-
plebeian gens ****tilia. The
plebeian Sestii known from the
later Republic may have been
descendants of freedmen, or of
Sestii who
relinquished their patrician...
- Lartii, Paccii, Veidii, and Vibii; and
perhaps also the Julii, Servii, and
Sestii.
Varro described this
praenomen as
obsolete in the 1st
century BC, implying...
- The
villa was
built on an
earlier site in
about 40-30 BC by the
local Sestii family as
shown by
brick stamps. It
propsered in the
early 1st
century AD...
-
provides instances of Vibius, a name that was also used by the
patrician Sestii,
supporting the
theory of a
common origin. Most of the ****tii
under the...
- 77 (1982), 240-245. Will, E. Lyding. "Defining the "Regna Vini" of the
Sestii," in Goldman, N.W., ed. New
Light from
Ancient Cosa:
Studies in
honor of...
- the
gentes Anicia, Curia, Octavia, Oppia, Sestia, ****tia, and Vedia. The
Sestii are the only
patrician family known to have used the name, which, like many...
- BC,
consul in 452 BC and
decemvir in 451 BC. He was a
member of the Gens
Sestii. He was the son of
Quintus and his
complete name is
Publius Sestius Q.f...
- and
appears at Rome from a very
early period,
being used by the
patrician Sestii, and
occasionally by
members of
several prominent plebeian families. The...
-
Publius Sestius (died
after 35 BC)[citation needed] was a
Roman politician and
governor in the 1st century BC. He
first appears as
quaestor for the consul...
-
Lucius Sestius Albani****
Quirinalis (fl. 43–23 BC) was an
aristocrat of the late
Roman Republic.
Although having Republican tendencies,
Augustus appointed...