The gens Pinnia was an obscure plebeian family at ancient Rome. Few members of this gens are mentioned in history, and few of them attained any of the higher offices of the Roman state, although a few became local governors, and at least one, Lucius Pinnius Porphyrio, held the quaestorship. Many others are known from inscriptions.
Quintus Pinnius, a friend of Marcus Terentius Varro, the antiquarian, who mentions him in Rerum Rusticarum, his treatise on agriculture.
Titus Pinnius, a friend of Cicero, who mentions him in one of his letters.
Lucius Pinnius Celer, a soldier named in an inscription from Rome, dating to AD 70.
Titus Pinnius Hilarus, made a contract with Publius Decimius Epagathus in March, AD 102.
Titus Pinnius Primigenius, together with his wife, Fannia Sabina, dedicated a tomb at Rome for their house slave, Honorata, aged six years, seven months, and twenty-seven days, with an inscription dating to the second century AD, or the latter part of the first.
Marcus Pinnius M. l. Surus, a freedman buried at Rome, in a tomb dating to the second century.
Pinnia Restuta, a freedwoman buried at Rome, in the tomb of Marcus Pinnius Surus.
Quintus Pinnius Onesimus, one of the priests at Ostia in Latium in AD 151.
Pinnius Aurelius Venerius, buried at Puteoli in Campania, aged about fifty, according to an inscription belonging to the late third or early fourth centuries AD>
Pinnii of uncertain era
Lucius Pinnius, Praefectus Augustalis, named in an inscription from Gabii in Latium.
Titus Pinnius T. Modestus, named in a funerary inscription for his freedwoman, Pinnia Primigenia.
Pinnia C. f. Natalia, daughter of Gaius Pinnius Chrysanthus, buried at Brundisium in Calabria, aged six.
Gaius C. f. Pinnius Natalis, son of Gaius Pinnius Chrysanthus, buried at Brundisium, aged six.
Lucius Pinnius Nedymus, Praefectus Augustalis, named in an inscription from Gabii.
Pinnia Plecte, sister of Titus Pinnius Cavarius, for whom she built a monument at Bouthoe.
Pinnia T. f. Poppaea, infant daughter of Titus Pinnius Corinthus and Livia Poppaea, buried at Rome, aged one year, six months, and five days.
Pinnia T. f. Poppaea, daughter of Titus Pinnius Corinthus and Livia Poppaea, buried at Rome, aged five years, two months, and twenty days.
Lucius Pinnius Porphyrio, a quaestor, named in an inscription from Gabii.
Lucius Pinnius Pri, named in an inscription from Tarvisium.
Pinnia T. l. Primigenia, the freedwoman of Titus Pinnius Modestus, buried at Rome.
Pinnius Probus, heir of Gaius Aemilius Severus, a centurion buried at Ravenna.
Pinnia L. l. Procula, the freedwoman and wife of Lucius Pinnius Valens, and mother of Lucius Pinnius Fortis, built a sepulchre at Ostia for her family.
Gaius Pinnius Provincialis, buried at Aquileia in Venetia and Histria.
Publius Pinnius Saturninus, buried at Castellum Celtianum in Numidia, aged thirty-one.
Lucius Pinnius L. l. Sopilus, a freedman, named in a dedicatory inscription from Aquileia.
Titus Pinnius T. l. Suntrophus, a freedman, who became a vestiarius, or clothier, at Rome.
Titus Pinnius Tilles, a freedman buried at Rome, together with Pinnia Joconio.
Lucius Pinnius Valens, the husband and former master of Pinnia Procula, and father of Lucius Pinnius Fortis, buried in the family sepulchre built by his wife at Ostia.
Marcus Pinnius Valens, a soldier in the praetorian guard, buried at Rome, aged forty-five, having served twenty-four years.
Lucius Pinnius Zabda, named in an inscription from Tarvisium.
Tiberius Claudius Pinnius, buried at Ostia, aged fourteen years, three months.