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About Theodosius I "the Great", Roman Emperor
https://www.britannica.com/biography/Theodosius-I
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.
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 three sons, 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 (a son), John, died with his mother in childbirth in 394.
ID: I21145
Name: Theodosius I of Rome
Prefix: Emperor
Given Name: Theodosius I
Surname: of Rome
Nickname: The Great
Sex: M
_UID: EFD7FF26AD49D811BE490080C8C142CCE8D3
Change Date: 14 Aug 2004
Birth: 11 JAN 346/47 in Cauca, Gallaccia, Spain
Death: 17 JAN 394/95 in Milan, Italy
Father: Flavius Theodosius of Rome b: 325 in Caus Castle, Salop
Mother: Thermantia b: ABT 325
Marriage 1 Aelia Flacila of Spanish Roman Empire b: 355 in Spain
Married:
Children
Flavius Arcadius I of Eastern Roman Empire b: ABT 377 in Cauca, Gallaccia, Spain
Flavius Augustus Honorius of Roman Empire b: 384
Pulcheria of Roman Empire
Forrás / Source:
http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=jdp-fam&i...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theodosius_I
B: 346 or 347
D: 392 or 395
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theodosius_I
Theodosius I (379-395 A.D.)
David Woods
University College of Cork
Origin and Early Career
Flavius Theodosius was born at Cauca in Spain in about 346 to Thermantia and Theodosius the Elder (so-called to distinguish him from his son). 1 Theodosius the Elder was a senior military officer serving in the Western empire and rose to become the magister equitum praesentalis under the emperor Valentinian I from late 368 until his execution in early 375. 2 As the son of a soldier, Theodosius was legally obliged to enter upon a military career. He seems to have served under his father during his expedition to Britain in 367/8, and was the dux Moesiae Primae by late 374. 3 Unfortunately, great controversy surrounds the rest of his career until Gratian had him hailed as his imperial colleague in succession to the emperor Valens at Sirmium on 19 January 379. 4 It is clear that he was forced to retire home to Spain only to be recalled to active service shortly thereafter, but the circumstances of his forced retirement are shrouded in mystery. 5 His father was executed at roughly the same time, and much speculation has centred on the relationship between these events. A general consensus seems to have emerged, however, that the future emperor was forced into retirement shortly after the execution of his father at Carthage in Africa during the winter of 375/6. 6 The same court faction which had engineered the death of his father managed to persuade Valentinian to dismiss him also, or so the consensus goes. This interpretation of events is incorrect, however, not least because it places far too much trust in a number of unreliable sources. 7
The answer to the mystery surrounding Theodosius' forced retirement lies in Ammianus' description of a severe defeat which Sarmatian raiders inflicted upon Roman forces in the province of Valeria in late 374 when they almost annihilated a legio Moesiaca , i.e. a legion from Moesia, and a legio Pannonica , i.e. a legion from Pannonia. 8 These legions had been sent to intercept a party of Sarmatians who had been pursuing a senior Roman officer named Aequitius deep into Roman territory, and would undoubtedly have triumphed had they acted together. But they failed to co-operate, and their quarrelling allowed the Sarmatians to catch them unprepared, defeating the legion from Moesia first, then the legion from Pannonia. Valentinian's reaction to this defeat can best be judged from his reaction to an earlier defeat which the Alamanni had managed to inflict on his forces in Gaul during the spring of 365. 9 He sought out those who had been the first to turn and run before the enemy and blamed them for the subsequent defeat. He ordered the unit in question - the Batavi - to be stripped of their weapons and sold into slavery, and it took the whole army to persuade him to relent. In this instance, the first of the two units to break and run had been the legion from Moesia. Hence Valentinian would have held their commanding officer responsible for the wider defeat, and, as the dux Moesiae Primae , Theodosius was the officer ultimately responsible for this unit. Hence Valentinian dismissed Theodosius and sent him home to Cauca in Spain in the same manner, and for the same reason, that the emperor Constantius II had dismissed Valentinian himself in 357, or the magister equitum per Gallias Marcellus in the same year. 10 He had found him guilty of cowardice.
The best explanation for the death of Theodosius the Elder is that he had tried to intervene on behalf of his son, and Valentinian had had him executed as a result, most probably during the early new year of 375. 11 His son regained his commission within the army only following the death of Valentinian himself on 17 November 375. He seems to have obtained a position similar to that which he had originally held at his dismissal, that of dux Valeriae perhaps. He campaigned against the Sarmatians again in 376, during which he was promoted as the magister militum per Illyricum .12 He remained as magister militum per Illyricum from 376 until 19 January 379 when the western emperor Gratian appointed him to succeed his eastern colleague Valens who had been killed at the Battle of Adrianople on 9 August 378. The fact that Gratian chose him as his new colleague does not necessarily mean that he enjoyed a particularly good reputation as the best general of his day. Gratian had effectively been forced to choose him since he seems to have been the most senior officer of Roman birth available to him at the time. 13
Foreign Policy
The problem confronting Theodosius immediately upon his accession was how to check the Goths and their allies who were continuing to ravage the Balkans. 14 One difficulty was that they had spread beyond the diocese of Thrace into the dioceses of Macedonia and Dacia in the prefecture of Illyricum, which had traditionally belonged to the western empire. The result was that Gratian surrendered the three dioceses of the prefecture of Illyricum to the temporary control of Theodosius for the duration of the Gothic crisis, while he himself returned to Trier in Gaul. 15 The date of this transfer is disputed, but it seems to have come into formal effect at the beginning of the new tax year on 1 September 379 and may be presumed to have ended on 31 August 382. This left Theodosius in control of the entire theatre of operations. Theodosius left Sirmium, the site of his accession, for Thessalonica in Macedonia which remained his base for the campaign seasons of 379 and 380. Gratian had transferred some of his own officers and men to Theodosius in order to assist him in his efforts to rebuild the eastern field-armies, which had been shattered at the Battle of Adrianople . These transfers included his comes domesticorum Richomer, who became Theodosius' magister peditum praesentalis , a post which he retained until his death by illness in late 392. 16
We are poorly informed about the exact sequence of events during the Gothic war, but Theodosius' "general" Modares appears to have inflicted an important defeat upon the Goths somewhere in Thrace in 379. 17 Theodosius proved himself willing to recruit one group of barbarians into his army to use against the other groups who remained hostile, but this was a risky strategy. In order to reduce the risk, Theodosius transferred some of these fresh barbarian recruits to Egypt in return for some of the experienced Roman troops stationed there, during late 379 apparently. 18 Nevertheless, a large number of his new recruits appeared to have defected to the other side during the course of his campaign in 380, so that he suffered at least one serious reverse. He left Thessalonica and entered Constantinople for the first time on 24 November 380. 19 He was to remain in Constantinople, or its immediate vicinity, until late 387. During the winter of 380/1 he wrote to Gratian for his help against the Goths in Illyricum, and Gratian replied first by sending his "generals" Bauto and Arbogast against them, then by taking to the field himself. 20 They appear to have succeeded in driving the Goths and their allies from Illyricum and back into Thrace during 381. Theodosius, however, did enjoy a propaganda coup when the Gothic chieftain Athanaric surrendered to him at Constantinople on 11 January 381, although he died only two weeks later. 21 Theodosius finally reached a settlement with the remainder of the Goths on 3 October 382. 22 The exact terms of this settlement have not been preserved, but it is clear that the Goths were granted the right to settle large amounts of land along the Danube frontier in the diocese of Thrace and enjoyed an unusual degree of autonomy. 23 Many came to serve in the Roman army, but the terms of their service remain unclear. Many volunteered to serve on a full-time professional basis, while more were obliged to serve only for the duration of a specific campaign. The results were that the Goths who settled within the empire remained a constant threat to its internal stability. A substantial number of Gothic troops defected to the side of Magnus Maximus when Theodosius joined his forces with those of the young Valentinian II at Thessalonica in 387 in preparation for their joint campaign westwards against Maximus .24 These hid in the rough country about Thessalonica until Theodosius managed to drive them back into Thrace during his return from the West in 391, where they remained a threat as late as 392 when they managed to kill the "general" Promotus. 25 One of their emerging leaders, Alaric, participated in Theodosius' campaign against Eugenius in 394, only to resume his rebellious behaviour against Theodosius' son and eastern successor, Arcadius , shortly thereafter. Nor did the external threat cease. The "general" Promotus won a notable victory for Theodosius in 386 when he defeated an attempt by Odotheus and his Greuthungian Goths to force their way across the Danube. 26
The East remained relatively quiet under Theodosius. The Saracens rejected their previous treaty of 377 with the Romans and resumed their raids once more along the frontier from Arabia to Syria in 383 apparently. 27 We do not know the reason for this revolt, but the magister peditum praesentalis Richomer appears to have crushed it in but one campaign that year. As a result, the Salihids replaced the Tanukhids as the dominant group among Rome's Saracen foederati . As for the Persians, Theodosius maintained good relations with a rapid succession of Persian kings during his reign. Armenia remained a potential source of conflict between the two powers until they reached agreement upon the division of this country in 387 when Theodosius sent his magister militum per Orientem Stilicho on an embassy to the Persian court. 28 In accordance with this agreement, the pro-Roman king Arsak retained possession of the western part of the country, while the pro-Persian king Khosro retained possession of the eastern part.
