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Constantine III (Western Roman emperor)

Constantine III (Latin: Flavius Claudius Constantinus; died shortly before 18 September 411) was a common Roman soldier who was declared emperor in Roman Britain in 407 and established himself in Gaul. He was recognised as co-emperor of the Roman Empire from 409 until 411.

Constantine III
Coin of Constantine III
Roman emperor
(in the West)
Reign407–411
PredecessorGratian
SuccessorHonorius
AlongsideHonorius (409–411)
Constans II (409–411)
Died411 (before 18 September)
IssueConstans II
Julian
Names
Flavius Claudius Constantinus
ReligionNicene Christianity

Constantine rose to power from within the field army of Roman Britain and was acclaimed emperor in early 407. He promptly moved to Gaul (modern France), taking all of the mobile troops from Britain, with their commander Gerontius, to confront bands of Germanic invaders who had crossed the Rhine the previous winter. With a mixture of fighting and diplomacy Constantine stabilised the situation and established control over Gaul and Hispania (modern Spain and Portugal), establishing his capital at Arles. The sitting emperor of the Western Roman Empire, Honorius, sent an army under Sarus the Goth to expel Constantine's forces. After initial victories, Sarus was repulsed. In Hispania, Honorius's relatives rose and expelled Constantine's administration. An army under the general Gerontius was sent to deal with this and Constantine's authority was re-established. In early 409 Honorius recognised Constantine as co-emperor. Constantine in turn raised his own oldest son to co-emperor as Constans II.

In 409 Gerontius rebelled, proclaimed his client Maximus emperor and incited barbarian groups in Gaul to rise up. Constans was sent to quash the revolt, but was defeated and withdrew to Arles. Meanwhile, Constantine invaded northern Italy, but his plan failed and he also pulled back to Arles. In 410 Constans was sent to Hispania again. Gerontius had strengthened his army with Germanic tribesmen and defeated Constans; the latter retreated north and was defeated again and killed at Vienne early in 411. Gerontius then besieged Constantine in Arles. Honorius appointed a new general, Flavius Constantius, who arrived at Arles while Gerontius was outside the city. Much of Gerontius's army deserted to Constantius, who took over the siege. A force attempting to relieve Constantine was ambushed. Constantine abdicated, took holy orders and – promised his life – surrendered. Constantius had lied: Constantine was killed and his head presented to Honorius on a pole.

Background

 
The Western and Eastern Roman Empires at the death of Theodosius I in 395

Following the death of the Roman emperor Theodosius I in 395 the Roman Empire was divided between his two sons: Arcadius became emperor of the Eastern Roman Empire and ten-year-old Honorius of the Western.[1] Honorius was underage and the leading general Stilicho became hugely influential and the de facto commander-in-chief of the Roman armies in the west.[2]

During this period Roman Britain was suffering raids by the Scoti, Saxons and Picts. Sometime between 396 and 398 Stilicho is said by contemporary poet and speech writer Claudian to have ordered a campaign against the Picts,[3] probably a naval campaign intended to suppress their seaborne raids on the east coast of Roman Britain.[4] He may also have ordered campaigns against the Scoti and Saxons.[5] Other interpretations suggest it went badly, or that troops defending Roman Britain defeated a Pictish invasion without external support.[6] This is the last recorded Roman military campaign in Britain.[7] Stilicho sent funds to strengthen the defences along Hadrian's Wall and the coastal defences at about the same time.[8]

In 401 or 402 Stilicho needed military manpower for wars with the Visigoths and the Ostrogoths and so stripped Hadrian's Wall of troops.[5][9][10] The year 402 is the last date from which Roman coinage is found in large quantities in Britain, suggesting the Empire was no longer paying the troops who remained.[10] Meanwhile, the Picts, Saxons and Scoti continued their raids, which may have increased in scope. In 405 the Irish king Niall of the Nine Hostages is described as having raided along the southern coast of Britain.[11]

Both the Eastern and Western Empires were suffering from incursions of large groups from Germanic tribes, whom the Romans referred to generically as "barbarians". In 406 a group of Alans and Goths led by Radagaisus invaded Italy. The group included women and children and is estimated to have been 90,000–100,000 strong, of whom more than 20,000 were fighting men. For six months they devastated northern Italy, capturing and sacking several cities. After concentrating his forces, Stilicho caught the Goths while they were besieging Florentia (modern Florence) and defeated them at the Battle of Faesulae; 12,000 prisoners joined the Roman army and so many captives were sold that the market in slaves collapsed. The Western Empire's problems with barbarian intruders were far from over.[12][13]

Life

Little is known of Flavius Claudius Constantinus before he was declared emperor and took the regnal name Constantine. His date and place of birth are unknown, as is his marital status. He had two sons, although their names prior to being given more regal-sounding ones are likewise unknown. Regarding his personal habits, one fifth-century historian described him as a glutton and another considered that his major flaw was being inconstant in his policies.[14]

Rise

In 406 the approximately 6,000 troops of the Roman field army based in Roman Britain were dissatisfied.[note 1][16][17] They had not been paid for several years, a large contingent had left to fight on the continent four years earlier and had not returned, the coastal defences had been dismantled to form the new field army and their commander had been replaced.[18][19] They revolted and determined to choose their own leader. Their first choice was a man named Marcus whom they appointed emperor. After a short period, unhappy with his performance, they killed him and appointed Gratian. He also failed to meet the troops' expectations and was killed after four months.[20] On 31 December 406 several tribes of barbarian invaders, including the Vandals, Sueves and Alans crossed the Rhine, perhaps near Mainz, and overran the Roman defensive works in a successful invasion of the Western Roman Empire.[note 2][21][22] Hearing of the Germanic invasion the Roman military in Britain was desperate for some sense of security in a world that seemed to be rapidly falling apart. They next chose as their leader a man named after the famed emperor of the early fourth century, Constantine the Great, who had himself risen to power through a military coup in Britain. Flavius Claudius Constantinus[23][24] was a common soldier, not an officer, and early in 407, possibly February, his fellows acclaimed him as emperor.[23][25][26] The modern historian Francisco Sanz-Huesma differs and proposes that Constantine was a skilled politician who engineered the three acclamations with the (successful) intention of eventually raising himself to imperial power.[27]

