Octavena gens

The gens Octavena was an obscure plebeian family at Rome. The gens is known primarily from a single individual, the jurist Octavenus, cited by a number of later authorities, although several other Octaveni are known from inscriptions.[1]

Members

  • Octavenus, a jurist, who probably lived in the mid-first century AD. He is cited by a number of authorities, including Valens, Pomponius, Paulus, and Ulpian.[2][1][3]
  • Titus Octavenus Gratus, a freedman and manufacturer of roof tiles dating to AD 123, found at several towns in Italy.[4]
  • Quintus Octavenus Hymnus, named in an inscription from Hispania Citerior.[5]
  • Octavena Pia, named in an inscription from Ostia.[6]
  • Octavenus Pius, named in an inscription from Ostia.[7]
  • Caninia Octavena, buried at Cirta in Numidia, aged twenty-seven years, three months.[8]
gollark: If you wanted to wipe out all humans for some reason, it would probably be quite effective to make a virus with reaaally delayed fatal effects which spreads well in the meantime.
gollark: Somewhat open, they aren't telling people all the production details I guess. Not sure if anyone was asking for that.
gollark: The Moderna one *is* effectively open but nobody has actually done anything with it.
gollark: As far as I know the IP thing is a red herring. Moderna said they wouldn't enforce patents on their vaccine, but nobody else is manufacturing it, because it's actually quite hard: you need specialized knowledge and equipment which is hard to attain externally.
gollark: Someone mentioned this, yes. Like I said, I don't follow cancer much.

See also

References

  1. Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, vol. III, p. 3 ("Octavenus").
  2. Digesta, 2 tit. 1. s. 9; 5 tit. 3. s. 16, 18; 36 tit. 1. s. 67; 40 tit. 5. s. 20.
  3. PIR, vol. II, p. 424.
  4. CIL XV, 464,1, CIL XV, 464,2, CIL XV, 464,3, CIL XV, 464,4, CIL XV, 464,5.
  5. CIL II, 6259,13.
  6. Bloch, No. 349.
  7. Bloch, No. 350.
  8. CIL VIII, 7271.

Bibliography

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.