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Documenti di Cultura
IN
ROMAN NOMENCLATURE
D. R. SHACKLETON BAILEY
Manufactured in the United States of America by Commercial Printing, Inc., State College, Pa. 16801
D. R. S. B.
Page
I. ONOMASTICON PSEUDOTULLIANUM
IG = InActvLptLoneA Gn.ae.cae..
vii
viii
Acha&t.
Eigmnamdn, B e r l i n , 1904.
pp. 247-278).
Oxford, 1971.
I.
ONOMASTICON
PSEUDOTULLIANUM
1
ONOMASTICON PSEUDOTULLIANUM
some i n t e r e s t i n g r e s u l t s .
3
i n v o l v e such amalgamation or s e p a r a t i o n are not covered. Nor have I
quotation-marks.
T. 'ACCIUS' ( l a )
a&Ll i n the other. I n frtitt. 271 the same person appears i n W i l k i n s '
N.H. V I I . 128 o f f e r s Atio P<a>auAcnA£y who may have been the prosecutor*
M. ACILIUS (15)
! !
no reason to read M'. [ U r s i n u s ] ) , o r simply Acilius, appears as
f ! 1 1
'Caninus' or C a n i n i u s or C a n i n i a n u s . 'Caninus' i s c l e a r l y r i g h t
may be Caesar's Legate or the Legate's son. But Caesar would not
1
use the s i n g l e cognomen i n t h i s one p l a c e and then r e t u r n to ' A c i l i u s
B e t t e r ^AO.4ZAJJLA} CantnuA.
*AETIDEMUS
SEX. ALBEDIUS
C. 'ALBINIUS' ( 1 )
P. ALBINOVANUS (1)
( 2 ) , P o n t i f e x Minor i n 57 (Hot. R e ^ p . 1 2 ) .
*ALEDIUS
w e l l even.
8
ALIENUS (1)
AMBIVIUS (1)
AMIANUS
corrupt ( f o r Amiantus?) .
ANDRICUS
See MEANDER.
*ANNIANUS
Presumable husband, l o v e r , or c l o s e r e l a t i v e of a c e r t a i n
T. ANNIUS (20-22)
p o s s i b i l i t i e s of i d e n t i f i c a t i o n a r e to be considered. The t r i b e of
T 1
M. ANNIUS (27) APPIUS
1 1
of Iguvium a r e c a l l e d ' I g u v i n i ; and c f . ' A n t i a s from Antium). In
1
doubtful. Perhaps i t was 'Annius, which as a s l a v e name would f a l l
Annius (32) A t i l i u s Bradua and Appius Annius (49; c f . 50, 88, 125)
Gallus.
L. ANTISTIUS (12)
below, p. 103.
p e r s u a s i v e l y to the c o n t r a r y , i d e n t i f y i n g t h e Tribune of 56 w i t h
Bexepi auve£nX6ev oV auxov xe xiuwv aex SiexeAeae KOU XOV uiov iraXiv
Sv> KXa(36ios yev 'tfaxepov np£e • • • OUTOS ap^as ztf nyQv. Broughton
h i s a c t i v i t y i n o f f i c e nothing i s known of h i s c a r e e r .
'ANTIUS 1
(2)
Text (1965).
1
'APENAS
f a i l e d to n o t i c e a v a l i d o b j e c t i o n to Turnebus 1
KpzJULoA, namely
that C i c e r o would have used t h e form ' A p e l l a . ' Apaltd may none t h e
P. APINIUS (1)
Cf. VoAJi. I I . 2 . 1 9 . The second name was ' L a p i r o . ' See CIG 5595-6
= IG XIV.353-4.
1
Klebs note on the former i s j u s t l y c a l l e d a s o r r y mess by Syme,
ebt, viA bona* zt honor tub, kojiedor {eeiX Aimllir 6ul, Cn. Satuinlnum
1994.46, X X I I . 3 6 . 3 3 ) .
ARCHELAOS (14)
(Strabo, p. 5 5 8 ) .
s p e c t i v e l y (RE X I I I . 1 3 9 4 . 2 ) .
M. AXIANUS
brother had become by adoption Ap. Claudius Ap. f . ) and Att. 114
the P r a e t o r of 6 5 ) : M. G a l l i u s M. f. Axianus.
BABULLIUS
fundus 1
of which C i c e r o h a s been w r i t i n g ; i n f a c t i t i s c l e a r l y not
FlamlnZanum.
P. BAGIENNUS
1
'BALBILIUS
BALBINUS ( 1 )
(CAECILIUS) METELLUS.
18
BARBATIUS
(1955). p. 57.
BELLIENUS (7)
person may or may not have been Pompey's freedman Demetrius of Gadara.
