THEODOSIUS I 379AD Authentic Ancient Roman Coin Wreath of success i39484

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Authentic Ancient

Coin of:

 Theodosius
I
 

Roman Emperor
: 379-395 A.D. –

Bronze

AE 4 12mm (1.09 grams) Constantinopolis mint: 379-383 A.D.
Reference: RIC 63b (Constantinopolis). C 70. Sear 4087.
 DNTHEODOSIVSPFAVG – Diademed, draped and cuirassed bust right.
No legend Exe: CONA –

wreath
 
, VOT/X/MVLT/XX within.

You are bidding on the exact item pictured,

provided with a Certificate of Authenticity and Lifetime Guarantee of

Authenticity.

Flavius Theodosius ( 11 January 347 – 17 January 395),

also called Theodosius I and Theodosius the Great (Greek:

Θεοδόσιος Α΄ and Θεοδόσιος ο Μέγας), was

Roman

Emperor
from 379 to 395. Reuniting the eastern and western portions of the

empire, Theodosius was the last emperor of both the

Eastern

and

Western Roman Empire

. After his death, the two parts split permanently. He

is also known for making

Nicene

Christianity the official

state religion

of the Roman Empire.

//

 Career

Theodosius was born in

Cauca
, in

Hispania

(modern day

Coca
,

Spain
) or, more

probably, in or near

Italica
(Seville)[2],

to a senior military officer,

Theodosius the Elder

.

He accompanied his father to

Britannia

to help quell the

Great Conspiracy

in 368. He was military commander (dux)

of Moesia
, a

Roman province on the lower

Danube
, in 374.

However, shortly thereafter, and at about the same time as the sudden disgrace

and execution of his father, Theodosius retired to Spain. The reason for his

retirement, and the relationship (if any) between it and his father’s death is

unclear. It is possible that he was dismissed from his command by the emperor

Valentinian I

after the loss of two of Theodosius’ legions to the

Sarmatians

in late 374.

The death of Valentinian I in 375 created political

pandemonium. Fearing further persecution on account of his family ties,

Theodosius abruptly retired to his family estates where he adapted to the life

of a provincial aristocrat.

From 364 to 375, the Roman Empire was governed by two

co-emperors, the brothers

Valentinian I

and

Valens
; when

Valentinian died in 375, his sons,

Valentinian II

and

Gratian
,

succeeded him as rulers of the Western Roman Empire. In 378, after

Valens
was

killed in the

Battle of Adrianople

, Gratian appointed Theodosius to replace the fallen

emperor as co-augustus for the East. Gratian was killed in a rebellion in

383, then Theodosius appointed his elder son,

Arcadius
,

his co-ruler for the East. After the death in 392 of Valentinian II, whom

Theodosius had supported against a variety of usurpations, Theodosius ruled as

sole emperor, appointing his younger son

Honorius

Augustus as his co-ruler for the West (Milan,

on 23 January 393) and defeating the usurper

Eugenius
on

6 September 394, at the

Battle of the Frigidus

(Vipava

river, modern Slovenia

) he restored peace.

 Family

By his first wife, the probably Spanish

Aelia Flaccilla

Augusta, he had two sons,

Arcadius

and

Honorius

and a daughter, Aelia

Pulcheria

; Arcadius was his heir in the East and Honorius in the West. Both

Aelia Flaccilla and Pulcheria died in 385.

His second wife (but never declared Augusta) was

Galla

, daughter of the emperor

Valentinian I

and his second wife

Justina

. Theodosius and Galla had a son Gratian, born in 388 who died young

and a daughter Aelia

Galla Placidia

(392–450). Placidia was the only child who survived to

adulthood and later became an Empress; a third child, John, died with his mother

in childbirth in 394.

 Diplomatic

policy with the Goths

The

Goths
and their

allies (Vandali,

Taifalae
,

Bastarnae

and the native

Carpi

) entrenched in the

provinces

of Dacia
and

eastern Pannonia Inferior

consumed Theodosious’ attention. The Gothic crisis was so

dire that his co-Emperor Gratian relinquished control of the

Illyrian

provinces and retired to

Trier
in

Gaul to let

Theodosius operate without hindrance. A major weakness in the Roman position

after the defeat at

Adrianople

was the recruiting of

barbarians

to fight against other barbarians. In order to reconstruct the Roman Army of the

West, Theodosius needed to find able bodied soldiers and so he turned to the

most capable men readily to hand: the barbarians recently settled in the Empire.

This caused many difficulties in the battle against barbarians since the newly

recruited fighters had little or no loyalty to Theodosius.

Theodosius was reduced to the costly expedient of shipping

his recruits to Egypt

and replacing them with more seasoned Romans, but there were still switches of

allegiance that resulted in military setbacks. Gratian sent generals to clear

the dioceses

of Illyria (Pannonia

and

Dalmatia

) of Goths, and Theodosius was able finally to enter

Constantinople

on 24 November 380, after two seasons in the field. The final

treaties with the remaining Gothic forces, signed 3 October 382, permitted large

contingents of primarily

Thervingian

Goths to settle along the southern

Danube
frontier

in the province

of Thrace
and

largely govern themselves.

