Gaius Iulius Iulianus

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Gaius Iulius Iulianus (full name form Gaius Iulius Gai filius Palatina Iulianus ) was a Roman politician living in the 2nd century AD . Through an inscription that was found in Centumcellae , individual stations of his career, which he completed in the first half of the 2nd century, are known.

Iulianus was inscribed in the tribe of Palatina . From the inscription reveals that he was originally a member of the Roman knighthood ( Eques® was) formed by Hadrian in the Senate was taken and that until his he Consulate , among others, Praetor and Quaestor in the province Baetica was.

A papyrus in Greek dated October 2, 150 and a military diploma dated November 19, 150 prove that Iulianus 150 was suffect consul with Gaius Curtius Iustus ; the two therefore held this office at least from October to November.

See also

Remarks

  1. The names of the two consuls are given in the papyrus as Γαιω Κουρτιω Ιουςτω Πουπλιω Ιουλιω Ναυτωνε (Gaio Curtio Iusto Publio Iulio Nautone). The name of Gaius Curtius Iustus is correctly given, but no Publius Iulius Nauto is known according to Roger SO Tomlin, John Pearce; therefore it is probably a mistake by the scribe in the creation of the document, who was probably not familiar with the Latin italics.

Individual evidence

  1. CIL 11, 3337
  2. ^ A b Roger SO Tomlin, John Pearce: A Roman Military Diploma for the German Fleet (November 19, 150) Found in Northern Britain In: Zeitschrift für Papyrologie und Epigraphik , Volume 206 (2018), pp. 207–216, here pp. 214-216.
  3. sb.3.6304 = HGV SB 3 6304 = Trismegistos 18822. Papyri.info, accessed on September 24, 2019 (English).
  4. ^ Military diploma of the year 150 ( ZPE-206-207 ).