• Vibius Sestius Capitolinus, grandfather of Publius Sestius Capitolinus, the consul of 452 BC. • Publius Sestius V. f. Capitolinus, father of Publius, the consul of 452 BC. •
Publius Sestius P. f. V. n. Capitolinus Vaticanus,
consul in 452 BC; the following year, he was one of the
decemvirs charged with drawing up the first
ten tables of Roman law. • Publius Sestius, accused of murder by Gaius Julius Iulus, one of the decemvirs, in 451 BC; apparently a different man from the decemvir Capitolinus. • Publius Sestius,
quaestor in 414 BC. • Lucius Sestius,
tribune of the plebs, probably early in the first century BC. •
Publius Sestius L. f.,
praetor in 53 BC; he was a friend and ally of
Cicero, by whom he was defended in 56. He was with
Pompeius on the outbreak of the
Civil War, but subsequently went over to
Caesar, who sent him into
Cappadocia in 48 BC. • Lucius Sestius Pansa, made a demand resisted by
Quintus Tullius Cicero in 54 BC. • Publius Sestius P. f., to whom Cicero wrote
circa 53 BC, had been condemned for an unknown offense. • Titus Sestius Gallus, owned the land where
Publius Clodius Pulcher was slain in 52 BC. •
Lucius Sestius P. f. L. n. Albanianus Quirinalis, consul
suffectus in 23 BC. • Lucius Sestius L. l. Carres, a freedman buried in a first-century sepulchre at Rome, along with Fausta Sestia Amaryllis and Publius Caesenus Cerdo. • Fausta Sestia Ɔ. l. Amaryllis, a freedwoman buried at Rome, age 20, shares her tomb with the freedmen Lucius Sestius Carres and Publius Caesenus Cerdo. ==See also==