Quintus Servilius Pudens was a Roman senator active during the second century AD.
He was ordinary consul for the year 166 with Lucius Fufidius Pollio as his colleague,[1] and he was proconsular governor of Africa around 180.
[2] Pudens is confidently known to have married Ceionia Plautia, daughter of Lucius Aelius, the adopted son of the emperor Hadrian.
[4] There appear to have been two Servilii Pudentes living about the same time: an inscription attests that a man of the same name was prefectus frumenti dandi, juridicus of Regio VIII Aemilia, and governor of Crete and Cyrenaica.
[5] Géza Alföldy notes that juridici for the districts of Italy did not come into existence until 166, and were praetorian offices held prior to the consulate.