The Goths now settled within the Empire had, as a result of

the treaties, military obligations to fight for the Romans as a national

contingent, as opposed to being fully integrated into the Roman forces.

However, many Goths would serve in Roman legions and others, as

foederati
,

for a single campaign, while bands of Goths switching loyalties became a

destabilizing factor in the internal struggles for control of the Empire.

In 390 the population of Thessalonica rioted in complaint

against the presence of the local Gothic garrison. The

garrison commander

was killed in the violence, so

Theodosius ordered the Goths to kill all the spectators in the circus as

retaliation

;

Theodoret
,

a contemporary witness to these events, reports:

the anger of the Emperor rose to the highest pitch, and

he gratified his vindictive desire for vengeance by unsheathing the sword

most unjustly and tyrannically against all, slaying the innocent and guilty

alike. It is said seven thousand perished without any forms of law, and

without even having judicial sentence passed upon them; but that, like ears

of wheat in the time of harvest, they were alike cut down.

In the last years of Theodosius’ reign, one of the emerging

leaders of the Goths, named

Alaric
,

participated in Theodosius’ campaign against

Eugenius
in

394, only to resume his rebellious behavior against Theodosius’ son and eastern

successor, Arcadius

, shortly after Theodosius’ death.

 Civil

wars in the Empire

The administrative divisions of the

Roman Empire

in 395, under Theodosius I.

After the death of

Gratian
in

383, Theodosius’ interests turned to the

Western Roman Empire

, for the usurper

Magnus Maximus

had taken all the provinces of the West except for Italy.

This self-proclaimed threat was hostile to Theodosius’ interests, since the

reigning emperor

Valentinian II

, Maximus’ enemy, was his ally. Theodosius, however, was

unable to do much about Maximus due to his still inadequate military capability

and he was forced to keep his attention on local matters. However when Maximus

began an invasion of Italy in 387, Theodosius was forced to take action. The

armies of Theodosius and Maximus met in 388 at Poetovio and Maximus was

defeated. On 28 August 388 Maximus was executed.

Trouble arose again, after Valentinian was found hanging in

his room. It was claimed to be a suicide by the

magister militum

,

Arbogast

. Arbogast, unable to assume the role of emperor, elected

Eugenius
, a

former teacher of rhetoric. Eugenius started a program of restoration of the

Pagan

faith, and sought, in vain, Theodosius’ recognition. In January 393, Theodosius

gave his son

Honorius

the full rank of Augustus in the West, citing Eugenius’

illegitimacy.

Theodosius campaigned against Eugenius. The two armies faced

at the

Battle of Frigidus

in September 394.

The battle began on 5 September 394 with Theodosius’ full frontal assault on

Eugenius’ forces. Theodosius was repulsed and Eugenius thought the battle to be

all but over. In Theodosius’ camp the loss of the day decreased morale. It is

said that Theodosius was visited by two “heavenly riders all in white”

who gave him courage. The next day, the battle began again and Theodosius’

forces were aided by a natural phenomenon known as the

Bora
,

which produces cyclonic winds. The Bora blew directly against the forces of

Eugenius and disrupted the line.

Eugenius’ camp was stormed and Eugenius was captured and soon

after executed. Thus Theodosius became the only emperor.

 Art

patronage

Theodosius offers a

laurel wreath

to the victor, on the marble base of the Obelisk of

Thutmosis III

at the

Hippodrome of Constantinople

.

Theodosius oversaw the removal in 390 of an Egyptian

obelisk
from

Alexandria to Constantinople. It is now known as the

obelisk of Theodosius

and still stands in the

Hippodrome

, the long

racetrack

that was the center of Constantinople’s public life and scene of

political turmoil. Re-erecting the monolith was a challenge for the technology

that had been honed in the construction of

siege

engines
. The obelisk, still recognizably a

solar symbol
,

had been moved from Karnak

to

Alexandria

with what is now the

Lateran obelisk

by

Constantius II

). The Lateran obelisk was shipped to Rome soon afterwards,

but the other one then spent a generation lying at the docks due to the

difficulty involved in attempting to ship it to Constantinople. Eventually, the

obelisk was cracked in transit. The white

marble
base is

entirely covered with

bas-reliefs

documenting the Imperial household and the engineering feat of

removing it to Constantinople. Theodosius and the imperial family are separated

from the nobles among the spectators in the

Imperial box

with a cover over them as a mark of their status. The

naturalism of traditional Roman art in such scenes gave way in these reliefs to

conceptual art

: the idea of order, decorum and respective ranking,

expressed in serried ranks of faces. This is seen as evidence of formal themes

beginning to oust the transitory details of mundane life, celebrated in Pagan

portraiture
.

Christianity had only just been adopted as the new state religion.

The Forum Tauri in Constantinople was renamed and redecorated

as the

Forum of Theodosius

, including a

column

and a

triumphal arch

in his honour.

