Her husband later became a general and statesman during the Second Punic War and was killed in battle in Hispania in 211 BC.
She was an aunt to Caecilia Attica and a great-aunt to Vipsania Agrippina (first wife to future Roman Emperor Tiberius).
When the younger Quintus Tullius Cicero grew up, he tried (encouraged by his uncles) to reconcile his parents, but was unsuccessful.
As an act of decency, Antony handed over Philologus, a former slave and traitor to Cicero, to Pomponia.
She was the wife of Roman General Aulus Plautius, a distant relative of Julia Livia (daughter of Drusus Julius Caesar) and granddaughter of Emperor Tiberius.
Famous speculation associates her with early Christianity in Rome, as in the novel and film Quo Vadis?.
[5] Pomponia Ummidia was the daughter of Annia Aurelia Faustina and a descendant of the Roman Emperor Marcus Aurelius and the wife of consul Flavius Antiochianus.