The Roman Empire at the start of the 4th century ce was turbulent and factional. Knowing that to refuse Constantine outright would result in civil war, Galerius placated him by offering him the title of caesar only, with Severus promoted to Augustus. At the games, which took place in the coliseum, jeers of Constantines invincibility surrounded him.
They ordered that regardless of the god, everyone must sacrifice.
Somehow protected in retreat by the Praetorian Guard, Maxentius made it to the bridge only for it to buckle under the weight of so many men. Published biannually, Classical Antiquity explores interdisciplinary research and discussion of major issues throughout the field of classics, including Greek and Roman literature, history, archaeology, art, philosophy and philology Bronze Age through Late Antiquity. By 303 this shift produced the Great Persecution in the Eastern Roman Empire, which manifested itself in the destruction of Christian churches, the burning of holy books, the outlawing of their even meeting in public, and in torture and execution. This is no better illustrated than by his and his army literally fighting in the dark, leaving so much to Fortune, and even stealing from their victims the usual honor of knowing who cut them down, since a dying moment would apparently be assuaged if you knew someone famous had done it. His very plan for arraying his forces proved that he was in a desperate state of mind and confused in counsel, wrote Nazarius.
You have none other than Classical Antiquity a journal that combines the pleasures, politics, intellectualism, cultural production, sciences, and linguistics of European traditions, centuries past. All of the accusations heaped upon him only surfaced after Constantines string of victories, and indeed, had their one and only battle turned out differently, everything from Constantines vision to his wars in the north would likely have been turned into the worst superstition and atrocity.
They were beaten to death, with clubs, maces, and axes all battering down on their armor and helmets, and on the exposed areas of their quickly collapsing horses. Constantine eventually settled for recognition as caesar by Galerius, who made Severus augustus of the West.
For all this, though, the brevity of the ancient accounts suggests that the battle did not last for long. While every effort has been made to follow citation style rules, there may be some discrepancies.
They rode right into Constantines trap. His father had already passed him over once for the title, and he did not intend to lose it again.
Maxentius tried to suppress news of Constantines victories among the Roman elite and the public, but such news could not help but get out.
Upon hearing this, Constantine converted to Christianity and vowed to oust Maxentius from his throne.
The enemy soldiers who remainedcondemned by the orator as having essentially abandoned their Roman identity when they took up arms against Constantinewere put in shackles made from their own melted-down weapons. To fix that other inherent problem of kingship; namely, that of succession, in 293 the Tetrarchy was created.
What is happening? When Diocletian fell ill in 305, Galerius encouraged both Diocletian and Maximian to abdicate, which the latter did only reluctantly. Constantine milked this growing sense of Maxentiuss softness as long as he could, not reaching Rome and not being met by another army until late October. With Licinius as an ally in the East, he could focus on taking Maxentiuss provinces in Italy and Africa before striking at Liciniuss territory. Word was immediately sent to Galerius, with Constantine disingenuously claiming his fathers title had been foisted upon him by the army, and that he had never sought it. The following day Constantine was welcomed into Rome with open arms. Well aware of the superiority of his numbers, Pompeianus was eager to get on with the fight, but made the mistake of continuing it immediately. In 313 Constantine met with Licinius to issue the Edict of Milan, which enacted a policy of Christian toleration throughout the Roman Empire after intense persecution under recent emperors. The ancient sources fill these months of Maxentiuss time with every excess and crime of which a supposedly idle tyrant might be accused, including lechery, theft, and even murder. In 311, he seized the provinces in Asia Minor upon Galeriuss death. Center portion, with both left and right ends of the painting cropped, showing Constantine at the Battle of the Milvian Bridge, as painted by, Exploring the History of Information and Media through Timelines.
