The gens Stlaccia was a minor
plebeian family at
ancient Rome. Hardly any members of this
gens are mentioned in history, but a number are known from inscriptions. By the second century, some of the Sltaccii had reached
senatorial rank.
Decimus Stlaccius, named in an inscription from
Delos, dating from the second century BC.[1]
Marcus Stlaccius M. l, a freedman employed as a scriba at Rome about the middle of the first century BC.[6][1]
Marcus Stlaccius M. f., sailed on one of
Caesar's ships during the
African War in 46 BC, and was captured, but subsequently freed.[1]
Quintus Stlaccius, named in an inscription from Delos, dating from the second century BC.[1]
Tertia Stlaccia, named in an inscription from Delos, dating from the second century BC.[1]
Gaius Stlaccius C. l. A[...], a freedman at
Neapolis in
Campania, where he worked as a mensor sacomarius, or measurer of weights, together with Aulus Stlaccius Mario.[7][1]
Marcus Stlaccius Albinus Trebellius Sallustius Rufus, one of the
senatorial patrons of an order for the enlargement of a temple at
Ostia in
Latium in AD 142.[8][9][10]
Lucius Stlaccius L. f. Macedo, a resident of
Cyrene, mentioned in a decree of
Augustus, dating to 6 or 7 BC, along with his brother, Aulus Stlaccius Maximus.[1]
Aulus Stlaccius A. l. Mario, a freedman at Neapolis, where he worked as a mensor sacomarius, together with Gaius Stlaccius.[7][1]
Aulus Stlaccius L. f. Maximus, a resident of Cyrene, mentioned in a decree of Augustus, along with his brother, Lucius Stlaccius Macedo.[1]
Stlaccia Ɔ. l. Quinta, a wealthy freedwoman who dedicated a tomb at Rome for herself, her husband, and her dispensator, or steward, Salvius.[11][12]
Wilhelm Henzen, Ephemeris Epigraphica: Corporis Inscriptionum Latinarum Supplementum (Journal of Inscriptions: Supplement to the Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum, abbreviated EE), Institute of Roman Archaeology, Rome (1872–1913).