Annii Lusci • Marcus Annius (Luscus),
triumvir for the founding of colonies in
Cisalpine Gaul in 218 BC, obliged by a sudden rising of the
Boii to take refuge in
Mutina. • Titus Annius M. f. Luscus, sent as an envoy to
Perseus in 172 BC, and triumvir for augmenting the colony at
Aquileia in 169. •
Titus Annius T. f. M. n. Luscus, consul in 153 BC, an orator who opposed
Tiberius Gracchus in 133. • Titus Annius T. f. T. n. Luscus, surnamed
Rufus, praetor in 131 BC, and subsequently governor of
Sicily. He was consul in 128 BC. •
Gaius Annius T. f. T. n. Luscus, commander of the garrison at
Leptis Magna under
Metellus Numidicus during the
Jugurthine War in 108 BC, and later sent by
Sulla against
Sertorius in 81, whom he compelled to retire to
Carthago Nova. • Annia T. f. T. n., the wife of
Gaius Papius Celsus and mother of
Titus Annius Milo.
Annii Bellieni • Lucius Annius C. f. Bellienus, praetor in 105 BC, served under
Gaius Marius in the war against
Jugurtha and
Bocchus. • Gaius Annius Bellienus, legate of Marcus Fonteius in
Gallia Narbonensis,
circa 74 BC. • Lucius Annius Bellienus, uncle of
Catiline, ordered by Sulla to kill
Quintus Lucretius Afella, and condemned in 64 BC. • Lucius Annius Bellienus, whose house was burnt down after the murder of
Caesar in 44 BC.
Annii Polliones • Gaius Annius (Pollio), father of the Pollio attested from the columbarium of his freedmen. Maybe the Annius who was
triumvir monetalis in 9 BC. Maybe the Annius who was
triumvir monetalis in 9 BC. • Gaius Annius C. f. C. n. Pollio, consul
suffectus in either AD 21 or 22. Accused of
majestas during the reign of
Tiberius. • Gaius Annius C. f. C. n. Pollio, son of the consul of 21 or 22, himself consul
suffectus circa AD 66. An intimate friend of
Nero, banished after being accused of participating in
the conspiracy of
Gaius Calpurnius Piso. • Annia C. f. C. n., daughter of the consul of 21 or 22 AD, wife of an Atratinus, possibly either a Sempronius Atratinus or
Marcus Asinius Atratinus the consul of 89 •
Lucius Annius C. f. C. n. Vinicianus, younger son of the consul of 21 or 22, and one of the men involved in the assassination of
Caligula. •
(Lucius) Annius L. f. C. n. Vinicianus, son of the conspirator against Caligula, was involved in a plot against Nero. He took his own life rather than defend himself. • (Gaius) Annius L. f. C. n. Pollio, son of the elder Vinicianus and husband of
Marcia Servilia.
