•
Proculus Julius, a legendary figure who announced the apotheosis of
Romulus to the Roman people,
circa 716 BC. •
Vopiscus Julius C. f. L. n. Iullus, consul in 473 BC. •
Gaius Julius C. f. C. n. Iullus, consul in 447 and 435 BC. • Spurius Julius Vop. f. C. n. Iullus, father of the consular tribunes of 408, 405, and 403 BC, according to the Capitoline Fasti. •
Gaius Julius Sp. f. Vop. n. Iullus, consular tribune in 408 and 405 BC, and censor in 393. •
Lucius Julius Iullus, consular tribune in 388 and 379 BC. •
Gaius Julius Iullus, nominated
dictator in 352 BC, ostensibly to carry on war against the
Etruscans, but in fact to carry the election of two patricians in the consular comitia, in violation of the
lex Licinia Sextia.
Julii Mentones •
Gaius Julius Mento, consul in 431 BC. • Gaius Julius Mento, a rhetorician, cited by
Seneca.
Julii Libones • Lucius Julius (Libo?), the grandfather of Lucius Julius Libo, consul in 267 BC. • Lucius Julius L. f. (Libo?), the father of Libo, the consul of 267 BC. •
Lucius Julius L. f. L. n. Libo, consul in 267 BC, triumphed over the
Sallentini.
Julii Caesares • Lucius Julius (Caesar?), father of the praetor of 208 BC. •
Sextus Julius (L. f.) Caesar,
praetor in 208 BC, obtained the province of
Sicilia, father of the praetor of 166 BC and the consul of 157 BC. •
Lucius Julius (Sex. f. L. n.) Caesar, praetor in 183 BC, had the province of
Gallia Cisalpina. • Lucius Julius (L. f. Sex. n.) Caesar, praetor in 166 BC. •
Sextus Julius Sex. f. L. n. Caesar, consul in 157 BC. • Gaius Julius (Sex. f. L. n.) Caesar, great-grandfather of the dictator. • Sextus Julius (Sex. f. Sex. n.) Caesar, praetor
urbanus in 123 BC; he is probably the same Sextus Julius Caesar who was
triumvir monetalis about this time. • Lucius Julius Sex. f. Sex. n. Caesar, father of the consul of 90 BC, married Popillia, widow of Quintus Lutatius Catulus, and mother of
Quintus Lutatius Catulus, consul in 102 BC. •
Gaius Julius (C. f. Sex. n.) Caesar, grandfather of the dictator, married Marcia. •
Lucius Julius L. f. Sex. n. Caesar, consul in 90 BC, during the
Social War, and
censor in 89. •
Julia L. f. L. n., wife of
Marcus Antonius Creticus, and mother of
Mark Antony, the triumvir. After his death, she married
Publius Cornelius Lentulus Sura, one of
Catiline's conspirators. •
Gaius Julius L. f. Sex. n. Caesar Strabo Vopiscus, a notable orator and poet, proscribed and put to death by
Marius and
Cinna in 87 BC. •
Gaius Julius C. f. (C. n.) Caesar, praetor, governor of
Asia, and father of the dictator, married Aurelia. •
Lucius Julius L. f. L. n. Caesar, consul in 64 BC. •
Lucius Julius L. f. L. n. Caesar, a partisan of
Pompeius during the
Civil War. • Julia L. f. L. n., daughter of the consul of 64 BC. •
Julia C. f. (C. n.), aunt of the dictator, married
Gaius Marius. •
Sextus Julius C. f. (C. n.) Caesar, consul in 91 BC, uncle of the dictator. •
Gaius Julius C. f. C. n. Caesar, consul in 59, 48, 46, 45, and 44 BC, dictator in 49, and from 47 to 44 BC. •
Julia C. f. C. n., eldest sister of the dictator, and wife of Lucius Pinarius and Quintus Pedius. •
Julia C. f. C. n., older sister of the dictator, and wife of
Marcus Atius Balbus. •
Julia C. f. C. n., daughter of the dictator, and wife of
Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus. • Sextus Julius Sex. f. C. n. Caesar,
Flamen Quirinalis in 57 BC. •
Sextus Julius Sex. f. Sex. n. Caesar, appointed governor of
Syria in 47 BC, killed in a revolt of the soldiers. •
Gaius Julius C. f. C. n. Caesar Octavianus, adopted son of the dictator, afterwards the emperor Augustus.
