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  1. Julia (c. 76 BC – August 54 BC) was the daughter of Roman dictator Julius Caesar and his first or second wife Cornelia, and his only child from his marriages. Julia became the fourth wife of Pompey the Great and was renowned for her beauty and virtue.

  2. In Julius Caesar: The first triumvirate and the conquest of Gaul …by marrying Caesar’s only child, Julia. Caesar married Calpurnia, daughter of Lucius Piso, who became consul in 58 bce .

  3. Julia the Elder (30 October 39 BC – AD 14), known to her contemporaries as Julia Caesaris filia or Julia Augusti filia (Classical Latin: IVLIA•CAESARIS•FILIA or IVLIA•AVGVSTI•FILIA), was the daughter and only biological child of Augustus, the first Roman emperor, and his second wife, Scribonia.

  4. Born around 83 bce; died in 54 bce; daughter of Roman emperor Julius Caesar (c. 100–44 bce) and Cornelia (c. 100–68 bce); married Pompey (106–48 bce), the Roman general, in 59 bce. In 60 bce, the Roman general Pompey formed a coalition, the First Triumvirate, with Crassus and Julius Caesar.

  5. Julius Caesar had two confirmed biological children: Julia from his first wife, Cornelia, and Caesarion by his lover Cleopatra VII. His will also named Gaius Julius Caesar Octavianus, his grand-nephew, as his adopted son and thus his heir.

  6. Daughter of Julius Caesar. Julia (c. 76–54 BC) was Julius Caesar's only legitimate child to survive to adulthood. Her marriage to Caesar's ally Pompeius was an important familial link within the First Triumvirate, and her death in childbirth in 54 BC was one of the events that led to the unraveling of the alliance.

  7. Only daughter of Augustus, first emperor of Rome, who was a favorite and politically useful child—until her love affairs brought him disgrace and he banished her from Rome forever. Born in Rome in 39 bce; died in Rhegium near the end of 14 ce of malnutrition and despair; daughter of Gaius Julius Caesar Octavianus also known as Octavian or ...