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Tullia Magrini (1950 – 2005) was an Italian anthropologist, an Associate Professor of Anthropology of Music at the University of Bologna.
Tullia Linders (1925–2008) was a Swedish archaeologist.
Tullia Minor, the younger daughter (her sister was also named Tullia) of Servius Tullius, the 6th king of Rome. She married Tarquinius Superbus and together they murdered her father in order to put Tarquinius on the throne as the 7th (and final) king of Rome. Tullia ordered her chariot driver to continue driving over her father's mutilated dead body, thereby covering her in his blood. So, not a nice person :)
Tullia d’Aragona (1501/1505 – 1556) was an Italian poet, author and philosopher. Throughout her life Tullia was esteemed one of the best female writers, poets, philosophers, and charmers of her time. Influencing many of the most famous male philosophers, Tullia's work raised the status (in literature) of women to be on an equal footing as men.
Tullia Calabi Zevi (1919–2011) was an Italian journalist and writer. Zevi's family fled Italy to France and then to the US after the rise of fascism in the 1930s. While in New York City, she married Bruno Zevi. She returned to Europe in 1946, and was one of the few women journalists to report the Nuremberg Trials. On her return to Italy, she played a major role in Interfaith dialog, and was active in Italian Centre-left politics. Zevi was president of the Union of Italian Jewish Communities from 1983 to 1998.
Tullia Cicero was the daughter of the Roman statesman Marcus Tullius Cicero. She was her father's darling.

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