<<

Servius Sulpicius Camerinus Cornutus

Servius Sulpicius Camerinus Cornutus (Q145194). From Wikidata. Jump to navigation Jump to search. Roman consul. Camerinus. Servius Sulpicius P.f. Camerinus Cornutus. edit. Language. Also known as. English. Servius Sulpicius Camerinus Cornutus. Roman consul. Camerinus. Servius Sulpicius P.f. Camerinus Cornutus. Statements. instance of. Sulpicius Camerinus Cornutus) - Roman consul, 500 B.C. + Sulpicius Cic:Brut_62 consulship with Servius Sulpicius, about ten years after. Camerinus 3 (Ser. Sulpicius Camerinus Cornutus) - Roman consul, 461 B.C. FastCap_p28 , Ser. Sulpicius . . Ser.n. Camerinus & [p30] [460] & FastCap_p30 ulso Ser. Sulpicius . . Ser.n. Camerinus P. Sestius Q.f. Camerinus 9 (Q. Sulpicius Camerinus) - Roman consul, 9 A.D. ExcBarb_52B Criticus and Nerva Camerinus and Birillus Dolabella and FastCap_p86 binus , Q. Sulpicius Q.f. Q.n. Camerinus & from 1st July: ↠Search for another name. This page © Andrew Smith, 2018 : Attalus' home page. Servius Sulpicius Camerinus Cornutus was a Roman politician in the 5th century BC, consul in 461 BC and decemvir in 451 BC. He was the son of Sulpicius Camerinus Cornutus (consul in 490 BC), and father of Quintus Sulpicius Camerinus Cornutus (military tribune with consular power in 402 BC and 398 BC). In 461 BC, he was consul with Volumnius Amintinus Gallus. Their terms occurred during a period of political tensions between the tribunes of the plebs, who demanded that the rights of the Servius Sulpicius Camerinus Cornutus, the short form of whose name is Camerinus, was consul at Rome in the year 500 BC with Tullius Longus. Livy reports that no important events occurred during this year, but Dionysius of Halicarnassus states that Camerinus detected and crushed a conspiracy to restore the Tarquins to power. His fellow-consul Tullius died during the year, leaving him as sole ruler. The first member of the gens who obtained the consulship was Servius Sulpicius Camerinus Cornutus, in 500 BC, only nine years after the expulsion of the Tarquins, and the last of the name who appears on the consular Fasti was Sulpicius Tertullus in AD 158. Although originally patrician, the family also possessed plebeian members, some of whom may have been descended from freedmen of the gens.[1]. Camerinus was the name of an old patrician family of the Sulpicia gens, which probably derived its name from the ancient town of Cameria or Camerium, in Latium. Many of them bore the agnomen Cornutus, from a Latin adjective meaning "horned".