Rebellion in Roman Britain was not unusual, a contemporary described it as a "province rich in usurpers". It was on the periphery of the Empire and there was a common view that it was overlooked in terms of resources and patronage.[28] Such revolts were usually short-lived; Constantine was uncommon in both establishing a lasting power base and in successfully exporting his rebellion to the mainland.[29] Constantine moved quickly: he appointed two officers already in Gaul (modern France) as generals, Justinianus and Nebiogastes, instructing them to seize Arles and the passes which controlled traffic to and from Italy. He crossed the Channel at Bononia (modern Boulogne), taking with him all of the 6,000 or so mobile troops left in Britain and their commander, the general Gerontius. This denuded Roman Britain of front-line military protection and explains the disappearance of the legions in the early fifth century.[30][31][32] Constantine travelled to Lyon, where he set up his headquarters and commenced minting coins in his own name.[33] The Roman Army of Gaul declared for him,[29] followed by the civilian administration in Hispania (modern Spain and Portugal).[34] The central Roman authorities did not respond to the Germanic invasion, and Constantine's forces got the better of at least one confrontation with the Vandals. Constantine also negotiated agreements with the Germanic groupings of the Franks, Alamanni and the Burgundians, thus securing the line of the Rhine. The main Vandal force and their allies moved into northern Gaul (modern Belgium).[35][36]

 
Roman Gaul at the time of Constantine

The Western Roman emperor, Honorius, and his commander-in-chief Stilicho were in conflict with the Eastern Roman Empire and allied to a large force of Visigoths under Alaric. The relationship with the Visigoths was shaky – they were demanding land or money for their services. An agreement was reached for a joint West Roman-Visigoth army to threaten the Eastern Empire to extort land from it which would then be given to the Visigoths. This manoeuvre was supposed to commence in May or June 407.[37] By then the Vandals and their allies had broken into Gaul, where Constantine had control of the army and was claiming the imperial throne. Sending a large Western Roman force to the east would have left Italy open to invasion by one or both of these groups and so the offensive was cancelled.[38] Instead a small army led by Sarus the Goth was sent west to put down Constantine's revolt while Stilicho's main army waited on events.[38]

Sarus defeated the army commanded by Justinianus in a pitched battle, killing Justinianus. Constantine personally moved against Sarus, but was besieged in Valence.[39][40] Nebiogastes attempted to negotiate and was killed by Sarus.[41][42] Another army, led by Gerontius and Edobichus and largely made up of freshly recruited Franks and Almannics, arrived to relieve Valence after a week of siege. Sarus was forced to retreat into Italy. Central control had deteriorated to the extent that Sarus needed to buy his passage through the Alpine passes from the brigand Bagaudae, who controlled them.[43] With this success Constantine established control over most of Gaul and the Alpine passes into Italy.[44]

Co-emperor

 
Constantine III portrayed on a siliqua. The reverse celebrates his victories.

By May 408 Constantine had captured Arles and made it his capital,[45] taking over the existing imperial administration and officials, and appointing Apollinaris as chief minister (with the title of praetorian prefect).[41][46] Heros was installed as a pliant archbishop of Arles in spite of local opposition.[note 3][48] Constantine commenced minting large quantities of good quality coins at Arles, possibly using bullion seized from Sarus's loot during his hasty retreat, and made a show of being an equal of both the Western and Eastern Emperors.[43]

Constantine's oldest son had entered a monastery and was a monk at the time his father rebelled, but he was summoned to the new imperial court. Constantine appointed him to the position of caesar – a senior, formal position that also recognised him as heir apparent – and gave him the imperial-sounding name of Constans.[49][50] He was swiftly married so a dynasty could be founded.[51] Early in 408 he was sent with Gerontius into Hispania.[30][43] Hispania was a stronghold of the House of Theodosius,[45] but on Constantine's initial landing on the continent, Honorius's relatives and partisans there had been either unwilling or militarily unable to oppose his assumption of control. When Sarus seemed on the verge of ending Constantine's revolt, two members of Honorius's family – Didymus and Verinianus – rebelled and overthrew Constantine's regime in Hispania. When Sarus withdrew to Italy, the knowledge of the large new army assembling at Ticinum (modern Pavia) with the intention of shortly engaging Constantine encouraged them to persist and even to attempt to seal the Pyrenean passes.[34] Constantine feared that Honorius's cousins would organise an attack from that direction while troops under Sarus and Stilicho attacked him from Italy in a pincer manoeuvre. He struck first, at Hispania.[43] Constans and Gerontius's army forced a pass and was reinforced. Constans established himself at Saragossa and rebuilt the civilian administration. Gerontius took the army and decisively defeated Honorius's supporters at a battle in Lusitania where Didymus and Verinianus were captured. With Hispania back under Constantine's control Constans left his new wife at Saragossa and returned to Arles to report to his father. Didymus and Verinianus accompanied him and were executed as civilian rebels, which further soured relations with Honorius.[34][52]

By early 408 the Visigoths were running out of patience with Stilicho. They moved from Epirus (modern Albania) to Noricum (modern Austria) and demanded a payment of 4,000 pounds (1,800 kg) of gold on pain of their invading Italy. Honorius and the Roman Senate were prepared to resist, but Stilicho persuaded them to approve the payment, to allow him to concentrate on the situation in Gaul.[22] He had assembled an army at Ticinum with which to do this. It is possible that the plan was for the Visigoths to accompany this force as military allies.[53] On 1 May the emperor of the Eastern Empire, Arcadius, died, leaving a seven-year-old heir, Theodosius II. A disagreement arose between Stilicho and Honorius, who each wished to travel to Constantinople – the capital of the Eastern Empire – to represent the Western Empire's interests. Stilicho got his way: he was to leave for the east while Honorius remained in Ravenna, the capital of the Western Empire.[54][55] But a rift between him and Honorius was obvious. The Roman establishment, led by the senior bureaucrat Olympius, worked to oppose Stilicho by spreading rumours that he wished to travel east to depose Theodosius and set his own son on the throne. On 13 August Honorius was formally reviewing the army about to set out from Ticinum against Constantine. With him were many of the senior officers and officials of the Western Empire. The troops mutinied, slaughtering Stilicho's supporters but respecting the person of the Emperor. Stilicho sought sanctuary, then surrendered and was executed on 22 August.[56]

 
A siliqua of Constans II

Olympius reversed the policy of making a massive payment to the Visigoths and the native parts of the Army of Italy started slaughtering Goths: especially their fellow soldiers and their wives and children. The latter, living in Italian cities, sometimes overtly as hostages for their husbands and fathers' good behaviour, were easy targets. Those Goths who could fled north and joined Alaric, greatly increasing his fighting strength. Alaric promptly crossed the Alps and headed south through Italy, devastating the countryside. He camped his army outside Rome and demanded a huge ransom.[57] Late in 408 Constantine sent an embassy to Ravenna. Needing to placate him, Honorius acknowledged him as co-emperor and sent a purple robe as formal recognition. The pair were joint consuls in 409. At around this time, Constantine raised Constans to the position of co-emperor, theoretically equal in rank to Honorius or Theodosius, as well as to Constantine.[58][59][60]

