Laelia gens


The gens Laelia was a plebeian family at Rome. The first of the gens to obtain the consulship was Gaius Laelius in 190 BC.

Branches and cognomina

The only family name of the Laelii was Balbus, a common cognomen, referring to one who stammers. A few of the Laelii used personal surnames, such as Sapiens, by which the Laelius who was a friend of the younger Scipio Africanus was sometimes known.

Members

Early Laelii

Laelii Balbi

Others

  • Decimus Laelius, mentioned in the Gracchan period, perhaps an ancestor of the Laelii Balbi.
  • Lucius Laelius, mentioned in an inscription dating from about 88 BC.
  • Publius Laelius L. f, mentioned in an inscription dating from about 88 BC.
  • Lucius Laelius, mentioned in an inscription from Pergamum, dating from the late Republic.
  • Lucius Laelius L. f., mentioned in an inscription from Pergamum, dating from the late Republic.
  • Laelia, wife of Gaius Vibius Marsus.
  • Laelius Felix, a jurist in the time of Hadrian.
  • Lucius Laelius Fuscus, a second-century soldier.
  • Laelius Bassus, a proconsul or legate under Septimius Severus.
  • Marcus Laelius Maximus Aemilianus, consul in 227 AD.