Julio-Claudian dynasty •
Imperator Caesar divi f. C. n. Augustus (born Gaius Octavius), emperor from 27 BC to AD 14. •
Julia Augusti f. divi n. Augusta (born Livia), empress as the third wife of Augustus, and mother of the emperor Tiberius. Augustus adopted her into his family in his will. •
Tiberius Julius Augusti f. divi n. Caesar Augustus (born Tiberius Claudius Nero), son of Livia and adopted son of Augustus, emperor from AD 14 to 37. •
Nero Julius Germanici. f. Ti. n. Caesar Germanicus, son of Germanicus, was exiled during the reign of Tiberius and died under unclear circumstances in AD 31. •
Drusus Julius Germanici. f. Ti. n. Caesar Germanicus, son of Germanicus, was likewise exiled by Tiberius, and is said to have starved to death in AD 33. • [?] Julius Germanici. f. Ti. n. Caesar Germanicus, son of Germanicus whose first name is unknwon, died in infancy. • Tiberius Julius Germanici. f. Ti. n. Caesar Germanicus, son of Germanicus, died in childhood. • Gaius Julius Caesar Germanici. f. Ti. n. Germanicus Major, son of Germanicus, died in early childhood. •
Gaius Julius Germanici. f. Ti. n. Caesar Germanicus Minor, son of Germanicus, better known as
Caligula, emperor from AD 37 to 41. •
Julia Drusi. f. Ti. n. Livia, daughter of Drusus •
Tiberius Julius Drusi. f. Ti. n. Caesar Nero Gemellus, son of Drusus, was killed by the emperor Caligula. • Germanicus Julius Drusi. f. Ti. n. Claudius Caesar Gemellus, son of Drusus, died in early childhood. •
Julia Germanici. f. Ti. n. Agrippina, daughter of Germanicus, and mother of the emperor
Nero. •
Julia Germanici. f. Ti. n. Drusilla, daughter of Germanicus, married first
Lucius Cassius Longinus, and second
Marcus Aemilius Lepidus. •
Julia Germanici. f. Ti. n. Livilla, daughter of Germanicus, married
Marcus Vinicius, consul in AD 30. •
Julia C. f. Germanici. n. Drusilla, daughter of Caligula, was murdered by the Praetorian Guard in AD 41.
Others First century BC • Lucius Julius Bursio,
triumvir monetalis in 85 BC. • Julia, possibly the name of a lady who wanted to divorce her husband Otho to marry Cicero's nephew Quintus. The name might be an error for
Tutia. • Lucius Julius Calidus, a poet in the final years of the Republic, proscribed by Volumnius, the partisan of Marcus Antonius, but saved through the intercession of
Atticus. •
Gaius Julius Hyginus, a freedman of Augustus, appointed head of the Palatine library, and the author of numerous books about history, mythology, and science. • Julius Modestus, a freedman of Gaius Julius Hyginus, who became a distinguished grammarian, and the author of
Quaestiones Confusae. • Julius Marathas, a freedman of Augustus, who wrote a life of his master. •
Marcus Julius Cottius, king of several Alpine tribes of the
Ligures, submitted to
Augustus and granted the title of
Praefectus. •
Gaius Julius Eurycles, a wealthy Spartan who assisted Octavian at the
battle of Actium and was subsequently awarded citizenship. He was the father of Laco and the grandfather of Spartiaticus.
