36. Dedication of an altar for the Magna Mater and Attis in Rome by the son of the praet. prefect C. Ceionius Rufius Volusianus signo Lampadius
In the PLRE I (pp. 978-980)
Editions
CIL 06, 00512
CLE 0264
ILS 4154
Mandowsky, Mitchell 1963, p. 66, nr. 25
Duthoy 1969, p. 19, nr. 25
Vidman 1969, p. 215, nr. 447
Malaise 1972, p. 119, nr. 22
Lane 1975, p. 178, nr. AD4
Vermaseren 1977, pp. 60-61, nr. 244
Schraudolph 1993, p. 244, nr. L195
Martinez-Maza 2003, p. 62, nr. 2
Bricault 2011, nr. 501/0212
Dubosson-Sbriglione 2018, p. 503, nr. 105
Photos
Smetius 1588, XX, 2 (with fac-simile)
Orlandi 2008, p. 54
Links
Praetorian prefects
Caius Ceionius Rufius Volusianus Lampadius
Date of the inscription
23th May 390 AD
Provenance and location
Ancient city: Roma
Modern city: Rome (Italy)
Province: Urbs
Diocese: Italiciana
Regional prefecture: Italia Illyricum Africa
Provenance: Rome, the exact provenance is unknown (discussion in critical commentary).
Current location: currently lost
Ancient location: public space
Type and material of the support and text layout
Type of support: altar
Material: marble
Reuse:
- Reuse of the inscribed field: unknown
- Reuse of the monument: unknown
- Opistographic: no
Dimensions of support: Height: unknown. Width: unknown. Breadth: unknown.
Dimensions of letters: unknown.
Inscribed field
One inscribed field (frons).
Damaged: the restorations of the text suggest that the altar was damaged both at the top and on the right side.
Writing technique: chiselled
Language: Latin
Rhythm: prose
Palaeography: Late Roman monumental capitals
Text category
Religious inscription
Latin text
[t]u[t]atoribus suis
Ceionius Rufius Volu[si=]
anus, v(ir) c(larissimus) et inlustr[is],
5ex vicario Asie (sic) et Ceio=
ni Rufi Volusiani, v(iri) c(larissimi)
et inlustris, ex prefecto (sic) [pre=]
torio et ex prefecto (sic) ur[bi]
et Cecine (sic) Lolliane (sic), clar[issi=]
10me (sic) et inlustris femin[e] (sic),
deae Isidis sacerdotis fi[lius],
iterato viginti annis exp[le=]
tis taurobolii (sic) sui (sic), aram constitu[it]
et consecravit X kal(endas) Iun(ias) d(omino) n(ostro) Va[len=]
15tiniano Aug(usto) IIII et Neoterio c[o(n)s(ulibu)s].
Critical edition
Edition based on CIL 06, 00512.
1-2: Dd(omini) nn(ostri) Fl(avio) Valentiniano et Gratiano ratoribus suis: Smetius 1588, XX, 2; Dd(omini) nn(ostri) Valente et Valentiniano Augg(usti), oratoribus suis: Pirrus Ligorius (Cod. Neap. XIII B 7), Mandowsky, Mitchell 1963, p. 66, nr. 25
11: filie: Mandowsky, Mitchell 1963, p. 66, nr. 25; fi[lia]: Schraudolph 1993, p. 244, nr. L195
12-13: iterato [sacro?] viginti: Dubusson-Sbriglione 2018, p. 503, nr. 105; viginti anni ex p.s./ bis taurabolii: Pirrus Ligorius (Cod. Neap. XIII B 7), Mandowsky, Mitchell 1963, p. 66, nr. 25
11: c[on(sulibus)]:Vidman 1969, p. 215, nr. 447, Malaise 1972, p. 119, nr. 22, Bricault 2011, nr. 501/0212; cons(ulibu)s: Dubusson-Sbriglione 2018, p. 503, nr. 105
Translations
English
To the Great Mother of gods Isis and to Attis Menotyrannus, to the great gods and their protectors, Ceionius Rufius Volusianus, illustrious man of clarissimus rank, ex vicar of Asia, son of Ceionius Rufius Volusianus, illustrious man of clarissimus rank, ex praetorian prefect, ex urban prefect, and of Caecinia Lolliana, illustrious woman of clarissimus rank, priestess of the goddess Isis, after repeating the ceremony of taurobolium twenty years later, he raised up and consecrated this altar ten days before the calends of June under the consulship of our master Valentinian Augustus, for the fourth time, and of Neoterius.
