Marcus Hirrius Fronto Neratius Pansa

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Marcus Hirrius Fronto Neratius Pansa was a

senator who held several posts in the emperor's service. He was appointed suffect consul in either AD 73 or 74.[1]
Pansa is known primarily through epigraphic inscriptions.

The origins of the

better source needed
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Career

Pansa's career in the emperor's service is not fully recorded. His earliest known office was Lycia from 70 to 72, prior to its federation with Pamphylia.[3] A fragmentary inscription recovered from Saepinum allows us to reconstruct his cursus honorum from that point, with his adlection into the patrician class around 73/74.[4] Then, after his consulship, Pansa was assigned in 74/75 to administer a census in a place called regio X: Mario Torelli believed this referred to a portion of the province of Cappadocia, which was at the time being organized; however, the editors of L'Annee Epigraphique note that it could also refer to Regio X Venetia et Histria in Roman Italy, where the Hirrii originated.[5]

This was followed with a commission to conduct a campaign against an enemy most of whose name was lost from the inscription except the initial letter A: either Pansa campaigned in Armenia Major, or against the Alans. This campaign was carried out in 75 or 76. He was victorious in his military tasks, for the inscription attests Pansa received

dona militaria or military honors, including the mural crown and camp crown.[4]

Either with his accession to the suffect consul, or between the completion of his campaign in the East and his next assignment as governor, Pansa was co-opted into the

curator aedium sacrarum, either before he served as governor, or after.[4] He was governor of Cappadocia and Galatia from 77 to 80 while they were still a combined province.[6]

Family

Pansa is not known to have had any children, and, to preserve his lineage, resorted to

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References

  1. Classical Quarterly
    , 31 (1981), pp. 206f, 219
  2. ^ a b Olli Salomies, Adoptive and polyonymous nomenclature in the Roman Empire, (Helsinki: Societas Scientiarum Fennica, 1992), p. 117
  3. ^ Werner Eck, "Jahres- und Provinzialfasten der senatorischen Statthalter von 69/70 bis 138/139", Chiron, 12 (1982), pp. 287-290
  4. ^
    Journal of Roman Studies
    , 58 (1968), pp. 170-175
  5. ^ AE 1968, 145
  6. ^ Eck, "Jahres- und Provinzialfasten", pp. 299-302