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Porcia (wife of Brutus)

Porcia (c. 73 BC – June 43 BC),[2][3] occasionally spelled "Portia", especially in 18th-century English literature,[4] was a Roman woman who lived in the 1st century BC. She was the daughter of Marcus Porcius Cato Uticensis (Cato the Younger) and his first wife Atilia. She is best known for being the second wife of Marcus Junius Brutus, the most famous of Julius Caesar's assassins, and appears primarily in the letters of Cicero.[5]

Porcia
Painting by Elisabetta Sirani
Bornc. 73 BC
DiedJune 43 BC (aged 29-30)
Spouse(s)Marcus Calpurnius Bibulus
Marcus Junius Brutus
Children2 (by Bibulus)[1]
Parents

Biography

Early life

 
Porcia from Guillaume Rouillé's Promptuarii Iconum Insigniorum .

Porcia was born around 73 BC.[6][7][8] She had an affectionate nature,[9] was addicted to philosophy and was full of an understanding courage.[10] Plutarch describes her as being prime of youth and beauty.[11] When she was still very young, her father divorced her mother for adultery.

At a young age she was married first to Marcus Calpurnius Bibulus, her father's political ally, between 58 BC and 53 BC. Porcia's father was a member of the Roman Optimate faction, and adamantly opposed Julius Caeser. Porcia embraced these ideals, and did not seem to outwardly object to the arranged marriage.[12] With Bibulus she had two children, at least one of them a son.[13] Lucius Calpurnius Bibulus (born around 59 BC) was possibly one of them, although most modern historians believe Porcia was too young to have mothered Lucius, and that he was Bibulus' son by his previous marriage, as he was old enough to fight in the Battle of Philippi in 42 BC.[14][5] He died in 32 BC. It is possible that a son of Porcia and Bibulus was the man who wrote the biography of Brutus.[15]

A few years later, Quintus Hortensius applied to Cato, asking for Porcia's hand in marriage.[16] Bibulus, who was infatuated with his wife, was unwilling to let her go. Hortensius offered to marry her and then return her to Bibulus once she had given birth to a male heir.[5] Such an arrangement was not uncommon at the time.[17] He argued that it was against natural law to keep a girl of Porcia's youth and beauty from producing children for his allies and impractical for her to overproduce for Bibulus.[18] Nonetheless, Bibulus refused to divorce her. Cato disliked the idea of marrying his daughter to a man who was four times her age, and was refused to break an arranged contract he held with Biblius.[17][5] Instead, Cato divorced his wife, Porcia's stepmother Marcia, and gave her to Hortensius; he remarried her after Hortensius died.

In 52 BC, Julius Caesar's Gallic Wars came to an end, but he refused to return to Rome, despite the Senate's demands that he lay down his arms. Cato personally detested Caesar, and was his greatest enemy in the Senate; Cato's political faction, the Optimates (also known as the Boni), believed that Caesar should return to Rome, in order for the Optimates to strip him of his property and dignitas, and permanently exile Caesar. In 49 BC, Caesar crossed the Rubicon with his army, thus declaring war, beginning the Great Roman Civil War. Both Cato and Bibulus allied with Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus against Caesar. Though both Boni hated Pompey, he did not pose the threat to their faction that Caesar did. Bibulus commanded Pompey's navy in the Adriatic Sea.[19] He captured a part of Caesar's fleet, although this was generally insignificant as Caesar went on to decisively defeat Pompey at the Battle of Pharsalus. Bibulus died in 48 BC from influenza following Pompey's defeat, leaving Porcia a widow.[5]

In 46 BC, Cato committed suicide following his defeat in the battle of Thapsus while Marcus Cato, Porcia's brother, was pardoned by Caesar and returned to Rome.[20]

Marriage to Brutus

Brutus, Porcia's first cousin, divorced his wife Claudia and married Porcia in 45 BC when she was still very young.[5][14][21] The marriage was scandalous as Brutus did not state any reasons for divorce despite having been married to Claudia for many years. Claudia was very popular for being a woman of great virtue, and was the daughter of Appius Claudius Pulcher, who had been Brutus's ally for many years.[22] She was also related to Pompey by marriage through her younger sister. The divorce was not well received by some, including Brutus's mother, Servilia,[23] who despised her half-brother, and appears to have been jealous of Brutus's affection for Porcia.[24] Therefore, Servilia supported Claudia's interests against those of Porcia.[25]

On the other hand, Porcia was highly favoured with the followers of both Pompey and Cato, so the marriage was favoured by people such as Marcus Tullius Cicero and Titus Pomponius Atticus.[26] The marriage was Brutus's way of honouring his uncle. Nonetheless, it appears that Porcia deeply loved Brutus and was utterly devoted to him.[10] She resolved not to inquire into Brutus's secrets before she had made a trial of herself and that she would bid defiance to pain.[10]

Brutus, along with many other co-conspirators, murdered Caesar in 44 BC.[27] He promised to share the "heavy secrets" of his heart with his wife but it is unclear if he ever got the chance.[28][29] Some historians believe Porcia may have known about the plot, and may have even been involved in the conspiracy itself.[30] Plutarch claims that she happened upon Brutus while he was pondering over what to do about Caesar and asked him what was wrong. When he did not answer, she suspected that he distrusted her on account of her being a woman, for fear she might reveal something, however unwillingly, under torture. In order to prove herself to him, she secretly inflicted a wound upon her own thigh with a barber's knife to see if she could endure the pain. As a result of the wound, she suffered from violent pains, chills and fever.[31] Some believe that she endured the pain of her untreated wound for at least a day. As soon as she overcame her pain, she returned to Brutus and said:

