Aemilia Pudentilla: married first to Sicinius Amicus and then to Apuleius; mother of Sicinius Pontianus and Sicinius Pudens.
Appii: friends of Apuleius at Oea, including Appius Quintianus, accused of joining with him to perform magical rites.
Apuleius: defendant, second husband of Aemilia Pudentilla.
Calpurnianus: a friend of Apuleius who produced allegedly incriminating evidence against him.
Capitolina: owner of some wood that Cornelius Saturninus made into a statuette.
Cassius Longinus: tutor (representative at law) of Pudentilla.
Claudius Maximus: proconsul of Africa 158/9, presiding at Apuleius’s trial.
Cornelius Saturninus: woodworker.
Corvinius Celer: public treasurer (quaestor publicus) of Oea.
Gavii: adversaries in a suit against Apuleius’s wife Pudentilla.
(L. Hedius Rufus) Lollianus Avitus: proconsul of Africa (probably) 157/8.
Herennia (?): daughter of Herennius Rufinus; the widow of Sicinius Pontianus, and intended by her father as wife of his younger brother Pudens.
Herennius Rufinus: allegedly son of a bankrupt father, father of (Herennia).
Iunius Crassus: owner of the house in which Apuleius and Appius Quintianus allegedly practiced magic.
(Q.) Lollius Urbicus: Prefect of the City who heard a case involving Sicinius Aemilianus.
Saturninus: craftsman in wood.
(Sicinius—): father of the following three Sicinii.
Sicinius Aemilianus: principal accuser, uncle of Sicinius Pontianus and Sicinius Pudens.
Sicinius Amicus: first husband of Aemilia Pudentilla.
Sicinius Clarus: intended by his father, Sicinius—, to be Pudentilla’s second husband, after the death of Amicus.
Sicinius Pontianus: Roman knight, elder son of Sicinius Amicus and Aemilia Pudentilla, now dead.
Sicinius Pudens: younger son of Sicinius Amicus and Aemilia Pudentilla, collaborating with Herennius Rufinus and Sicinius Aemilianus in their case against Apuleius.
Tannonius Pudens: advocatus (representative in court) of Sicinius Aemilianus and Sicinius Pudens.
Thallus: slave of Apuleius, allegedly used by him in performing magic.