Uttiedia gens


The gens Uttiedia, occasionally written Uttedia or Utiedia, was an obscure plebeian family at ancient Rome. No members of this gens are mentioned by Roman writers, but several are known from epigraphy. Uttedius Honoratus was governor of Mauretania Tingitana in AD 144, and an Uttiedius Afer was consul designate in an uncertain year.

Origin

The nomen Uttiedius belongs to a large class of gentilicia originally formed from cognomina ending in '. This type of nomen was so common that ' and ' came to be regarded as regular gentile-forming suffixes, and were applied to form gentilicia even from names that did not originally end in '.

Praenomina

The praenomina found in the extant inscriptions of the Uttiedii include Sextus, Gaius, and Lucius, all of which were common throughout Roman history, as well as an example of the feminine praenomen Tertia.

Members

Undated Uttiedii

  • Tertia Uttiedia C. f., buried at Urvinum Matuarense.
  • Uttiedius L. f. Afer, an augur and consul designatus in an uncertain year, was patron of the Roman colony at Carthage.
  • Lucius Uttiedius L. l. Beryllus, a freedman named in a sepulchral inscription from Rome.
  • Uttiedia Chryse, buried at Rome along with her husband, Lucius Uttiedius Venustus.
  • Sextus Uttiedius Philargurus, buried at Tuder in Umbria, along with the freedman Lucius Marius Demeter.
  • Uttiedius Secundus, along with his mother-in-law, Caesia Arescusa, dedicated a tomb at Rome for his wife, Caesia Calliope, aged thirty-six years, fourteen days.
  • Lucius Uttiedius Venustus, buried at Rome along with his wife, Uttiedia Chryse.