You, my husband, though you trusted my spirit that it would not betray you, nevertheless were distrustful of my body, and your feeling was but human. But I found that my body also can keep silence... Therefore fear not, but tell me all you are concealing from me, for neither fire, nor lashes, nor goads will force me to divulge a word; I was not born to that extent a woman. Hence, if you still distrust me, it is better for me to die than to live; otherwise let no one think me longer the daughter of Cato or your wife.[32][33][34]

Brutus marveled when he saw the gash on her thigh and after hearing this he no longer hid anything from her, but felt strengthened himself and promised to relate the whole plot.[35] Lifting his hands above him, he is said to have prayed that he might succeed in his undertaking and thus show himself a worthy husband.[36] Yet Brutus never got the chance as they were interrupted and never had a moment's privacy before the conspiracy was carried out. On the day of Caesar's assassination, Porcia was extremely disturbed with anxiety and sent messengers to the Senate to check that Brutus was still alive.[37] She worked herself up to the point whereupon her fainting, her maids feared that she was dying.[33]

When Brutus and the other assassins fled Rome to Athens, it was agreed that Porcia should stay in Italy.[38] Porcia was overcome with grief to part from Brutus, but tried hard to conceal it. When she came across a painting depicting the parting of Hector from Andromache in the Iliad, however, she burst into tears, feeling it reflected her own sorrow. She would go on to visit this painting multiple times per day.[39][40] Brutus' friend Acilius heard of this, and quoted Homer where Andromache speaks to Hector:

But Hector, you to me are father and are mother too, my brother, and my loving husband true.[41]

Brutus smiled, saying he would never say to Porcia what Hector said to Andromache in return (Ply loom and distaff and give orders to thy maids[41]), saying of Porcia:

...Though the natural weakness of her body hinders her from doing what only the strength of men can perform, she has a mind as valiant and as active for the good of her country as the best of us.[42]

Death

 

Porcia's death has been a fixation for many historians and writers. It was believed by a majority of contemporary historians that Porcia committed suicide in 42 BC, reputedly by swallowing hot coals. Modern historians find this tale implausible, however, and one popular speculation has Porcia taking her life by burning charcoal in an unventilated room, thus succumbing to carbon monoxide poisoning.[43]

The exact timing of Porcia's death is also a problem. Some modern classicists like John H. Collins assert that she died in the summer of 43 BC.[5] Most contemporary historians, however, (Cassius Dio, Valerius Maximus, and Appian) claim that she killed herself after hearing that Brutus had died following the second battle of Philippi.[44][45][46][47] Nicolaus says it happened before Brutus' death, however, saying she died following the first battle of Philippi, claiming that she only thought he was dead, and that Brutus wrote a letter to their friends in Rome, blaming them for Porcia's suicide. Plutarch dismisses Nicolaus' claims of a letter stating that too much was disclosed in the letter for it to be genuine.[48] Plutarch also repeats the story of swallowing charcoal, but disbelieves it:[49]

As for Porcia, the wife of Brutus, Nicolaüs the philosopher, as well as Valerius Maximus, relates that she now desired to die, but was opposed by all her friends, who kept strict watch upon her; whereupon she snatched up live coals from the fire, swallowed them, kept her mouth fast closed, and thus made away with herself. And yet there is extant a letter of Brutus to his friends in which he chides them with regard to Porcia and laments her fate, because she was neglected by them and therefore driven by illness to prefer death to life. It would seem, then, that Nicolaüs was mistaken in the time of her death, since her distemper, her love for Brutus, and the manner of her death, are also indicated in the letter, if, indeed, it is a genuine one.[50]

Plutarch also acknowledges the false image that Porcia displays, explaining that she was "frightened with every little noise and cry," "possessed with the fury of the Bacchantes," and had passed out and carried into her home.[51] Plutarch's description of Camma in Dialogue of Love is similar to his interpretation of Porcia in Brutus, and with both works being written around the same time period, Plutarch's anecdotes concerning Camma might have influenced those about Porcia. The character of Panthea in Xenophon's Cyropaedia also presents similarities to Plutarch's Porcia - with both women expressing to their husbands that they are truly devoted, and are willing to harm themselves to prove themselves - being another possible inspiration for Plutarch's portrayal of Porcia. In totality, Plutarch accentuates Porcia's role as loyal wife using his portrayal of her suicide.[52]

According to the political journalist and classicist Garry Wills, although Shakespeare has Porcia die by the method Plutarch repeats, but rejects, "the historical Porcia died of illness (possibly of plague) a year before the battle of Philippi"[53]...“but Valerius Maximus [mistakenly] wrote that she killed herself at news of Brutus’s death in that battle. This was the version of the story celebrated in works like Martial's Epigram 1.42."[54] The claim that Porcia's death occurred before that of Brutus is backed up by a letter sent by Cicero. This letter would have been sent in late June or early July 43 BC, before either battle of Philippi.[55] It further suggests that Porcia did not commit suicide, but died of some lingering illness. As Plutarch states, if the letter was genuine Brutus lamented her death and blamed their friends for not looking after her.[48] There is also an earlier letter from Brutus to Atticus, which hints at Porcia's illness and compliments him for taking care of her.[56][57] Cicero later wrote his surviving letter to Brutus, consoling him in his grief, calling Porcia "one such as never before has been in the world."[58][5] This is probably the most accurate[59] account of Porcia's death.

