Faustus

Roman senator and praetorian prefect of Italy (Ostrogothic court)|Ravenna
A leading Roman senator of the Ostrogothic kingdom in Italy, most plausibly identified as Flavius Anicius Probus Faustus 'niger', who held the consulship in 490 and served as quaestor and praetorian prefect of Italy under Theoderic the Great. As a pillar of the senatorial aristocracy at Rome and Ravenna, he features prominently as a recipient of administrative letters in Cassiodorus's Variae and as a frequent correspondent of the deacon (later bishop) Ennodius of Pavia, who appealed to him for patronage. The name also recurs in the Gallo-Roman epistolary world of Sidonius Apollinaris, so some of these thirty letters may address one or more distinct men named Faustus; the dominant figure, however, belongs to the early-sixth-century Italian governing elite that mediated between the Roman Senate and the Gothic court.
1
Letters sent
30
Letters received
31
Total letters
3
Correspondents

Top correspondents

All letters (31)

From Sidonius Apollinarisc. 467 AD

To the Lord Bishop Faustus [Bishop of Riez].

sidonius apollinaris #9009
To Ennodius of Paviac. 494 AD

Faustus, from Ennodius.

ennodius pavia #1003
From Ennodius of Paviac. 496 AD

The distinguished Dalmatius — a man who holds no mere fraction but the full portion of my heart, and whose splendid...

ennodius pavia #4005
From Ennodius of Paviac. 497 AD

There is no need to commend with elaborate words the artisans sent by the holy bishop.

ennodius pavia #8005
From Ennodius of Paviac. 500 AD

If the heavenly ruler had looked at my merit, I would have received scant blessings — or none at all.

ennodius pavia #2010
From Ennodius of Paviac. 500 AD

The polished art of letter-writing, when it is carried away by enthusiasm, tends to lose its judgment.

ennodius pavia #4009
From Ennodius of Paviac. 500 AD

May the divine power second our honorable desires.

ennodius pavia #5009
From Ennodius of Paviac. 500 AD

Although the protection of a bishop rests upon the innocence that is the companion of his office, and although the...

ennodius pavia #6009
From Ennodius of Paviac. 501 AD

What am I to do when you write things that demand a reply, and yet your own foresight has already anticipated...

ennodius pavia #2011
From Ennodius of Paviac. 501 AD

God, who planted in your soul the desire for good works, will Himself watch over their fulfillment.

ennodius pavia #6010
From Ennodius of Paviac. 502 AD

I received your letter, rich with the wealth of many joys, and I give thanks for the grace God has shown in...

ennodius pavia #9011
From Ennodius of Paviac. 504 AD

Things that are often given with modest means gain a value beyond their cost whenever they flow from a generous heart.

ennodius pavia #4014
From Ennodius of Paviac. 504 AD

I would have kept my difficulties to myself, had I not understood that your concern for me makes my silence a form...

ennodius pavia #8014
From Ennodius of Paviac. 505 AD

It would have been proper for the distinguished Panfronius to carry his own introduction — a man of his stature...

ennodius pavia #2016
From Ennodius of Paviac. 505 AD

The road to a favorable hearing is easier when the petition comes from a source that the powerful already trust.

ennodius pavia #4015
From Ennodius of Paviac. 505 AD

The providence above arranges things well: while I am making my request of you from one direction, events themselves...

ennodius pavia #6015
From Ennodius of Paviac. 507 AD

In championing causes that deserve their day in court, a man does not deny his own services to the truth.

ennodius pavia #4018
From Ennodius of Paviac. 507 AD

It is scarcely possible for a man absorbed in successful ventures to spare attention for the claims of correspondence.

ennodius pavia #5018
From Ennodius of Paviac. 508 AD

The bearer of this letter compelled me to take up my pen again — not that I needed much compelling.

ennodius pavia #8018
From Ennodius of Paviac. 509 AD

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ennodius pavia #3020
From Ennodius of Paviac. 510 AD

The man who labors at unnecessary expense to secure a favor works in vain when the same result would have come...

ennodius pavia #2022
From Ennodius of Paviac. 510 AD

The man I commend to you needs few words from me: his own reputation and your long acquaintance with him make a...

ennodius pavia #3021
From Ennodius of Paviac. 511 AD

Ennodius the deacon to his lord Faustus.

ennodius pavia #2023
From Ennodius of Paviac. 511 AD

Hope mocks me — it demands the frequency of letters but offers no guarantee that they will be received, much less...

ennodius pavia #3022
From Ennodius of Paviac. 512 AD

Ennodius the deacon to his lord Faustus.

ennodius pavia #2024
From Ennodius of Paviac. 512 AD

A sick spirit endures silence no more than a sick body endures stillness.

ennodius pavia #4024
From Ennodius of Paviac. 518 AD

My pages serve their purpose — they carry to you the devotion that prompts them.

ennodius pavia #3033
From Cassiodorusc. 522 AD

King Theodoric to Faustus, Praetorian Prefect.

cassiodorus #2005
From Cassiodorusc. 522 AD

King Theodoric to Faustus, Praetorian Prefect.

cassiodorus #4036
From Cassiodorusc. 522 AD

King Theodoric to Faustus, Praetorian Prefect.

cassiodorus #4038
From Cassiodorusc. 522 AD

King Theodoric to Faustus, Praetorian Prefect.

cassiodorus #4050