French
(from Dubosson-Sbriglione 2018, p. 503, nr. 105)
“A la grande Mère des dieux Idéenne et à Attis Menotyrannus, les grands dieux et ses protecteurs, Ceionius Rufius Volusianus, homme clarissime et illustre, ancien vicaire d’Asie, et fils de Ceionius Rufius Volusianus, homme clarissime et illustre, ancien préfet du prétoire et ancien préfet de la ville de Rome, et (fils) de Caecinia Lolliana, femme clarissime et illustre, prêtresse de la déesse Isis, (la cérémonie) de son taurobole ayant été répétée après vingt ans écoulés, a dressé et consacré l’autel le 10eme jour avant les calendes de juin, sous le consulat de notre maître Valentinien Auguste, pour la quatrième fois, et de (FI.) Neoterius.”
Italian
“Alla Grande Madre degli dei Iside e Attis Menotyrannus, ai grandi dei e ai loro protettori, Ceionius Rufius Volusianus, chiarissimo e illustre, ex vicario d’Asia, figlio di Ceionius Volusianus, ex prefetto del pretorio ed ex prefetto urbano, e di Caecinia Lolliana chiarissima ed illustre, sacerdotessa della dea Iside, dopo aver ripetuto, trascorsi vent’anni, la cerimonia del taurobolium, eresse e consacrò quest’altare dieci giorni prima delle calende di giugno durante il consolato del nostro sovrano Valentiniano Augusto, per la quarta volta, e di Neoterius.”
The inscription and its prefects: critical commentary, updating, overviews
As can be deduced from the textual restorations, this altar, unfortunately lost, was damaged both on the top and on its right side. The stone, which bore a religious inscription, dated to May 23th, 390 AD, was made by Ceionius Rufius Volusianus (PLRE I, Volusianus 3, p. 976), son of the former praetorian prefect and urban prefect C. Ceionius Rufius Volusianus signo Lampadius (PLRE I, Volusianus 5, pp. 978-980) and Caecinia Lolliana (PLRE I, p. 511). Volusianus performed the ceremony of the taurabolium, a ritual related to the worship of the Magna Mater and Attis (about this pagan rite and its late antique evolution, see PPRET 40), after a lapse of twenty years. Since the efficaciousness of the taurobolium was considered to last only twenty years, it thus had to be repeated (see also CIL 06, 00504 = CLE 0264 = ILS 4153 = Vermaseren 1956, nr. 514 = Vidman 1969, nr. 457 = Vermaseren 1977, nr. 233 = Bricault 2011, nr. 501/208 = Dubosson-Sbriglione 2018, nr. 97 = EDR 151218, dated 376 AD).
The inscription was last seen in the 16th Century and its text was copied by two humanists: Martinus Smetius (1525-1578), at Rome between 1545 and 1551 (Bibl. Naz. Napoli MS. V.E.4 [Fondo Farnese], p. 83, 20, 2, then Smetius 1588, XX, 2), and Pirrus Ligorius (1513-1583) (Cod. Neap. XIII B 7, p. 55, cf. Orlandi 2008, p. 54), whose readings slightly differ (see critical edition). According to the description of Smetius, the altar had many decorative elements that emphasized the religious nature of the monument: «five slaughtered rams lie at the top, there is also a ram on each corner and one at the front; on the right, a ram standing under a pine tree with a tympanum, a syrinx and a pair of cymbals hanging down from the branches; on the left, a bull standing under a pine tree with a pedum and a double-flute hanging down from the branches; at the back, two crossed torches» (Vermaseren 1977, p. 60, nr. 244). The description concords with that of Ligorius, although the latter records four rams instead of five and a vase, a bowl and lituus on the opposite side (Mandowsky, Mitchell 1963, p. 66, nr. 25).