With the Visigoths deep in Italy and unopposed, Olympius's influence ended[note 4] and a new chief minister, Jovius, entered into peace negotiations[62] but Honorius continued to refuse to reach an agreement with Alaric. The Visigoths in retaliation continued to roam across Italy and extort vast sums from the city of Rome. Alaric elevated his own emperor, the senator Priscus Attalus, to no avail. On 24 August 410 the Visigoths entered Rome and pillaged the city for three days.[63]

Decline

 
Coin of Constantine with the legend fl cl constantinus aug·

In spring or summer 409 Apollinaris was replaced as praetorian prefect by Decimus Rusticus and Constans was sent back to Hispania. Either before Constans left Arles or while he was travelling Gerontius rebelled, proclaiming his client Maximus as emperor. Maximus was an important figure in his own right, but it was clear he was controlled by Gerontius.[39][64] They set up court at Tarraco (modern Tarragona). Gerontius was concerned that he would not be able to withstand the military force Constantine could bring to bear and so attempted to incite the barbarians who had entered Gaul late in 406 against Constantine. These had been quiescent in the north of the territory, but now set off across Gaul for the rich territories of Aquitaine and Narbonensis (modern south-west and southern France). They spread devastation across these areas, much to the horror of the populace. Concentrating on the threat from Constans, Gerontius weakened his garrisons in the Pyrenean passes and in autumn 409 much of the barbarian force entered Hispania.[65][66] Eventually Gerontius was able to reach a modus operandi with some of these groups whereby they supplied him with military forces, which enabled him to take the offensive against Constantine.[66]

From 408 Saxon pirates raided Roman Britain extensively, undeterred by the totally inadequate force which Constantine had left.[67][68] The locals organised their own defences, so successfully that they defeated the Saxons in 409.[69] Distressed that Constantine had failed to defend them, the Roman inhabitants of Britain rebelled and expelled his officials,[50][60][70] accepting that henceforth they would have to look to their own defence.[19] Inspired by the example of Roman Britain, later that year the Bagaudae of Armorica (modern Brittany) also expelled Constantine's officials and declared independence.[71]

Constantine sent a further embassy to Ravenna, which achieved little, but Constantine's emissary, Jovius, did suborn one of Honorius's senior generals, Allobich. In spring 410 Constantine led an army into northern Italy. It is possible that he claimed he intended to assist Honorius against the Visigoths. It is also likely he was counting on support from Allobich. When he reached the River Po he heard, wrongly, that Allobich was dead, which caused him to abandon his mission and withdraw to Arles.[72]

Meanwhile, Constans, with an army commanded by a general named Justus, attempted to subdue Gerontius. He failed, although no details are known, and returned to Arles in spring 410. At about the same time Constantine returned from his abortive invasion of Italy. Given the difficulties the Visigoths were creating in Italy, Gerontius was considered a greater threat than Honorius.[73][74] Edobichus was again sent north to raise troops from the Franks while Constans returned to confront Gerontius with a fresh army. Events are again unclear, but it seems likely that Gerontius was simultaneously advancing on Arles. The two armies clashed and Constans was defeated. He fell back to the north with what was left of his command, hoping to be reinforced by Edobichus. But Gerontius caught him at Vienne, probably early in 411, defeated his army and killed Constans. Gerontius's army then marched on Arles and besieged Constantine.[75]

Fall

 
Solidus of Constantius III

In 411 Honorius appointed a new general, Flavius Constantius, who took the Army of Italy over the Alps into Gaul in another attempt to suppress Constantine.[61] Constantius arrived at Arles while Gerontius was outside the city. Many of Gerontius's troops deserted to Constantius and Gerontius retreated to Hispania with the remainder. There, in a hopeless position, Gerontius committed suicide.[76] Constantius's army took over the siege. Meanwhile Edobichus raised troops in northern Gaul among the Franks and Alamanni,[67][61] combined them with those of the Army of Gaul still loyal to Constantine and marched to Constantine's assistance. Constantius defeated this force in an ambush.[77] Constantine, his hopes fading after the troops guarding the Rhine abandoned him to support yet another claimant to the imperial throne, the Gallo-Roman Jovinus, surrendered to Constantius along with his surviving son Julian.[78] Despite a promise of safe passage, and Constantine's assumption of clerical office, Constantius imprisoned the former soldier and had him and Julian beheaded in either August or September 411.[23] His head was mounted on a pole and presented to Emperor Honorius on 18 September.[61] It was later displayed outside Carthage, as was that of Julian.[note 5][79]

Aftermath

Constantius withdrew in the face of Jovinus's forces. The modern historian Peter Heather describes the Roman Army of Gaul as emerging from Constantine's wars "in tatters". In 413 a Visigoth army under Athaulf, who was now allied with Honorius, suppressed Jovinus's revolt.[80] Constantius took over Stilicho's role as the main power in the Western Empire and generalissimo. He was broadly able to recover the situation for the central authorities and to enable reconstruction. Gaul was pacified, the rebellion in Amorica was quashed and the area brought back under Roman control, the barbarians in Hispania were in large part subdued and the Visigoths were settled on land in Aquitaine as Roman allies. Roman rule never returned to Britain after Constantine stripped its defences. In 417 Constantius married Honorius's sister, Galla Placidia. On 8 February 421, Honorius made Constantius co-emperor under himself. Constantius reigned only seven months, dying on 2 September. Honorius then ruled alone until his death in 423, whereupon Constantius's son, Valentinian III, assumed the throne.[81][82]

Legend

Constantine III is also known as Constantine II of Britain. He has been associated with the Constantine found in Geoffrey of Monmouth's popular and imaginative Historia Regum Britanniae, who comes to power following Gracianus Municeps's reign. Geoffrey's Constantine, through his son Uther Pendragon, becomes the grandfather of the legendary King Arthur. Other sources explicitly state that Constantine III is the grandfather of Arthur.[83][84]

Notes, citations and sources

Notes

  1. ^ The ancient historian Zosimus gave the army's main features as "insolence and irascibility".[15]
  2. ^ It may have been a transfer of troops from the Rhine frontier, which had long been quiet, to the Channel to guard against a possible invasion by Marcus or Gratian that permitted the invaders to successfully enter the empire.[18]
  3. ^ After Constantine's death Heros was deposed and exiled, and replaced by Patroclus.[47][48]
  4. ^ Constantius had Olympius clubbed to death in late 410 or early 411.[61]
  5. ^ In 414 the heads of Jovinus and his son were also to be seen at Carthage.[79]

