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ROMAN PERSONAL NAMES IN ELEIA<br />

as ευπατρίδης; see also Hesperia 44, 1975, 404). He was eponymous archon at<br />

Athens of the year A.D. 187/8 (S. Rotroff, Hesperia 44, 1975, 407). The person was<br />

also a consul of the year A.D. 185 (Degrassi, Fasti consolari, 51). Further on him see<br />

E. Groag, RE III 2 (1899) 2680, s.v. Claudius [87]; PIR C 785; Halfmann,<br />

Senatoren, no. 128; J. Oliver, EOS, 586-588 and 601 and for the whole family 585-<br />

588; Ameling, op. cit.; FOS, 72-73 (comments on no. 56).<br />

Oliver, op. cit., believes that there were four sons of Herodes, a Ti. Claudius Appius<br />

Atilius Bradua Regillus Atticus (EL 167), who is to be recognised in the above<br />

mentioned Athenian inscriptions, a second one appearing in the inscription from<br />

Olympia, a third one named L. Vibullius Regillus Claudius Herodes attested also in<br />

Olympia (ΙνΟ 626) and a fourth one, who died in infancy. The second son, who is<br />

discussed here, honoured in Olympia (7v0623) passed, according to Oliver, into the<br />

gens Atilia through adoption —perhaps by a maternal uncle of his mother, in the<br />

family of which there was the name Atilius—, moved out of the Athenian<br />

environment into that of Rome and is consequently to be identified with the consul<br />

of A.D. 185 (see above) and the proconsul Africae attested in J.M. Reynolds and J.B.<br />

Ward Perkins, The inscriptions of Roman Tripolitania (Rome-London 1952) 517; he<br />

also proposes completing the lacuna of the text with the name Regillus instead the<br />

Tertullus of the editors Reynolds and Perkins. So his whole name would be M. Atilius<br />

Metilius Bra[dua] Cauci[dius Regillus Claudius At]ticus [Vibu]llius Pollio Gavidius<br />

Latiaris Atrius Bassus. Oliver died before he could have known the new reading of<br />

G. di Vita-Evrard, "Le proconsul d'Afrique polyonyme IRT 517: une nouvelle<br />

tentative d'identification", MEFR 93, 1981, 183-226 who reads [ ]blicus instead<br />

of [At]ticus (see esp. p. 208-209); W. Eck, Der neue Pauly2, 214 [Π 9].<br />

It seems likely, that he is to be identified with 'Αττικού τοϋ Ήρώδου, attested in a<br />

cursus honorum of his synephebos Corinthas, son of Nicephorus, from Sparta (IG V<br />

1, 45 11. 9-10; LAC 272); this opinion is supported by Boeckh, CIG 1256; Kolbe (in<br />

the comments of IG V 1, 45); Graindor, Atticus, 103 ns 5-6; Follet, Athènes, 134;<br />

Halfmann, Senatoren, no. 128 [5]; A.J.S. Spawforth, ABSA 75, 1980, 208-10 (cf.<br />

SEG 30, 1980,406); on the contrary Chrimes, Ancient Sparta, AAA no. 20; Bradford,<br />

494 and Ameling, Herodes Atticus, I, 37-38 n. 14. II no. 70 identify him with his<br />

father Herodes Atticus.<br />

s. Herodes Atticus (EL 144) and Regula (EL 17); for the stemma of the family see Appendix,<br />

Stemmata XI, 1.2. 3.<br />

ΑΠΠΙΑ ΑΝΝΙΑ A[T]EIAIA ΡΗΓΙΛΛΑ ΕΛΠΙΝΕΙΚΗ ΑΤΡΙΑ ΠΟΛΛΑ: see EL 16<br />

58. Μ(ΑΡΚΟΣ) ΑΤΤΗΔΙΟΣ ΚΟΓΝΙΤΟΣ<br />

[1] /ν0 85,1. 15 facsimile [A.D. 77-81].<br />

Olympia; list of cult personnel; here attested as [Μ(αρκος) Άττήδιος] Κόγνιτος.<br />

[2] ΙνΟ 86,1. 11 facsimile [A.D. 85-95].<br />

433<br />

58

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