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Sabinus Of Canossa
Sabinus can also refer to: Ancient Romans * Sabinus (Ovid) (died AD 14 or 15), Roman poet, known friend of Ovid * Appius Claudius Sabinus Regillensis, founder of the Claudian family * Masurius Sabinus, Roman jurist who lived during the reign of Tiberius (Tiberius reigned 14-37 AD) * Titus Flavius Sabinus (other), several people * Quintus Titurius Sabinus (died 54 BC), legate under Julius Caesar * Gaius Poppaeus Sabinus, consul in AD 9 * Julius Sabinus, Romanised Gaul who rebelled against Rome, living around AD 69 * Gaius Valarius Sabinus, Roman finance minister around AD 271 * Sabinus of Heraclea, 4th-century historian Saints * Sabinus of Spoleto (d. 304), Roman martyr * Sabinus of Hermopolis, Christian martyr of Egypt * Sabinus of Canosa (461-566), bishop of Canosa in Italy * Sabinus of Piacenza (333-420), bishop of Piacenza in Italy Other uses * Angelus Sabinus (15th century), Italian Renaissance poet and classical philologist * Georg Sabinus Georg Sabinus or ...
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Sabinus (Ovid)
Sabinus (died 14 or 15 AD) was a Latin poet and friend of Ovid. He is known only from two passages of Ovid's works. At ''Amores'' 2.18.27—34, Ovid says that Sabinus has written responses to six of Ovid's '' Heroïdes'', the collection of elegiac epistles each written in the person of a legendary woman to her absent male lover. These are enumerated as Ulysses to Penelope, in response to ''Heroïdes'' 1; Hippolytus to Phaedra (''H.'' 4); Aeneas to Dido (''H.'' 7); Demophoon to Phyllis (''H.'' 2); Jason to Hypsipyle (''H.'' 6); and (presumably) Phaon to Sappho (''H.'' 15). Three of these Ovidian responses by Sabinus — the letters from Ulysses and Demophoon, along with a letter from Paris to Oenone (''Heroïdes'' 5) — are printed in Renaissance editions of the ''Heroïdes''. Modern scholars believe them to have actually been written in the 1460s–1470s by the humanist Angelo Sabino, who was a poet and editor of classical texts. His edition advertised the inclusion of poems ...
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Appius Claudius Sabinus Regillensis
Appius Claudius Sabinus Regillensis or Inregillensis (fl. 505 – 480 BC) was the legendary founder of the Roman gens Claudia, and consul in 495 BC. He was the leading figure of the aristocratic party in the early Roman Republic. Background and migration to Rome Appius Claudius was a wealthy Sabine from a town known as "Regillum". His original name was ''Attius Clausus'', according to Livy; Suetonius gives ''Atta Claudius'', while Dionysius of Halicarnassus gives ''Titus Claudius''.Livy, ii. 16Suetonius, "Life of Tiberius", 1.Dionysius, v. 40. From the '' Fasti consulares'', it is known that Claudius' father was named ''Marcus''.Broughton, vol. I, p. 13. He had at least two sons: Appius Claudius Sabinus Regillensis, consul in 471 BC, and Gaius Claudius Sabinus Regillensis, consul in 460 BC. Appius Claudius Crassus, the decemvir, was his grandson. In 505 BC, shortly after the establishment of the Roman Republic, Rome successfully waged war against the Sabines, and in the followi ...
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Masurius Sabinus
Masurius Sabinus, also Massurius, was a Roman jurist who lived in the time of Tiberius (reigned 14–37 AD). Unlike most jurists of the time, he was not of senatorial rank and was admitted to the equestrian order only rather late in life, by virtue of his exceptional ability and imperial patronage. Masurius was the first person to give "state-certified opinions" ''(publice respondere)'', a privilege granted by the emperor which marked increasing imperial control over the judicial process after the end of the Roman Republic. Before the Principate of Augustus, the value of legal opinions was based on the expertise of those who gave them. The passage in the ''Digest'' of Justinian that discusses the granting of Masurius's authority is thus a pivotal point in the history of Roman law. Masurius was a leader of the '' Sabiniani'', a school or sect of legal thought in the 1st and 2nd centuries AD. He was succeeded by a line of jurists including Gnaeus Arulenus Caelius Sabinus (consul 6 ...
