Titus Clodius Vibius Varus

Titus Clodius Vibius Varus was a Roman senator who was ordinary consul in AD 160 as the colleague of Appius Annius Atilius Bradua.[1] A bull offering was made to the goddess Cybele for the health of Emperor Antoninus Pius and for the preservation of the Colonia Copia Felix Munatia (now Lyon) on the fifth of December in the year of Vibius' consulate.[2][3]

In his monograph on naming practices of the first centuries of the Imperial period, Olli Salomies writes confidently that Varus was the son of Titus Vibius Varus, ordinary consul of 134. The scholar also suggests that the gentilicum Clodius and the presence of the uncommon praenomen Titus may indicate his mother was a Clodia, or a female member of the gens Clodius.[4]

References

  1. Werner Eck, "Die Fasti consulares der Regungszeit des Antoninus Pius, eine Bestandsaufnahme seit Géza Alföldys Konsulat und Senatorenstand" in Studia epigraphica in memoriam Géza Alföldy, hg. W. Eck, B. Feher, and P. Kovács (Bonn, 2013), p. 80
  2. Henry Coxe (pseudonym of John Millard) The Gentleman's Guide in His Tour Through France pp. 83-84
  3. Emily Hemelrijk, Greg Woolf Women and the Roman City in the Latin West pp. 163
  4. Salomies, Adoptive and Polyonymous Nomenclature in the Roman Empire (Helsinki: Societas Scientiarum Fennica, 1992), pp. 99f

Epigraphs

Political offices
Preceded by
Plautius Quintillus, and
Marcus Statius Priscus Licinius Italicus
Consul of the Roman Empire
160
with Appius Annius Atilius Bradua
Succeeded by
Marcus Aurelius Caesar III,
and Lucius Aelius Aurelius Commodus II
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