• Seppienus, a
centurion, and the commander of Lucius Voconius Proculus, a scout buried at Rome in the last part of the first century, or the early part of the second. • Publius Seppienus P. f. Aelianus, a soldier mentioned in an inscription from the present site of Botew in Bulgaria, formerly part of
Moesia Inferior, dating from AD 78. • Marcus Seppienus M. f. Aurio, a boy buried at
Salona in
Dalmatia, aged nine, with a monument from his father, Marcus Seppienus Eutychus, dating between AD 150 and 300. • Lucius Seppienus Bithus, together with his little girl, Epidia Procula, dedicated a monument at Rome to his wife, Epidia Gnome, aged twenty-four. • Marcus Seppienus Eutychus, dedicated a second- or third-century tomb at Salona to his son, Marcus Seppienus Aurio. • Seppiena Nike, dedicated a tomb at Salona to her son, Eutyches, dating between AD 150 and 300. • Seppiena Philomena, buried at Salona in a tomb built by her mother, Seppiena Restituta, and dating to the first century, or the first half of the second. • Seppiena Q. f. Polla, named in an inscription from
Brixellum in
Cisalpine Gaul. • Seppiena Prima, the wife of Gaius Caesius Pantheris, and mother of Gaius Caesius Vitulus, who donated a pot in memory of his parents at Mons Feretur, near
Callium in
Umbria. • Seppiena Restituta, a freedwoman who built a first- or second-century tomb at Salona for her daughter, Seppiena Philomena. ==See also==