The gens Antia was a minor plebeian family at ancient Rome. The Antii emerged at the end of the second century BC, and were of little importance during the Republic, but they continued into the third century, obtaining the consulship in AD 94 and 105.[1][2][3]
^Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, vol. I, p. 184 ("Antia Gens").
The gensAntia was a minor plebeian family at ancient Rome. The Antii emerged at the end of the second century BC, and were of little importance during...
Antia may refer to: Antiagens, a Roman gensAntía, a female given name Noshir H. Antia, an Indian plastic surgeon Antius (disambiguation) This disambiguation...
Sicily in 213, and suggests Gratillianus could be Calpurnianus' son. Antia (gens) Anthony R. Birley, The Fasti of Roman Britain, (Oxford: Clarendon Press...
about the life of Valerius Antias. Historians surmise that his family were the Valerii Antiates, a branch of the Valeria gens residing (at least from early...
refer to a number of people or things: Antiu, a people of ancient Egypt Antia (gens), a family of ancient Romans with the name Antius This disambiguation...
Look up gens in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. The gens (plural gentes) was a Roman family, of Italic or Etruscan origins, consisting of all those individuals...
In ancient Rome, a gens (/ɡɛns/ or /dʒɛnz/, Latin: [gẽːs]; pl.: gentes [ˈgɛnteːs]) was a family consisting of individuals who shared the same nomen gentilicium...
The gens Valeria was a patrician family at ancient Rome, prominent from the very beginning of the Republic to the latest period of the Empire. Publius...
is generally inferred that the Furia gens, like the Fulvia, had come from Tusculum. As the first member of the gens that occurs in history, Sextus Furius...
murdered ambassadors, stood for a time on the rostrum in the Roman Forum. Antiagens Liv. 4.17.1.2 http://latin.packhum.org/loc/914/1/0#214 William Henry Smyth...
The gens Terentia was a plebeian family at ancient Rome. Dionysius mentions a Gaius Terentius Arsa, tribune of the plebs in 462 BC, but Livy calls him...
The gens Naevia, occasionally written Navia, was a plebeian or patrician family at ancient Rome. Members of this gens are first mentioned at the time...
a politician of the Roman Republic. He is principally known for the lex Antia sumptuaria, a law against luxury he passed as tribune of the plebs in 68 BC...
The gens Petillia or Petilia was a plebeian family at ancient Rome. Members of this gens first appear in history at the beginning of the second century...
The gens Marcia, occasionally written Martia, was one of the oldest and noblest houses at ancient Rome. They claimed descent from the second and fourth...
generative power that suffused the gens and each of its members. As the singular, lawful head of a family derived from a gens, the pater familias embodied and...
name (nomen). A woman from the gens Aemilia would be called Aemilia; from the gens Cornelia, Cornelia; from the gens Sempronia, Sempronia; and so on...
single nomen and claiming descent from a common ancestor. Over centuries, a gens could expand from a single family to a large clan, potentially including...
to rule by ordinance. Roman emperor Pompilia gens Hostilia gens Marcia gens Tullia gens Tarquinia gens Outline of Roman History William C. Morey, Ph...
Martyrology Anthony the Hermit c. 468 c. 520 1584 by Pope Gregory XIII Antia of Illyria unknown c. 138 found in Roman Martyrology Antiochus of Sulcis...
during or shortly after Cicero's times, by such authors as Varro, Atticus, Antias, Tuditanus and Fenestella (a contemporary of Livy whom he often criticizes)...
His father reportedly belonged to gens Vergilia, and his mother belonged to gens Magia. According to Conway, gens Vergilia is poorly attested in inscriptions...
for the sponsoring legislator and designated by the adjectival form of his gens name (nomen gentilicum), in the feminine form because the noun lex (plural...
the Elder, her brother, was from Como. Gaius was a member of the Plinia gens: the Insubric root Plina still persists, with rhotacism, in the local surname...
gentilicium, or "gentile name", designated a Roman citizen as a member of a gens. A gens, which may be translated as "clan", constituted an extended Roman group...