Citations

  1. ^ Mitchell 2007, p. 89.
  2. ^ Mitchell 2007, p. 91.
  3. ^ Snyder 2003, p. 62.
  4. ^ Frere 1987, p. 355.
  5. ^ a b Jones & Mattingly 1990, p. 307.
  6. ^ Miller 1975, pp. 141–144.
  7. ^ Mattingly 2006, p. 238.
  8. ^ Hollway 2022, p. 175.
  9. ^ Snyder 2003, pp. 62–63.
  10. ^ a b Snyder 1998, p. 18.
  11. ^ Frere 1987, p. 357.
  12. ^ Wijnendaele 2018, p. 261.
  13. ^ Heather 2005, pp. 198–199, 205–206.
  14. ^ Jones, Martindale & Morris 1992, pp. 316–317.
  15. ^ Wijnendaele 2018, p. 262.
  16. ^ Burns 1994, pp. 212–213.
  17. ^ Drinkwater 1998, p. 275.
  18. ^ a b Drinkwater 1998, p. 271.
  19. ^ a b de la Bédoyère 2001, p. 100.
  20. ^ Heather 2005, p. 209.
  21. ^ Bury 1889, p. 138.
  22. ^ a b Heather 2005, p. 221.
  23. ^ a b c Jones, Martindale & Morris 1992, p. 316.
  24. ^ Drinkwater 1998, pp. 271–272.
  25. ^ Snyder 1998, p. 19.
  26. ^ Kulikowski 2000, pp. 328, 332–334.
  27. ^ Sanz-Huesma 2005, p. 315.
  28. ^ Wijnendaele 2018, pp. 261–262.
  29. ^ a b Heather 2005, p. 210.
  30. ^ a b Elton 1999.
  31. ^ Heather 2008, p. 529.
  32. ^ de la Bédoyère 2001, pp. 100, 104.
  33. ^ Drinkwater 1998, p. 277.
  34. ^ a b c Drinkwater 1998, p. 280.
  35. ^ Heather 2005, pp. 210–211.
  36. ^ Kulikowski 2000, pp. 333, 338.
  37. ^ Heather 2005, pp. 219–221.
  38. ^ a b Heather 2005, pp. 220–221.
  39. ^ a b Birley 2005, p. 460.
  40. ^ Wijnendaele 2018, p. 263.
  41. ^ a b Drinkwater 1998, p. 278.
  42. ^ Kulikowski 2000, p. 334.
  43. ^ a b c d Drinkwater 1998, p. 279.
  44. ^ Birley 2005, pp. 458–459.
  45. ^ a b Bury 1889, p. 140.
  46. ^ Jones, Martindale & Morris 1992, p. 113.
  47. ^ Hunt 2008, p. 250.
  48. ^ a b Heinzelmann 1992, p. 244.
  49. ^ Drinkwater 1998, p. 272.
  50. ^ a b Birley 2005, p. 459.
  51. ^ Kulikowski 2000, p. 333.
  52. ^ Kulikowski 2000, pp. 333, 336.
  53. ^ Wijnendaele 2018, pp. 263, 266.
  54. ^ Heather 2005, pp. 221–222.
  55. ^ Mitchell 2007, p. 93.
  56. ^ Heather 2005, pp. 222–223.
  57. ^ Heather 2005, pp. 197, 223–225.
  58. ^ Kulikowski 2000, pp. 335–337.
  59. ^ Heather 2005, p. 225.
  60. ^ a b Ward-Perkins 2006, p. 44.
  61. ^ a b c d Heather 2005, p. 237.
  62. ^ Heather 2005, pp. 223–225.
  63. ^ Drinkwater 1998, p. 281.
  64. ^ Kulikowski 2000, p. 337.
  65. ^ Kulikowski 2000, pp. 337–339.
  66. ^ a b Drinkwater 1998, p. 283.
  67. ^ a b Bury 1889, p. 143.
  68. ^ Thompson 1977, pp. 306, 315.
  69. ^ Thompson 1977, pp. 306–309.
  70. ^ Higham 1992, pp. 71–72.
  71. ^ Thompson 1977, p. 310.
  72. ^ Kulikowski 2000, p. 39.
  73. ^ Burns 1994, p. 244.
  74. ^ Kulikowski 2000, p. 339.
  75. ^ Kulikowski 2000, pp. 339–340.
  76. ^ Drinkwater 1998, p. 285.
  77. ^ Bury 1889, p. 144.
  78. ^ Drinkwater 1998, p. 287.
  79. ^ a b Heather 2005, p. 254.
  80. ^ Heather 2008, pp. 247, 513.
  81. ^ Heather 2005, pp. 236, 241–242, 245, 251–257.
  82. ^ Thompson 1977, p. 311.
  83. ^ Curley 1994, p. 34.
  84. ^ Ashe 1996, pp. 98–99.

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  • Snyder, Christopher A. (2003). The Britons. Malden: Blackwell Publishing. ISBN 978-0-6312-2260-6.
  • Thompson, E. A. (1977). "Britain, A.D. 406–410". Britannia. 8: 303–318. doi:10.2307/525904. ISSN 0068-113X. JSTOR 525904. S2CID 161802945.
  • Ward-Perkins, Bryan (2006). The Fall of Rome and the End of Civilisation. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-1928-0728-1.
  • Wijnendaele, Jeroen W. P. (2018). ""Dagli altari alla polvere." Alaric, Constantine III, and the Downfall of Stilicho". Journal of Ancient History. 6 (2): 260–277. doi:10.1515/jah-2018-0012. OCLC 7938682414. S2CID 165726112.
Regnal titles
Preceded by Western Roman emperor
407–411
with Honorius
Succeeded by
Honorius
Political offices
Preceded by
Anicius Auchenius Bassus
Flavius Philippus
Roman consul
409
with Honorius and Theodosius II
Succeeded by
Varanes
Tertullus
Legendary titles
Vacant
Title last held by
Gracianus Municeps
King of Britain
407–411
Succeeded by