Family

Portia in popular culture

 
Portia, played by Deborah Kerr, and James Mason as Marcus Brutus, in the 1953 film Julius Caesar

Literature

Classic

  • In Shakespeare's play Julius Caesar, she appears in fictionalised form as Brutus' wife.[60] She makes only two appearances. Portia and Calpurnia are the only two substantial female roles in the play. It is reported in the fourth act that she died by swallowing fire.
     
    Portia, Wife of Brutus, John William Wright (c.1849)
  • Portia is also briefly mentioned in Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice in regards to the character of her namesake, Portia:
In Belmont is a lady richly left;
And she is fair, and, fairer than that word,
Of wondrous virtues: sometimes from her eyes
I did receive fair speechless messages:
Her name is Portia, nothing undervalued
To Cato's daughter, Brutus' Portia.[61]
  • In Robert Garnier's play Porcie, she is the heroine of the play, which describes her suicide. In the play, she is devastated to hear of the death of her husband and kills herself. Her servant announces to the Romans that Portia died swallowing live coals, before taking her own life with a dagger.
  • In The Purgatory of Suicide by Thomas Cooper, Portia is one of the suicides spoken of in the poem. Here Portia's life is compared to the death of Arria, Pœtus' wife.[62]

Modern

  • In Masters of Rome, a series of seven novels by the Australian writer Colleen McCullough, Portia appears as a child in Caesar's Women,[63] as a teenager in Caesar[64] and as a young woman in The October Horse.[65] Portia is portrayed as being, first a rabid unthinking follower of republican values, then as a raving maniac, and then as perhaps totally insane. Servilia, who abuses her constantly, later writes to Brutus before the battle of Philippi to inform him that Portia went mad and killed herself by swallowing live coals. Brutus, however, recognizes that it is more likely that Servilia murdered Portia by forcing burning coals down her throat. Given the vicious character of Servilia in the novel, this murder is perfectly believable.
  • She appears in The Ides of March, an epistolary novel by Thornton Wilder, describing the events leading up to the death of Julius Caesar. Portia is one of the main characters in fourth part of the book. Cicero speaks of her as the only person that Brutus loves. Portia and Servilia exchange several letters, hinting towards Servilia's dislike of her. Caesar later sends a letter to Portia informing her that Brutus is returning to Rome, and Portia replies with a polite thank you; Caesar later confesses to Lucius Mamilius Turrinus (the chief character) that he greatly envies Brutus his marriage to her and often wishes he could have married her himself.[66]
  • She is referenced in The Stars' Tennis Balls by Stephen Fry. As part of his revenge, Simon Cotter gives Oliver Delft, the policeman who had him imprisoned, an alternative to being imprisoned himself. The alternative is for Delft to kill himself, with hot coals, as Portia did in Julius Caesar.

Drama

  • Portia has been played in various adaptations of Shakespeare's Julius Caesar. Actresses such as Deborah Kerr, Virginia McKenna and Diana Rigg have played the part in movies and television productions.[67]
  • Portia appears as a child and as an adult in the 2003 miniseries Julius Caesar. She is portrayed by Kate Steavenson-Payne as an adult.[68] She is a companion to her cousin Brutus and later becomes his wife. The drama shows her as an unwilling pawn in Caesar's assassination, torn between her husband and her friend, Calpurnia.

