Others
- Sulpicia, the mother-in-law of Spurius Postumius Albinus, consul in 186 BC.
- Sulpicia, the wife of Lentulus Cruscellio, who was proscribed by the triumvirs in 43 BC, followed her husband to Sicilia, against the wishes of her mother, Julia.
- Publius Sulpicius Quirinus, censor in 42 and consul suffectus in 36 BC.
- Servius Sulpicius, mentioned by Quintus Horatius Flaccus as an author of love-poems.
- Sulpicia, a poet, perhaps the daughter of Servius Sulpicius Rufus.
- Publius Sulpicius Quirinus, also called Quirinius, consul in 12 BC, and later governor of Syria.
- Sulpicius Asper, a centurion, and one of the conspirators against Nero, discovered and put to death in AD 66.
- Sulpicius Florus, an infantryman granted Roman citizenship under the emperor Galba, who later participated in the emperor's overthrow.
- Sulpicius Blitho, a source cited by the biographer Cornelius Nepos.
- Sulpicia, a poet, praised by Martial, who probably lived toward the close of the 1st century.
- Sulpicia Lepidina, the wife Flavius Cerealis, prefect of a cohort at Vindolanda in Britannia, circa AD 103.
- Sulpicius Apollinaris, a grammarian, and a friend and contemporary of Aulus Gellius during the later 2nd century.
- Sextus Sulpicius Tertullus, consul in AD 158.
- Sulpicia Memmia, one of the three wives of Alexander Severus. Her father was a man of consular rank; her grandfather's name was Catulus.
- Sulpicius Lupercus Servastus, a Latin poet, of whom nothing is known except his elegy, De Cupiditate, and a Sapphic ode, De Vetustate.
- Sulpicius Severus, an ecclesiastical historian of the late 4th and early 5th centuries.
- Sulpicius Flavus, a companion of the emperor Claudius, whom he assisted in the composition of his historical works.
Read more about this topic: Sulpicii, Members of The Gens