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Fabia gens

The gens Fabia was one of the most ancient patrician families at ancient Rome. The gens played a prominent part in history soon after the establishment of the Republic, and three brothers were invested with seven successive consulships, from 485 to 479 BC, thereby cementing the high repute of the family.[1] Overall, the Fabii received 45 consulships during the Republic. The house derived its greatest lustre from the patriotic courage and tragic fate of the 306 Fabii in the Battle of the Cremera, 477 BC. But the Fabii were not distinguished as warriors alone; several members of the gens were also important in the history of Roman literature and the arts.[2][3][4]

Statue of Quintus Fabius Maximus Verrucosus, made between 1773–1780 for Schönbrunn Palace, Vienna.

Background

The family is generally thought to have been counted amongst the gentes maiores, the most prominent of the patrician houses at Rome, together with the Aemilii, Claudii, Cornelii, Manlii, and Valerii; but no list of the gentes maiores has survived, and even the number of families so designated is a complete mystery. Until 480 BC, the Fabii were staunch supporters of the aristocratic policies favoring the patricians and the senate against the plebs. However, following a great battle that year against the Veientes, in which victory was achieved only by cooperation between the generals and their soldiers, the Fabii aligned themselves with the plebs.[5][6]

One of the thirty-five voting tribes into which the Roman people were divided was named after the Fabii; several tribes were named after important gentes, including the tribes Aemilia, Claudia, Cornelia, Fabia, Papiria, Publilia, Sergia, and Veturia. Several of the others appear to have been named after lesser families.[2]

The most famous legend of the Fabii asserts that, following the last of the seven consecutive consulships in 479 BC, the gens undertook the war with Veii as a private obligation. A militia consisting of over three hundred men of the gens, together with their friends and clients, amounting to a total of some four thousand men, took up arms and stationed itself on a hill overlooking the Cremera, a little river between Rome and Veii. The cause of this secession is said to have been the enmity between the Fabii and the patricians, who regarded them as traitors for advocating the causes of the plebeians. The Fabian militia remained in their camp on the Cremera for two years, successfully opposing the Veientes, until at last they were lured into an ambush, and destroyed.[7][8] Three hundred and six Fabii of fighting age were said to have perished in the disaster, leaving only a single survivor to return home. By some accounts he was the only survivor of the entire gens; but it seems unlikely that the camp of the Fabii included not only all of the men, but the women and children of the family as well. They and the elders of the gens probably remained at Rome. The day on which the Fabii perished was forever remembered, as it was the same day that the Gauls defeated the Roman army at the Battle of the Allia in 390 BC. This was the fifteenth day before the kalends of Sextilis, or July 18, according to the modern calendar.[9][10][11][12][13][14] The story was considerably embellished at a later date in order to present it as a counterpart of the Battle of Thermopylae, which took place in 479 BC (hence the number of 306 Fabii, similar to the 300 Spartans of Leonidas). However, Tim Cornell states that there is no reason to doubt the historicity of the battle, because the tribus Fabia—presumably where the Fabii had their country estates—was located near the Cremera, on the border with Veii.[15]

Throughout the history of the Republic, the Fabii made several alliances with other prominent families, especially plebeian and Italian ones, which partly explains their long prominence. The first of such alliances that can be traced dates from the middle of the fifth century and was with the Poetelii; it lasted for at least a century.[16] In the fourth century, the Fabii were allied to the patrician Manlii and the plebeian Genucii and Licinii, whom they supported during the Conflict of the Orders.[17] They then occupied an unprecedented leading position in the third century, as three generations of Fabii were princeps senatus—a unique occurrence during the Republic.[i][18][19] During this period, they allied with the plebeian Atilii from Campania, where the Fabii had significant estates, the Fulvii and Mamilii from Tusculum, the Otacili from Beneventum, the Ogulnii from Etruria, and the Marcii.[20] They also sponsored the emergence of the Caecilii Metelli and Porcii, who owed their first consulate to the Fabii,[21] as well as the re-emergence of the patrician Quinctii.[22] The main direction of the second war against Carthage was disputed between the Fabii and the Cornelii Scipiones.[23] The death of Fabius Verrucosus in 203 marks the end of the Fabian leadership on Roman politics, by now assumed by their rivals: Scipio Africanus and his family.[24] After the consulship of Fabius Maximus Eburnus in 116, the Fabii entered a century-long eclipse, until their temporary revival under Augustus.[25]

The name of the Fabii was associated with one of the two colleges of the Luperci, the priests who carried on the sacred rites of the ancient religious festival of the Lupercalia. The other college bore the name of the Quinctilii, suggesting that in the earliest times these two gentes superintended these rites as a sacrum gentilicum, much as the Pinarii and Potitii maintained the worship of Hercules. Such sacred rites were gradually transferred to the state, or opened to the Roman populus; a well-known legend attributed the destruction of the Potitii to the abandonment of its religious office. In later times the privilege of the Lupercalia had ceased to be confined to the Fabii and the Quinctilii.[2][26][27][28]

Origin

 
The Capitoline Wolf with Romulus and Remus. One legend holds that their respective followers were called the Quinctilii and the Fabii.

According to legend, the Fabii claimed descent from Hercules, who visited Italy a generation before the Trojan War, and from Evander, his host, through Fabius. This brought the Fabii into the same tradition as the Pinarii and Potitii, who were said to have welcomed Hercules and learned from him the sacred rites which for centuries afterward they performed in his honor.[11][29][30][31][32]

Another early legend stated that at the founding of Rome, the followers of the brothers Romulus and Remus were called the Quinctilii and the Fabii, respectively. The brothers were said to have offered up sacrifices in the cave of the Lupercal at the base of the Palatine Hill, which became the origin of the Lupercalia. This story is certainly connected with the tradition that the two colleges of the Luperci bore the names of these ancient gentes.[33][34][35][36]

The nomen of the Fabii is said originally to have been Fovius, Favius, or Fodius; Plinius stated that it was derived from faba, a bean, a vegetable which the Fabii were said to have first cultivated. A more fanciful explanation derives the name from fovea, ditches, which the ancestors of the Fabii were said to have used in order to capture wolves.[37]

It is uncertain whether the Fabii were of Latin or Sabine origin. Niebuhr, followed by Göttling, considered them Sabines. However, other scholars are unsatisfied with their reasoning, and point out that the legend associating the Fabii with Romulus and Remus would place them at Rome before the incorporation of the Sabines into the nascent Roman state.[2]

It may nonetheless be noted that, even supposing this tradition to be based on actual historical events, the followers of the brothers were described as "shepherds," and presumably included many of the people then living in the countryside where the city of Rome was to be built. The hills of Rome were already inhabited at the time of the city's legendary founding, and they stood in the hinterland between the Latins, Sabines, and Etruscans. Even if many the followers of Romulus and Remus were Latins from the ancient city of Alba Longa, many may also have been Sabines already living in the surrounding countryside.[38][39]

Praenomina

The earliest generations of the Fabii favored the praenomina Caeso, Quintus, and Marcus. They were the only patrician gens to make regular use of Numerius, which appears in the family after the destruction of the Fabii at the Cremera. According to the tradition related by Festus, this praenomen entered the gens when Quintus Fabius Vibulanus, the consul of 467, married a daughter of Numerius Otacilius of Maleventum, and bestowed his father-in-law's name on his son.[ii][2][43]

Although the Fabii Ambusti and some later branches of the family used the praenomen Gaius, Quintus is the name most frequently associated with the Fabii of the later Republic. The Fabii Maximi used it almost to the exclusion of all other names until the end of the Republic, when they revived the ancient praenomen Paullus. This was done in honor of the Aemilii Paulli, from whom the later Fabii Maximi were descended, having been adopted into the Fabia gens at the end of the 3rd century BC. A variety of surnames associated with the Aemilii were also used by this family, and one of the Fabii was called Africanus Fabius Maximus, although his proper name was Quintus Fabius Maximus Africanus.[2][44] In a manuscript of Cicero, Servius appears among the Fabii Pictores, but this seems to have been a corruption in the manuscript, which originally read Numerius.[45]

Branches and cognomina

 
Denarius of Gaius Fabius Hadrianus, 102 BC. On the obverse is the head of Cybele, a possible allusion to the visit to Rome of Battaces, a priest of Magna Mater.[46] The reverse depicts Victoria driving a biga, with a flamingo below.

