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Valeria (gens)
The ''Gens Valeria'' was a patrician family at Rome, which later included a number of plebeian branches. The Valeria gens was one of the most ancient and most celebrated at Rome; and no other Roman gens was distinguished for so long a period, although a few others, such as the Cornelia gens, produced a greater number of illustrious men. Publius Valerius, afterwards surnamed ''Poplicola'' or ''Publicola'', played a distinguished part in the story of the expulsion of the Kings, and was elected consul in the first year of the Republic, BC 509. From this time forward, down to the latest period of the Empire, for nearly a thousand years, the name ''Valerius'' occurs more or less frequently in the Fasti, and it was borne by the emperors Maximinus, Maximianus, Maxentius, Diocletian, Constantius, Constantine the Great, and others.〔''Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology'', William Smith, Editor.〕 The Valeria gens enjoyed extraordinary honours and privileges at Rome. Their house at the bottom of the Velia was the only one in Rome of which the doors were allowed to open back into the street.〔Dionysius of Halicarnassus, ''Romaike Archaiologia'' v. 39.〕〔Plutarchus, ''Lives of the Noble Greeks and Romans'', ''Publicola'' 20.〕 In the Circus Maximus a conspicuous place was set apart for them, where a small throne was erected, an honour of which there was no other example among the Romans.〔Titus Livius, ''Ab Urbe Condita'' ii. 31.〕 They were also allowed to bury their dead within the walls, a privilege which was also granted to some other gentes; and when they had exchanged the older custom of interment for that of burning the corpse, although they did not light the funeral pile on their burying-ground, the bier was set down there, as a symbolical way of preserving their right.〔〔Marcus Tullius Cicero, ''De Legibus'' ii. 23.〕〔Plutarchus, ''Lives of the Noble Greeks and Romans'', ''Publicola'' 23.〕 Niebuhr, who mentions these distinctions, conjectures that among the gradual changes of the constitution from a monarchy to an aristocracy, the Valeria gens for a time possessed the right that one of its members should exercise the kingly power for the Tities, to which tribe the Valerii must have belonged, as their Sabine origin indicates;〔Barthold Georg Niebuhr, ''History of Rome'', vol. i. p. 538.〕 but on this point, as on many others in early Roman history, it is impossible to come to any certainty. The Valerii in early times were always foremost in advocating the rights of the plebeians, and the laws which they proposed at various times were the great charters of the liberties of the second order.〔〔''Dictionary of Antiquities, s. v. Leges Valeriae''.〕 ==Origin== The Valerii are universally admitted to have been of Sabine origin, and their ancestor, Volesus or Volusus, is said to have settled at Rome with Titus Tatius. Publius Valerius Poplicola and his brothers, Marcus Valerius Volusus and Manius Valerius Maximus, were descendants of this Volesus.〔〔Dionysius of Halicarnassus, ''Romaike Archaiologia'' ii. 46.〕〔Plutarchus, ''Lives of the Noble Greeks and Romans'', ''Numa'' 5, ''Publicola'' 1.〕 The nomen ''Valerius'' is a patronymic surname derived from the praenomen ''Volesus'', itself derived from ''valere'', to be strong.〔George Davis Chase, "The Origin of Roman Praenomina", in ''Harvard Studies in Classical Philology'', vol. VIII (1897).〕〔D.P. Simpson, ''Cassell's Latin & English Dictionary'' (1963).〕
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