• Umbonia, mentioned in an inscription from
Lilybaeum in
Sicily, dating from the latter half of the third century BC. • Lucius Umbonius, mentioned in an inscription from Lilybaeum, dating from the latter half of the third century BC. • Umbonia C. l. Zosima, a freedwoman named in an inscription from Rome, dating from the early or mid-first century. • Umbonius Silo, governor of
Hispania Baetica in AD 44, during the reign of
Claudius, was expelled from the
Roman Senate, ostensibly for failing to provide adequate grain to the soldiers in
Mauretania, but in fact because he had offended some freedmen. • Lucius Umbonius Varus, named in an inscription from
Ostia in
Latium, dating from the early third century. • Umbonius Mannachius, a senator honored at
Aeclanum in
Samnium during the latter half of the fourth century.
Undated Umbonii • Umbonius Fuscus, named in an inscription from
Carthage in
Africa Proconsularis. • Umbonius Juvas, a man of senatorial rank at
Cirta in
Numidia. • Gaius Umbonius Saturninus, dedicated a tomb at
Lambaesis in Numidia to his mother, Tiberia Catula, aged eighty-five. • Umbonia Secundula, buried at Carthage, aged twenty-eight years, seven months, along with her son, Aurelius Felix, aged four years, two months, and ten days, in a tomb built by her husband, also named Felix. • Gaius Umbonius Tauriscus, dedicated a tomb at Rome to his wife, Numitoria, the freedwoman of Hilarus. ==See also==