Flavianus
Flavianus—the adjectival form of the name Flavius in Latin—may refer to:
- M. Pompeius Silvanus Staberius Flavianus, a 1st-century Roman consul
- L. Septimius Flavianus Flavillianus, a 3rd-century Roman athlete
- Faustus Flavianus, fully Marcus Cocceius Anicius Faustus Flavianus, a 3rd-century Roman consul
- Flavianus, a 4th-century prefect of Roman Egypt
- Flavianus the Elder, fully Virius Nicomachus Flavianus, a 4th-century Roman consul and prefect of Italy
- Flavianus the Younger, also known as Nicomachus Flavianus, son of the Italian prefect
- St Flavianus of Avellino (d. 311), a priest from Antioch martyred with St Florentinus
- St Flavianus of Constantinople, referring to either
- St Flavianus I of Constantinople (d. 449), patriarch
- St Flavianus II of Constantinople, better known as Fravitta (d. 490), patriarch
- Flavianus I of Antioch, a 4th-century archbishop
- Flavianus II of Antioch, a late 5th- and early 6th-century archbishop
- Flavianus, a 5th-century bishop of Adramyttium
- Flavianus, a 6th-century bishop of Cotenna
- St Flavianus Michael Malke (1858–1915), Syrian Catholic eparch of Cizre martyred during a Turkish massacre of Christians
See also
- Flavian, the common anglicization of these names
- 349, known to the Romans as the "Year of Flavianus without colleague" after Flavianus the Elder
- Epitome of the Caesars, one of the few sources preserving passages of Flavianus the Elder's Annals
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