On the Seviri Augustales as Agents of Romanity in Hispania
Streszczenie
This chapter analyses the general features of the seviratus Augustalis,
its territorial presence and continuity in the Roman Empire, and its
influence in the spreading of the cultural and religious Roman customs
in Hispania, through the study of its preserved epigraphic sources.
The seviratus Augustalis was especially developed in the Western
towns of the Empire, it lasted from the 1st to the 3rd century AD, and it
was a semi-official institution mainly held by wealthy freedmen looking
for social recognition. Despite the unresolved debate about its concrete
function, the numerous preserved inscriptions in relation to the
Augustality provide important information about the religious and
munificent actions of its members. From the study of the existing epigraphic
inscriptions in Hispania, we will demonstrate the role played
by the seviri Augustales as promoters of Romanity, based on elements
such as the worship of Roman deities, the connection of different gods
with the emperor, the diffusion of Latin onomastics, the adoption of
Roman magistracies and the imitation of the local Romanised elites.
Consequently, this position created in Italy worked in Hispania as
a diffusor of the Roman religion and the Roman social order, promoting
the consolidation of the imperial regime in the provinces.
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