Milonia gens

Ancient Roman family

The gens Milonia was an obscure plebeian family at ancient Rome. The first member of this gens mentioned in history was Gaius Milonius, a Roman senator, and one of Cinna's allies. The empress Milonia Caesonia was presumably descended from this family. A few Milonii are known from inscriptions.

Members

This list includes abbreviated praenomina. For an explanation of this practice, see filiation.
  • Gaius Milonius, a senator, and one of the allies of the consul Cinna, when the latter was expelled from Rome by his colleague, Gnaeus Octavius, in 87 BC. Milonius was probably one of the tribunes of the plebs that year. Cinna, Marius, and Milonius returned with an army, but Milonius was slain in the fighting at the Janiculum.[1][2][3][4]
  • Milonius, a person mentioned in one of Horace's Satires as dancing and joking in a state of drunken revelry.[5]
  • Milonia Apollonia, the wife of Ollius Nicadas, who built a family sepulchre at Rome, dating to the first half of the first century.[6]
  • Milonia Caesonia, the fourth and last wife of Caligula, was killed along with their daughter Julia Drusilla following the emperor's assassination in AD 41.[7][8][9][10]
  • Milonia M. f. Secunda, a woman buried at Thibilis in Numidia, aged 35.[11]
  • Marcus Milonius Verus Junianus, commander of the ala Gallorum et Thraecorum Antiana, one of the auxilia stationed in Moesia Inferior in AD 54.[12]

See also

References

  1. ^ Livy, Perochiae, 79.
  2. ^ Granius Licinianus, 23, 25.
  3. ^ Appian, Bellum Civile, i. 295.
  4. ^ Broughton, vol. II, pp. 46, 50 (and notes 2, 3, 9).
  5. ^ Horace, Satirae, ii. 1, 24 ff.
  6. ^ CIL VI, 22933.
  7. ^ Suetonius, "The Life of Caligula", 25, 33, 38, 59.
  8. ^ Cassius Dio, lix. 23, 28, 29.
  9. ^ Josephus, Antiquitates Judaïcae, xix. 2. § 4.
  10. ^ Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, vol. I, p. 558 ("Caesonia").
  11. ^ CIL VIII, 5618.
  12. ^ CIL XVI, 3.

Bibliography