patrician and afterwards plebeian also. The Valeria gens was one of the most ancient and most celebrated at Rome; and no other Roman gens was distinguished for so long a period, although a few others, such as the Cornelia gens, produced a greater number of illustrious men. The Valerii are universally admitted to have been of Sabine origin, and their ancestor Volesus or Volusus is said to have settled at Rome with Titus Tatius. (Dionys. A. R. 2.46; Plut. Num. 5, Publ. 1.) One of the descendants of this Volesus, P. Valerius, afterwards surnamed Publicola, plays a distinguished part in the story of the expulsion of the kings, and was elected consul in the first year of the republic, B. C. 509. From this time forward down to the latest period of the empire, for nearly a thousand years, the name occurs more or less frequently in the Fasti, and it was borne by the emperors Maximinus, Maximianus, Maxentius, Diocletian, Constantius, Constantine the
The Valeria gens was divided into various families under the republic, the names of which are : -- CORVUS or CORVINUS, FALTO, FLACCUS, LAEVINUS, MAXIMUS, MESSALLA, POTITUS, PUBLICOLA, TAPPO, TRIARIUS, VOLUSUS. Besides these we meet with other cognomens of the Valerii under the republic, which are mostly the names of freedmen or clients of the Valeria gens. They are given below in alphabetical order, together with the surnames borne by the Valerii in the imperial period. [VALERIUS.] The few Valerii, who occur without any surname, are not of sufficient importance to require any notice. On the coins of the gens we find the cognomens Acisculus, Catullus, Flacccs, Barbatus.