Universitätsbibliothek HeidelbergUniversitätsbibliothek Heidelberg
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Ramsay, William Mitchell
The cities and bishoprics of Phrygia: being an essay of the local history of Phrygia from the earliest time to the Turkish conquest (Band 1,2): West and West-Central Phrygia — Oxford, 1897

DOI Page / Citation link:
https://doi.org/10.11588/diglit.4680#0137

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468 XI. APAMEIA.

Aeliana Regina belonged to the family of M. Aelius Apollinarios no.
301; for Iter second son was called Apollinarios l. Her eldest son formed
one of her names into a cognomen, and her second son revived a cognomen
of her family.

A person named Aelius Tryphon, thrice Asiarch, is mentioned a. d.
247-8 in no. 31a; and the same person occurs on a coin of Gallienus
em • TPYcp[n]NOC a. d. 353-68. His name shows that he belonged to
the family of Proklianos Tryphon and Aeliana Regina; but he is
evidently not the same as either of the two sons here mentioned. He
may have been either a grandson or a third son ; and in the latter case
all three sons took cognomina from the mother's family.

The stemma may be conjeeturally restored

M. Aelius Apollinarius epim. e. 140 (no. 301).

[Procla?] = [Antonius Tryphon ?2] [Aelius Apollinarius ?] = [Regina?]

natus c. X40

Proclianus Tryphon = Aeliana Rcgina
n. e. 165 I nata c. 165

M. Aur. Antonius M. Aur. Antonius Aelius Tryphon

Eeginus n. c. 190 Tryphonius Apollinarius n. c. 200 ter Asiarcha ante 247

305. (R. 1891). MM. Legrand and Chamonard BCH 1893 p. 247.
0[l T]4povres erip,ricrav Aovklov 'AtlXlov Aovklov vlov YloXariva TlpoK\o[v
vearepov, lepia r&v cre/3ao-7w, (piXoyepovra /ecu cpiXoTiarpiv, Tipecrj3euaavTa
Trpbs tovs cre/3d(rroi;s Scopea 3 virep t&v els ttjv ktlctiv bicKpepovratv, kv re rats
Aonrcu? rfjs woAc-cos km rrjs yepovcr(.as \peiais ayvuis km Sikchcos e« irpoyovcov
iroXirevop.evov, <rvvr\yopov rrjs yepovaCas.

L. Atilius L. P. Pal. Proclus was son of the L. Atilius mentioned in
no. 290. It is not possible to identify them, both because this one is
distinguished as vecorepos, and because the spelling (Aovklos, but Acvklos
290, 298) shows that this inscription is later. The change probably
occurred in the middle of the first century. Hence the Augusti here are
probably Vespasian and Titus. Between 70 and 79 a. d. Atilius, being
then an elderly man. and a member of the Gerousia, acted as envoy to
Rome on some matter connected with ' the foundation' (obviously of the

1 The practice was widespread that In the eastern provinces examples occur,

the second son took as cognomen either as here, where all the children share in

the gentilicium or a cognomen of his the names of both parents,

mother's family; and we have seen 2 Antonius seems needed in order to

already p. 2^9 a case in which a child introduce the name,

revivedanamebelongingtothe mother's 3 8<opea[v] BCHagainstthe epigraphic

family but not actually borne by her. text.
 
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