Tutinia gens


The gens Tutinia was an obscure plebeian family of imperial times at ancient Rome. No members of this gens are mentioned by Roman writers, but several are known from inscriptions.

Origin

The nomen Tutinius belongs to a class of gentilicia originally formed from cognomina ending in '. The derivative suffix ' then came to be used to form new nomina from existing gentilicia. Tutinius seems to have been formed from a nomen such as Tutius, which was probably derived either from the Latin tutus, "safe", or perhaps from the Oscan touto, a people.

Members

  • Tutinia Q. l. Auge, a freedwoman at Rome in the early first century.
  • Tiberius Tutinius Severus, one of the Arval Brethren, and magister of the college between AD 84 and 90, in the time of Domitian.
  • Tiberius Tutinius Sentius Satrinus, master of a potter's workshop at Rome dating from AD 126, in the time of Hadrian. He was certainly related to the priest Tiberius Tutinius Severus, perhaps his son.
  • Gaius Tutinius Justinus, a native of Blera in Latium, was a soldier in the fifth cohort of the praetorian guard at Rome in AD 144, serving in the century of Firmus.
  • Tutinia Charite, together with Tiberius Tutinius, built a second-century family sepulchre at Rome for themselves and Tutinius Felicissimus.
  • Tutinius Felicissimus, buried in a second-century family sepulchre at Rome, built by Tiberius Tutinius and Tutinia Charite.
  • Tiberius Tutinius, a verna, or home-born slave, together with Tutinia Charite, built a second-century family sepulchre for themselves and Tutinius Felicissimus.
  • Tutinia, the daughter of Rufus, and wife of Publius Caetronius Verecundus, one of the quattuorviri jure dicundo, who built a family sepulchre at the site of modern Lonigo, formerly part of Venetia and Histria, for himself, his wife, their sons, Publius Caetronius and Gaius Caetronius Exoratus, and their wives, Dellia Secunda and Ducellia Sabina.