Maecilia gens

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Solidus of Marcus Maecilius Avitus, emperor from AD 455 to 456. Solidus Avitus Arles.jpg
Solidus of Marcus Maecilius Avitus, emperor from AD 455 to 456.

The gens Maecilia or Mecilia was a minor plebeian family at ancient Rome. Although of great antiquity, few members of this gens are mentioned in republican times, including two tribunes of the plebs in the first century of the Republic. The Maecilii appear again, somewhat sporadically, in imperial times, even obtaining the consulship during the early fourth century. One of the last emperors of the Western Empire was Marcus Maecilius Avitus. [1]

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The gens Nautia was an old patrician family at ancient Rome. The first of the gens to obtain the consulship was Spurius Nautius Rutilus in 488 BC, and from then until the Samnite Wars the Nautii regularly filled the highest offices of the Roman Republic. After that time, the Nautii all but disappear from the record, appearing only in a handful of inscriptions, mostly from Rome and Latium. A few Nautii occur in imperial times, including a number who appear to have been freedmen, and in the provinces.

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The gens Oppia was an ancient Roman family, known from the first century of the Republic down to imperial times. The gens may originally have been patrician, as they supplied priestesses to the College of Vestals at a very early date, but all of the Oppii known to history were plebeians. None of them obtained the consulship until imperial times.

Plautia gens Ancient Roman family

The gens Plautia, sometimes written Plotia, was a plebeian family at ancient Rome. Members of this gens first appear in history in the middle of the fourth century BC, when Gaius Plautius Proculus obtained the consulship soon after that magistracy was opened to the plebeian order by the lex Licinia Sextia. Little is heard of the Plautii from the period of the Samnite Wars down to the late second century BC, but from then to imperial times they regularly held the consulship and other offices of importance. In the first century AD, the emperor Claudius, whose first wife was a member of this family, granted patrician status to one branch of the Plautii.

The gens Spurilia, sometimes spelled Spurillia, was an obscure plebeian family at ancient Rome. Hardly any members of this gens are mentioned by ancient writers, for the Spurilius mentioned in some manuscripts of Livy as tribune of the plebs in 422 BC is amended by some authorities to "Spurius Icilius", while it is uncertain whether the moneyer who issued denarii in 139 BC was named Spurius, Spurilius, or Spurinna. Nevertheless, a number of Spurilii are known from inscriptions.

References

  1. Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, vol. II, p. 895 ("Maecilia Gens").
  2. Livy, ii. 58.
  3. Broughton, vol. I, p. 31, who spells him Mecilius.
  4. Livy, iv. 48.
  5. Broughton, vol. I, p. 74.
  6. Broughton, vol. I, p. 256.
  7. Eckhel, vol. v, p. 240.
  8. Roman Imperial Coinage, vol. 1, p. 75.
  9. CIL XI, 3805
  10. Braund, p. 239.
  11. PIR2 M 44.
  12. Birley, p. 358.
  13. CIL VI, 37116, CIL VIII, 1179, CIL VIII, 12524
  14. Sidonius Apollinaris, "Panegyric on Avitus".
  15. Gregory of Tours, ii. 11.
  16. Hydatius, Chronicon.
  17. Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, vol. I, p. 435 ("Marcus Maecilius Avitus").
  18. CIL VI, 32110

Bibliography