Arellia (gens)

The gens Arellia was a plebeian family at Rome. Although of equestrian rank, this gens does not appear to have been particularly large or important, and is known primarily from three individuals.[1]

Members

  • Arellius, a talented painter at Rome in the latter part of the first century BC, who gained notoriety for depicted goddesses with the features of his own mistresses.[2]
  • Arellius Fuscus, a rhetorician in Greek and Latin at Rome, around the beginning of the first century. He was a tutor of Ovid and Fabianus, and a rival of Marcus Porcius Latro. His son, who had the same name, was also a rhetorician.[3][4][5]
  • Quintus Arellius Fuscus, either the father or the son, bore the praenomen Quintus, but it is not certain which.[5]

See also

List of Roman gentes

References

  1. Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, vol. I, p. 275 ("Arellius"), vol. II, p. 191 ("Arellius Fuscus").
  2. Pliny the Elder, Historia Naturalis, xxxv. 37.
  3. Pliny the Elder, Historia Naturalis, xxxiii. 12. § 152.
  4. Seneca the Elder, Controversiae, x. p. 157, proëm. ii.; Suasoriae, iv. p. 29. (ed. Bipontina),
  5. Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, vol. II, p. 191 ("Arellius Fuscus").

Bibliography

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