Marcus Peducaeus Stloga Priscinus was a Roman senator active during the middle of the second century AD. He was ordinary consul for 141 as the colleague of Titus Hoenius Severus. [1]
Priscinus came of a Republican family, the Peducaei. [2] His father was Marcus Peducaeus Priscinus, ordinary consul in 110. [3] It has often been suggested that Priscinus adopted Marcus Peducaeus Plautius Quintillus, ordinary consul in 177; Quintillus was the birth son of Plautius Quintillus, consul in 159. [4] The details of Priscinus' senatorial career have not yet been recovered. He is known only through surviving inscriptions.
An inscription from the Great Theatre at Ephesus mentions a Marcus Peducaeus Priscinus as proconsular governor of Asia, whom professor Géza Alföldy, amongst others, has identified as this Priscinus. [5] However, Ronald Syme denied the identification, attributing the inscription to his father instead. [6]