Notes

  1. ^ Tarrant, R. J. (1987). Harvard Studies in Classical Philology. Vol. 91. Harvard University Press. p. 198. ISBN 9780674379398.
  2. ^ Cicero ad Brutum I
  3. ^ Plutarch, Marcus Brutus, 53.5.
  4. ^ Spelled Portia in Lempriere's Classical Dictionary (19th century)
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h Collins, John (1955). "Porcia's First Husband". The Classical Journal. 50 (4): 261–270 – via JSTOR.
  6. ^ Plutarch, Cato the Younger, 7.3.
  7. ^ Plutarch, Cato the Younger, 7.4
  8. ^ Plutarch, Cato the Younger, 24.3
  9. ^ Plutarch, Marcus Brutus, 13.4. Porcia, being of an affectionate nature... and full of sensible pride.
  10. ^ a b c Plutarch, Marcus Brutus, 13.4.
  11. ^ Plutarch, Cato the Younger, 25.3.
  12. ^ "Portia (c. 70–43 BCE) | Encyclopedia.com". www.encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 2022-09-25.
  13. ^ Tarrant, R. J. (1987). Harvard Studies in Classical Philology. Vol. 91. Harvard University Press. p. 198. ISBN 9780674379398.
  14. ^ a b Plutarch, Marcus Brutus, 13.3.
  15. ^ Cornell, Tim (2013). The Fragments of the Roman Historians. ISBN 9780199277056.
  16. ^ Plutarch, Cato the Younger, 25.2.
  17. ^ a b Plutarch, Cato the Younger, 25.3
  18. ^ Plutarch, Cato the Younger, 25.3. "According to the opinion of men, he argued, such a course was absurd, but according to the law of nature it was honourable and good for the state that a woman in the prime of youth and beauty should neither quench her productive power and lie idle, nor yet, by bearing more offspring than enough, burden and impoverish a husband who does not want them."
  19. ^ Plutarch, Cato the Younger, 54.4.
  20. ^ Appian, The Civil Wars, Book II, 100.
  21. ^ Cicero, Brutus, 77. 94
  22. ^ Cicero, Atticus, 13. 16
  23. ^ Cicero, Atticus, 13. 10
  24. ^ Cicero, Atticus, 13. 22
  25. ^ Middleton, Conyers. History of the Life of Marcus Tullus Cicero, The. p 208
  26. ^ Cicero, Atticus, 13. 9
  27. ^ Cassius Dio, 44.13.1.
  28. ^ Cassius Dio, 44.13.
  29. ^ Plutarch, Marcus Brutus, 14.4
  30. ^ Plutarch, Cato the Younger, 73.4.
  31. ^ Plutarch, Marcus Brutus, 13.5
  32. ^ Cassius Dio, 44.13.4
  33. ^ a b Plutarch, Marcus Brutus, 13.7.
  34. ^ Plutarch, Marcus Brutus, 13.8.
  35. ^ Cassius Dio, 44.14.1
  36. ^ Plutarch, Marcus Brutus, 13.11.
  37. ^ Plutarch, Marcus Brutus, 15.6.
  38. ^ Plutarch, Marcus Brutus, 23.2.
  39. ^ Plutarch, Marcus Brutus, 23.4.
  40. ^ MacDonald, Dennis (2003). Does the New Testament Imitate Homer? Four Cases from the Acts of the Apostles. New Haven: Yale University Press. pp. 72–73. ISBN 9780300129892.
  41. ^ a b Homer, Iliad, vi.429 f.; 491.
  42. ^ Plutarch, Marcus Brutus, 23.6.
  43. ^ Roman Life in the Days of Cicero, Alfred J. Church
  44. ^ Cassius Dio, Roman History. 47.49.3.
  45. ^ Appian, The Civil Wars, Book 5.136.
  46. ^ Valerius Maximus, De factis mem. iv.6.5.
  47. ^ Plutarch, Cato the Younger, 53.5.
  48. ^ a b Plutarch, Marcus Brutus, 53.7.
  49. ^ See also: Wills, Garry (2011), Rome and Rhetoric: Shakespeare's Julius Caesar ; New Haven and London: Yale University Press, pg 137.
  50. ^ Plutarch, Brutus; 53: 5-7.
  51. ^ Faber (1965). "Lord Brutus' Wife: A Modern View". Psychoanalytic Review. 52 (4): 109–115 – via ProQuest.
  52. ^ Beneker, Jeffrey (2020). The Discourse of Marriage in the Greco-Roman World. University of Wisconsin Press. pp. 199–218.
  53. ^ Wills (2011), Op. cit., pg 138 and “Porcia’s illness and death are reported in Cicero’s correspondence.”: Op. cit., Note 18, pg 174: Cicero, Ad Brutum, I.9.2 and I.17.7.
  54. ^ Wills, Op. cit., citing: Valerius Maximus, Libri Novem, 4.6.5. Also see: Peter Howell (1989), A Commentary on Book One of the Epigrams of Martial (London: Athlone), pp 199-203.
  55. ^ Cicero, Ad Brutum, 1.9.2.
  56. ^ Ad Brut., 17, Valetudinem Porcia meæ tibi curæ esse, non minor
  57. ^ History of the Life of Marcus Tullus Cicero, The. Middleton, Conyers. p 278
  58. ^ Cicero, Ad Brutum, 1.9, saying "You have suffered indeed a great loss (for you have lost that which had not left its fellow on earth), and must be allowed to grieve under so cruel a blow, lest to want all sense of grief should be thought more wretched than grief itself: but do it with moderation, is both useful to others and necessary to yourself."
  59. ^ Cicero, Ad Brutum, 1.9.2 includes a contemporary letter, which Cicero sent to Brutus, consoling him over Porcia's death. As this is addressed to her husband it is fair to assume this is one of the more accurate accounts of Porcia Catonis' death.
  60. ^ Not to be confused with Portia
  61. ^ The Merchant of Venice. Shakespeare, William. 1.1.161-66
  62. ^ Purgatory of Suicides, Book 11. Cooper, Thomas. Page 239. 26. These, side by side,— Portia and Arria,—o'er the plain, conversing hied.
  63. ^ McCullough, Colleen (1997-02-01). Caesar's Women. Avon. ISBN 978-0-380-71084-3.
  64. ^ McCullough, Colleen (2003). Caesar. Avon. ISBN 978-0-09-946043-5.
  65. ^ McCullough, Colleen (2003). The October Horse. ISBN 978-0-09-928052-1.
  66. ^ Wilder, Thornton (September 2003). The Ides of March. Harper Perennial. ISBN 978-0-06-008890-3.
  67. ^ Internet Movie Database search on character name Portia
  68. ^ Julius Caesar (2002)(TV) at IMDb

References

Primary sources

Secondary sources

  • Roman Life in the Days of Cicero, Alfred J. Church
  • History of the Life of Marcus Tullus Cicero, Conyers Middleton
  • Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, William Smith 2005-11-30 at the Wayback Machine
  • Salisbury, J. E. (2001). Encyclopedia of Women in the Ancient World .
  • Clarke, M. L. (1981). The Noblest Roman: Marcus Brutus and his Reputation. London.

