The Gallii do not appear to have been divided into distinct families, and none of those known during the late Republic bore any surnames.
Members
This list includes abbreviated praenomina. For an explanation of this practice, see filiation.
Quintus Gallius, praetorurbanus in 63 BC, had been accused of ambitus by Marcus Calidius the previous year, and was successfully defended by Cicero. As praetor he presided over the trial of Gaius Cornelius, one of Catiline's conspirators.[2][3][4][5]
Marcus Gallius, the adoptive father of Axianus, and possibly a brother of Quintus Gallius, the praetor urbanus.[6]
Marcus Gallius M. f. Axianus, adopted from the Axia gens.[7]
Marcus Gallius Q. f., praetor in an uncertain year, and a supporter of Marcus Antonius. He adopted the future emperor Tiberius in his youth, and left him a considerable legacy.[8][9]
Quintus Gallius Q. f., officer under the proconsul Quintus Marcius Philippus in 47–46 BC. Praetor in 43 BC, he was arrested and put to death by Octavian on the apparently false suspicion of intending to murder him, although Octavian later claimed that Gallius had merely been commended into the care of his brother, and disappeared.[10][11][12]
Gallia Polla, the proprietor of a first-century ousia[i] in Egypt that later passed to the imperial freedman Marcus Antonius Pallas, and after him to Lucius Septimius Severus, (an ancestor of the emperor). She may have been related to Tiberius' adoptive father.[13][14][15]
Gaius Gallius, a person mentioned by Valerius Maximus as having been scourged to death by Sempronius Musca, who caught him in the act of adultery.[16]
Gaius Gallius C. f. Lupercus, minted copper sestertii in 15 BC.[17]
Gallia C. f. Tertulla, named in an inscription found at Ravenna, dating to the reigns of Augustus or Tiberius.[18]
Quintus Gallius Pulcher, archiereus of the Koinon in Ankyra in 35 AD. He probably came from a family that had been granted citizenship by Quintus Gallius the quaestor of Cicily.[19]
Shackleton Bailey, David Roy (1991). Two Studies in Roman Nomenclature. Scholars Press. ISBN9781555406660.
Derks, Ton; Roymans, Nico (2009). Ethnic Constructs in Antiquity: The Role of Power and Tradition. Amsterdam archaeological studies. Vol. 13 (illustrated ed.). Amsterdam University Press. ISBN9789089640789.