The gens Abronia was an obscure plebeian family at ancient Rome. The only members of this gens mentioned by Roman writers are Abronius Silo, a Latin poet during the time of Augustus, and his son, who was the author of pantomimes.[1][2] Epigraphic sources provide a few other instances of this nomen, but the readings are very uncertain, and it is possible that Abronius is merely an orthographic variation of Apronius.

Members edit

  • Abronius Silo, the Latin poet, was one of the students of the rhetorician Marcus Porcius Latro. He flourished during the later years of the emperor Augustus.[1][2]
  • Abronius Silo, son of the poet Abronius Silo, was likewise a poet, but Seneca reports that he wrote for pantomimes, which were considered a form of low culture.[1][2]
  • Abronia Quinta, named in a first-century inscription from Dume in Hispania, along with Abronius Reburrus. In both instances, the nomen is uncertain.[3]
  • Abronius Reburrus, named in a first-century inscription from Dume, along with Abronia Quinta. In both instances, the nomen is uncertain.[3]
  • Gaius Abronius Car[...], a name of uncertain reading that occurs in two inscriptions from Vitudurum in Germania Superior, dating from around the reign of Claudius.[4]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Seneca the Elder, Suasoriae, ii. p. 21 (ed. Bipontina).
  2. ^ a b c   Smith, William, ed. (1870). "Abronius Silo". Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology. Vol. 1. p. 3.
  3. ^ a b AE 1983, 582.
  4. ^ AE 2016, 1151, AE 2017, 1049.

Bibliography edit