Sedatia gens

The gens Sedatia, occasionally written Sedata, was a plebeian family at ancient Rome, which flourished from the first to the third century. The only member of this gens known to have held a seat in the Roman senate was Marcus Sedatius Severianus, consul suffectus in AD 153.[1]

The Sedatii were an influential mercantile family, whose wealth was based on commerce along the Loire, and had interests in Ostia.[2] The social and political rise of the Sedatii parallels the decline of the aristocratic Julii, who had been the leading class in Roman Gaul since the time of the Julio-Claudian dynasty. The likely marriage of Gaius Sedatius Severus and Julia Rufina might have contributed to the ascendency of winemakers and landowners, who became the leading class in Gaul until the Flavians.[3]

Origin

The Sedatii seem to have been a Gallic family, which probably obtained Roman citizenship some time during the early Empire. The nomen Sedatius seems to be derived from the name of a Celtic god, Sedatus, of whom little is known, but who is mentioned in a series of inscriptions from the Danubian provinces. The transformation of a theonym into a personal name was typical of Gallic practice, but the development of original gentilicia at this early date was highly unusual. Cassius Dio relates that newly enrolled citizens in the time of Claudius were expected to assume the imperial gentilicium, unless the emperor granted them permission to bear another name, and no exceptions are known prior to the time of Vespasian. Original gentilicia were much more typical of the second century, when such names were very common in the provinces.[4]

Praenomina

The only praenomina associated with the Sedatii are Gaius and Marcus, two of the most common names throughout all periods of Roman history.

Branches and cognomina

The only distinct family of the Sedatii bore the cognomen Severus, and its derivative, Severianus. Severus, meaning "stern, serious, austere", or "severe", belongs to a class of old Roman surnames, derived from the characteristics and habits of individuals.[5]

Members

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

Sedatii Severi

Others

  • Gaius Sedatius Florus, secretary for the administration of Portus Namnetum, with Marcus Gemellius Secundus, early in the second century AD.[9][10]
  • Marcus Sedatius Myro, together with his brother, Apollinaris, dedicated a tomb at Rome to his daughter, Sedatia Pollina.[11]
  • Sedatia M. f. Pollina, buried at Rome, in a tomb dedicated by her father, Marcus Sedatius Myro, and uncle, Apollinaris.[11]
  • Gaius Sedatius Velleius Priscus Macrinus, an imperial legate in Bithynia during the reign of Claudius Gothicus. He was honoured with a statue at Palmyra.[6]
  • Gaius Sedatius Stephanus,[lower-roman 1] a decurion of the Civitatis Taunensium in Germania Superior, in AD 240.[12][13]
  • Gaius Sedatius, named in an inscription from Virunum in Noricum.[14]
  • Sedatius Agathonicus, dedicated a tomb at Lugdunum in Gallia Lugdunensis for his father, Claudius Agathyrsus, aged seventy years, five months, and ten days.[15]
  • Sedatia Bassina, named in a libationary inscription honoring Jupiter Optimus Maximus and Juno Regina, from Nida in Germania Superior.[16]
  • Sedatia Blandula, named in an inscription honoring Mercury at Andematunum in Gallia Belgica.[17]
  • Sedatius Gratus, named in a funerary inscription from Mogontiacum in Germania Superior.[18]
  • Sedatius Martius, husband of Olympias and father of Martia, a girl buried at Rome, aged eleven years, [... months?], and twenty-five days.[19]
  • Sedatia Primitiva, the wife of Libertius Decimianus, and mother of Libertia Primula, buried at Lugdunum, aged forty-five years, having been married for sixteen years.[20]

Footnotes

  1. Stephanus seems to have been adopted into the gens Sedatia, for none of his children bear the name.

See also

References

  1. Fasti Ostienses, CIL XIV, 244.
  2. Picard, "Ostie et la Gaule de l'Ouest", passim.
  3. Rémy, Les carrières sénatoriales, p. 220.
  4. Picard, "Ostie et la Gaule de l'Ouest", p. 887.
  5. Chase, pp. 110, 111.
  6. PIR, pp. 189, 190.
  7. Picard, "Ostie et la Gaule de l'Ouest", p. 889.
  8. Picard, "Ostie et la Gaule de l'Ouest", pp. 885–888.
  9. CIL XIII, 3106.
  10. (in French) Champeaux & Chassignet, Aere perennius, p. 229.
  11. AE 1987, 00078.
  12. CIL XIII, 7352.
  13. Mémoires de la Société nationale des antiquaires de France, p. 142.
  14. AEA, 2005, +00008.
  15. CIL XIII, 2099.
  16. CIL XIII, 7347.
  17. CIL XIII, 5676.
  18. CIL XIII, 7083.
  19. CIL VI, 22254.
  20. CIL XIII, 2264.

Bibliography

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