Quintus Axius M. f. (or "Quintus Axius, son of Marcus", see filiation) was a man of ancient Rome of the Axia gens who lived in the 1st century BCE.
[2] He was an intimate friend of the statesman and writer Cicero and scholar Marcus Terentius Varro, the latter of whom inserted him as one of the speakers in the third book of his de Re Rustica.
[3] The 2nd-century CE historian Suetonius quotes from one of Cicero's letters to Axius, and the 2nd-century Roman grammarian Aulus Gellius speaks of a letter which Marcus Tullius Tiro, the freedman of Cicero, wrote to Axius criticizing a speech of Cato the Elder's, On Behalf of the Rhodians.
[8] Pliny the Elder tells an anecdote of Axius paying the astronomical sum of 400,000 sestertii for a high-quality donkey.
[9] His farm estate, the Roman villa of Quintus Axius, still stands today.