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σαντα, Ι 5 άριστα πολειτευόμεΐνον.<br />

ROMAN PERSONAL NAMES IN ARGOLIS<br />

[9] IG IV 2 1, 681; cf. Peek 1969, 130, no. 297 [1st c. A.D.].<br />

Epidauros, sanctuary; a statue base decorated with a cymatium erected for the son of the<br />

person by the brother of his mother Teimosthenis, L. Volussenus Aristocrates of Sparta. The<br />

name of the person discussed here is attested as ΤειΙμοκράτους (text ARG 242).<br />

Remarks: The date of [1] is disputed. B. Keil, "Beiträge zur Geschichte des Areopags",<br />

Berichte über die Verhandlungen der Sächsischen Akademie der Wissenschaften zu<br />

Leipzig, Phil.-Hist. Kl. 71, 1919, Heft 8, 3 dated the inscription IG IV 2 1, 82 in the<br />

time of Nero, followed by A. Momigliano, 1RS 34, 1944, 115-6; P. Graindor,<br />

"Chronologie des archontes athéniens sous l'empire", Mémoires publiés par la<br />

Classe des lettres et des sciences morales et politiques de Ρ Académie royale de<br />

Belgique. Collection in quarto, deuxième Série, VIII 1921, no. 41 bis, p. 71-74 and<br />

309 argues for a date "vers l'époque de Claude". Groag, Reichsbeamten, 28-29<br />

interprets the phrase ...μετά τό τήν έλευθερίαν ήμεΐν άποδοθήναι... as an allusion of<br />

the beneficial government of Memmius Regulus. J.H. Oliver, "On the Athenian<br />

decrees for Ulpius Eubiotus", Hesperia 20, 1951, esp. 351, n. 1; id., Hesperia 47,<br />

1978, 187-8 suggests a grant of liberty to the Panachaeans under Tiberius on the<br />

basis of evidence from the cycle of Athenian secretaries, since Timocrates appears<br />

also in the honorary inscription for Memmius Regulus, erected on behalf of the<br />

Achaean League (see [2]). Oliver dates the liberation, refered to in the text before<br />

Caius, in the age of Tiberius, under whom Achaia became an imperial province; he<br />

also points out that the Δωριείς of the inscription were merged later in the Locroi,<br />

so that they are not named in IG VII 2711-2712, which are to be dated in A.D. 37.<br />

A.J.S. Spawforth, ABSA 80, 253-4 (cf. SEG 35, 1985, 304) argues that Timocrates is<br />

mentioned in the Regulus' inscription [2] together with his father and would have<br />

been relatively young, not older that forty; in [1] he could be about fifty or sixty or<br />

more, in other words, already with great experience and qualification (cf.... άπαντι<br />

τώι προβεβιωμένω σεμνώς καί θαυμαστώς βίωι...); Β. Levy, "When did Nero<br />

liberate Achaia and why", in: Achaia und Elis, 189-194 cites the inscription as<br />

evidence for the serious administrative work done in Roman Achaia in A.D. 67, as<br />

provincial political institutions were swept away and were replaced by local<br />

administrative systems. The liberation took place in November A.D. 66 according<br />

to Levy, who places Timocrates' term of office in A.D. 66/7.<br />

The person was agonothetes before he obtained Roman citizenship, i.e. before A.D.<br />

35-44 (cf. [8]), like his father (ARG 244 [2]), who was agonothetes of Apollonia,<br />

Asclapeia and Caesareia.<br />

s. T. Statilius Lamprias (II) (ARG 244), husband of Statilia Teimosthenis (ARG 242), f. T.<br />

Statilius Lamprias III (ARG 245). For a stemma of the family see A.J.S. Spawforth, ABSA 80,<br />

1985, 249, table 7, given also in Appendix, Stemma V, and Settipani, 496.<br />

253. Τ(ΙΤΟΣ) ΣΤΑΤΙΔΙΟΣ ΛΑΜΠΡΙΟΥ (IV) ΥΙΟΣ ΤΙΜΟΚΡΑΤΗΣ (Π)<br />

[1] IG IV 2 1, 678 [IG: primum saec. IIp. Chr.].<br />

235<br />

253

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