constantine, western, roman, emperor, confused, with, constantius, constantine, byzantine, emperor, constantine, latin, flavius, claudius, constantinus, died, shortly, before, september, common, roman, soldier, declared, emperor, roman, britain, established, h. Not to be confused with Constantius III or Constantine III Byzantine emperor Constantine III Latin Flavius Claudius Constantinus died shortly before 18 September 411 was a common Roman soldier who was declared emperor in Roman Britain in 407 and established himself in Gaul He was recognised as co emperor of the Roman Empire from 409 until 411 Constantine IIICoin of Constantine IIIRoman emperor in the West Reign407 411PredecessorGratianSuccessorHonoriusAlongsideHonorius 409 411 Constans II 409 411 Died411 before 18 September IssueConstans IIJulianNamesFlavius Claudius ConstantinusReligionNicene ChristianityConstantine rose to power from within the field army of Roman Britain and was acclaimed emperor in early 407 He promptly moved to Gaul modern France taking all of the mobile troops from Britain with their commander Gerontius to confront bands of Germanic invaders who had crossed the Rhine the previous winter With a mixture of fighting and diplomacy Constantine stabilised the situation and established control over Gaul and Hispania modern Spain and Portugal establishing his capital at Arles The sitting emperor of the Western Roman Empire Honorius sent an army under Sarus the Goth to expel Constantine s forces After initial victories Sarus was repulsed In Hispania Honorius s relatives rose and expelled Constantine s administration An army under the general Gerontius was sent to deal with this and Constantine s authority was re established In early 409 Honorius recognised Constantine as co emperor Constantine in turn raised his own oldest son to co emperor as Constans II In 409 Gerontius rebelled proclaimed his client Maximus emperor and incited barbarian groups in Gaul to rise up Constans was sent to quash the revolt but was defeated and withdrew to Arles Meanwhile Constantine invaded northern Italy but his plan failed and he also pulled back to Arles In 410 Constans was sent to Hispania again Gerontius had strengthened his army with Germanic tribesmen and defeated Constans the latter retreated north and was defeated again and killed at Vienne early in 411 Gerontius then besieged Constantine in Arles Honorius appointed a new general Flavius Constantius who arrived at Arles while Gerontius was outside the city Much of Gerontius s army deserted to Constantius who took over the siege A force attempting to relieve Constantine was ambushed Constantine abdicated took holy orders and promised his life surrendered Constantius had lied Constantine was killed and his head presented to Honorius on a pole Contents 1 Background 2 Life 2 1 Rise 2 2 Co emperor 2 3 Decline 2 4 Fall 3 Aftermath 4 Legend 5 Notes citations and sources 5 1 Notes 5 2 Citations 5 3 SourcesBackground EditFurther information Fall of the Western Roman Empire The Western and Eastern Roman Empires at the death of Theodosius I in 395 Following the death of the Roman emperor Theodosius I in 395 the Roman Empire was divided between his two sons Arcadius became emperor of the Eastern Roman Empire and ten year old Honorius of the Western 1 Honorius was underage and the leading general Stilicho became hugely influential and the de facto commander in chief of the Roman armies in the west 2 During this period Roman Britain was suffering raids by the Scoti Saxons and Picts Sometime between 396 and 398 Stilicho is said by contemporary poet and speech writer Claudian to have ordered a campaign against the Picts 3 probably a naval campaign intended to suppress their seaborne raids on the east coast of Roman Britain 4 He may also have ordered campaigns against the Scoti and Saxons 5 Other interpretations suggest it went badly or that troops defending Roman Britain defeated a Pictish invasion without external support 6 This is the last recorded Roman military campaign in Britain 7 Stilicho sent funds to strengthen the defences along Hadrian s Wall and the coastal defences at about the same time 8 In 401 or 402 Stilicho needed military manpower for wars with the Visigoths and the Ostrogoths and so stripped Hadrian s Wall of troops 5 9 10 The year 402 is the last date from which Roman coinage is found in large quantities in Britain suggesting the Empire was no longer paying the troops who remained 10 Meanwhile the Picts Saxons and Scoti continued their raids which may have increased in scope In 405 the Irish king Niall of the Nine Hostages is described as having raided along the southern coast of Britain 11 Both the Eastern and Western Empires were suffering from incursions of large groups from Germanic tribes whom the Romans referred to generically as barbarians In 406 a group of Alans and Goths led by Radagaisus invaded Italy The group included women and children and is estimated to have been 90 000 100 000 strong of whom more than 20 000 were fighting men For six months they devastated northern Italy capturing and sacking several cities After concentrating his forces Stilicho caught the Goths while they were besieging Florentia modern Florence and defeated them at the Battle of Faesulae 12 000 prisoners joined the Roman army and so many captives were sold that the market in slaves collapsed The Western Empire s problems with barbarian intruders were far from over 12 13 Life EditLittle is known of Flavius Claudius Constantinus before he was declared emperor and took the regnal name Constantine His date and place of birth are unknown as is his marital status He had two sons although their names prior to being given more regal sounding ones are likewise unknown Regarding his personal habits one fifth century historian described him as a glutton and another considered that his major flaw was being inconstant in his policies 14 Rise Edit In 406 the approximately 6 000 troops of the Roman field army based in Roman Britain were dissatisfied note 1 16 17 They had not been paid for several years a large contingent had left to fight on the continent four years earlier and had not returned the coastal defences had been dismantled to form the new field army and their commander had been replaced 18 19 They revolted and determined to choose their own leader Their first choice was a man named Marcus whom they appointed emperor After a short period unhappy with his performance they killed him and appointed Gratian He also failed to meet the troops expectations and was killed after four months 20 On 31 December 406 several tribes of barbarian invaders including the Vandals Sueves and Alans crossed the Rhine perhaps near Mainz and overran the Roman defensive works in a successful invasion of the Western Roman Empire note 2 21 22 Hearing of the Germanic invasion the Roman military in Britain was desperate for some sense of security in a world that seemed to be rapidly falling apart They next chose as their leader a man named after the famed emperor of the early fourth century Constantine the Great who had himself risen to power through a military coup in Britain Flavius Claudius Constantinus 23 24 was a common soldier not an officer and early in 407 possibly February his fellows acclaimed him as emperor 23 25 26 The modern historian Francisco Sanz Huesma differs