Fulvia symbolizes the antithesis of the Roman matron, who abandoned the tasks socially assigned to women, acting as a ruler, and even recruiting legions. Possibly the classical authors used her figure as an example that embodies the moral degeneration of the end of the Republic. 

The historian Dio Casio mentions Fulvia committing an act of cruelty. You must find out, by consulting the net, what motives Fulvia could have felt such hatred towards Cicero that prompted her to commit such an outrage with his head.  

And when Cicero's head was sent to them (for when he fled he was seized and beheaded), Antony, after addressing many unpleasant expletives to him, ordered it to be placed in a conspicuous place, more visible than the others, in the tribune of orators, there from where he had uttered so many sophistries against him, and there it could be seen together with his right hand, which had been amputated, and Fulvia took the head in her hands, before it was taken away, and, enraged with it and spitting at him, placed it on her knees, and opening her mouth, tore out her tongue and pierced it with the hairpins she used for her hair, while she taunted him with many cruel infamies
 
Our translation from Dio Cassius: Historia romana, BCG-393. Translation by Juan Pedro Oliver Segura (p.80) 

a.-Read carefully the text of Dio Cassius, writing down the meaning of the underlined terms. Explain in your own words the event that is narrated and identify the characters involved in it. 
 
b.-Place the text in a historical context. Draw a chronological axis where the most relevant events that occurred between the end of the Republic and the beginning of the Empire are collected (two triumvirates, civil wars and establishment of the first emperor), along with the characters who starred in them. Look for information on Wikipedia about these characters.
 
c.-Locate or place the protagonists of the text and others that you consider fundamental in the axis, even if they are not mentioned in it. 

d.-Investigate and take note of the reasons that Cicero could have given Fulvia to arouse her hatred against the speaker.