Gaius Servilius Ahala

Gaius Servilius Ahala was a legendary hero of ancient Rome. He was said to have saved Rome from Spurius Maelius in 439 BC, by killing him with a dagger concealed under an armpit. However, this was likely an aetological myth invented to explain the Servilian cognomen "Ahala"/"Axilla", which means "armpit" and is likely of Etruscan origin. The fasti list a "C. Servilius Structus Ahala" as consul in 478 BC, and so another version of the myth made Servilius Master of Horse acting on the orders of Cincinnatus. Livy (bks. 4 and 5) also mentions Servilius serving as consul (427 BC) and as military tribune several times, the last in 402 BC, but the randomness of Servilius' appearances is one of the points that cast doubt on his historicity. Plutarch life of Brutus says that Brutus' mother Servilia was a descendant of Servilius Ahala, and the ancestral example was an inspiration for his assassination of Julius Caesar.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
d.h. peligro
rapti
edwin booth
east bay ray
ryukyu islands
sado province
sagami province
saito tatsuoki
sakuma morimasa
sakuma shozan
sanada masayuki
sanada yukimura
steller's eider
sanuki province
atlasov island
oundle
binnenhof
list of dos commands
cherokee language
skive
saikaido
yorb language
great spotted cuckoo
phut
gene regulatory network
bourguignon
letter from birmingham jail
kovalam
bakoena
bataung
tom robbins
batlokoa
submersion
mohammed rafi
computer aided maintenance
canada well being measurement act
properly discontinuous
secretary of state for culture, media and sport
metroid fusion
list of television stations in south carolina
czartak
abbott axsym
yeha
communist party of greece