The cognomina of the Fabii under the Republic were Ambustus, Buteo, Dorso or Dorsuo, Labeo, Licinus, Maximus (with the agnomina Aemilianus, Allobrogicus, Eburnus, Gurges, Rullianus, Servilianus, and Verrucosus), Pictor, and Vibulanus. Other cognomina belonged to persons who were not, strictly speaking, members of the gens, but who were freedmen or the descendants of freedmen, or who had been enrolled as Roman citizens under the Fabii. The only cognomina appearing on coins are Hispaniensis, Labeo, Maximus, and Pictor.[2][47]

In imperial times it becomes difficult to distinguish between members of the gens and unrelated persons sharing the same nomen. Members of the gens are known as late as the second century, but persons bearing the name of Fabius continue to appear into the latest period of the Empire.[2]

The eldest branch of the Fabii bore the cognomen Vibulanus, which may allude to an ancestral home of the gens. The surname Ambustus, meaning "burnt", replaced Vibulanus at the end of the 5th century BC; the first of the Fabii to be called Ambustus was a descendant of the Vibulani. The most celebrated stirps of the Fabia gens, which bore the surname Maximus, was in turn descended from the Fabii Ambusti. This family was famous for its statesmen and its military exploits, which lasted from the Samnite Wars, in the 4th century BC until the wars with the Germanic invaders of the 2nd century BC. Most, if not all of the later Fabii Maximi were descendants of Quintus Fabius Maximus Aemilianus, one of the Aemilii Paulli, who as a child was adopted into that illustrious family.[2][iii]

Buteo, which described a type of hawk, was originally given to a member of the Fabia gens because such a bird on one occasion settled upon his ship with a favorable omen. This tradition, related by Plinius, does not indicate which of the Fabii first obtained this surname, but it was probably one of the Fabii Ambusti.[2][48] Crawford suggests that the buteo of the legend was not a hawk, but a flamingo, based on the appearance of a bird resembling a flamingo on the coins of Gaius Fabius Hadrianus, who may have sought to associate himself with that family by the use of such a symbol. Hadrianus and his descendants form the last distinguishable family of the Fabii. Their surname was probably derived from the Latin colony of Hatria, and it is likely that they were not lineal descendants of the Fabii Buteones, but newly-enfranchised citizens.[49] The flamingo might also allude to the family's coastal origins.[50]

The surname Pictor, borne by another family of the Fabii, signifies a painter,[51] and the earliest known member of this family was indeed a painter, famed for his work in the temple of Salus, built by Gaius Junius Bubulcus Brutus between 307 and 302 BC. The later members of this family, several of whom were distinguished in the arts, appear to have been his descendants, and must have taken their cognomen from this ancestor.[2] The cognomen Labeo ("the one with large lips") appears at the beginning of the second century BC; Quintus Fabius Labeo, the first of that name, was also a poet, but his line vanished before the end of the century.

Members

This list includes abbreviated praenomina. For an explanation of this practice, see filiation.
 
Coin of one of the Fabii Maximi, minted during the reign of Augustus

Fabii Vibulani et Ambusti

Fabii Dorsuones et Licini

Fabii Maximi

Fabii Pictores

 
Denarius of Numerius Fabius Pictor, 126 BC. On the obverse is the head of Roma; on the reverse is Quintus Fabius Pictor, the praetor of 189, holding an apex and shield inscribed QVIRIN, alluding to his status of Flamen Quirinalis.

Fabii Buteones

Fabii Labeones

 
Denarius of Quintus Fabius Labeo, 124 BC. The obverse depicts the head of Roma, while the obverse shows Jupiter driving a quadriga. The prow below alludes to his grandfather's naval triumph.
  • Quintus Fabius Q. f. Q. n. Labeo, quaestor urbanus in 196 BC. Praetor then propraetor in 189 and 188, he defeated the naval forces of Antiochus III, for which he received a naval triumph the following year. He was triumvir for establishing the colonies of Potentia and Pisaurum in 184, and Saturnia in 183. He was consul in 183, and proconsul in Liguria the following year. He also became pontiff in 180, and was part of a commission of ten men sent to advise Aemilius Paullus on the settlement of Macedonia in 167. He was also a poet, according to Suetonius.[159][160][161][162]
  • Quintus Fabius Q. f. Q. n. Labeo, a learned orator known whose eloquence is mentioned by Cicero. He must have lived about the middle of the second century BC, and either he or more probably his son was proconsul in Spain, where the name occurs on some milestones.[163][164][165]
  • Quintus Fabius Q. f. Q. n. Labeo, triumvir monetalis in 124 BC. He was probably proconsul in Spain between 120 and 100 BC.[166][164][167][165]

Fabii Hadriani

Others

 
Tetradrachm of Gaius Fabius Hadrianus, as proconsul at Pergamon (with the local magistrate Demeas), circa 57 BC. On the obverse is a Cista mystica within ivy wreath; on the reverse is a bow case between two serpents, with a thyrsus on the right.

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ Ryan dismisses Pliny's account of the three consecutive principes: Ambustus, Rullianus, and Gurges. He suggests instead Rullianus, Gurges, and Verrucosus, but does not believe that they served consecutively.
  2. ^ This story is doubted by Münzer and Ogilvie, who consider it to be anachronistic, as Otacilius is described as a Samnite, and there was no significant contact between Rome and the Samnites for another century.[40] Münzer argues that Numerius appears only among the collateral stirpes of the Buteones and Pictores, but never among the main line of the family, the Vibulani, Ambusti, and Maximi. Manuscripts of Livy give Gnaeus instead of Numerius among the older Fabii, which has generally been amended to Numerius, following the Capitoline Fasti. Carolus Sigonius followed this scheme in his editio princeps of Livy in 1555, as have most later historians. However, Münzer prefers Gnaeus, otherwise unused by the Fabii, as Livy had access to sources predating the chronology of Varro, which was used to compile the Fasti. According to Münzer, the first of the Fabii to bear the name was Numerius Fabius Buteo, the consul of 247; his father, Marcus, did not follow the usual convention of giving his praenomen to his eldest son, and must therefore have been the Fabius to whom Festus referred.[41][42][40]
  3. ^ Although some sources state that they were adopted by Quintus Fabius Maximus Verrucosus, who died in 203 BC, it has been argued that their father, Lucius Aemilius Paullus Macedonicus, as the only surviving member of the Aemilii Paulli following the Battle of Cannae, would not have allowed his two elder children to be adopted out of the gens until after the birth of his two younger sons, circa 180–177 BC.
  4. ^ Broughton thought he could have been the son of Quintus Fabius Maximus Gurges, the consul of 292 and 276, and thus assigned him the consulship of 265. However, Ryan disagrees and gives the three consulships to Gurges.

