Plautia (gens)
The gens Plautia, sometimes written Plotia, was a plebeian family at ancient Rome. Members of this gens first appear in history in the middle of the fourth century BC, when Gaius Plautius Proculus obtained the consulship soon after that magistracy was opened to the plebeian order by the lex Licinia Sextia. Little is heard of the Plautii from the period of the Samnite Wars down to the late second century BC, but from then to imperial times they regularly held the consulship and other offices of importance. In the first century AD, the emperor Claudius, whose first wife was a member of this family, granted patrician status to one branch of the Plautii.
Origin
The Plautii of the later Republic claimed descent from Leucon, the son of Neptune and Themisto, the daughter of Hypseus, King of the Lapiths. The coins minted by Publius Plautius Hypsaeus depict Neptune and Leucon.The nomen Plautius is derived from the common Latin surname Plautus, flat-footed. Chase classifies the name among those gentilicia that were either native to Rome, or which occurred there and cannot be shown to have originated anywhere else. However, other scholars have suggested that they may have come from Privernum, a city of southern Latium. Several of the early Plautii appearing in the Fasti consulares carried on war against the Privernates.
Praenomina
The earlier Plautii mainly used the praenomina Lucius and Gaius, and occasionally Publius and Marcus. The later Plautii employed different names; the Laterani seem to have used only Aulus and Quintus, while the Silvani used Marcus and Tiberius.Branches and cognomina
The only distinct family of the Plautii during the middle Republic bore the surname Venno or Venox, a hunter. Frontinus describes a story, in which Gaius Plautius, censor in 312 BC, obtained the surname Venox by discovering the springs that fed the Aqua Appia, Rome's first aqueduct. However, Venno occurs before this, and appears more often in the fasti. The first of this family to obtain the consulship bore the additional surname Hypsaeus, later spelled Ypsaeus on coins, which was evidently a personal cognomen, as it does not appear again for over a century, when this name replaces the older Venno.Proculus, which occurs as the surname of the first Plautius to obtain the consulship, also seems to have been a personal surname; it is not apparent whether this Plautius was part of the same family as the Vennones. Proculus was an old praenomen, which the Roman antiquarians supposed to have been given to a child born when his father was far from home, although morphologically it seems to be a diminutive of Proca, a name occurring in Roman mythology as one of the Kings of Alba Longa.
Two families of Plautii were entangled in the affairs of the imperial family during the first century. The earlier of these, which first appears in the later years of the Republic, and flourished until the time of Nero, bore the surname Lateranus, at least in its later generations; this surname was probably inherited through a female line, and did not apply to the earlier members. This was the family of Aulus Plautius, the first Roman governor of Britain. The other family bore the cognomen Silvanus, originally referring to one who dwells in the forest. The imperial Plautii of the late second century may have been descended from one of these families through marriage, but were apparently descended from the Titii in the male line, and used Plautius because of its greater dignity.
Many of the Plautii bore no surname; these seem to have used the alternative spelling, Plotius, more than the others.
Members
- Publius Plautius, the grandfather of Gaius Plautius Proculus, consul in 357 BC.
- Publius P. f. Plautius, the father of Gaius Plautius Proculus.
- Gaius Plautius P. f. P. n. Proculus, consul in 358 BC, defeated the Hernici, and was honoured with a triumph. In 356, he was magister equitum to Gaius Marcius Rutilus, the first plebeian dictator.
- Gaius Plautius P. f. P. n. Decianus, consul in 329 BC, undertook the war with Privernum, and captured the city, for which he received a triumph. He was censor in 312, with Appius Claudius Caecus. At the expiration of the traditional term of eighteen months, Decianus resigned his office, but Claudius refused to do the same, remaining in office as sole censor for the ancient term of five years.
Plautii Vennones et Hypsaei
- Lucius Plautius Venno, the grandfather of Gaius Plautius Venno Hypsaeus, consul in 347 and 341 BC.
- Lucius Plautius L. f. Venno, the father of Gaius Plautius Venno Hypsaeus.
