From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The gens Laronia was a minor family at
ancient Rome . The most famous of the Laronii was
Quintus Laronius ,
consul suffectus in 33 BC. Other Laronii are known from inscriptions.
Members
This list includes abbreviated
praenomina . For an explanation of this practice, see
filiation .
Quintus Laronius , served under
Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa during the war with
Sextus Pompeius in 36 BC, and relieved the forces under
Lucius Cornificius at
Tauromenium . In 33 he was appointed consul suffectus in the place of
Gaius Fonteius Capito .
[1]
[2]
Publius Laronius Probatus.
[3]
Quintus Laronius Hermo, named in a sepulchral inscription at the house of Decimus Antoninus Phrygepanis in Rome.
[4]
Marcus Laronius Italicus, named on a sepulchral tablet found at Rome, and now in the Capitoline Museum.
[5]
Gaius Laronius C. C. l. Annalis, named on a marble tablet at
Florentia .
[6]
Gaius Laronius C. C. l. Bassus, named on a marble tablet at Florentia.
[7]
Gaius Laronius C. C. l. Menophilus, named on a marble tablet at Florentia.
[8]
Gaius Laronius C. l. Orestes, named on a marble tablet at Florentia.
[9]
Laronius Rufus, named on a fragment of a marble tablet from Rome, now in the Lateran Museum.
[10]
Quintus Laronius Q. l. Salvius Cascelianus, named on a marble tablet from Rome, now in the public museum at
Panormus .
[11]
Laronia Q. l. Nice, named on a marble tablet from Rome, now in the public museum at Panormus.
[12]
Laronia Q. f. Plias, named on a marble tablet found at Rome, now in the Lateran Museum.
[13]
Quintus Laronius Dexster, named in a sepulchral inscription at Rome, together with Quintus Laronius Rufus.
[14]
Quintus Laronius Rufus, named in a sepulchral inscription at Rome, together with Quintus Laronius Dexter.
[15]
See also
References
^ Appian, Bellum Civile , v. 12, 15.
^ Broughton, vol. II, pp. 360, 414.
^ CIL VI. 1058 II, 97.
^ CIL VI. 21133.
^ CIL VI. 21134.
^ CIL VI. 21135.
^ CIL VI. 21135.
^ CIL VI. 21135.
^ CIL VI. 21135.
^ CIL VI. 21136.
^ CIL VI. 21137.
^ CIL VI. 21137.
^ CIL VI. 21138.
^ CIL VI. 28329.
^ CIL VI. 28329.
Bibliography
Appianus Alexandrinus (
Appian ), Bellum Civile (The Civil War).
Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology ,
William Smith , ed., Little, Brown and Company, Boston (1849).
Theodor Mommsen et alii ,
Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum (The Body of Latin Inscriptions, abbreviated "CIL"), Berlin-Brandenburgische Akademie der Wissenschaften (1853–present).
T. Robert S. Broughton , The Magistrates of the Roman Republic , American Philological Association (1952).