Family of Lucius LIBO Scribonius and Connelia MAGNA Pompeia

Husband: Lucius LIBO Scribonius ( -16)
Wife: Connelia MAGNA Pompeia (c. 47- )
Children: Scribonia LIBO (c. 68- )

Husband: Lucius LIBO Scribonius

Name: Lucius LIBO Scribonius
Sex: Male
Father: -
Mother: -
Death 0016

Wife: Connelia MAGNA Pompeia

Name: Connelia MAGNA Pompeia
Sex: Female
Father: -
Mother: -
Birth c. 0047 B.C.

Child 1: Scribonia LIBO

Name: Scribonia LIBO
Sex: Female
Spouse 1: Augustus (63-14)
Spouse 2: Corneilus SCIPIO (c. 80-35)
Birth c. 0068 B.C.

Note on Husband: Lucius LIBO Scribonius

Lucius Scribonius Libo (d. 16 AD) was son of the above. He was a consul in 16. This nobleman had planned to revolt against the Roman Emperor Tiberius. The Emperor had tried him in a Senatorial Court. Lucius had pleaded to the Emperor for the support of Tiberius‘ son Drusus Julius Caesar but the emperor rejected this. Lucius and Tiberius took part in a sacrifice among the priests. During the ceremony, the Emperor had asked Lucius for assistance, when the ceremony was over, Tiberius stabbed him with a knife. This occurred after the trial. Lucius had married Cornelia Pompeia Magna a relative, who was the daughter of Pompeia Magna from her second marriage to consul Lucius Cornelius Cinna. Pompeia bore Lucius, a daughter and only child Scribonia. Scribonia married the consul Marcus Licinius Crassus Frugi and had children.

Note on Wife: Connelia MAGNA Pompeia

Cornelia Pompeia Magna (born 47/35 BC, year of death unknown) was the daughter and youngest child to Pompeia Magna and suffect consul Lucius Cornelius Cinna. Cornelia’s maternal grandparents were triumvir Pompey and his third wife Mucia Tertia, while her paternal grandfather was an elder Lucius Cornelius Cinna. Her full-blooded brother was Gnaeus Cornelius Cinna Magnus; a half-sibling from her mother’s first marriage to senator Faustus Cornelius Sulla. Her mother died before 35 BC and was raised by her father.

 

Before 16, Cornelia married Lucius Scribonius Libo consul of 16 and like her came from a senatorial family. This nobleman was perhaps a distant relative to Cornelia. Libo maybe was a descendant of her mother’s first marriage; his paternal grandmother possibly was Cornelia’s elder half-sister. The Roman Emperor Tiberius, who charged Libo in planning a revolt against the emperor, stabbed Libo to death in 16.

 

Cornelia and Libo had a child, Scribonia, who married the consul Marcus Licinius Crassus Frugi and had children.