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Titus Flavius Sabinus (other)
Titus Flavius Sabinus was the name of several notable Ancient Romans, including: * Titus Flavius Sabinus, father of the emperor Vespasian. * Titus Flavius Sabinus, brother of Vespasian, was consul ''suffectus'' in AD 47 and ''praefectus urbi'' under the emperor Nero. * Titus Flavius Sabinus, consul ''suffectus'' in AD 69, and probably a nephew of Vespasian. * Titus Flavius Sabinus, consul ''suffectus'' in AD 82, nephew of Vespasian, and son of the consul of 47. {{hndis Titus Titus Caesar Vespasianus ( ; 30 December 39 – 13 September 81 AD) was Roman emperor from 79 to 81. A member of the Flavian dynasty, Titus succeeded his father Vespasian upon his death. Before becoming emperor, Titus gained renown as a mili ... Ancient Roman prosopographical lists ...
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Quintus Titurius Sabinus
Quintus Titurius Sabinus was one of Caesar's legates during the Gallic Wars. He is first mentioned in Caesar's campaign against the Remi, in 57 BC. In 56 BC, he was sent by Caesar with three legions against the Venelli, Curiosolitae, and Lexovii (in Normandy), who were led by Viridovix. He gained a great victory over Viridovix's forces, and all the insurgent states submitted to his authority. In 54 BC he and Lucius Aurunculeius Cotta were stationed for the winter in the territory of the Eburones with a legion and five cohorts. They had not been in the country more than fifteen days before they were attacked by Ambiorix and Cativolcus. Sabinus, showing less resolve than Cotta and trusting himself under Ambiorix's guise of truce and safe passage, evacuated the camp under threat of German attack. As a result, he was massacred along with Cotta and all their troops. Sources * Caes. B. G. ii. 5, iii. 11, 17— 19, v. 24— 37 * Dion Cass.br>xxxix. 45
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Gaius Poppaeus Sabinus
Gaius Poppaeus Sabinus was a Roman senator (died AD 35), who served as consul in AD 9 with Quintus Sulpicius Camerinus as his colleague. He enjoyed the friendship of the Emperors Augustus and Tiberius. Sabinus was elected to the consulship, with Quintus Sulpicius Camerinus, in AD 9. They served until the Kalends of July, when they were succeeded by Sabinus' brother, Quintus Poppaeus Secundus, and Marcus Papius Mutilus, authors of the ''lex Papia Poppaea'', a law intended to strengthen and encourage marriage. From 15 until his death in 35, Sabinus served as Governor of the combined provinces of Moesia, Achaea, and Macedonia. During his tenure Sabinus oversaw the resolution of a boundary dispute between the communities of Kierion and Metropolis (mod. Palaiokastro Georgikon), both located in ancient Thessaly. Also during his tenure he ended a revolt in Thrace in 26. Consequently, he was awarded the '' ornamenta triumphalia''. Gaius Poppaeus Sabinus died in late December of ...
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Julius Sabinus
Julius Sabinus was an aristocratic Gauls, Gaul of the Lingones at the time of the Batavian rebellion of AD 69. He attempted to take advantage of the turmoil in Rome after the death of Nero to set up an independent Gaulish state. After his defeat he was hidden for many years by his wife Epponina. The story of the couple, with emphasis on the loyalty of Epponina (known as "Éponine"), became popular in France during the 18th and 19th centuries. Rebellion He was a Roman officer, naturalized, as indicated by his name. He claimed to be the great-grandson of Julius Caesar on the grounds that his great-grandmother had been Caesar's lover during the Gallic war. In AD 69, benefiting from the Year of the Four Emperors, period of disorders which shook the Roman Empire and the rebellion started on the Rhine by the Batavians, he started a revolt in Gallia Belgica, Belgian Gaul. However, his badly organised forces were easily defeated by the Sequani who were still faithful to Rome. Following h ...
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Gaius Valarius Sabinus
Gaius Valarius Sabinus was a public officer in Ancient Rome, during the reign of Emperor Aurelian. After the revolt of Felicissimus and the mint workers in the spring of 271, Aurelian appointed Sabinus as the new finance minister. He was first given the title ''agens vice rationalis'' ("acting in the place of rationalis"). This suggest he was given the office in the immediate aftermath of the riots. Later his position was confirmed officially, when he was given the title of ''v.p. rationalis''. Scholars believe that Sabinus was largely responsible for Aurelian's new financial and monetary policies. Sabinus set up his headquarters at Ticinum Ticinum (the modern Pavia) was an ancient city of Gallia Transpadana, founded on the banks of the river of the same name (now the Ticino river) a little way above its confluence with the Padus ( Po). It was said by Pliny the Elder to have bee ..., where Aurelian's largest new mint was also located. Sources * Watson Alaric (1999), ''Aur ...