References

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  3. ^ Homo, pp. 7 ff.
  4. ^ Smith, The Roman Clan, pp. 290 ff.
  5. ^ Dionysius, ix. 11, 13.
  6. ^ Livy, ii. 46, 47.
  7. ^ Livy, ii. 48-50.
  8. ^ Dionysius, ix. 15-23.
  9. ^ Livy, ii. 50; vi. 1.
  10. ^ Dionysius, ix. 22.
  11. ^ a b Ovid, Fasti, ii. 237.
  12. ^ Plutarch, "The Life of Camillus", 19.
  13. ^ Tacitus, Historiae, ii. 91.
  14. ^ Niebuhr, vol. ii. p. 194.
  15. ^ Cornell, The Beginnings of Rome, p. 311.
  16. ^ Münzer, Roman Aristocratic Parties, pp. 31, 32.
  17. ^ Münzer, Roman Aristocratic Parties, pp. 28-30.
  18. ^ Münzer, Roman Aristocratic Parties, pp. 54–56.
  19. ^ Ryan, Rank and participation in the Senate, pp. 173–179.
  20. ^ Münzer, Roman Aristocratic Parties, pp. 57, 58, 63–66, 69–71.
  21. ^ Münzer, Roman Aristocratic Parties, p. 50.
  22. ^ Münzer, Roman Aristocratic Parties, pp. 112, 114.
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  24. ^ Münzer, Roman Aristocratic Parties, p. 87, 95, 96, 175.
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  27. ^ Propertius, Elegies, iv. 26.
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  34. ^ Aurelius Victor, De Origo Gentis Romanae, 22.
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  36. ^ Valerius Maximus, ii. 2. § 9.
  37. ^ Pliny the Elder, Historia Naturalis, xviii. 3.
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  39. ^ Göttling, pp. 109, 194.
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  47. ^ Eckhel, vol. v. p. 209 ff.
  48. ^ Pliny, x. 8. § 10.
  49. ^ Taylor, Voting Districts, p. 212.
  50. ^ a b Crawford, Roman Republican Coinage, pp. 326, 327.
  51. ^ Cassell's Latin & English Dictionary, s.v. "Pictor".
  52. ^ Livy, ii. 41–43, 46.
  53. ^ Dionysius, viii. 77, 82, 90, ix. 11.
  54. ^ Broughton, vol. I, pp. 21, 23, 24.
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  57. ^ Zonaras, vii. 17.
  58. ^ Valerius Maximus, ix. 3. § 5.
  59. ^ Aulus Gellius, xvii. 21.
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  61. ^ Cassius Dio, fragment no. 26, ed. Reim.
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  65. ^ Becker, vol. ii. part ii. p. 93.
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  68. ^ Dionysius, viii. 87, 88, ix. 5-13, 15.
  69. ^ Frontinus, Strategemata, i. 11. § 1.
  70. ^ Valerius Maximus, v. 5. § 2.
  71. ^ Broughton, vol. I, pp. 22, 24.
  72. ^ Livy, iii. 1-3, 9, 22-25, 35, 41, 58.
  73. ^ Dionysius, ix. 59, 61, 69, x. 20-22, 58, xi. 23, 46.
  74. ^ Broughton, vol. I, pp. 32, 33, 36, 38, 40, 46.
  75. ^ Diodorus Sicullus, xii, 3.1
  76. ^ Broughton, vol i, pp.41 (note 2)
  77. ^ Livy, iv. 11, 17, 19, 25, 27, 28, v. 41.
  78. ^ Diodorus Siculus, xii. 34, 58.
  79. ^ Broughton, vol. I, pp. 54, 59, 62, 64.
  80. ^ Livy, iv. 43, 49, 58.
  81. ^ Diodorus Siculus, xiii. 24, xiv. 3.
  82. ^ Livy, iv. 37, 49, 51.
  83. ^ Diodorus Siculus, xiii. 9, 38.
  84. ^ Livy, iv. 52.
  85. ^ Livy, iv. 54, 61, v. 10, 24, 35, 36, 41.
  86. ^ a b c d Plutarch, "The Life of Camillus", 17.
  87. ^ Livy, iv. 58, v. 35, 36, 41.
  88. ^ a b Livy, v. 35, 36, 41.
  89. ^ Livy, vi. 22, 34, 36.
  90. ^ a b c d e Fasti Capitolini.
  91. ^ a b Livy, vi. 34.
  92. ^ a b Zonaras, vii. 24.
  93. ^ a b Aurelius Victor, De Viris Illustribus, 20.
  94. ^ Livy, vii. 11, 17, 22, viii. 33.
  95. ^ Fasti Triumphales.
  96. ^ Livy, vii. 12.
  97. ^ Livy, viii. 38.
  98. ^ Livy, ix. 7.
  99. ^ Livy, ix. 23.
  100. ^ Livy, v. 46, 52.
  101. ^ Valerius Maximus, i. 1. § 11.
  102. ^ Livy, vii. 28.
  103. ^ Diodorus Siculus, xvi. 66.
  104. ^ Velleius Paterculus, i. 14.
  105. ^ Eutropius, ii. 15.
  106. ^ Valerius Maximus, vi. 6. § 5.
  107. ^ Livy, Epitome, xv.
  108. ^ Cassius Dio, Fragment 43.
  109. ^ Zonaras, viii. 8.
  110. ^ Broughton, vol. I, pp. 200, 201 (note 1), 202 (note 1).
  111. ^ Livy, xxiv. 9, 11, 12, 20, 43-45, 46, xxviii. 9.
  112. ^ Plutarch, "The Life of Fabius Maximus", 24.
  113. ^ Cicero, De Natura Deorum, iii. 32; Tusculanae Quaestiones, iii. 28; Cato Maior de Senectute, 4; Epistulae ad Familiares, iv. 6.
  114. ^ Livy, xxx. 26; xxxiii. 42.
  115. ^ Livy, xl. 19; xxxix. 29.
  116. ^ Cicero, Tusculanae Quaestiones, i. 33.
  117. ^ Valerius Maximus, iii. 5. § 2.
  118. ^ Appian, Hispanica, 70; Iberica, 67.
  119. ^ Orosius, v. 4.
  120. ^ Cicero, Epistulae ad Atticum, xii. 5.
  121. ^ Valerius Maximus, vi. 1. § 5, viii. 5. § 1.
  122. ^ Cicero, De Oratore, i. 26, Pro Balbo, 11.
  123. ^ Valerius Maximus, vi. 1. § 5.
  124. ^ Orosius, v. 16.
  125. ^ Cicero, In Vatinium Testem, 11; Epistulae ad Familiares, vii. 30.
  126. ^ Caesar, De Bello Hispaniensis, 2, 41.
  127. ^ Cassius Dio, xliii. 42, 46.
  128. ^ Pliny the Elder, vii. 53.
  129. ^ Livy, Epitome, 116.
  130. ^ CIL VI, 1407.
  131. ^ Syme, The Augustan Aristocracy, p. 418.
  132. ^ CIL VI, 7701, CIL VI, 33842.
  133. ^ CIL VI, 2002
  134. ^ Pliny the Elder, xxxv. 4. s. 7.
  135. ^ Valerius Maximus, viii. 14. § 6.
  136. ^ Dionysius, xvi.6.
  137. ^ Cicero, Tusculanae Quaestiones, i. 2. § 4.
  138. ^ Niebuhr, History of Rome, vol. iii. § 356.
  139. ^ Broughton, vol. I, p. 199.
  140. ^ Valerius Maximus, iv. 3. § 9.
  141. ^ Broughton, vol. I, pp. 197, 201.
  142. ^ Livy, xxii. 57, xxiii. 11.
  143. ^ Broughton, vol. I, p. 251.
  144. ^ Livy, xxxvii. 47, 50, 51; xlv. 44.
  145. ^ Broughton, vol. I, pp. 359, 361, 394, 436.
  146. ^ Cicero, Brutus, 81.
  147. ^ Sumner, Orators in Brutus, p. 43.
  148. ^ Crawford, Roman Republican Coinage, pp. 291, 292.
  149. ^ Zonaras, viii. 16.
  150. ^ Livy, xxiii. 22, 23.
  151. ^ Plutarch, "The Life of Fabius Maximus", 9.
  152. ^ Orosius, iv. 13.
  153. ^ Livy, xxx. 26, 40.
  154. ^ Livy, xxiii. 24, 26.
  155. ^ Livy, xl. 18, 36, 43; xlv.13.
  156. ^ Livy, xli. 33; xlii. 1, 4.
  157. ^ Valerius Maximus, viii. 15. § 4.
  158. ^ Appian, Hispanica, 84.
  159. ^ Livy, xxxiii. 42; xxxvii. 47, 50, 60; xxxviii. 39, 47, xxxix. 32, 44, 45, xl. 42, xlv. 17.
  160. ^ Cicero, De Officiis, i. 10.
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  163. ^ Cicero, Brutus, i. 81.
  164. ^ a b CIL I, 823, CIL I, 824.
  165. ^ a b Crawford, Roman Republican Coinage, p. 294.
  166. ^ CIL I² 823.
  167. ^ Broughton, vol. I, pp. 543, 544.
  168. ^ Cicero, In Verrem, i. 27, v. 36.
  169. ^ Pseudo-Asconius, in Verrem p. 179, ed. Orelli.
  170. ^ Diodorus Siculus, p. 138, ed. Dind.
  171. ^ Livy, Epitome, 86.
  172. ^ Valerius Maximus, ix. 10. § 2.
  173. ^ Orosius, v. 20.
  174. ^ ILLRP 363.
  175. ^ Broughton, vol. II, pp. 60, 62 (note 1), 64, 69.
  176. ^ Broughton, vol. II, pp. 118, 134, 140.
  177. ^ Broughton, vol. II, pp. 194, 203.
  178. ^ Hans Voegtli, "Zwei Münzfunde aus Pergamon," in Schweizerische Numismatische Rundschau 69 (1990), pp. 47, 63–64.
  179. ^ Horace, Epistulae, ii. 1. 173.
  180. ^ Pliny the Elder, xiv. 15.
  181. ^ Seneca the Younger, Epistulae morales ad Lucilium, 89.
  182. ^ Cicero, Pro Murena, 71.
  183. ^ Broughton, vol. II, pp. 162, 164 (note 4).
  184. ^ Broughton, vol. II, pp. 217, 220 (note 2), 225, 227 (note 5).
  185. ^ Sallust, The Conspiracy of Catiline, 41.
  186. ^ Appian, Bellum Civile, ii. 4.
  187. ^ Cicero, In Pisonem, 31.
  188. ^ Cicero, Epistulae ad Familiares, iii. 3, 4, Epistulae ad Atticum, viii. 11.
  189. ^ a b c CIL IX, 5390.
  190. ^ Camodeca, "Novità sui fasti consolari delle tavolette cerate della Campania", pp. 52, 70.
  191. ^ Tacitus, Agricola, 10.
  192. ^ Plutarch, "The Life of Galba", 27.
  193. ^ Tacitus, Historiae i. 44, iii. 14.
  194. ^ Tacitus, Historiae, iv. 79.
  195. ^ CIL IV, 7963.
  196. ^ Goldberg, Constructing Literature, p. 20.
  197. ^ John R. Clarke, review of "Mario Grimaldi (ed.), Pompei. La Casa di Marco Fabio Rufo. Collana Pompei, vol. 2.", Bryn Mawr Classical Review, 2015.02.37.
  198. ^ Tacitus, Dialogus de Oratoribus.
  199. ^ Pliny the Younger, Epistulae, i. 11, vii. 2.
  200. ^ Julius Capitolinus, The Life of Antoninus Pius, 8.
  201. ^ Digesta, 46. tit. 3. s. 39, 50 tit. 16. s. 207, 9. tit. 2. s. 11, 19. tit. 1. s. 17, tit. 9. s. 3.
  202. ^ Cassius Dio, lxxvii. 4, lxxviii. 11.
  203. ^ Aelius Spartianus, The Life of Caracalla, 4.
  204. ^ Aurelius Victor, Epitome de Caesaribus, 20.
  205. ^ Aelius Lampridius, The Life of Alexander Severus, c. 68, The Life of Elagabalus, c. 16.

