Anicius_Faustus

Anicius Faustus

Anicius Faustus

3rd-century Roman statesman and official


Anicius Faustus[1][2] (c. 240  after 300) was a Roman senator who was appointed consul in AD 298.

Biography

A member of the gens Anicia, Paulinus was possibly the son of Sextus Cocceius Anicius Faustus Paulinus, the Proconsular governor of Africa during the 260s, and grandson of Quintus Anicius Faustus Paulinus.[3] He was the patron of the town of Uzappa.[4]

If he is identified as the Faustus mentioned on the Great Altar of Hercules in Rome, he served as Praetor urbanus early in his career.[5] He was subsequently appointed suffect consul probably sometime during the 270s. He was then made consul posterior alongside Virius Gallus in 298. After serving as consul, he was appointed Praefectus Urbi of Rome, serving from 299 until 1 March 300.[6]

It is postulated that Faustus married the noblewoman Amnia Demetrias,[7] daughter of Titus Flavius Stasicles Metrophanes (fl. 190-199 AD) and Claudia Capitolina according to Christian Settipani;[8] with whom he probably had at least two sons: Amnius Anicius Julianus, Consul in 322, and Sextus Anicius Paulinus, the consul of 325.[9]

Sources

  • Chastagnol, André, Les Fastes de la Prefecture de Rome au Bas-Empire (1962)
  • Martindale, J. R.; Jones, A. H. M, The Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire, Vol. I AD 260–395, Cambridge University Press (1971)

Oxyrhynchus Papyrus P.Mich 9 547, a receipt for hire of a whipbearer. It names Anicius Faustus (and Virius Gallus) as current Consuls, and is dated to the day, September 6, 298 (15th and 14th and 7th year of our lords Diocletian and Maximian, Augusti, and Constantius and Maximian, distinguished Caesars, in the consulship of Anicius Faustus and Virius Gallus, Thoth 9)


References

  1. Martindale & Jones, pgs. 329 and 676
  2. His full name was possibly Sextus Anicius Faustus Paulinianus or Marcus Junius Caesonius Nicomachus Anicius Faustus Paulinus – see Torres, Milton Luiz Christian Burial Practices at Ostia Antica: Backgrounds and Contexts with a Case Study of the Pianabella Basilica (2007), pg. 118, note 419, and Chastagnol, pgs. 31-33
  3. Martindale & Jones, pgs. 680-681
  4. Martindale & Jones, pg. 676
  5. Chastagnol, pg. 32
  6. Chastagnol, pg. 33
  7. Settipani, Christian; Continuité gentilice et continuité familiale dans les familles sénatoriales romaines à l’époque impériale: mythe et réalité, Linacre, UK: Prosopographica et Genealogica, 2000, p. 105. ILL. NYPL ASY (Rome) 03-983
  8. Settipani, Christian (26 October 2021). Adam et Eve ou la généalogie impossible, Les liens généalogiques avec l'Antiquité : mythe ou réalité (Lecture). La Fédération Française de Généalogie, Pantin, France.
  9. Martindale & Jones, pg. 329; Chastagnol, pg. 31
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