Mavortius was probably the son of
Caecina Mavortius Basilius Decius, consul in 486, and related to
Vettius Agorius Praetextatus, an influential aristocrat of the late 4th century. In 527, Mavortius held the positions of
Comes domesticorum (Commander of the Imperial Guard) and consul. Subscriptions in three manuscripts containing the works of
Horace state that Mavortius emended one text of that poet in the sixth century. The scholar
Vollmer believed Mavortius' copy was the archetype of the entire tradition, but R. J. Tarrant argues that the subscription was copied from Mavortius' manuscript into an unrelated book, then found its way into the three surviving manuscripts – which otherwise belong to different branches of the manuscript transmission. A subscription with Mavortius' name also appears in a sixth-century manuscript of
Prudentius. == Notes ==