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Vibius
(2,209 words)
Uncommon Latin
praenomen , abbreviation
V. The etymology of the name is unknown. Like the identical
nomen gentilicium, it derives from the Osco-Umbrian
Vībie/o-. Related
nomina gentilicia were
Vibidius, Vibuleius, Vibulenus. The
praenomen and its feminine equivalent
Vībia- were loaned into Etruscan as
Vipie and
Vipia respectively. The
nomen gentilicium formed from that,
Vipi(e)na, appears in Latinized form as
Vibenna . Steinbauer, Dieter (Regensburg) I. Republican period [German version] [I 1] V. Curius Prefect of Caesar, to whom troops of L. Manlius [I 18] Torquatu…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Tiberius
(2,375 words)
I Greek [German version] [I 1] Greek rhetor, prob. late 3rd/4th cent. (Τιβέριος/
Tibérios). Greek rhetor, probably of the late 3rd or 4th cents. AD, author of a small surviving treatise on figures (Περὶ τῶν παρὰ Δημοσθένει σχημάτων,
Perì tòn parà Demosthénei schēmáton, 'On the figures in Demosthenes'), which uses Apsines as its main source. The latter's dates (1st half of 3rd cent. AD) are thus the only point of reference for dating T. The treatise deals separately with figures of thought (1-22) and figures of speech (23-42; Figures). E…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Proculus
(644 words)
Roman praenomen (
P. Iulius, a contemporary of Romulus [1]), and secondarily a cognomen. Depending on the form, a diminutive (older *
prokelo-) of the stem *
proko- (~ classical
procus 'wooer, suitor'), it originally perhaps meant 'the one who demands or claims (the inheritance?)'.
Proca (King of Alba Longa) can also be regarded as etymologically connected. The
praenomen, which had already become rare at an early time, survived in derivatives, the gentilician names
Procilius and
Proculeius. Steinbauer, Dieter (Regensburg) [German version] [1] Roman jurist, 1st cent. The jurist fro…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly