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Roman Naming Conventions
1
Roman Nomenclature
Naming of Male Roman Citizens during the Republic
Praenomen
(plural praenomina)
Nomen
(plural nomina)
Cognomen
(plural cognomina)
personal, individualizing name;
given through naming
ceremony
name of the clan (gens) to
which the man belonged;
hereditary
name of the branch of the
clan to which the man
belonged; hereditary
used primarily within the
family or among close
intimates; usually abbreviated
in inscriptions
used to designate the man in
informal conversation and
between friends if he had no
cognomen
most commonly used to
designate the man in
informal conversation and
between friends
Marcus
Gaius
Tullius
Julius
Cicero
Caesar
In more formal circumstances, a man would be called by his praenomen and nomen or cognomen; in
very formal circumstances and inscriptions, all three names were used
Tria Nomina: Aristocratic Romans in the Republic had all three names; until late in the Republic,
non-aristocrats frequently had only the first two (e.g., Gaius Marius, Gnaeus Pompeius). There were only
a small number of personal names in use, and the same praenomina tended to be used again and again
in families; in particular, the first-born son was usually named after his father. On inscriptions and
official documents, the male citizen was also usually designated by reference to his paternal ancestors
and the Roman voting tribe in which he was registered; an indication of the voting tribe is proof positive
that the man was a Roman citizen. For example, the Roman orator Cicero registered the birth of his son
as follows:
M. TULLIUS M[arci] F[ilius] M[arci] N[epos] M[arci] PR[onepos] COR[nelia tribu] CICERO,
“Marcus Tullius Cicero, the son of Marcus, the grandson of Marcus, the great-grandson of Marcus, of the
Cornelian voting tribe.”
Cognomen ex virtute: Men with two or three names could be officially awarded an additional
cognomen, an “honorific” which they bore for life but did not pass down to their descendants (e.g.,
Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus (“the Great”), Publius Cornelius Scipio Africanus (“conqueror of Africa”); both
these cognomina were awarded by senatorial decree. Sometimes this additional cognomen was a
nickname that stuck (e.g., Lucius Cornelius Sulla Felix (“the Lucky”). This type of cognomen is sometimes
called an agnomen.
Adoption: An adult son of a family which already had a male heir could be adopted into a family
which did not have a surviving son. The adopted man took all three names of his adoptive father and
Roman Naming Conventions
2
usually added the adjectival form of his own clan name, formed by adding the suffix -anus) to his own
nomen. Thus, when Gaius Octavius Thurinus was adopted by his great-uncle, Julius Caesar, his formal
name became Gaius Julius Caesar Octavianus. At the time, those who addressed or referred to him
respectfully would do so as "Caesar" or "Gaius Caesar"; those who wished to be denigrating or
disrespectful would use his adoptive, "Octavianus." Modern historians usually call him Octavian until he
officially added the honorific Augustus (“the revered one”) to his name in 27 BCE.
Names of Citizen Women: All female children of citizen families were named with the feminine
form of the clan into which they were born; hence, all women whose fathers had the nomen Julius were
named Julia, and all women whose fathers had the nomen Cornelius were named Cornelia. In public,
they would be identified by the possessive form of their father's cognomen (e.g., Julia Caesaris, “Julia,
the daughter of Caesar”), or if married by the possessive form of their husband's cognomen (e.g., Clodia
Metelli, “Clodia, the wife of Metellus”). If families had more than one daughter, they were distinguished
by the words maior and minor (“elder” and “younger”), or prima, secunda, tertia, etc.
However, by the late Republic these conventions were changing slightly, in that elite Roman
woman were sometimes designated by the feminine form of their father's nomen plus the feminine
form of his cognomen, sometimes in the dominutive (e.g. Livia, who married Octavian and became
Rome's first empress, was often referred to as Livia Drusilla, since her father was a noble named Marcus
Livius Drusus). Starting with Augustus, names of the most prominent women did not necessarily follow
the Republican convention, but rather reflected the family connections that were most significant to the
namers. For example, the two daughters of Augustus' daughter Julia, who was married to Marcus
Vipsanius Agrippa, would normally have been named Vipsania; instead one was called Julia and the
other Agrippina. When Agrippina married Nero Claudius Germanicus (grandson of Livia), her three
daughters were named Agrippina, Drusilla, and Julia Livilla (referring to the family lines of both of their
distinguished great-grandparents) instead of Claudia, which would refer to their father's nomen.
Names of Freedpeople: When slaves were freed, they occupied a middle status between the
freeborn and the enslaved; they were referred to as liberti or libertini, which we translate as
“freedpeople.” While they were still enslaved, they had a single name, either a part of the name they
had carried before they were enslaved or a name given to them by their master, often coming from
mythology, referring to their country of origin, or referring to a personal characteristic. The slave's name,
like everything else, was completely at the discretion of his/her owner. However, there were specific
conventions that governed the names of freedpeople. A freedman took the praenomen and nomen of
his former master, who was now his patron, plus his slave name as a cognomen; if he had been freed by
a woman, he took her father's praenomen and nomen plus his slave name (e.g., Marcus Antonius'
Roman Naming Conventions
3
daughter Antonia freed a slave named Pallas, who was then called M. Antonius Pallas). Freedwomen
took the feminine form of their master's (or mistress's) nomen plus their slave name (e.g., Antonia's
freed slavewoman Caenis became Antonia Caenis). If the freedperson then contracted a legal marriage,
the children born after this marriage were freeborn, and they often continued to bear the nomen of
their father's patron. For example, according to an inscription from the first century BCE, a man named
Publius Larcius freed a male slave named Nicia, who was then called Publius Larcius Nicia, and his
freeborn sons were named Publius Larcius Rufus and Publius Larcius Brocchus. Publius Larcius Nicia later
freed his own female slave named Horaea, who was then named Larcia Horaea.
Possession of three names did not necessarily mean that a freedman was a Roman citizen. If his
former master or mistress had been a Roman citizen and if he had been formally freed according to
certain specific procedures and conditions, he would become a Roman citizen. However, if he had been
freed informally by a Roman citizen, he would become a Junian Latin rather than a Roman citizen, even
though his name would be the same; thus only an indication of a voting tribe after his name would
prove that the freedman was now a Roman citizen.
External Links:
 The Roman Name (by John Porter, University of Saskatchewan)
 Roman Names (chapter from the early twentieth-century book Private Life of the Romans by
Johnston, put online at Forum Romanum)
Barbara F. McManus, The College of New Rochelle
[email protected]
revised November, 2007