'BRULLA'
which i n the f i r s t two passages has (a)b ucULtzno and buozni, and
'ox-nose 1
(not buAAhZaon, as Lewis and S h o r t ) .
*(CAECILIUS) METELLUS
Wiseman, Cinna thz Vozt [1974], pp. 112, 188 f f . ) , had been involved
CAELIUS (2)
( V I I . 3) .11.
21
C. 'CAELIUS' ( 7 )
M. 'CAELIUS' (14)
Q. 'CAELIUS' (14)
praenomen so i n d i c a t e s .
T. 'CAELIUS' (15)
263 f.) points out that the nomen was ' C l o e l i u s ' ( o r ' C l o i l i u s ' or
C. 'CAESIUS' (3a)
f
I n Flacc. 68 the p r i n c i p a l MS h a s ceAAjjuum, which i s more l i k e l y
*CALPURNIUS
1
T y r r e l l and P u r s e r thought that Antony s emissary to C i c e r o i n
or C. Antonius 1
Legate i n 43 (RE Suppl. I I I . 2 3 0 ) , who was another L.
"Calpurnii. ' 11
T h i s , of course, does not hold good f o r all noble f a m i l i e s ,
assumption i n RE I I I . 1 4 1 2 . 3 6 .
placed by TKoJocuLLum, see my note and pJtoc. Cam. Pkil. Soa. 4 (1956-57) .
pp. 17 f f .
*CASSIUS
L. CASSIUS (13)
l a t t e r L. C a s s i u s i s g e n e r a l l y i d e n t i f i e d w i t h L. C a s s i u s Longinus,
L. CASTRINIUS PAETUS
r f
V I I I 2, 2 erwahnt, und C. [read L . ] C a s t r o n i u s Paetus aus Luca, von C i c .
identisch 1
(Munzer, R E Suppl. I . 278 f . ) . Schulze (Elgcnnamcn,
1
p. 266 n . l ) suggests that ' C a s t r i n i u s and ' C a s t r o n i u s ' may be i n t e r -
'CATO' ( c f . C. P o r c i u s [ 6 ] Cato)
See GUTTA.
25
*C. CAUDINUS
L. CLAUDIUS (21)
1
'Lucius a f t e r two of them who bore i t had beeri c o n v i c t e d on c r i m i n a l
p r o h i b i t i o n (Voting Vtbt/uxitA, P- 2 0 3
)• B u t
these two C l a u d i i may
become e x t i n c t . The l a s t c e r t a i n r e p r e s e n t a t i v e i s P. C l o e l i u s ( 9 )
c o n n e x i o n w i t h P. C l o d i u s T
l i e u t e n a n t Sex. C l o e l i u s , my n o t e on Att-
r e s t r i c t e d t o p a t r i c i a n s and d i s q u a l i f i e d i t s h o l d e r f r o m o t h e r public
o f f i c e , m i g h t f i t l y be c o n f e r r e d upon t h e descendant o f a p r e v i o u s
i s n o t a t t e s t e d i n t h e gens C l o e l i a , b u t t h a t h a r d l y signifies.
Consul o f 4 9 . However, a c c o r d i n g t o t h e b e s t m a n u s c r i p t t r a d i t i o n t h e
d i s m i s s e d t h e c o n s p i r a c y i n Rome and t h e f i g h t i n g i n E t r u r i a as t o o
to t h e n o b l e house o f t h e C l a u d i i M a r c e l l i , b u t t o a l e s s e r breed?
MINDIUS..
L. CLODIUS (9)
C i c e r o r e f e r s t o Sex. C l o e l i u s .
1
SEX. CLODIUS 1
(12)
1
See a l s o T. 'CAELIUS.
28
l l
* COCTIUS
puzzle.
T h i s , not ' C a e l i u s , 1
i s t h e r i g h t nomen i n Lzg. Man. 58: see
'Latinianus ), r
Wiseman, Mow Men, p. 2 2 5 . The p a r a d o s i s i s czZiuA.
L. 'CONSIDIUS' (4)
723 a ) .
29
!
C a l l e d P. L e n t u l u s ' by Asconius (5.10, C l a r k ) i n an otherwise
grandson, as 'Lentulus ( p u e r ) 1
(ktt. 267 [ X I I . 2 8 ] . 3 , 270 [XII.30].1).
credit.
P u b l i u s i n view of P. C o r n e l i u s (233) P. f . L e n t u l u s M a r c e l l i n u s ,
f 1 !
D o l a b e l l a might become o f f i c i a l l y P . or Cn. C o r n e l i u s Lentulus
1
(Dolabella), w h i l e keeping h i s former name i n general use, l i k e M.
Lucullus, e t c .
1
'CURIUS (1)
(see my n o t e ) .
