Month: January 2020
Brescia: Santa Giulia (deel 4)
Brescia: Santa Giulia (deel 3)
Brescia: Santa Giulia (deel 2)
Brescia: Santa Giulia (deel 1)
Het Museo di Santa Giulia is het gemeentemuseum van Brescia. Het is gehuisvest in het enorme kloostercomplex van San Salvatore-Santa Giulia, dat sinds 2011 als een van de zeven Longobard Places of Power op de Werelderfgoedlijst van UNESCO staat.[1] De geschiedenis van het complex is dan ook nauw verbonden met…
Carus, Numerianus and Carinus: The Years 282-284
Probus: The Years 276-282
Tacitus, Florianus and Probus: The Years 275-276
Aurelianus: The Years 274-275
Now that Zenobia had been defeated and captured, Aurelianus could focus on the one remaining rebel in the West: Tetricus, ruler of the so-called ‘Gallic Empire’ (the name is a modern invention). In early 274, the army of Aurelianus met that of Tetricus in the vicinity of Durocatalaunum (modern Châlons).…
Aurelianus: The Years 271-273
Still in 271, while en route to the East to confront Zenobia, Aurelianus campaigned against marauding tribes that had once again broken through the Danube border. The not-so reliable Historia Augusta mentions campaigns in Illyricum (a generic term for the Balkans) and Thrace and even claims that the emperor fought…
Quintillus and Aurelianus: The Years 270-271
Claudius Gothicus was succeeded by his brother Quintillus. He was accepted by the Senate as Augustus, but the Senate had little real power in those days. Quintillus reigned long enough to mint coins, but the army was unhappy with the Senate’s choice and quickly presented its own candidate: Lucius Domitius…
Claudius Gothicus: The Years 268-270
Gallienus: The Years 260-268
Publius Licinius Egnatius Gallienus Augustus was now sole ruler of the vast Roman Empire, or rather: the sole legitimate ruler. Most western provinces were in the hands of Postumus, ruler of the ‘Gallic Empire’, while Gallienus soon had to deal with usurpers and rebels in the eastern provinces as well.…