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  2. 5 days ago · Retired general; proclaimed eastern emperor by Gratian. Ruler of the entire empire after Valentinian II's death 11 January 346/347 – 17 January 395 (aged 48/49)

  3. 2 days ago · Valentinian II fled to the Eastern Roman Empire, and convinced Theodosius I to invade the Western Roman Empire and restore him to the Western Roman throne, which he did in 388. Maximus was defeated in battle near Aquileia, and executed.

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Theodosius_ITheodosius I - Wikipedia

    1 day ago · During his earlier reign, Theodosius ruled the eastern provinces, while the west was overseen by the emperors Gratian and Valentinian II, whose sister he married. Theodosius sponsored several measures to improve his capital and main residence, Constantinople , most notably his expansion of the Forum Tauri , which became the biggest public ...

  5. 4 days ago · But his prescribed work was ended. The third of the rivers and fountains of waters had been made bitter by his means. An embassy from the Emperor Valentinian and the Roman bishop Leo sufficed to deprecate his wrath. He suddenly withdrew from Italy, recrossed the Danube, and the very next year, A.D. 453, was cut off by apoplexy. The meteor was ...

  6. 4 days ago · There are in the Ashmolean Museum 22 coins described as having been found at South Lawn (1 Constantine II, 11 Constans, 2 Constantius II, 2 Valentinian I, 2 Valens, 2 uncertain Theodosian, 2 of uncertain reign): and there were 22 when Mr. E. T. Leeds examined the South Lawn material in November 1923.

  7. 5 days ago · In 2002, excavations at the Antinoeion uncovered several Egyptianizing sculptures and architectural fragments, including a statue of the pharaoh Ramses II (ruled 12791213 BC), a small head with pharaonic headgear, and a statue of Horus wearing the double crown of Egypt.

  8. 4 days ago · Bradbury believes that the first two Capetian kings, Hugh (987–96) and Robert II (996–1031), were not as weak as many historians have depicted them (p. 95). Their kingdom continued to grow in wealth and power, and they controlled many major dioceses as well as abbeys.

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