Romanianus, citizen of Tagaste
Romanianus, a wealthy citizen of
Tagaste, possessing there and at Carthage a
house and other property. He shewed great
kindness towards Augustine in his early life,
which he did not fail in later days gratefully to
acknowledge. In a passage of the second book
against the heathen philosophers Augustine
relates with pathetic simplicity how when he
was but a boy and in poverty arising no doubt
from his father's "spirited" disregard of
expense, he found in Romanianus a friend
who provided him a home and pecuniary help
in his studies at Carthage, and shewed him what
he valued more than these—friendship
and kindly encouragement. After the death
of Augustine's father in 371, Romanianus
received him into his house at Tagaste as his
honoured guest, and though, in a patriotic
spirit, he tried to dissuade him from returning
to Carthage, when he saw that his youthful
ambition desired a wider range than his native
town could afford, he supplied him with the
necessary means. Nor, as Augustine mentions
with special gratitude, was he offended at a
neglect to write, but passed over it with
considerate kindness (Aug. Conf. ii. 3, vi.
14; c. Acad ii. 2; Ep. 27, 4).
Romanianus had a son Licentius, who may
have been a pupil under Augustine while
he was teaching
rhetoric at Carthage, but of this there is no
evidence, though he undoubtedly was 10
or 12 years later at Milan. Romanianus appears
to have had another son, Olympius, frequently
mentioned in the various discourses composed
by Augustine at Cassiciacum near Milan, who
received baptism at the same time as Augustine,
and who afterwards became bp. of Tagaste, of
which place he was certainly a native,
and of a rank in life agreeing entirely with that
of Romanianus (Aug. Conf. vi. 7). Like
Augustine himself, perhaps in some degree
through his influence, Romanianus fell into
the prevailing errors of Manicheism, which,
however, he appears to have cast off, though
without adopting as yet the true philosophy
of the gospel, by the time when, as we gather
from the description of Augustine, he visited
him at Milan in 385. He had gone thither on
important business, and entered with some
warmth into the scheme of a life in common
of 10 members. In 386, while Augustine was
with his friends in the house of Verecundus
at Cassiciacum, and meditating the great
change of life which he made in 387, he
composed 4 discourses, dedicating to
Romanianus the one against the academic
philosophers, entreating him to abandon
their doctrines, and declaring his own intention
to abide by the authority of Christ,
"For," says he, "I find none more powerful
than this" (c. Acad. i. x ; iii. 20;
Retract. i. 1–4). Some time during the
3 years following the conversion of Augustine
Romanianus
became a Christian, thus drawing still closer
the intimacy between Augustine and himself
and his family. The same year Augustine
addressed to Romanianus his book on true
religion (c. Acad. ii. 3, 8 ; de Ver.
Rel. 12; Ep. 27, 4; 31, 7).
We find Augustine also writing, A.D.
395, to Licentius, entreating him in the most
affectionate manner to shake
off the bonds in which he was held by the
world, to visit Paulinus at Nola and learn
from him how this was to be accomplished
(Aug. Ep. 26, 3). This letter he followed
up by one to Paulinus, introducing to him
Romanianus, the bearer of the letter, and
commending Licentius to his attention
(Ep. 27, 3, 4, 6). In 396 Paulinus wrote
to Romanianus congratulating the church of Africa
on the appointment of Augustine as coadjutor-bp.
of Hippo, and expressing the hope that the
trumpet of Augustine may sound in the ears
of Licentius, to whom he wrote both in prose
and in verse, exhorting him to devote himself
to God (Paulin. Epp. vii. viii.).
[H.W.P.]