Civil Wars
Theodosius fought two bloody civil wars in quick succession against the usurpers Magnus Maximus and Eugenius .Magnus Maximus was a fellow Spaniard who even claimed to be a relative of Theodosius himself. 29 Like Theodosius, he was also a pious Catholic. Hence there was no deep ideological differences between the two. Magnus Maximus had been the commander of a field army in Britain in 383 when he had led his troops back to Gaul in an attempt to seize power. 30 He forced Gratian to flee from an initial encounter near Paris, but was blamed for Gratian's assassination near Lyons as he made for northern Italy. This was the only charge which Theodosius could seriously have held against him in 383, that he had risen to power through the assassination of a legitimate emperor. War between the two had not been inevitable, and the orator Themistius undoubtedly exaggerates when he claims that Theodosius set out against him in 384 with the intention of avenging Gratian's death. 31 The young Valentinian II continued to rule the prefectures of Italy, Illyricum and Africa, which constituted a buffer-ground between the territories of his two more powerful colleagues. An uneasy peace prevailed until the late summer of 387 when Maximus sent his troops into northern Italy and forced Valentinian to retreat to Thessalonica at the eastern extreme of his territory. 32 Yet while Maximus may have struck the first formal blow in this renewed bout of civil war, one suspects that he felt compelled to act as he did much because of the growing influence of Theodosius over Valentinian and his ministers. One notes that Theodosius' magister peditum praesentalis Richomer was the uncle of Valentinian's magister equitum praesentalis Arbogast, who was effectively the sole commander of Valentinian's forces at this point. 33 More importantly, perhaps, Valentinian had appointed Gildo as his comes Africae ca. 386, and Theodosius had attempted to win Gildo over to his cause by marrying Nebridius, a nephew of the empress Flaccilla, to Gildo's daughter Salvina. 34 The fact that Maximus suffered some sort of serious defeat at Sicily during the initial stage of the civil war in 388, and that he committed a large number of men to naval operations off the southern Italian coast under the command of his magister praesentalis Andragathius, suggests that Theodosius was well rewarded for his efforts, that he did at least persuade Gildo to defect to his side and seize Sicily on his behalf. 35 Whatever the case, Theodosius joined with Valentinian at Thessalonica during the late summer of 387, at which time he also married Valentinian's sister Galla. They launched a joint expedition against Maximus during the summer of 388, defeating his forces in pitched battles at Siscia, then Poetovio. 36 They then forced their way across the Alps and captured Maximus himself at Aquileia. They had him executed three miles outside Aquileia on 28 August 388, and sent Arbogast to do the same to his son Victor in Trier. However, they spared his wife and two daughters.
Theodosius spent about three years in Italy until he began his return trip to Constantinople in the summer of 391. Valentinian now ruled the whole of the western empire, but he was increasingly dominated by his magister peditum praesentalis Arbogast, whose own arrogance increased the further Theodosius moved from the scene. Matters came to a head in 392 when Valentinian tried to cashier Arbogast and Arbogast simply refused to accept his command. 37 Valentinian secretly wrote to Theodosius for his assistance, but was found dead on 15 May 392. An uneasy peace followed as Arbogast awaited the news of Theodosius' reaction to the death of his brother-in-law Valentinian ; Theodosius tried to determine whether Valentinian really had committed suicide as alleged. 38 Unfortunately for all concerned, Theodosius was still married to Galla, who refused to accept that her brother had committed suicide. Worse still, Arbogast's strongest advocate at Theodosius' court, his uncle Richomer, was mortally ill. As a hostile judgement seemed increasingly likely, Arbogast struck first. He hailed Valentinian's magister scrinii as emperor on 22 August 392 and quickly secured Italy for his cause. In contrast to his acceptance of Maximus for several years, Theodosius refused to recognise Eugenius as emperor right from the start. He publicly indicated this by his refusal to accept Eugenius' nominees for the consulship of 393 and by his coronation of his second son Honorius as Augustus on 23 January 393. The war did not begin until the summer of 394 when Theodosius finally began his march from Constantinople. The war was decided by one decisive battle on the banks of the river Frigidus in the foothills of the Alps on 6 September 394. 39 While Christian sources delight to recount how God assisted Theodosius by sending a wind to blow his enemies' weapons back into their faces, 40 the crucial factor was surely the decision by a key section of Maximus' army under the comes Arbitio to defect from his side to that of Theodosius. 41 So Theodosius triumphed and had Eugenius executed, while Arbogast committed suicide.
Religious Policy
Theodosius was Catholic and received baptism at the hands of bishop Acholius of Thessalonica during the autumn of 380 when serious illness threatened his life. 42 Two days after his first arrival in Constantinople on 24 November 380, Theodosius expelled the "Arian" bishop Demophilus of Constantinople from the churches of that city and surrendered them to Gregory of Naziaznus who happened to be the leader of the small Catholic or "Nicene" community there at the time. This was greatly resented and may even have resulted in an attempt to assassinate the emperor. 43 He also called a synod of 150 Catholic bishops who assembled at Constantinople in May 381. An early meeting of this synod, when all the bishops had not yet arrived, elected Gregory of Nazianzus as the new Bishop of Constantinople, but he was quickly forced to resign. The synod then elected the senator Nectarius, who obviously enjoyed the strong backing of the emperor himself, in his stead. Theodosius' early reign witnessed the gradual expulsion of all heretical bishops from the towns and cities of the East and the transfer of all church buildings and property to their Catholic rivals. The depth of resentment which such policies caused can best be judged by the fact that in 388 "Arian" mobs at Constantinople rioted and caused widespread damage in reponse to the false rumour that Magnus Maximus had inflicted a severe defeat upon Theodosius. 44
Theodosius continued to tolerate the traditional pagan practices and rituals which had enjoyed toleration from successive Christian emperors throughout the fourth century, i.e., almost anything which did not include blood-sacrifice or did not smack of treason against the emperor, until 391 at least. He then issued a series of laws which seemed effectively to prohibit all pagan worship by forbidding visits to pagan sites of worship or even the adornment in any manner of the images of the gods. 45 This apparent change of policy on his part has often been credited to the increased influence of bishop Ambrose of Milan. 46 For in 390 Ambrose had excommunicated Theodosius because he had ordered the execution of several thousand of the inhabitants of Thessalonica in response to the murder there of his "general" Butherichus. Theodosius accepted his excommunication and even performed several months of public penance, so it is all too easy too imagine how he might have taken the time to review his other "failings" also, including his continued toleration of paganism. 47 However, the importance of these laws has been greatly exaggerated. 48 They were limited in scope, specific measures in response to various petitions and accusations and tell us less about Theodosius than the private agenda of many of the increasingly militant Christians who could be found throughout his administration. Although he had voiced his support earlier for the preservation of temples or pagan statues as useful public buildings or as works of art, in 391 he officially sanctioned the destruction of the most famous of the temples in the East, the Serapeum at Alexandria. 49 Bands of monks and Christian officials had long been accustomed to take the law into their own hands and destroy various centres of pagan worship, but the destruction of the Serapeum seemed to confirm that such actions had often enjoyed the emperor's tacit approval at least, and served to encourage such action in the future also. Again, however, Theodosius had been effectively manipulated into sanctioning the destruction of the Serapeum by local officials who had essentially engineered the crisis there for this very purpose.
Family and Succession
Theodosius married twice. His first wife was the Spanish Aelia Flavia Flaccilla. 50 She bore him Arcadius ca. 377, Honorius on 9 September 384, and Pulcheria ca . 385. Theodosius honoured her with the title of Augusta shortly after his accession, but she died in 386. In late 387 he married Galla, daughter of Valentinian I and full-sister of Valentinian II .51 She bore him Gratian ca . 388, Galla Placidia ca . 388/390, and died in childbirth in 394, together with her new-born son John. 52 Of his two sons who survived infancy, he appointed Arcadius as Augustus on 19 January 383 and Honorius as Augustus on 23 January 393. His promotion of Arcadius as a full Augustus at an unusually young age points to his determination right from the start that one of his own sons should succeed him. He sought to strengthen Arcadius' position in particular by means of a series of strategic marriages whose purpose was to tie his leading "generals" irrevocably to his dynasty. Hence he married his niece and adoptive daughter Serena to his magister militum per Orientem Stilicho in 387, her elder sister Thermantia to a "general" whose name has not been preserved, and ca. 387 his nephew-in-law Nebridius to Salvina, daughter of the comes Africae Gildo. 53 By the time of his death by illness on 17 January 395, Theodosius had promoted Stilicho from his position as one of the two comites domesticorum under his own eastern administration to that of magister peditum praesentalis in a western administration, in an entirely traditional manner, under his younger son Honorius . Although Stilicho managed to increase the power of the magister peditum praesentalis to the disadvantage of his colleague the magister equitum praesentalis and claimed that Theodosius had appointed him as guardian for both his sons, this tells us more about his cunning and ambition than it does about Theodosius' constitutional arrangements. 54
Theodosius' importance rests on the fact that he founded a dynasty which continued in power until the death of his grandson Theodosius II in 450. This ensured a continuity of policy which saw the emergence of Nicene Christianity as the orthodox belief of the vast majority of Christians throughout the middle ages. It also ensured the essential destruction of paganism and the emergence of Christianity as the religion of the state, even if the individual steps in this process can be difficult to identify. On the negative side, however, he allowed his dynastic interests and ambitions to lead him into two unnecessary and bloody civil wars which severely weakened the empire's ability to defend itself in the face of continued barbarian pressure upon its frontiers. In this manner, he put the interests of his family before those of the wider Roman population and was responsible, in many ways, for the phenomenon to which we now refer as the fall of the western Roman empire.
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Cameron, A. Claudian: Poetry and Propaganda at the Court of Honorius. (Oxford, 1970).
________. "Theodosius the Great and the Regency of Stilicho." Harvard Studies in Classical Philology 73 (1969), 247-80.
Croke, B. "Arbogast and the Death of Valentinian." Historia 25 (1976), 235-44.
Duval, Y.-M. "Les aurea fulmina des Alpes Juliennes: le role des statues divines dans les lieux strategiques." in Bratoz, R (1996), 95-108.
Errington, R.M. "The Accession of Theodosius I." Klio 78 (1996a), 438-53.
________. "Theodosius and the Goths." Chiron 26 (1996b), 1-27.
________. "Church and State in the First Years of Theodosius I." Chiron 27 (1997a), 21-72.
________. "Christian Accounts of the Religious Legislation of Theodosius I." Klio 79 (1997b), 398-443.
Friell, G. and Williams, S., Theodosius: The Empire at Bay. (London, 1994).
Heather, P. Goths and Romans 332-489 (Oxford, 1991).
Hoffmann, D. Das spätrömische Bewegungsheer und die Notitia Dignitatum .(Dusseldorf, 1969).
Kovac, M. "Bora or Summer Storm: Meteorological Aspect of the Battle at Frigidus." in Bratoz, R. (1996), 109-19.
Matthews, J.F., Western Aristocracies and Imperial Court AD 364-425. (Oxford, 1975)
McLynn, N. Ambrose of Milan: Church and Court in a Christian Capital. (Berkeley, 1994).
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Rebenich, S. "Gratian, a Son of Theodosius, and the Birth of Galla Placidia." Historia 34 (1985), 372-85.
Sivan, H. "Was Theodosius I a Usurper ?" Klio 78 (1996), 198-211.
Shahid, I. Byzantium and the Arabs in the Fourth Century (Washington DC, 1984).
Springer, M. "Die Schlacht am Frigidus als quellenkundliches und literaturgeschichtliches Problem." in Bratoz, R. (1996), 45-93.
