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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: TUM-VAN |
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VALENTINIAN I ., Roman emperor of the West from A.D. 364 to 375, was born at Cibalis, in Pannonia. He had been an officer of the guard under Julian and Jovian, and had risen high in the imperial service. Of robust frame
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governor . The services of Theodosius were again requisitioned, He landed in Africa with a small band of veterans, and Firmus, to avoid being taken prisoner, committed suicide. In 374 the Quadi, a German tribe in what is now Moravia and Hungary, resenting the erection of Roman forts to the north of the Danube in what they considered to be their own territory, and further exasperated by the treacherous murder of their king, Gabinius, crossed the river and laid waste the province of Pannonia. The emperor in April of the following year entered Illyricum with a powerful army, but during an audience to an embassy from the Quadi at Brigetio on the Danube (near Pressburg) died in a fit of apoplexy. His general administration seems to have been thoroughly honest and able, in some respects beneficent. If he was hard and exacting in the matter of taxes, he spent them in the defence and improvement of his dominions, not in idle show or luxury. Though himself a plain and almost illiterate soldier, he was a founder of schools, and he also provided medical attendance for the poor of Rome, by appointing a physician for each of the fourteen districts of the city. He was an orthodox Catholic, but he permitted absolute religious freedom to all his subjects. Against all abuses, both civil and ecclesiastical, he steadily set his face, even against the increasing wealth and worldliness of the clergy. The great blot on his memory is his cruelty, which at times was frightful, and showed itself in its full fierceness in the punishment of persons accused of witchcraft, soothsaying or magical practices.See Ammianus Marcellinus
1865), pp. 24o-68. After his death, his son, VALENTINIAN II., an infant of four years of age, with his half-brother Gratian (q.v.) a lad of about' seventeen, became the emperors of the West. They made Milan their home; and the empire was nominally divided petween them, Gratian taking the trans-Alpine provinces, Hhilst Italy, Illyricum in part, and Africa were to be under jhe rule of Valentinian, or rather of his mother, Justina. Justina was an Arian, and the imperial court at Milan pitted Itself against the Catholics, under the famous Ambrose
See Gibbon, Decline and Fall, chap. 27; Schiller, Geschichte der romischen Kaiserzeit, bk. iii. vol. iv. pp. 32, 33 ;L. Ranke,Weltgeschichte, bk. iv. vol. i. chap. 6 ; and especially H. Richter, Das westromische Reich unter den Kaisern Gratian, Valentinian II. and Maximus (Berlin, 1865), pp. 577-65o, where full references to authorities are given. End of Article: VALENTINIAN I If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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