First century , statue at
Bath •
Julius Florus, an orator, jurist, poet, and either the author or editor of several satires during the reign of Augustus. He accompanied Tiberius to Armenia, and may have been the uncle of Julius Secundus, and perhaps the friend of
Quintilian, who calls him an eminent orator of
Gaul. • Julius M. f. Vestalis, a son of Marcus Julius Cottius, was a centurion, and in AD 12 commanded the force that retook the frontier post of Aegyssus from the Getae, a deed celebrated by Ovid. • Gaius Julius M. f. Donnus, son of Marcus Julius Cottius, prefect of the Ligures, fought for
Tiberius. • Marcus Julius M. f. Cottius, another son of Marcus Julius Cottius, prefect of the Ligures, was granted title of king by the emperor Claudius. • Julius Florus, leader of an insurrection of the
Treveri during the reign of
Tiberius. •
Julius Sacrovir, a leader of the
Aedui, who together with Julius Florus revolted in AD 21. •
Julius Secundus, an orator and friend of Quintilian, perhaps the nephew of the Gallic orator Julius Florus. • Julius Montanus, a senator, poet, and friend of Tiberius, cited by both the
elder and
younger Seneca. After the emperor
Nero assaulted him in the dark, Montanus resisted forcefully before recognizing his attacker and begging for mercy, but he was compelled to commit suicide. •
Sextus Julius Postumus, used by
Sejanus in one of his schemes, AD 23. • Julius Africanus, of the
Gallic state of the
Santones, was condemned by Tiberius in AD 32. • Julius Celsus, a tribune of the city cohort, was condemned to death under Tiberius, but broke his own neck in prison, in order to avoid a public execution. • Julius Canus, a
Stoic philosopher, condemned to death by the emperor
Caligula. He had promised to appear to his friends after his death, and fulfilled his promise by appearing to one of them in a vision. •
Julius Graecinus, a writer on botany, and the father of Gnaeus Julius Agricola, was put to death by Caligula. •
Gaius Julius Callistus, a
freedman of Caligula, influential during his reign and that of
Claudius. • Gaius Julius Sex. f. Postumus,
governor of Egypt from AD 45 to 48. • Marcus Julius Romulus, adlected into the Senate after serving as tribune of the plebs, also served as
legate of the
Legio XV Apollinaris, and proconsul of Macedonia. •
Gaius Julius Aquila, an
eques, sent to protect
Cotys, King of the
Bosporus, in AD 50. •
Tiberius Julius Alexander, an equestrian from a wealthy Jewish family from Alexandria, procurator of Judea from AD 46 to AD 48 and governor of Egypt from AD 66 to AD 69. He was present as part of Titus's entourage during the
siege of Jerusalem. •
Marcus Julius Alexander, younger brother of Tiberius Julius Alexander, he was betrothed to the
princess Berenice but died prematurely in AD 44 and had no issue with her. • Julius Pelignus,
Procurator of
Cappadocia in AD 52, during the reign of Claudius. • Julius Bassus, said by the elder
Plinius to have written a medical work in Greek. • Gaius Julius C. f. Laco, the son of Eurycles, was an
augur and
flamen of the
imperial cult at
Corinth. He was one of the municipal
duumvirs, and served as
agonothete of the
Isthmian Games. • Gaius Julius C. f. C. n. Spartiaticus, the son of Gaius Julius Laco, was a
military tribune from Corinth. He held several of the same offices as his father, being a priest of the imperial cult, duumvir, and agonothete of the Isthmian Games, according to an inscription dating between the reign of
Nero and the end of the first century. • Julius Diocles of
Carystus, author of four epigrams in the
Greek Anthology. •
Gaius Julius Alpinus Classicianus, procurator of
Britannia from AD 61 to 65. •
Julia Pacata, the wife of Classicanus. •
Julius Indus, a cavalry commander of the Treveri, and the father-in-law of Classicanus. •
Julius Africanus, a celebrated orator in the reign of Nero. • Lucius Julius Rufus, consul in AD 67. His death is related by the elder
Pliny. •
Gaius Julius Vindex, one of the chief supporters of
Galba, led the rebellion against Nero. •
Julius Fronto, a supporter of
Otho, put in chains by the soldiers because his brother, Julius Gratus, was a supporter of
Vitellius. •
Julius Gratus, prefect of the camp in the army of