 Nicene

Christianity becomes the state religion

Theodosius promoted Nicene Trinitarianism within Christianity

and Christianity within the Empire. On 27 February 380, he declared “Catholic

Christianity” the only legitimate imperial religion, ending state support for

the traditional Roman religion.

 Nicene

Creed

In the 4th century, the

Christian Church

was wracked with controversy over the divinity of

Jesus

Christ
, his

relationship to God

the Father, and the nature of the

Trinity
. In

325, Constantine I

convened the

Council of Nicea

, which asserted that Jesus, the Son, was equal to the

Father, one with the Father, and of the same substance (homoousios in

Greek). The council condemned the teachings of the theologian

Arius
: that the

Son was a created being and inferior to God the Father, and that the Father and

Son were of a similar substance (homoiousios in Greek) but not identical

(see

Nontrinitarian

). Despite the council’s ruling, controversy continued. By the

time of Theodosius’ accession, there were still several different church

factions that promoted alternative

Christology

.

 Arians

While no mainstream churchmen within the Empire explicitly

adhered to Arius

(a presbyter from Alexandria, Egypt) or his teachings, there were those who

still used the homoiousios formula, as well as those who attempted to

bypass the debate by merely saying that Jesus was like (homoios in Greek)

God the Father, without speaking of substance (ousia). All these non-Nicenes

were frequently labeled as

Arians

(i.e., followers of Arius) by their opponents, though they would not

have identified themselves as such.

The Emperor Valens had favored the group who used the

homoios formula; this

theology

was prominent in much of the East and had under the sons of Constantine the

Great gained a foothold in the West. Theodosius, on the other hand, cleaved

closely to the

Nicene

Creed
which was the interpretation that predominated in the West and was

held by the important

Alexandrian church

.

 Establishment

of Nicene Orthodoxy

On 26 November 380, two days after he had arrived in

Constantinople, Theodosius expelled the non-Nicene bishop,

Demophilus of Constantinople

, and appointed

Meletius

patriarch of Antioch, and

Gregory of Nazianzus

, one of the

Cappadocian Fathers

from

Antioch

(today in Turkey), patriarch of Constantinople. Theodosius had just been

baptized, by bishop

Acholius of Thessalonica

, during a severe illness, as was common in the

early Christian world.

On 27 February 380 he,

Gratian
and

Valentinian II

published an edict in order that all their subjects should

profess the faith of the bishops of Rome and Alexandria (i.e., the Nicene

faith). The move was mainly a thrust at the various beliefs that had arisen out

of Arianism, but smaller dissident sects, such as the

Macedonians

, were also prohibited. The exact text of this decree, gathered

in the Codex Theodosianus XVI.1.2, was:

It is our desire that all the various nations which

are subject to our Clemency and Moderation, should continue to profess that

religion which was delivered to the Romans by the divine Apostle Peter, as

it has been preserved by faithful tradition, and which is now professed by

the Pontiff Damasus and by Peter, Bishop of Alexandria, a man of apostolic

holiness. According to the apostolic teaching and the doctrine of the

Gospel, let us believe in the one deity of the Father, the Son and the Holy

Spirit, in equal majesty and in a holy Trinity. We authorize the

followers of this law to assume the title of Catholic Christians; but as

for the others, since, in our judgment they are foolish madmen, we decree

that they shall be branded with the ignominious name of heretics, and shall

not presume to give to their conventicles the name of churches. They will

suffer in the first place the chastisement of the divine condemnation and in

the second the punishment of our authority which in accordance with the will

of Heaven we shall decide to inflict.

(Henry

Bettenson, Documents of the Christian Church, Oxford University

Press, 1967, 2nd. (1st. 1943), p. 22).

In May 381, Theodosius summoned a new ecumenical council at

Constantinople (see

First Council of Constantinople

) to repair the schism between East and West

on the basis of Nicean orthodoxy.

“The council went on to define orthodoxy, including the mysterious Third Person

of the Trinity, the Holy Ghost who, though equal to the Father, ‘proceeded’ from

Him, whereas the Son was ‘begotten’ of Him.”

The council also “condemned the Apollonian and Macedonian heresies, clarified

church jurisdictions according to the civil boundaries of dioceses and ruled

that Constantinople was second in precedence to Rome.”

With the

death of Valens

, the Arians’ protector, his defeat probably damaged the

standing of the Homoian faction.

 Conflicts

with Pagans during the reign of Theodosius I

 Death

of Western Roman Emperor Valentinian II

On 15 May 392,

Valentinian II

was found hanged in his residence in the town of

Vienne
in

Gaul. The Frankish

soldier and Pagan

Arbogast

, Valentinian’s protector and

magister militum

, maintained that it was suicide. Arbogast and Valentinian

had frequently disputed rulership over the Western Roman Empire, and Valentinian

was also noted to have complained of Arbogast’s control over him to Theodosius.

