The gens Sertoria was a minor plebeian family at ancient Rome. Few members of this gens appear in history, the most illustrious of whom was the Roman general Quintus Sertorius, who defied the dictatorSulla and his allies for a decade after the populares were driven from power in Rome.[1]
The nomenSertorius is a patronymic surname, derived from the rare praenomenSertor. Chase suggests that it was the equivalent of servator, meaning "one who protects" or "preserves".[2][3]
The Sertorii of the Republic were not divided into distinct families. The general Sertorius was born at Nursia, in Sabinum, where his family had lived for several generations. In imperial times there was a family bearing the cognomenBrocchus, originally referring to someone with prominent teeth.[4][5]
Members
This list includes abbreviated praenomina. For an explanation of this practice, see filiation.
Quintus Sertorius, a celebrated general in the last decades of the Republic. He fought alongside Marius and Cinna, and later established an independent state in Hispania during the dictatorship of Sulla, but was finally murdered by one of his officers.[6][1]
Sertorius Severus, a man of praetorian rank, was named one of the heirs of Pomponia Galla, together with Pliny the Younger.[7]
Lucius Sertorius L. f. Sisenna, buried at Verona in Venetia and Histria, along with his wife, Terentia Maxima, with an altar dedicated by their sons, Lucius Sertorius Firmus and Quintus Sertorius Festus.[8]
Lucius Sertorius L. f. L. n. Firmus, the son of Lucius Sertorius Sisenna and Terentia Maxima, brother of Quintus Sertorius Festus, and husband of Domitia Prisca, was Aquilifer in the Legio XI Claudia, with whom he was buried at Verona in a tomb dating from the second half of the first century.[9]
Quintus Sertorius L. f. L. n. Festus, the son of Lucius Sertorius Sisenna and Terentia Maxima, and brother of Lucius Sertorius Firmus, was a centurion in the Legio XI Claudia. He was buried alongside his parents and brother at Verona, with a monument dating from the second half of the first century.[10]
Sertorius, the husband of Bibula, mentioned by Juvenal.[11][12]
Sertorius Clemens, a medical writer mentioned by Galen.[12]
Liber de Praenominibus, a short treatise of uncertain authorship, traditionally appended to Valerius Maximus' Factorum ac Dictorum Memorabilium (Memorable Facts and Sayings).
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