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Cornelia Supera (or Supra), was the wife of Aemilianus. Legend: CORNEL. SVPERA AVG. / VESTA. Aemilian was born in the Roman province of Africa.According to the 4th century source Epitome de Caesaribus, he was born at Girba (modern Djerba, an island off the coast of Tunisia) and was a Moor; [2] a reference in the same source hints that he was born around 207. [3]
Saint Aemilian (/ ˈ i m iː l i ə n /; (in Latin Emilianus or Aemilianus) (12 November 472 – 11 June 573) is an Iberic saint, widely revered throughout Spain, who lived during the age of Visigothic rule.
Aemilian may refer to: Aemilianus (207–253), emperor of Rome for several months in 253 AD, known in English as Aemilian. Emilianus of Trevi (died 302 or 304), bishop and martyr, later Saint; Aemilian of Cogolla (472–573), Spanish saint; Gerolamo Emiliani (1486–1537), also known as Jerome Aemilian, Italian humanitarian and Roman Catholic saint
Ariobarzanes III, surnamed Eusebes Philorhomaios, "Pious and Friend of the Romans" (Ancient Greek: Ἀριοβαρζάνης Εὐσεβής Φιλορώμαιος, Ariobarzánēs Eusebḗs Philorōmaíos), was the king of Cappadocia from ca. 51 BC until 42 BC.
Ariobarzanes belonged to one of the Persian aristocratic families of Cappadocia. [3] Like the previous ruling Ariarathid dynasty, Ariobarzanes also claimed to be a direct descendant of the companions of Darius the Great (r.
Saint Aemilianus (or Aemilius) lived in the 5th century AD, and is known as a physician, confessor, and martyr. [1] In the reign of the Arian Vandal King Huneric, he became emmired in the Arian persecution in Africa.
Mithridates was the first son of the Roman client king Aspurgus and his consort Gepaepyris. [7] He had a younger brother who would go on to succeed him as Cotys I.He was a prince of Greek, Iranian and Roman ancestry.
The Aemilii regularly used the praenomina Lucius, Manius, Marcus, and Quintus, and occasionally Mamercus.The Aemilii Mamercini also used Tiberius and Gaius, while the Aemilii Lepidi, who had a particular fondness for old and unusual names, used Paullus, presumably with reference to the family of the Aemilii Paulli, which had died out nearly a century earlier.