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ROMAN PELOPONNESE I<br />

Olympia; a statue base of Pentelic marble from the exedra of Herodes Atticus bearing<br />

honorary inscriptions erected by the polis of Elis for his children Athenais and Regullus: Μαρκίαν<br />

Κλαυδίαν Άλκίαν Ι Αθηναΐδα Γαβιδίαν Λατιαρίαν Ι Ήρώδου και Τηγίλλης θυγατέρα<br />

etc. (for the full text see EL 113).<br />

[9] IvO 626 facsimile (Ameling, Herodes Atticus II, 134, no. 128); Bol, Herodes- Atticus-<br />

Nymphäum, 132-3, no. 17, pi. 11, facsimile, fig. 60 (Tobin, Herodes Atticus, 89, no. 2) [middle<br />

of 2nd c. A.D.].<br />

Olympia; a statue base of Pentelic marble from the exedra of Herodes Atticus bearing<br />

honorary inscriptions erected by the polis of Elis for his children Athenais and Regullus:<br />

Λ(ούκιον) Κλαύδιον Ι Βιβούλλιον Τήγιλλον Ι Ήρώδην, Ήρώδου Ι και Τηγίλλης υίόν, etc.<br />

(for the full text see EL 167).<br />

[10] L. Schumacher, "Eine neue Inschrift für den Sophisten Herodes Atticus", OIB 1999, 421-<br />

437 (BullÉpigr 2000, 351) [ca. A.D. 175].<br />

Olympia; honorary inscription for Herodes Atticus erected by the polis of Elis. His name is<br />

not preserved, but there is no doupt, that the person bearing the functions of [— ]vir, sodalis<br />

Augustalis, sodalis Hadrianalis and priest of Dionysos, and is named as husband of Regula and<br />

Athenian is to be identified with Herodes.<br />

Remarks: The full name of Regula is Appia Annia Regula Atilia Caucidia Tertulla; from the<br />

large bibliography on the person see in particular P.v. Rohden, RE I 2 (1894) 2315-<br />

2316, s.v. Annius [125]; PIR 2 A 720; Halfmann, Senatoren, 158; FOS, 83-84, no. 66,<br />

stemma XXVII and no. 118 (Atilia Caucia Tertulla), stemma VIII, XXVII;<br />

Settipani, 472-476 with stemmata. For the dedications [1] and [2] of Regula,<br />

respectively, to Hygeia and Demeter see also Tobin, Herodes Atticus, 322-323. A<br />

statue of Hygeia in Heraion is mentioned by Pausanias V. 20, 3; the dedication is,<br />

however, connected with the so called nymphaeum; the importance of water is<br />

obvious, especially in a place which was crowded during the period of the Olympic<br />

festival (cf. Lucian, De mort. Peregr. 19 and I. Weiler, "Olympia-jenseits der<br />

Agonistik: Kultur und Spektakel", Nikephoros 10, 1997, 193-195).<br />

Regula is also attested in Corinth, to which her husband Herodes was connected as<br />

a benefactor. A marble statue base bearing an epigram in honour of Regula was<br />

found in front of the middle of the eastern apse of Peirene, connecting in this way<br />

the family of the Athenian sophist with a reconstruction of the court of the fountain<br />

(COR 528 [1]). A second statue base bearing a flattering epigram in her honour is<br />

found near the so-called Temple F (maybe of Tyche, since Regula appears also in the<br />

epigram connected with Tyche), see COR 528 [2].<br />

w. Herodes Atticus (EL 144), d. Appius Annius Gallus (EL 18). For the stemma of the family<br />

see Appendix, Stemmata XI, 1. 2. 3.<br />

*18. ΑΠΠΙΟΣ ΑΝΝΙΟΣ ΓΑΛΛΟΣ<br />

IvO 619 facsimile (Ameling, Herodes Atticus II, 131, no. 121); Bol, Herodes- Atticus-<br />

Nymphäum, 120-121, no. 10, pi. 7, facsimile (fig. 52) [middle of 2nd c. A.D.].<br />

420

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