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BONIFACIUS (d. 432)

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Originally appearing in Volume V04, Page 208 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BONIFACIUS (d. 432)  , the
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Roman governor of the province of Africa who is generally believed to have invited the Vandals into that province in revenge for the hostile
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action of Placidia, ruling in behalf of her son the emperor Valentinian III . (428-429) . That action is by
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Procopius attributed to his
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rival Maus, but the earliest authorities speak of a certain Felix, chief minister of Placidia, as the calumniator of Bonifacius . Whether he really invited the Vandals or not, there is no doubt that he soon turned against them and bravely defended the city of
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Hippo from their attacks . In 432 he returned to Italy, was received into favour by Placidia, and appointed master of the soldiery . Plains, how-ever, resented his promotion, the two rivals met, perhaps in single combat, and Bonifacius, though victorious, received a wound from the effects of which he died three months later . The authorities for the extremely obscure and difficult
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history of these transactions are well discussed by E . A . Freeman in an article in the
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English
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Historical Review,
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July 1887, to which the reader is referred . But compare also Gibbon, Decline and Fall of the Roman
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Empire, vol. iii. pp . 505-506, edited by J . B .

Bury (
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London, 1897) .

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