• Poppaeus Silvanus, a man of consular rank, and the governor of
Dalmatia at the death of Nero, is probably to be identified with
Marcus Pompeius Silvanus, consul in AD 45 under the emperor
Claudius, and later a prominent supporter of
Vespasian. • Lucius Poppaeus Vopiscus, consul
suffectus ex Kal. Mart. in AD 69, should probably be read "Lucius
Pompeius Vopiscus". • Poppaea, a freedwoman buried at Rome. • Gaius Poppaeus, buried at
Mevania in
Umbria. • Gnaeus Poppaeus, named in a funerary inscription from Mevania. • Publius Poppaeus T. f., named in an inscription from
Casinum. • Gaius Poppaeus Aprilis,
trierarch, or commander of a
trireme in the
Roman navy, married Eppia Prima. He was buried at Rome, aged thirty. • Gaius Poppaeus Aptorus, named in a funerary inscription from Rome. • Quintus Poppaeus Blastus, named in an inscription from
Stabiae in
Campania. • Gaius Poppaeus Botryo, buried at Rome, aged forty. • Gaius Poppaeus Celer, named in an inscription from Stabiae. • Poppaea Demetria, wife of Titus Fundanius Eromenus, buried at Rome during the second century. • Poppaea Fausta, named in an inscription from Rome. • Poppaea Q. l. Fausta, a freedwoman named in an inscription from Stabiae. • Gaius Poppaeus C. l. Felicio, a freedman named in an inscription from Stabiae. • Quintus Poppaeus Firmus, named in an inscription from
Pompeii. • Poppaea Triquinia (or Tarquinia), named in a
graffiti from
Pompeii. Possibly a member of the Poppaei Sabini or a freedwoman of theirs. The fact that the text included her full name may imply that she came from a family of high social status. • Gaius Poppaeus Gemellus, buried at Ficulea (now a suburb of Rome), aged ninety years, three months, two days, with a monument from his son, Poppaeus Primigenius. • Poppaea Hermione, buried at Rome; Gaius Poppaeus Iaso dedicated a monument to her. • Gaius Poppaeus Hymetus, a resident of Stabiae. • Gaius Poppaeus Iaso, dedicated a monument to Poppaea Hermione. • Poppaea Januaria, client of Galus Poppaeus Januarius, to whom she dedicated a monument at Rome. • Gaius Poppaeus Januarius, patron of Poppaea Januaria, who dedicated a monument to him at Rome. • Gaius Poppaeus Priscus, one of the
duumviri at
Veii in AD 256. • Poppaea C. f. Procca, buried at
Abellinum in Campania, aged eight years, four months. • Sextus Poppaeus Thalamus, husband of Fulvia Felicula, buried at
Sublaqueum, in a sepulchre built by his stepson. • Poppaea Trophime, wife of Lucius Afinius Ampliatus, buried at Rome, aged twenty-one. • Lucius Poppaeus Urbanus, named in an inscription from
Abella in Campania, dating to AD 28. • Gaius Poppaeus Valens, built a sepulchre at Rome for himself, Poppaea Ilias, and Aviania Charis. • Poppaea Verina, daughter of Titus Flavius Vestalis, to whom she dedicated a monument at Rome.
Poppaei Sabini • Quintus Poppaeus, grandfather of the consuls Sabinus and Secundus. •
Gaius Poppaeus Q. f. Q. n. Sabinus,
consul in AD 9, and afterward governor of
Moesia,
Achaea, and
Macedonia until his death in AD 35. He received the
triumphal ornaments for his victory over the
Thracians in AD 26. He was the maternal grandfather of Poppaea Sabina, second wife of Emperor
Nero. •
Quintus Poppaeus Q. f. Q. n. Secundus, consul
suffectus ex Kal. Jul. in AD 9, during the latter part of the reign of
Augustus, was one of the authors of the
lex Papia Poppaea, a law intended to discourage adultery and encourage lawful marriage. • Quintus Poppaeus Sabinus, magistrate with
Gaius Vibius Secundus in Pompeii. His house, known as the "
Casa del Menandro", has been preserved. •
Poppaea C. f. Sabina, married
Titus Ollius, by whom she was the mother of
(Ollia) Poppaea Sabina, the mistress and second wife of
Nero. Her husband was implicated in the intrigues of
Sejanus, and put to death. Poppaea's second husband was
Publius Cornelius Lentulus Scipio, consul in AD 24. Poppaea's daughter was said to have inherited her great beauty from her mother. • Gaius Poppaeus Sabinianus,
praefectus annonae (c. 62-c. 65), according to an inscription at
Ostia. Perhaps an uncle of the empress Sabina. • Potitus Poppaeus Sabinus, a shop owner attested from a seal (
sugello) in Pompeii. • Gaius Poppaeus Sabinianus, mention in brickstamps from the early 2nd-century. ==See also==