• Quintus Tussidius Dexter, named in pottery inscriptions from
Virunum in
Noricum, dating from the first half of the first century. • Gaius Tussidius C. f. Marcianus,
aedile at
Tifernum Tiberinum in
Umbria, at some point during the early first century. • Lucius Tussidius Verus, named in a wooden inscription from
Pompeii in
Campania. • Tussidia L. l. Chloë, inurned in a first-century cinerarium from
Firmum in
Picenum. • Tusidius Primus, together with Cispia Ciprinia Calliste, dedicated a tomb at either
Matilica in Umbria or
Auximum in
Picenum, dating between the last quarter of the first century and the end of the second, for their young son, Herennius Primianus, aged three years, nine months, and twenty-seven days. • Tussidia Barbara, dedicated a tomb at Rome, dating from the first half of the second century, for her son, Julius Potentinus, a soldier in the fifth
cohort of the
praetorian guard, serving in the
century of Superus. At least part of the inscription is thought to be modern. • Lucius Tusidius L. f. Campester, probably a native of
Ricina in Picenum, was
consul suffectus in AD 142, serving from the Kalends of September to the Kalends of November. His colleague was Quintus Cornelius Senecio Annianus. He had previously been a
military tribune in the
Legio X Gemina. • Lucius Tusidius L. f. Sabinianus, a native of
Planina in Picenum, was a soldier in the seventh cohort of the praetorian guard at Rome, serving in the century of Iedarnus. He built a tomb at Rome for his colleague, Quintus Mettius Primitivus of
Cremona, dating between AD 100 and 180. • Lucius Tusidius, along with his siblings, Tusidius Speratus and Tusidia Prisca, built a second-century family sepulchre at Rome for themselves and their late brother, Tusidius Felix. • Tusidius Cyrus, dedicated a second-century monument at Ricina for his wife, Cassia. • Tusidius Felix, a young man buried at Rome, aged nineteen years, three months, in a second-century family sepulchre built by his siblings, Lucius Tusidius, Tusidius Speratus, and Tusidia Prisca. • Tusidia Prisca, along with her brothers, Lucius Tusidius and Tusidius Speratus, built a second-century family sepulchre at Rome for themselves and their late brother, Tusidius Felix. • Tussidius, a man who lived at the end of third century. He was married to Turcia Marcella, daughter of
Lucius Turcius Faesasius Apronianus,
suffect consul somewhere during the 3rd century, and sister of
Lucius Turcius Secundus, suffect consul c. 300. He probably descended from Lucius Tussidius Campester.
Undated Tussidii • Tussidia, perhaps a sister of Quintus Tussidius Primitivus, for whom she and Primitivus' wife, Crassicia Amanda, dedicated a tomb at
Beneventum in
Samnium. • Lucius Tusidius Faventinus, along with his wife, Vettia Rufina, dedicated a tomb at Ricina for their son, Tusidius Jucundus. • Sextus Tussidius Felix, buried at
Ausculum in
Apulia, aged twenty, with a monument from his parents, Tussidia Fortunata and Publius Cerrinius Felix. • Tussidia Fortunaesis, a young woman buried at the site of modern
Monte San Biagio, formerly part of Latium, aged fourteen years, three months, and twenty-four days, with a monument from her parents, Thosdeus Uxsicus and Clodia Nate. • Tussidia Fortunata, along with Publius Cerrinius Felix, dedicated a tomb at Ausculum for their son, Sextus Tussidius Felix. • Quintus Tussidius Primitivus, buried at Beneventum, aged fifty-five, with a monument from Crassicia Amanda, his wife of eight years and three months, and Tussidia, perhaps a sister. • Gaius Tussidius Verecundus, named in an inscription from
Tolosa in
Gallia Narbonensis. ==See also==