Pollienus Auspex (consul under Commodus)

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Pollienus Auspex[note 1] (fl. 3rd century AD) was a Roman military officer and senator who was appointed suffect consul around AD 185. His praenomen is thought to be Tiberius.

Biography

Pollienus Auspex was a member of the possibly Italian gens Pollieni, and the son of

Alexander Severus
.

His next appointment was probably as Iudex ex delegatione Caesarum or Vice Augg cognoscens (the judicial deputy of the emperor in Rome), which he held either before 192, or between 197 and 202, or around 218–9. Auspex also held a number of provincial commands around this time:

Moesia Inferior (between 193 and 197, or 222–235) and Britannia (if held between 193 and 197) or Britannia Superior (if held around AD 230).[1]

Although traditionally described as being Pollienus Auspex's biological son, Tiberius Julius Pollienus Auspex has also been identified by some scholars as being the same individual as this Pollienus Auspex.[2] If his career was dated to the reign of Alexander Severus, then Pollienus Auspex was also probably the adoptive father of Tiberius Pollienus Armenius Peregrinus.

Footnotes

  1. ^ There has been enormous scholarly discussion over what offices should be assigned to this Pollienus Auspex and which to his father of the same name. This reconstruction is taken from Mennen’s Power and Status in the Roman Empire, AD 193-284 (2011), pgs. 116-118

Sources

  • Mennen, Inge, Power and Status in the Roman Empire, AD 193-284 (2011)

References

  1. ^ Mennen, p. 116
  2. ^ Mennen, p. 117
Political offices
Preceded by
Uncertain
Consul suffectus of the Roman Empire
around AD 185
Succeeded by
Uncertain