The precise findspot of the altar is unknown (see CIL 06, 00512). In all likelihood, the monument was originally situated in the Vatican Phrygianum in Rome, a large sanctuary of the Magna Mater in the campo Vaticano, next to the old basilica of St. Peter (Liverani 2008; for new religious inscriptions from this sanctuary cf. Carbonell Manils 2015). A remarkable proportion of these pagan archaeological finds, all attributable to the period during which the Phrygian cult was revived (370-377 AD), belongs to members of the powerful aristocratic family of the Ceionii (Chastagnol 1956; Sbriglione 2010; Olariu 2013; stemma PLRE I, p. 1138, nr. 13; Chausson 2007, p. 130, fig. 10; Sbriglione 2010, pp. 156-157). The prevalence of the gens Ceionia suggests a deep family connection with the sanctuary and identifies them as strong upper-class supporters of the pagan religion. Their most representative member is our former praetorian prefect C. Ceionius Rufius Volusianus signo Lampadius (below). Although he does not explicitly appear upon any preserved inscription from the Vatican Phrygianum, the dedication on a statue at Ostia (see PPRET 40), indirectly attesting his taurobolium, and the presence of three of his children (Rufia Volusiana, on CIL 06, 00509 = EDR 106599; Sabina, on CIL 06, 30966 = EDR 107605; Rufius Ceionius Volusianus, on the present inscription) in the sacred area on the Vatican hill, suggests that his involvement in the roman cult of the Magna Mater was highly significant (McLynn 1996, p. 327; Cameron 2011, pp. 132-172; for the context Machado 2019, pp. 178-181; for the pagan attitude in inscriptions cf. Bodnaruk 2019, pp. 49, 505-510).
C. Ceionius Rufius Volusianus signo Lampadius (PLRE I, Volusianus 5, pp. 978-980), was born around 315 AD and was a noble descendant of the powerful gens Ceionia (Chastagnol 1961; Olariu 2013). He was the son of Caeionius Rufius Albinus, who was ordinary consul in 335 AD and urban prefect in 336-337 AD (PLRE I, Albinus 14, p. 37). He was also the grandson of Gaius Caeionius Rufius Volusianus, praetorian prefect, urban prefect and ordinary consul of the usurper Maxentius and later consul and urban prefect of Constantine (PLRE I, Volusianus 4, pp. 976-978). Al. Cameron (2011, p. 147) suggests that since an inscription found on the Aventine hill (CIL 06, 00846 = ILS 4413 ) begins with his senatorial rank and ends with a single state priesthood, Volusianus Lampadius was involved in several pagan cults early in his career: even before holding his first governorship, Volusianus would most likely have been pater, hierophant, prophet of Isis and pontifex Solis (for priesthoods in late inscriptions of Rome cf. Orlandi 2011).
Lampadius’ first attested office is the praetura of Rome, which he presumably held late in the reign of Constantine when he was quite young, perhaps coinciding with the urban prefecture of his father (335-337 AD, see Chastagnol 1962, p. 166; Barnes 1998, p. 116). An episode during Lampadius’ praetorian games concerns the Vatican, where our inscription comes from. According to Ammianus (Amm. 27, 03, 06) when Volusianus was giving his magnificent and costly ludi praetorii, the spectators by way of acclamationes, pressed him to better reward the performers (or the citizens themselves according to Neri 1998, p. 65). In order to prove that he was not afraid to defy the plebs, the praetor reacted by summoning instead some nameless beggars from the Vatican. This event has been interpreted in many different ways. Assuming that the summoned egentes were Christians, a connection based on the mention of the Vatican, many scholars see the praetor’s invitation to the crowd as a provocatory act aimed at emulating or outdoing the Christian caritas, rather than as an act of benevolence in itself (Matthews 1989, p. 417; Colombo 2008, p. 200). Barnes (1998, p. 116) argues that Lampadius could have been under Constantine a Christian of convenience, who later reverted to paganism, and that the beggars of the Vatican were Christian clerics. Nevertheless, the Vatican was not yet a symbol of Christianity in that period and there is no evidence to demonstrate that the egentes belonged to the Christian faith. On the contrary, the epigraphic and literary sources make it clear that Volusianus signo Lampadius remained pagan for life. Moreover, the Phrygianum was located on the Vatican hill, to which the praetor was related as we have already said. Perhaps the quosdam egentes summoned from there by Lampadius were pagans themselves (McLynn 1996, p. 329; Lizzi Testa 2004, pp. 76-85). However, even if the identification of this group and the religious’ slant of Lampadius' act remains conjectural, Volusianus reaction may well have been nothing more than an attempt to nip a potential insurrection in the bud, an act that «had more to do with time-honoured pagan εὐεργεσία than Christian caritas» (Boeft, Drijvers 2009, p. 56).