33
1
ignores the Quaestor. Neither the praenomen 'M. nor the nomen
recommended to Caesar f o r a M i l i t a r y T r i b u n a t e i n 54 ( Q . F t . I I . 1 4 . 3 ,
1
p. 618). C i c e r o ' s protege i n 54 was a d i f f e r e n t man. But 'M. C u r t i u s
1
between he i s always 'Postumus.
* L . CUSTIDIUS
f f
* DECIMUS
as u n d i s t i n g u i s h e d a f i g u r e as the L e n t i d i i , L o l l i i , Plaguleii,
and S e r g i i of Vom. 89. H i s re*al name may have been Decius or Decimius
DEMETRIUS (50)
See BELLIENUS.
Atticus 1
libnatUoluA (Att. 79 [ I V . 8 ] . 2 ; c f . 78 [ I V . 4 a ] . l ) i s to
Aristarchus 1
pupil. The JUbtoutZohiA w i l l have been a mere s l a v e .
1, e t a i . )
'DOMESTICUS 1
( c f . A t i l i u s [71])
'EXTITIUS'
VlancuA.
Q. FABRICIUS (7)
1.4.3 i s p a l a e o g r a p h i c a l l y i n f e r i o r to a p o s s i b l e a l t e r n a t i v e , AtiliuA;
'Q.' FADIUS ( 3 )
1 1
M. FADIUS (6) GALLUS
1
Q. 'FADIUS (8) GALLUS
1
CN. 'FANNIUS (11)
and H a r l e i a n i 4105 (K) and 4852 (Z) the passage i s missing. Authority
On the other hand, Cicero mentions that the Knight was ^XevtoA
name.
39
C.'FIDULIUS'
1
Clodius s a t e l l i t e C. ' F i d u l i u s ' i n Pom. 79 f f . i s no doubt
indicated.
L. FLAVIUS (16)
*FL0RUS
*FUSIUS
1 1
'Fusius i s only the a r c h a i c form of ' F u r i u s , so that even i f the
1
31, 26, C l a r k .
l t
T. FURFANIUS POSTUMUS
C. GALLIUS (3)
e p i g r a p h i c a l l y recorded a s s e r v i n g i n an u n s p e c i f i e d c a p a c i t y under
what C i c e r o s a y s — t h a t G a l l u s a p p l i e d to V e r r e s to a l l o w the
1
prosecution of t h e t i t h e - r o b b e r Apronius. Klebs entry on the j u r i s t
i s c a l l e d GaJUuA no&tZA.
GAVIUS 'OLELUS' ( c f . A t i l i u s [ 7 0 ] )
s p e c i e s o f b i r d ) o r gavlota, may be i n v o l v e d .
L. GELLIUS (5)
West.
GUTTA
(Tribune i n 56) were ex-Praetors i n 54, Cotta and Otko have been
RE XXII.107.13: f
C i c . ad Qu. f r . I l l 4, 1; bes. I l l 8 [=6], 6.'
1
'HALIMETUS
Gallus.
HELICO (2)
worse than i d l e .
HELONIUS
C. HERENNIUS (7)
11.21) remains p o s s i b l e .
HERODES (8)
, t
* HERUS
f f
s l a v e might be c a l l e d H e r o s Ofrpoos) or 'Hero* ("Hpcov), but
1
n e i t h e r of these would form an a c c u s a t i v e 'Herum. Perhaps read
1
A.2214.15), ' H e r i u s would not s u r p r i s e as the name of a s l a v e . Along
T. HORDEONIUS ( 2 )
1
that Munzer did r i g h t to accept Schiitz s u b s t i t u t i o n s , b r i n g i n g the
t e x t i n t o l i n e w i t h 388 ( X I I I . 4 6 ) . 3 T. HondzOYlio.
45
1
'TULLUS HOSTILIUS (7)
IULIA (549)
see TUTIA.
1
the context i n C a e l i u s l e t t e r concerns Caesar, not Pompey. I have
s t i t u t e , though admittedly q u i t e u n c e r t a i n .
LATINUS ( 2 )
that the cognomen ' L a t i n u s ' i s not found among the b e t t e r known
f a m i l i e s o f the R e p u b l i c . Was i t r e p u b l i c a n a t a l l ( c f . K a j a n t o ,
46
, I
* LEPIS0
See AETIDEMUS.
• P l u t a r c h r e v e a l s t h a t S c i p i o ' s f l e e t s t a t i o n e d i t s e l f near U t i c a
47
1
time of C r a s s u s departure heavy storms were b u f f e t i n g those a t
f
which has S c i p i o s s h i p s tossed i n storms f o r a long time before
1
t h e i r u l t i m a t e f a t e a t Hippo R e g i u s .
m&iapdhm mzZam.
