Gaius Valerius Eudaemon

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DiedUnknown (possibly mentioned by Marcus Aurelius among admired deceased individuals)
Known forClose confidant of Emperor Hadrian; career spanning key imperial administrative posts
Gaius Valerius Eudaemon
Prefect (governor) of Roman Egypt
In office
142–143
Personal details
DiedUnknown (possibly mentioned by Marcus Aurelius among admired deceased individuals)
Known forClose confidant of Emperor Hadrian; career spanning key imperial administrative posts

Gaius Valerius Eudaemon was a Roman eques who held a number of military and civilian positions during the reigns of the Emperors Hadrian and Antoninus Pius, which includes praefectus of Roman Egypt. He is known as a close friend of the emperor Hadrian.

His career is documented in two inscriptions. One is in Latin from Ephesus, erected by an imperial freedman named Hermes.[1] The name of the subject is missing, but from the other inscription, erected in Syria and written in Greek, Eudaemon is confirmed as the subject.[2]

The date of his death is not known, although he may be the same Eudaemon Marcus Aurelius mentions in a list of dead men he looked up to, along with Demetrius and Aulus Claudius Charax.[3]

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