Bibliography

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Modern sources

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fabia, gens, this, article, about, roman, gens, other, persons, places, with, this, name, fabius, disambiguation, gens, fabia, most, ancient, patrician, families, ancient, rome, gens, played, prominent, part, history, soon, after, establishment, republic, thre. This article is about the Roman gens For other persons and places with this name see Fabius disambiguation The gens Fabia was one of the most ancient patrician families at ancient Rome The gens played a prominent part in history soon after the establishment of the Republic and three brothers were invested with seven successive consulships from 485 to 479 BC thereby cementing the high repute of the family 1 Overall the Fabii received 45 consulships during the Republic The house derived its greatest lustre from the patriotic courage and tragic fate of the 306 Fabii in the Battle of the Cremera 477 BC But the Fabii were not distinguished as warriors alone several members of the gens were also important in the history of Roman literature and the arts 2 3 4 Statue of Quintus Fabius Maximus Verrucosus made between 1773 1780 for Schonbrunn Palace Vienna Contents 1 Background 2 Origin 3 Praenomina 4 Branches and cognomina 5 Members 5 1 Fabii Vibulani et Ambusti 5 2 Fabii Dorsuones et Licini 5 3 Fabii Maximi 5 4 Fabii Pictores 5 5 Fabii Buteones 5 6 Fabii Labeones 5 7 Fabii Hadriani 5 8 Others 6 See also 7 Footnotes 8 References 9 Bibliography 9 1 Ancient sources 9 2 Modern sourcesBackground EditThe family is generally thought to have been counted amongst the gentes maiores the most prominent of the patrician houses at Rome together with the Aemilii Claudii Cornelii Manlii and Valerii but no list of the gentes maiores has survived and even the number of families so designated is a complete mystery Until 480 BC the Fabii were staunch supporters of the aristocratic policies favoring the patricians and the senate against the plebs However following a great battle that year against the Veientes in which victory was achieved only by cooperation between the generals and their soldiers the Fabii aligned themselves with the plebs 5 6 One of the thirty five voting tribes into which the Roman people were divided was named after the Fabii several tribes were named after important gentes including the tribes Aemilia Claudia Cornelia Fabia Papiria Publilia Sergia and Veturia Several of the others appear to have been named after lesser families 2 The most famous legend of the Fabii asserts that following the last of the seven consecutive consulships in 479 BC the gens undertook the war with Veii as a private obligation A militia consisting of over three hundred men of the gens together with their friends and clients amounting to a total of some four thousand men took up arms and stationed itself on a hill overlooking the Cremera a little river between Rome and Veii The cause of this secession is said to have been the enmity between the Fabii and the patricians who regarded them as traitors for advocating the causes of the plebeians The Fabian militia remained in their camp on the Cremera for two years successfully opposing the Veientes until at last they were lured into an ambush and destroyed 7 8 Three hundred and six Fabii of fighting age were said to have perished in the disaster leaving only a single survivor to return home By some accounts he was the only survivor of the entire gens but it seems unlikely that the camp of the Fabii included not only all of the men but the women and children of the family as well They and the elders of the gens probably remained at Rome The day on which the Fabii perished was forever remembered as it was the same day that the Gauls defeated the Roman army at the Battle of the Allia in 390 BC This was the fifteenth day before the kalends of Sextilis or July 18 according to the modern calendar 9 10 11 12 13 14 The story was considerably embellished at a later date in order to present it as a counterpart of the Battle of Thermopylae which took place in 479 BC hence the number of 306 Fabii similar to the 300 Spartans of Leonidas However Tim Cornell states that there is no reason to doubt the historicity of the battle because the tribus Fabia presumably where the Fabii had their country estates was located near the Cremera on the border with Veii 15 Throughout the history of the Republic the Fabii made several alliances with other prominent families especially plebeian and Italian ones which partly explains their long prominence The first of such alliances that can be traced dates from the middle of the fifth century and was with the Poetelii it lasted for at least a century 16 In the fourth century the Fabii were allied to the patrician Manlii and the plebeian Genucii and Licinii whom they supported during the Conflict of the Orders 17 They then occupied an unprecedented leading position in the third century as three generations of Fabii were princeps senatus a unique occurrence during the Republic i 18 19 During this period they allied with the plebeian Atilii from Campania where the Fabii had significant estates the Fulvii and Mamilii from Tusculum the Otacili from Beneventum the Ogulnii from Etruria and the Marcii 20 They also sponsored the emergence of the Caecilii Metelli and Porcii who owed their first consulate to the Fabii 21 as well as the re emergence of the patrician Quinctii 22 The main direction of the second war against Carthage was disputed between the Fabii and the Cornelii Scipiones 23 The death of Fabius Verrucosus in 203 marks the end of the Fabian leadership on Roman politics by now assumed by their rivals Scipio Africanus and his family 24 After the consulship of Fabius Maximus Eburnus in 116 the Fabii entered a century long eclipse until their temporary revival under Augustus 25 The name of the Fabii was associated with one of the two colleges of the Luperci the priests who carried on the sacred rites of the ancient religious festival of the Lupercalia The other college bore the name of the Quinctilii suggesting that in the earliest times these two gentes superintended these rites as a sacrum gentilicum much as the Pinarii and Potitii maintained the worship of Hercules Such sacred rites were gradually transferred to the state or opened to the Roman populus a well known legend attributed the destruction of the Potitii to the abandonment of its religious office In later times the privilege of the Lupercalia had ceased to be confined to the Fabii and the Quinctilii 2 26 27 28 Origin Edit The Capitoline Wolf with Romulus and Remus One legend holds that their respective followers were called the Quinctilii and the Fabii According to legend the Fabii claimed descent from Hercules who visited Italy a generation before the Trojan War and from Evander his host through Fabius This brought the Fabii into the same tradition as the Pinarii and Potitii who were said to have welcomed Hercules and learned from him the sacred rites which for centuries afterward they performed in his honor 11 29 30 31 32 Another early legend stated that at the founding of Rome the followers of the brothers Romulus and Remus were called the Quinctilii and the Fabii respectively The brothers were said to have offered up sacrifices in the cave of the Lupercal at the base of the Palatine Hill which became the origin of the Lupercalia This story is certainly connected with the tradition that the two colleges of the Luperci bore the names of these ancient gentes 33 34 35 36 The nomen of the Fabii is said originally to have been Fovius Favius or Fodius Plinius stated that it was derived from faba a bean a vegetable which the Fabii were said to have first cultivated A more fanciful explanation derives the name from fovea ditches which the ancestors of the Fabii were said to have used in order to capture wolves 37 It is uncertain whether the Fabii were of Latin or Sabine origin Niebuhr followed by Gottling considered them Sabines However other scholars are unsatisfied with their reasoning and point out that the legend associating the Fabii with Romulus and Remus would place them at Rome before the incorporation of the Sabines into the nascent Roman state 2 It may nonetheless be noted that even supposing this