- Gaius Plautius L. f. L. n. Venno Hypsaeus, consul in 347 BC, and again in 341. In the latter year he defeated the Privernates, and forced a withdrawal of the Volsci, whose land he plundered.
- Lucius Plautius L. f. L. n. Venno, consul in 330 BC, fought against the Privernates and the Fundani.
- Lucius Plautius L. f. L. n. Venno, consul in 318 BC, received the hostages sent by Teate and Canusium, two towns in Apulia.
- Gaius Plautius C. f. C. n. Venox, censor in 312, with Appius Claudius Caecus. At the expiration of the traditional term of eighteen months, Plautius resigned his office, but Claudius refused to do the same, remaining in office as sole censor for the ancient term of five years.
- Lucius Plautius Hypsaeus, praetor in 189 BC, obtained the province of Hispania Citerior.
- Lucius Plautius Hypsaeus, triumvir monetalis between 194 and 190 BC, probably the son of Lucius Plautius Hypsaeus, praetor in 189 BC.
- Gaius Plautius Hypsaeus, praetor in 146 BC, was assigned the province of Hispania Ulterior. He was severely defeated twice by Viriathus, and forced into exile after returning to Rome.
- Lucius Plautius Hypsaeus, praetor in Sicily during the First Servile War, was defeated by the slaves. Broughton tentatively places his praetorship in 139 BC.
- Marcus Plautius Hypsaeus, consul in 125 BC, was appointed to redistribute portions of the ager publicus that had been illegally occupied. Cicero criticizes Plautius' understanding of the law.
- Gaius Plautius C. f. Hypsaeus, triumvir monetalis in 121 BC. His coins bear the inscription Pluti, the only instance of this spelling.
- Marcus Plautius Hypsaeus, praetor or propraetor in Asia in an uncertain year before 90 BC, and perhaps a legate under Sulla. He might be the same Plautius who took his own life on returning from Asia, only to learn of the death of his wife, Orestilla.
- Publius Plautius Hypsaeus, an ally of Gnaeus Pompeius, under whom he had served as quaestor. He was a candidate for the consulship in 54 BC, but at the trial of Titus Annius Milo, Hypsaeus' slaves confessed under torture that he had committed bribery in order to win election, and he was banished.
Plautii Laterani
- Quintus Plautius A. f., a senator and ambassador in Crete in 113 BC. He very likely belonged to the Laterani as his praenomen and that of his father, Aulus, are only found among them.
- Aulus Plautius, tribune of the plebs in 70 BC, and legate in Sicily and the Adriatic Sea under Pompey in 67. The cognomen Varus found in Appian is probably a mistake. He might have been the same as Aulus Plautius, tribune of the plebs in 56 BC, or his father.
- Aulus Plautius, tribune of the plebs in 56 BC, curule aedile in 55, praetor urbanus in 51, and subsequently propraetor of Bithynia and Pontus. He was a friend of Cicero and supported Pompey. He also minted coins during his aedileship.
- Aulus Plautius A. f., consul suffectus in 1 BC.
- Plautia A. f. A. n., married Publius Petronius.
- Aulus Plautius A. f. A. n., consul suffectus from the Kalends of July in AD 29, was subsequently sent by Claudius to invade Britain, and conquered the southern part of the island, becoming its first governor. He was granted an ovation on his return in 47, and shown great favour by the emperor.
- Quintus Plautius A. f. A. n., consul in AD 36.
- Plautius Lateranus, one of the paramours of the empress Messalina, he was pardoned by Claudius out of respect for his famous uncle. Consul elect for AD 66, he participated in the conspiracy of Piso, and was put to death, bravely refusing to reveal the names of his fellow conspirators.
- Plautia Laterana, wife of Publius Quinctilius Varus the Younger.
- Aulus Plautius, a young man put to death by Nero.
Plautii Silvani
- Marcus Plautius A. f. Silvanus, tribune of the plebs in 89 BC, he passed the Lex Plautia Papiria, which granted Roman citizenship to all the allies, therefore ending the Social War.