and proposes that Constantine was a skilled politician who engineered the three acclamations with the successful intention of eventually raising himself to imperial power 27 Rebellion in Roman Britain was not unusual a contemporary described it as a province rich in usurpers It was on the periphery of the Empire and there was a common view that it was overlooked in terms of resources and patronage 28 Such revolts were usually short lived Constantine was uncommon in both establishing a lasting power base and in successfully exporting his rebellion to the mainland 29 Constantine moved quickly he appointed two officers already in Gaul modern France as generals Justinianus and Nebiogastes instructing them to seize Arles and the passes which controlled traffic to and from Italy He crossed the Channel at Bononia modern Boulogne taking with him all of the 6 000 or so mobile troops left in Britain and their commander the general Gerontius This denuded Roman Britain of front line military protection and explains the disappearance of the legions in the early fifth century 30 31 32 Constantine travelled to Lyon where he set up his headquarters and commenced minting coins in his own name 33 The Roman Army of Gaul declared for him 29 followed by the civilian administration in Hispania modern Spain and Portugal 34 The central Roman authorities did not respond to the Germanic invasion and Constantine s forces got the better of at least one confrontation with the Vandals Constantine also negotiated agreements with the Germanic groupings of the Franks Alamanni and the Burgundians thus securing the line of the Rhine The main Vandal force and their allies moved into northern Gaul modern Belgium 35 36 Roman Gaul at the time of Constantine The Western Roman emperor Honorius and his commander in chief Stilicho were in conflict with the Eastern Roman Empire and allied to a large force of Visigoths under Alaric The relationship with the Visigoths was shaky they were demanding land or money for their services An agreement was reached for a joint West Roman Visigoth army to threaten the Eastern Empire to extort land from it which would then be given to the Visigoths This manoeuvre was supposed to commence in May or June 407 37 By then the Vandals and their allies had broken into Gaul where Constantine had control of the army and was claiming the imperial throne Sending a large Western Roman force to the east would have left Italy open to invasion by one or both of these groups and so the offensive was cancelled 38 Instead a small army led by Sarus the Goth was sent west to put down Constantine s revolt while Stilicho s main army waited on events 38 Sarus defeated the army commanded by Justinianus in a pitched battle killing Justinianus Constantine personally moved against Sarus but was besieged in Valence 39 40 Nebiogastes attempted to negotiate and was killed by Sarus 41 42 Another army led by Gerontius and Edobichus and largely made up of freshly recruited Franks and Almannics arrived to relieve Valence after a week of siege Sarus was forced to retreat into Italy Central control had deteriorated to the extent that Sarus needed to buy his passage through the Alpine passes from the brigand Bagaudae who controlled them 43 With this success Constantine established control over most of Gaul and the Alpine passes into Italy 44 Co emperor Edit Constantine III portrayed on a siliqua The reverse celebrates his victories By May 408 Constantine had captured Arles and made it his capital 45 taking over the existing imperial administration and officials and appointing Apollinaris as chief minister with the title of praetorian prefect 41 46 Heros was installed as a pliant archbishop of Arles in spite of local opposition note 3 48 Constantine commenced minting large quantities of good quality coins at Arles possibly using bullion seized from Sarus s loot during his hasty retreat and made a show of being an equal of both the Western and Eastern Emperors 43 Constantine s oldest son had entered a monastery and was a monk at the time his father rebelled but he was summoned to the new imperial court Constantine appointed him to the position of caesar a senior formal position that also recognised him as heir apparent and gave him the imperial sounding name of Constans 49 50 He was swiftly married so a dynasty could be founded 51 Early in 408 he was sent with Gerontius into Hispania 30 43 Hispania was a stronghold of the House of Theodosius 45 but on Constantine s initial landing on the continent Honorius s relatives and partisans there had been either unwilling or militarily unable to oppose his assumption of control When Sarus seemed on the verge of ending Constantine s revolt two members of Honorius s family Didymus and Verinianus rebelled and overthrew Constantine s regime in Hispania When Sarus withdrew to Italy the knowledge of the large new army assembling at Ticinum modern Pavia with the intention of shortly engaging Constantine encouraged them to persist and even to attempt to seal the Pyrenean passes 34 Constantine feared that Honorius s cousins would organise an attack from that direction while troops under Sarus and Stilicho attacked him from Italy in a pincer manoeuvre He struck first at Hispania 43 Constans and Gerontius s army forced a pass and was reinforced Constans established himself at Saragossa and rebuilt the civilian administration Gerontius took the army and decisively defeated Honorius s supporters at a battle in Lusitania where Didymus and Verinianus were captured With Hispania back under Constantine s control Constans left his new wife at Saragossa and returned to Arles to report to his father Didymus and Verinianus accompanied him and were executed as civilian rebels which further soured relations with Honorius 34 52 By early 408 the Visigoths were running out of patience with Stilicho They moved from Epirus modern Albania to Noricum modern Austria and demanded a payment of 4 000 pounds 1 800 kg of gold on pain of their invading Italy Honorius and the Roman Senate were prepared to resist but Stilicho persuaded them to approve the payment to allow him to concentrate on the situation in Gaul 22 He had assembled an army at Ticinum with which to do this It is possible that the plan was for the Visigoths to accompany this force as military allies 53 On 1 May the emperor of the Eastern Empire Arcadius died leaving a seven year old heir Theodosius II A disagreement arose between Stilicho and Honorius who each wished to travel to Constantinople the capital of the Eastern Empire to represent the Western Empire s interests Stilicho got his way he was to leave for the east while Honorius remained in Ravenna the capital of the Western Empire 54 55 But a rift between him and Honorius was obvious The Roman establishment led by the senior bureaucrat Olympius worked to oppose Stilicho by spreading rumours that he wished to travel east to depose Theodosius and set his own son on the throne On 13 August Honorius was formally reviewing the army about to set out from Ticinum against Constantine With him were many of the senior officers and officials of the Western Empire The troops mutinied slaughtering Stilicho s supporters but respecting the person of the Emperor Stilicho sought sanctuary then surrendered and was executed on 22 August 56 A siliqua of Constans II Olympius reversed