Thus when word of his death reached Constantinople Theodosius believed, or at

least suspected, that Arbogast was lying and that he had engineered

Valentinian’s demise. These suspicions were further fueled by Arbogast’s

elevation of a Eugenius

, pagan official to the position of Western Emperor, and the veiled

accusations which Ambrose

, the Bishop of Milan, spoke during his funeral oration for

Valentinian.

Valentinian II’s death sparked a civil war between Eugenius

and Theodosius over the rulership of the west in the

Battle of the Frigidus

. The resultant eastern victory there led to the final

brief unification of the Roman Empire under Theodosius, and the ultimate

irreparable division of the empire after his death.

 Proscription

of Paganism

For the first part of his rule, Theodosius seems to have

ignored the semi-official standing of the Christian bishops; in fact he had

voiced his support for the preservation of temples or pagan statues as useful

public buildings. In his early reign, Theodosius was fairly tolerant of the

pagans, for he needed the support of the influential pagan ruling class. However

he would in time stamp out the last vestiges of paganism with great severity.

His first attempt to inhibit paganism was in 381 when he reiterated

Constantine’s ban on sacrifice. In 384 he prohibited

haruspicy

on pain of death

, and unlike earlier anti-pagan prohibitions, he made

non-enforcement of the law, by Magistrates, into a crime itself.

In 388 he sent a prefect to Syria, Egypt, and Asia Minor with

the aim of breaking up pagan associations and the destruction of their temples.

The

Serapeum

at Alexandria was destroyed during this campaign.

In a series of decrees called the “Theodosian decrees” he progressively declared

that those Pagan feasts that had not yet been rendered Christian ones were now

to be workdays (in 389). In 391, he reiterated the ban of

blood sacrifice

and decreed “no one is to go to the sanctuaries, walk

through the temples, or raise his eyes to statues created by the labor of man”.

The temples that were thus closed could be declared “abandoned”, as Bishop

Theophilus of Alexandria

immediately noted in applying for permission to

demolish a site and cover it with a Christian church, an act that must have

received general sanction, for

mithraea

forming crypts of churches, and temples forming the foundations

of 5th century churches appear throughout the former Roman Empire. Theodosius

participated in actions by Christians against major Pagan sites: the destruction

of the gigantic Serapeum

of Alexandria by soldiers and local Christian citizens in 392,

according to the Christian sources authorized by Theodosius (extirpium malum),

needs to be seen against a complicated background of less spectacular violence

in the city:

Eusebius

mentions street-fighting in Alexandria between Christians and

non-Christians as early as 249, and non-Christians had participated in the

struggles for and against

Athanasius

in 341 and 356. “In 363 they killed
Bishop George for repeated acts of pointed outrage, insult, and pillage of the
most sacred treasures of the city.”

Saint Ambrose and Emperor Theodosius,

Anthony van Dyck

.

By decree in 391, Theodosius ended the subsidies that had

still trickled to some remnants of Greco-Roman civic Paganism too. The

eternal fire

in the Temple of

Vesta

in the

Roman

Forum
was extinguished, and the

Vestal Virgins

were disbanded. Taking the

auspices

and practicing

witchcraft

were to be punished. Pagan members of the

Senate

in Rome appealed to him to restore the

Altar of Victory

in the Senate House; he refused. After the last

Olympic Games

in 393, it is believed that Theodosius cancelled the games

although there is no proof of that in the official records of the Roman Empire,

and the reckoning of dates by

Olympiads

soon came to an end. Now Theodosius portrayed himself on his coins holding the

labarum
.

The apparent change of policy that resulted in the “Theodosian

decrees” has often been credited to the increased influence of

Ambrose
,

bishop of Milan

. It is worth noting that in 390 Ambrose had excommunicated

Theodosius, who had recently given orders which resulted in the

massacre

of 7,000 inhabitants of

Thessalonica

,

in response to the assassination of his military governor stationed in the city,

and that Theodosius performed several months of public penance. The specifics of

the decrees were superficially limited in scope, specific measures in response

to various petitions from Christians throughout his administration.

Some modern historians question the consequences of the laws

against pagans.

 Death

Theodosius died, after battling the vascular disease

oedema

, in Milan

on 17 January 395. Ambrose organized and managed Theodosius’s lying in state in

Milan. Ambrose delivered a

panegyric

titled De Obitu Theodosii

before Stilicho

and Honorius

in which Ambrose detailed the suppression of heresy and paganism by Theodosius.

Theodosius was finally laid to rest in Constantinople on 8 November 395.




