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Marcus Antonius, one of the most well known members of the gens.. The gens Antonia was a Roman family of great antiquity, with both patrician and plebeian branches. The first of the gens to achieve prominence was Titus Antonius Merenda, one of the second group of Decemviri called, in 450 BC, to help draft what became the Law of the Twelve Tables.
A member of the plebeian gens Antonia, Antony was born in Rome [2] on 14 January 83 BC. [3] [4] His father and namesake was Marcus Antonius Creticus, son of the noted orator Marcus Antonius who had been murdered during the purges of Gaius Marius in the winter of 87–86 BC. [5] His mother was Julia, a third cousin of Julius Caesar.
Gallia Polla, the proprietor of a first-century ousia [i] in Egypt that later passed to the imperial freedman Marcus Antonius Pallas, and after him to Lucius Septimius Severus, (an ancestor of the emperor). She may have been related to Tiberius' adoptive father. [13] [14] [15]
Lucius Antonius Albus (proconsul of Asia) Antonia (wife of Pythodoros) Antonia (kidnapped by pirates) Antonia Minor; Antonia the Elder; Antonius (herbalist) Lucius Antonius (brother of Mark Antony) Marcus Antonius Antyllus; Antonius Atticus
Iullus Antonius (43–2 BC) [1] was a Roman magnate and poet. A son of Mark Antony and Fulvia , he was spared by the emperor Augustus after the civil wars of the Republic, and was married to the emperor's niece.
Lucius Marcius Censorinus, whose father had the same name, was praetor in 43 BC and a partisan of Marcus Antonius. He was proconsul of the provinces of Macedonia and Achaea 42–40 BC. In 39 BC he was consul with Calvisius Sabinus, and one of the quindecimviri sacris faciundis in 17 BC. Gaius Marcius Censorinus was consul in 8 BC.
Marcus Cocceius Nerva, consul in 36 B.C. Marcus Cocceius (M. f.) Nerva, a friend of Tiberius, learned in the law, on which he wrote several books, now lost. He was the grandfather of the emperor Nerva. Marcus Cocceius M. f. (M. n.) Nerva, otherwise known as Nerva filius, son of the jurist, in whose footsteps he followed, and father of the emperor.
Gaius Catius, tribunus militum in the army of Marcus Antonius, in 43 BC. [1] Catius, an Epicurean philosopher, thought to have been an Insubrian Gaul; he may have been a freedman of the gens. [5] [6] [3] Catia, mentioned by the poet Horatius. [7] Catius Crispus, mentioned by the elder Seneca. [8]