(3): see my note ad l o c . and ?Koc. Cam. Phil. Soc. 3 (1954-5). p. 31.
48
1
For y e t another example of ' L u c c e i u s corrupted i n t o ' L u c u l l u s ' s e e
CCLQZ. 52.
f
The only a u t h o r i t y f o r the praenomen of C a t o s ward, the son of
m i s t r u s t i t ; c f . Munzer, RE X I I I . 4 1 9 . 3 . C l a r k m i s t a k e n l y supplied
LOLLIA (29)
f f
C. LOLLIUS ( 4 )
1
P. 'LUCCEIUS
1
(XII.30).5. The Mediceus p r e s e n t s i t c o n s i s t e n t l y a s ' L u c c i u s ;
1 1 1
other MSS have ' L u c t i u s or ' L u t i u s . The v u l g a t e ' L u c c e i u s i s
f f
d e s t i t u t e of a u t h o r i t y and should be forgotten. Luccius is a
J . A. Richmond).
1 1
Q. LUCRETIUS (20) OFELLA
Rather !
Afella: f
see Badian, J.R.S. 57 (1967). pp. 227. So
'LUSCENIUS'
T 1
CN. MAGIUS (3)
181 (IX.13<x); Caes. B.C. 1.24.4. The person named i n these passages
c a l l e d 'P.' i n Vam. 253 (IV. 12).2 but 'Cn.' i n L i v . Eptt. CXV. Was
he r e a l l y another Numerius?
'MALLIUS' (2)
from the Consul of 105, the nomen ' M a l l i u s ' i s of very r a r e occurrence
Q. MAMERCIUS ( c f . Mamercus [ 2 ] )
Eigennamen, p. 466.
Q. MANLIUS (34)
d e s c r i p t i o n i n the pHO Cluentlo does not suggest a man who had gone
peak, and t h a t he would not have got even thus f a r but f o r aAJ>c.OH.dtae
51
Latium, the C r i t i i * 1
( c i t i n g CIL I 2
. 1535). I t i s a l s o found i n
12104 [369]).
MATRIS
tal i n Fam.* 190 ( I X . 16).8 quod i>JL p&aeve/icu> m e ad modJuJ* tuac ccnam
MELA (1)
1
See LICINIUS 'DENTICULUS.
T
ends h i s e n t r y 'Memmius ( 5 ) with a q u a l i f i c a t i o n : 'doch es f r a g t
'MENANDER' (1)
! T
following a f i n a l m i n the previous word; whereas i t i s eminently
(Manutius) i s an i n a d m i s s i b l e form.
1
'METIUS (1)
w e l l enough a t t e s t e d i n CJL. !
Cf. a l s o M. M e t i u s 1
i n Caesar s f
MSS of
p. 241.
Madvig s maczllanluA
f
f o r maAczUuA i n Tarn. 214 (XV.17).2: see VkULol.
M i n u c i i B a s i l i have to be separated.
any doubt.
official.
after 63.
MUSTELA (3)
NIKIAS (17)
i d e n t i f i c a t i o n of C u r t i u s N i c i a s w i t h the t y r a n t of Cos ( N i k i a s [ 1 4 ] )
1
respectively: that ' L u c i u s i s a t t e s t e d s i x times i n MSS against
republican O c t a v i i .
C. ORCIVIUS (1)
written 'Orcivius. 1
C i c e r o , however, i n the OKatoK can only be under-
OTHO ( c f . Roscius [ 2 2 ] )
(22) Otho.
M PACUVIUS ( 4 )
Q. PACUVIUS (5)
PAPIA (15)
VI.23815.
PHILOTIMOS (1)
to the former.
L. POSTUMIUS (15)
Cicero's speech names him i n four p l a c e s (54, 56, 57, 6 9 ) , but never
*PRECILIUS
*PRECIUS
^pHedum^ WLe daAet tanti, cam ka.beA.ct venate, I would read VK.cci.am
and would not have used the word pAaeb i s connexion with a p r i v a t e
transaction. On 'Precianus 1
of Tarn. 29 ( V I I . 8 ) . 2 see below, p. 126.
PUBLILIUS ( c f . 4)
note ad l o c .
T t
* PUBLIUS
(Suppl. p. 27) that 'the MSS readings i n C i c . Fam. 13.43 favour QiUntlo
G a l l u s (CIL I . 1 8 2 0 = IX.4023).
2
T h i s may be r i g h t . But both Munzer
L. RACILIUS (1)
p. 255).
