Fadii Galli •
Titus Fadius Gallus,
quaestor of
Cicero during his
consulship in BC 63. He was
tribune of the plebs in 57, and endeavoured to bring about Cicero's recall from exile. Fadius himself seems to have been exiled at a later time, during which Cicero wrote his friend concerning his misfortune. •
Marcus Fadius Gallus, a close friend of Cicero and
Atticus, was one of
Caesar's supporters during the
Civil War. In 49 BC, he was one of Caesar's
legates in
Spain. •
Quintus Fadius Gallus, a brother of Marcus, with whom he was engaged in a dispute in 46 BC. Cicero, who recommended Marcus to Paetus, regarded his brother Quintus as a
homo non sapiens. •
Fadia Q. f., the daughter of Quintus Fadius Gallus, had her inheritance stolen through the fraudulent machinations of Publius Sextilius Rufus.
Others •
Gaius or Quintus Fadius, the father-in-law of
Marcus Antonius, was a very wealthy freedman. •
Fadia, the first wife of the
triumvir Mark Antony, to whom she bore several children. • Sextus Fadius, mentioned by Cicero as one of the physician Nicon's disciples. • Lucius Fadius, one of the
aediles at
Arpinum in 44 BC. • Lucius Fadius Rufinus, consul
suffectus in AD 113, he served from the Kalends of May to the Kalends of September. • Gaius Fadius Rufus, consul
suffectus in AD 145, serving from the Kalends of November to the end of the year. ==See also==