Aulus Caecina Alienus, the general of Vitellius, was put in chains by the soldiers because his brother, Julius Fronto, supported
Otho. • Julius Carus, one of the murderers of
Titus Vinius when the emperor Galba was put to death in AD 69. •
Gaius Julius Civilis, leader of the
Batavian Rebellion in AD 69. •
Julius Classicus, of the Treveri, who with Civilis was one of the leaders of the Batavian Rebellion. •
Julius Paulus, the brother of Civilis, was put to death on a false charge of treason by
Gaius Fonteius Capito, the
governor of Germania Inferior. •
Julius Briganticus, a nephew of Civilis, who fought under
Cerealis in
Germania, and fell in battle in AD 71. •
Julius Sabinus, of the
Lingones, joined in the revolt of the Batavi. •
Julius Tutor, of the Treviri, joined in the rebellion of Classicus. • Julius Calenus, of the Aedui, a partisan of Vitellius, was sent to
Gaul as proof of the emperor's defeat at
Cremona in AD 69. •
Julius Priscus, appointed
Praetorian Prefect by Vitellius in AD 69, he failed to hold the passes of the Apennines, and returned to Rome in disgrace. •
Julius Placidus, tribune of a cohort in the army of
Vespasian, who dragged Vitellius from his hiding place. • Julius Burdo, commander of the Roman fleet in Germania, in AD 70. Previously suspected by the soldiers of having a hand in the death of Gaius Fonteius Capito, he was protected by Vitellius. • Sextus Julius Gabinianus, a celebrated rhetorician who taught in Gaul during the time of Vespasian, and was spoken of by
Suetonius in
De Claris Rhetoribus. • Julia Procilla, the mother of Agricola. •
Tiberius Julius Lupus, governor of
Roman Egypt from 71 to 73. • Lucius Julius Marinus, governor of
Bithynia and Pontus at some point between AD 85 and 89. • Julius Rufus, a writer of satires, contemporary with Martial. •
Sextus Julius Frontinus, twice consul in the late first century, and author of
De Aquaeductu. • Gaius Junius Silanus, consul
suffectus in AD 92. • Julius Naso, a friend of both the younger Pliny and
Tacitus, who were interested in his success as a candidate for public office. • Julius Calvaster, a military tribune who took part in the rebellion of
Lucius Antonius Saturninus, but was pardoned by
Domitian. • Julius Ferox, consul
suffectus from the Kalends of November in AD 100, and subsequently Curator of the Banks and Courses of the Tiber, and of the Cloaca Maxima. He is sometimes confused with the jurist
Urseius Ferox.
Second century at
Alcántara, built by C. Julius Lacer •
Lucius Julius Ursus, consul in AD 84, 98, and 100. •
Gaius Julius Servilius Ursus Servianus, the brother-in-law of
Hadrian, and consul in AD 107, 111, and 136. • Gaius Julius Lacer, an architect during the reign of
Trajan. His name is inscribed upon
the famous bridge over the
Tagus, which he built, and which still stands. • Gaius Julius Africanus, grandson of the orator
Julius Africanus, was consul
suffectus in AD 108. •
Gaius Julius Antiochus Epiphanes Philopappus, a prince of
Commagene, consul
suffectus in AD 109. •
Sextus Julius Major, a wealthy noble from Asia, consul
suffectus circa AD 126. •
Julius Severianus, a rhetorician in the time of Hadrian, and the author of
Syntomata, or
Praecepta Artis Rhetoricae. •
Sextus Julius Severus, governor of Britannia and Bithynia under Hadrian, was sent to
Judaea to suppress the
Bar Kokhba revolt. •
Julius Aquila, a jurist, probably of the late second century. • Lucius Julius Aquila, the author of
De Etrusca Disciplina, a work on Etruscan religion. • Julius Vestinus, a
sophist, who made an abridgement of the lexicon of
Pamphilus. •
Julius Pollux, a Greek sophist and grammarian, and a teacher of grammar and rhetoric at
Athens during the reign of
Commodus. • Julius Titianus, a scholar and writer of the late second century, and the father of the rhetorician Titianus. • Julius Titianus, a rhetorician, and tutor of the younger
Maximinus. • Julius Solon, purchased the rank of
senator under Commodus, but put to death by
Septimius Severus, at the commencement of his reign. • Julius Crispus, a distinguished tribune of the
Praetorian Guard, capriciously put to death by Septimius Severus during the
Parthian War in AD 199. • Julius Rufus, a
nobilis, slain by Septimius Severus. •
Lucius Julius Julianus, legate of the
Legio II Augusta.