An African fragmentary inscription of a Volusianus v(ir) c(larissimus) (Duval p. 427, nr. 45) could attest to Lampadius being the consularis of the province of Byzacena (before 355 AD, when he is attested as praetorian prefect). That said, Chastagnol (1967) does not list him among the consularis Byzacenae, and Duval (1989, p. 427, nr. 45) considered this proposal “aventureuse” (cf. Camedoca 2014, pp. 105-106). Nevertheless, it would be not so unlikely, even if this office is not attested anywhere else, given the African origins of his family and the African properties, that he shared with his wife Caecinia Lolliana and their four children, as an inscription found near Thougga clearly records (CIL 08, 25990 see DU388EP003).
Later, Lampadius became praefectus praetorio: in all the inscriptions (PPRET 36; PPRET 37; PPRET 38; PPRET 39; PPRET 40; PPRET 41) mentioning this office, Lampadius is cited as a former praetorian prefect (ex praefecto praetorio), a wording employed in the literary sources, but never used epigraphically until this moment. The evidence concerning this post is both meagre and conflicting. All the constitutions place his praetorian prefecture in Italy in the first half of 355 AD (CTh 11, 34, 02; CI 06, 22, 06; CTh 03, 12, 02; CTh 11, 30, 26; CTh 11, 36, 12) (so Vogler 1979, p. 129; Migl 1994, p. 131-132; Delmaire 2003, pp. 167-168; Colombo 2008, p. 199, Moser 2018, p. 283), but Zosimus (Zos. 02, 55, 03) and Ammianus associate his tenure with Gaul (Jones 1964, p. 82; PLRE I, pp. 978-980; Cameron 1985, p. 179; Barnes 1992, p. 256; Lizzi Testa 2004, p. 76; Poglio 2007, p. 32) as early as 354 AD. The literary sources record that Lampadius was one of those who persuaded Constantius II to recall and execute Gallus during the Summer of 354 (Zos. 02, 55, 03), and, thus, that the prefect conspired with some others against Silvanus, magister peditum per Gallias, forging letters to incriminate him (Amm. 15, 05, 04-05). Consequently, the emperor Constantius had him dismissed; he was placed on trial, but was later acquitted (Amm. 15, 05, 13). However, the fact that so many constitutions concord with each other in their account cannot be disregarded. Indeed, there is no evidence to suggest that Volusianus was stationed in Gaul (CTh 11, 34, 02 and CTh 03, 12, 03 point to a praetorian prefecture in Italy). He may well have accompanied the emperor there during his visit in the summer 354 AD, but nothing more. Moreover, Delmaire (2003, pp. 167-168) noted that Constantius II had returned to the court at Milan, when he decided to recall Gallus and discharge Silvanus (before August 355 AD), so it is plausible that the praetorian prefect could have influenced Constantius’ policy in Italy (so also Moser 2018, p. 283). This shady incident may have damaged his political reputation. Perhaps it is no accident that Volusianus had to wait another ten years before holding another position.
Lampadius is attested as urban prefect (Chastagnol 1962, pp. 164-169) after 10th March 365 AD (CTh 01, 06, 04, the last constitution addressed to his predecessor Avianius Symmachus, PLRE I, Symmachus 3, pp. 863-865) and February 366 AD (CTh 08, 05, 22). Ammianus Marcellinus gives an unfavorable account of his tenure, describing him as vain, arrogant and opposed by riots (on the portrait of Lampadius given by Ammianus see Lizzi Testa 2004, pp. 61-75). According to the historian (Amm. 27, 03, 07), he had his name inscribed on buildings throughout the city, claiming to have built them rather than restore them (non ut veterum instaurator sed conditor). Since he made it a habit of neglecting to pay for the materials he used in his building projects, Lampadius became a victim of the urban mob, which, infuriated by his requisitions, tried to burn down his house near the Baths of Constantine and forced Lampadius to retreat to the Milvian bridge (Amm. 27, 03, 08-09; cf. Matthews 1989, p. 417). The picture painted is by no means a pretty one and conforms in large part to the caricatural stereotype of the roman aristocrat (Lizzi Testa 2004, p. 63). Nevertheless, some points ought to be reconsidered.