External links

  • Cicero: ad Brutum I.9
  • Plutarch's Life of Brutus and the Play of Its Repetitions in Shakespearean Drama

porcia, wife, brutus, sister, cato, younger, porcia, sister, cato, younger, porcia, june, occasionally, spelled, portia, especially, 18th, century, english, literature, roman, woman, lived, century, daughter, marcus, porcius, cato, uticensis, cato, younger, fi. For the sister of Cato the Younger see Porcia sister of Cato the Younger Porcia c 73 BC June 43 BC 2 3 occasionally spelled Portia especially in 18th century English literature 4 was a Roman woman who lived in the 1st century BC She was the daughter of Marcus Porcius Cato Uticensis Cato the Younger and his first wife Atilia She is best known for being the second wife of Marcus Junius Brutus the most famous of Julius Caesar s assassins and appears primarily in the letters of Cicero 5 PorciaPainting by Elisabetta SiraniBornc 73 BCDiedJune 43 BC aged 29 30 Spouse s Marcus Calpurnius BibulusMarcus Junius BrutusChildren2 by Bibulus 1 ParentsCato the Younger father Attilia mother Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 Marriage to Brutus 1 3 Death 2 Family 3 Portia in popular culture 3 1 Literature 3 1 1 Classic 3 1 2 Modern 3 2 Drama 4 Notes 5 References 5 1 Primary sources 5 2 Secondary sources 6 External linksBiography EditEarly life Edit Porcia from Guillaume Rouille s Promptuarii Iconum Insigniorum Porcia was born around 73 BC 6 7 8 She had an affectionate nature 9 was addicted to philosophy and was full of an understanding courage 10 Plutarch describes her as being prime of youth and beauty 11 When she was still very young her father divorced her mother for adultery At a young age she was married first to Marcus Calpurnius Bibulus her father s political ally between 58 BC and 53 BC Porcia s father was a member of the Roman Optimate faction and adamantly opposed Julius Caeser Porcia embraced these ideals and did not seem to outwardly object to the arranged marriage 12 With Bibulus she had two children at least one of them a son 13 Lucius Calpurnius Bibulus born around 59 BC was possibly one of them although most modern historians believe Porcia was too young to have mothered Lucius and that he was Bibulus son by his previous marriage as he was old enough to fight in the Battle of Philippi in 42 BC 14 5 He died in 32 BC It is possible that a son of Porcia and Bibulus was the man who wrote the biography of Brutus 15 A few years later Quintus Hortensius applied to Cato asking for Porcia s hand in marriage 16 Bibulus who was infatuated with his wife was unwilling to let her go Hortensius offered to marry her and then return her to Bibulus once she had given birth to a male heir 5 Such an arrangement was not uncommon at the time 17 He argued that it was against natural law to keep a girl of Porcia s youth and beauty from producing children for his allies and impractical for her to overproduce for Bibulus 18 Nonetheless Bibulus refused to divorce her Cato disliked the idea of marrying his daughter to a man who was four times her age and was refused to break an arranged contract he held with Biblius 17 5 Instead Cato divorced his wife Porcia s stepmother Marcia and gave her to Hortensius he remarried her after Hortensius died In 52 BC Julius Caesar s Gallic Wars came to an end but he refused to return to Rome despite the Senate s demands that he lay down his arms Cato personally detested Caesar and was his greatest enemy in the Senate Cato s political faction the Optimates also known as the Boni believed that Caesar should return to Rome in order for the Optimates to strip him of his property and dignitas and permanently exile Caesar In 49 BC Caesar crossed the Rubicon with his army thus declaring war beginning the Great Roman Civil War Both Cato and Bibulus allied with Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus against Caesar Though both Boni hated Pompey he did not pose the threat to their faction that Caesar did Bibulus commanded Pompey s navy in the Adriatic Sea 19 He captured a part of Caesar s fleet although this was generally insignificant as Caesar went on to decisively defeat Pompey at the Battle of Pharsalus Bibulus died in 48 BC from influenza following Pompey s defeat leaving Porcia a widow 5 In 46 BC Cato committed suicide following his defeat in the battle of Thapsus while Marcus Cato Porcia s brother was pardoned by Caesar and returned to Rome 20 Marriage to Brutus Edit Brutus Porcia s first cousin divorced his wife Claudia and married Porcia in 45 BC when she was still very young 5 14 21 The marriage was scandalous as Brutus did not state any reasons for divorce despite having been married to Claudia for many years Claudia was very popular for being a woman of great virtue and was the daughter of Appius Claudius Pulcher who had been Brutus s ally for many years 22 She was also related to Pompey by marriage through her younger sister The divorce was not well received by some including Brutus s mother Servilia 23 who despised her half brother and appears to have been jealous of Brutus s affection for Porcia 24 Therefore Servilia supported Claudia s interests against those of Porcia 25 On the other hand Porcia was highly favoured with the followers of both Pompey and Cato so the marriage was favoured by people such as Marcus Tullius Cicero and Titus Pomponius Atticus 26 The marriage was Brutus s way of honouring his uncle Nonetheless it appears that Porcia deeply loved Brutus and was utterly devoted to him 10 She resolved not to inquire into Brutus s secrets