Tuticana gens
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The gens Tuticana, sometimes written Tuticania, was an obscure plebeian family at ancient Rome. Only a few members of this gens are mentioned in history, but a number are known from inscriptions.
Praenomina
Members
- This list includes abbreviated praenomina. For an explanation of this practice, see filiation.
- Flavius Tuticanus Gallus,[i] an eques in Caesar's army, who was slain at Dyrrhachium in 48 BC. His father was a senator.[3]
- Tuticanus (Gallus), a senator, and the father of Flavius Tuticanus Gallus, an eques in Caesar's army who was slain at Dyrrhachium in 48 BC.[4]
- Tuticanus, a friend of Ovid, who translated some or all of the Odyssey into Latin verse.[5][6][7][8]
- Quintus Tuticanus Q. f. Eros, a Latin grammarian honored with a tomb built by the decurions of Verona in Venetia and Histria, dating between the reigns of Claudius and Vespasian. Quintus Tuticanus Felicianus is named in the same inscription.[9]
- Quintus Tuticanus Felicianus, named in the middle first-century sepulchral inscription of the grammarian Quintus Tuticanus Eros at Verona.[9]
- Gaius Tuticanus Saturninus, named in a series of dedicatory inscriptions from Porolissum in Dacia, Banasa in Mauretania Tingitana, and various other places, dating from AD 97 to 112.[10][11][12]
- Gaius Tuticanus Helius, named in a military diploma from Brigetio in Pannonia Superior and several others, dating between AD 99 and 110.[13][12]
- Gaius Tuticanus Crescens, named in a dedicatory inscription from an unknown province, dating from AD 115.[14]
- Gaius Tuticanus Sophronius, dedicated a tomb at Rome, dating between the middle of the first century and the end of the second, for his young son, also named Gaius Tuticanus Sophronius.[15]
- Gaius Tuticanus C. f. Sophronius, a little boy buried at Rome, aged three years, nine months, and fifteen days, in a tomb dedicated by his father, also named Gaius Tuticanus Sophronius, dating between the middle of the first century and the end of the second.[15]
- Tuticanius Capito, a prefect in the praetorian guard, mentioned in an inscription from Sirmium in Pannonia Inferior, and several others, dating from AD 152 to 160.[16][17][18][19]
- Tuticania Antiochis, dedicated a second- or third-century tomb at Rome for her husband, Hyginus.[20]
- Publius Tuticanus Hermes, a beneficarius, a type of soldier assigned special duties, serving in the praetorian guard at Rome in AD 203.[21]
- Titus Tuticanius Incitatus, along with his son, Tuticanius Valerius, dedicated a tomb at Rome, dating from the first half of the third century, for his wife, Aristobula, aged twenty-seven.[22]
- (Titus) Tuticanius T. f. Valerius, along with his father, Titus Tuticanus Incitatus, dedicated a tomb at Rome, dating from the first half of the third century, for his mother, Aristobula.[22]
- Tuticania Veneria,[ii] buried at Rome on the fourth day before the Ides of September[iii] in an uncertain year during the middle portion of the fourth century, aged forty-four years, one day, in a tomb dedicated by Primus, perhaps her husband.[23]
Undated Tuticani
- Gaius Tuticanus Callistus, along with his son, Gaius Tuticanus Maximus, built a tomb at Rome for his wife, Valeria Saturnina.[24]
- Gaius Tuticanus C. f. Maximus, along with his father, Gaius Tuticanus Callistus, built a tomb at Rome for his mother, Valeria Saturnina.[24]
- Tuticana Sophe, buried at Rome in a tomb dedicated by her father-in-law, Valerius Marinus.[25]