Cornelius' chief notability is for having been appointed
flamen dialis, the high priest of Jupiter, at the direction of Augustus, after the position had been vacant for an unusually long period. The precise date of his appointment is uncertain;
Cassius Dio places it about 11 BC, which is accepted by many modern scholars. But
Tacitus states that he was appointed seventy-two years after the suicide of
Lucius Cornelius Merula, the previous holder of the priesthood, in 87 BC. In AD 10, Cornelius and
Quintus Junius Blaesus, were appointed consul
suffectus in the place of Publius Cornelius Dolabella and Gaius Junius Silanus. Cornelius and Blaesus served from the kalends of July to the end of the year. Twelve years later, Cornelius sought to be appointed governor of
Asia for AD 22. Such an appointment would have been typical for a consular such as Cornelius. However, the emperor Tiberius asserted that the religious duties and obligations of the
flamen dialis precluded his leaving Italy, and thus Cornelius was denied the governorship. He died in AD 23, and his son, also named Servius, was appointed
flamen dialis in his place. ==See also==