|
See also: Roman emperor from A.D
.
286 to 305, was See also: born of humble parents at Sirmium in See also: Pannonia
.
He achieved distinction during long service in the army, and having been made Caesar by See also: Diocletian in 285, received the title of See also: Augustus in the following See also: year (See also: April 1, 286)
.
In 287 he suppressed the rising of the peasants (Bagaudae) in See also: Gaul, but in 289, after a three years' struggle, his colleague and he were compelled to acquiesce in the See also: assumption by his See also: lieutenant See also: Carausius (who had crossed over to Britain) of the title of Augustus
.
After 293 Maximianus See also: left the care of the Rhine frontier to See also: Constantius Chlorus, who had been designated Caesar in that year, but in 297 his arms achieved a rapid and decisive victory over the barbarians of See also: Mauretania, and in 302 he shared at See also: Rome the See also: triumph of Diocletian, the last See also: pageant of the kind ever witnessed by that city
.
On the 1st of May 305, the See also: day of Diocletian's abdication, he also, but without his colleague's sincerity, divested himself of the imperial dignity at Mediolanum (Milan), which had been his capital, and retired to a See also: villa in Lucania; in the following year, however, he was induced by his son See also: Maxentius to reassume the See also: purple
.
In 307 he brought the emperor Flavius See also: Valerius
Severus a See also: captive to Rome, and also compelled Galerius to retreat, but in 308 he was himself driven by Maxentius from See also: Italy into Illyricum, whence again he was compelled to seek See also: refuge at Arelate (See also: Arles), the See also: court of his son-in-See also: law, See also: Constantine
.
Here a false report was received, or invented, of the See also: death of Constantine, at that See also: time absent on the Rhine
.
Maximianus at once grasped at the succession, but was soon driven to Massilia (See also: Marseilles), where, having been delivered up to his pursuers, he strangled himself
.
See See also: Zosimus ii
.
7—11; See also: Zonaras xii
.
31—33; See also: Eutropius ix
.
20, X . 2, 3; Aurelius Victor p . 39 . For the emperor Galerius Valerius Maximianus see GALE5UUS . |
|
|
[back] MAXIMIANUS |
[next] MAXIMILIAN |
There are no comments yet for this article.
Do not copy, download, transfer, or otherwise replicate the site content in whole or in part.
Links to articles and home page are encouraged.