Acron, onis, A king of the Ceninenses, whom Romulus slue hande to hande. There was also in Agrigentine a Phisition of the same name, and a Grammarian, which made commentaries vpon Horace.
Lewis and Short: Latin dictionary
acra, ōrum, n., also ae, f., = a)/kra, a promontory or headland, App. de Mundo prooem.: Acra Iapygia,
acro or acrōn, ōnis, m., = a)/krwn, the extremity of a thing; so of a member of the body, Veg. 2, 28, 17; 5, 65, 2; of the stem of a plant, Apic. 4, 4.
Ācron, ōnis, m.I.A king of the Caeninenses, who, in the war with the Romans on account of the rape of the Sabines, was slain by Romulus, Prop. 4, 10, 7.—II.A Greek slain by Mezentius, Verg. A. 10, 719.—III.Helenius Acron, a commentator on Terence, Horace, and perh. Persius; cf. Teuffel, Rom. Lit. II. 370.