Vipsania Marcella
Template:Use dmy dates {{#invoke:other uses|otheruses}} Vipsania Marcella is a name retrospectively given by historians to a possible daughter or daughters of the ancient Roman general Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa and his second wife Claudia Marcella Major, the eldest niece of emperor Augustus.<ref>Suet., Aug. 63.1.</ref>
History
It was once thought that Agrippa and Marcella only had one surviving child together,<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> a daughter whom no real information about was available, this daughter was given a composite name to distinguish her from her sisters from Agrippa's other marriages.Template:Efn But as new information was discovered and men such as Quintus Haterius, Publius Quinctilius Varus,<ref>Meyer Reinhold, "M. Agrippa's Son-in-Law P. Quinctilius Varus," CPh 67 (1972), 119–21).</ref> and Marcus Aemilius Lepidus<ref name="Syme">Template:Aut, The Augustan Aristocracy, Oxford, 1986, p. 125.</ref> began to be speculated to have been Agrippa's sons-in-law by a daughter or daughters of Marcella opinions began to shift. Ronald Syme believed the wives of each men were three different people, one Vipsania who married Varus, a Vipsania who married Lepidus and one Vipsania who married Haterius, but Syme also argued that Haterius wife was a daughter of Agrippa by his first wife Pomponia, not Marcella.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Meyer Reinhold rebutted and argued that Varus wife was the daughter of Pomponia, L. Koenen has entertained this possibility as well,<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> while Franziska Knopf thought that Haterius wife could be Marcella's daughter.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Some historians also think that Varus and Lepidus wives were not separate people. Nonetheless Syme's view hold majority opinion in the 21st century.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Cultural depictions
In Robert Graves' books, I, Claudius and Claudius the God, a single daughter of Agrippa and Marcella is mentioned to exist. She is depicted as having committed suicide for unexplained reasons early on, but later in the story Roman empress Livia claims that she killed herself over guilt for committing incest with her father, to secretly instigate his poisoning.