64
1
C. RUBELLIUS 1
(1)
A. 'RUPILIUS 1
(3)
Oppianicus 1
doctor (Clxiznt. 176) f
i s called Rutilius f
i n the
1
L. SABELLIUS 1
(1)
[ 1 9 6 7 ] . p. 227.
f
Q . SALVIDIENUS (4) RUFUS SALVIUS'
*SAPALA
M. SEIUS (4)
35 ( V I I . 1 2 ) . 1 see VELLEIUS.
P. SEPTIMIUS (12)
Or 'Sevius, 1
which i s the p a r a d o s i s i n Vam. 92 ( V I I I . 7 ) . 2 ?
See the f o l l o w i n g .
mentioned by C a e l i u s Rufus i n F a m . 98 ( V I I I . 1 2 ) . 2 f . as P o l a S e r v i u s
! 1
and 'Pola. 1
The i n v e r s i o n suggests that ' S e r v i u s 1
is g&nti£icium
1
are very l i k e l y r e l a t e d . That i s a l l that can be s a i d w i t h confidence
1
'SICURA
f
III.7.8. Munzer s adduction o f the Saguntine Sicoris i n S i l . Ital.
T T
the o r i g i n a l was S c u r r a , found as a s l a v e name i n a number of
Roman i n s c r i p t i o n s ( C I L I and I X , i n d i c e s ) .
67
F
A . S I L I U S ' (3)
1
'SIREGIUS
the trouble.
SPURINNA (2)
' V e s t r i c i u s Spurinna 1
( c f . Tac. Wirt. 11.11) by T y r r e l l and P u r s e r .
'Spurinna 1
i s a gtntilicAum; c f . Gundel, RE V I I I A.1791.23.
N. 'SUFFUSTIUS'
Suhkicium ( f C a t u l l . 54.5).
C AuhuAtLum ( c f . Syme, WUtonJLa., 4 [1955]
SULLA
i n an i n s c r i p t i o n o f 59 (TLLRP 2 0 0 ) .
L. 'TARQUITIUS' ( 2 ; c f . T a r q u i n i u s 10)
P. 'TETTIUS' (3)
of the two, even though the 'p' i n the MSS might be due to the
praenomen.
69
1
'SEX. TETTIUS (4)
f f
C. T I T I U S (41) STRABO
L. TITIUS (42) STRABO
1 1
'Tidius ( ' T e i d i u s ) i s an unexceptionable nomen, and u n l i k e l y to
f f
be a corruption of the r e l a t i v e l y common T i t i u s . I t should there-
22 (1963). pp. 87 f f .
70
'P. TULLIO'
f.), though Vantoltoni i s not impossible. But the name may have
been S e m i t i c .
M. TULLIUS (15)
TUTIA ( c f . T u t i u s )
R&6p. 43.
UMMIUS ( c f . Ummidius [ 1 ] )
L. VALERIUS (62)
l
L . ' VALERIUS (366) TRIARIUS
any support.
72
Welt, f
I [1972], p. 903) a l l governors a f t e r the S u l l a n reforms ( e x -
'VALGIUS' (1)
time (1LLRP 646). For more concerning him see Gundel's entry and
C l a r k has 'Cotylo 1
i n Phil. V.5 and 7, as favoured by the MSS,
f f
but C o t y l a i n V I I I . 2 4 and 28 and X I I I . 2 6 without mention of v a r i a n t .
P. 'VATINIUS' (1)
P. VEDIUS (1)
Augustus 1
f r i e n d P. Vedius (8) P o l l i o : so Syme, J . R . S . 51 (1961).
pp. 23 f f .
C. VELLEIUS (1)
LUCAJUA no&toA.
1
VENNONIUS (5) 'VINDICIUS
1
informer of L i v . I I . 5 . 1 0 (who i n c i d e n t a l l y i s c a l l e d 'Vindex by
1 f
SEX. VENNONIUS (4)
had 6£xto rrujno, which may represent Sexto Junto or Sexto \Jtn[n)io;
( i b i d . 28980).
VERRIUS (1)
Manutius' i d e n t i f i c a t i o n of P a p i r i u s Paetus' f r i e n d V e r r i u s
1
M. V e r r i u s F l a c c u s gewesen i s t (Gundel) can be put a s i d e . I t
*VIDIUS
Varro's r e l a t i o n s h i p w i t h C i c e r o and h i s l e g a l e x p e r t i s e , i n h e r i t e d
VOLUMNIA
f
p r o b a b i l i t y Antony s m i s t r e s s , Volumnia C y t h e r i s . The o b j e c t i o n i n
L. 'VOLUSENUS' (2)
The MSS i n ZJbxdnt. 198 (and not merely some of them, as Gundel
ZOSIPPOS
ADOPTIVE NOMENCLATURE
79
ADOPTIVE NOMENCLATURE IN T H E LATE ROMAN REPUBLIC
[1963]. p. 56 n.14).
a L. Aemilius L. f . P a u l l u s adopted by a P. C o r n e l i u s P. f . S c i p i o
1
would become 'P. C o r n e l i u s P. f . P. n. S c i p i o Aemilianus. Since
!