Vanderspoel, J. Themistius and the Imperial Court: Oratory, Civic Duty, and Paideia from Constantius to Theodosius (Ann Arbor, 1995).
Woods, D. "Julian, Arbogastes, and the Signa of the Ioviani and the Herculiani ." Journal of Roman Military Equipment Studies 6 (1995), 61-68.
Notes
1On his origin at Cauca, see Zos. 4.24.4. His date of birth is calculated from his death in his fiftieth year in January 395, Epit. 48.19. The name of his mother is preserved only at Epit . 48.1.
2 Pan. Lat . 2(12).5.2 preserves the fullest surviving account of the movements of Theodosius the Elder throughout his career, but fails to note his rank or position at any particular time. On this passage, see Nixon and Rodgers (1994), 517-19. Amm. Marc. 28.3.9 proves that he succeeded Jovinus as the magister equitum praesentalis following his return in late 368 from an expedition to Britain. He is normally identified as a comes rei militaris before this, with little effort to define what exactly is meant by this term. See Birley (1981), 333-39. I believe that he succeeded Charietto as the vicarius of the magister equitum praesentalis Jovinus in early 365 and retained this post until he succeeded Jovinus in 368.
3On his service in Britain, see Zos. 4.24.4. On his position as dux Moesiae , see Amm. Marc. 29.6.15; Zos. 4.16.6. He had presumably served on his father's staff as a protector domesticus , a member of the imperial bodyguard seconded to his command. Note, for example, that the ten protectores domestici who had accompanied the magister militum per Gallias Ursicinus to Cologne in 355 had consisted of friends and relatives for the most part (Amm. Marc. 15.5.22).
4 Epit . 48.1; Oros. 7.34.2; Cons. Constant. s.a. 379 (exact date).
5 Pan. Lat . 2(12).9; Theod. HE 5.5.1-2. It has traditionally been accepted that the emperor Gratian recalled Theodosius to active service only sometime after the battle of Adrianopole on 9 August 378, i.e., that he remained in retirement in Spain for almost three years 376-78. See, e.g., Sivan (1996), 199. But Errington (1996a), 438-40, exposes Theodoret's account of Theodosius' recall to service for the fictitious nonsense it is and dates his recall as early as late 377.
6See, e.g., Nixon and Rodgers (1994), 453; Williams and Friell (1994), 23-4. Differences sometimes emerge, as when Errington (1996a), 443-44, argues that their enemies forced the younger Theodosius into retirement first before they dared to move against his father, or when Matthews (1975), 93, claims that the younger Theodosius "withdrew to a judicious retirement" after his father's execution as if he did so entirely voluntarily. Nevertheless, all accept that Theodosius the Elder was executed at Carthage, and that his execution and his son's "retirement" should both to be dated to the winter of 375/76.
7E.g., Oros. 7.33.7 is our only source to locate Theodosius' death at Carthage, and only because Carthage was the administrative centre for the region. He may also have been influenced by the fact that Arcadius had had the rebellious comes Africae Heraclianus executed at Carthage ca . 413. In contrast, Amm. Marc. 29.5.1-55 reveals not the slightest indication that Theodosius had visited Carthage even once during his stay in Africa ca. 373-4. Writing ca. 417, during the reign of Theodosius' grandson Arcadius, Orosius was principally concerned to fill in the flattering assumption that the father of such a pious dynasty had surely received baptism before his death. As for the date of Theodosius' execution, Jerome is our only source, and he dates it to 376 ( Chron. s.a . 376). Note, however, that he does not date the execution of Theodosius the Elder alone to 376 but associates it with the deaths of many other notables also. If he is not simply mistaken, as he is on other occasions, it is arguable that he refers to a series of executions, which culminated in 376, rather than that they all necessarily occurred in the same year.
8Amm. Marc. 29.6.13-14. These legions have traditionally been identified with two palatine legions whose names are recorded together in the Notitia Dignitatum , the Pannoniciani seniores (ND Oc. 5.149) and the Moesiaci seniores (ND Oc . 5.150), e.g. by Hoffmann (1969), 433. There are several objections to this identification. The first must be that their titles do not actually match. Ammianus records the names of other palatine legions in the exact form that they have been preserved by the Notitia so that we cannot simply assume some literary licence on his part in this instance. He refers to the Primani (ND Or . 6.45) by their correct title (Amm. 16.12.49) and the Divitenses Iuniores and the Tuncgrecani Iuniores by theirs (Amm. 26.6.12), and to the Lanciarii and the Mattiarii (Amm. 21.13.16, 31.13.8), whether seniores or iuniores (ND Or . 5.42, 6.42; Or. 6.47, Oc. 7.30), as such rather than as, say, the legio lanciaria or the legio mattiaria . Next, a pair of palatine legions, a so-called "brigade" in the manner of the Pannoniciani seniores and the Moesiaci seniores should have been long used to operating together so it is difficult to understand why they should have quarrelled so badly here. Next, one notes that Ammianus does not say where exactly they came from, and the speed with which they arrived upon the scene inclines one to suspect that they had not had to come very far at all. Finally, it must strike one as a remarkable coincidence that the first two palatine legions to arrive in response to attacks upon the Pannonias and Moesia Prima should have been named after those very regions.
9Zos. 4.9.3-4.
10See Amm. Marc. 16.11.6-7 (dismissal of Valentinian) and Amm. Marc. 16.4.3, 7.1, 8.1 (dismissal of Marcellus).
11 Cf . his earlier petition on behalf of the advocate Africanus who had merely wanted a second provincial governorship, Amm. Marc. 29.3.6. In response, Valentinian had ordered him to behead Africanus. It is beyond the scope of the present article to explore the evidence in full, but I believe that Theodosius the Elder reached the Pannonian provinces in order to lead their defence against the Sarmatians sometime during late 374, and that he then reported back to Valentinian himself at Trier. He is probably identifiable as one of the "missing" consuls for 375. Jerome is the only author to explain why there appear to have been no consuls for 375, claiming that the consuls remained the same as the previous year because of the Sarmatian devastation of the Pannonian provinces ( Chron. s.a. 375). This was true in a round about way, in so far as the Sarmatian attacks did set off a chain of events that resulted in the execution of Theodosius the Elder and the disgrace of his consular colleague, but not in the way that Jerome implies. The Sarmatian attack upon the Pannonias was an embarassment rather than a serious military crisis, as is best revealed by the fact that it did not provoke Valentinian I to leave his capital at Trier until the spring of 375, when the worst was over. If such an attack had prevented Valentinian from appointing new consuls for 375, then it is a wonder that there were any new consuls at all during the far more serious crises of the subsequent decades.
12 Pan. Lat . 2(12).10.2-3; Themist. Or. 14.182c, 15.198a. This was the campaign which Valentinian himself had been planning when he died.
13Of Gratian's command staff in early 379, the names of his magistri praesentales Merobaudes and Frigeridus betray their German origin, as do the names of his two western comites domesticorum Richomeres and Mallobaudes. Finally, of the the two vicarii of his two magistri praesentales , Sebastianus had been killed at Adrianople, while Nannienus' name betrays his non-Roman origin also.
14For detailed analyses of our meagre sources for this war, see Heather (1991), 122-56; Errington (1996b).
15Errington (1996b), 22-27.
16Zos. 4.55.2-3. Strictly speaking, he was a magister militum (or utriusque militiae )praesentalis , probably prima (ND Or . 5.1), by the time of his death, since Theodosius had merged the infantry and cavalry branches of the army in the meantime, perhaps ca. 388.
17Zos. 4.25.2. Modares was himself a Goth, a member of the royal family, and is normally identified as a magister militum of some type. No emperor would have appointed any barbarian defector to such a high rank without first having tested his ability and loyalty at a lower level of command. So one suspects that he is identifiable with the dux Arabiae to whom Ammianus refers as Munderichus (Amm. 31.3.5), and that Ammianus, or his source, have confused Modares' name with his Gothic title reiks "leader of men".
18Zos. 4.30-32.
19 Cons. Constant. s.a. 380.
20Zos. 4.32-33.
21 Cons. Constant. s.a. 381.
22 Ibid . s.a. 382.
23Heather (1991), 157-92.
24Zos. 4.45.3.
25Zos. 4.51; Claud. De Cons. Stil. . 1.94-6.
26 Cons. Constant. s.a. 386; Zos. 4.35.1, 38-39.
27 Pan. Lat. 2(12).22.3. See Shahid (1984), 203-21.
28In general, see Blockley (1987).
29 Pan. Lat . 2(12).24.1.
30The nature of Maximus' command at the time of his revolt is a matter of great controversy. He is normally identified as one of the comes Britanniarum , the dux Britanniarum or the comes litoris Saxonici . See Birley (1981), 346-52. I suspect that he was the vicarius of the magister peditum praesentalis Merobaudes and that he commanded a small expedition to Britain ca . 382 similar to that which Theodosius had led there in 367/68.
31Them. Or . 18. See Vanderspoel (1995), 187-216, esp. 210.
32Zos. 4.42-43.
33Joh. Ant. frag . 187 (Müller) = Eunap. frag . 58.2 (Blockley).
34Claud. Gild. 154; Jer. Epp . 79.2, 123.17.
35On Sicily, see Ambr. Ep . 73(40).22-23. Zos. 4.46.1 preserves a ridiculous story that Valentinian's mother Justina sailed across the Ionian Sea to Italy with some of her children, and that Maximus had initially assembled his fleet in order to capture her. He then kept the fleet in being because he feared that Theodosius was about to launch a naval expedition. It suffices to note that this would have left Valentinian's family stranded behind enemy lines in danger of being used as hostages against him. McLynn (1994), 293-4, assumes that Valentinian himself led a naval expedition which gained the victory at Sicily. But Valentinian had no military experience, and if he and Theodosius had really wanted to open a second front, then it would have been far less risky, and potentially far more beneficial, had they sent their forces to land on the eastern coast of peninsular Italy instead, as far north as possible. They would then have been able to strike Maximus' main lines of defence in northern Italy from behind.
36Ambr. Ep . 73(40).23; Pan. Lat . 2(12).34-35.
37Zos. 4.53. According to Zosimus, Arbogast claimed that Valentinian had not given him his command in the first place so he could not now take it away from him. This is often interpreted as evidence that Theodosius had somehow imposed him upon Valentinian and that he was the tool by which Theodosius had continued to control his western colleague. It refers, rather, to the fact that he had essentially "inherited" the post of magister peditum praesentalis from his father Bauto ca. 386. Neither emperor had been in a position to nominate an alternative candidate to succeed Bauto at the time.
