Avienus (consul 501)
Flavius Avienus (fl. 501–509) was a Roman politician during the reign of Theodoric the Great. He held the consulship with Pompeius as colleague in 501.[1]
He probably belonged to the gens Decia; he was the son of Caecina Decius Maximus Basilius (consul in 480), and brother of Albinus (consul in 493), Theodorus (consul in 505) and Inportunus (consul in 509).[2] John Moorhead argues that the brothers were on different sides of the Laurentian schism, with Albinus and Avienus supporting Symmachus and Theodore and Inportunus supporting Laurentius.[3]
He was a correspondent of Magnus Felix Ennodius; one letter by Ennodius to Avienus has been preserved.[4]
By 507/509, Avienus and his brother Albinus had already become patricii; around this time, but after the death of their father, they were asked to become patrons of the Greens and to appoint a pantomime.
Notes[]
- ^ CIL XII, 930.
- ^ Cassiodorus, Variae III.6.2
- ^ Moorhead, "The Decii under Theoderic", Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte, 33 (1984), p. 109
- ^ Ennodius, Epistulae, III.8.
Further reading[]
- Martindale, John R., "Fl. Avienus iunior 3", Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire, Volume 2, Cambridge University Press, 1980, pp. 577–581.
- 6th-century Romans
- 6th-century Roman consuls
- Correspondents of Ennodius
- Decii
- Imperial Roman consuls
- Patricii