'Except by way of such f i l i a t i o n s as C . L i v i u s M. A e m i l i a n i f. M.
1
n. Drusus (cos. 147, F a s t i C a p i t o l i n i ) and Q. Fabius Q. A e m i l i a n i f .
Q. n. Maximus (cos. 121, Acta Triumphorum).
81
82
(Rufus).
f 1
origin. Hadrianus, borne by a f a m i l y of F a b i i , c l e a r l y comes from
1
Hadria. 'Trebianus could be adoptive from 'Trebius,' but more
p o l i t i c a l or m i l i t a r y leader s i n g l y or c o l l e c t i v e l y by h i s name ( e . g .
1 f f
'Clodiani, Pompeiani ) could be r e l e v a n t here, as could phenomena
f f
like Iugurthinus a p p l i e d to both Marius and L . Opimius from t h e i r
i
Cicero r e f e r s to t h e f r i e n d s or b u s i n e s s a s s o c i a t e s of h i s protege
1
P. Cuspius as ' C u s p i a n i . P a r t i c u l a r l y noteworthy i s C i c e r o ' s f a c e t i o u s
vogue during the Republic, though the well-known case of t h e two sons
f
L . S e s t i u s P. f . A l b . i n Onom. p. 6, under C. ALBINIUS).
1
Where the adopted son had no previous cognomen the standard pro-
i s f r e e of a l l doubt).
inherited.
The new mode was to c a r r y over the former cognomen along with or
! f
to p r e f e r t h i s s t y l e to that of Cn. A u f i d i u s A u r e l i a n u s : w i t h the
f
i n congratulation, heading h i s l e t t e r (Att. 65 [ I I I . 2 0 ] ) Q. Caecilio
1
Q. f . Pomponiano A t t i c o . No doubt the heading i s to some extent
f a c e t i o u s , a s an i n t i m a t e f r i e n d might s t a r t a l e t t e r to a newly
f 1
created B r i t i s h peer My L o r d i n s t e a d of 'Dear Jack.' But o b v i o u s l y
the s t y l e had to be c o r r e c t . An i n t e r e s t i n g f e a t u r e i s t h e i n c l u s i o n
latter.
both adopted son and adopting f a t h e r had cognomina, and i n some cases
Cn. C o r n e l i u s L e n t u l u s V a t i a , ( L . ) L i c i n i u s Crassus S c i p i o , C.
1
himself on h i s c o i n s ' L e n t ( u l u s ) M a r ( c e l l i ) f ( i l i u s ) . I t too preserved
r
the M a r c e l l i n i i n the same breath as the M a r c e l l i ( air?. 108 [XV.10J.1
of A u r e l i u s Orestes.
!
whose name i s found on c o i n s i n the form 'Albinus B r u t i f . A son of
the l i k e i n C i c e r o ' s l e t t e r s . ^
ist.
1
evidence, though meagre, goes to show t h a t S c i p i o s complaint went un-
1
who claimed t h a t t h e adoption was i n v a l i d and C l o d i u s a c t s a s Tribune,
tention was not accepted, not even by Cato, who had a d i f f e r e n t axe
g
According to Weinrib (pp. 256 f . ) he 'apparently pretended t h a t no
change of genA had r e s u l t e d . ' According to C i c e r o he l o s t h i s former
hacjuii Vom. 35 AOLQAA Clodiae. ge.ntiA CUA inteAexmt, quod in te. eAt? .
. . tu ne.que. VonteJjuA eA, qui eA&e, de.be.bcu>, ne.que. pa&uA hexeA, nzquz
amiAAiA ACLQAAA pateAniA in hae.c adoptZva ve.niAti. But t h i s must be
1
taken a s C i c e r o ' s view, not C l o d i u s .
90
'P. L e n t u l u s P. f . '
P. C o r n e l i u s D o l a b e l l a was adopted by a p l e b e i a n C o r n e l i u s
h i s remains d o u b t f u l .
!