before she had made a trial of herself and that she would bid defiance to pain 10 Brutus along with many other co conspirators murdered Caesar in 44 BC 27 He promised to share the heavy secrets of his heart with his wife but it is unclear if he ever got the chance 28 29 Some historians believe Porcia may have known about the plot and may have even been involved in the conspiracy itself 30 Plutarch claims that she happened upon Brutus while he was pondering over what to do about Caesar and asked him what was wrong When he did not answer she suspected that he distrusted her on account of her being a woman for fear she might reveal something however unwillingly under torture In order to prove herself to him she secretly inflicted a wound upon her own thigh with a barber s knife to see if she could endure the pain As a result of the wound she suffered from violent pains chills and fever 31 Some believe that she endured the pain of her untreated wound for at least a day As soon as she overcame her pain she returned to Brutus and said You my husband though you trusted my spirit that it would not betray you nevertheless were distrustful of my body and your feeling was but human But I found that my body also can keep silence Therefore fear not but tell me all you are concealing from me for neither fire nor lashes nor goads will force me to divulge a word I was not born to that extent a woman Hence if you still distrust me it is better for me to die than to live otherwise let no one think me longer the daughter of Cato or your wife 32 33 34 Brutus marveled when he saw the gash on her thigh and after hearing this he no longer hid anything from her but felt strengthened himself and promised to relate the whole plot 35 Lifting his hands above him he is said to have prayed that he might succeed in his undertaking and thus show himself a worthy husband 36 Yet Brutus never got the chance as they were interrupted and never had a moment s privacy before the conspiracy was carried out On the day of Caesar s assassination Porcia was extremely disturbed with anxiety and sent messengers to the Senate to check that Brutus was still alive 37 She worked herself up to the point whereupon her fainting her maids feared that she was dying 33 When Brutus and the other assassins fled Rome to Athens it was agreed that Porcia should stay in Italy 38 Porcia was overcome with grief to part from Brutus but tried hard to conceal it When she came across a painting depicting the parting of Hector from Andromache in the Iliad however she burst into tears feeling it reflected her own sorrow She would go on to visit this painting multiple times per day 39 40 Brutus friend Acilius heard of this and quoted Homer where Andromache speaks to Hector But Hector you to me are father and are mother too my brother and my loving husband true 41 Brutus smiled saying he would never say to Porcia what Hector said to Andromache in return Ply loom and distaff and give orders to thy maids 41 saying of Porcia Though the natural weakness of her body hinders her from doing what only the strength of men can perform she has a mind as valiant and as active for the good of her country as the best of us 42 Death Edit The suicide of Porcia Pierre Mignard Museum of Fine Arts of Rennes Porcia s death has been a fixation for many historians and writers It was believed by a majority of contemporary historians that Porcia committed suicide in 42 BC reputedly by swallowing hot coals Modern historians find this tale implausible however and one popular speculation has Porcia taking her life by burning charcoal in an unventilated room thus succumbing to carbon monoxide poisoning 43 The exact timing of Porcia s death is also a problem Some modern classicists like John H Collins assert that she died in the summer of 43 BC 5 Most contemporary historians however Cassius Dio Valerius Maximus and Appian claim that she killed herself after hearing that Brutus had died following the second battle of Philippi 44 45 46 47 Nicolaus says it happened before Brutus death however saying she died following the first battle of Philippi claiming that she only thought he was dead and that Brutus wrote a letter to their friends in Rome blaming them for Porcia s suicide Plutarch dismisses Nicolaus claims of a letter stating that too much was disclosed in the letter for it to be genuine 48 Plutarch also repeats the story of swallowing charcoal but disbelieves it 49 As for Porcia the wife of Brutus Nicolaus the philosopher as well as Valerius Maximus relates that she now desired to die but was opposed by all her friends who kept strict watch upon her whereupon she snatched up live coals from the fire swallowed them kept her mouth fast closed and thus made away with herself And yet there is extant a letter of Brutus to his friends in which he chides them with regard to Porcia and laments her fate because she was neglected by them and therefore driven by illness to prefer death to life It would seem then that Nicolaus was mistaken in the time of her death since her distemper her love for Brutus and the manner of her death are also indicated in the letter if indeed it is a genuine one 50 Plutarch also acknowledges the false image that Porcia displays explaining that she was frightened with every little noise and cry possessed with the fury of the Bacchantes and had passed out and carried into her home 51 Plutarch s description of Camma in Dialogue of Love is similar to his interpretation of Porcia in Brutus and with both works being written around the same time period