68–58 BC) was a Roman aristocrat, and the adoptive father of Brutus, the assassin of Julius Caesar.
[4] According to a tentative reconstruction of his life, Caepio may have held the quaestorship by about 69 BC, which would have given him senatorial rank.
He then served as a deputy (legatus) to the general Pompey in the campaign against the Cilician pirates and then in the Mithridatic War.
In 58 BC, he appears for the last time in history as a creditor of Quintus Tullius Cicero, and probably died not long after.
[9] This reconstruction depends on the identity of several Servilii and Caepiones in scattered mentions, which is doubted by Treggiari.