Gessia gens

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The gens Gessia was a minor Roman family, known chiefly from the east of Imperial times. None of its members held any curule magistracies, although the emperor Severus Alexander is believed to have descended from a branch of this gens.

Members

  • Decimus Gessius, father of the Delian Gessius.
  • Decimus Gessius D. f., mentioned in an inscription from Delos, dated to about 125 BC.
  • Lucius Gessius Optatus, built an altar for Neptune at Roatto.[1]
  • Publius Gessius, father of Publius Gessius.
  • Publius Gessius P. f., mentioned on a monument found near Viterbo, probably dating to about AD 50.[2]
  • Publius Gessius P. l. Primus, freedman of Publius Gessius.
  • Gessia P. l. Fausta, freedwoman of Publius Gessius.
  • Aulus Gessius was the chief magistrate of Smyrna during the reigns of Claudius and Nero. His name is preserved on coins commemorating the marriage of Claudius and Agrippina the Younger.[3]
  • Gessius Florus, procurator of Judea during the reign of Nero. Josephus considers his numerous abuses of power and efforts to distract attention from them with instigating the First Jewish–Roman War.
  • Marcus Julius Gessius Marcianus, procurator, possibly in Syria, in the latter part of the second century, and perhaps the early part of the third; he was reputedly the father of Severus Alexander. He was put to death on the orders of Macrinus in 218.[4]
  • Marcus Julius Gessius Bassianus, a priest of the Arval Brethren during the reign of Caracalla; possibly a brother of Severus Alexander.
  • Theoclia, the sister of Severus Alexander; she married a Roman aristocrat named Messalla. Both were murdered on the orders of Macrinus in 218.
  • Marcus Julius Gessius Bassianus Alexianus, otherwise known as Severus Alexander, emperor from AD 222 to 235.

See also

List of Roman gentes

References

  1. ^ Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum, V. 7457.
  2. ^ M. B. Comstock and C. C. Vermeule, Sculpture in Stone, Boston (1976), pp. 200, 201.
  3. ^ Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, vol. II, p. 266 ("A. Gessius").
  4. ^ Cassius Dio, lxxviii. 30.

Bibliography