• Publius Statinius, named in a second-century plaster inscription from
Curia Raetorum in
Raetia. • Sextus Statinius Aplinis, buried at Rider in
Dalmatia, aged eighty, in a tomb dating from the first century, or the first half of the second. • Marcus Statinius Dorus, made an offering to
Luna and
Mars on behalf of Fruticia Thymele, who made a reciprocal offering to the
Magna Mater and
Ceres, recorded in two inscriptions from
Aquileia in
Venetia and Histria, dating to the last quarter of the first century, or the first quarter of the third. • Statinia M. l. Phaenusa, a freedwoman buried at Aquileia during the second century, or the latter half of the first. • Statinia Phoebe, buried at
Poetovio in
Pannonia Superior, with a monument from her husband, Gaius Caecina Florus, dating from the first half of the second century. • Statinia Prima, buried in a third-century sepulchre at Rome, aged twenty years, six months, and nineteen days, with a monument from her husband, the freedman Marcus Aurelius Primus. • Statinia Strategis, buried in a first-century tomb at Aquileia, with a monument from her son, Gaius Plenius Strato, one of the
Seviri Augustales. • Statinia Thymele, dedicated a second-century tomb at Aquileia for her husband, the freedman Lucius Acestius Saturninus, one of the Seviri Augustales. ==See also==