- Lucius Antonius (brother of Mark Antony)
:"Another Lucius Antonius was a grandson to
Mark Antony ."LuciusAntonius (1st century BC ) was the younger brother and supporter ofMark Antony , a Roman politician.Lucius was son of
Marcus Antonius Creticus , son of the rhetoricianMarcus Antonius Orator executed byGaius Marius ' supporters in86 BC , andJulia Antonia , a cousin ofJulius Caesar . Together with his older brothers Mark Antony andGaius Antonius , he spent his early years roaming through Rome in bad companies.Plutarch refers the untamed life of the youths and their friends, frequenting gambling houses and drinking too much.Lucius was always a big supporter of Mark Antony. In
44 BC , the year of Antony's consulship andJulius Caesar 's assassination, Lucius as a tribune of the plebs brought forward a law authorizing Caesar to nominate the chief magistrates during his absence from Rome. After the murder of Caesar, he supported his brother Marcus. He proposed an agrarian law in favor of the people and Caesar's veterans, and took part in the operations at Mutina (43 BC ). In41 BC , he wasconsul with Publius Servilius Vatia as his senior partner. In this year, he assisted Mark Antony's wife,Fulvia , who was anxious to recall her husband from Cleopatra's court, in the raising of an eight legion army to fight against Octavian's unpopular policies. Later, observing the bitter feelings that had been evoked by the distribution of land among the veterans of Caesar, Antonius and Fulvia changed their attitude, and stood forward as the defenders of those who had suffered from its operation. Antonius marched on Rome, drove out Lepidus, and promised the people that the triumvirate should be abolished. On the approach of Octavian, he retired toPerusia in Etruria, where he was besieged by three armies, and compelled to surrender (winter of41 BC ). The city was destroyed but his life was spared, and he was sent by Octavian to Spain as governor. Nothing is known of the circumstances or date of his death. Cicero, in his "Philippics", actuated in great measure by personal animosity, gives a highly unfavorable view of his character.References
* Appian, "Bellum Civile", v. 14 ff.
* Dio Cassius xlviii. 5-14.
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