The testimony of Ammianus on Lampadius’ activity in the restoration of ancient buildings is supported by an imperial law of 364 AD, CTh 15, 01, 11, that prevented officials from undertaking any new constructions that would have required the employment of more public funds, recommending instead to restore the pre-existing structures. The problem was such that by the 4th Century, many venerable public buildings and monuments were urgently in need of restoration and the presiding urban prefect was responsible for their maintenance. It is nonetheless true that, during his two-year tenure, Lampadius sponsored more restorations than any other prefect we know of: he restored a castellum of the Aqua Claudia (PPRET 39), intervened in the baths of Caracalla, where he erected or moved a number of statues (PPRET 37), and repaired thirteen bridges over the Tiber (PPRET 41). After a period in the political wilderness, he was evidently keen to restore his esteem by increasing his building activity (Colombo 2008, p. 203). However, it seems unlikely that Lampadius would have confiscated materials without paying for them, earning him the enmity of the people, when he could have relied on his funds, as was his right as the urban prefect. Indeed, this would have meant defrauding the State and, if Lampadius had been tried, Ammianus would surely not have omitted it. Thus it remains to understand what the urban prefect might have done to produce such a riot.
Colombo (2008, pp. 205-206) suggests that Lampadius may have imposed exceptional contributions in speciebus (materials’ furniture) that did not feature among the fiscal tituli, a fact that might explain their missing payment. Not by chance, many imperial constitutions (CTh 15, 01, 11; CTh 15, 01, 17; CTh 14, 06, 03) set out clear rules concerning the building’s policy so as to avoid misappropriations from the Roman administration. Since the word pauperes (Amm. 27, 03, 10) often corresponds to the productive part of the lower class (see also Cracco Ruggini 1997, p. 179), Lizzi Testa (2004, pp. 61-75) identified those who may have been more economically damaged by the prefect's impositions with the collegia fabrorum tignariorum, a corporation that dealt with the making of the materials employed in the restorations. Therefore, the scholar considered addressed to Lampadius a controversal constitution (CTh 14, 06, 03: 6th August 365 AD), even if he features as vicarius – ad Volusianum v(irum) c(larissimum) vic(arium) – concerning a tax lightening for the calcis coctores vecturarii, who handled the lime and its transport, a crucial supply for building (for the content of the law see also Machado 2019, pp. 80-84). Moreover, also Chastagnol (1962, p. 168) identified the recipient as the urban prefect; contra Seeck (1919, pp. 118-119) argued he was an homonym, followed by PLRE (PLRE I, Volusianus 1, pp. 975-976) and Schmidt-Hofner (2008, pp. 530-532, 569). If so, although these measures were not illegal, such inequality would have provoked discontent among the collegia that would have been more heavily burdened by the exceptional contributions.
There are conflicting opinions as to when his urban prefecture ended and the prefecture of his successor Viventius (PLRE I, p. 972) started. According to some scholars (PLRE I, p. 972; Lizzi Testa 2004, p. 75), who follow Seeck’s dating (1919, pp. 31-35, 70), the prefect concluded his tenure shortly after the 17th September 365 AD (CI 01, 19, 05), corresponding to the insurrection after which he would have been dismissed. On the other hand Chastagnol (1962, p. 168) argues for February 18th 366 AD as terminus post quem referring to CTh 08, 05, 22 (differently attributed and dated to 365 AD by Seeck 1919, pp. 118-119; cf. Pergami 1993, pp. 318-320; Schmidt-Hofner 2008, pp. 530-532). After that Volusianus disappears from the literary and epigraphic sources. It is however noteworthy that on our inscription, dated 390 AD, twenty-five years after the urban prefecture of Lampadius, his son Ceionius Rufius Volusianus, who cites just one office, presumably his only major administrative post, took up more than half of his dedication by naming both his father’s and mother’s complete name with titles as a symbol of distinction.
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Praetorian prefects and epigraphic habit
Number of praetorian prefects in this inscription
Only one praetorian prefect
The praetorian prefect is mentioned, without being the person addressing or being addressed: father of the dedicant
Inscription containing legal acts issued by praetorian prefects
Edicts issued by praetorian prefects
Epistles issued by praetorian prefects
Inscribed monuments made by praetorian prefects
Other categories of religious inscriptions
The praetorian prefecture in inscriptions: titulature, duration and extension of the appointment
The rank of the praetorian prefects: viri clarissimi
Latin / Greek titulature of the office: ex praefecto praetorio
Inscription posesses a partial cursus honorum of the prefect
Inscription only records the prefecture just completed
Inscription does not record the regional area of the prefecture