Anicius Acilius Glabrio Faustus

Anicius Acilius Glabrio Faustus (floruit 425-443) was an aristocrat of the later Roman Empire. He was Urban prefect three times before 437, consul in 438, and briefly Praetorian prefect of Italy in 442.[1][2] Faustus was selected to promulgate the Theodosian Code in the Western Empire.[3]

Faustus was the son of Acilius Glabrio Sibidius, who is known from a dedication to him from Faustus. Sibidius was a member of the lineage of the Acilii Glabrii, who descended from the consul of 191 BC, Manius Acilius Glabrio.[4] Cameron states his mother was one of the house of the gens Anicia, although unable to identify the woman.[5] His descendants include Rufius Achilius Maecius Placidus (cos. 481), Anicius Acilius Aginantius Faustus (cos. 483), and Rufius Achilius Sividius (cos. 488).[6]

References

  1. B.L. Twyman, "Aetius and the Aristocracy" Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte, 19 (1970), p. 490
  2. Henry Fynes Clinton (1845). Fasti Romani: The Civil and Literary Chronology of Rome and Constantinopole, from the Death of Augustus to the Death of Justin II. University Press. pp. 696–.
  3. Ronald J. Weber, "Albinus: The Living Memory of a Fifth-Century Personality", Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte, 38 (1989), pp. 481f
  4. Alan Cameron, "Anician Myths", Journal of Roman Studies, 102 (2012), pp. 148f
  5. "Anician Myths", p. 149
  6. Cameron, "Anician Myths", p. 150
Political offices
Preceded by
Flavius Sigisvultus,
Flavius Aetius
Consul of the Roman Empire
438
with Flavius Theodosius Augustus
Succeeded by
Flavius Theodosius Augustus,
Festus


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