Faustina was a Roman empress as the third wife of the emperor Constantius II. The main source for her biography is the account of historian Ammianus Marcellinus...
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and Faustina the Younger, the third wife of Roman Emperor Elagabalus Faustina (wife of Constantius II) Faustina Constantia, daughter of Faustina and Constantius...
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grandfather Constantius Chlorus to Flavia Maximiana Theodora, though the details are unclear. Two of Constantius's uncles (Julius Constantius and Flavius...
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consort of Gratian of the Western Roman Empire. According to Ammianus Marcellinus, her mother was Faustina and her father was Constantius II, who died...
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emperor Constantius II (r. 337–61), his cousin. A grandson of emperor Constantius Chlorus (r. 293–306) and empress Flavia Maximiana Theodora, and a son of Julius...
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Valerius Constantius (c. 250 – 25 July 306), also called Constantius I, was a Roman emperor from 305 to 306. He was one of the four original members of the...
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Constantinian dynasty (redirect from House of Constantine)
daughter of Julius Constantius No offspring from marriage between Constantius II and Eusebia From marriage between Constantius II and Faustina Constantia...
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by Constantius II. The new Caesar was a paternal first cousin to Helena and her siblings. He was a son of Julius Constantius and his second wife Basilina...
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Marcus Aurelius (category Augurs of the Roman Empire)
temple he had dedicated to his wife, Diva Faustina, became the Temple of Antoninus and Faustina. It survives as the church of San Lorenzo in Miranda. In accordance...
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Flavia Maximiana Theodora (category Daughters of Roman emperors)
before 337) was a Roman empress as the wife of Constantius Chlorus. She is often referred to as a stepdaughter of Emperor Maximian by ancient sources, leading...
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Caliphate Fausta Fausta (wife of Constans II) Faustina (wife of Constantius II) Faventia, Battle of Felice Cornicola Felix of Ravenna Fenari Isa Mosque...
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Antoninus Pius (category Roman governors of Asia)
Galeria Faustina the Elder. They are believed to have enjoyed a happy marriage. Faustina was the daughter of consul Marcus Annius Verus (II) and Rupilia...
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Flavia Julia Constantia (category Year of birth uncertain)
the wife of Licinius. She was the daughter of the Roman emperor Constantius Chlorus and his wife Flavia Maximiana Theodora, and younger half-sister of Constantine...
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empress as the wife of Byzantine emperor Theophilos from 830 to 842 and regent for the couple's young son Michael III, after the death of Theophilos, from...
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Commodus (category Sons of Roman emperors)
emperor, Marcus Aurelius, and Aurelius' first cousin, Faustina the Younger, the youngest daughter of Emperor Antoninus Pius, who had died only a few months...
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Procopius (usurper) (redirect from Battle of Nacolia)
link to the Constantinian dynasty by appearing in public with Constantius II’s widow Faustina and their daughter Constantia, an act which Ammianus considered...
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Fausta (category Daughters of Roman emperors)
Although Julian praised Fausta in his panegyric to Constantius II, there is no other evidence of her memory being rehabilitated. Fausta is an important...
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Julian (emperor) (redirect from Revolt of Aquileia (361))
descendants from the second marriage of Constantius Chlorus and Theodora, leaving only Constantius and his brothers Constantine II and Constans I, and their cousins...
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Galla Placidia (category Daughters of Roman emperors)
briefly empress consort to Constantius III in 421, and managed the government administration as a regent during the early reign of Valentinian III until her...
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Eusebia (empress) (redirect from Eusebia (wife of Constantius II))
as the second wife of Roman emperor Constantius II. The main sources for the knowledge about her life are Julian's panegyric "Speech of Thanks to the...
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Justina (empress) (category Mothers of Roman emperors)
deemed illegitimate by Constantius II. Another possibility is that Justina was born out of wedlock to Constans I and Justus's wife, but Justus was forced...
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Constantine the Great (redirect from Constantine I of the Roman Empire)
throughout the empire. In 288, Maximian appointed Constantius to serve as his praetorian prefect in Gaul. Constantius left Helena to marry Maximian's stepdaughter...
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Aelius Antoninus Pius, or Faustina II, wife of Marcus Aurelius Antoninus Commodus was named co-emperor in 177, at the age of 16. Caracalla was named co-emperor...
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Lucius Verus (category People of the Roman–Parthian Wars)
temple he had dedicated to his wife, Diva Faustina, became the Temple of Antoninus and Faustina. It survives as the church of San Lorenzo in Miranda. Soon...
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The influence of the prominent Sarantepechos family in the theme of Hellas likely played a part in the selection of Irene as the wife of the emperor's...
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Eutropia (category Mothers of Roman emperors)
wife of Constantine the Great and mother of emperors Constantine II, Constantius II, and Constans. The parentage of Theodora, the wife of Constantius...
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note 88; Bédoyère 2018, p. 282. Barbara Levick (2014). Faustina I and II: Imperial Women of the Golden Age. Oxford University Press. p. 170. ISBN 978-0-19-537941-9...
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Caracalla (redirect from Antoninus II)
treason, though he had probably fabricated the evidence of the plot. It was then that he banished his wife, whose later killing might have been carried out under...
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Zoe Porphyrogenita (redirect from Zoe of Byzantium)
second daughter of Constantine VIII and his wife Helena. Her father had become co-emperor, at the age of two, in 962. His brother Basil II, the senior co-ruler...
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Placidia (category Daughters of Roman emperors)
[plaˈkɪdɪ.a]) was a daughter of Valentinian III, Roman emperor of the West from 425 to 455, and from 454/455 the wife of Olybrius, who became western...
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