The Principate



 Julio-Claudian
dynasty



Reign



Incumbent



Notes


16 January 27 BC to 19 August AD 14



Augustus

 


19 August 14 to 16 March 37



Tiberius

 


18 March 37 to 24 January 41



Caligula


Murdered by Praetorian Guard


24 January 41 to 13 October 54



Claudius


Poisoned by his wife Agrippina, mother of Nero


13 October 54 to 11 June 68



Nero


Made a slave kill him



 Year
of the Four Emperors
(Civil War)



Reign



Incumbent



Notes


8 June 68 to 15 January 69



Galba


Murdered in favour of
Otho


15 January 69 to 16 April 69



Otho


Committed suicide


2 January 69 to 20 December 69



Vitellius


Murdered in favour of
Vespasian



 Flavian
dynasty



Reign



Incumbent



Notes


1 July 69 to 24 June 79



Vespasian

 


24 June 79 to 13 September 81



Titus


Possibly assassinated by Domitian


14 September 81 to 18 September 96



Domitian


Assassinated



 Nervan-Antonian
dynasty


Main article:
Five Good Emperors



Reign



Incumbent



Notes


18 September 96 to 27 January 98



Nerva


Proclaimed emperor by senate


28 January 98 to 7 August 117



Trajan

 


11 August 117 to 10 July 138



Hadrian

 


10 July 138 to 7 March 161



Antoninus Pius

 


7 March 161 to 17 March 180



Marcus Aurelius

 


7 March 161 to March 169



Lucius Verus


Co-emperor with
Marcus Aurelius


175



Avidius Cassius


Usurper; ruled in Egypt and Syria; murdered by his own army


177 to 31 December 192



Commodus


Assassinated



 Year
of the Five Emperors
&
Severan dynasty



Reign



Incumbent



Notes


1 January 193 to 28 March 193



Pertinax


Proclaimed emperor by senate; murdered by Praetorian Guard


28 March 193 to 1 June 193



Didius Julianus


Proclaimed emperor by Praetorian Guard; executed on orders of the Senate


9 April 193 to 4 February 211



Septimius Severus


Proclaimed emperor by
Pannonian
troops; accepted by
senate


193 to 194/195



Pescennius Niger


Proclaimed emperor by Syrian troops, defeated in battle by
Septimius Severus


193/195 to 197



Clodius Albinus


Proclaimed emperor by British troops, defeated in battle by
Septimius Severus


198 to 8 April 217



Caracalla


Assassinated at the behest of
Macrinus


209 to 4 February 211



Geta


Co-emperor with
Caracalla
; assassinated on orders
of
Caracalla


11 April 217 to June 218



Macrinus


Proclaimed himself emperor; executed on orders of
Elagabalus


May 217 to June 218



Diadumenian


Junior co-emperor under
Macrinus
; executed


June 218 to 222



Elagabalus


Proclaimed emperor by army; murdered by his own troops


13 March 222 to ?March 235



Alexander Severus


Murdered by his own troops



 Rulers during the
Crisis of the Third Century



Reign



Incumbent



Notes


February/March 235 to March/April 238



Maximinus Thrax


Proclaimed emperor by the army; murdered by
Praetorian Guard



early
January/March
238 to lateJanuary/April 238



Gordian I


Proclaimed emperor in Africa; committed suicide after
Gordian II
‘s death



early
January
March 238 to lateJanuary/April 238



Gordian II


Proclaimed emperor with
Gordian I
, killed in battle



early
February
238 to earlyMay 238



Pupienus


Proclaimed joint emperor by senate; murdered by
Praetorian Guard



early
February
238 to earlyMay 238



Balbinus


Proclaimed joint emperor by senate; murdered by
Praetorian Guard


May 238 to February 244



Gordian III


Nephew of
Gordian II
; death unclear,
probably murdered


240



Sabinianus


Usurper; proclaimed himself emperor; defeated in battle


February 244 to September/October 249



Philip the Arab


Proclaimed emperor after death of
Gordian III
; killed in battle by
Decius


248



Pacatianus


Usurper; proclaimed himself emperor; murdered by his own soldiers


248 to 249



Iotapianus


Usurper; proclaimed himself emperor in the east; murdered by his own
soldiers


248? or 253?



Silbannacus


Usurper; details essentially unknown


249 to June 251



Decius


Killed in battle


249 to 252



Priscus


Proclaimed himself emperor in the east in opposition to
Decius


250 to 250



Licinianus


Usurper; proclaimed emperor in Rome; rebellion suppressed



early
251
to June 251



Herennius Etruscus


Junior co-emperor under
Decius
; killed in battle


251



Hostilian


Son of
Decius
; died of plague


June 251 to August 253



Gallus


Proclaimed emperor by his troops after Decius’s death; murdered by them
in favour of Aemilianus


July 251 to August 253



Volusianus


Junior co-emperor under
Gallus
; murdered by army


August 253 to October 253



Aemilian


Proclaimed emperor by his troops; murdered by them in favour of
Valerian


253 to June 260



Valerian


Proclaimed emperor by his troops; captured in battle by the
Persians
; died in captivity


253 to September 268



Gallienus


Junior co-emperor under
Valerian
to 260; probably murdered
by his generals


260



Saloninus


Son of
Gallienus
; proclaimed emperor by
army; murdered shortly after by troops of
Postumus


June 260 (or 258)



Ingenuus


Usurper; proclaimed himself emperor after
Valerian
‘s capture; defeated in
battle


