In memory of A. Tullia Scholastica Augusta

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IN·MEMORIAM·A·TVLLAE·SCHOLASTICAE·AVGVSTAE·PRINCIPIS·SENATVS·CENSORIS·IIII·CONSVLIS·II·PRAETRICIS

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Tabula ansata funebris A. Tulliae Scholasticae Augustae.jpg

A. TULLIA SCHOLASTICA AUGUSTA

(Nancy M. Balding),

PRINCEPS SENATUS, CENSORIAL AND CONSULAR SENATOR and AWARDED KNIGHT of Nova Roma,
has passed.
She lived 80 years.

She will live in our hearts forever!


The people of Nova Roma mourns the loss of A. Tullia Scholastica Augusta, our teacher and champion of classical studies.

Nova Roma and the Nova Romans extend their condolence to the family and friends of Scholastica Augusta. Nova Roma will pray for A. Tullia Scholastica Augusta and her family in this difficult time, and ceremonies in her memory are being performed. The senate has also awarded a funus censorium, a censorial state funeral and three days of official State Mourning, memorial games called the Ludi Tullii, and a new series of coins minted, all these to be done in her memory. The Nova Roman censorial funeral takes place as a separate ceremony after the actual funeral on a.d. V Id. Mai. M. Cotta C. Petronio cos. MMDCCLXXVII a.u.c.. The senate and people of Nova Roma have donated an amount towards the costs of the funeral. You can help and support these commemorative actions by donations as announced in our forum. You can learn more about her life and role in Nova Roma on her biography page.

THANK YOU for your contribution and dedication to Nova Roma, dear Scholastica! Thank you for being our fellow citizen for more than two decades!
Farewell our princeps senatus!



EPITAPHIUM

State Mourning Photogpraph of A. Tullia Scholastica Augusta.jpg

DIS MANIBUS
A. TULLIAE SCHOLASTICAE AUGUSTAE
PRINCIPI SENATUS
QUAE VIXIT ANNORUM LXXX.
* * *
AULA TULLIA SCHOLASTICA AUGUSTA,
CONSUL BIS ET CENSOR QUARTUM ATQUE PRAETRIX,
QUAESTRIX, VIGINTISEXVIRA, PRIMA INTERREGINA,
PRINCEPS SENATUS QUAE FUIT APUD VOS,
OPTIMA MAGISTRA LINGUAE LATINAE,
ROMANITATISQUE MAXIMA PRAECEPTRIX,
MATRINARUM GEMMA, VIRTUTUM EXEMPLUM,
SAPIENTISSIMA DOCTRIX ATQUE DOCTISSIMA:
HANC NOVAE ROMAE PLURIMI CONSENTIUNT
BONARUM OPTIMAM FUISSE VIRAGINUM.
HONORE VIRTUTE OMNES SUPERAVIT,
QUAM OB REM SENATUS AUGUSTAM APPELLAVIT.
+
SIT TIBI TERRA LEVIS!

CN. CORNELIUS LENTULUS
PRINCEPS IUVENTUTIS
SCRIPSIT



This poem, loosely following the form of versus Saturnius, the poetical format of Roman epitaph inscriptions, was written in memory and honor of A. Tullia Scholastica Augusta, the princeps senatus, by Cn. Cornelius Lentulus, the princeps iuventutis. The epitaph of Tullia Scholastica imitates the texts of the most famous versus Saturnius funerary inscription poems of Scipio Barbatus and that of Scipio Africanus Minor. The English translation of the epitaph is below:


To the Divine Departed Spirits
of A. Tullia Scholastica Augusta,
princeps senatus,
who lived 80 years.
* * *
Aula Tullia Scholastica Augusta,
Consul twice and four times censor, also praetor,
Quaestor, vigintisexvira, the first interregina,
Who as princeps senatus served the state among you,
The best master and teacher of the Latin language,
Greatest educator of the Roman culture,
A gem of the matrons, example of virtue,
The wisest woman and the most learned of all:
All the Nova Romans agree she was a heroine.
In honor and virtue she has surpassed all,
So the Senate was moved to name her Augusta.

