Anicius Probus (fl. 459) was a Roman politician.
A Christian, he is attested in an inscription dated to 30 August 459, found in Aquileia, but now lost;[1] it was the inscription on the tomb of Anicia Ulfina (emended in Iuliana by recent scholars)[2] erected by her parents Anicius Probus and Adeleta (emended in Adelfia by recent scholars, and the daughter of Valerius Adelphius Bassus).[2]
This Anicius Probus has been identified as a member of the gens Anicia; he should be the son of the consul Anicius Hermogenianus Olybrius and wife and cousin Anicia Iuliana. It is also possible that he was the Probus who, in 424, was a praetor.[2]
In the inscription, Probus is styled as vir inlustris, but his office is not given; however, since he belonged to a noble and prestigious family, he could have been a praetorian prefect or a praefectus urbi.