Plutarch s anecdotes concerning Camma might have influenced those about Porcia The character of Panthea in Xenophon s Cyropaedia also presents similarities to Plutarch s Porcia with both women expressing to their husbands that they are truly devoted and are willing to harm themselves to prove themselves being another possible inspiration for Plutarch s portrayal of Porcia In totality Plutarch accentuates Porcia s role as loyal wife using his portrayal of her suicide 52 According to the political journalist and classicist Garry Wills although Shakespeare has Porcia die by the method Plutarch repeats but rejects the historical Porcia died of illness possibly of plague a year before the battle of Philippi 53 but Valerius Maximus mistakenly wrote that she killed herself at news of Brutus s death in that battle This was the version of the story celebrated in works like Martial s Epigram 1 42 54 The claim that Porcia s death occurred before that of Brutus is backed up by a letter sent by Cicero This letter would have been sent in late June or early July 43 BC before either battle of Philippi 55 It further suggests that Porcia did not commit suicide but died of some lingering illness As Plutarch states if the letter was genuine Brutus lamented her death and blamed their friends for not looking after her 48 There is also an earlier letter from Brutus to Atticus which hints at Porcia s illness and compliments him for taking care of her 56 57 Cicero later wrote his surviving letter to Brutus consoling him in his grief calling Porcia one such as never before has been in the world 58 5 This is probably the most accurate 59 account of Porcia s death Family EditvteBrutus family treeThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message Salonia 2 Cato the ElderLicinia 1 Marcus Porcius Cato SalonianusMarcus Porcius Cato LicinianusMarcus Livius DrususMarcus Porcius Cato 2 LiviaQuintus Servilius Caepio 1 Marcus Livius DrususAtilia 1 Cato the YoungerMarcus Livius Drusus Claudianus adopted sonMarcus Junius Brutus 1 ServiliaDecimus Junius Silanus 2 ServiliaGnaeus Servilius CaepioPorciaMarcus Junius Brutus Junia PrimaJunia TertiaGaius Cassius Longinus xMarcus Porcius CatoJunia SecundaMarcus Aemilius Lepidus triumvir Descendant of Pompey and SullasonManius Aemilius LepidusAemilia Lepida II 1 1st spouse 2 2nd spouse assassin of CaesarNotes Portia in popular culture Edit Portia played by Deborah Kerr and James Mason as Marcus Brutus in the 1953 film Julius Caesar Literature Edit Classic Edit In Shakespeare s play Julius Caesar she appears in fictionalised form as Brutus wife 60 She makes only two appearances Portia and Calpurnia are the only two substantial female roles in the play It is reported in the fourth act that she died by swallowing fire Portia Wife of Brutus John William Wright c 1849 Portia is also briefly mentioned in Shakespeare s The Merchant of Venice in regards to the character of her namesake Portia In Belmont is a lady richly left And she is fair and fairer than that word Of wondrous virtues sometimes from her eyes I did receive fair speechless messages Her name is Portia nothing undervalued To Cato s daughter Brutus Portia 61 In Robert Garnier s play Porcie she is the heroine of the play which describes her suicide In the play she is devastated to hear of the death of her husband and kills herself Her servant announces to the Romans that Portia died swallowing live coals before taking her own life with a dagger In The Purgatory of Suicide by Thomas Cooper Portia is one of the suicides spoken of in the poem Here Portia s life is compared to the death of Arria Pœtus wife 62 Modern Edit In Masters of Rome a series of seven novels by the Australian writer Colleen McCullough Portia appears as a child in Caesar s Women 63 as a teenager in Caesar 64 and as a young woman in The October Horse 65 Portia is portrayed as being first a rabid unthinking follower of republican values then as a raving maniac and then as perhaps totally insane Servilia who abuses her constantly later writes to Brutus before the battle of Philippi to inform him that Portia went mad and killed herself by swallowing live coals Brutus however recognizes that it is more likely that Servilia murdered Portia by forcing burning coals down her throat Given the vicious character of Servilia in the novel this murder is perfectly believable She appears in The Ides of March an epistolary novel by Thornton Wilder describing the events leading up to the death of Julius Caesar Portia is one of the main characters in fourth part of the book Cicero speaks of her as the only person that Brutus loves Portia and Servilia exchange several letters hinting towards Servilia s dislike of her Caesar later sends a letter to Portia informing her that Brutus is returning to Rome and Portia replies with a polite thank you Caesar later confesses to Lucius Mamilius Turrinus the chief character that he greatly envies Brutus his marriage to her and often wishes he could have married her himself 66 She is referenced in The Stars Tennis Balls by Stephen Fry As part of his revenge Simon Cotter gives Oliver Delft the policeman who had him imprisoned an alternative to being imprisoned himself The alternative is for Delft to kill himself with hot coals as Portia did in Julius Caesar Drama Edit Portia has been played in various adaptations of Shakespeare s Julius Caesar Actresses such as Deborah Kerr Virginia McKenna and Diana Rigg have played the part in movies and television productions 67 Portia appears as a child and as an adult in the 2003 