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Flavius Dalmatius ( died 337 ), also known as Dalmatius the Censor, was a censor ( 333 ), and a member of the Constantinian dynasty, which ruled over the Roman Empire at the beginning of the 4th century.
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Flavius and Dalmatius
* September 19 – Flavius Dalmatius is raised to the rank of Caesar, with control of Thracia and Macedonia.
Flavius Dalmatius responsible for the security of the eastern frontier, is send to Cyprus to suppress the rebellion.
This rebellion ended with the arrival of troops led by Flavius Dalmatius and the death of Calocaerus.
He left most of the West to his son Constantine II, the East to his son Constantius II, Italia and the Upper Danube to his son Constans I, and Greece and the Lower Danube to his half-nephew Flavius Dalmatius.
Constantius I's second wife Theodora ( stepdaughter of Maximian and half-sister of Fausta ) bore him two sons ( Flavius Dalmatius and Iulius Constantius ) and two daughters ( Eutropia and Constantia, the wife of Licinius ).
During the mid-320s, Flavius Dalmatius returned to Constantinople, to the court of his half-brother, and was appointed consul and censor in 333.
His two sons were appointed of important offices under Constantine's administration, but Flavius Dalmatius and his sons were killed in the purges that followed the Emperor's death in May 337.
Flavius and died
Flavius Constantius ( died 2 September 421 ), commonly known as Constantius III, was Western Roman Emperor for seven months in 421.
Flavius Claudius Constantinus, known in English as Constantine III ( died 411 by 18 September ) was a Roman general who declared himself Western Roman Emperor in Britannia in 407 and established himself in Gaul.
Flavius Julius Crispus ( died 326 ), also known as Flavius Claudius Crispus and Flavius Valerius Crispus, was a Caesar of the Roman Empire.
Flavius Eugenius ( died 6 September 394 ) was a usurper in the Western Roman Empire ( 392 – 394 ) against Emperor Theodosius I.
* Flavius Constantius III, Joint Emperor of the Western Roman Empire, died of pleurisy on 2 September 421 AD.
Flavius Fravitta ( died 402 / 403 ) was a chieftain of the Visigoths, who entered in the Eastern Roman army, rising to its highest ranks.
According to the poet Rutilius Claudius Namatianus, the general Flavius Stilicho ( died AD 408 ) burned them, as they were used to attack his government.
Gallus had three siblings: an elder sister, of unknown name, who was the first wife of Constantius II, an elder brother, also of unknown name, who died in the purges after the death of Constantine I, and a younger half-brother by his father's second marriage, named Flavius Claudius Iulianus, commonly known as Julian.
By some he is identified as Flavius Sallustius ( a native of Spain who was praetorian prefect of Gaul from 361 until 363 and a Consul in 363 ), by others with Saturninius Secundus Salutius ( died after 367 CE, a native of Gaul who was praetorian prefect of the Orient in 361 ).
Flavius Rufinus ( died November 27, 395 ) was a 4th century Eastern Roman Empire statesman of Gaulish extraction who served as Praetorian prefect of the East for the emperor Theodosius I, as well as his son Arcadius, under whom Rufinus was the actual power behind the throne.
Although further Emperors would don the purple on the basis of military power ( e. g., Constantine I, Valentinian I, and Theodosius I ), the phenomenon of the barracks emperors died out, to be replaced in the late imperial era by shadow emperors like Stilicho, Constantius III, Flavius Aëtius, Avitus, Ricimer, Gundobad, Flavius Orestes, and Odoacer, military strongmen who effectually ruled the empire as imperial generalissimos controlling weak-willed puppet emperors rather than by donning the purple themselves.
Flavius Arbogastes ( died September 8, 394 ), or Arbogast was a Frankish general in the Roman Empire.
Flavius and 337
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A similar story is reported by Flavius Josephus during the siege of Jerusalem by Rome in 70 AD ( see Mary of Bethezuba ), and the population of Numantia during the Roman Siege of Numantia in the 2nd century BC was reduced to cannibalism and suicide.
Titus Flavius Clemens ( c. 150 – c. 215 ), known as Clement of Alexandria, was a Christian theologian who taught at the Catechetical School of Alexandria.
Flavius Claudius Julianus, born in May or June 332 or 331 in Constantinople, was the son of Julius Constantius ( consul in 335 ), half brother of Emperor Constantine I, and his second wife, Basilina, a woman of Greek origin.
Titus Flavius Josephus ( 37 – 100 ), also called Joseph ben Matityahu ( Biblical Hebrew: יוסף בן מתתיהו, Yosef ben Matityahu ), was a 1st-century Romano-Jewish historian and hagiographer who was born in Jerusalem-then part of Roman Judea-to a father of priestly descent and a mother who claimed royal ancestry.
The Roman-Jewish historian Flavius Josephus states that three of the seven lamps were allowed to burn during the day also ; however, according to the Talmud ( Rashi, Tractate Shabbat 22b ), only the center lamp was left burning all day, into which as much oil was put as into the others.
His mother was an Arian, sister of Clearchus, also an Arian, and a paternal granddaughter of Gallus ( born c. 370 ), son of Anastasia ( born c. 352 ) and husband, in turn daughter of Flavius Claudius Constantius Gallus and wife and cousin Constantina.
The first written references to an ancient Celtic sighthound, the " vertragus ", in the " Cynegeticus " of Flavius Arrianus ( Arrian ), Roman proconsul of Baetica in the second century, may refer to the Galgo, or more likely to its antecedant.
They had two sons, Titus Flavius Vespasianus ( b. 41 ) and Titus Flavius Domitianus ( b. 51 ), and a daughter, Domitilla ( b. 39 ).
In 525 ( the consulship of Probus Junior Flavius Probus ), a Christian monk named Dionysius Exiguus stated that the incarnation of Jesus occurred 525 years earlier.
* Flavius Aetius, Roman general ( magister militum ), fights a campaign in Rhaetia ( Switzerland ) and Noricum ( Austria ).
* Flavius Aetius, Roman general ( magister militum ), starts a 10-year campaign against the Visigoths in southern Gaul.
* Flavius Aetius, Roman general ( magister militum ), returns as triumphator back to Rome after several years ' fighting the Burgundians and Visigoths in Gaul.
* Flavius Aetius, Roman general ( magister militum ), arrives in southern Gaul with an army ( 40, 000 men ) and defeats the Visigoths under king Theodoric I who besiege the strategic city of Arles.
* Flavius Aetius, Roman general ( magister militum ), in the service of emperor Valentinian III, holds power in Rome for twenty years.
* Flavius Aetius, Roman general ( magister militum ), attended to put an end to Burgundian raids in Gaul.
They begin to move from the Upper Rhine and Flavius Aetius, commander-in-chief ( magister militum ), gives them land in the Geneva area ( Maxima Sequanorum ).
Flavius Aetius, Roman general ( magister militum ), musters in Gaul an army of Burgundians, Celts, Ripuarians, Salian Franks and Visigoths under the command of the Visigoth king Theodoric I.
He is succeeded by Justin ( Flavius Justinus ), his comes excubitorum, commander of the palace guard.
The candidates include Emperor Honorius ( 403 ) and Flavius Belisarius ( ostensibly " sitting in " for Emperor Justinian I ), in recognition for his victory over the Vandals.
* Roman usurper Joannes sends Flavius Aetius, governor of the Palace ( cura palatii ), to the Huns to ask for their assistance.
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