The man who only a few years earlier had had a vision of the sun god Apollo, and who said Sol had carried his father off after death, and who no doubt knew of the Christians in his train who associated Christ and his resurrection with the risen sun, could not miss the connections or refuse the support of whatever gods he could get. It was Liciniuss turn to receive a divine message via a dream on the eve of battle, and upon his victory he and Constantine agreed to divide the empire between them. What do you have to do, emperor, with the fate of inferior beings?. While Maxentiuss troops, which some number as twice Constantines 40,000, included the loyal Praetorian Guard who had acclaimed him emperor in the first place, as well as legionaries and leftovers from the forces of Galerius and Severus, the majority of his regular troops, whether North African or Italian, were inexperienced and could not be counted on for affection or loyalty. Classical Antiquity
While Diocletian had obviously benefited from the influence of armies, the presence of high government officials in the daily lives of the citizens also was meant to discourage usurpers and keep the military from proclaiming another emperor.
In the lead up to battle, Maxentius consulted the oracles and received one of those mainstays of ancient prophecy. What is clear is that Diocletians hopes for easy succession had not lasted beyond a breath.
The African provinces promptly surrendered to Constantine. He was Rembrandts teacher and the leader of the so-called Pre-Rembrandtists, their history paintings being characterized by epic narrative and a precise adherence to the story rendered in rich detail. Constantine still governed his fathers lands in Britain, Gaul, and Spain. option. The years ad 235 to ad 284, during which more than 20 men were proclaimed emperor, was a period of astonishing instability and near collapse in the Roman Empire. What details tell you about the time period when this event took place.
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The ancient accounts differ about the actions that Constantine took before the two men clashed at the Milvian Bridge. By extending and thinning out his lines, he invited a charge which his men immediately encircled and swallowed in a classic envelopment. The Roman Senateand, crucially, the Praetorian Guardproclaimed Maxentius emperor (augustus), although he then called himself merely princeps (first citizen) to avoid provoking other claimants to the senior imperial title. Updates?
He was, for the moment, content with them.
While in eastern Europe, Licinius had come into conflict with Galeriuss caesar, Maximinus Daia, who was then campaigning in Asia Minor. Collating all the accounts, we can say that, fervently pious toward the religious cult of the Unconquered Sun (Sol Invictus, one of the most popular deities in the Roman army), Constantine one day at noon was in prayer, with the sun at its highest point in the sky, when he saw with his own eyes, up in the sky and resting over the sun, a cross-shaped trophy formed from light, and a text attached to it which said, By this, conquer..
All later accounts of the Battle of Verona downplay the danger of this moment, but it was palpable. For terms and use, please refer to our Terms and Conditions
The superstitious among them may have thought Maxentius knew the outcome before going in.
Constantines invasion of Italy began in the early campaign season of 312, likely as soon as the winter snow began to melt.
According to Lactantiuss De mortibus persecutorum (On the Deaths of the Persecutors), on the night before Maxentius sallied out to meet him, Constantine had a dream in which he was commanded to use the sign of the cross to defend against all enemies. And like many a fundamentalist before and since, Galerius fell into the persecutions with a savage joy and fervor that went beyond any mere political advantages they might yield or religious devotion they might reflect.
Whoever it was overlooking and influencing the scene, Constantine led his superb Gallic cavalry in the opening charge and, suddenly seeing their own cavalry defeated and now facing the full force of Constantines infantry, Maxentiuss troops broke for the bridge of boats.
Byzantine has not become a byword over the centuries for scheming and intricacy by accident, as only the briefest summary of its early years can attest. He had spent his formative years receiving the best education possible in the crowded court of Diocletian, but at the same time had likely been held there, if not as a prisoner, certainly as insurance against his father revolting. Rather than giving the recently arrived men an evening to rest, he rushed out to face Constantine who, to avoid his own trap at Turin, spread his lines out even further to keep Pompeianuss wings from closing around him.
While this initial position upstream, near to a steep wall of rock, did offer his left flank some protection, his right began with their backs to the Tiber; and when the battle began, almost immediately his men shifted so that nearly everyone had the river behind them, forcing either victory or death in battle or drowning in retreat.
