Aventinus of Alba Longa
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Aventinus of Alba Longa
Summary
Aventinus of Alba Longa is a human whose existence is disputed[1]. It draws 15 Wikipedia views per month (human_whose_existence_is_disputed category, ranking #147 of 306).[2]
Key Facts
- Aventinus of Alba Longa is buried at Aventine Hill[3].
- Aventinus of Alba Longa's father was Romulus Silvius[4].
- A child of Aventinus of Alba Longa was Procas[5].
- Aventinus of Alba Longa held citizenship in Alba Longa[6].
- Aventinus of Alba Longa held the position of king[7].
- Aventinus of Alba Longa's image is recorded as Aventinus Silvius from Nuremberg chronicles.png[8].
- Aventinus of Alba Longa is recorded as male[9].
- Aventinus of Alba Longa's instance of is recorded as human whose existence is disputed[10].
- Aventinus of Alba Longa's family is recorded as Aeneads[11].
- Aventinus of Alba Longa's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/026qxtn[12].
- Aventinus of Alba Longa's Rodovid ID is recorded as 89097[13].
- Aventinus of Alba Longa's described by source is recorded as Pauly–Wissowa[14].
- Aventinus of Alba Longa's Sandrart.net person ID is recorded as 3969[15].
- Aventinus of Alba Longa's name in native language is recorded as {'lang': 'la', 'text': 'Aventinus Silvius'}[16].
- Aventinus of Alba Longa's nomen gentilicium is recorded as Silvius[17].
- Aventinus of Alba Longa's Geni.com profile ID is recorded as 6000000008177465210[18].
- Aventinus of Alba Longa's ToposText person ID is recorded as 20014[19].
Body
Origins and Family
Aventinus of Alba Longa's father was Romulus Silvius[4].
Career and Affiliations
Aventinus of Alba Longa held the position of king[7].
Personal Life
A child of Aventinus of Alba Longa was Procas[5].
Death and Burial
Burial took place at Aventine Hill[3].
Works and Contributions
Things named for Aventinus of Alba Longa include Aventine Hill[20], a hill[21], in Italy[22].
Why It Matters
Aventinus of Alba Longa draws 15 Wikipedia views per month (human_whose_existence_is_disputed category, ranking #147 of 306).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 13 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[23] It is known by 4 alternative names across languages and contexts.[24]
Entities named for it include Aventine Hill[20], a hill[21], in Italy[22].
FAQs
Who were Aventinus of Alba Longa's parents?
Aventinus of Alba Longa's father was Romulus Silvius[4].