tradition to be based on actual historical events the followers of the brothers were described as shepherds and presumably included many of the people then living in the countryside where the city of Rome was to be built The hills of Rome were already inhabited at the time of the city s legendary founding and they stood in the hinterland between the Latins Sabines and Etruscans Even if many the followers of Romulus and Remus were Latins from the ancient city of Alba Longa many may also have been Sabines already living in the surrounding countryside 38 39 Praenomina EditThe earliest generations of the Fabii favored the praenomina Caeso Quintus and Marcus They were the only patrician gens to make regular use of Numerius which appears in the family after the destruction of the Fabii at the Cremera According to the tradition related by Festus this praenomen entered the gens when Quintus Fabius Vibulanus the consul of 467 married a daughter of Numerius Otacilius of Maleventum and bestowed his father in law s name on his son ii 2 43 Although the Fabii Ambusti and some later branches of the family used the praenomen Gaius Quintus is the name most frequently associated with the Fabii of the later Republic The Fabii Maximi used it almost to the exclusion of all other names until the end of the Republic when they revived the ancient praenomen Paullus This was done in honor of the Aemilii Paulli from whom the later Fabii Maximi were descended having been adopted into the Fabia gens at the end of the 3rd century BC A variety of surnames associated with the Aemilii were also used by this family and one of the Fabii was called Africanus Fabius Maximus although his proper name was Quintus Fabius Maximus Africanus 2 44 In a manuscript of Cicero Servius appears among the Fabii Pictores but this seems to have been a corruption in the manuscript which originally read Numerius 45 Branches and cognomina Edit Denarius of Gaius Fabius Hadrianus 102 BC On the obverse is the head of Cybele a possible allusion to the visit to Rome of Battaces a priest of Magna Mater 46 The reverse depicts Victoria driving a biga with a flamingo below The cognomina of the Fabii under the Republic were Ambustus Buteo Dorso or Dorsuo Labeo Licinus Maximus with the agnomina Aemilianus Allobrogicus Eburnus Gurges Rullianus Servilianus and Verrucosus Pictor and Vibulanus Other cognomina belonged to persons who were not strictly speaking members of the gens but who were freedmen or the descendants of freedmen or who had been enrolled as Roman citizens under the Fabii The only cognomina appearing on coins are Hispaniensis Labeo Maximus and Pictor 2 47 In imperial times it becomes difficult to distinguish between members of the gens and unrelated persons sharing the same nomen Members of the gens are known as late as the second century but persons bearing the name of Fabius continue to appear into the latest period of the Empire 2 The eldest branch of the Fabii bore the cognomen Vibulanus which may allude to an ancestral home of the gens The surname Ambustus meaning burnt replaced Vibulanus at the end of the 5th century BC the first of the Fabii to be called Ambustus was a descendant of the Vibulani The most celebrated stirps of the Fabia gens which bore the surname Maximus was in turn descended from the Fabii Ambusti This family was famous for its statesmen and its military exploits which lasted from the Samnite Wars in the 4th century BC until the wars with the Germanic invaders of the 2nd century BC Most if not all of the later Fabii Maximi were descendants of Quintus Fabius Maximus Aemilianus one of the Aemilii Paulli who as a child was adopted into that illustrious family 2 iii Buteo which described a type of hawk was originally given to a member of the Fabia gens because such a bird on one occasion settled upon his ship with a favorable omen This tradition related by Plinius does not indicate which of the Fabii first obtained this surname but it was probably one of the Fabii Ambusti 2 48 Crawford suggests that the buteo of the legend was not a hawk but a flamingo based on the appearance of a bird resembling a flamingo on the coins of Gaius Fabius Hadrianus who may have sought to associate himself with that family by the use of such a symbol Hadrianus and his descendants form the last distinguishable family of the Fabii Their surname was probably derived from the Latin colony of Hatria and it is likely that they were not lineal descendants of the Fabii Buteones but newly enfranchised citizens 49 The flamingo might also allude to the family s coastal origins 50 The surname Pictor borne by another family of the Fabii signifies a painter 51 and the earliest known member of this family was indeed a painter famed for his work in the temple of Salus built by Gaius Junius Bubulcus Brutus between 307 and 302 BC The later members of this family several of whom were distinguished in the arts appear to have been his descendants and must have taken their cognomen from this ancestor 2 The cognomen Labeo the one with large lips appears at the beginning of the second century BC Quintus Fabius Labeo the first of that name was also a poet but his line vanished before the end of the century Members EditThis list includes abbreviated praenomina For an explanation of this practice see filiation Coin of one of the Fabii Maximi minted during the reign of Augustus Fabii Vibulani et Ambusti Edit Caeso Fabius Vibulanus father of Quintus Caeso and Marcus consuls from 485 to 479 BC Quintus Fabius K f Vibulanus consul in 485 and 482 BC He waged war against the Volsci and Aequi He fell in battle against the Veientes in 480 52 53 54 Caeso Fabius K f Vibulanus quaestor in 485 BC he prosecuted Spurius Cassius Vecellinus consul of the preceding year on a charge of treason Consul in 484 481 and 479 Fabius continued the war against the Aequi and Veii He led the Fabii at the Battle of the Cremera where he died 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 Marcus Fabius K f Vibulanus consul in 483 and 480 BC He resigned two months before the end of his second consulship after sustaining injuries in a battle against Veii during which his brother Quintus was slain 67 68 69 70 71 Quintus Fabius M f K n Vibulanus consul in 467 465 and 459 The only survivor of the Battle of the Cremera He fought against the Aequi in each of his consulships and was awarded a triumph during the last one He was finally a member of the second Decemvirate in 450 and also urban prefect in 462 and 458 43 72 73 74 Marcus Fabius Vibulanus named by Diodorus as one of the consuls in 457 BC together with Cincinnatus The majority of ancient sources name Gaius Horatius Pulvillus and Quintus Minucius Esquilinus as the consuls of this year 75 76 Marcus Fabius Q f M n Vibulanus consul in 442 BC legate during the war against Veii in 437 consular tribune in 433 and legate in 431 77 78 79 Numerius Fabius Q f M n Vibulanus consul in 421 and consular tribune in 415 and 407 BC 80 81 Quintus Fabius Q f M n Vibulanus consul in 423 and consular tribune in 416 and 414 BC 82 83 Quintus Fabius M f Q n Vibulanus Ambustus consul in 412 BC 84 Caeso Fabius M f Q n Ambustus consular tribune in 404 401 395 and 390 BC 85 86 Numerius Fabius M f Q n Ambustus consular tribune in 406 and 390 BC 86 87 Quintus Fabius M f Q n Ambustus consular tribune in 390 BC 86 88 Marcus Fabius Q f Q n Ambustus pontifex maximus in 390 BC 86 88 Marcus Fabius K f M n Ambustus consular tribune in 381 and 369 BC and censor in 363 supported the lex Licinia Sextia which granted the plebeians the right to hold the consulship 89 90 Fabia M f K n married Servius Sulpicius Praetextatus consular tribune in 377 376 370 and 368 BC 91 92 93 Fabia M f K n married Gaius Licinius Calvus Stolo consul in 364 and 361 BC 91 92 93 Marcus Fabius N f M n Ambustus consul in 360 356 and 354 BC princeps senatus triumphed over the Tiburtines 94 95 Gaius Fabius N f M n Ambustus consul in 358 BC 96 Marcus Fabius M f N n Ambustus magister equitum in 322 BC 97 Quintus Fabius Ambustus nominated dictator in 321 BC but compelled to resign due to a fault in the auspices 98 Gaius Fabius M f N n Ambustus appointed magister equitum in 315 BC in place of Quintus Aulius who fell in battle 99 Fabii Dorsuones et Licini Edit Gaius Fabius Dorsuo bravely left the Capitoline Hill to