Third century • Julius Frontinus, a Latin rhetorician, who gave instruction in his art to
Severus Alexander. • Julius Granianus, a rhetorician at the time of Severus Alexander, who was instructed by him in rhetoric. •
Sextus Julius Africanus, a chronographer and Christian writer of the early third century. •
Gaius Julius Solinus, a grammarian and geographer, probably of the early third century. •
Julia Aquilia Severa, a
Vestal Virgin, scandalously taken as a wife by the emperor
Elagabalus. • Gaius Julius Maximinus, equestrian governor of
Mauretania Tingitana, between AD 222 and 235. •
Gaius Julius Verus Maximinus, surnamed
Thrax, emperor from AD 235 to 238. •
Marcus Julius Philippus, also known as Philip the Arab, emperor from AD 244 to 249. •
Marcus Julius M. f. Philippus, emperor with his father from AD 247 to 249. • Gaius Julius Saturninus, a name assigned to the younger Marcus Julius Philippus by
Aurelius Victor. • Quintus Julius Gallienus, a son of the emperor
Gallienus, who probably predeceased his father. • Julius Aterianus, said to have written a history of
Victorinus, and perhaps others of the
Thirty Tyrants. •
Julius Saturninus, usurper against the emperor
Probus in AD 280.
Fourth century • Julius Capitolinus, the supposed author of nine biographies in the
Historia Augusta. •
Flavius Julius Crispus, son of the emperor
Constantine I; a distinguished soldier, he was put to death in AD 326. •
Julius Firmicus Maternus, a fourth-century
astrologer and writer on the subject of
profane religions. •
Julius Valerius Alexander Polemius, a historian who translated a Greek life of
Alexander the Great; he is likely the same Polemius who was consul in AD 338. •
Julius Obsequens, perhaps of the fourth century, an author of a tract known as
De Prodigiis, or
Prodigiorum Libellus, describing various prodigies and phenomena found in the works of earlier writers. •
Gaius Julius Victor, a rhetorician of the fourth century. •
Julius Ausonius, an eminent physician, and
praefectus of
Illyricum under the emperor
Valentinian I. •
(Julius) Ausonius, also called Decimus Magnus Ausonius, son of the physician, a celebrated poet. • Julia Dryadia, daughter of the physician Julius Ausonius. • Julius Rufinianus, a Latin rhetorician of uncertain date, and the author of a treatise called
De Figuris Sententiarum et Elocutionis. • Julius Paris, author of an epitome of
Valerius Maximus, written perhaps in the fourth or fifth century.
Fifth century and after •
Julius Valerius Majorianus, emperor from AD 457 to 461. •
Julius Nepos, emperor in AD 474 and 475. •
Julius Exsuperantius, a late Roman historian, probably of the fifth or sixth century; his tract,
De Marii, Lepidi, ac Sertorii Bellis Civilibus may have been abridged from the histories of
Sallust. • Claudius Julius or Joläus, a Greek historian of unknown date, wrote works on
Phoenicia and the
Peloponnesus. • Julius Celsus, a scholar at
Constantinople in the seventh century, who made a recension of the text of Caesar's commentaries. ==See also==