Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus (husband of Claudia Antonia)


Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus was a noble Roman that lived during the 1st century; he is not to be confused with his namesake Pompey the Great. Pompeius was one among the sons of the consul of the year 27, Marcus Licinius Crassus Frugi and Scribonia.

Birth

According to Suetonius, Pompeius was a nobleman of the highest ancient birth. Pompeius’ birth name is unknown, however by birth and adoption through his father, Pompeius was of the gens Licinia, hence the nomen Licinius. During the Roman Empire, it was common for Roman nobles to drop their paternal names and assume the names of their maternal ancestors. Roman nobles did this to either honor the memory of their ancestors or for adoption purposes.
Pompeius’ maternal grandparents were both direct descendants of Pompeia, the daughter of triumvir Pompey from his third marriage to Mucia Tertia. His maternal grandfather Lucius Scribonius Libo descended from his paternal grandmother Cornelia Sulla, a daughter of Pompeia with her first husband Faustus Cornelius Sulla. Therefore, his maternal grandmother Cornelia Pompeia herself was a daughter of Pompeia through her second marriage with Lucius Cornelius Cinna, the suffect consul in 32 BC.
His paternal grandfather was consul and governor Marcus Licinius Crassus Dives. Crassus was the adoptive son of consul and general Marcus Licinius Crassus, who was the grandson of triumvir Marcus Licinius Crassus. He was the last known direct descendant of the triumvir and was the last known direct descendant of the triumvir who bore his name.

Life and career

Little is known on the life of Pompeius. During the reign of unstable Roman Emperor Caligula, the emperor had removed his cognomen Magnus or The Great from him and wouldn’t allow Pompeius to use his cognomen. When Caligula was assassinated in 41, his paternal uncle Claudius became the new emperor. Claudius had restored Pompeius' cognomen to him.
Pompeius’ father had gained favor with the emperor and it was probably through this favor, that Claudius had arranged for Pompeius to marry Claudia Antonia, Claudius’ daughter and only child from his second marriage to Aelia Paetina. Antonia and Pompeius had married in 43.
Claudius had successfully conquered Britain and had added Britain as a province to the Roman Empire. Claudius had sent Pompeius to the Roman Senate to proclaim to the senators, that his father-in-law had conquered Britain. According to Suetonius he died in 47, because he was stabbed to death while in bed with a favorite boyfriend. Cassius Dio states that Roman Empress Valeria Messalina ordered his death. After Pompeius died, Antonia married Faustus Cornelius Sulla Felix, Messalina’s half-brother, in order to strengthen the bloodline of the Julio-Claudian dynasty. Pompeius had no children with Antonia.
After Pompeius died his remains were interred in the tomb of Licinii Calpurnii located on the Via Salaria. Engraved on the urn of Pompeius is this text:

Ancestry

In fiction

Pompeius is a character in Robert Graves' novel Claudius the God. This account claims that Claudius had Pompeius killed as the latter engaged in unnatural sexual practices with the former's daughter. He was omitted from the 1976 television adaptation.