Junia
Junia (rendered "Junias" in the UPDV) is named once, in Paul's greetings to the believers in Rome, paired with Andronicus and given an unusually dense set of credentials in a single line.
Kinsman, Fellow-Prisoner, and Of Note Among the Apostles
The greeting reads: "Greet Andronicus and Junias, my kinsmen, and my fellow-prisoners, who are of note among the apostles, who also have been in Christ before me" (Rom 16:7). Four facts are attached to the pair in one verse. They are Paul's kinsmen — fellow Jews, possibly relatives. They have shared imprisonment with him at some point in his missionary career. They are "of note among the apostles," set apart for distinction in the broader apostolic circle. And they were already in Christ before Paul himself was — placing their conversion earlier than his Damascus-road encounter and locating them in the very first generation of believers.