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in 167 and an ordinary consul in 173. In the year of his second consulship, Severus became a patron and was made an honorary citizen of
Pompeiopolis. That same year, an honorific inscription, which survives to this day on a statue base, was dedicated to Severus in his birth city:
119:, son-in-law of the Emperor Caesar Marcus Aurelius Antoninus Augustus, patron of the city, the metropolis Pompeiopolis of the province of Paphlagonia put this up in the 178th year of the province through the work of Publius Domitius Augureinus Clodius Kalbeinus the chief
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Marcus
Claudius Ummidius Quadratus Annianus Verus. His birth name other than Claudius is unknown and he is known by his adopted name. Claudius was adopted by the other ordinary consul of 167,
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167:
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80:. Although Severus held no major political influence, he was considered as an influential figure in the intellectual and philosophical circles in
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The Cities and
Bishoprics of Phyrgia: Being an Essay of the Local History of Phrygia from the Earliest Times to the Turkish Conquest
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143:, who was a cousin and a maternal nephew of Marcus Aurelius. In 182, he was involved in a failed plot to kill the Emperor
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to him as his personal physician. Severus and his father accompanied Marcus
Aurelius on a philosophical visit to
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http://thecorner.wordpress.com/2006/06/21/chapter-two-septimius-and-the-cursus-honorum/
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166:, who served as an ordinary consul in 200 and married his maternal second cousin
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84:. Like his father, Severus was a friend and had a great influence on the Emperor
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88:(161-180). It was probably Severus that introduced Marcus Aurelius to the
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From
Tiberius to the Antonines: a history of the Roman Empire AD 14-192
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For the good fortune of Gnaeus
Claudius Severus who was consul twice,
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156:, the second daughter and fifth child born to Marcus Aurelius and
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The
Cambridge ancient history: The High Empire, A.D. 70-192
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https://www.livius.org/fa-fn/faustina/faustina_ii.html
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A noblewoman, name unknown, with whom he had a son:
38:Severus was the son of the senator and philosopher
42:by a mother whose name is unknown. Severus was of
16:2nd century Roman senator, consul and philosopher
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147:(180-192), which led to the former's execution.
62:, was a consul and the first Roman governor of
76:Like his father, Severus was a follower of
141:Marcus Ummidius Quadratus Annianus Verus
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194:Septimius Severus: the African emperor
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314:Quintus Volusius Flaccus Cornelianus
46:descent. He was born and raised in
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342:Roman-era Peripatetic philosophers
164:Tiberius Claudius Severus Proculus
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358:
274:Servius Calpurnius Scipio Orfitus
40:Gnaeus Claudius Severus Arabianus
26:and philosopher who lived in the
224:, vol. 11, second edition (2000)
154:Annia Galeria Aurelia Faustina
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234:, Volume One, Part One (2004)
58:. His paternal grandfather,
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30:during the 2nd century AD.
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337:2nd-century Roman consuls
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280:Sextus Quintilius Maximus
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160:. They had a son called:
332:2nd-century philosophers
192:Anthony Richard Birley,
132:Severus married twice:
196:, second edition (1999)
189:London: Routledge, 2000
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20:Gnaeus Claudius Severus
309:Lucius Aurelius Gallus
183:Anthony Richard Birley
78:peripatetic philosophy
60:Gaius Claudius Severus
152:After 159 he married
158:Faustina the Younger
106:Severus served as a
66:in the reign of the
300:Claudius Pompeianus
266:Political offices
243:2013-05-18 at the
128:Wives and children
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306:Succeeded by
254:Marcus Aurelius,
228:William M. Ramsay
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271:Preceded by
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95:and recommended
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168:Annia Faustina
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108:suffect consul
64:Arabia Petraea
52:Roman province
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24:Roman senator
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48:Pompeiopolis
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28:Roman Empire
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257:Meditations
93:Cornelianus
90:rhetorician
326:Categories
73:, 98–117.
241:Archived
145:Commodus
117:pontifex
103:in 176.
347:Claudii
289:of the
177:Sources
68:Emperor
56:Galatia
287:Consul
206:(1974)
121:archon
101:Athens
71:Trajan
22:was a
311:, and
298:with
97:Galen
278:and
82:Rome
34:Life
295:173
54:of
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302:II
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