Publius Albinovanus, named in an inscription from Rome, perhaps to be identified with the Marian partisan, or the pontifex.[26]
Albinovana P. l. Ac[...], a freedwoman of Publius Albinovanus, named in an inscription from Rome, dating from the first century BC.[27]
Albinovana Felicula, commemorated in an inscription from Rome as having made a gift of some sort to her brother, Albinovanus Priscus. The inscription is thought to be from the middle or later first century, but may be a forgery.[28]
Albinovana C. l. Iame, a freedwoman who dedicated a first-century family sepulchre at Rome for her parents, Lucius Oppius Iamo and Oppia Grapte.[29]
Publius Albinovanus P. l. Meander, one of the freedmen of Publius Albinovanus, named in an inscription from Rome, dating from the first century BC.[27]
Albinovana P. l. Nice, a freedwoman named in an inscription from Rome, dating to the Julio-Claudian dynasty.[30]
Publius Albinovanus P. l. Philippus, one of the freedmen of Publius Albinovanus, named in an inscription from Rome, dating from the first century BC.[27]
Publius Albinovanus P. l. Philomusus, one of the freedmen of Publius Albinovanus, named in an inscription from Rome, dating from the first century BC.[27]
Albinovanus Philoxenus, together with Otatius Eros, Lollius Secundus, and Didius Primus, made an offering to the gods of reason, commemorated in an inscription dating from the first half of the first century, from the country of the Marsi, found at modern Pereto.[31]
Albinovanus Priscus, received a gift from his sister, Albinovana Felicula, according to a first-century inscription from Rome, perhaps a modern forgery.[28]
Albinovana C. f. Threpte, the daughter of Gaius Albinovanus Threptus, who built a second-century tomb at Rome for her.[32]
Gaius Albinovanus Threptus, dedicated a second-century tomb at Rome for his daughter, Albinovana Threpte.[32]
Gaius Albinovanus Xan[...], buried at Rome in a tomb built by Oppia Thumele for herself and Albinovanus.[33]
Albinovana Ɔ. l. Zenis, a freedwoman named along with the freedman Lucius Aquillius Surus, in an inscription from Rome dating from the first half of the first century.[34]
↑ The praenomen Gaius is traditionally assigned to the poet, but does not appear in any of the primary sources.[20]
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