- from
surnames ending in -****,
typically derived from
place names. The
Afranii may have been of
Picentine origin.
Lucius Afranius, who held the consulship...
- ****tus
Afranius Burrus (born AD 1 in Vasio,
Gallia Narbonensis; died AD 62) was a
prefect of the
Praetorian Guard and was,
together with
Seneca the Younger...
-
Publius Afranius Potitus was a
Roman plebeian who
vowed during an
illness of
Caligula to
sacrifice his own life if the
emperor recovered,
expecting to...
-
Afranius Syagrius (fl. 345–382) was a
Roman politician and administrator.
Afranius was a
member of the
Roman aristocratic family of the Syagrii, which...
-
Lucius Afranius (died 46 BC) was an
ancient Roman plebeian and a
client of
Pompey the Great. He
served Pompey as a
legate during his
Iberian campaigns...
-
Gnaeus Afranius Dexter (died June 24, AD 105) was a
Roman Senator who was
murdered by one of his slaves. He was a
suffect consul as the
colleague of Gaius...
-
Lucius Afranius was an
ancient Roman comic poet who
lived at the
beginning of the 1st
century BC. Afranius'
comedies described Roman scenes and manners...
-
Titus Afranius, Afrenius, or Lafrenius, who was not a Roman, was one of the
leaders of the
Italian confederates in the
Social war in 90 BC. At
Mount Falerinus...
-
Afranius Hannibali**** (fl. 3rd century) was the
consul of 292 AD, a
praetorian prefect, a
senator and a
military officer and commander.
Believed to belong...
- Gaia
Afrania (fl. 1st
century BC) was the wife of the
senator Licinius Buccio.
Afrania was born into an old
plebeian family, the gens Afrania. She lived...