miniseries Julius Caesar She is portrayed by Kate Steavenson Payne as an adult 68 She is a companion to her cousin Brutus and later becomes his wife The drama shows her as an unwilling pawn in Caesar s assassination torn between her husband and her friend Calpurnia Notes Edit Tarrant R J 1987 Harvard Studies in Classical Philology Vol 91 Harvard University Press p 198 ISBN 9780674379398 Cicero ad Brutum I Plutarch Marcus Brutus 53 5 Spelled Portia in Lempriere s Classical Dictionary 19th century a b c d e f g h Collins John 1955 Porcia s First Husband The Classical Journal 50 4 261 270 via JSTOR Plutarch Cato the Younger 7 3 Plutarch Cato the Younger 7 4 Plutarch Cato the Younger 24 3 Plutarch Marcus Brutus 13 4 Porcia being of an affectionate nature and full of sensible pride a b c Plutarch Marcus Brutus 13 4 Plutarch Cato the Younger 25 3 Portia c 70 43 BCE Encyclopedia com www encyclopedia com Retrieved 2022 09 25 Tarrant R J 1987 Harvard Studies in Classical Philology Vol 91 Harvard University Press p 198 ISBN 9780674379398 a b Plutarch Marcus Brutus 13 3 Cornell Tim 2013 The Fragments of the Roman Historians ISBN 9780199277056 Plutarch Cato the Younger 25 2 a b Plutarch Cato the Younger 25 3 Plutarch Cato the Younger 25 3 According to the opinion of men he argued such a course was absurd but according to the law of nature it was honourable and good for the state that a woman in the prime of youth and beauty should neither quench her productive power and lie idle nor yet by bearing more offspring than enough burden and impoverish a husband who does not want them Plutarch Cato the Younger 54 4 Appian The Civil Wars Book II 100 Cicero Brutus 77 94 Cicero Atticus 13 16 Cicero Atticus 13 10 Cicero Atticus 13 22 Middleton Conyers History of the Life of Marcus Tullus Cicero The p 208 Cicero Atticus 13 9 Cassius Dio 44 13 1 Cassius Dio 44 13 Plutarch Marcus Brutus 14 4 Plutarch Cato the Younger 73 4 Plutarch Marcus Brutus 13 5 Cassius Dio 44 13 4 a b Plutarch Marcus Brutus 13 7 Plutarch Marcus Brutus 13 8 Cassius Dio 44 14 1 Plutarch Marcus Brutus 13 11 Plutarch Marcus Brutus 15 6 Plutarch Marcus Brutus 23 2 Plutarch Marcus Brutus 23 4 MacDonald Dennis 2003 Does the New Testament Imitate Homer Four Cases from the Acts of the Apostles New Haven Yale University Press pp 72 73 ISBN 9780300129892 a b Homer Iliad vi 429 f 491 Plutarch Marcus Brutus 23 6 Roman Life in the Days of Cicero Alfred J Church Cassius Dio Roman History 47 49 3 Appian The Civil Wars Book 5 136 Valerius Maximus De factis mem iv 6 5 Plutarch Cato the Younger 53 5 a b Plutarch Marcus Brutus 53 7 See also Wills Garry 2011 Rome and Rhetoric Shakespeare sJulius Caesar New Haven and London Yale University Press pg 137 Plutarch Brutus 53 5 7 Faber 1965 Lord Brutus Wife A Modern View Psychoanalytic Review 52 4 109 115 via ProQuest Beneker Jeffrey 2020 The Discourse of Marriage in the Greco Roman World University of Wisconsin Press pp 199 218 Wills 2011 Op cit pg 138 and Porcia s illness and death are reported in Cicero s correspondence Op cit Note 18 pg 174 Cicero Ad Brutum I 9 2 and I 17 7 Wills Op cit citing Valerius Maximus Libri Novem 4 6 5 Also see Peter Howell 1989 A Commentary on Book One of the Epigrams of Martial London Athlone pp 199 203 Cicero Ad Brutum 1 9 2 Ad Brut 17 Valetudinem Porcia meae tibi curae esse non minor History of the Life of Marcus Tullus Cicero The Middleton Conyers p 278 Cicero Ad Brutum 1 9 saying You have suffered indeed a great loss for you have lost that which had not left its fellow on earth and must be allowed to grieve under so cruel a blow lest to want all sense of grief should be thought more wretched than grief itself but do it with moderation is both useful to others and necessary to yourself Cicero Ad Brutum 1 9 2 includes a contemporary letter which Cicero sent to Brutus consoling him over Porcia s death As this is addressed to her husband it is fair to assume this is one of the more accurate accounts of Porcia Catonis death Not to be confused with Portia The Merchant of Venice Shakespeare William 1 1 161 66 Purgatory of Suicides Book 11 Cooper Thomas Page 239 26 These side by side Portia and Arria o er the plain conversing hied McCullough Colleen 1997 02 01 Caesar s Women Avon ISBN 978 0 380 71084 3 McCullough Colleen 2003 Caesar Avon ISBN 978 0 09 946043 5 McCullough Colleen 2003 The October Horse ISBN 978 0 09 928052 1 Wilder Thornton September 2003 The Ides of March Harper Perennial ISBN 978 0 06 008890 3 Internet Movie Database search on character name Portia Julius Caesar 2002 TV at IMDbReferences EditPrimary sources Edit Plutarch Marcus Brutus Plutarch Cato the Younger Cicero Epistulae ad Brutum Cicero Epistulae ad Atticum Appian The Civil Wars Book II Valerius Maximus De factis mem Cassius Dio Roman History 44 47 Valerius Maximus Factorum et dictorum memorabilium libri iv 6 5Secondary sources Edit Roman Life in the Days of Cicero Alfred J Church History of the Life of Marcus Tullus Cicero Conyers Middleton Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology William Smith Archived 2005 11 30 at the Wayback Machine Salisbury J E 2001 Encyclopedia of Women in the Ancient World Clarke M L 1981 The Noblest Roman Marcus Brutus and his Reputation London External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Porcia Cicero ad Brutum I 9 The Purgatory of Suicides Book IX Plutarch s Life of Brutus and the Play of Its Repetitions in Shakespearean Drama Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index 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