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See also:CLAUDIUS See also:MAMERTINUS (4th See also:century A.D.) , one of the Latin panegyrists . After the See also:death of See also:Julian, by whom he was evidently regarded with See also:special favour, he was See also:praefect of See also:Italy (365) under See also:Valens and Valentinian, but was subsequently (368) deprived of his See also:office for See also:embezzlement . He was the author of an extant speech of thanks to Julian for raising him to the consulship, delivered on the 1st of See also:January 362 at See also:Constantinople . Two panegyrical addresses (also extant) to Maximian (See also:emperor A.D . 286โ305) are attributed to an older magister See also:Mamertinus, but it is probable that the corrupt MS. superscription contains the word memoriae, and that they are by an unknown magister memoriae (an See also:official whose See also:duty consisted in communicating imperial rescripts and decisions to the public) . The first of these was delivered on the birthday of See also:Rome (See also:April 21, 289), probably at Maximian's See also:palace at See also:Augusta Trevirorum (Treves), the second in 290 or 291, on the birthday of the emperor . By some they are attributed to See also:Eumenius (q.v.) who was a magister memoriae and the author of at least one (if not more) panegyrics . The three speeches will be found in E . Bahrens, Panegyrici See also:latini (1874); see also See also:Teuffel-See also:Schwabe, Hist. of See also:Roman Literature (Eng trans.), ยง 417, 7 . |
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