Having seized every major city in northern Italy, Constantine could now descend on Rome with impunity. But instead of Constantine being chosen as caesar under his father in the west, the two caesars actually selected both had family ties to Galerius.
It bore the Greek inscription En tout nikaIn this, conquer. Eusebius then describes a divine dream similar to Lactantiuss account.
Galerius and Maximinus Daia ruled in the East, while Constantius and Severus oversaw the West. All summer Rome had been filled with rumors of the western emperor, Constantine, and the ease with which he and his army had crossed the Alps and, once on Italian soil, strung together a handful of victories in the north.
When Maxentius declared war on him, he did so in part under claims that Constantine had killed his father, which is unlikely. To access this article, please, Access everything in the JPASS collection, Download up to 10 article PDFs to save and keep, Download up to 120 article PDFs to save and keep.
Although some scholars have doubted the genuine nature of his pre-battle conversion, it is almost certain that Constantines victory over Maxentius confirmed his belief that the Christian God had protected him and would continue to guide him. Before the campaign began, Constantines soothsayers oversaw a divinatory sacrifice that clearly made any military action in Italy ill omened, but by this point Constantine was beyond confident and ignored their warnings. Constantine spent the next six years in the west, solidifying his control there, while claimants for the eastern throne exhausted themselves in civil war.
Two 4th-century Christian writers, Lactantius and Eusebius of Caesarea, provide slightly different accounts of this event.
As October neared, however, the real Maxentius remained, and still remains, a mystery. The Italians were especially reluctant to continue the fight, and the number of men who tried and failed to make it to the bridge simply glutted the riverside in a bloody snake of bodies and glittering weapons, or it cascaded them into the Tiber. Beyond that, both sides were essentially equipped equally. For all this, though, contemporary accounts try to maintain that distance between emperor and solider by saying that the Tiber, personified as the god Tibernius, actually swallowed and devoured Maxentius in his own personal whirlpool. According to De mortibus, Constantine instructed his soldiers to paint the Chi-Rho on their shields, while the Vita states that he ordered his men to carry the labarum, a battle standard bearing the same sacred monogram.
The orator concludes that this must reflect something like his invincibility and divine approval: You were carried away entirely by your impulse, like a river in flood carrying along trees broken off at their roots and rocks torn away from their foundations, he wrote.
According to ancient sources, Constantine converted to Christianity just before the battle, which likely affected his decision to end Christian persecution and establish Christianity as the most favoured religion within the Roman Empire. Eusebiuss account in Vita Constantini is more exhaustive than his and Lactantiuss earlier works, but it is also his most problematic. In Rome, though, Maximians son Maxentius believed that he should have been named caesar. Eusebiuss two accounts of the battle, in the Historia ecclesiastica and the Vita Constantini, differ both from Lactantiuss and among themselves. After Constantines army broke Maxentiuss, remnants of the latter, in their confused attempt to flee back over the Tiber, overloaded the pontoon bridge, causing many men, including Maxentius, to fall into the river and drown.
The anonymous orator called on an allusion to Virgil to describe the breathtaking chaos of men and horses drowning in a crowd, or being carried downriver in the Tibers swift stream, or likely fighting each other for air and space in an attempt to save their lives, grappling onto the drowned or still living without a thought, or trying to free themselves from the armor that had only recently been their protection.
https://www.britannica.com/topic/Battle-of-the-Milvian-Bridge, History Today - The Battle of the Milvian Bridge, Warfare History Network - Bloody Clash on the Tiber. When Verona finally acquiesced to Constantine, so did other towns in northern Italy, such as Aquileia, Ravenna, and Mutina. Although the logistics of this seem less than probable and reek more than anything of the victors propaganda, there is no doubting that the image is born from the real terror and amazement of an all-powerful emperor succumbing to the waves.