The gens Fufidia was a
plebeian family at
Rome. Members of this
gens are first mentioned toward the end of the second century BC.[1]
Members
Lucius Fufidius, a pleader of causes of some repute at Rome, about BC 115 to 105.
Marcus Aemilius Scaurus addressed to him an autobiography in three books.[2][3]
Fufidius,
propraetor of
Hispania Baetica at the beginning of the
Sertorian War. He is probably the same person as the Furfidius mentioned by
Florus, who admonished
Sulla during his proscription "to spare some that he might have some to rule."
Sertorius defeated him in BC 83 or 82.[4][5]
Fufidius, an eques, whom
Lucius Calpurnius Piso, when
proconsul of
Macedonia, assigned to his creditors at Apollonia. According to
Cicero, this assignment was the more shameful because these very Apolloniates had procured by a bribe of 200
talents to Piso remission or delay of their own debts.[6]
Quintus Fufidius, an eques, and a native of
Arpinum. He was one of three commissioners sent in BC 46 by the municipium of Arpinum to collect their rents in
Cisalpine Gaul. Fufidius was the stepson of Marcus Caesius, and was tribune of a legion stationed in
Cilicia during Cicero's consulship. Cicero recommended him to
Marcus Junius Brutus.[7]
The gens Fufidia was a
plebeian family at
Rome. Members of this
gens are first mentioned toward the end of the second century BC.[1]
Members
Lucius Fufidius, a pleader of causes of some repute at Rome, about BC 115 to 105.
Marcus Aemilius Scaurus addressed to him an autobiography in three books.[2][3]
Fufidius,
propraetor of
Hispania Baetica at the beginning of the
Sertorian War. He is probably the same person as the Furfidius mentioned by
Florus, who admonished
Sulla during his proscription "to spare some that he might have some to rule."
Sertorius defeated him in BC 83 or 82.[4][5]
Fufidius, an eques, whom
Lucius Calpurnius Piso, when
proconsul of
Macedonia, assigned to his creditors at Apollonia. According to
Cicero, this assignment was the more shameful because these very Apolloniates had procured by a bribe of 200
talents to Piso remission or delay of their own debts.[6]
Quintus Fufidius, an eques, and a native of
Arpinum. He was one of three commissioners sent in BC 46 by the municipium of Arpinum to collect their rents in
Cisalpine Gaul. Fufidius was the stepson of Marcus Caesius, and was tribune of a legion stationed in
Cilicia during Cicero's consulship. Cicero recommended him to
Marcus Junius Brutus.[7]