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Sabinus Of Heraclea
Sabinus of Heraclea was bishop of Heraclea in Thrace, and a leader of the party and sect of Macedonius. He was the author of a collection of the Acts of the councils of the Catholic Church, from the council of Nicaea to his own time. William Cave fixes the date at which Sabinus flourished as c. 425. The church history of Sabinus was much used by Socrates of Constantinople in his ''Ecclesiastical History'', who speaks of it as untrustworthy, because Sabinus was partisan, and omitted, and even wilfully altered, facts and statements adverse to his views and interests. Socrates shews how Sabinus tries to disparage the fathers of Nicaea in the face of the contrary evidence of Eusebius, and makes no mention whatever of Macedonius, lest he should have to describe his deeds. Baroniusad ann. 325, xxxix., ad ann. 344, iii. etc. speaks strongly of Sabinus's unscrupulous handling of history, calls him "homo mendacissimus," and suggests that Sozomen gives a garbled account of the election of A ...
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Sabinus Of Spoleto
:''for other saints called Sabinus, see Sabinus (other)'' Saint Sabinus of Spoleto (died c. 300) was a bishop in the Christian church who resisted the Diocletianic Persecution and was martyred. According to legend, Venustian, governor of Etruria and Umbria, had Sabinus and his deacons arrested in Assisi. Diocletian's order required all Christians to sacrifice to the gods or be put to death, with their estates seized for the state. Venustian mocked Sabinus's faith, accusing him of leading the people to the worship of a dead man. When Sabinus said that Christ rose on the third day, Venustian invited him to do the same thing. He had Sabinus's hands cut off. The deacons were in great fear, but Sabinus encouraged them to hold to their faith, and they died after being torn apart by iron hooks. In prison after the martyrdom of his deacons, he was tended by a woman named Serena. While in prison, he healed a man born blind. Venustian heard of the cure and sought a cure for ...
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Sabinus Of Hermopolis
Sabinus of Hermopolis (also known as Abibus and Phanas) was a procurator, possibly bishop, and Christian martyr of Hermopolis in Egypt. During the persecution of Diocletian he and several other Christians concealed themselves in a hut. Their presence there was ultimately revealed to the government by someone whose identity remains dubious. That person is described as either a beggar or a physician. Sabinus was then taken to Antinoöpolis, where, after being subjected to a variety of tortures, he was drowned in the Nile. Some believe he was governor and bishop. It is known that he was a nobleman by birth, who took in Christians and did work with the poor. He is recognized as a saint by several Christian churches. His feast day in the Roman Catholic Church is March 13. The Greek Orthodox Church gives him the full office of March 16. He is also commemorated in the Coptic Church The Coptic Orthodox Church ( cop, Ϯⲉⲕ̀ⲕⲗⲏⲥⲓⲁ ⲛ̀ⲣⲉⲙⲛ̀ⲭⲏⲙⲓ ⲛ̀ⲟ ...
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Sabinus Of Canosa
:''for other people called Sabinus, see Sabinus (other)'' Saint Sabinus of Canosa ( it, San Sabino) (461 – 9 February 566), venerated as a saint in the Roman Catholic church, was bishop of Canosa di Puglia from 514. Life He was sent twice as a papal envoy to Constantinople, in 525, by Pope John I and in 536 to accompany Pope Agapitus I, who lost his life on the journey, to defend the true faith against the Monophysite heresy. He attended the Council of Constantinople (536). In 531, in the papacy of Pope Boniface II, he took part in the Synod of Rome. He was a builder of churches and other religious buildings, according to the Benedictine discipline of ''Ora et labora'' ("Work and pray"). He died after 52 years as bishop, on 9 February 566. Cult Sabinus was a friend of Saint Benedict, whom he visited at Montecassino and to whom, as recorded by Gregory the Great, he once expressed his preoccupations on the incursions of the Ostrogoth King Totila into the Italian pe ...
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