Fl Boetio (Flavio Boezio) - Studiolo di Federico da Montefeltro.jpg

Flavius Boethius (fl. 522–526) was a Roman politician during the Ostrogothic kingdom in Italy.

Son of the philosopher Anicius Manlius Severinus Boethius[1] and of Rusticiana (his aunts were Galla and Proba), Boethius was the brother of Symmachus, with whom he shared the consulate,[2] chosen by the Ostrogothic court.

His father fell into disgrace with the Ostrogothic ruler and had his own property confiscated; at the death of king Theodoric the Great (526), these properties were given back to Boethius and Symmachus.[3] Boethius is known to have served as praetorian prefect of Byzantine North Africa from 560 to 561.[4]

John R.C. Martyn suggests that Boethius had three children:[4]

Notes

  1. Boethius does not mention the name of his sons in his The Consolation of Philosophy, but in II.3.8, 4.7 he mentions their joint consulate.
  2. AE 1961, 284
  3. Procopius of Caesarea, Bellum Gothicum, I.2.5.
  4. 1 2 John R.C. Martyn (2006). "A New Family Tree for Boethius", Parergon, 23, pp. 5–8 doi:10.1353/pgn.2006.0082

Bibliography

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