Sornatia gens


The gens Sornatia was an obscure plebeian family at ancient Rome. Few members of this gens appear in history, of whom the most famous was a general of Lucullus during the Third Mithridatic War, but several others are known from inscriptions.

Origin

The nomen Sornatius resembles other gentilicia formed using the suffix ', usually from cognomina ending in ' or ', derived from place names, or participles ending in '. However, there are no known corresponding surnames; there was, however, a town called Sornum in Dacia. There was also a rare gentile name Sornius, from which the nomen might have been derived.

Members

  • Sornatius, a physician quoted by Pliny the Elder. Sornatius is given as an authority for the proposition that those using a certain hair dye produced by rotting leeches in a leaden vessel full of vinegar should put oil in their mouths to prevent their teeth from blackening along with their hair.
  • Gaius Sornatius C. f., a legate of the proconsul Lucius Licinius Lucullus during the Third Mithridatic War. In 72 BC, he inflicted a devastating defeat on the Pontic army, and nearly captured Mithridates. When Lucullus invaded [Kingdom of Kingdom of Armenia (antiquity)|Armenia (antiquity)|Armenia] in 69, he left Sornatius in charge of Pontus, with a force of six thousand soldiers. The following year, his soldiers mutinied, and refused to leave for Armenia, until shamed into doing so by a Roman defeat.
  • Gaius Sornatius C. f., named in an inscription from Castrum Novum in Picenum.
  • Gaius Sornatius C. f., a centurion primus pilus in the Legio X Fretensis, buried at Rome, with a monument from Sornatia Phiale.
  • Sornatia Arecusa, together with her son, Gaius Sornatius Indus, dedicated a tomb at Rome for her husband of forty-three years, Quintus Lucretius Zeuxis, aged sixty.
  • Gaius Sornatius Q. f. Q. n. Indus, together with his mother, Sornatia Arecusa, dedicated a tomb at Rome for his father, Quintus Lucretius Zeuxis.
  • Sornatia Phiale, dedicated a monument at Rome to Gaius Sornatius, the centurion.
  • Gaius Sornatius Plutus, together with Gaius Norbanus Amianthus, masters of a slave named Cedrus, named in an inscription from Rome.
  • Gaius Sornatius Quartio, buried at Rome, with a monument from his sister, Sornatia.
  • Titus Sornatius C. f. Sabinus, buried at Rome during the first century, in a sepulchre built by his mother, Anusia Tertia for herself and her son.