• Sollia, the wife and heir of Sollius, for whom she dedicated a monument at the present site of
Anglefort, formerly part of
Gallia Lugdunensis. • Sollia, buried at
Flavia Solva in
Noricum, aged twenty-one, with a monument from her husband, dating to the second century, or the last part of the first. • Sollius, a potter known by a maker's mark on pottery from
Pons Aelius in
Britannia. • Sollius, the son of Matinus, was buried at the site of modern Anglefort, with a monument from his wife, Sollia. • Lucius Sollius, made an offering to
Epona at
Augusta Raurica in
Germania Superior, during the late second or early third century. • Marcus Sollius, named in an inscription from
Pinna in
Sabinum, dating to the reign of
Caligula. • Sollia Abdugissa, buried at
Augusta Treverorum, along with her husband, Marcus Jovincatius Sumaro. • Sollia Annia, along with her son, Marinius Claudianus, dedicated a late second- or early third-century monument at
Vienna in
Gallia Narbonensis to her husband, Lucius Marinius Italicensis. • Marcus Sollius Atticus, dedicated a second-century monument at
Castrum Truentinum in
Picenum to his brother, whose name has not been preserved, but who had a distinguished career in public service, as
legate of the
Legio VII Gemina,
praefectus aerarii militaris, and
consul. • Lucius Sollius Calendio, buried at
Dea Augusta Vocontiorum in Gallia Narbonensis, with a monument from his wife, Sollia Sabina. • Sollius Decuminius, made an offering to
Jupiter Optimus Maximus and
Juno Regina at
Nida in Germania Superior, during the latter half of the second century, or the first half of the third. • Sollia Sex. f. Demostheniana, together with her mother, Theodotia Basilissa, and brother, Sollius Olympiodorus, dedicated a second-century monument at Vienna to her father, Sextus Sollius Demosthenianus. • Sextus Sollius Demosthenianus, apparently a freedman, buried at Vienna in Gallia Narbonensis during the second century, with a monument dedicated by his wife, Theodotia Basilissa, and his children, Sollia Demostheniana and Sollius Olympiodorus. • Marcus Sollius Epaphroditus, dedicated a monument at
Lugdunum in Gallia Lugdunensis to his friend, Marcus Jucundius Primus Vocontius. • Sollia Fida, buried in a second-century tomb at Vienna, with a monument from her husband, Titus Cafatius Cosmus, one of the
Seviri Augustales. • Sollia Fortunata, the wife of Gaius Julius Sabinus, with whom she dedicated a second-century monument at Pinna to their son, Gaius Julius Sabinianus, a young physician, aged seventeen years, ten months, and fourteen days. • Sollius Gallicanus, a soldier and
optio custodiarum in the
Legio I Adiutrix, serving in the century of Valerius Fronto, at
Mogontiacum, between AD 70 and 86. • Marcus Sollius Zurae f. Gracilis Scordiscus, a native of
Pannonia, recognized in a military diploma dating from AD 139. • Marcus Sollius Marcellus, buried at
Gratianopolis in Gallia Narbonensis, leaving Gaius Sollius Verus as his heir. • Gaius Sollius C. f. Marculus, a
librarius, or copyist, buried at Gratianopolis, aged twenty-six, with a monument dating to the latter half of the third century, dedicated by his father, Gaius Sollius Marcus, sisters, Attia Marciana and Marcula, and wife, Attia Aurelia. • Gaius Sollius Marcus, along with his daughters, Attia Marciana and Marcula, and daughter-in-law, Attia Aurelia, dedicated a monument at Gratianopolis to his son, Gaius Sollius Marculus, dating to the latter half of the third century. • Quintus Sollius Primus, buried at
Scupi in
Moesia Superior, aged twenty-three, during the latter half of the second century, or the first half of the third, with a monument from his grandfather, Quintus Sollius Surus. • Sollia Sabina, dedicated a tomb at Dea Augusta Vocontiorum for her husband, Lucius Sollius Calendio. • Lucius Sollius L. f. Secundio, a native of
Ticinum in
Cisalpine Gaul, dedicated a sepulchre at
Verona in
Venetia and Histria for himself and his wife, Pailonia Maxima. • Sollius C. f. Siro, along with his father, Gaius Sollius Surus, made a second- or third-century offering to Jupiter Optimus Maximus at Carnuntum. • Lucius Sollius Ursio, dedicated a monument at Rome for his wife, Claudia Primitiva, aged thirty-seven. • Gaius Sollius Verus, the heir of Marcus Sollius Marcellus, for whom he dedicated a monument at Gratianopolis. ==See also==