Nobiles
Nobiles is a Latin term used to describe the noble class in ancient Rome. The word nobilis means “well-known” or “noble,” and the plural nobiles referred collectively to the families judged to possess noble status. There was no formal legal body called the Nobility in Rome; instead, nobiles denoted a social-political elite defined by lineage, prestige, and attainment of high office.
Membership in the nobiles was typically earned by holding curule magistracies—especially the consulship—as well as other
In practice, the distinction between nobiles and other Romans was social and political rather than legal. It
See also: Roman nobility, nobilitas, patricians, plebeians, senatorial class.