Opsidia (gens)

The gens Opsidia or Obsidia was a minor plebeian family at Rome. Few members of this gens are known to have held any magistracies, but several are found in inscriptions.[1]

Origin

The nomen Opsidius belongs to a class of gentilicia formed from other names using the suffix -idius. In this case the nomen is derived from the more common Opsius; the same nomen also gives rise to the gens Opsilia.[2] The common root of all three nomina is op-, "help", found in the name of the goddess Ops, as well as the praenomen Opiter, and the derived patronymics Opiternius and Opetreius, and the nomen Oppius.[3]

Most of these names are thought to be of Sabine or Samnite origin, and in some writers we find the nomen Obsidius, apparently an orthographic variation of Opsidius, among the Frentani, a Samnite people.[4][5] At a later period, a Roman traveler of this name is said to have discovered the type of volcanic rock now known as Obsidian, which became highly fashionable at Rome.[6]

Members

This list includes abbreviated praenomina. For an explanation of this practice, see filiation.

Footnotes

  1. Plutarch calls him Oplacus; Dionysius Oblacus Vulsinius, but Florus appears to have preserved the original name, Obsidius.
  2. Found indistinctly written in manuscripts of Pliny, sometimes read as Obaidius, which Sillig amended to Obsius; but as Obsidius is a genuine, if uncommon nomen, that appears to be the correct reading.
  3. i.e. Maxima.
  4. Also read as Obsidius.
gollark: Technically no, if you know all the other participants and their order.
gollark: I couldn't make it work properly, so I'm working on other things instead.
gollark: ```The "apiomemetics" strategy will be as follows:- if this is the first turn, fork process- if you are the parent process, wait for the child to terminate- if child, use a strategy and see how well it goes- at 100th turn (matches are AT LEAST this long), if child, send message to parent via shared memory and exit- repeat with different strategy- store best strategy against current opponent somewhere, use on all subsequent turns```
gollark: And also it infinitely loops somehow.
gollark: Right now it doesn't actually test it.

See also

References

  1. Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, vol. III, p. 2 ("Obsidius").
  2. Chase, pp. 121–123.
  3. Chase, pp. 148, 149.
  4. Chase, pp. 128, 129.
  5. Florus, i. 18. § 7.
  6. Pliny the Elder, xxxvi. 26. § 67.
  7. CIL IX, 3062.
  8. Plutarch, "The Life of Pyrrhus", 16.
  9. Dionysius, xviii. 2–4.
  10. CIL V, 8875.
  11. CIL V, 2920.
  12. CIL V, 2791.

Bibliography

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