Nonianus was descended from
Gaius Servilius Geminus, the
praetor who had renounced his
Patrician status. His father was
Marcus Servilius, consul in AD 3 and his mother the daughter of the
Nonius whom
Mark Antony proscribed over the possession of a gem. He was
proconsular governor of
Africa in 46–47.
Pliny the Elder recounts several anecdotes concerning Nonianus. One was that he was terribly worried about losing his sight and to prevent this, Nonianus wore a lucky charm around his neck consisting of the two
Greek letters alpha and
rho. Pliny reports that the charm worked. Another anecdote was that his daughter was cured of an illness with goats' milk, as advised by the family doctor
Servilius Democrates. The poet
Persius revered Nonianus like a father, according to the historian
Ronald Syme. Nonianus married
Considia; their daughter Servilia Considia married the senator
Quintus Marcius Barea Soranus. This marriage and the admiration Persius had for him, led Syme to suspect Nonianus was part of the
Stoic circle of the
Principate. Tacitus dates the death of Servilius Nonianus to 59, contrasting his elegant life to another senator who died that year,
Domitius Afer, who possessed the same genius yet was a provincial. == Historical work ==