perform a sacrifice when Rome was occupied by the Gauls following the Battle of the Allia in 390 BC eluding the Gallic sentries both on his departure and his return 100 101 Marcus Fabius C f Dorsuo consul in 345 BC carried on the war against the Volsci and captured Sora 102 103 Gaius Fabius M f M n Dorsuo Licinus consul in 273 BC died during his year of office 104 105 Marcus Fabius C f M n Licinus consul in 246 BC 90 Fabii Maximi Edit Quintus Fabius M f N n Maximus Rullianus magister equitum in 325 or 324 consul in 322 310 308 297 and 295 BC dictator in 315 and censor in 304 princeps senatus triumphed in 322 309 and 295 Quintus Fabius Q f M n Maximus Gurges consul in 292 276 and 265 BC princeps senatus triumphed in 291 and 276 Quintus Fabius Maximus aedile in 266 BC he assaulted the ambassadors of Apollonia and was remanded to the custody of the Apolloniates but was dismissed unharmed iv 106 107 108 109 110 Quintus Fabius Q f Q n Maximus Verrucosus nicknamed Cunctator consul in 233 228 215 214 and 209 BC censor in 230 and dictator in 221 and 217 princeps senatus triumphed in 233 Quintus Fabius Q f Q n Maximus consul in 213 BC 111 112 113 Quintus Fabius Q f Q n Maximus appointed augur in 203 BC 114 Quintus Fabius Maximus praetor peregrinus in 181 BC 115 Quintus Fabius Q f Q n Maximus Aemilianus consul in 145 BC the son of Lucius Aemilius Paullus conqueror of Macedonia as a child he was adopted by Quintus Fabius Maximus the praetor Quintus Fabius Q f Q n Maximus Allobrogicus consul in 121 BC and censor in 108 triumphed over the Allobroges Quintus Fabius Q f Q n Maximus Allobrogicus son of the consul of 121 BC remarkable only for his vices 116 117 Quintus Fabius Q f Q n Maximus Servilianus consul in 142 BC 118 119 120 121 Quintus Fabius Maximus Eburnus consul in 116 BC he condemned one of his sons to death being accused by Gnaeus Pompeius Strabo he went into exile 122 123 124 Quintus Fabius Q f Q n Maximus legate of Caesar and consul suffectus in 45 BC 125 126 127 128 129 Paullus Fabius Q f Q n Maximus consul in 11 BC Quintus Fabius Q f Q n Maximus Africanus better known as Africanus Fabius Maximus consul in 10 BC Quintus Fabius Allobrogicinus Maximus named in an inscription from the Augustan era now lost 130 Paullus Fabius Paulli f Q n Persicus consul in AD 34 Fabia Eburna inferred by Ronald Syme from an inscription naming Eutychia the slave girl of a woman named Eburna another inscription names a slave woman named Alexa perhaps belonging to the same Eburna 131 132 Fabius Numantinus one of eight young men admitted to an undetermined sacerdotal college possibly the sodales Titii between AD 59 and 64 133 Fabii Pictores Edit Denarius of Numerius Fabius Pictor 126 BC On the obverse is the head of Roma on the reverse is Quintus Fabius Pictor the praetor of 189 holding an apex and shield inscribed QVIRIN alluding to his status of Flamen Quirinalis Gaius Fabius M f Pictor painted the interior of the temple of Salus dedicated in 302 BC 134 135 136 137 138 Gaius Fabius C f M n Pictor consul in 269 BC 139 Numerius Fabius C f M n Pictor ambassador in 273 BC he accompanied Quintus Fabius Maximus Gurges to the court of Ptolemy II Philadelphos Consul in 266 he triumphed over the Sassinates and again over the Sallentini and Messapii 90 140 141 Quintus Fabius C f C n Pictor ambassador in 216 BC he was sent to consult the oracle of Delphi in order to find ways to appease the gods after the disaster of Cannae Pictor is known as the earliest of the Latin historians although he wrote in Greek he was an important source for later annalists but most of his own work has been lost 142 143 Quintus Fabius Q f C n Pictor praetor in 189 BC received Sardinia as his province but was compelled by the pontifex maximus to remain at Rome because he was Flamen Quirinalis his abdication was rejected by the senate which designated him praetor peregrinus He died in 167 144 145 Numerius Fabius Q f Q n Pictor an annalist and antiquarian of the second century BC 146 45 147 Numerius Fabius N f Q n Pictor triumvir monetalis in 126 BC 2 148 Fabii Buteones Edit Numerius Fabius M f M n Buteo consul in 247 BC during the First Punic War 90 149 Marcus Fabius M f M n Buteo consul in 245 BC censor probably in 241 appointed dictator in 216 to fill the vacancies in the senate after the Battle of Cannae 150 151 Fabius M f M n Buteo according to Orosius accused of theft and slain in consequence by his own father 152 Marcus Fabius Buteo praetor in 201 BC obtained Sardinia as his province 153 Quintus Fabius Buteo praetor in 196 BC obtained the province of Hispania Ulterior 154 Quintus Fabius Buteo praetor in 181 BC obtained Gallia Cisalpina as his province 155 Numerius Fabius Buteo praetor in 173 BC obtained the province of Hispania Citerior but died at Massilia on his way to his province 156 Quintus Fabius Buteo quaestor in 134 BC apparently the son of Quintus Fabius Maximus Aemilianus and nephew of Scipio Aemilianus by whom he was entrusted with the command of four thousand volunteers during the Numantine War 157 158 Fabii Labeones Edit Denarius of Quintus Fabius Labeo 124 BC The obverse depicts the head of Roma while the obverse shows Jupiter driving a quadriga The prow below alludes to his grandfather s naval triumph Quintus Fabius Q f Q n Labeo quaestor urbanus in 196 BC Praetor then propraetor in 189 and 188 he defeated the naval forces of Antiochus III for which he received a naval triumph the following year He was triumvir for establishing the colonies of Potentia and Pisaurum in 184 and Saturnia in 183 He was consul in 183 and proconsul in Liguria the following year He also became pontiff in 180 and was part of a commission of ten men sent to advise Aemilius Paullus on the settlement of Macedonia in 167 He was also a poet according to Suetonius 159 160 161 162 Quintus Fabius Q f Q n Labeo a learned orator known whose eloquence is mentioned by Cicero He must have lived about the middle of the second century BC and either he or more probably his son was proconsul in Spain where the name occurs on some milestones 163 164 165 Quintus Fabius Q f Q n Labeo triumvir monetalis in 124 BC He was probably proconsul in Spain between 120 and 100 BC 166 164 167 165 Fabii Hadriani Edit Gaius Fabius C f Q n Hadrianus triumvir monetalis in 102 BC A supporter of Cinna and Carbo during the Civil War against Sulla he was appointed praetor of Africa in 84 BC He remained there as propraetor for two years but his government was so oppressive that the colonists and merchants at Utica burnt him to death in his own praetorium 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 50 Marcus Fabius C f C n Hadrianus legate between 72 and 68 BC under Lucius Licinius Lucullus during the Third Mithridatic War He was defeated by Mithridates in 68 176 Gaius Fabius M f C n Hadrianus praetor in 58 BC and subsequently proconsul in Asia where he minted coins 177 178 Others Edit Tetradrachm of Gaius Fabius Hadrianus as proconsul at Pergamon with the local magistrate Demeas circa 57 BC On the obverse is a Cista mystica within ivy wreath on the reverse is a bow case between two serpents with a thyrsus on the right Fabius Dorsennus a Latin comic playwright whose style and care was criticized by Quintus Horatius Flaccus 179 180 181 Fabius an hypothetical tribune of the plebs in 64 BC He might have carried a bill reducing the number of attendants a candidate could bring with him at an election 182 183 Gaius Fabius tribune of the plebs in 55 BC passed a law complementing Caesar s agrarian law He served under Caesar as a legate from 54 to 49 BC during the second half of the Gallic Wars and at the start of the Civil War 184 Quintus Fabius Sanga warned Cicero about the conspiracy of Catiline after being informed by the ambassadors of the Allobroges 185 186 187 Quintus Fabius Vergilianus legate of Appius Claudius Pulcher in Cilicia in 51 BC during the Civil War he espoused the cause of Pompeius 188 Publius Fabius Blandus named in a sepulchral inscription from Firmum Picenum dating between the late first century BC and the first half of the first century AD 189 Fabia P f Pollitta probably the daughter of Publius Fabius Blandus named in the same inscription from Firmum Picenum 189 Fabia P l Bassa the freedwoman of Publius Fabius Blandus named in the same inscription from Firmum Picenum 