Salvii Othones •
Marcus Salvius Otho, grandfather of the emperor. •
Marcus Salvius Otho, moneyer and uncle of the emperor Otho. •
Lucius Salvius M. f. Otho, father of the emperor, was
consul from the kalends of July, AD 34. •
Salvia, sister of Otho and fiancé of
Drusus Caesar •
Lucius Salvius L. f. M. n. Otho Titianus, the elder brother of the emperor, was consul in AD 52. •
Marcus Salvius L. f. M. n. Otho, emperor from January 15 to April 16, AD 69. •
Lucius Salvius L. f. L. n. Otho Cocceianus, the emperor's nephew, was consul in AD 82.
Others • Salvius, praefectus sociorum in 168 BC • Salvius,
praetor urbanus in around 76/74 BC and possibly the author of the
Interdictum Salvianum • Salvius, a centurion of the and one of the murderers of
Pompey in 48 BC. • Salvius,
tribune of the plebs in 43 BC and the first man to be killed during the proscriptions by the
Second Triumvirate • Salvia Titisenia, a mistress of
Octavian. • Salvia Postuma, funded the building of an arch at
Pola in
Venetia and Histria, dating from the late first century BC. She was the husband of Lucius Sergius, and their son was Lucius Sergius Lepidus. • Publius Salvius Aper, praetorian prefect with Quintus Ostorius Scapula in 2 BC. Aper is not known to have been related to the contemporary Othones. • Salvius Carus, governor of
Crete under
Hadrian. •
Gaius Salvius Liberalis Nonius Bassus, consul
suffectus in AD 85. He was a member of the
Arval Brethren. • Gaius Salvius Vitellianus, the son of Gaius Salvius Liberalis and Vitellia Rufilla. •
Lucius Octavius Cornelius Publius Salvius Julianus Aemilianus, an eminent jurist, was consul in AD 148. • Publius Salvius L. f. Julianus, consul in AD 175. • Salvius Tuscus became a
Salian priest in AD 181; he served as
quindecimvir in 204. ==See also==