the policy of making a massive payment to the Visigoths and the native parts of the Army of Italy started slaughtering Goths especially their fellow soldiers and their wives and children The latter living in Italian cities sometimes overtly as hostages for their husbands and fathers good behaviour were easy targets Those Goths who could fled north and joined Alaric greatly increasing his fighting strength Alaric promptly crossed the Alps and headed south through Italy devastating the countryside He camped his army outside Rome and demanded a huge ransom 57 Late in 408 Constantine sent an embassy to Ravenna Needing to placate him Honorius acknowledged him as co emperor and sent a purple robe as formal recognition The pair were joint consuls in 409 At around this time Constantine raised Constans to the position of co emperor theoretically equal in rank to Honorius or Theodosius as well as to Constantine 58 59 60 With the Visigoths deep in Italy and unopposed Olympius s influence ended note 4 and a new chief minister Jovius entered into peace negotiations 62 but Honorius continued to refuse to reach an agreement with Alaric The Visigoths in retaliation continued to roam across Italy and extort vast sums from the city of Rome Alaric elevated his own emperor the senator Priscus Attalus to no avail On 24 August 410 the Visigoths entered Rome and pillaged the city for three days 63 Decline Edit Coin of Constantine with the legend fl cl constantinus aug In spring or summer 409 Apollinaris was replaced as praetorian prefect by Decimus Rusticus and Constans was sent back to Hispania Either before Constans left Arles or while he was travelling Gerontius rebelled proclaiming his client Maximus as emperor Maximus was an important figure in his own right but it was clear he was controlled by Gerontius 39 64 They set up court at Tarraco modern Tarragona Gerontius was concerned that he would not be able to withstand the military force Constantine could bring to bear and so attempted to incite the barbarians who had entered Gaul late in 406 against Constantine These had been quiescent in the north of the territory but now set off across Gaul for the rich territories of Aquitaine and Narbonensis modern south west and southern France They spread devastation across these areas much to the horror of the populace Concentrating on the threat from Constans Gerontius weakened his garrisons in the Pyrenean passes and in autumn 409 much of the barbarian force entered Hispania 65 66 Eventually Gerontius was able to reach a modus operandi with some of these groups whereby they supplied him with military forces which enabled him to take the offensive against Constantine 66 From 408 Saxon pirates raided Roman Britain extensively undeterred by the totally inadequate force which Constantine had left 67 68 The locals organised their own defences so successfully that they defeated the Saxons in 409 69 Distressed that Constantine had failed to defend them the Roman inhabitants of Britain rebelled and expelled his officials 50 60 70 accepting that henceforth they would have to look to their own defence 19 Inspired by the example of Roman Britain later that year the Bagaudae of Armorica modern Brittany also expelled Constantine s officials and declared independence 71 Constantine sent a further embassy to Ravenna which achieved little but Constantine s emissary Jovius did suborn one of Honorius s senior generals Allobich In spring 410 Constantine led an army into northern Italy It is possible that he claimed he intended to assist Honorius against the Visigoths It is also likely he was counting on support from Allobich When he reached the River Po he heard wrongly that Allobich was dead which caused him to abandon his mission and withdraw to Arles 72 Meanwhile Constans with an army commanded by a general named Justus attempted to subdue Gerontius He failed although no details are known and returned to Arles in spring 410 At about the same time Constantine returned from his abortive invasion of Italy Given the difficulties the Visigoths were creating in Italy Gerontius was considered a greater threat than Honorius 73 74 Edobichus was again sent north to raise troops from the Franks while Constans returned to confront Gerontius with a fresh army Events are again unclear but it seems likely that Gerontius was simultaneously advancing on Arles The two armies clashed and Constans was defeated He fell back to the north with what was left of his command hoping to be reinforced by Edobichus But Gerontius caught him at Vienne probably early in 411 defeated his army and killed Constans Gerontius s army then marched on Arles and besieged Constantine 75 Fall Edit Solidus of Constantius III In 411 Honorius appointed a new general Flavius Constantius who took the Army of Italy over the Alps into Gaul in another attempt to suppress Constantine 61 Constantius arrived at Arles while Gerontius was outside the city Many of Gerontius s troops deserted to Constantius and Gerontius retreated to Hispania with the remainder There in a hopeless position Gerontius committed suicide 76 Constantius s army took over the siege Meanwhile Edobichus raised troops in northern Gaul among the Franks and Alamanni 67 61 combined them with those of the Army of Gaul still loyal to Constantine and marched to Constantine s assistance Constantius defeated this force in an ambush 77 Constantine his hopes fading after the troops guarding the Rhine abandoned him to support yet another claimant to the imperial throne the Gallo Roman Jovinus surrendered to Constantius along with his surviving son Julian 78 Despite a promise of safe passage and Constantine s assumption of clerical office Constantius imprisoned the former soldier and had him and Julian beheaded in either August or September 411 23 His head was mounted on a pole and presented to Emperor Honorius on 18 September 61 It was later displayed outside Carthage as was that of Julian note 5 79 Aftermath EditConstantius withdrew in the face of Jovinus s forces The modern historian Peter Heather describes the Roman Army of Gaul as emerging from Constantine s wars in tatters In 413 a Visigoth army under Athaulf who was now allied with Honorius suppressed Jovinus s revolt 80 Constantius took over Stilicho s role as the main power in the Western Empire and generalissimo He was broadly able to recover the situation for the central authorities and to enable reconstruction Gaul was pacified the rebellion in Amorica was quashed and the area brought back under Roman control the barbarians in Hispania were in large part subdued and the Visigoths were settled on land in Aquitaine as Roman allies Roman rule never returned to Britain after Constantine stripped its defences In 417 Constantius married Honorius s sister Galla Placidia On 8 February 421 Honorius made Constantius co emperor under himself Constantius reigned only seven months dying on 2 September Honorius then ruled alone until his death in 423 whereupon Constantius s son Valentinian III assumed the throne 81 82 Legend EditConstantine III is also known as Constantine II of Britain He has been associated with the Constantine found in Geoffrey of Monmouth s popular and imaginative Historia Regum Britanniae who comes to power following Gracianus Municeps s reign Geoffrey s Constantine through his son Uther Pendragon becomes