'L. E q u i t i u s C. f. C a e c i l i a n u s Postimus,' C. L u t t i u s L. f . A u l i a n u s , '
took the t e s t a t o r ' s name (though even that was not compulsory). That
was a l l .
fore the Praetor Urbanus: Schmitthenner, p. 50) the young man used
1
P h i l i p p i c s , not only i n t h e o f f i c i a l s t y l e 'C. Caesar C. f . and
iZ
T h e use of the term adoptlo (adoptaAe) to cover i n d i f f e r e n t l y t e s t a -
mentary and other adoptions admittedly proves nothing. But Weinrib's
claim (p. 254 n.34) that the c a s e of C. S t a i e n u s a f f o r d s 'a c l e a r
example of the use of the word adoptaAe to i n d i c a t e a change of name
rather than a formal change of a g n a t i c s t a t u s ' cannot be accepted a s a
legitimate deduction from C i c e r o ' s remark i n oVmt. 241, qui he tp6e
adoptavoAat et de Staleno AeZlum ^ecQAat, which i s s u r e l y only a
hacetLOUA way of s a y i n g (whether t r u l y or not) that S t a i e n u s had no
right to c a l l himself ' A e l i u s ' (though C i c e r o had so c a l l e d him i n
Cluent. 65), a l l u d i n g presumably to some a l l e g e d i r r e g u l a r i t y i n the
procedure. A spurious Church of England clergyman might be d e s c r i b e d as
'self-ordained' without any i m p l i c a t i o n as to t h e v a l i d i t y of A n g l i c a n
orders.
Zt mzmoftla pa/iznta> 6ul. There w i l l have been nothing out of the way
change i n a g n a t i c p o s i t i o n ' ? I am i n c l i n e d to d e t e c t r e l e v a n c e i n a
point: Ji&ddcta e*£ el turn a malonAhuA Atatua pnjo vita, quae muZto*
must needs love Caesar ( i . e . Octavian) among other reasons quod Q.X tarn
Ad. 126 natusui tu ilti patdA CA, conAitiU* ego), i t i s evident t h a t {ill
to show."^
18
x,
Cf. Schmitthenner, pp. 48 f . : 'Die Folgen der testamentarischen
Auflage zu Ziehen oder n i c h t , s c h e i n t i n das Belieben des Erben
g e s t e l l t zu s e i n ; der S f f e n t l i c h e UAU* sprach mit. . . . Auf
besondere, f e i e r l i c h e Rechtsformer, deren es etwa zur Erlangung der
Rechtskraft bedurft h a t t e , e r f o l g t k e i n Hinweis. Die L a x h e i t der^
Handhabung f a l l t auf und b e l e u c h t e t den Riickgang des strengen
a l t e n G e s c h l e c h t s r e c h t s . ' But Schmitthenner's p o s i t i o n , as I under-
stand him, i s that properly there were no consequences other than
change of name.
"I Q
1
s p e c i f y i n g t h a t the adoption was testamentary M e s s a l l a ( i f he i s P l i n y
f
i n Appian and Dio to the e f f e c t that O c t a v i a n s procedure was i n
twenty.
I n t h i s connexion a l s o the p o s s i b i l i t y of i n d i v i d u a l or f a m i l y
overlooked.
REGISTER OF ADOPTIONS
evidence f o r r e p u b l i c a n procedure.
that given i n t h i s r e g i s t e r .
101
102
1
Not 'Avianus or 'Avianius' but 'Avianianus.' He was an A v i a n i u s
A e m i l i u s ' i n 314 ( X I I I . 2 ) .
*C. AFIEPIUS S E S T I A M S
M. ANNEIUS
*ANNlAhlUS
Onom, pp. 8 f .
103
1
and elsewhere. Usually (always by C i c e r o ) c a l l e d 'T. Annius or
accord with the evidence. Hts name was probably 'Pacuvius Labeo'
1 1
there c a l l e d simply 'Decianus, but again 'Apuleius Decianus in
Onom. ibid.
AURELTANUS [/)
M. AXIANUS
BUCILUMUS
been a B u c i l i u s adopted by a C a e c i l i u s .
74 [ I V . 2 ] . 5 ) . I n l a t e r correspondence l i k e w i s e he i s sometimes
Q. f. Fab. Metellus P i u s S c i p i o 1
i n two AenatuACOVlAuJttCL ( C i c . Earn. 84
he i s ' S c i p i o 1
( P . S c i p i o ' i n Phil.
f
XIII.29). Varro has ' S c i p i o
1
Later L a t i n w r i t e r s follow s u i t . He i s u s u a l l y '(P.) S c i p i o ,
1
but sometimes ( a l s o i n P l u t a r c h ) 'Metellus S c i p i o * or ' S c i p i o M e t e l l u s .
and Dio blunder. The former c a l l s him ' A C U K I O S EKITTIWV' (B.C. 11.24,
c f . 1LLR? 111.