189 Publius Fabius Firmanus consul suffectus in the early years of the reign of the emperor Claudius 190 Fabius Rusticus a historian of the mid first century AD frequently quoted by Tacitus on the life of Nero 191 Fabius Fabullus legate of Legio V Alaudae chosen as a leader of the soldiers who mutinied against Aulus Caecina Alienus in AD 69 perhaps the same man to whom the murder of the emperor Galba was attributed 192 193 Gaius Fabius Valens one of the principal generals of Vitellius and consul suffectus ex kal Sept in AD 69 Fabius Priscus one of the legates sent against Civilis in AD 70 194 Fabius Ululitremulus a shopkeeper in Pompeii A graffito from the doorpost of his shop alludes to the Aeneid and praises Minerva as the patron of the fullones 195 196 Marcus Fabius Rufus the last owner of a rich villa in Pompeii 197 Marcus Fabius Quintilianus the most celebrated of Roman rhetoricians granted the insignia and title of consul by Domitian Lucius Fabius Tuscus consul suffectus in 100 Lucius Fabius Justus a distinguished rhetorician and a friend of both Tacitus and the younger Pliny 198 199 Lucius Julius Gainius Fabius Agrippa A Roman descendant of the Herodian dynasty gymnasiarch of Apamea and one of the most prominent citizens of the city in the 110s Possibly an ancestor to usurper Jotapianus though it is unclear if the initial F in Jotapianus name stands for Fabius Ceionia Fabia an adoptive granddaughter of Hadrian and sister of the emperor Lucius Verus Her name indicates descent from the gens Fabia though her ancestry is obscure Quintus Fabius Catullinus consul in AD 130 2 Fabius Cornelius Repentinus appointed praefectus praetorio in the reign of Antoninus Pius 200 Fabius Mela an eminent jurist probably of the mid 2nd century 201 Lucius Fabius Cilo Septimianus consul suffectus in AD 193 and consul in 204 202 203 204 Fabius Sabinus one of the consiliarii of Alexander Severus perhaps the same Sabinus later driven out of Rome by order of Elagabalus 205 Fabia Orestilla supposedly the wife of Gordian I and mother of his children Her name appears only in the Augustan History Quintus Fabius Clodius Agrippianus Celsinus Proconsul of Caria in 249 Fabianus Pope from 236 to 250 Supposedly of noble Roman birth his father s name was reportedly Fabius Titus Fabius Titianus consul in AD 337 90 Aconia Fabia Paulina a pagan priestess during the late fourth century wife of Vettius Agorius Praetextatus Saint Fabiola a Christian ascetic of the late fourth century she was later declared a saint Quintus Fabius Memmius Symmachus a politician of the late fourth and early fifth century who was appointed Quaestor at the age of ten Possibly a pagan he was alleged to have built a temple to Flora Fabius Planciades Fulgentius a Latin grammarian probably not earlier than the sixth century Fabia Eudocia first empress consort of the Byzantine emperor Heraclius She was born in the Exarchate of Africa and died in AD 612 reportedly due to epilepsy One of her two known children was Constantine III See also EditList of Roman gentesFootnotes Edit Ryan dismisses Pliny s account of the three consecutive principes Ambustus Rullianus and Gurges He suggests instead Rullianus Gurges and Verrucosus but does not believe that they served consecutively This story is doubted by Munzer and Ogilvie who consider it to be anachronistic as Otacilius is described as a Samnite and there was no significant contact between Rome and the Samnites for another century 40 Munzer argues that Numerius appears only among the collateral stirpes of the Buteones and Pictores but never among the main line of the family the Vibulani Ambusti and Maximi Manuscripts of Livy give Gnaeus instead of Numerius among the older Fabii which has generally been amended to Numerius following the Capitoline Fasti Carolus Sigonius followed this scheme in his editio princeps of Livy in 1555 as have most later historians However Munzer prefers Gnaeus otherwise unused by the Fabii as Livy had access to sources predating the chronology of Varro which was used to compile the Fasti According to Munzer the first of the Fabii to bear the name was Numerius Fabius Buteo the consul of 247 his father Marcus did not follow the usual convention of giving his praenomen to his eldest son and must therefore have been the Fabius to whom Festus referred 41 42 40 Although some sources state that they were adopted by Quintus Fabius Maximus Verrucosus who died in 203 BC it has been argued that their father Lucius Aemilius Paullus Macedonicus as the only surviving member of the Aemilii Paulli following the Battle of Cannae would not have allowed his two elder children to be adopted out of the gens until after the birth of his two younger sons circa 180 177 BC Broughton thought he could have been the son of Quintus Fabius Maximus Gurges the consul of 292 and 276 and thus assigned him the consulship of 265 However Ryan disagrees and gives the three consulships to Gurges References Edit Livy ii 42 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology vol II p 131 Fabia Gens Homo pp 7 ff Smith The Roman Clan pp 290 ff Dionysius ix 11 13 Livy ii 46 47 Livy ii 48 50 Dionysius ix 15 23 Livy ii 50 vi 1 Dionysius ix 22 a b Ovid Fasti ii 237 Plutarch The Life of Camillus 19 Tacitus Historiae ii 91 Niebuhr vol ii p 194 Cornell The Beginnings of Rome p 311 Munzer Roman Aristocratic Parties pp 31 32 Munzer Roman Aristocratic Parties pp 28 30 Munzer Roman Aristocratic Parties pp 54 56 Ryan Rank and participation in the Senate pp 173 179 Munzer Roman Aristocratic Parties pp 57 58 63 66 69 71 Munzer Roman Aristocratic Parties p 50 Munzer Roman Aristocratic Parties pp 112 114 Briscoe Cambridge Ancient History vol VIII pp 68 74 Munzer Roman Aristocratic Parties p 87 95 96 175 Munzer Roman Aristocratic Parties p 260 Cicero Philippicae ii 34 xiii 15 Pro Caelio 26 Propertius Elegies iv 26 Plutarch The Life of Caesar 61 Ovid Ex Pontio iii 3 99 Juvenal Satires viii 14 Plutarch The Life of Fabius Maximus 1 Paulus s v Favii Ovid Fasti ii 361f 375f Aurelius Victor De Origo Gentis Romanae 22 Plutarch The Life of Romulus 22 Valerius Maximus ii 2 9 Pliny the Elder Historia Naturalis xviii 3 Niebuhr History of Rome Gottling pp 109 194 a b Ogilvie Commentary on Livy books 1 5 pp 597 598 Munzer Roman Aristocratic Parties pp 69 71 Broughton vol I p 70 note 1 a b Festus s v Numerius pp 170 173 ed Muller PIR vol II p 48 a b Ernst Badian reviews of Cicero Scripta Quae Manserunt Omnia Fasc 4 Brutus E Malcovati Cicero Brutus A E Douglas Journal of Roman Studies Vol 57 No 1 2 1967 pp 223 230 Diodorus Siculus xxxvi 13 Eckhel vol v p 209 ff Pliny x 8 10 Taylor Voting Districts p 212 a b Crawford Roman Republican Coinage pp 326 327 Cassell s Latin amp English Dictionary s v Pictor Livy ii 41 43 46 Dionysius viii 77 82 90 ix 11 Broughton vol I pp 21 23 24 Livy ii 41 43 46 50 Dionysius viii 77 ff 82 86 ix 1 ff 11 13 22 Zonaras vii 17 Valerius Maximus ix 3 5 Aulus Gellius xvii 21 Ovid Fasti ii 195 ff Cassius Dio fragment no 26 ed Reim Festus s v Scerlerata porta Niebuhr History of Rome vol ii p 177 ff Gottling p 308 Becker vol ii part ii p 93 Broughton vol I pp 22 24 26 Livy ii 42 47 Dionysius viii 87 88 ix 5 13 15 Frontinus Strategemata i 11 1 Valerius Maximus v 5 2 Broughton vol I pp 22 24 Livy iii 1 3 9 22 25 35 41 58 Dionysius ix 59 61 69 x 20 22 58 xi 23 46 Broughton vol I pp 32 33 36 38 40 46 Diodorus Sicullus xii 3 1 Broughton vol i pp 41 note 2 Livy iv 11 17 19 25 27 28 v 41 Diodorus Siculus xii 34 58 Broughton vol I pp 54 59 62 64 Livy iv 43 49 58 Diodorus Siculus xiii 24 xiv 3 Livy iv 37 49 51 Diodorus Siculus xiii 9 38 Livy iv 52 Livy iv 54 61 v 10 24 35 36 41 a b c d Plutarch The Life of Camillus 17 Livy iv 58 v 35 36 41 a b Livy v 35 36 41 Livy vi 22 34 36 a b c d e Fasti Capitolini a b Livy vi 34 a b Zonaras vii 24 a b Aurelius Victor De Viris Illustribus 20 Livy vii 11 17 22 viii 33 Fasti Triumphales Livy vii 12 Livy viii 38 Livy ix 7 Livy ix 23 Livy v 46 52 Valerius Maximus i 1 11 Livy vii 28 Diodorus Siculus xvi 66 Velleius Paterculus i 14 Eutropius ii 15 Valerius Maximus vi 6 5 Livy Epitome xv Cassius Dio Fragment 43 Zonaras viii 8 Broughton vol I pp 200 201 note 1 202 note 1 Livy xxiv 9 11 12 20 43 45 46 xxviii 9 Plutarch The Life of Fabius Maximus 24 Cicero De Natura Deorum iii 32 Tusculanae Quaestiones iii 28 Cato