Annii Galli •
Appius Annius Gallus, consul
suffectus in AD 67 and Roman general under the emperors
Otho and
Vespasian. •
Appius Annius (Ap. f.) Trebonius Gallus, perhaps the son of Appius Annius Gallus, the consul of AD 67; consul in 108. •
Appius Annius Ap. f. (Ap. n.) Trebonius Gallus, consul in AD 139. father of: •
Appius Annius Ap. f. Ap. n. Atilius Bradua, consul in AD 160. •
Appia Annia Ap. f. Ap. n. Regilla Atilia Caucidia Tertulla, better known as Aspasia Annia Regilla, daughter of the consul of AD 139, married
Herodes Atticus. •
Annia M. f. M. n. Galeria Faustina, better known as Faustina Major or Faustina the Elder, was the wife of
Antoninus Pius, and Roman empress from AD 138 to 140; Marcus Aurelius was her nephew. •
Marcus Annius M. f. M. n. Libo, the uncle of Marcus Aurelius, was consul in AD 128 and 161. •
Marcus Annius M. f. M. n. Verus, the father of Marcus Aurelius, attained the praetorship, but died
circa AD 124, leaving his children to be raised by their paternal grandfather. •
Marcus Annius M. f. M. n. Sabinus Libo, son of Marcus Annius Libo, the consul of AD 128 and 161. •
Annia M. f. M. n. Fundania Faustina, daughter of Marcus Annius Libo, the consul of AD 128 and 161, married
Titus Pomponius Proculus Vitrasius Pollio. She was later murdered on the orders of her cousin, the emperor
Commodus. •
Marcus Annius M. f. M. n. Verus, afterwards Marcus Aurelius, emperor from AD 161 to 180. •
Annia M. f. M. n. Cornificia Faustina, the sister of Marcus Aurelius. •
Marcus Annius Flavius M. f. M. n. M. pron. Libo, consul in 204 AD, he was probably the son of Marcus Annius Sabinus Libo. •
Marcus Annius Verus Caesar, the twelfth son of Marcus Aurelius. •
Annia Faustina, the granddaughter of Annia Cornificia Faustina. •
Annia Aurelia Faustina, the daughter of Annia Faustina, married the emperor
Elagabalus.
Others •
Lucius Annius, a native of
Setia, was
praetor of the
Latin League in 340 BC. He demanded that the Latins be treated as half the Roman state, and that one of the consuls and half the senate be chosen from among them. On receiving the indignant reply from the senators and the consul Titus Manlius, he is said to have harangued
Capitoline Jupiter. He then fell and struck his head while leaving the senate house, though sources differ as to whether he died. • Lucius Annius, a senator in 307 BC, who was expelled from the senate by the
censors after repudiating his wife without previously consulting the
consilium domesticum. • Annius, a
freedman, and reportedly the father of
Gnaeus Flavius,
curule aedile in 304 BC. • Gaius Annius C. f., a quaestor or praetor during the third century BC. • Annius, a
Campanian ambassador to Rome in 216 BC, demanded that one of the consuls should henceforth be a Campanian. • Gaius Annius C. f., a senator in 135 BC. • Lucius Annius L. f., a senator in 135 BC. • Marcus Annius P. f., quaestor in Macedonia circa 119 BC, won a victory over the Celts who had killed the
propraetor Sextus Pompeius. • Lucius Annius, tribune of the plebs in 110 BC, possibly the son of Lucius Annius, senator in 135, wished to continue in office the next year, but was resisted by his colleagues. • Publius Annius, a
military tribune in 87 BC, murdered
Marcus Antonius, the orator, and brought his head to Marius. • Annia, the wife of
Lucius Cornelius Cinna, who died in 84 BC, and afterwards of
Marcus Pupius Piso Frugi Calpurnianus, whom
Sulla compelled to divorce her, because of her former marriage to Cinna. •
Publius Annius Asellus, a
senator who died in 75 BC, leaving his only daughter as his heiress. His property was seized by the praetor
Verres. He was quaestor in Sicily soon before. • Quintus Annius Chilo, a senator, and one of
Catiline's conspirators in 63 BC. • Lucius Annius, a quaestor in Sicily before 50 BC. •
Gaius Annius Cimber, a supporter of
Marcus Antonius in 43 BC. •
Annius Rufus, governor of Judea from AD 12 to 15. • Annius Faustus, a man of
equestrian rank, and one of the informers (
delatores) in the reign of
Nero, was condemned by the Senate in AD 69, on the accusation of
Vibius Crispus. •
Marcus Annius Afrinus, consul
suffectus in AD 66. • Annius Bassus, commander of a
legion under
Marcus Antonius Primus in AD 70. •
Publius Annius Florus, a poet and rhetorician from the time of
Domitian to
Hadrian, wrote a dialogue titled
Vergilius orator an poeta. He is possibly identical with the historian Annaeus Florus. •
Lucius Annius Arrianus, consul in AD 243. ==See also==