+
May the earth rest lightly upon you.

Cn. Cornelius Lentulus
princeps iuventutis
wrote it.

Tabula ansata cum versu Saturnino de A. Tullia Scholastica Augusta.jpg

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Contents


Obituary

A. TULLIA SCHOLASTICA AUGUSTA (Nancy M. Balding), PRINCEPS SENATUS, CENSORIAL and CONSULAR SENATOR, former INTERREGINA has passed away on her 80th birthday.

It is our very sad duty to announce that today, on the day of her 80th birthday, after the celebration, the princeps senatus A. Tullia Scholastica Augusta, four times censor, two times consul, former praetor, chief Latinist of Nova Roma, Classicist, one of the leaders of the Liberators Saving Nova Roma, multiple times awarded citizen, among other things, with the Censorial Award, the Senate Award for Shaping the First Quarter Century of Nova Roma, awarded eques equo publico, awarded with the distinctive agnomen Augusta for being an iconic emblem of Nova Roma for over 20 years, has passed away. She wanted to live her milestone 80th birthday despite the devastating disease, and the gods gave her this last award. Nova Roma will greatly miss her.

Tullia Scholastica worked as a Latin teacher, and she was about to work towards her PhD doctorate from Classics when a very serious cancer made her unable to continue her studies for several years. When she recovered from that, in a miraculous way, after all doctors renounced about her, then her mother became sick and frail, and Tullia Scholastica had to demonstrate the virtue of filial pietas for the next two decades when she remained at home taking care of her ailing mother until the very last. She loved and respected her mother very much, and she believed in piety, family, devotion, reverence and discipline.

After her mother passed away, Scholastica joined Nova Roma, and dedicated her life entirely to the cause of teaching Latin, educating Romans, promoting Roman Studies and reviving ancient Rome. She became a reenactor, she made Greek and Roman clothing, obtained the basic equipment, pugio, Roman glasses, vessels, the flag of Nova Roma and all things that you would find in the home of a devote Nova Roman and Roman reconstructionist.

She started her activities in Nova Roma as a Latinist, served innumerable magistrates as Latin counsel, and advisors, clerk, scribe in several apparitor positions: in the offices of aediles, censors, consuls and praetors. She was part of the Onomastic Reform Committee which corrected the chaotic Roman names system in Nova Roma and replaced it with the current classical standards. She started her cursus honorum as vigintisexvira assisting the Censorial Office in K. Buteone Modiano Po. Minucia coss. (2006).

She became very respected and admired for her qualities and service to Nova Roma, and her status and popularity made her elected as one of the highest ranking leaders: she became a praetor of Nova Roma the next year, L. Arminio Ti. Galerio coss. (2007). As it happens to those with strong principles and stubborn character, many came to dislike her puritan insistence on chaste and reverent behavior, but old fashioner republican Roman matrons would have understood her very well, in fact, she was their embodiment in modern age. She served as quaestrix and vigintisexvira, and in many apparitorship during the next years, when she was elected to the most respected magistracy of our res publica, the censorship in Cn. Caesare C. Tullio coss. (2012). She was a very dutiful and exemplary censor, and her character fitted the office amazingly. If modern women Roman can be censors, then Tullia Scholastica was definitely the one most naturally born to this dignity.

When Nova Roma was attacked by the coup d'état of Caesar and Sulla, Scholastica was among the first five citizens to start immediate action in order to save our republic. She immediately joined the Government In Exile of consul S. Lucilius Tutor, and continued to rally support and help the leaders of the Liberatores Saving Nova Roma until the lawful senate (the senators escaped from the coup) declared the separation of the coup-taken corporation and the respublica, the citizen community of Nova Roma, and she has become acting (deputy) princeps senatus, and the first ever interregina, serving three times, whose job was to get Nova Roma through the chaos, have magistrates elected, and re-start the proper operations of our symbolic state. She was integral to these vital moves to save and restore our beloved Nova Roma. Thank you, magistra, thank you Scholastica for all these things! The lawful senate appointed her as full princeps senatus due to her seniority and respected status among the patres conscripti in C. Claudio T. Domitio (II) coss. (2018), in the year of the 20th Anniversary of Nova Roma.