38The ancient sources disagree about the circumstances of Valentinian's death. See Soc. HE 5.25; Soz. HE 7.22; Philost. HE 11.1. In general, see Croke (1976) who concludes that Valentinian probably did commit suicide
39See Springer (1996).
40E.g. Soc. 5.25; Soz. 7.24; Theod. HE 5.24; Claud. III Cons. Hon . 89-98. For a modern, rational interpretation of this "miracle", see Kovac (1996).
41Oros. 7.35.16 (for Arbitio's name); Ruf. HE 2.33; Soz. 7.24.5. The ecclesiastical historians have exaggerated the religious aspects of the conflict for ideological reasons, although many modern commentators have traditionaly accepted their propaganda at its face value. The claims, for example, that Eugenius' forces erected statues of Jupiter in the Alps (Aug. Civ. Dei 5.26), or that they bore an image of Hercules at their head as they marched (Theod. HE 5.24) are not to be taken literally. They have their origin in a deliberate misrepresentation of the significance of the fact that the two leading western military units, the Ioviani seniores and the Herculiani seniores , had probably restored their standards to what they imagined to be their traditional form. See Woods (1995). For a more traditional interpretation, see Duval (1996).
42Soc. HE 5.6; Soz. HE 7.4. In general on this period, see Errington (1997a).
43 Chron. Pasch. s.a . 380; Malal. Chron . 13.36. Both sources describe an attempt to assassinate an emperor, whom they identify as Gratian but the date, location, and general circumstances of the attempt suggest that the anecdote which lies at their heart had originally described a plot to assassinate Theodosius.
44Soc. HE 5.13.
45 C.Th. 16.10.10 (24 February 391), 16.10.11 (16 June 391), 16.10.12 (8 November 392).
46E.g., Williams and Friell (1994), 68-71.
47Soz. HE 7.25; Ruf. HE 2.18; Aug. Civ. Dei 5.26; Theod. HE 5.17-18. See McLynn (1994), 315-30.
48McLynn (1994), 330-35; Errington (1997b), passim .
49For Theodosius' protection of temples, see C.Th. 16.10.8 (30 November 382), Lib. Or . 30.49-51 (386). On the destruction of the Serapeum, see Soc. HE 5.16-17; Soz. HE 7.15; Ruf. HE 2.23.
50Claud. Laus. Ser . 63-9.
51Soc. HE 4.31; Philost. HE 10.7; Zos. 4.44.
52Rebenich (1985), passim.
53Many modern commentators follow Cameron (1970), 56, in dating the marriage of Serena and Stilicho to 384, although his conclusion, that it was Serena herself, not Theodosius, who chose Stilicho as her husband, that it was "one of those very rare events in a royal family, a love match", ought to have occasioned greater scepticism. Much depends on one's interpretation of Claud. De Cons. Stil. 1.51-68, which records that Stilicho negotiated an important treaty with the Persians shortly before his marriage to Serena. I interpret this to refer to the treaty of 387 by which the Romans and Persians agreed upon the division of Armenia between their empires. This means that Stilicho's daughter Maria can only have been about 10 years of age by the time of her marriage to Honorius in about February 398. But this explains the tradition preserved at Zos. 5.28.2, that Serena herself thought that Maria was too young for marriage, even if one cannot accept Zosimus' fanciful solution to this problem, that Serena managed to drug Honorius in order to prevent him from consummating the marriage, over a period of ten years apparently !
54Relying principally on Zos. 4.59, Cameron (1969) argues that Theodosius had appointed Stilicho as magister militum per Occidentem with command of all the western troops and the power to administer the western empire in Honorius' name some three months before his death in January 395. At that point, Theodosius made a vague statement entrusting his sons to Stilicho which the latter interpreted in his own interest to mean that his earlier regency over Honorius had now been extended over Arcadius also. But the office of magister militum per Occidentem , or whatever other title one wishes to use to describe the appointment of a single supreme military commander, was entirely without precedent and an obvious threat to the independence of any emperor. One suspects, rather, that Theodosius had appointed Stilicho to an entirely regular command, i.e. as magister peditum praesentalis , at that point three months before his death, and that Stilicho asserted a regency which he had yet to enjoy over either son.
Copyright (C) 1998, David Woods. This file may be copied on the condition that the entire contents, including the header and this copyright notice, remain intact.
Spouses
1Galla
Birthabt 365
Death394
FatherValentinian I Emperor of Rome (~321-375)
MotherIustina
ChildrenAelia Galla (~390-450)
2Aelia Flavia Flaccilla
Birthabt 352, Spain
Death385
ChildrenFlavius (377-408)
http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teodosio_I
Flavio Teodosio, llamado el el Grande[1] (Coca o Itálica, 11 de enero de 347 – Milán, 17 de enero de 395), fue emperador de los romanos desde 379 hasta su muerte. Promovido a la dignidad imperial tras el Desastre de Adrianópolis, primero compartió el poder con Graciano y Valentiniano II. En 392 Teodosio reunió las porciones oriental y occidental del Imperio, siendo el último emperador en gobernar todo el mundo romano. Después de su muerte, las dos partes del Imperio se separaron definitivamente.
Con respecto a la política religiosa, tomó la trascendental decisión de hacer del cristianismo niceno o catolicismo la religión oficial del Imperio mediante el Edicto de Tesalónica de 380.
Orígenes y carrera [editar]
Teodosio nació en Cauca, en Hispania (actual Coca) o, según Alicia M. Canto, en Itálica o sus alrededores,[2] hijo de un oficial militar, Teodosio el Viejo,[3] conocido en la época como el comes Theodosius. Acompañó a su padre a Britannia para ayudar a acabar con la Gran Conspiración en 368. Era comandante militar (dux) de Mesia, una provincia romana en el Danubio inferior, en 374. Sin embargo, poco después, y alrededor de la época de la repentina caída en desgracia y ejecución de su padre, Teodosio se retiró a Hispania. La razón de su retiro, y la relación (si es que la había) entre él y la muerte de su padre no queda clara. Es posible que fuera cesado en su mando por el emperador Valentiniano I después de la pérdida de dos de las legiones de Teodosio ante los sármatas a finales de 374.
La muerte de Valentiniano I en 375 creó un pandemónium político. Temiendo más persecuciones debido a sus relaciones familiares, Teodosio abruptamente se retiró a sus fincas familiares donde se adaptó a la vida de un aristócrata provincial.
Desde 364 hasta 375, el Imperio Romano estuvo gobernado por dos co-emperadores, los hermanos Valentiniano I y Valente; cuando Valentiniano murió en 375, sus hijos, Valentiniano II y Graciano, le sucedieron como gobernantes del Imperio Romano de Occidente. En 378, después de que Valente fuera asesinado en la batalla de Adrianópolis, Graciano nombró a Teodosio como reemplazo del caído emperador como co-augusto para Oriente. Graciano fue asesinado en una rebelión en 383, luego Teodosio nombró a su hijo mayor, Arcadio, su co-augusto para Oriente. Después de la muerte en 392 de Valentiniano II, a quien Teodosio había apoyado contra una serie de usurpadores, Teodosio gobernó como único emperador, nombrando co-augusto para Occidente a su hijo menor Honorio (en Milán, el 23 de enero de 393), y derrotando al usurpador Eugenio el 6 de septiembre de 394, en la batalla del Frígido (río Vipava, actual Eslovenia).
Familia
De su primera esposa, la probablemente hispana Aelia Flacila Augusta, tuvo dos hijos, Arcadio y Honorio y una hija , Aelia Pulqueria; Arcadio fue su heredero en Oriente y Honorio en Occidente. Tanto Elia Flacila como Pulqueria murieron en 385.
Su segunda esposa (nunca declarada Augusta) fue Gala, hija del emperador Valentiniano I y su segunda esposa Justina. Teodosio y Gala tuvieron tres hijos que fueron un niño, Graciano, nacido en 388 que murió joven y una hija Aelia Gala Placidia (392–450). Placidia fue la única descendiente que llegó a adulta y más tarde se convirtió en emperatriz; un tercer hijo (un niño), Juan, murió con su madre durante el parto en 394.
info and pic
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theodosius_I
http://knowledgerush.com/kr/encyclopedia/Theodosius_I/
Roman Emperor 379-395.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theodosius_I
•Namn: Theodosius I " den äldre " EMPEROR i öst
•Förnamn : Theodosius I " den äldre " Kejsaren av
•Efternamn: ÖSTRA
Gift två gånger
Theodosius was asked to take on an almost impossible task and fill Valens' shoes as Emperor in the East after one of the greatest disasters to befall the Romans in almost 600 years. The emperor Valens had been killed and his army destroyed at Adrianople in August, 378 A. D. The East was left defenseless. Valens' nephew, the young Emperor Gratian, selected Theodosius because of his family's solid military background. Apparently, Theodosius was willing to forgive the fact that his father had been disgraced and murdered as a result of a court intrigue a few years before during the reign of Gratian's father, Valentinian I. So Theodosius came out of retirement at his Spanish villa to serve the Eastern Roman Empire with his strong leadership skills.
No sooner was Theodosius on the throne than he had to deal with three major crises. First, his Persian neighbors to the East might try to take advantage of the weakened Roman defenses. Persia had been an on again, off again enemy and rival of Rome for more than four hundred years. Theodosius' young nephew Gratian was not very well liked by his subjects, and especially disliked by the high ranking military officers in charge of the western legions. And, if there things were not enough, something had to be done about Fritigern and the horde of Visigothic raiders who had annihilated Valens' army.
These were indeed strange times. Theodosius was a ruthless general, yet a very pious and religious man. He was also a very capable emperor, ruling with absolute authority except where his authority came into conflict with the Catholic Church. A bizarre incident during his reign illustrates how rulers of the day exercised absolute power over the people they ruled yet would obey the commands of a powerful bishop.