260



Regalianus


Usurper; proclaimed emperor after
Ingenuus
‘s defeat; fate unclear


260 to 261



Macrianus Major


Usurper; proclaimed emperor by eastern army; defeated and killed in
battle


260 to 261



Macrianus Minor


Usurper; son of
Macrianus Major
; defeated and
killed in battle


260 to 261



Quietus


Usurper; son of
Macrianus Major
; defeated and
killed in battle


261 to 261 or 262



Mussius Aemilianus


Usurper; proclaimed himself emperor after the defeat of the Macriani;
defeated and executed


268 to 268



Aureolus


Usurper; proclaimed himself emperor after
Gallienus
‘s death; surrendered to
Claudius II Gothicus
; murdered by
Praetorian Guard


268 to August 270



Claudius II Gothicus


Proclaimed emperor by the army


August 270 to September 270



Quintillus


Proclaimed himself emperor; cause of death unclear


August 270 to 275



Aurelian


Proclaimed emperor by army; murdered by the
Praetorian Guard


271 to 271



Septimius


Usurper; proclaimed emperor in
Dalmatia
; killed by his own
soldiers


November/December 275 to July 276



Tacitus


Appointed emperor by the Senate; possibly assassinated


July 276 to September 276



Florianus


Brother of
Tacitus
, proclaimed emperor by the
western army; murdered by his troops


July 276 to lateSeptember 282



Probus


Proclaimed emperor by the eastern army; murdered by his own soldiers in
favour of
Carus


280



Julius Saturninus


Usurper; proclaimed emperor by his troops; then killed by them


280



Proculus


Usurper; proclaimed himself emperor at the request of the people of
Lugdunum
; executed by
Probus


280



Bonosus


Usurper; proclaimed himself emperor; defeated by
Probus
and committed suicide


September 282 to July/August 283



Carus


Proclaimed emperor by Praetorian guard


spring 283 to summer 285



Carinus


Son of Carus; co-emperor with
Numerian
; fate unclear


July/August 283 to November 284



Numerian


Son of Carus; co-emperor with
Carinus
; probably murdered



 Gallic
Empire

260
to 274



Reign



Incumbent



Notes


260 to 268



Postumus


Declared himself emperor after
Valerian
‘s death; killed by his
own troops


268 to 268



Laelianus


Proclaimed himself emperor in opposition to Postumus; defeated and
killed by Postumus


269 to 269



Marius


Proclaimed himself emperor after Postumus’s death


269 to 271



Victorinus


Proclaimed emperor after Marius’s death


270 to 271



Domitianus


Proclaimed himself emperor of the
Gallic Empire


271 to 274



Tetricus I


Nominated heir to Victorinus



 Britannic
Empire

286
to 297



Reign



Incumbent



Notes


286 to 293



Carausius


Declared himself emperor; assassinated by
Allectus


293 to 297



Allectus


Declared himself emperor after
Carausius
‘s death; defeated by
Constantius Chlorus



 Dominate



 Tetrarchy
and
Constantinian dynasty



Reign



Incumbent



Notes


20 November 284 to 1 May 305



Diocletian


Declared emperor by the army after Numerian’s death; Abdicated


1 April 286 to 1 May 305



Maximian


Made co-emperor (‘Augustus’) with
Diocletian
; abdicated


1 May 305 to 25 July 306



Constantius I Chlorus


Made junior co-emperor (‘Caesar’) under
Maximian
; became Augustus after
his abdication


1 May 305 to May 311



Galerius


Made junior co-emperor (‘Caesar’) under
Diocletian
; became Augustus after
his abdication


August 306 to 16 September 307



Severus II


Made junior co-emperor (‘Caesar’) under
Constantius Chlorus
; became
Augustus after his death; executed by
Maxentius


28 October 306 to 28 October 312



Maxentius


Son of
Maximian
; proclaimed Augustus by
Praetorian Guard
; defeated in
battle by
Constantine I



de jure:

307, de facto 312 to 22 May 337



Constantine I


Son of
Constantius Chlorus
; proclaimed
Augustus by army


308
309?/311?



Domitius Alexander


Proclaimed emperor in Africa; defeated in battle by
Maxentius


11 November 308 to 18 September 324



Licinius


Appointed Augustus by
Galerius
; deposed by
Constantine I
and executed


1 May 311 to July/August 313



Maximinus Daia


Made junior co-emperor (‘Caesar’) under
Galerius
; became Augustus after
his death; defeated in battle by Licinius and committed suicide


December 316 to 1 March 317



Valerius Valens


Appointed co-Augustus by
Licinius
; executed by
Licinius


July to 18 September 324



Martinianus


Appointed co-Augustus by
Licinius
; deposed by
Constantine I
and executed


337 to 340



Constantine II


Son of
Constantine I
; co-emperor with his
brothers; killed in battle


337 to 361



Constantius II


Son of
Constantine I
; co-emperor with his
brothers


337 to 350



Constans I


Son of
Constantine I
; co-emperor with his
brothers, killed by
Magnentius


January 350 to 11 August 353



Magnentius


Usurper; proclaimed emperor by the army; defeated by
Constantius II
and committed
suicide



c.