20
C i c h o r i u s (LztpzlgoA Stud. z. cZ. VhUL. 9 [1887]. p. 237 n.9) pro-
posed SciplonAA ComoJUt (ConndLLotuxm). B e t t e r Sclptonls Connatiionim)
{conndLlo -V)*
109
cos. 54, and thus becoming Ap. Claudius Ap. f . ( c f . JGRR IV.330). His
367 B [XIV.13 B].4; I L S 882) may have been born before the adoption.
follows:
by b i r t h .
i n 43 ( C i c . Earn. 406 [ X I I . 1 5 ] ) he s t y l e s h i m s e l f P. L e n t u l u s P. f .
f
I n a l l p r o b a b i l i t y Cn. Lentulus V a t i a of C i c . £. F t . I I . 3 . 5 =
The opprobrious agnomen ' S a l v i t t o ' ( i f that i s i t s true form) may have
ZaXaxxwv).
C . C0SSUT7US (4) M A R I P I A W U S
Moneyer i n 44 (Crawford 4 8 0 ) .
Vergilius ( 4 ) , t r . p i . 87.
r a t h e r than to patAOAtOA. f
Oddly enough, Munzer d i d not f i n d the
Called 1
Gallius 1
i n C i c . Att. 207 (X.15).4, he w i l l have been
Schmitthenner, pp. 70 f .
5
AA3?vos; Bpouxov xov AGKIUOV, O"V KOU ' I o u v i o v 'AABTvov xe eireKaAouv,
M. JUNIUS BRUTUS
( c f . a l s o RE XXI.15.56).
M. LAENAS CURTIANUS
etc.
M. LICINIUS LUCULLUS
? 1
II.94.1) and Drusus L i v i u s ( I I . 7 1 . 3 ) , i n Dio ( X L V I I I . 4 4 . 1 )
! 1
Livius Drusus.
* C . LUTTIUS A U L I A N U S
f
Son of C i c e r o s great-uncle M. G r a t i d i u s and Maria, s i s t e r to
? 1 1
8 0 ) — b u t never M. Gratidianus. 'Marius G r a t i d i a n u s i n Asconius
A e d i l e a t Fundi, w i t h f i l i a t i o n f
L . f . ' (ILLRP 603).
gentttaiAjurn.
L . PlotluA (= S o l i n . 46.3).
138 f .
T. POMPONIUS ATTICUS
PONUANUS (1)
PONTIUS (19) A U F I P I A M U S
PONTIUS (22) T I T I N I A N U S
century later.
J . R . S . 50 [ I 9 6 0 ] , p. 1 5 ) ; a s 'M. P i s o M. f . F r u g i ' on c o i n s of 61 ( ? )
(JLLR? 603, 6 0 4 ) .
f
S a l v i d i e n u s adopted by a S a l v i u s , becoming o f f i c i a l l y Q. Salvius
Q. f . S a l v i d i e n u s ( R u f u s ) . 1
Oh the unchanged gwtAllicAjum i n -lenuA
see p. 82 .
!
L. Sempronius L. f . L. n. ' H i s n a t u r a l f a t h e r w i l l have been L.
f
2 (1968). p. 5. On l i t e r a r y and other r e f e r e n c e s to him as (L.
pp. 148 f f .
23
23
The p o s i t i o n of the f i l i a t i o n means nothing. I t could not have been
placed otherwise, s i n c e the adoptive f a t h e r was not a B r u t u s . Cf.
'P. L e n t u l i P. f . ' ( S p i n t h e r ) , e t sim.
130
The Caepio of Q.. IrH. 1.3.7 may be the same. Miinzer's proposed
h i s own t i m e ) .
131
1
I n general usage, contemporary and l a t e r , he remained (M.) Brutus'
the l a t t e r ) , ad Bsiut. 3, e t c .
versa. But such a one would hardly have combined h i s new praenomen
C. STAIENUS
y e a r by the names M. T e r e n t i u s f 1
and C. C a s s i u s ' i n l/CAA. I I . 1.60
T
f
(but M. L u c u l l u s 1
i n Cluzwt. 1 3 7 ) . U n o f f i c i a l l y '(M.) L u c u l l u s 1
f 1
has M. L i c i n i u s L u c u l l u s ) . H i s o r i g i n a l praenomen w i l l a l s o have
been 'Marcus.'
1 f 1 1
Murena, A. V a r r o , and 'Murena. See Munzer and S. T r e g g i a r i ,
Murena, c o s . 2 3 , i s r e f e r r e d to by V e l l e i u s ( I I . 9 1 . 2 ) as 'L.
Murena 1
and by Dio ( L I V . 3 . 3 ) as ' L i c i n i u s Murena. 1
Dio could be
1
that the younger Varro Murena was born before the o l d e r s adoption
Q. TITINIUS
[TREBIANUS]
c f . p. 8 2 .
TULL1ANUS (1)
2).
though no r e p u b l i c a n p a r a l l e l i s a v a i l a b l e .
a r c h a e o l o g i c a l evidence i n support.
135