The citizens of the Greek city of Thessalonika had rioted and murdered one of the emperor's officers. Theodosius responded by sending a detachment of troops to slaughter anyone they thought had anything to do with the murder, and they wound up killing many innocent people besides. When Archbishop Ambrose of Milan heard about the deed, he threatened to excommunicate the emperor. Theodosius had no choice but to beg forgiveness and do penance for his deed. After Theodosius had suitably humbled himself, waiting outside Ambrose's palace in the snow, he was duly forgiven. An earlier incident involving riots and threatened insurrection in the city of Alexandria did not incur the wrath of the archbishop, and was ruthlessly put down by Theodosius’ soldiers
Perhaps the most famous and important event that occurred during the reign of Theodosius I was the Battle of the River Frigidus. In A.D. 392. Arbogastes, Valentinian II's Frankish Master of Soldiers on the throne in the West after Valentinian II was either murdered or committed suicide. Arbogastes simply wanted to rule, but it would not be acceptable for a Frank to sit upon the imperial throne. So he chose Eugenius, a Neo-Pagan supported by a group of powerful Roman senators to sit on the throne and do Arbogastes' bidding. The emperor was married to the sister of the dead Valentinian, and she kept pleading with Theodosius to avenge her poor slain brother. When Theodosius came from the East with an army to attack Eugenius and Arbogastes, they found the passes of the Julian Alps heavily fortified. By the best conventional military thinking of the day, no army entering Italy from the East (as Theodosius did) stood even a slim chance of defeating a well positioned army defending these high mountain passes. The battle took place during two days in early September, A. D. 394. On the evening of the first day of the battle, it appeared that Theodosius was in retreat and disarray. Detachments of Eugenius' army moved into positions to surround and entrap the Theodosian troops. However, Theodosius' agents worked hard throughout the night to turn the loyalty of Eugenius' troops. By morning, the enemy detachments that had trapped Theodosius were pledging their loyalty to him. With the help of a violent storm that blew dust in the face of Eugenius' soldiers and snatched shields and weapons out of their hands, Theodosius and his Visigothic federated troops totally routed the army of Eugenius. Eugenius was captured after the battle and executed and Arbogastes fled into the mountains and is believed to have killed himself a few days later.
The outcome of this battle held great religious significance for the Catholic Church. Paganism had made its final, desperate stand and had been totally vanquished. Eugenius had represented the interests of such Pagan senatorial families in Rome such as the Symmachi and others. With Eugenius and Arbogastes dead, there would never be another serious threat to Church power from pagan interests. Another strange twist of history is associated with the Battle of the Frigidus. Theodosius had established a military academy for top generals in which a young Visigoth named Alaric had taken his training and had done quite well. Alaric's first major action was to take a heavily defended valley at the Battle of the Frigidus. In A. D. 394, the fearsome Goth who would later sack Rome herself was sacrificing the lives of his troops to defend the Roman Empire against a rebel and usurper. A short fifteen years later, one of Rome's finest generals would be one of her most dreaded enemies.
Reference: http://familytrees.genopro.com/318186/jarleslekt/default.htm?page=t...
Theodosius I (379-395 A.D.)
David Woods
University College of Cork
Origin and Early Career
Flavius Theodosius was born at Cauca in Spain in about 346 to Thermantia and Theodosius the Elder (so-called to distinguish him from his son). 1 Theodosius the Elder was a senior military officer serving in the Western empire and rose to become the magister equitum praesentalis under the emperor Valentinian I from late 368 until his execution in early 375. 2 As the son of a soldier, Theodosius was legally obliged to enter upon a military career. He seems to have served under his father during his expedition to Britain in 367/8, and was the dux Moesiae Primae by late 374. 3 Unfortunately, great controversy surrounds the rest of his career until Gratian had him hailed as his imperial colleague in succession to the emperor Valens at Sirmium on 19 January 379. 4 It is clear that he was forced to retire home to Spain only to be recalled to active service shortly thereafter, but the circumstances of his forced retirement are shrouded in mystery. 5 His father was executed at roughly the same time, and much speculation has centred on the relationship between these events. A general consensus seems to have emerged, however, that the future emperor was forced into retirement shortly after the execution of his father at Carthage in Africa during the winter of 375/6. 6 The same court faction which had engineered the death of his father managed to persuade Valentinian to dismiss him also, or so the consensus goes. This interpretation of events is incorrect, however, not least because it places far too much trust in a number of unreliable sources. 7
The answer to the mystery surrounding Theodosius' forced retirement lies in Ammianus' description of a severe defeat which Sarmatian raiders inflicted upon Roman forces in the province of Valeria in late 374 when they almost annihilated a legio Moesiaca , i.e. a legion from Moesia, and a legio Pannonica , i.e. a legion from Pannonia. 8 These legions had been sent to intercept a party of Sarmatians who had been pursuing a senior Roman officer named Aequitius deep into Roman territory, and would undoubtedly have triumphed had they acted together. But they failed to co-operate, and their quarrelling allowed the Sarmatians to catch them unprepared, defeating the legion from Moesia first, then the legion from Pannonia. Valentinian's reaction to this defeat can best be judged from his reaction to an earlier defeat which the Alamanni had managed to inflict on his forces in Gaul during the spring of 365. 9 He sought out those who had been the first to turn and run before the enemy and blamed them for the subsequent defeat. He ordered the unit in question - the Batavi - to be stripped of their weapons and sold into slavery, and it took the whole army to persuade him to relent. In this instance, the first of the two units to break and run had been the legion from Moesia. Hence Valentinian would have held their commanding officer responsible for the wider defeat, and, as the dux Moesiae Primae , Theodosius was the officer ultimately responsible for this unit. Hence Valentinian dismissed Theodosius and sent him home to Cauca in Spain in the same manner, and for the same reason, that the emperor Constantius II had dismissed Valentinian himself in 357, or the magister equitum per Gallias Marcellus in the same year. 10 He had found him guilty of cowardice.
The best explanation for the death of Theodosius the Elder is that he had tried to intervene on behalf of his son, and Valentinian had had him executed as a result, most probably during the early new year of 375. 11 His son regained his commission within the army only following the death of Valentinian himself on 17 November 375. He seems to have obtained a position similar to that which he had originally held at his dismissal, that of dux Valeriae perhaps. He campaigned against the Sarmatians again in 376, during which he was promoted as the magister militum per Illyricum .12 He remained as magister militum per Illyricum from 376 until 19 January 379 when the western emperor Gratian appointed him to succeed his eastern colleague Valens who had been killed at the Battle of Adrianople on 9 August 378. The fact that Gratian chose him as his new colleague does not necessarily mean that he enjoyed a particularly good reputation as the best general of his day. Gratian had effectively been forced to choose him since he seems to have been the most senior officer of Roman birth available to him at the time. 13
Foreign Policy
The problem confronting Theodosius immediately upon his accession was how to check the Goths and their allies who were continuing to ravage the Balkans. 14 One difficulty was that they had spread beyond the diocese of Thrace into the dioceses of Macedonia and Dacia in the prefecture of Illyricum, which had traditionally belonged to the western empire. The result was that Gratian surrendered the three dioceses of the prefecture of Illyricum to the temporary control of Theodosius for the duration of the Gothic crisis, while he himself returned to Trier in Gaul. 15 The date of this transfer is disputed, but it seems to have come into formal effect at the beginning of the new tax year on 1 September 379 and may be presumed to have ended on 31 August 382. This left Theodosius in control of the entire theatre of operations. Theodosius left Sirmium, the site of his accession, for Thessalonica in Macedonia which remained his base for the campaign seasons of 379 and 380. Gratian had transferred some of his own officers and men to Theodosius in order to assist him in his efforts to rebuild the eastern field-armies, which had been shattered at the Battle of Adrianople . These transfers included his comes domesticorum Richomer, who became Theodosius' magister peditum praesentalis , a post which he retained until his death by illness in late 392. 16
We are poorly informed about the exact sequence of events during the Gothic war, but Theodosius' "general" Modares appears to have inflicted an important defeat upon the Goths somewhere in Thrace in 379. 17 Theodosius proved himself willing to recruit one group of barbarians into his army to use against the other groups who remained hostile, but this was a risky strategy. In order to reduce the risk, Theodosius transferred some of these fresh barbarian recruits to Egypt in return for some of the experienced Roman troops stationed there, during late 379 apparently. 18 Nevertheless, a large number of his new recruits appeared to have defected to the other side during the course of his campaign in 380, so that he suffered at least one serious reverse. He left Thessalonica and entered Constantinople for the first time on 24 November 380. 19 He was to remain in Constantinople, or its immediate vicinity, until late 387. During the winter of 380/1 he wrote to Gratian for his help against the Goths in Illyricum, and Gratian replied first by sending his "generals" Bauto and Arbogast against them, then by taking to the field himself. 20 They appear to have succeeded in driving the Goths and their allies from Illyricum and back into Thrace during 381. Theodosius, however, did enjoy a propaganda coup when the Gothic chieftain Athanaric surrendered to him at Constantinople on 11 January 381, although he died only two weeks later. 21 Theodosius finally reached a settlement with the remainder of the Goths on 3 October 382. 22 The exact terms of this settlement have not been preserved, but it is clear that the Goths were granted the right to settle large amounts of land along the Danube frontier in the diocese of Thrace and enjoyed an unusual degree of autonomy. 23 Many came to serve in the Roman army, but the terms of their service remain unclear. Many volunteered to serve on a full-time professional basis, while more were obliged to serve only for the duration of a specific campaign. The results were that the Goths who settled within the empire remained a constant threat to its internal stability. A substantial number of Gothic troops defected to the side of Magnus Maximus when Theodosius joined his forces with those of the young Valentinian II at Thessalonica in 387 in preparation for their joint campaign westwards against Maximus .24 These hid in the rough country about Thessalonica until Theodosius managed to drive them back into Thrace during his return from the West in 391, where they remained a threat as late as 392 when they managed to kill the "general" Promotus. 25 One of their emerging leaders, Alaric, participated in Theodosius' campaign against Eugenius in 394, only to resume his rebellious behaviour against Theodosius' son and eastern successor, Arcadius , shortly thereafter. Nor did the external threat cease. The "general" Promotus won a notable victory for Theodosius in 386 when he defeated an attempt by Odotheus and his Greuthungian Goths to force their way across the Danube. 26
The East remained relatively quiet under Theodosius. The Saracens rejected their previous treaty of 377 with the Romans and resumed their raids once more along the frontier from Arabia to Syria in 383 apparently. 27 We do not know the reason for this revolt, but the magister peditum praesentalis Richomer appears to have crushed it in but one campaign that year. As a result, the Salihids replaced the Tanukhids as the dominant group among Rome's Saracen foederati . As for the Persians, Theodosius maintained good relations with a rapid succession of Persian kings during his reign. Armenia remained a potential source of conflict between the two powers until they reached agreement upon the division of this country in 387 when Theodosius sent his magister militum per Orientem Stilicho on an embassy to the Persian court. 28 In accordance with this agreement, the pro-Roman king Arsak retained possession of the western part of the country, while the pro-Persian king Khosro retained possession of the eastern part.
