Vesta


Features associated with: Crater

Type
Feature Name
Origin
Crater
Named after Fabia Aconia Paulina - Roman aristocratic woman, wife of Praetextatus (d. c. 384).
Crater
Named after Aelia Oculata - Roman vestal virgin (c. 83).
Crater
Named after Cornelia Africana - Roman noblewoman, wife of Tiberus Gracchus Major, mother of Tiberus and Gaius Gracchus (c. 190-100 B.C.).
Crater
Roman vestal virgin.
Crater
Named after Albia Dominica - Roman noblewoman, wife of Emperor Valens (c. 337–378).
Crater
Roman noblewoman, daughter of Anthemius and Aelia Euphemia, wife of Ricimer (fl. 467-472).
Crater
Named after Angioletta Coradini - Italian planetary scientist (1946-2011).
Crater
Named after Antonia - Famous Roman woman, daughter of M. Antonius and Octavia, wife of Drusus, mother of Germanicus, Livilla, and Emperor Claudius (36 B.C. - A.D. 37).
Crater
Named after Julia Aquilia Severa - Roman vestal virgin (c. 218).
Crater
Named after Arruntia - Roman vestal virgin (c. 70 B.C.).
Crater
Roman vestal virgin (c. 3rd century).
Crater
Named after Bruttia Crispina - Roman Empress, wife of Emperor Commodus (164-191).
Crater
Named after Atia Balba Caesonia - Roman noblewoman, daughter of Julius Ceasar’s sister, mother of Emperor Augustus (85-43 B.C.).
Crater
Roman vestal virgin (c. 3rd century).
Crater
Roman vestal virgin (c. 213).
Crater
One of the first Roman vestal virgins.
Crater
Named after Caparronia - Roman vestal virgin (d. 266 B.C.).
Crater
Roman Empress, daughter of military commander Lucillianus, wife of Emperor Jovian (mid 4th century C.E.).
Crater
Named after Claudia - Roman vestal virgin (c. 143 B.C.).
Crater
Named after Coelia Concordia - the last Roman vestal virgin and the last Vestalis Maxima (Chief Vestal) after the Temple of Vesta was closed in 391 (d. 406 A.D.).
Crater
Roman vestal virgin (c. 23).
Crater
Roman vestal virgin.
Crater
Roman vestal virgin (c. 10-19).
Crater
Julia; wife of Roman emperor Severus.
Crater
Named after Julia Drusilla - famous Roman woman, second daughter of Germanicus and Agrippina, sister of Gaius (16-38).
Crater
Priestess and prominent citizen of Pompeii (c. 1st century).
Crater
Famous Roman woman, second wife of Constantius II.
Crater
Wife of Maximian (c. 324).
Crater
Named after Fabia - Roman vestal virgin (served as a vestal virgin from 73 to pre 58 B.C.).
Crater
Named after Flavia Maxima Fausta - Roman Empress, wife of Constantine I, executed by him (d. 326).
Crater
Roman vestal virgin (c. 215).
Crater
Named after Floronia - Roman vestal virgin (d. 216 B.C.).
Crater
Named after Fonteia - Roman vestal virgin (c. 69 B.C.).
Crater
Wife of Clodius, Curio, and Antony.
Crater
Named after Annia Fundania Faustina - Roman noblewoman, cousin of M. Aurelius, victim of Commodus (d. 192).
Crater
Named after Galeria Fundana - wife of Emperor Vitellius, (c. 1st century).
Crater
Roman vestal virgin.
Crater
Named after Pomponia Graecina - Roman noblewoman, married to the consul Aulus Plautius (d. A.D. 83).
Crater
Flavia Iulia Helena Augusta; mother of Constantine the Great.
Crater
Named after Herennia Etruscilla - Roman Empress, wife of Emperor Decius, mother of Emperors Etruscus Herrenius and Hostilian (c. 250).
Crater
Daughter of consul and advocate Quintus Hortensius (fl. c. 50 B.C.); she was known as a skilled orator.
Crater
Roman vestal virgin (c. 107).
Crater
Famous Roman woman, second wife of Emperor Valentinian.
Crater
Roman vestal virgin (c. 62).
Crater
Named after Clodia Laeta - Roman vestal virgin (c. 213).
Crater
Acca; mythical woman, wife of the shepherd Faustulus in Roman mythology, adoptive mother of Romulus and Remus.
