| agricola | (n) Roman general who was governor of Britain and extended Roman rule north to the Firth of Forth (37-93), Syn. Gnaeus Julius Agricola |
| augustus | (n) Roman statesman who established the Roman Empire and became emperor in 27 BC; defeated Mark Antony and Cleopatra in 31 BC at Actium (63 BC - AD 14), Syn. Octavian, Gaius Julius Caesar Octavianus, Gaius Octavianus |
| caesar | (n) conqueror of Gaul and master of Italy (100-44 BC), Syn. Julius Caesar, Gaius Julius Caesar |
| cohn | (n) German botanist who is generally recognized as founding bacteriology when he recognized bacteria as plants, Syn. Ferdinand Julius Cohn |
| erving | (n) United States basketball forward (born in 1950), Syn. Dr. J, Julius Erving, Julius Winfield Erving |
| fairbanks | (n) United States film actor noted for his swashbuckling roles (1883-1939), Syn. Douglas Fairbanks, Julius Ullman, Douglas Elton Fairbanks |
| fuchs | (n) British physicist who was born in Germany and fled Nazi persecution; in the 1940s he passed secret information to the USSR about the development of the atom bomb in the United States (1911-1988), Syn. Emil Klaus Julius Fuchs, Klaus Fuchs |
| marx | (n) United States comedian; one of four brothers who made motion pictures together (1890-1977), Syn. Julius Marx, Groucho |
| reiter | (n) German bacteriologist who described a disease now known as Reiter's syndrome and who identified the spirochete that causes syphilis in humans (1881-1969), Syn. Hans Conrad Julius Reiter |
| sibelius | (n) Finnish composer (1865-1957), Syn. Johan Julius Christian Sibelius, Jean Sibelius |