• Subria L. l. [...]da, a freedwoman named in a late first-century sepulchral inscription from
Carthago Nova in
Hispania Citerior, along with the
Sevir Augustalis Lucius Subrius La[...]. • Subrius Apollinaris, leader of a
cohort in an uncertain
legion, who made a second- or third-century offering to
Jupiter Optimus Maximus in
Britannia. • Sextus Subrius Dexter,
tribune of a cohort in the
Praetorian Guard in AD 69, went into the Guard's camp with his fellow tribunes, Cetrius Severus and Pompeius Longinus, to determine whether they would be loyal to
Galba or intended to mutiny. In 74, he was governor of
Sardinia. He may have been the brother of Subrius Flavus, and perhaps is the same Sextus Subrius Dexter mentioned in an inscription from
Patavium, dating to the first half of the second century. • Lucius Subrius Felix, buried at
Ostia in
Latium, aged thirty-six, in a third-century tomb dedicated by his wife, Laelia Quinta. •
Subrius Flavus or Flavius, tribune of a cohort in the Praetorian Guard during the reign of
Nero, was an active member of the
Pisonian conspiracy, and proposed to slay the emperor with his own hand. When he was betrayed by one of his co-conspirators, he denied the charges at first, then took responsibility, and went to his death proudly. It was rumoured that he had planned to kill
Piso as well, and offer the empire to the philosopher
Seneca. • Titus Subrius Hyginus, dedicated a tomb at
Nemausus in
Gallia Narbonensis for his wife, Epidia Hedone, the freedwoman of Peculiaris. • Lucius Subrius La[...], one of the
Seviri Augustales of
Arelate in Gallia Narbonensis, named in a late first-century sepulchral inscription from Carthago Nova, along with a freedwoman named Subria. • Gaius Subrius Severianus, dedicated a third-century tomb at Cemenelum in Alpes Maritimae to his brother, the flamen Gaius Subrius Secundinus. ==See also==