Stlaccia gens


The gens Stlaccia was a minor plebeian family at ancient Rome. Hardly any members of this gens are mentioned in history, but a number are known from inscriptions. By the second century, some of the Stlaccii had reached senatorial rank.

Origin

The nomen Stlaccius is of Oscan origin.

Members

  • Gaius Stlaccius, a maker of amphorae whose workshop was along the Baetis in Hispania. Some of his pottery was found at the Baths of Diocletian, in Rome.
  • Decimus Stlaccius, named in an inscription from Delos, dating from the second century BC.
  • Marcus Stlaccius M. l, a freedman employed as a scriba at Rome about the middle of the first century BC.
  • Marcus Stlaccius M. f., sailed on one of Caesar's ships during the African War in 46 BC, and was captured, but subsequently freed.
  • Quintus Stlaccius, named in an inscription from Delos, dating from the second century BC.
  • Tertia Stlaccia, named in an inscription from Delos, dating from the second century BC.
  • Gaius Stlaccius C. l. A, a freedman at Neapolis in Campania, where he worked as a mensor sacomarius, or measurer of weights, together with Aulus Stlaccius Mario.
  • Marcus Stlaccius Albinus Trebellius Sallustius Rufus, one of the senatorial patrons of an order for the enlargement of a temple at Ostia in Latium in AD 142.
  • Lucius Stlaccius L. f. Macedo, a resident of Cyrene, mentioned in a decree of Augustus, dating to 6 or 7 BC, along with his brother, Aulus Stlaccius Maximus.
  • Aulus Stlaccius A. l. Mario, a freedman at Neapolis, where he worked as a mensor sacomarius, together with Gaius Stlaccius.
  • Aulus Stlaccius L. f. Maximus, a resident of Cyrene, mentioned in a decree of Augustus, along with his brother, Lucius Stlaccius Macedo.
  • Stlaccia Ɔ. l. Quinta, a wealthy freedwoman who dedicated a tomb at Rome for herself, her husband, and her dispensator, or steward, Salvius.