Civil Wars
Theodosius fought two bloody civil wars in quick succession against the usurpers Magnus Maximus and Eugenius .Magnus Maximus was a fellow Spaniard who even claimed to be a relative of Theodosius himself. 29 Like Theodosius, he was also a pious Catholic. Hence there was no deep ideological differences between the two. Magnus Maximus had been the commander of a field army in Britain in 383 when he had led his troops back to Gaul in an attempt to seize power. 30 He forced Gratian to flee from an initial encounter near Paris, but was blamed for Gratian's assassination near Lyons as he made for northern Italy. This was the only charge which Theodosius could seriously have held against him in 383, that he had risen to power through the assassination of a legitimate emperor. War between the two had not been inevitable, and the orator Themistius undoubtedly exaggerates when he claims that Theodosius set out against him in 384 with the intention of avenging Gratian's death. 31 The young Valentinian II continued to rule the prefectures of Italy, Illyricum and Africa, which constituted a buffer-ground between the territories of his two more powerful colleagues. An uneasy peace prevailed until the late summer of 387 when Maximus sent his troops into northern Italy and forced Valentinian to retreat to Thessalonica at the eastern extreme of his territory. 32 Yet while Maximus may have struck the first formal blow in this renewed bout of civil war, one suspects that he felt compelled to act as he did much because of the growing influence of Theodosius over Valentinian and his ministers. One notes that Theodosius' magister peditum praesentalis Richomer was the uncle of Valentinian's magister equitum praesentalis Arbogast, who was effectively the sole commander of Valentinian's forces at this point. 33 More importantly, perhaps, Valentinian had appointed Gildo as his comes Africae ca. 386, and Theodosius had attempted to win Gildo over to his cause by marrying Nebridius, a nephew of the empress Flaccilla, to Gildo's daughter Salvina. 34 The fact that Maximus suffered some sort of serious defeat at Sicily during the initial stage of the civil war in 388, and that he committed a large number of men to naval operations off the southern Italian coast under the command of his magister praesentalis Andragathius, suggests that Theodosius was well rewarded for his efforts, that he did at least persuade Gildo to defect to his side and seize Sicily on his behalf. 35 Whatever the case, Theodosius joined with Valentinian at Thessalonica during the late summer of 387, at which time he also married Valentinian's sister Galla. They launched a joint expedition against Maximus during the summer of 388, defeating his forces in pitched battles at Siscia, then Poetovio. 36 They then forced their way across the Alps and captured Maximus himself at Aquileia. They had him executed three miles outside Aquileia on 28 August 388, and sent Arbogast to do the same to his son Victor in Trier. However, they spared his wife and two daughters.
Theodosius spent about three years in Italy until he began his return trip to Constantinople in the summer of 391. Valentinian now ruled the whole of the western empire, but he was increasingly dominated by his magister peditum praesentalis Arbogast, whose own arrogance increased the further Theodosius moved from the scene. Matters came to a head in 392 when Valentinian tried to cashier Arbogast and Arbogast simply refused to accept his command. 37 Valentinian secretly wrote to Theodosius for his assistance, but was found dead on 15 May 392. An uneasy peace followed as Arbogast awaited the news of Theodosius' reaction to the death of his brother-in-law Valentinian ; Theodosius tried to determine whether Valentinian really had committed suicide as alleged. 38 Unfortunately for all concerned, Theodosius was still married to Galla, who refused to accept that her brother had committed suicide. Worse still, Arbogast's strongest advocate at Theodosius' court, his uncle Richomer, was mortally ill. As a hostile judgement seemed increasingly likely, Arbogast struck first. He hailed Valentinian's magister scrinii as emperor on 22 August 392 and quickly secured Italy for his cause. In contrast to his acceptance of Maximus for several years, Theodosius refused to recognise Eugenius as emperor right from the start. He publicly indicated this by his refusal to accept Eugenius' nominees for the consulship of 393 and by his coronation of his second son Honorius as Augustus on 23 January 393. The war did not begin until the summer of 394 when Theodosius finally began his march from Constantinople. The war was decided by one decisive battle on the banks of the river Frigidus in the foothills of the Alps on 6 September 394. 39 While Christian sources delight to recount how God assisted Theodosius by sending a wind to blow his enemies' weapons back into their faces, 40 the crucial factor was surely the decision by a key section of Maximus' army under the comes Arbitio to defect from his side to that of Theodosius. 41 So Theodosius triumphed and had Eugenius executed, while Arbogast committed suicide.
Religious Policy
Theodosius was Catholic and received baptism at the hands of bishop Acholius of Thessalonica during the autumn of 380 when serious illness threatened his life. 42 Two days after his first arrival in Constantinople on 24 November 380, Theodosius expelled the "Arian" bishop Demophilus of Constantinople from the churches of that city and surrendered them to Gregory of Naziaznus who happened to be the leader of the small Catholic or "Nicene" community there at the time. This was greatly resented and may even have resulted in an attempt to assassinate the emperor. 43 He also called a synod of 150 Catholic bishops who assembled at Constantinople in May 381. An early meeting of this synod, when all the bishops had not yet arrived, elected Gregory of Nazianzus as the new Bishop of Constantinople, but he was quickly forced to resign. The synod then elected the senator Nectarius, who obviously enjoyed the strong backing of the emperor himself, in his stead. Theodosius' early reign witnessed the gradual expulsion of all heretical bishops from the towns and cities of the East and the transfer of all church buildings and property to their Catholic rivals. The depth of resentment which such policies caused can best be judged by the fact that in 388 "Arian" mobs at Constantinople rioted and caused widespread damage in reponse to the false rumour that Magnus Maximus had inflicted a severe defeat upon Theodosius. 44
Theodosius continued to tolerate the traditional pagan practices and rituals which had enjoyed toleration from successive Christian emperors throughout the fourth century, i.e., almost anything which did not include blood-sacrifice or did not smack of treason against the emperor, until 391 at least. He then issued a series of laws which seemed effectively to prohibit all pagan worship by forbidding visits to pagan sites of worship or even the adornment in any manner of the images of the gods. 45 This apparent change of policy on his part has often been credited to the increased influence of bishop Ambrose of Milan. 46 For in 390 Ambrose had excommunicated Theodosius because he had ordered the execution of several thousand of the inhabitants of Thessalonica in response to the murder there of his "general" Butherichus. Theodosius accepted his excommunication and even performed several months of public penance, so it is all too easy too imagine how he might have taken the time to review his other "failings" also, including his continued toleration of paganism. 47 However, the importance of these laws has been greatly exaggerated. 48 They were limited in scope, specific measures in response to various petitions and accusations and tell us less about Theodosius than the private agenda of many of the increasingly militant Christians who could be found throughout his administration. Although he had voiced his support earlier for the preservation of temples or pagan statues as useful public buildings or as works of art, in 391 he officially sanctioned the destruction of the most famous of the temples in the East, the Serapeum at Alexandria. 49 Bands of monks and Christian officials had long been accustomed to take the law into their own hands and destroy various centres of pagan worship, but the destruction of the Serapeum seemed to confirm that such actions had often enjoyed the emperor's tacit approval at least, and served to encourage such action in the future also. Again, however, Theodosius had been effectively manipulated into sanctioning the destruction of the Serapeum by local officials who had essentially engineered the crisis there for this very purpose.
Family and Succession
Theodosius married twice. His first wife was the Spanish Aelia Flavia Flaccilla. 50 She bore him Arcadius ca. 377, Honorius on 9 September 384, and Pulcheria ca . 385. Theodosius honoured her with the title of Augusta shortly after his accession, but she died in 386. In late 387 he married Galla, daughter of Valentinian I and full-sister of Valentinian II .51 She bore him Gratian ca . 388, Galla Placidia ca . 388/390, and died in childbirth in 394, together with her new-born son John. 52 Of his two sons who survived infancy, he appointed Arcadius as Augustus on 19 January 383 and Honorius as Augustus on 23 January 393. His promotion of Arcadius as a full Augustus at an unusually young age points to his determination right from the start that one of his own sons should succeed him. He sought to strengthen Arcadius' position in particular by means of a series of strategic marriages whose purpose was to tie his leading "generals" irrevocably to his dynasty. Hence he married his niece and adoptive daughter Serena to his magister militum per Orientem Stilicho in 387, her elder sister Thermantia to a "general" whose name has not been preserved, and ca. 387 his nephew-in-law Nebridius to Salvina, daughter of the comes Africae Gildo. 53 By the time of his death by illness on 17 January 395, Theodosius had promoted Stilicho from his position as one of the two comites domesticorum under his own eastern administration to that of magister peditum praesentalis in a western administration, in an entirely traditional manner, under his younger son Honorius . Although Stilicho managed to increase the power of the magister peditum praesentalis to the disadvantage of his colleague the magister equitum praesentalis and claimed that Theodosius had appointed him as guardian for both his sons, this tells us more about his cunning and ambition than it does about Theodosius' constitutional arrangements. 54
Theodosius' importance rests on the fact that he founded a dynasty which continued in power until the death of his grandson Theodosius II in 450. This ensured a continuity of policy which saw the emergence of Nicene Christianity as the orthodox belief of the vast majority of Christians throughout the middle ages. It also ensured the essential destruction of paganism and the emergence of Christianity as the religion of the state, even if the individual steps in this process can be difficult to identify. On the negative side, however, he allowed his dynastic interests and ambitions to lead him into two unnecessary and bloody civil wars which severely weakened the empire's ability to defend itself in the face of continued barbarian pressure upon its frontiers. In this manner, he put the interests of his family before those of the wider Roman population and was responsible, in many ways, for the phenomenon to which we now refer as the fall of the western Roman empire.
Secondary Sources
Birley, A.R. The Fasti of Roman Britain (Oxford, 1981).
Blockley, R.C. "The Division of Armenia between the Romans and Persians at the End of the Fourth Century AD." Historia 36 (1987), 222-34.
Bratoz, R. (ed.). Westillyricum und Nordostitalien in der Spätromischen Zeit (Narodni muzej. 1996).
Cameron, A. Claudian: Poetry and Propaganda at the Court of Honorius. (Oxford, 1970).
________. "Theodosius the Great and the Regency of Stilicho." Harvard Studies in Classical Philology 73 (1969), 247-80.
Croke, B. "Arbogast and the Death of Valentinian." Historia 25 (1976), 235-44.
Duval, Y.-M. "Les aurea fulmina des Alpes Juliennes: le role des statues divines dans les lieux strategiques." in Bratoz, R (1996), 95-108.
