-
rebellious band of slaves, and thus the son was
bestowed the
cognomen "
Thurinus". In 61 BC, the
elder Octavius was
elected praetor.
Following his praetorship...
- ok-TAY-vee-əs, Latin: [ˈɡaːiʊs ɔkˈtaːwiʊs]).
According to Suetonius, the
cognomen Thurinus (Latin: [tʰuːˈriːnʊs], "of Thurii") was
added to his
birth name as a toddler...
-
Thurii led him to give his son, then a few
years old, the
cognomen of "
Thurinus". He then left for
Macedonia and
proved to be a
capable administrator,...
- Tertius, Tertulla, Tertulli****, Tertullus, Tetricus, Tetti****, Thrasea,
Thurinus, Tiberi****, Tiberillus, Tiberinus, Tibullus, Tiburs, Tigris, Tiro, Titi****...
- same as it is in the 21st century. Caesar's grand-nephew,
Gaius Octavius Thurinus, duly took the full name "Gaius
Julius Caesar" upon Caesar's posthumous...
- army near there. As a result, the ****ure
emperor was
granted the
surname Thurinus shortly after birth. At the
outbreak of the
Civil Wars, it was
deemed by...
- put down a
slave revolt at
Thurii and was
sometimes given the
surname Thurinus (a
cognomen ex virtute), but this name was not p****ed down to the son.[citation...
- (proconsul) (c. 100–59 BC),
praetor in 61 BC
Augustus or
Gaius Octavius Thurinus (63 BC–AD 14),
first Roman Emperor Gaius Octavius Laenas,
curator of the...
- This
marriage made him step-father to
Octavia Minor and
Gaius Octavius Thurinus (****ure
Roman emperor Augustus). In 49 BC,
tensions between Julius Caesar...
- may be
inherited as in the case of
Augustus who
inherited the
cognomen Thurinus.
Examples in
formation of
patrial names include: 1.
definite article and...