350



Vetranio


Proclaimed himself emperor against
Magnentius
; recognized by
Constantius II
but then deposed



c.

350



Nepotianus


Proclaimed himself emperor against
Magnentius
, defeated and executed
by
Magnentius


November 361 to June 363



Julian


Cousin of
Constantius II
; made Caesar by
Constantius, then proclaimed Augustus by the army; killed in battle


363 to 17 February 364



Jovian


Proclaimed emperor by the army after
Julian
‘s death



 Valentinian
dynasty



Reign



Incumbent



Notes


26 February 364 to 17 November 375



Valentinian I

Valentinian I Coins.htm


Proclaimed emperor by the army after
Jovian
‘s death


28 March 365 to 9 August 378



Valens


Made co-emperor in the east by his brother
Valentinian I
; killed in battle


September 365 to 27 May 366



Procopius


Usurper; Proclaimed himself emperor; defeated and executed by
Valens


24 August 367 to 383



Gratian

Gratian Coins.htm


Son of
Valentinian I
; assassinated


375 to 392



Valentinian II

Valentinian II Coins.htm


Son of
Valentinian I
; deposed by
Arbogast
and died in suspicious
circumstances


383 to 388



Magnus Maximus

Magnus Maximus Coins.htm


Usurper; proclaimed emperor by troops; at one time recognized by
Theodosius I
, but then deposed and
executed



c.
386
to 388



Flavius Victor

Flavius Victor Coins.htm


Son of Magnus Maximus, executed on orders of
Theodosius I


392 to 394



Eugenius

Eugenius Coins.htm


Usurper; proclaimed emperor by army under
Arbogast
; defeated in battle by
Theodosius I



 Theodosian
dynasty



Reign



Incumbent



Notes


379 to 17 January 395



Theodosius I

Theodosius I Coins.htm


Made co-emperor for the east by
Gratian


383 to 408
EAST



Arcadius

Arcadius Coins.htm


Appointed co-emperor with his father
Theodosius I
; sole emperor for the
east from January 395


23 January 393 to 15 August 423
WEST



Honorius

Honorius Coins.htm


Appointed Augustus for the west by his father
Theodosius I


407 to 411
WEST



Constantine III

Constantine III Coins.htm


Usurper; proclaimed emperor in Britain; defeated by
Constantius III


409 to 411
WEST



Constans II

Constans II Coins.htm


Usurper; made emperor by his father
Constantine III
; killed in battle


409 and 414 to 415
WEST



Priscus Attalus

Priscus Attalus Coins.htm


Usurper; twice proclaimed emperor by
Visigoths
under
Alaric
and twice deposed by
Honorius


409 to 411
WEST



Maximus

Maximus Coins.htm


Usurper; proclaimed emperor in Spain; abdicated


411 to 413
WEST



Jovinus

Jovinus Coins.htm


Usurper; proclaimed emperor after
Constantine III
‘s death, executed
by
Honorius


412 to 413
WEST



Sebastianus

Sebastianus Coins.htm


Usurper; appointed co-emperor by
Jovinus
, executed by
Honorius


408 to 450
EAST



Theodosius II

Theodosius II Coins.htm


Son of
Arcadius


421 to 421
WEST



Constantius III

Constantius III Coins.htm


Son-in-law of
Theodosius I
; appointed co-emperor
by
Honorius


423 to 425
WEST



Joannes

Johannes Coins.htm


Proclaimed western emperor, initially undisputed; defeated and executed
by
Theodosius II
in favour of
Valentinian III


425 to 16 March 455
WEST



Valentinian III

Valentinian III Coins.htm


Son of
Constantius III
; appointed emperor
by
Theodosius II
; assassinated



 Western
Roman Empire



Reign



Incumbent



Notes


17 March 455 to 31 May 455



Petronius Maximus

Petronius Maximus Coins.htm


Proclaimed himself emperor after
Valentinian III
‘s death; murdered


June 455 to 17 October 456



Avitus

Avitus Coins.htm


Proclaimed emperor by the
Visigoth
king
Theoderic II
; deposed by
Ricimer


457 to 2 August 461



Majorian

Majorian Coins.htm


Appointed by
Ricimer
; deposed and executed by
Ricimer


461 to 465



Libius Severus

Libius Severus Coins.htm


Appointed by
Ricimer
; deposed and executed by
Ricimer


12 April 467 to 11 July 472



Anthemius

Anthemius Coins.htm


Appointed by
Ricimer
; deposed and executed by
Ricimer


July 472 to 2 November 472



Olybrius

Olybrius Coins.htm


Appointed by
Ricimer


5 March 473 to June 474



Glycerius

Glycerius Coins.htm


Appointed by
Gundobad
; deposed by
Julius Nepos


June 474 to 25 April 480



Julius Nepos

Julius Nepos Coins.htm


Appointed by eastern emperor
Leo I
; deposed in Italy by
Orestes
in 475; continued to be
recognised as lawful emperor in Gaul and Dalmatia until his murder in
480


