• Aulus Latinius Velsial natus, from an Etruscan cinerary urn, dating to the third century BC. • Latinius Pandusa,
propraetor of
Moesia during the reign of
Tiberius, was sent to
Thrace to secure the release of
Cotys, the Thracian king, from his uncle,
Rhescuporis, in AD 19. He died in Moesia later that year. • Latinius Latiaris, a disciple of
Sejanus, was
praetor in an uncertain year during the reign of Tiberius. He
denounced Titius Sabinus, an
eques who had been a friend of
Germanicus, and who was put to death through Latinius' conniving. He was condemned and executed after the fall of Sejanus. • Lucius Latinius L. f. Macer,
centurion primi pili and
praefectus castrorum of the
Legio IX Hispana in the early second century AD. He dedicated an altar to
Apollo at
Aquae Grani. •
Marcus Cassianius Latinius Postumus, a usurper, whose dominion over Gaul, Spain, Britain, and Germania from AD 260 to 269 is widely known as the
Gallic Empire. •
Latinius Pacatus Drepanius, a
panegyrist of the late fourth century AD. ==See also==