The gens Caetronia, occasionally written Cetronia, was a family at
ancient Rome that flourished during the late
Republic and early decades of the
Empire. The
nomenCaetronius is
Etruscan in origin.[1]
Members
Caetronius, father of the consul Vibius Pansa, was proscribed by
Sulla.[2][3]
Gaius Caetronius,
legate of the
Legio I Germanica in
Germania at the accession of
Tiberius in AD 14. Following a mutiny of the soldiers, Caetronius held a court martial of the leaders, who were tried and executed by their fellow soldiers.[4][5][6][7]
Edmund Groag,
Arthur Stein,
Leiva Petersen, and Klaus Wachtel, Prosopographia Imperii Romani (The Prosopography of the Roman Empire, Second Edition, abbreviated PIR2), Berlin (1933–2015).
The gens Caetronia, occasionally written Cetronia, was a family at
ancient Rome that flourished during the late
Republic and early decades of the
Empire. The
nomenCaetronius is
Etruscan in origin.[1]
Members
Caetronius, father of the consul Vibius Pansa, was proscribed by
Sulla.[2][3]
Gaius Caetronius,
legate of the
Legio I Germanica in
Germania at the accession of
Tiberius in AD 14. Following a mutiny of the soldiers, Caetronius held a court martial of the leaders, who were tried and executed by their fellow soldiers.[4][5][6][7]
Edmund Groag,
Arthur Stein,
Leiva Petersen, and Klaus Wachtel, Prosopographia Imperii Romani (The Prosopography of the Roman Empire, Second Edition, abbreviated PIR2), Berlin (1933–2015).