Genucii Augurini • Lucius Genucius, grandfather of the consuls of 451 and 445 BC. • Lucius Genucius L. f., father of the consuls of BC 451 and 445. •
Titus Genucius L. f. L. n. Augurinus, consul in BC 451, and a member of the first
decemvirate. Six years later, during his brother's consulship, Titus, a member of the
Roman Senate, brought forward the law establishing the office
consular tribune, allowing the election of plebeian magistrates. •
Marcus Genucius L. f. L. n. Augurinus, consul in 445 BC. He and his colleague strenuously opposed the
lex Canuleia, repealing the prohibition on the intermarriage between patricians and plebeians. After that law was passed, Marcus consulted with his brother, Titus, the consul of 451, on ways to resolve the strife between the orders, although some accused them of carrying on the business of the state in secret. • Marcus Genucius M. f. Augurinus, father of the consular tribune. •
Gnaeus Genucius M. f. M. n. Augurinus, consular tribune in 399 and 396 BC. In the former year, Rome was ravaged by a plague, but the Roman forces besieging
Veii met with some success. In his second tribuneship, Genucius and one of his colleagues, Lucius Titinius, were ambushed by a force of
Faliscans and
Capenates; Genucius died bravely in the fighting.
Genucii Aventinenses • Marcus Genucius Cn. f., father of Lucius, the consul of 365 and 362 BC. • Marcus Genucius M. f., father of Gnaeus, the consul of 363 BC. • Lucius Genucius M. f. Cn. n. Aventinensis, consul in 365, a year of terrible plague, marked by the death of
Marcus Furius Camillus. Consul for the second time in 362, he was the first plebeian consul to lead an army in the field. Ambushed by the
Hernici, Genucius was surrounded and killed when his troops panicked, leading the patricians to claim vindication for their opposition to the election of plebeian consuls. •
Gnaeus Genucius M. f. M. n. Aventinensis, consul in 363 BC, the third year of a great plague, which distracted from the threat of war with the Hernici. Lucius Manlius Capitolinus was nominated dictator in order to perform the rite of
clavum fingere, in hopes of appeasing the gods. •
Lucius Genucius (Aventinensis), tribune of the plebs in 342 BC, brought forward a number of reforms, known as the
leges Genuciae, abolishing usury, preventing the same person from holding two curule magistracies in the same year, or the same office twice within the next ten years (until 332 BC), and requiring that at least one consul had to be plebeian. • Lucius Genucius L. f. M. n. Aventinensis, consul in 303 BC, a year of relative peace, in which colonies were sent to
Sora and
Alba Fucens,
Roman citizenship was granted to
Arpinum and
Trebula,
Frusino was punished for conspiring with the Hernici, and a large force of
Umbrian raiders was trapped in a cave and destroyed.
Genucii Clepsinae • Gaius Genucius L. f. L. n. Clepsina, consul in 276 BC, in which year Rome was again beset by pestilence. Consul for the second time in 270, either he or his brother, who had been consul the previous year, captured the town of
Rhegium, which had revolted, and sent most of the soldiers responsible to Rome for trial, where they were scourged and beheaded.
Others • Titus Genucius,
tribune of the plebs in 476 BC, proposed an
agrarian law, and accused
Titus Menenius Lanatus in connection with the disaster at
the Cremera and subsequent defeat at the hands of the Etruscans. • Gnaeus Genucius, tribune of the plebs in 473 BC, attempted to pass the agrarian law, and charged the consuls of the previous year with misconduct for having obstructed it. On the day of their trial, Genucius was found murdered in his house, a deed which helped set in motion the events leading to the ratification of the
lex Publilia two years later. • Genucius, tribune of the plebs in an uncertain year, perhaps BC 241. According to
Plutarch, war was declared against the
Faliscans as the result of some insult offered to Genucius. • Lucius Genucius, one of the ambassadors sent to
Syphax, king of
Numidia, in 210 BC, during the
Second Punic War. • Marcus Genucius, a
military tribune serving under the consul
Lucius Cornelius Merula in 193 BC. He fell in battle against the
Boii. • Lucius Genucius L. f., a senator in 129 BC. • Genucius, a priest of the
Magna Mater, was denied the right of inheritance by the consul
Mamercus Aemilius Lepidus in 77 BC, on the grounds that he was a eunuch. • Genucius Cipus or Cippus,
praetor in an uncertain year, voluntarily chose exile after the
haruspices declared he would become king upon his return to the city. ==Footnotes==