Fulvia's own political career started with her third marriage, to future Roman
Triumvir Mark Antony. Plutarch said that she needed husbands with an active political profile and the ambitious Antony was highly qualified. As Clodius had done previously, Antony was happy to accept her money to boost his career. Antony changed the name of the Ancient Greek city of Eunemia or Eumeneia to Fulvia, in honor of her.
Fulvia bore Antony two sons:
Marcus Antonius Antyllus Creticus (
47 BC-1 August
30 BC) and
Iullus Antonius Creticus (
45 BC-2 BC). Antyllus has her father’s first name or praenomen.
Following
Julius Caesar's assassination in
March 15 44 BC, Antony formed the
second triumvirate with Octavian (future emperor
Augustus) and
Marcus Aemilius Lepidus and embarked on a savage proscription. To solidify the political alliance, Fulvia offered her daughter, Clodia, to young Octavian as wife. Antony pursued his political enemies, chief among them being
Marcus Tullius Cicero, who had criticized him openly for abusing his powers as consul after Caesar's assassination. In the proscription, Antony dispatched search parties to Cicero's country homes to track him down. He was found and beheaded by a Roman centurion, Herennius, whom Cicero had previously defended successfully in a murder trial, after his whereabouts were revealed by a young slave to whom Cicero had shown special favor. Antony exhibited Cicero's head and hands at the
rostra in the
Forum.
Fulvia was happy to take revenge against Cicero for Antony's sake, but also in revenge for Publius Clodius Pulcher, her first husband, also an earlier victim of Cicero's sharp rhetoric.
Cassius Dio describes the joy with which she pierced the tongue of the dead Cicero with her golden hairpins, as a final revenge against Cicero's power of speech.