Errington, R.M. "The Accession of Theodosius I." Klio 78 (1996a), 438-53.
________. "Theodosius and the Goths." Chiron 26 (1996b), 1-27.
________. "Church and State in the First Years of Theodosius I." Chiron 27 (1997a), 21-72.
________. "Christian Accounts of the Religious Legislation of Theodosius I." Klio 79 (1997b), 398-443.
Friell, G. and Williams, S., Theodosius: The Empire at Bay. (London, 1994).
Heather, P. Goths and Romans 332-489 (Oxford, 1991).
Hoffmann, D. Das spätrömische Bewegungsheer und die Notitia Dignitatum .(Dusseldorf, 1969).
Kovac, M. "Bora or Summer Storm: Meteorological Aspect of the Battle at Frigidus." in Bratoz, R. (1996), 109-19.
Matthews, J.F., Western Aristocracies and Imperial Court AD 364-425. (Oxford, 1975)
McLynn, N. Ambrose of Milan: Church and Court in a Christian Capital. (Berkeley, 1994).
Nixon, C.E.V. and Rodgers, B.S. The Panegyrici Latini: Introduction, Translation and Historical Commentary (Berkeley, 1994).
Rebenich, S. "Gratian, a Son of Theodosius, and the Birth of Galla Placidia." Historia 34 (1985), 372-85.
Sivan, H. "Was Theodosius I a Usurper ?" Klio 78 (1996), 198-211.
Shahid, I. Byzantium and the Arabs in the Fourth Century (Washington DC, 1984).
Springer, M. "Die Schlacht am Frigidus als quellenkundliches und literaturgeschichtliches Problem." in Bratoz, R. (1996), 45-93.
Vanderspoel, J. Themistius and the Imperial Court: Oratory, Civic Duty, and Paideia from Constantius to Theodosius (Ann Arbor, 1995).
Woods, D. "Julian, Arbogastes, and the Signa of the Ioviani and the Herculiani ." Journal of Roman Military Equipment Studies 6 (1995), 61-68.
Notes
1On his origin at Cauca, see Zos. 4.24.4. His date of birth is calculated from his death in his fiftieth year in January 395, Epit. 48.19. The name of his mother is preserved only at Epit . 48.1.
2 Pan. Lat . 2(12).5.2 preserves the fullest surviving account of the movements of Theodosius the Elder throughout his career, but fails to note his rank or position at any particular time. On this passage, see Nixon and Rodgers (1994), 517-19. Amm. Marc. 28.3.9 proves that he succeeded Jovinus as the magister equitum praesentalis following his return in late 368 from an expedition to Britain. He is normally identified as a comes rei militaris before this, with little effort to define what exactly is meant by this term. See Birley (1981), 333-39. I believe that he succeeded Charietto as the vicarius of the magister equitum praesentalis Jovinus in early 365 and retained this post until he succeeded Jovinus in 368.
3On his service in Britain, see Zos. 4.24.4. On his position as dux Moesiae , see Amm. Marc. 29.6.15; Zos. 4.16.6. He had presumably served on his father's staff as a protector domesticus , a member of the imperial bodyguard seconded to his command. Note, for example, that the ten protectores domestici who had accompanied the magister militum per Gallias Ursicinus to Cologne in 355 had consisted of friends and relatives for the most part (Amm. Marc. 15.5.22).
4 Epit . 48.1; Oros. 7.34.2; Cons. Constant. s.a. 379 (exact date).
5 Pan. Lat . 2(12).9; Theod. HE 5.5.1-2. It has traditionally been accepted that the emperor Gratian recalled Theodosius to active service only sometime after the battle of Adrianopole on 9 August 378, i.e., that he remained in retirement in Spain for almost three years 376-78. See, e.g., Sivan (1996), 199. But Errington (1996a), 438-40, exposes Theodoret's account of Theodosius' recall to service for the fictitious nonsense it is and dates his recall as early as late 377.
6See, e.g., Nixon and Rodgers (1994), 453; Williams and Friell (1994), 23-4. Differences sometimes emerge, as when Errington (1996a), 443-44, argues that their enemies forced the younger Theodosius into retirement first before they dared to move against his father, or when Matthews (1975), 93, claims that the younger Theodosius "withdrew to a judicious retirement" after his father's execution as if he did so entirely voluntarily. Nevertheless, all accept that Theodosius the Elder was executed at Carthage, and that his execution and his son's "retirement" should both to be dated to the winter of 375/76.
7E.g., Oros. 7.33.7 is our only source to locate Theodosius' death at Carthage, and only because Carthage was the administrative centre for the region. He may also have been influenced by the fact that Arcadius had had the rebellious comes Africae Heraclianus executed at Carthage ca . 413. In contrast, Amm. Marc. 29.5.1-55 reveals not the slightest indication that Theodosius had visited Carthage even once during his stay in Africa ca. 373-4. Writing ca. 417, during the reign of Theodosius' grandson Arcadius, Orosius was principally concerned to fill in the flattering assumption that the father of such a pious dynasty had surely received baptism before his death. As for the date of Theodosius' execution, Jerome is our only source, and he dates it to 376 ( Chron. s.a . 376). Note, however, that he does not date the execution of Theodosius the Elder alone to 376 but associates it with the deaths of many other notables also. If he is not simply mistaken, as he is on other occasions, it is arguable that he refers to a series of executions, which culminated in 376, rather than that they all necessarily occurred in the same year.
8Amm. Marc. 29.6.13-14. These legions have traditionally been identified with two palatine legions whose names are recorded together in the Notitia Dignitatum , the Pannoniciani seniores (ND Oc. 5.149) and the Moesiaci seniores (ND Oc . 5.150), e.g. by Hoffmann (1969), 433. There are several objections to this identification. The first must be that their titles do not actually match. Ammianus records the names of other palatine legions in the exact form that they have been preserved by the Notitia so that we cannot simply assume some literary licence on his part in this instance. He refers to the Primani (ND Or . 6.45) by their correct title (Amm. 16.12.49) and the Divitenses Iuniores and the Tuncgrecani Iuniores by theirs (Amm. 26.6.12), and to the Lanciarii and the Mattiarii (Amm. 21.13.16, 31.13.8), whether seniores or iuniores (ND Or . 5.42, 6.42; Or. 6.47, Oc. 7.30), as such rather than as, say, the legio lanciaria or the legio mattiaria . Next, a pair of palatine legions, a so-called "brigade" in the manner of the Pannoniciani seniores and the Moesiaci seniores should have been long used to operating together so it is difficult to understand why they should have quarrelled so badly here. Next, one notes that Ammianus does not say where exactly they came from, and the speed with which they arrived upon the scene inclines one to suspect that they had not had to come very far at all. Finally, it must strike one as a remarkable coincidence that the first two palatine legions to arrive in response to attacks upon the Pannonias and Moesia Prima should have been named after those very regions.
9Zos. 4.9.3-4.
10See Amm. Marc. 16.11.6-7 (dismissal of Valentinian) and Amm. Marc. 16.4.3, 7.1, 8.1 (dismissal of Marcellus).
11 Cf . his earlier petition on behalf of the advocate Africanus who had merely wanted a second provincial governorship, Amm. Marc. 29.3.6. In response, Valentinian had ordered him to behead Africanus. It is beyond the scope of the present article to explore the evidence in full, but I believe that Theodosius the Elder reached the Pannonian provinces in order to lead their defence against the Sarmatians sometime during late 374, and that he then reported back to Valentinian himself at Trier. He is probably identifiable as one of the "missing" consuls for 375. Jerome is the only author to explain why there appear to have been no consuls for 375, claiming that the consuls remained the same as the previous year because of the Sarmatian devastation of the Pannonian provinces ( Chron. s.a. 375). This was true in a round about way, in so far as the Sarmatian attacks did set off a chain of events that resulted in the execution of Theodosius the Elder and the disgrace of his consular colleague, but not in the way that Jerome implies. The Sarmatian attack upon the Pannonias was an embarassment rather than a serious military crisis, as is best revealed by the fact that it did not provoke Valentinian I to leave his capital at Trier until the spring of 375, when the worst was over. If such an attack had prevented Valentinian from appointing new consuls for 375, then it is a wonder that there were any new consuls at all during the far more serious crises of the subsequent decades.
12 Pan. Lat . 2(12).10.2-3; Themist. Or. 14.182c, 15.198a. This was the campaign which Valentinian himself had been planning when he died.
13Of Gratian's command staff in early 379, the names of his magistri praesentales Merobaudes and Frigeridus betray their German origin, as do the names of his two western comites domesticorum Richomeres and Mallobaudes. Finally, of the the two vicarii of his two magistri praesentales , Sebastianus had been killed at Adrianople, while Nannienus' name betrays his non-Roman origin also.
14For detailed analyses of our meagre sources for this war, see Heather (1991), 122-56; Errington (1996b).
15Errington (1996b), 22-27.
16Zos. 4.55.2-3. Strictly speaking, he was a magister militum (or utriusque militiae )praesentalis , probably prima (ND Or . 5.1), by the time of his death, since Theodosius had merged the infantry and cavalry branches of the army in the meantime, perhaps ca. 388.
17Zos. 4.25.2. Modares was himself a Goth, a member of the royal family, and is normally identified as a magister militum of some type. No emperor would have appointed any barbarian defector to such a high rank without first having tested his ability and loyalty at a lower level of command. So one suspects that he is identifiable with the dux Arabiae to whom Ammianus refers as Munderichus (Amm. 31.3.5), and that Ammianus, or his source, have confused Modares' name with his Gothic title reiks "leader of men".
18Zos. 4.30-32.
19 Cons. Constant. s.a. 380.
20Zos. 4.32-33.
21 Cons. Constant. s.a. 381.
22 Ibid . s.a. 382.
23Heather (1991), 157-92.
24Zos. 4.45.3.
25Zos. 4.51; Claud. De Cons. Stil. . 1.94-6.
26 Cons. Constant. s.a. 386; Zos. 4.35.1, 38-39.
27 Pan. Lat. 2(12).22.3. See Shahid (1984), 203-21.
28In general, see Blockley (1987).
29 Pan. Lat . 2(12).24.1.
30The nature of Maximus' command at the time of his revolt is a matter of great controversy. He is normally identified as one of the comes Britanniarum , the dux Britanniarum or the comes litoris Saxonici . See Birley (1981), 346-52. I suspect that he was the vicarius of the magister peditum praesentalis Merobaudes and that he commanded a small expedition to Britain ca . 382 similar to that which Theodosius had led there in 367/68.
