Tullia Minor

Tullia Minor is a semi-legendary figure in Roman history who can be found in the writings of Livy, Cicero, and Dionysius of Halicarnassus.

Tullia Minor was the younger daughter of Rome's sixth king, Servius Tullius, who eventually married Lucius Tarquinius.

Tarquinius was convinced and began to solicit the support of the patrician senators, especially those families who had been given senatorial rank by his father.

There at the top of the Cyprian Street she encountered her father's mutilated remains and, in a mad frenzy, drove the carriage over his body.

[2]: 1.48 Tullia's desecration of her murdered father's corpse spattered her with blood and stained her clothes, in which manner she returned to her husband's house.

Additionally, Tullia was depicted in a now lost drawing by prominent French painter François Pascal Simon Gérard.

Tullia driving over her father's body