Tariolena gens

The gens Tariolena was an obscure plebeian family of Roman times. No members of this gens appear in history, but several are known from inscriptions.

Origin
The nomen Tariolenus belongs to a class of gentilicia formed using the suffix -enus, regularly formed from other nomina, but occasionally from place-names. Names of this class are frequently associated with families of Umbrian origin, but were also characteristic of Cisalpine Gaul, and particularly of Venetia and Histria, where the inscriptions of the Tarioleni are found.

Members

 * Lucius Tariolenus Princeps, named in two inscriptions from Aquileia in Venetia and Histria, may have been the master of the freedwomen Tariolena Fausta and Tariolena Doris.
 * Tariolena L. l. Doris, a freedwoman named in an inscription from Aquileia, together with the freedwoman Tariolena Fausta, and Lucius Tariolenus Princeps, perhaps their former master.
 * Tariolena L. l. Fausta, a freedwoman named in an inscription from Aquileia, together with the freedwoman Tariolena Doris, and Lucius Tariolenus Princeps, perhaps their former master.
 * Lucius Tariolenus L. l. Hilarus, a freedman buried at Aquileia, together with the freedman Lucius Tariolenus Liccaeus, in a tomb dating from the latter half of the first century BC.
 * Lucius Tariolenus L. l. Liccaeus, a freedman buried at Aquileia, together with the freedman Lucius Tariolenus Hilarus, in a tomb dating from the latter half of the first century BC.