Mucia Tertia
Mucia Tertia was a
Roman matrona that lived in the
1st century BC. She was the daughter of Quintus Mucius Scaevola, the
pontifex maximus killed by
Gaius Marius' supporters in
86 BC. Her mother was a Licinia that divorced her father to marry
Quintus Caecilius Metellus Nepos, in a scandal mentioned by several sources. Her name, Mucia Tertia, suggests that she was a third daughter, according to the
Roman naming convention for women. Mucia had also two younger brothers from her mother's second marriage (see
Caecilius Metellus family tree).
Mucia was first married to
Gaius Marius the Younger,
consul in
82 BC, despite her young age. This was a time of civil war, when
Lucius Cornelius Sulla had an army ready to march on Rome and their opponents needed a charismatic leader. Young Marius was not known as a talented general, but he had his father's (
Gaius Marius) name to back him. Sulla won this civil war and Young Marius committed suicide, leaving Mucia a childless widow. According to the proscription laws, she was forbidden to marry again.
Soon after, Sulla, now
dictator, changed his mind in respect to this young widow in particular. He needed to secure
Pompey's loyalty and to do that, he arranged his marriage to Mucia around
79 BC. This marriage resulted in three children:
Gnaeus Pompeius (Pompey the younger), the girl Pompeia (married to
Faustus Cornelius Sulla) and
Sextus Pompeius.
Between
76 and
61 BC, Pompey spends most of the time away from Rome, campaigning in Hispania against
Sertorius, in the
Mediterranean Sea against the pirates and in the East, fighting king
Mithridates VI of Pontus. On the final return, in 61 BC, Pompey sent Mucia a letter of divorce. According to
Cicero's personal correspondence, the motive was adultery (it is said that she was one of
Julius Caesar's many affairs). Mucia then disappears from the sources.