Marcus Fulcinius, a native of Tarquinii in Etruria, was a successful banker at Rome, whom Cicero described as eminently respectable.
During the debt crisis of 88 BC, he sold a farm to his wife in the Ager Tarquiniensis using her dowry to make the investment.
[2] Fulcinius is a secondary beneficiary in the will of his ex-wife Caesennia who died in late 70 or early 69 BC, leaving him 2.8% of her estate.
Fulcinius is mentioned in Cicero's case Pro Caecina, dating to 69 BC.
His son bequeathed it to his friend and presumed maternal relative Publius Caesennius.