Sepullia gens

The gens Sepullia was a minor plebeian family at ancient Rome. Hardly any members of this gens are mentioned in ancient writers, of whom the most famous was Sepullius Bassus, a rhetorician known to Seneca the Elder.[2]

Origin

The nomen Sepullius belongs to a class of gentilicia apparently formed from cognomina ending in the diminutive suffix -ulus.[3] In this case, the nomen would have derived from Sepulus or a similar name, presumably a diminutive of the old Latin praenomen Septimus, originally given to a seventh son or seventh child, or Seppius, its Oscan equivalent. Sepullius would thus be derived from the same root as the more common Septimius.[4]

The Sepullii were perhaps from Patavium in Venetia and Histria, as several of the inscriptions bearing this name are from that area.[5]

Members

This list includes abbreviated praenomina. For an explanation of this practice, see filiation.

Undated Sepulii

  • Sepullius, dedicated a monument in memory of Timetus at Interamna Lirenas in southern Latium.[13]
  • Publius Sepullius P. f., a maker of small pottery, whose maker's mark is found on pottery from Gallia Cisalpina, Narbonensis, and Patavium in Venetia and Histria.[14]
  • Quintus Sepullius, named in an inscription from Rome.[15]
  • Sepullia Ɔ. l. Fausta, a freedwoman, and wife of the tibicen Gaius Urveilius Pedo, with whom she was buried at Aquinum in Latium.[16]
  • Publius Sepullius P. l. Florens, a freedman buried at Patavium.[17]
  • Gaius Sepullius C. f. Maturus, buried at Patavium, along with Ettia Prima, perhaps his wife.[18]
  • Gaius Sepullius Onesimus, an officinator buried at Patavium.[19]
  • Gaius Sepullius C. f. Rufus, buried at Cyzicus in Asia, along with his wife, Caecinia Prima, aged forty-nine.[20]
  • Publius Sepullius P. f. Tacitus, buried at Patavium.[21]

See also

References

  1. ^ Crawford, Roman Republican Coinage, p. 490.
  2. ^ Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, vol. I, p. 473 ("Bassus, Sepullius").
  3. ^ Chase, pp. 123, 124.
  4. ^ Chase, pp. 131, 150, 151.
  5. ^ Wiseman, "Some Republican Senators", p. 130.
  6. ^ CIL IV, 60.
  7. ^ Eckhel, Doctrina Numorum Veterum, v. 306.
  8. ^ a b PIR, S. 360.
  9. ^ Scott, "The Sidus Iulium and the Apotheosis of Caesar".
  10. ^ Gurval, "Caesar's Comet".
  11. ^ Seneca the Elder, Controversiae, iii. 16, 17, 20–22.
  12. ^ CIL VI, 19521.
  13. ^ AE 2010, 260.
  14. ^ CIL XII, 05686,0819, CIL V, 8112, 76a-e.
  15. ^ CIL XV, 7223.
  16. ^ AE 1974, 235.
  17. ^ CIL V, 3036.
  18. ^ CIL V, 2948.
  19. ^ CIL V, 2885.
  20. ^ CIL III, 373.
  21. ^ CIL V, 3037.

Bibliography

  • Lucius Annaeus Seneca (Seneca the Elder), Controversiae.
  • Joseph Hilarius Eckhel, Doctrina Numorum Veterum (The Study of Ancient Coins, 1792–1798).
  • Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, William Smith, ed., Little, Brown and Company, Boston (1849).
  • Theodor Mommsen et alii, Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum (The Body of Latin Inscriptions, abbreviated CIL), Berlin-Brandenburgische Akademie der Wissenschaften (1853–present).
  • René Cagnat et alii, L'Année épigraphique (The Year in Epigraphy, abbreviated AE), Presses Universitaires de France (1888–present).
  • George Davis Chase, "The Origin of Roman Praenomina", in Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, vol. VIII, pp. 103–184 (1897).
  • Paul von Rohden, Elimar Klebs, & Hermann Dessau, Prosopographia Imperii Romani (The Prosopography of the Roman Empire, abbreviated PIR), Berlin (1898).
  • Kenneth Scott, "The Sidus Iulium and the Apotheosis of Caesar", in Classical Philology, vol. 36, No. 3, pp. 257–272 (July 1941).
  • T. P. Wiseman, "Some Republican Senators and Their Tribes", The Classical Quarterly, Vol. 14, No. 1 (May, 1964), pp. 122-133.
  • Michael Crawford, Roman Republican Coinage, Cambridge University Press, 1974, ISBN 9780521074926.
  • Robert A. Gurval, "Caesar's Comet: the Politics and Poetics of an Augustan Myth", in Memoirs of the American Academy in Rome, vol. 42, pp. 39–71 (1997).