Gaius Memmius Regulus

Gaius Memmius Regulus was a Roman consul that lived in the 1st century in the Roman Empire.

Family Background & Early Life

Regulus was a member of the Plebeian gens, Memmia. He was the son of Roman Senator, consul Publius Memmius Regulus and Lollia Paulina,[1] a woman of great beauty and considerable wealth. His father was the son of an elder Publius Memmius Regulus from his unnamed wife who originally was from Roussillon of the Roman province of Gallia Narbonensis. His mother was the second daughter of the suffect consul Marcus Lollius and the noble woman Volusia Saturnina.[2] His name was an ancestral one from the gens, Memmia. His Praenomen Gaius is also inherited from his mother’s family, as the paternal grandmother of Lollia Paulina was a member of the gens, Valeria, as the Praenomen Gaius also belonged to that gens.

Regulus was born at an unknown date during the second half of the reign of the Roman emperor Tiberius. When his father served as a praefect of Achaea in 35, he and his father were honored with various statues. In 38, the Roman emperor Caligula forced his parents to divorce, so that Caligula could marry his mother for himself.[3][4][5][6]

Political career

Regulus served as an ordinary consul in 63[7] with Lucius Verginius Rufus during the reign of the Roman emperor Nero. After his consulship, Regulus in 65 served in the priesthood of the Sodales Augustales and later in the Sodales Claudialium.[8]

References

Sources

Preceded by
Publius Marius and Lucius Afinius Gallus
Consul of the Roman Empire with Lucius Verginius Rufus
63
Succeeded by
Gaius Laecanius Bassus and Marcus Licinius Crassus Frugi II
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