Suillii Rufi •
Publius Suillius Rufus, the half-brother of
Gnaeus Domitius Corbulo, was the
quaestor of
Germanicus, but banished by
Tiberius for accepting bribes while a
judex. Recalled by
Claudius, he became a trusted advisor to the emperor, and was
consul in AD 41; but he wasted his talents and was too easily influenced by money, and was banished again by
Nero. Suillius was a son-in-law of the poet
Ovid. • (Publius) Suillius P. f. Caesoninus, accused of complicity in the scandalous marriage of
Gaius Silius and the empress
Messalina, was spared execution on the grounds that "his part had been the reverse of masculine". •
Marcus Suillius P. f. Nerullinus, consul in AD 50, was spared punishment when his father was banished by Nero, and was
proconsul of
Asia at the beginning of the reign of
Vespasian. • Publius Suillius (P. f.) Rufus, hypothesized to be a third son of Rufus, and the brother of Caesoninus and Nerullinus, may instead be the same person as Rufus. • Suillia, daughter of the consul Nerullinus • Marcus Suillius (M. f. P. n.) Nerullinus, named on a coin from
Hierapolis in Asia, is perhaps the Nerullinus known to
Athenagoras, in which case he may have been the son of the consul Nerullinus, and governor of Asia under the
Antonines.
Others • Suillius, named in an inscription from
Vasio in
Gallia Narbonensis. • Suillius, named in a pottery inscription from
Noviomagus Batavorum in
Germania Inferior. • Marcus Suillius M. f., named in a sepulchral inscription from
Spoletium in
Umbria. • Publius Suillius P. (f?), named in an inscription from
Mediolanum in
Gallia Lugdunensis, mentioning Gaius Prastina Placatus, the
provincial governor at some point in the reign of
Antoninus Pius. • Titus Suillius Albanus, a native of
Nicaea, and veteran of twenty-five years' service, was buried at
Misenum in
Campania, in his fifties, in a tomb dating from the middle or late second century, dedicated by Antonius Quadratus, Aemilius Quadratus, and his freedwoman, Suillia Eugenia. • Publius Suillius Celer, one of the
curatores of the
tribus Suburana in AD 70. • Manius Suillius M'. f. Celsus, a
scriba at Rome, and the former master of Manius Suillius Philodamus. • Publius Suillius Cerylus, buried at
Pisae in
Etruria, aged fifty-three. • Suillia T. l. Eugenia, freedwoman of Titus Suillius Albanus, for whom she joined Antonius Quadratus and Aemilius Quadratus in dedicating a second-century tomb at Misenum. • Suillia Firmina, buried in a family sepulchre at Municipium Turcetanum in
Africa Proconsularis, aged twenty-five, along with her father-in-law, Lucius Licinius Felix Egnatianus, aged sixty-nine, and son, Lucius Licinius Victorinus Ampelianus, aged seven. • Suillius Genialis, the infant son of Rufus, buried at
Thysdrus in Africa Proconsularis, aged one year, seven months, and twelve days. • Suillia Halina, one of the daughters of Valeria Successa, the wife of Lucius Valerius Halys, buried in a first-century tomb at Rome, with a monument from her husband and children. • Publius Suillius Halo, one of the sons of Valeria Successa, the wife of Lucius Valerius Halys, buried in a first-century tomb at Rome, with a monument from her husband and children. • Manius Suillius M'. l. Philodamus, freedman of the
scriba Manius Suillius Celsus, named in an inscription from Rome. • Suillius Saturninus,
dioichetes of
Egypt in AD 194. • Suillia Secunda, buried at
Rusellae in Etruria, aged twelve, with a monument from her parents, Suillius Secundus and Nemusa, dating to the second or early third century. • Suillius Secundus, together with his wife, Nemusa, dedicated a second- or early third-century tomb at Rusellae for their daughter, Suillia Secunda. ==See also==