have strengthened Octavian's bonds with the two. Nonetheless, he eventually rejected her and married Clodia Pulchra instead. She went on to marry Lepidus Minor instead. This union was possibly proposed by her mother and Lepidus in an attempt to soothe any ill feelings created by Octavian's rejection.

Death

In 31 BC, her husband led a plot to assassinate Octavian, motivated by the banishment of his father. He had tried to restore his exiled father to a position of authority but was caught and condemned to death. When her husband was killed, she committed suicide, the method of which is stated in ancient sources to have been swallowing hot coals or alternatively drinking to death, possibly due to coal-eating being regarded as too Gothic. Suicide by a widow was considered a great sign of devotion in Rome at the time. It has been propossed that her manner of death might have been misatributed to her cousin-once-removed Porcia historically.

Research

In the past historians sometimes believed that she and Augustus had actually married, but it is widely agreed upon today that they were only ever engaged.
It has been proposed that the character of Lavinia in The Aeneid was in part intended to represent Servilia.

Cultural depictions

Servilia appears Colleen McCullough's Masters of Rome series, first in The October Horse where Octavian promises her father to marry to get him on his side, when this is decided she is still too young to marry so Octavian plans to wait out the engagement until he can find someone he is actually in love with. In In the 2007 novel Antony and Cleopatra by Australian author Colleen McCullough, Servilia is mentioned several times. She is described as a virgin who Octavian has little interest in and knows she will marry Lepidus instead.