Thread Rating:
  • 0 Vote(s) - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
Did patrician families of Rome used something similar to crests?
#1
Hello Gentlemen, 

Do we have any information if the patrician families/ roman aristocracy used something similar to crests or had any other symbols used specificly by certain families?
If they used such symbols. would they used it as a symbol on their signet ring?
Daniel
Reply
#2
(06-21-2018, 07:45 AM)Corvus Wrote: would they used it as a symbol on their signet ring?

Wealthy Romans did indeed have signet rings with identifying symbols, used to seal letters, among other things. They could also be used as a sort of guarantee of fidelity - in one recoded anecdote, the late emperor Valentinian III stole a senator's signet ring and used it trick the man's wife into attending the palace alone. The senator (Petronius Maximus) later had the emperor murdered...

However, these rings seem to have identified individuals rather than families, as far as we know, and were perhaps handed down from father to son. The symbols are usually religious or mythological figures, or animals; quite often they were cut into carnelian, and several of these rings survive today.

Roman aristocratic families only seem to have acquired a sort of 'corporate' existence in the later empire. By the 4th century, the networks of senatorial family alliances that had grown throughout the imperial period had matured into something like clans or dynasties. Historians still argue about just how powerful or coherent these 'clans' actually were, but undoubtably families like the Anicii, Ceionii, Symmachi and Nicomachi were incredibly wealthy, owned vast tracts of land and had considerable political influence.

Of course, by then many of these families were Christian, and christian symbols or images would have replaced much of the more traditional ones. However, we still don't know whether these referred to families or to particular individuals. The image below shows a monogram that appears at the top of an ivory panel depicting the deification of Quintus Aurelius Symmachus (a pagan) - it perhaps relates to the Symmachi family.

[Image: Symmacho_cifra%2C_British_Museum.png]
Nathan Ross
Reply
#3
Thank you Nathan.

What a pity, would be interesting if families would have some specific symbols or figures as a sort of crest.
Do we know what symbols on their signet rings famous Romans used?

I only saw mentions about following persons and the symbols of their signet ring:
Caesar- Venus Victrix
Augustus- Sphinx, later head of Alexander the great and more later his own head
Pompey: Lion with sword
Daniel
Reply


Possibly Related Threads…
Thread Author Replies Views Last Post
  Footwear and Families at Vindolanda Vindex 3 1,459 03-21-2013, 05:28 AM
Last Post: Alanus
  Descendants of roman patrician families dengland 39 11,985 06-15-2012, 06:56 PM
Last Post: Eleatic Guest

Forum Jump: