- The city of Serdica,
modern day Sofia, was
renamed as
Ulpia Serdica. The
Ulpii were from Umbria.
Little is
known of them
except that they were connected...
- from
Italy in the
following centuries.
Among the
Italic settlers were the
Ulpii and the Traii, who were
either part of the
original colonists or arrived...
-
settlement for
wounded and
invalid veterans of the wars
against Carthage. The
Ulpii, like the
Aelii and the Traii, were
among the
leading Roman families of...
-
which is
usually also
thought to be
Umbrian and that
became related to the
Ulpii, were the
original paternal family of
Trajan and a
relevant local indigenous...
-
Dionysian subjects and one with the
names of the house's
owners (Arippii and
Ulpii Vibii).
These mosaics are now on show in the seminary. Coarelli, Filippo...
- Laelian. He
shares the same
nomen as a
prominent Hispano-Roman family, the
Ulpii, that
included Trajan among its members, and may have been a relative. This...
-
Ulpius Limenius (died 8
April AD 349) was a
Roman politician who was
appointed consul in AD 349.
Presumably a
member of the
Nobiles and a
member of the...
-
Ulpius Marcellus (fl. 211–212) was
formerly thought to be the latest-recorded
governor of Britannia,
before it was
divided into
separate provinces. He...
-
Ulpia Severina was
Roman empress as the wife of
Roman emperor Aurelian from c. 270 to 275.
Severina is
unmentioned in
surviving literary sources and known...
-
Marcus Ulpius Leurus was a
Roman senator, who was
active during the
reign of
Septimius Severus and Caracalla. He was
suffect consul in some undetermined...