Sabinus
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sabinus (Latin, Sabine, ie from the Sabine region - feminine form Sabina), can refer to:
- Sabinus (mythology), the fabled ancestor of the Sabines, an ancient people that lived in Latium, Italy before the founding of Rome.
- Quintus Titurius Sabinus, a Roman commander killed at the start of the Belgic revolt in 54 BC
- Sabinus (Ovid), friend of Ovid
- Publius Sabinus, appointed praetorian prefect by Vitellius on his accession, despite then only being a praefectus cohortis. (Tac. Hist. ii. 92, iii. 36.)
- Titus Flavius Sabinus, name of four major figures
- Cornelius Sabinus, conspirator against Caligula
- Saint Sabinus (d. 304), martyr
- Sabinus, 3rd century bishop of Seville who buried the bodies of Justa and Rufina
- Sabinus of Hermopolis, a Christian martyr of Egypt
- Sabinus (4th century), 4th century historian
- Sabinus (6th century), bishop of Canosa
- Saint Sabinus, bishop of Catania (760)
- Sabinus (15th century), a 15th-century historian
- Sabinus, Roman jurist
[edit] See also
- List of Sabini, for a more detailed list
[edit] Source
This article incorporates text from the public domain Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities by William Smith (1870).