Titus Vibius Varus was a Roman senator who was ordinary consul in AD 134 as the colleague of Lucius Julius Ursus Servianus, the brother-in-law of the emperor Hadrian.
[1] He is known from inscriptions and the Digest (XXII, 5,3,1); he is also attested by a military diploma,[2] which shows, that he was still in office on April 2, together with Titus Haterius Nepos as his colleague.
[3] Bernard Rémy identifies Varus as the son of the homonymous suffect consul in 115.
Rémy also suggests that their family came from Brixia in Istria, or Region X of Italy.
[3] In his monograph on naming practices in the early Roman Empire, Olli Salomies writes that Varus was the father of Titus Clodius Vibius Varus, ordinary consul of 160.