• Marcus Aceronius, the master of Troilus, a slave mentioned in an inscription from
Minturnae in
Latium, dating from the first half of the first century BC. • Gnaeus Acerronius, mentioned as a
vir optimus by Cicero in his oration,
Pro Tullio, BC 71. •
Gnaeus Acerronius Proculus,
consul in AD 37. • Acerronia Salviae l., a freedwoman buried at
Cereatae Marianae in
Latium, together with her husband, the freedman Gaius Mussius Hilarus, in a tomb dating from the first half of the first century. • Acerronia Eleutheria, buried at
Tarentum in
Calabria, aged seventy-five, in a tomb dating from the first half of the first century. • Gnaeus Acerronius Cn. [...], buried in a first-century tomb at
Ferentinum in Latium, along with two women named Acerronia, and others. • Acerronia Posilla, buried at
Egnatia in Calabria, aged seventy-five, in a tomb dating from the first century. • Acerronia, named in a sepulchral inscription from
Locri in
Bruttium, dating between the mid-first and early second century. • Gaius Acerronius Fur[...], named in two inscriptions from
Londinium in
Britannia, dating from between the mid-first and late second century. • Acerronia, dedicated a second-century tomb at Rome.
Undated Acerronii • Acerronius Celer, dedicated a tomb at
Potentia in
Lucania to his son. • Numerius Acerronius Puteolanus, named in a sepulchral inscription from Potentia. • Pompeia Acerronia, buried in a family sepulchre at
Nemausus in
Gallia Narbonensis, along with her husband, Quintus Magius Zosimus, one of the
Seviri Augustales, and their freedmen. ==See also==