the grandfather of the legendary King Arthur Other sources explicitly state that Constantine III is the grandfather of Arthur 83 84 Notes citations and sources Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Constantine III usurper Notes Edit The ancient historian Zosimus gave the army s main features as insolence and irascibility 15 It may have been a transfer of troops from the Rhine frontier which had long been quiet to the Channel to guard against a possible invasion by Marcus or Gratian that permitted the invaders to successfully enter the empire 18 After Constantine s death Heros was deposed and exiled and replaced by Patroclus 47 48 Constantius had Olympius clubbed to death in late 410 or early 411 61 In 414 the heads of Jovinus and his son were also to be seen at Carthage 79 Citations Edit Mitchell 2007 p 89 Mitchell 2007 p 91 Snyder 2003 p 62 Frere 1987 p 355 a b Jones amp Mattingly 1990 p 307 Miller 1975 pp 141 144 Mattingly 2006 p 238 Hollway 2022 p 175 Snyder 2003 pp 62 63 a b Snyder 1998 p 18 Frere 1987 p 357 Wijnendaele 2018 p 261 Heather 2005 pp 198 199 205 206 Jones Martindale amp Morris 1992 pp 316 317 Wijnendaele 2018 p 262 Burns 1994 pp 212 213 Drinkwater 1998 p 275 a b Drinkwater 1998 p 271 a b de la Bedoyere 2001 p 100 Heather 2005 p 209 Bury 1889 p 138 a b Heather 2005 p 221 a b c Jones Martindale amp Morris 1992 p 316 Drinkwater 1998 pp 271 272 Snyder 1998 p 19 Kulikowski 2000 pp 328 332 334 Sanz Huesma 2005 p 315 Wijnendaele 2018 pp 261 262 a b Heather 2005 p 210 a b Elton 1999 Heather 2008 p 529 de la Bedoyere 2001 pp 100 104 Drinkwater 1998 p 277 a b c Drinkwater 1998 p 280 Heather 2005 pp 210 211 Kulikowski 2000 pp 333 338 Heather 2005 pp 219 221 a b Heather 2005 pp 220 221 a b Birley 2005 p 460 Wijnendaele 2018 p 263 a b Drinkwater 1998 p 278 Kulikowski 2000 p 334 a b c d Drinkwater 1998 p 279 Birley 2005 pp 458 459 a b Bury 1889 p 140 Jones Martindale amp Morris 1992 p 113 Hunt 2008 p 250 a b Heinzelmann 1992 p 244 Drinkwater 1998 p 272 a b Birley 2005 p 459 Kulikowski 2000 p 333 Kulikowski 2000 pp 333 336 Wijnendaele 2018 pp 263 266 Heather 2005 pp 221 222 Mitchell 2007 p 93 Heather 2005 pp 222 223 Heather 2005 pp 197 223 225 Kulikowski 2000 pp 335 337 Heather 2005 p 225 a b Ward Perkins 2006 p 44 a b c d Heather 2005 p 237 Heather 2005 pp 223 225 Drinkwater 1998 p 281 Kulikowski 2000 p 337 Kulikowski 2000 pp 337 339 a b Drinkwater 1998 p 283 a b Bury 1889 p 143 Thompson 1977 pp 306 315 Thompson 1977 pp 306 309 Higham 1992 pp 71 72 Thompson 1977 p 310 Kulikowski 2000 p 39 Burns 1994 p 244 Kulikowski 2000 p 339 Kulikowski 2000 pp 339 340 Drinkwater 1998 p 285 Bury 1889 p 144 Drinkwater 1998 p 287 a b Heather 2005 p 254 Heather 2008 pp 247 513 Heather 2005 pp 236 241 242 245 251 257 Thompson 1977 p 311 Curley 1994 p 34 Ashe 1996 pp 98 99 Sources Edit Ashe Geoffrey 1996 Constantine 1 In Lacy Norris J ed The New Arthurian Encyclopedia New York Garland p 98 ISBN 978 1 5686 5432 4 Retrieved 21 June 2022 de la Bedoyere Guy 2001 Eagles Over Britannia The Roman Army in Britain Stroud Tempus ISBN 978 0 7524 1923 7 Birley Anthony 2005 The Roman Government in Britain Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 1992 5237 4 Burns T S 1994 Barbarians Within the Gates of Rome A Study of Roman Military Policy and the Barbarians ca 375 425 Bloomington Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 2533 1288 4 Bury J B 1889 A History of the Later Roman Empire from Arcadius to Irene Vol 1 London New York Macmillan OCLC 22138662 Curley Michael J 1994 Geoffrey of Monmouth New York Twayne ISBN 978 0 8057 7055 1 Drinkwater J F 1998 The Usurpers Constantine III 407 411 and Jovinus 411 413 Britannia 29 269 298 doi 10 2307 526818 JSTOR 526818 S2CID 161846385 Elton Hugh 1999 Constantine III 407 411 A D De Imperatoribus Romanis Florida International University Retrieved 17 October 2021 Frere Sheppard Sunderland 1987 Britannia A History of Roman Britain 3rd revised ed London Routledge amp Kegan Paul ISBN 978 0 7102 1215 3 Heather Peter 2005 The Fall of the Roman Empire Basingstoke and Oxford Pan Macmillan ISBN 978 0 3339 8914 2 Heather Peter 2008 1998 Goths and Huns c 320 425 In Cameron Averil Garnsey Peter eds The Cambridge Ancient History The Late Empire A D 337 425 Vol XIII Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 487 515 ISBN 978 0 5213 0200 5 Heinzelmann M 1992 The Affair of Hilary of Arles 445 and Gallo Roman Identity in the Fifth Century In Drinkwater John Elton Hugh eds Fifth Century Gaul A Crisis of Identity Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 239 251 ISBN 978 0 5214 1485 2 Higham Nicholas 1992 Rome Britain and the Anglo Saxons London B A Seaby ISBN 978 1 8526 4022 4 Hollway Don 2022 At the Gates of Rome The Fall of the Eternal City AD 410 Oxford Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 978 1 4728 4996 0 Hunt David 2008 1998 The Church as a Public Institution In Cameron Averil Garnsey Peter eds The Cambridge Ancient History The Late Empire A D 337 425 Vol XIII Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 238 276 ISBN 978 0 5213 0200 5 Jones Arnold Hugh Martin Martindale John Robert amp Morris John 1992 The Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire Vol 2 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 5212 0159 9 Jones Barri Mattingly David 1990 An Atlas of Roman Britain Cambridge Blackwell Publishers published 2007 ISBN 978 1 8421 7067 0 Kulikowski Michael 2000 Barbarians in Gaul Usurpers in Britain Britannia 31 325 334 doi 10 2307 526925 JSTOR 526925 S2CID 162663612 Mattingly David 2006 An Imperial Possession Britain in the Roman Empire London Penguin Books published 2007 ISBN 978 0 1401 4822 0 Miller M 1975 Stilicho s Pictish War Britannia 6 141 144 doi 10 2307 525995 JSTOR 525995 S2CID 154735147 Mitchell Stephen 2007 A History of the Later Roman Empire Malden Blackwell ISBN 978 1 4051 0856 0 Sanz Huesma Francisco 2005 Usurpaciones en Britania 406 407 hipotesis sobre sus causas y protagonistas Usurpations in Britain 406 407 Hypotheses Regarding Their Causes and Protagonists Gerion in Spanish 23 315 324 Snyder Christopher A 1998 An Age of Tyrants Britain and the Britons A D 400 600 University Park Pennsylvania State University Press ISBN 978 0 2710 1780 8 Snyder Christopher A 2003 The Britons Malden Blackwell Publishing ISBN 978 0 6312 2260 6 Thompson E A 1977 Britain A D 406 410 Britannia 8 303 318 doi 10 2307 525904 ISSN 0068 113X JSTOR 525904 S2CID 161802945 Ward Perkins Bryan 2006 The Fall of Rome and the End of Civilisation Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 1928 0728 1 Wijnendaele Jeroen W P 2018 Dagli altari alla polvere Alaric Constantine III and the Downfall of Stilicho Journal of Ancient History 6 2 260 277 doi 10 1515 jah 2018 0012 OCLC 7938682414 S2CID 165726112 Regnal titlesPreceded byHonorius Western Roman emperor407 411with Honorius Succeeded byHonoriusPolitical officesPreceded byAnicius Auchenius BassusFlavius Philippus Roman consul409with Honorius and Theodosius II Succeeded byVaranesTertullusLegendary titlesVacantTurmoilTitle last held byGracianus Municeps King of Britain407 411 Succeeded byConstans Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Constantine III Western Roman emperor amp oldid 1152770756, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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