31Them. Or . 18. See Vanderspoel (1995), 187-216, esp. 210.
32Zos. 4.42-43.
33Joh. Ant. frag . 187 (Müller) = Eunap. frag . 58.2 (Blockley).
34Claud. Gild. 154; Jer. Epp . 79.2, 123.17.
35On Sicily, see Ambr. Ep . 73(40).22-23. Zos. 4.46.1 preserves a ridiculous story that Valentinian's mother Justina sailed across the Ionian Sea to Italy with some of her children, and that Maximus had initially assembled his fleet in order to capture her. He then kept the fleet in being because he feared that Theodosius was about to launch a naval expedition. It suffices to note that this would have left Valentinian's family stranded behind enemy lines in danger of being used as hostages against him. McLynn (1994), 293-4, assumes that Valentinian himself led a naval expedition which gained the victory at Sicily. But Valentinian had no military experience, and if he and Theodosius had really wanted to open a second front, then it would have been far less risky, and potentially far more beneficial, had they sent their forces to land on the eastern coast of peninsular Italy instead, as far north as possible. They would then have been able to strike Maximus' main lines of defence in northern Italy from behind.
36Ambr. Ep . 73(40).23; Pan. Lat . 2(12).34-35.
37Zos. 4.53. According to Zosimus, Arbogast claimed that Valentinian had not given him his command in the first place so he could not now take it away from him. This is often interpreted as evidence that Theodosius had somehow imposed him upon Valentinian and that he was the tool by which Theodosius had continued to control his western colleague. It refers, rather, to the fact that he had essentially "inherited" the post of magister peditum praesentalis from his father Bauto ca. 386. Neither emperor had been in a position to nominate an alternative candidate to succeed Bauto at the time.
38The ancient sources disagree about the circumstances of Valentinian's death. See Soc. HE 5.25; Soz. HE 7.22; Philost. HE 11.1. In general, see Croke (1976) who concludes that Valentinian probably did commit suicide
39See Springer (1996).
40E.g. Soc. 5.25; Soz. 7.24; Theod. HE 5.24; Claud. III Cons. Hon . 89-98. For a modern, rational interpretation of this "miracle", see Kovac (1996).
41Oros. 7.35.16 (for Arbitio's name); Ruf. HE 2.33; Soz. 7.24.5. The ecclesiastical historians have exaggerated the religious aspects of the conflict for ideological reasons, although many modern commentators have traditionaly accepted their propaganda at its face value. The claims, for example, that Eugenius' forces erected statues of Jupiter in the Alps (Aug. Civ. Dei 5.26), or that they bore an image of Hercules at their head as they marched (Theod. HE 5.24) are not to be taken literally. They have their origin in a deliberate misrepresentation of the significance of the fact that the two leading western military units, the Ioviani seniores and the Herculiani seniores , had probably restored their standards to what they imagined to be their traditional form. See Woods (1995). For a more traditional interpretation, see Duval (1996).
42Soc. HE 5.6; Soz. HE 7.4. In general on this period, see Errington (1997a).
43 Chron. Pasch. s.a . 380; Malal. Chron . 13.36. Both sources describe an attempt to assassinate an emperor, whom they identify as Gratian but the date, location, and general circumstances of the attempt suggest that the anecdote which lies at their heart had originally described a plot to assassinate Theodosius.
44Soc. HE 5.13.
45 C.Th. 16.10.10 (24 February 391), 16.10.11 (16 June 391), 16.10.12 (8 November 392).
46E.g., Williams and Friell (1994), 68-71.
47Soz. HE 7.25; Ruf. HE 2.18; Aug. Civ. Dei 5.26; Theod. HE 5.17-18. See McLynn (1994), 315-30.
48McLynn (1994), 330-35; Errington (1997b), passim .
49For Theodosius' protection of temples, see C.Th. 16.10.8 (30 November 382), Lib. Or . 30.49-51 (386). On the destruction of the Serapeum, see Soc. HE 5.16-17; Soz. HE 7.15; Ruf. HE 2.23.
50Claud. Laus. Ser . 63-9.
51Soc. HE 4.31; Philost. HE 10.7; Zos. 4.44.
52Rebenich (1985), passim.
53Many modern commentators follow Cameron (1970), 56, in dating the marriage of Serena and Stilicho to 384, although his conclusion, that it was Serena herself, not Theodosius, who chose Stilicho as her husband, that it was "one of those very rare events in a royal family, a love match", ought to have occasioned greater scepticism. Much depends on one's interpretation of Claud. De Cons. Stil. 1.51-68, which records that Stilicho negotiated an important treaty with the Persians shortly before his marriage to Serena. I interpret this to refer to the treaty of 387 by which the Romans and Persians agreed upon the division of Armenia between their empires. This means that Stilicho's daughter Maria can only have been about 10 years of age by the time of her marriage to Honorius in about February 398. But this explains the tradition preserved at Zos. 5.28.2, that Serena herself thought that Maria was too young for marriage, even if one cannot accept Zosimus' fanciful solution to this problem, that Serena managed to drug Honorius in order to prevent him from consummating the marriage, over a period of ten years apparently !
54Relying principally on Zos. 4.59, Cameron (1969) argues that Theodosius had appointed Stilicho as magister militum per Occidentem with command of all the western troops and the power to administer the western empire in Honorius' name some three months before his death in January 395. At that point, Theodosius made a vague statement entrusting his sons to Stilicho which the latter interpreted in his own interest to mean that his earlier regency over Honorius had now been extended over Arcadius also. But the office of magister militum per Occidentem , or whatever other title one wishes to use to describe the appointment of a single supreme military commander, was entirely without precedent and an obvious threat to the independence of any emperor. One suspects, rather, that Theodosius had appointed Stilicho to an entirely regular command, i.e. as magister peditum praesentalis , at that point three months before his death, and that Stilicho asserted a regency which he had yet to enjoy over either son.
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Theodosius den store
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Theodosius I den store
Theodosivs I
Navn før
tiltredelse: Flavius Theodosius
Navn som
keiser: Imperator Caesar Flavius Theodosius Pius Felix Augustus
Regjerte: 379 - 17. januar 395
Dynasti: Theodosiske
Født: 11. januar 347, Coca, Spania
Død: 17. januar 395,
Milano, Italia
Dødsårsak: Sykdom
Forgjenger: Gratian
Valentinian II
Etterfølger: Arcadius
Honorius
Se også liste over romerske keisere
Theodosius I den store (11. januar 347-17. januar 395) var romersk keiser fra 379, først kun i øst, men etter Valentinian IIs død i 392 ble han enehersker over hele riket. Han var den siste keiseren som hersket over hele Romerriket.
Hans regjering falt sammen med folkevandringenes første fase og ble preget av fornyelse innad og begynnende sammenbrudd utad. Ved tronbestigelsen ble han kristen, og som lovgiver bygde han opp den nye kristne romerske stat, mens han ustanselig måtte kjempe mot germanske innfall og andre som gjorde krav på tronen.
Theodosius er kjent som den keiseren som endelig gjorde kristendommen til Romerrikets statsreligion. I 380 ble søndagen obligatorisk helligdag, i 392 ble den kristne lære stats- og enereligion, og i 394 ble de olympiske leker forbudt som hedenske fester. Han var flere ganger i strid med sine medregenter av religiøse årsaker og måtte ved en leilighet ydmyke seg overfor kirkefaderen Ambrosius, som fikk ham til å gjøre bot etter en massakre – et tidlig eksempel på geistlighetens autoritet i forbindelse med en keiser.
Ved hans død ble riket delt mellom hans to sønner, Arcadius og Honorius. Hans slekt kom til å ha makten i de to romerske rikene i omkring femti år.
Delingen av Romeriket ved Theodosius' død
Romersk keiser
Theodosiske dynasti
Forgjenger:
Gratian
Valentinian II 379–395
Medkeiser(e):
Gratian (379-383)
Valentinian II (379-392)
Arcadius (383-395)
Honorius (393-395) Etterfølger:
Arcadius
Honorius
Reference: http://familytrees.genopro.com/318186/jarleslekt/default.htm?page=t...
Emperor of Rome in the East 378-394
Emperor of Rome 394-395
Theodosius was the son of the famous general Flavius Theodosius and was born in Spain. As a young man, he often accompanied his father in the British campaigns, but when he later died Theodosius retired to Spain. When the Roman Emperor Valens in the East died in 378, his co-Emperor Gratian in the West appointed Theodosius to rule the East as Emperor. In 382, Theodosius finally compromised with the invading Visigoths that they could remain in the Empire as long as they served in the army.
When the Roman Emperor Gratian died in 383, Theodosius recognized the usurper Maximus as Emperor in the West with the exception of Italy, where Valentinian II ruled as Emperor. In 388, Maximus attacked Theodosius, however Theodosius defeated and killed him, returning sole rule fo the West to his co-Emperor Valentinian. In 392, Valentinian's general Arbogast killed the Western Emperor and gave the crown to Eugenius as a puppet ruler in his place. Theodosius marched to Italy and defeated the two pretenders in 394, becoming the first sole Roman Emperor since the Emperor Jovian died in 364. He formally divided the Roman Empire on his death permanently into two separate, independent empires of the West and the East. He was succeeded by his sons Arcadius and Honorius to the East and West respectively.
Noteringar
Under Emperor Valentinian I, Flavius Theodosius had been stripped of command and exiled to Spain. His father had been executed, possibly for interceding on behalf of his son. Despite such inasupicious beginnings, Theodosius, with his eight-year-old son was installed in name as ruler of the Western Empire.
Theodosius var den siste att regera hela det Romerska riket, om än bara för en kort tid. Han är även känd för att ha gjort kristendomen till officiell statsreligion i hela riket.
Hans söner blev kejsare över Östromerska-, respektive Västromerska riket.
Se:
www.roman-empire.net/diverse/chronicle-emps.html
Wikipedia:
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.[3] 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.
[edit] 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.
[edit] 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...
Theodosius I "the Great", Roman Emperor's Timeline
347 |
January 11, 347
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Cauca, Gallaccia, Spain
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377 |
377
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Cauca Galaecia, Coca, Segovia, Castilla y León, Spain
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379 |
January 19, 379
- May 15, 392
Age 32
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Rome, Italy
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384 |
September 9, 384
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Spain
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385 |
385
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Constantinople, Byzantium
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388 |
388
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392 |
May 15, 392
- January 17, 395
Age 45
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Rome, Italy
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394 |
394
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