Servius Cornelius Cethegus

Servius Cornelius Cethegus was a Roman senator active during the reign of Tiberius. He was consul ordinarius in AD 24, together with Lucius Visellius Varro.[1]

According to his filiation in Dio Cassius, his father was also named Servius.[2] Edmund Groag notes that the identification of Cethegus' father with one Cornelius Lentulus Cethegus, who erected a monument to his nutrix, "cannot be excluded";[3] this would connect him to the family of the Cornelii Lentuli, one of the last surviving branches of the gens Cornelia. Ronald Syme also attempts to fit him in the Cornelii Lentuli, but admits the praenomen Servius was last used by them in the mid-second century BC.[4]

An inscription at Haydrah in modern Tunisia attests that Cethegus was proconsular governor of Africa;[5] his tenure in that post has been dated towards the end of Tiberius' reign.

See also

References

  1. Alison E. Cooley, The Cambridge Manual of Latin Epigraphy (Cambridge: University Press, 2012), p. 459
  2. Dio Cassius, 57.1
  3. Cornelius 98, 215, Realencyclopädie der classischen Altertumswissenschaft, IV.1, cols. 1281, 1380; CIL VI, 6072
  4. Syme, The Augustan Aristocracy (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1986), p. 297 n. 117
  5. CIL VIII, 32364
Political offices
Preceded by
Gaius Asinius Pollio,
and Gaius Stertinius Maximus
Ordinary consul of the Roman Empire
24
with Lucius Visellius Varro
Succeeded by
Gaius Calpurnius Aviola, and
Publius Cornelius Lentulus Scipio

as Suffect consuls
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