Nomen gentilicium explained

The Latin: nomen gentilicium (or simply Latin: nomen) was a hereditary name borne by the peoples of Roman Italy and later by the citizens of the Roman Republic and the Roman Empire. It was originally the name of one's Latin: [[gens]] (family or clan) by patrilineal descent. However, as Rome expanded its frontiers and non-Roman peoples were progressively granted citizenship and concomitant Latin: nomen, the latter lost its value in indicating patrilineal ancestry.

For men, the Latin: nomen was the middle of the Latin: tria nomina ("three names"), after the Latin: [[praenomen]] and before the Latin: [[cognomen]]. For women, the Latin: nomen was often the only name used until the late Republic. For example, three members of gens Julia were Gaius Julius Caesar and his sisters Julia Major and Julia Minor ("Julia the elder" and "Julia the younger").

History

The nomen gentilicium, or "gentile name" designated a Roman citizen as a member of a gens. A gens, which may be translated as "race", "family", or "clan", constituted an extended Roman family, all of whom shared the same nomen and claimed descent from a common ancestor. Particularly in the early Roman Republic, the gens functioned as a state within the state, observing its own sacred rites and establishing private laws, which were binding on its members although not on the community as a whole.[1]

Although the other peoples of Italy also possessed nomina (plural of nomen), the distinction between Romans and the non-Roman peoples of Italy disappeared as various communities were granted the Roman franchise and, after the Social War (91–87 BC), that was extended to most of Italy. Possession of the nomen gentilicium then identified a man as a Roman citizen.

The nomen was an essential element of Roman nomenclature throughout Roman history, but its usefulness as a distinguishing element declined precipitously following the Constitutio Antoniniana, which effectively granted the nomen "Aurelius" to vast numbers of newly-enfranchised citizens. Countless other "new Romans" acquired the nomina of important families in this manner during imperial times. In the 4th century, Aurelius was surpassed in number by Flavius, and other names became quite common, including Valerius, Claudius, Fabius, Julius and Junius. Those names no longer had any utility in indicating one's patrilineal ancestry and became largely perfunctory. They could be changed to indicate rank or status, and even abbreviated, much as praenomina had been.[2] [3]

Both in its original form, identifying an individual as a member of a Roman gens, and in its later form, as an indicator of status, the nomen continued to be used for several decades after the collapse of Imperial authority in the west. The last datable example of a nomen gentilicium belongs to a Julia Rogatiana, who died at Volubilis in AD 655. In the east, nomina such as Flavius continued until the early 8th century; Flavius Basilius was Pagarch of Aphrodito in Egypt in 710.[3]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Oxford Classical Dictionary, 2nd Ed. (1970), "Gens."
  2. Oxford Classical Dictionary, 2nd Ed. (1970), "Names, Personal."
  3. [Benet Salway]