- Marcus Plautius M. f. A. n. Silvanus, consul in 2 BC.
- Publius Plautius M. f. M. n. Pulcher, quaestor in 31 BC, he was the second son of Marcus Plautius Silvanus.
- Aulus Plautius Urgulanius, died at the age of 9.
- Marcus Plautius M. f. Silvanus, praetor in AD 24, was condemned to death for having murdered his second wife, Apronia. His first wife, Fabia Numantina, was charged with having caused his insanity through the use of witchcraft, but was acquitted.
- Plautia M. f. Urgulanilla, the first wife of Claudius.
- Tiberius Plautius Silvanus Aelianus, consul suffectus from the Kalends of March to the Kalends of July in AD 45. In 74, he was chosen consul for the second time, replacing Vespasian on the Ides of January, and serving with Titus until the Ides of May.
- Lucius Aelius Lamia Plautius Aelianus, consul suffectus in AD 80, replacing Domitian on the Ides of January, and serving until the Kalends of March.
Others
- Publius Plautius Rufus
- Novius Plautius, a skilled metalworker, who probably lived about the middle of the third century BC. Many of his caskets have been found at Praeneste.
- Plautius, a comic poet. According to Varro, he was frequently confused with Plautus, to whom his comedies were mistakenly attributed.
- Lucius Plotius Gallus, came to Rome from Cisalpine Gaul circa 88 BC, to establish the first school for Latin and rhetoric. He was very influential on the development of Roman rhetoric, and authored arguments for some of the leading advocates of his day. He was highly regarded by the young Cicero.
- Marcus Plotius, one of Caesar's envoys to the proconsul Lucius Cornelius Lentulus Crus in 48 BC, who urged him to leave Pompeius, but to no effect.
- Lucius Plautius Plancus, born Gaius Munatius Plancus, but adopted by one of the Plautii. He was the brother of Lucius Munatius Plancus, consul in 42, Titus Munatius Plancus Bursa, a partisan of Marcus Antonius, and Gnaeus Munatius Plancus, praetor in 43. Plautius was proscribed by the triumvirs, and gave himself up to preserve the lives of his slaves, who were being tortured to reveal his hiding place.
- Plotius Numida, fought in the Cantabrian Wars. His safe return to Italy was celebrated by his friend, the poet Horace, in one of his odes.
- Gaius Plautius Rufus, one of the triumviri monetalis during the time of Augustus. He may be the same person as the conspirator.
- Plotius Tucca, a friend of the poets Horace and Virgil. Virgil named him one of his heirs, to whom he gave his unfinished writings, including the manuscript of the Aeneid.
- Plautius Rufus, one of those who conspired against Augustus. He may be the same as Gaius Plotius Rufus.
- Plotius Firmus, one of Otho's allies, who rose from humble beginnings to become praetorian prefect. He successfully quelled a mutiny through a combination of personal charisma and bribery, and encouraged the emperor to be brave and trust in his army.
- Plotius Griphus, one of Vespasian's supporters, appointed praetor in AD 70.
- Plautius, a notable jurist, who must have lived about the time of Vespasian.
- Plautius Quintillus, consul in AD 159, married Ceionia Fabia, the sister of Lucius Verus.
- Lucius Titius Plautius Aquilinus, consul in AD 162.
- Marcus Peducaeus Plautius Quintillus, consul in AD 177, with his brother-in-law, Commodus. He was an augur, and one of Commodus' trusted advisors, but escaped the wrath of his successors until 205, when Septimius Severus ordered his death.
- Plautius M. f. Quintillus, son of Marcus Peducaeus Plautius Quintillus, and nephew of Commodus.
- Plautilla Servilia, daughter of Quintillus, and niece of Commodus.
- Marius Plotius Sacerdos, a late Latin grammarian, probably belonging to the fifth or sixth centuries, and the author of De Metris Liber, originally the third part of a treatise on grammar.
Footnotes