Maior de Senectute 4 Epistulae ad Familiares iv 6 Livy xxx 26 xxxiii 42 Livy xl 19 xxxix 29 Cicero Tusculanae Quaestiones i 33 Valerius Maximus iii 5 2 Appian Hispanica 70 Iberica 67 Orosius v 4 Cicero Epistulae ad Atticum xii 5 Valerius Maximus vi 1 5 viii 5 1 Cicero De Oratore i 26 Pro Balbo 11 Valerius Maximus vi 1 5 Orosius v 16 Cicero In Vatinium Testem 11 Epistulae ad Familiares vii 30 Caesar De Bello Hispaniensis 2 41 Cassius Dio xliii 42 46 Pliny the Elder vii 53 Livy Epitome 116 CIL VI 1407 Syme The Augustan Aristocracy p 418 CIL VI 7701 CIL VI 33842 CIL VI 2002 Pliny the Elder xxxv 4 s 7 Valerius Maximus viii 14 6 Dionysius xvi 6 Cicero Tusculanae Quaestiones i 2 4 Niebuhr History of Rome vol iii 356 Broughton vol I p 199 Valerius Maximus iv 3 9 Broughton vol I pp 197 201 Livy xxii 57 xxiii 11 Broughton vol I p 251 Livy xxxvii 47 50 51 xlv 44 Broughton vol I pp 359 361 394 436 Cicero Brutus 81 Sumner Orators in Brutus p 43 Crawford Roman Republican Coinage pp 291 292 Zonaras viii 16 Livy xxiii 22 23 Plutarch The Life of Fabius Maximus 9 Orosius iv 13 Livy xxx 26 40 Livy xxiii 24 26 Livy xl 18 36 43 xlv 13 Livy xli 33 xlii 1 4 Valerius Maximus viii 15 4 Appian Hispanica 84 Livy xxxiii 42 xxxvii 47 50 60 xxxviii 39 47 xxxix 32 44 45 xl 42 xlv 17 Cicero De Officiis i 10 Suetonius The Life of Terence 4 Broughton vol I pp 336 361 366 377 378 380 383 390 393 435 436 note 3 Cicero Brutus i 81 a b CIL I 823 CIL I 824 a b Crawford Roman Republican Coinage p 294 CIL I 823 Broughton vol I pp 543 544 Cicero In Verrem i 27 v 36 Pseudo Asconius in Verrem p 179 ed Orelli Diodorus Siculus p 138 ed Dind Livy Epitome 86 Valerius Maximus ix 10 2 Orosius v 20 ILLRP 363 Broughton vol II pp 60 62 note 1 64 69 Broughton vol II pp 118 134 140 Broughton vol II pp 194 203 Hans Voegtli Zwei Munzfunde aus Pergamon in Schweizerische Numismatische Rundschau 69 1990 pp 47 63 64 Horace Epistulae ii 1 173 Pliny the Elder xiv 15 Seneca the Younger Epistulae morales ad Lucilium 89 Cicero Pro Murena 71 Broughton vol II pp 162 164 note 4 Broughton vol II pp 217 220 note 2 225 227 note 5 Sallust The Conspiracy of Catiline 41 Appian Bellum Civile ii 4 Cicero In Pisonem 31 Cicero Epistulae ad Familiares iii 3 4 Epistulae ad Atticum viii 11 a b c CIL IX 5390 Camodeca Novita sui fasti consolari delle tavolette cerate della Campania pp 52 70 Tacitus Agricola 10 Plutarch The Life of Galba 27 Tacitus Historiae i 44 iii 14 Tacitus Historiae iv 79 CIL IV 7963 Goldberg Constructing Literature p 20 John R Clarke review of Mario Grimaldi ed Pompei La Casa di Marco Fabio Rufo Collana Pompei vol 2 Bryn Mawr Classical Review 2015 02 37 Tacitus Dialogus de Oratoribus Pliny the Younger Epistulae i 11 vii 2 Julius Capitolinus The Life of Antoninus Pius 8 Digesta 46 tit 3 s 39 50 tit 16 s 207 9 tit 2 s 11 19 tit 1 s 17 tit 9 s 3 Cassius Dio lxxvii 4 lxxviii 11 Aelius Spartianus The Life of Caracalla 4 Aurelius Victor Epitome de Caesaribus 20 Aelius Lampridius The Life of Alexander Severus c 68 The Life of Elagabalus c 16 Bibliography EditAncient sources Edit Marcus Tullius Cicero Brutus Cato Maior de Senectute De Natura Deorum De Officiis De Oratore Epistulae ad Brutum Epistulae ad Familiares In Pisonem In Vatinium Testem In Verrem Philippicae Pro Balbo Pro Caelio Pro Murena Tusculanae Quaestiones Gaius Julius Caesar attributed De Bello Hispaniensis On the War in Spain Gaius Sallustius Crispus Sallust Bellum Catilinae The Conspiracy of Catiline Diodorus Siculus Bibliotheca Historica Library of History Sextus Aurelius Propertius Elegiae Elegies Quintus Horatius Flaccus Horace Epistulae Letters Dionysius of Halicarnassus Romaike Archaiologia Roman Antiquities Titus Livius Livy History of Rome Publius Ovidius Naso Ovid Fasti Ex Ponto From Pontus Marcus Velleius Paterculus Compendium of Roman History Valerius Maximus Factorum ac Dictorum Memorabilium Memorable Facts and Sayings Lucius Annaeus Seneca Seneca the Younger Epistulae Morales ad Lucilium Moral Letters to Lucilius Gaius Plinius Secundus Pliny the Elder Naturalis Historia Natural History Gaius Plinius Caecilius Secundus Pliny the Younger Epistulae Letters Sextus Julius Frontinus Strategemata Stratagems Publius Cornelius Tacitus Historiae De Vita et Moribus Iulii Agricolae On the Life and Mores of Julius Agricola Dialogus de Oratoribus Dialogue on Oratory Lucius Mestrius Plutarchus Plutarch Lives of the Noble Greeks and Romans Gaius Suetonius Tranquillus De Viris Illustribus Decimus Junius Juvenalis Satirae Satires Aulus Gellius Noctes Atticae Attic Nights Appianus Alexandrinus Appian Bellum Civile The Civil War Hispanica The Spanish Wars Iberica Sextus Pompeius Festus Epitome de M Verrio Flacco de Verborum Significatu Epitome of Marcus Verrius Flaccus On the Meaning of Words Lucius Cassius Dio Cocceianus Cassius Dio Roman History Aelius Lampridius Aelius Spartianus Flavius Vopiscus Julius Capitolinus Trebellius Pollio and Vulcatius Gallicanus Historia Augusta Augustan History Sextus Aurelius Victor attributed De Origo Gentis Romanae On the Origin of the Roman People De Viris Illustribus On Famous Men Epitome de Caesaribus Epitome of the Lives of the Caesars Eutropius Breviarium Historiae Romanae Abridgement of the History of Rome Paulus Orosius Historiarum Adversum Paganos History Against the Pagans Digesta seu Pandectae The Digest Paulus Diaconus Epitome de Sex Pompeio Festo de Significatu Verborum Epitome of Festus De Significatu Verborum ed Karl Otfried Muller Joannes Zonaras Epitome Historiarum Epitome of History Modern sources Edit Joseph Hilarius Eckhel Doctrina Numorum Veterum The Study of Ancient Coins 1792 1798 Barthold Georg Niebuhr The History of Rome Julius Charles Hare and Connop Thirlwall trans John Smith Cambridge 1828 Wilhelm Adolf Becker Handbuch der Romischen Alterhumer Handbook of Roman Antiquities Weidmannsche Buchhandlung Leipzig 1846 Karl Wilhelm Gottling Geschichte der Romischen Staatsverfassung von Erbauung der Stadt bis zu C Casar s Tod History of the Roman State from the Founding of the City to the Death of Caesar Buchhandlung des Waisenhauses Halle 1840 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 August Pauly Georg Wissowa et alii Realencyclopadie der Classischen Altertumswissenschaft J B Metzler Stuttgart 1894 1980 Paul von Rohden Elimar Klebs amp Hermann Dessau Prosopographia Imperii Romani The Prosopography of the Roman Empire abbreviated PIR Berlin 1898 Friedrich Munzer Roman Aristocratic Parties and Families translated by Therese Ridley Johns Hopkins University Press 1999 originally published in 1920 T Robert S Broughton The Magistrates of the Roman Republic American Philological Association 1952 Attilio Degrassi Inscriptiones Latinae Liberae Rei Publicae abbreviated ILLRP Florence 1957 1963 Lily Ross Taylor The Voting Districts of the Roman Republic University of Michigan Press 1960 D P Simpson Cassell s Latin and English Dictionary Macmillan Publishing Company New York 1963 Robert Maxwell Ogilvie Commentary on Livy books 1 5 Oxford Clarendon Press 1965 Graham Vincent Sumner The Orators in Cicero s Brutus Prosopography and Chronology Phoenix Supplementary Volume XI Toronto and Buffalo University of Toronto Press 1973 Michael Crawford Roman Republican Coinage Cambridge University Press 1974 2001 J A Crook F W Walbank M W Frederiksen R M Ogilvie editors The Cambridge Ancient History vol VIII Rome and the Mediterranean to 133 B C Cambridge University Press 1989 Ronald Syme The Augustan Aristocracy Clarendon Press Oxford 1989 Giuseppe Camodeca Novita sui fasti consolari delle tavolette cerate della Campania Publications de l Ecole francaise de Rome vol 143 1991 T J Cornell The Beginnings of Rome London and New York Routledge 1995 Francis X Ryan Rank and Participation in the Republican Senate Stuttgart Franz Steiner Verlag 1998 Sander M Goldberg Constructing Literature in the Roman Republic Poetry and its Reception Cambridge University Press 2005 C J Smith The Roman Clan the Gens from Ancient Ideology to Modern Anthropology Cambridge University Press 2006 ISBN 978 0 521 85692 8 Leon Homo Roman Political Institutions Routledge 2013 ISBN 978 1 136 19811 3 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fabia gens amp oldid 1141372669, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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