5th-century BC Roman politician and consular tribune
Marcus Postumius Albinus Regillensis was an ancient Roman politician belonging to the patricianPostumia gens.[1] His father and grandfather were both named Aulus, possibly identifying his father or grandfather as Aulus Postumius Albus Regillensis, consul in 464 BC. Publius Postumius Albinus Regillensis, consular tribune in 414 BC, was most likely his brother. Postumius relationship to later Postumii Albini remains unknown as filiations are missing from the consular tribunes and consuls of 397, 394 and 334 BC.[2]
In 403 BC Postumius was elected as censor together with Marcus Furius Camillus. During their censorship a tax was imposed upon all men who had remained single up until old age and on orphans.[7][8][9][10][11]
He is listed by Livy as consular tribune in 403 BC, were the historian has included the two censors into the college of the consular tribunes.[12] The consensus among modern scholars is that Livy (or the sources he relied on) has misidentified the censors as consular tribunes.[1][13] Some scholars, such as Beloch, have argued that this might mean that they were in fact neither consular tribunes or censors, but instead military tribunes with censorial powers.[14]