Titus Albucius

Titus Albucius (praetor c. 105 BC) was a noted orator of the late Roman Republic.

He finished his studies at Athens at the latter end of the 2nd century BC, and belonged to the Epicurean sect.

[3] In 105 BC, Albucius was praetor in Sardinia, and in consequence of some insignificant success which he had gained over some robbers, he celebrated a triumph in the province.

On his return to Rome, he applied to the Senate for the honour of a supplicatio, but this was refused, and he was accused in 103 BC of repetundae by Gaius Julius Caesar (the elder), and condemned.

Pompeius Strabo had offered himself as the accuser, but he was not allowed to conduct the prosecution, because he had been the quaestor of Albucius.