Recent epigraphic discoveries, combined with the unique genealogical record provided by the Mausoleum of Licinnia Flavilla in Oinoanda, allow a thorough reconstruction of family binds between Lycian senatorial families of the second and third centuries A.D., showing that all of them were somehow related to one another, and that they all descended from high-priests of the Lycian koinon. Was this a normal state of affairs amongst Greek-speaking elites of the Roman Empire, or is it just another peculiarity of Roman Lycia, "a nation that stands apart from all others", as Sir Ronald Syme once stated?
Due famiglie dell'aristocrazia licia in età imperiale / Slavich, Carlo. - STAMPA. - (2003), pp. 275-295. [10.1400/41529]
Due famiglie dell'aristocrazia licia in età imperiale
Slavich, Carlo
2003
Abstract
Recent epigraphic discoveries, combined with the unique genealogical record provided by the Mausoleum of Licinnia Flavilla in Oinoanda, allow a thorough reconstruction of family binds between Lycian senatorial families of the second and third centuries A.D., showing that all of them were somehow related to one another, and that they all descended from high-priests of the Lycian koinon. Was this a normal state of affairs amongst Greek-speaking elites of the Roman Empire, or is it just another peculiarity of Roman Lycia, "a nation that stands apart from all others", as Sir Ronald Syme once stated?File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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