Crater
Roman vestal virgin (c. 25).
Crater
Named after Licinia - Roman vestal virgin (c. 140-113 B.C.).
Crater
Named after Lollia Paulina - Roman woman of distinguished ancestry and great wealth, Roman Empress as the third wife of Caligula (15-49).
Crater
Named after Domitia Longina - Roman empress, wife of Emperor Domitian, Augusta of Rome (c. 51-130).
Crater
Named after Annia Lucilla - Roman Empress, mother of M. Aurelius, married to Emperors L. Verus, and then to Ti. Claudius (c. 150-182).
Crater
Roman vestal virgin (c. 240).
Crater
Named after Marcia - Roman vestal virgin (d. 113 B.C.).
Crater
Named after Mariamne - Second wife of Herod, king of Roman province Judea, known for her great beauty (c. 60-29 B.C.).
Crater
Named after Claudia Metrodora - Greek woman with Roman citizenship, prominent public benefactor (mid 1st century A.D.).
Crater
The first wife of the Roman Emperor Constantine the Great, mother of Crispus (early 4th century).
Crater
Named after Minucia - Roman vestal virgin (c. 337 B.C.).
Crater
Daughter of Pythagoras and Theano, wife of Milon of Crotona.
Crater
Roman vestal virgin (c. 204).
Crater
Named after Occia - Roman vestal virgin (served as vestal virgin from c. 40 B.C. to A.D. 19).
Crater
Named after Octavia - Roman vestal virgin (third century A.D.).
Crater
Named after Oppia - Roman vestal virgin (d. 483 B.C.).
Crater
Named after Paculla Annia - Campanian (Southern Italy) priestess of Bacchus whose reforms radically altered the Bacchanalian ritual in ancient Rome (fl. c. 188 B.C.).
Crater
Aurelia; priestess for life of asylum-granting Artemis Pergaia, built hydreion at her own expense.
Crater
Named after Perpennia - Roman vestal virgin (c. 100-70 B.C.).
Crater
Named after Pinaria - Roman vestal virgin (c. 600 B.C.).
Crater
Named after Galla Placidia - daughter of the Roman Emperor Theodorius I, wife of Athualf, King of the Visigoths, and Constantius III, Roman Emperor (390-450).
Crater
Named after Plancia Magna - daughter of Roman Senator Varus, wife of Tertullus, benefactress and patron of Perga, the capital of the Roman province of Pamphylia in Asia Minor (1st-2nd century A.D.).
Crater
Roman vestal virgin (c. 213).
Crater
Named after Portia - Daughter of Roman statesman Cato Uticensis, second wife of M. Brutus (c. 70-43/42 B.C.).
Crater
Named after Postumia - Roman vestal virgin (c. 420 B.C.).
Crater
Named after Flavia Publicia - Roman vestal virgin (c. 213).
Crater
Named after Rheasilvia - Rhea Silvia, Roman vestal virgin, mother of Romulus and Remus (c. 770 B.C.).
Crater
Roman vestal virgin (c. 54).
Crater
Roman vestal virgin (c. 250-301).
Crater
Named after Scantia - Roman vestal virgin (c. 40 B.C.-A.D. 23).
Crater
Amaesia Sentia; mentioned by Valerius Maximus as an instance of a female who pleaded her own cause before the praetor; called “Androgyne” for having a man’s spirit with a female body.
Crater
Roman noblewoman, niece of Emperor Theodosius (c. 400).
Crater
Roman vestal virgin (c. 240).
Crater
Named after Sextilia - Roman vestal virgin (d. 274 B.C.).
Crater
Roman vestal virgin.
Crater
Roman vestal virgin.
Crater
Teia Euphrosyne Ruffina, Roman vestal virgin (c. 200).
Crater
Roman vestal virgin (c. 48).
Crater
Roman vestal virgin.
Crater
Roman vestal virgin.
Crater
Roman vestal virgin (c. 10-83).
Crater
One of the first Roman vestal virgins.
Crater
Roman vestal virgin (c. 200).
Crater
Roman vestal virgin (c. 48).

Built by Inkleby based on data from the Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature.
This website uses cookies to see how many people visited (Learn More).