Published on 05 February 2018

Roman epigraph 'Gens Numisia'

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tdr125

Description

The epigraph is located in the atrium of the municipal building of the city of terracina, ItalyThe inscription in Latin is:P(ublius) Numisius P(ubli) f(ilius) Ouf(entina) Iacul[a IIvir] /iter(um) praef(ectus) pro IIv[iro] / P(ublius) Numisius P(ubli) f(ilius) Ouf(entina) Festus [---] / Pantuleia / P(ublius) Numisius P(ubli) l(ibertus) Ter[tius].The epigraph shows the name of the freedman Publius Numisius Tertius of the gens Numisia. Before him two deceased, of free status belonging to the same gens, are mentioned. The first was Publius Numisius Iacula, son of Publius of the Oufentina tribe, and Publius Numisius Festus of the same tribe of Iacula (they were probably brothers because they have the same patronymic.) Tertius was perhaps freedman of their father). Iacula was twice duumvir (IIvir), and praefectus pro duumviro, that is to say he replaced one of the two duumvirs in office due to impediments of the latter or for other reasons. The inscription is incomplete in some points.Source: Objaverse 1.0 / Sketchfab

Citations (0)

Mentions (0)

Metrics

Dataset Index

1.8

FAIR Score

73%

Citations

0

Mentions

0

Metrics Over Time

Publication Details

DOI

Publisher

Zenodo

Assigned Domain

Subfield

Archeology

Field

Arts and Humanities

Domain

Social Sciences

Confidence Score

93%

Source

Open Alex

Normalization Factors

FT

13.46

CTw

1.00

MTw

1.00