After Nova Roma was recovered from the hands of the Caesarian faction, but while the "Civil War" was still going on in exacerbation, Tullia Scholastica was elected censor again, for three consecutive short terms, thus she reached a previously unconquered glory, to be the first person ever to have served four times as censor. She conducted censuses, and presided over the Censorial Office in a most critical period, when Nova Roma was being fought and saved... and rebuilt.

As the coronation and most important grade of her cursus honorum, she was elected consul for Q. Arrio (III) A. Tullia coss. (2021), and she presided over the closing of the "Years of Organizational War" and announcing the victory that year, and putting an end to the emergency state and the ruling of Nova Roma by senatus consulta ultima. She and Q. Arrius Nauta restored Roman republican democracy, restored freedom to Nova Roma, and closed a difficult period in the history of Nova Roma. As another big first in the history of modern Roman womanhood, she became the first woman to be re-elected consul for a second time, for the next year Sex. Lucilio (II) A. Tullia (II) coss. (2022) when she continued and finished the reform measures.

After her second consulship, she has been fulfilling her duties in the senate diligently, leading with counsel and advice as befitting the princeps senatus, assisted by her deputy, Cn. Cornelius Lentulus, the princeps iuventutis. She was duty exemplified, virtuous and pious, a Roman stateswoman, nothing less. She never missed a senate session, never missed a voting, she raised her concerns and commented on even the tiniest matters of state. She carried on her duties until the very last moment, even asking details about the current senate session, the only one in which she could not personally participate. It is not by chance that the senate awarded her the agnomen Augusta, for being mighty and unwavering, a bastion of Nova Roma and a pillar of virtue.

What is more telling about her than that she attended, or tried to attend, all conventuses of Nova Roma: in Britain, in Rome, in Aquincum, all the bigger American events, Roman days, the American provinces' conventus, and I could list many more. She was everywhere were Nova Roma "happened." It would be difficult to find a more dedicated and committed Nova Roman than Tullia Scholastica Augusta was. She knew everybody and everybody knew her. She was like a mater patriae... Truly Augusta. She was full of wanting to live. She wanted to be with Nova Roma. With all of you.

She was ready to do many things. She was planning to go to the next Conventus. She was full of plans and desire to continue. Tragically sadly, the terrible cancer disease returned, in a different form, after the happy decades. The lethal disease was once forced by the gods to leave her, but it wanted its way back: probably that was the divine deal. They gave her to us, to Nova Roma for 20 years to nurture us as our august mater patriae, but now the deal's time was served out, and it came back for her. However, she received a last award, a last recognition as her Roman life time award.

When she got to know that she has only weeks, maybe month left, due to her will of life, her last goal was to make it to her 80th birthday. To get a last go with life. And miraculously, she did. Today, she has died while celebrating her 80th birthday. She had visitors, a choir of nurses sang Happy Birthday to Scholastica. She got presents, flowers and it was indeed a celebration. She was just barely conscious, but she sensed that her life is being celebrated, her 80th big birthday. While her cousin present on her side, quietly and in utmost dignity and honor, she passed away to the realm of blessed.

A. Tullia Scholastica Augusta, princeps senatus, censorial, consular senatrix lived 80 years.

She was the mother of the senate, of Nova Roma, she didn't left any natural children after her, but she left an adopted Roman daughter, Tullia Scholastica Flaviana who will continue her name, her Roman dynasty, her legacy. She also wanted and asked Cn. Cornelius Lentulus to carry on with her legacy and Roman familial dynasty, to keep her memory alive. We are deeply grieving for her: but we will soldier on, keep the flag high, and will continue her work. Now we are devastated and in tears, but Nova Roma will not stop. And with Nova Roma, she lives on.

She will never truly die.

D. M. A. TULLIAE SCHOLASTICAE AUGUSTAE

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