31 October 475 to 4 September 476



Romulus Augustus

(Romulus
Augustulus
)

Romulus Augustus Coins.htm


Son of
Orestes
; deposed by
Odoacer
; fate unknown


Further information:
Barbarian kings of Italy



 Eastern
Roman Empire

  • For
    the rulers of the Eastern Roman Empire (also known as the
    Byzantine Empire
    ) after
    Theodosius II
    , see:
    List of Byzantine Emperors


Theodosian dynasty (395–457)

Name Reign Comments
  Theodosius I “the Great”

(Θεοδόσιος Α’ ο Μέγας, Flavius Theodosius)Theodosius
I Coins.htm
19 January 379 –
17 January 395
Born on 11 January 347. Aristocrat and military leader,
brother-in-law of Gratian, who appointed him as emperor of the East.
From 392 until his death sole Roman emperor
  Arcadius

(Αρκάδιος, Flavius Arcadius)Arcadius
Coins.htm
17 January 395 –
1 May 408
Born in 377/378, the eldest son of Theodosius I.
Succeeded upon the death of his father
  Theodosius II

(Θεοδόσιος Β’, Flavius Theodosius)
Theodosius II Coins.htm
1 May 408 –
28 July 450
Born on 10 April 401, the only son of Arcadius.
Succeeded upon the death of his father. As a minor, the praetorian
prefect
Anthemius
was regent in 408–414. He
died in a riding accident

Marcian.jpg
Marcian

(Μαρκιανός, Flavius Valerius Marcianus)

Marcian Coins.htm

450 – January 457 Born in 396. A soldier and
politician, he became emperor after being wed by the Augusta
Pulcheria
, Theodosius II’s sister,
following the latter’s death. Died of
gangrene

Leonid
dynasty (457–518)

Name Reign Comments
  Leo I “the Thracian”

(Λέων Α’ ο Θράξ, Flavius Valerius Leo)

Leo I Coins.htm

7 February 457 –
18 January 474
Born in
Dacia
in 401. A common soldier, he was
chosen by Aspar
, commander-in-chief of the army.
Died of dysentery

Leo (474)-coin.jpg
Leo II

(Λέων Β’, Flavius Leo)

Leo II
Coins.htm

18 January –
17 November 474
Born in 467, the grandson of Leo I. Succeeded upon the
death of Leo I. Died of an unknown disease, possibly poisoned

Zeno.png
Zeno

(Ζήνων, Flavius Zeno)

Zeno Coins.htm

17 November 474 –
9 April 491
Born c.425 at
Zenonopolis
,
Isauria
, originally named
Tarasicodissa. Son-in-law of Leo I, he was bypassed in the succession
because of his barbarian origin. Named co-emperor by his son on 9
February 474, he succeeded upon the death of Leo II. Deposed by
Basiliscus, brother-in-law of Leo, he fled to his native country and
regained the throne in August 476.

Basiliscus.jpg
Basiliscus

(Βασιλίσκος, Flavius Basiliscus)

Basiliscus Coins.htm

9 January 475 –
August 476
General and brother-in-law of Leo I, he seized power
from Zeno but was again deposed by him. Died in 476/477

Anastasius I (emperor).jpg
Anastasius I

(Αναστάσιος Α’, Flavius Anastasius)

BYZANTINE – Anastasius
Coins.htm

11 April 491 –
9 July 518
Born c. 430 at
Dyrrhachium
,
Epirus nova
. A palace official (silentiarius)
and son-in-law of Leo I, he was chosen as emperor by empress-dowager
Ariadne

Justinian Dynasty

Portrait Name Born Reigned Succession Died

Tremissis-Justin I-sb0058.jpg
Justin I

FLAVIVS IVSTINVS AVGVSTVS
c. 450 AD,
Naissus
July 9, 518 AD – August 1, 527 AD Commander of the palace guard under
Anastasius I)
; elected as emperor with
support of army
August 1, 527 AD
Natural causes

Meister von San Vitale in Ravenna 004.jpg

Justinian I

FLAVIVS PETRVS SABBATIVS IVSTINIANVS AVGVSTVS
c. 482 AD,
Tauresium
,
Dardania
August 1, 527 AD – 13/14 November 565 AD Nephew and nominated heir of
Justin I
13/14 November 565 AD
Natural causes

Solidus-Justin II-sb0391.jpg

Justin II

FLAVIVS IVSTINIVS IVNIOR AVGVSTVS
c. 520 AD, ? 13/14 November 565 AD – 578 AD Nephew of
Justinian I
578 AD
Became insane;
Tiberius II Constantine
ruled as regent
from December 574 and became emperor on Justin’s death in 578



Roman Late Monogram Coins.htm



Roman AE4 Coins.htm



 See also


  • Roman Republic

  • Roman Empire

  • Western Roman Empire

  • Byzantine Empire

  • Britannic Empire

  • Gallic Empire

  • List of Roman usurpers

  • Roman usurper

  • Thirty Tyrants (Roman)

 

 


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