Manius Acilius Glabrio Gnaeus Cornelius Severus

Manius Acilius Glabrio Gnaeus Cornelius Severus (born c. 119 - after 177) was a senator of the Roman Empire. He was consul ordinarius in 152 with Marcus Valerius Homullus as his colleague. Acilius Glabrio is known almost solely from surviving inscriptions.

Ancestry and Birth

Assuming that he was appointed consul ordinarius suo anno, Acilius Glabrio was born in 119.[1] He belonged to the Acilii Glabriones, a family that first gained prominence during Republican times. Although it had been a Plebian family during the Republic, by Acilius Glabrio's lifetime it had been granted Patrician status.

His father was Manius Acilius Glabrio, consul in 124; and his grandfather was Manius Acilius Glabrio, consul in 91.[2]

Acilius Glabrio's name presents a problem, due to its polyonomous nature. Its latter half, "Gnaeus Cornelius Severus", reflects his being born into the Cornelii Severi and afterwards adopted into the Acilii Glabriones; or receiving an inheritance that depended on his adopting "Gnaeus Cornelius Severus" as part of his name; or reflecting the parentage of his mother, the daughter of the suffect consul of 112. Ronald Syme discusses this problem and asserts the correct interpretation is that his mother was the daughter of the consul, her hypothetical but unattested name Cornelia Severa.[3]

Career

His career is known through a surviving inscription, CIL XIV, 4237. It records a cursus honorum that Edward Champlin considered unusual for a patrician,[4] and Ronald Syme wrote "presents abnormal features" and elaborates: "The patrician senator never sees an army; he accedes to the fasces at the age of thirty two or soon after; and he may not bother to leave the shores of Italy until the sortition (discretely managed) awards Asia or Africa fourteen or fifteen years later."[5]

His career as a senator began in a predictable fashion, as a triumvir monetalis, about which Syme notes, "No patrician in this epoch held any of the other three minor magistracies." However, his next office was unusual: Acilius Glabrio saw service as a military tribune of Legio XV Apollinaris. After Trajan became emperor, only one other patrician is known to have served as a military tribune, Publius Manilius Vopiscus Vicinillianus, consul of 114.[6] Then he was praetorian legates twice—the first as the adjunct to the governor of Crete and Cyrenaica, the other to the proconsul of Africa—prior to becoming quaestor.

Syme examined the context of his posting. He notes that in 137 (the year Syme concludes Acilius Glabrio served with the Legio XV Apollinaris) the governor of the province that legion was stationed in was Flavius Arrianus, who dedicated his Tacitica to the current emperor, Hadrian; Syme also notes that 137 was an unsettled year towards the end of Hadrian's reign, when intrigue surrounded his selection of a successor. "A prudent father would do well if he removed his young son beyond ... [its] reach."[7] Syme also notes that while stationed in Cappadocia Acilius Glabrio provided Roman citizenship for the family of Acilius Diodotus, a sophist from Caesarea (modern Kayseri).[8]

Little can be said about his time in Crete and Cyrenaica: the governor when he was in the province, 138/139, is not known. However, Syme proposes that when Acilius Glabrio was in Africa, 139/140, the proconsul of Africa at the time was his father, Manius Acilius Glabrio.[9] His father's influence was present throughout this part of his life.

After his consulship Acilius Glabrio was proconsul of Africa in his own right between AD 164 and 168.[10] That he was one of the witnesses to the Tabula Banasitana (AE 1971, 534) shows he was still alive 6 July 177.

Family

According to a partly preserved gravestone CIL XIV, 2484, his wife's name was Faustina; the inscription memorializes two daughters: Faustina Aciliana (died aged 13 years, 2 months and 11 days) and Priscilla Aciliana (also died young). They are known to have two sons, Manius Acilius Glabrio, twice consul;[11] and Manius Acilius Faustinus, suffect consul in 179.[12]

Champlin suggests that, based on her name, Faustina was a descendant of the wife of Marcus Annius Verus, more specifically Ummidia Cornificia Faustina, the niece of Emperor Marcus Aurelius.[13] However Syme raises two objections to this identification. One is that Ummidia Cornificia was much too young to be married to Acilius Glabio: her parents were married in 136, and her presumed oldest son was consul for the second time in 186. The other Syme explains, "If Glabrio had married a cousin or a niece of Marcus, it is strange that, surviving his consulate by a quarter of a century, he was able to avoid a second tenure of the fasces."[14]

References

  1. Syme, "An Eccentric Patrician", Chiron, 10 (1980), pp. 432, 433
  2. Paul Gallivan, "Who Was Acilius?", Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte, 27 (1978), pp. 621ff
  3. Syme, "Eccentric Patrician", pp. 441f
  4. Champlin, "Notes on the Heirs of Commodus", American Journal of Philology, 100 (1979), p. 291
  5. Syme, "Eccentric Patrician", p. 427
  6. Syme, "Eccentric Patrician", p. 428
  7. Syme, "Eccentric Patrician", p. 433
  8. Syme, "Eccentric Patrician", pp. 429f
  9. Syme, "Eccentric Patrician", pp. 431-433
  10. Géza Alföldy, Konsulat und Senatorenstand unter den Antoninen (Bonn: Habelt Verlag, 1977), pp. 209f
  11. Champlin, "Notes", pp. 291f
  12. Ioan Piso and Doina Benea, "Das Militärdiplom von Drobeta", Zeitschrift für Papyrologie und Epigraphik, 56 (1984), pp. 263ff
  13. Champlin, "Notes", pp. 292f
  14. Syme, "Eccentric Patrician", p. 445
Political offices
Preceded by
Sextus Quintilius Condianus,
and Sextus Quintilius Valerius Maximus
Consul of the Roman Empire
152
with Marcus Valerius Homullus
Succeeded by
Gaius Bruttius Praesens,
and Aulus Junius Rufinus
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