Faustus Cornelius Sulla (quaestor 54 BC) explained

Faustus Cornelius Sulla (before 86 BC – 46 BC) was a politician of the Roman Republic. He was the son of the dictator Lucius Cornelius Sulla. He started his career in the shadow of Pompey, whom he followed during the Civil War against Julius Caesar. He was killed soon after the battle of Thapsus in 46 BC.

Life

Family background

Faustus was the only surviving son of the Roman dictator Lucius Cornelius Sulla and his fourth wife, Caecilia Metella, and thus was a member of one of the most ancient patrician families, the Cornelii. After his father's death in 78 BC, he and his twin sister, Fausta, were brought up by his guardian and father's friend, Lucullus.

Faustus married Pompeia Magna, daughter of Pompey the Great. Faustus accompanied Pompey on his Asian campaigns, and was the first to climb over the walls of the Temple of Jerusalem when it was stormed by Pompey in 63 BC.[1] After his return to Rome, he gave gladiatorial games to celebrate his father in 60.[2] At an unknown time before 57, Faustus Sulla became augur.[3] As owner of the central slopes of Mount Falernus, his name became synonymous with the most esteemed wine in ancient Rome, Faustian Falernian.

Triumvir monetalis (56 BC)

Faustus became triumvir monetalis in 56 BC, together with Lucius Marcius Philippus and Gaius Considius Nonianius. He had an important activity as moneyer, producing four types of denarius, which celebrate with an elaborate imagery both his father Sulla and father-in-law Pompey.[4] Michael Crawford dated all the coins to 56, but other dates have been suggested: H. A. Grueber favoured 62 for the two denarii about Sulla, while Michael Harlan proposed 55.[5] Both preferred 54 for those about Pompey, because they bore the letters SC, for senatus consulto, which makes Harlan think that they belong to Faustus' time as quaestor that year.[6]

Later career

Faustus Sulla was quaestor in 54 BC. The senate commissioned him to rebuild the curia Hostilia in 52 which had been burned down after the riots which followed the murder of Clodius.[26] After that, the curia was known as the curia Cornelia.

His career as an advocate was cut short, however, by the civil war between Pompey and Julius Caesar. He, as Lucullus' ward and Pompey's son-in-law, sided with the former. Faustus was at the Battle of Pharsalus in 48 BC, joining the leaders of his party in Africa subsequently. After the Battle of Thapsus, he tried to escape to Mauretania, but was caught and killed by Publius Sittius, a supporter of Caesar, in 46 BC.[27]

With Pompeia he had at least two children:[28] [29] A son is attested named Faustus Cornelius Sulla the Younger. Faustus Cornelius Sulla Lucullus, suffect consul in AD 31, was his descendant.

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. [Josephus]
  2. [Cassius Dio]
  3. Cassius Dio 39.17.2.
  4. Crawford, Roman Republican Coinage, pp. 449–451.
  5. Grueber, Coins of the Roman Republic in the British Museum, vol. I, p. 448.
  6. Harlan, Roman Republican Moneyers and their Coins, pp. 100, 106.
  7. Velleius, ii. 25.
  8. Harlan, Roman Republican Moneyers and their Coins, pp. 100, 101.
  9. Harlan, Roman Republican Moneyers and their Coins, p. 105.
  10. Harlan, Roman Republican Moneyers and their Coins, p. 106.
  11. Plutarch, Sulla, 35.
  12. Sumi, "Spectacles", p. 418.
  13. Harlan, Roman Republican Moneyers and their Coins, p. 103.
  14. Santangelo, Sulla, p. 220.
  15. Crawford, Roman Republican Coinage, p. 450.
  16. Plutarch, Sulla, 19.
  17. Broughton, Magistrates, vol. II, p. 191.
  18. Crawford, Roman Republican Coinage, p. 451.
  19. Sumi, "Spectacles", p. 417 (note 25)
  20. Crawford, Roman Republican Coinage, p. 451.
  21. Harlan, Roman Republican Moneyers and their Coins, p. 107.
  22. Broughton, Magistrates, vol. II, pp. 203, 204.
  23. Crawford, Roman Republican Coinage, pp. 450, 451.
  24. Harlan, Roman Republican Moneyers and their Coins, p. 107.
  25. de Souza, Piracy, p. 174.
  26. Cassius Dio 40.50.2.
  27. Ps.-Caesar: De bello Africo 95; Titus Livius, Perioche 114; Sueton, Caesar 75.3; Aurelius Victor, de viris illustribus 78.9.
  28. Ps.-Caesar: De bello Africo 95: Pompeiae cum Fausti liberis
  29. Book: Elvers, Karl-Ludwig. Karl-Ludwig Elvers. Faustus. Brill's New Pauly.