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  1. www.wikiwand.com › en › MinervinaMinervina - Wikiwand

    The story of Minervina is quite similar to that of Constantine's mother Helena. Constantine's father later had to divorce her for political reasons, specifically, to marry Flavia Maximiana Theodora, the daughter of Maximian, in order to secure his alliance with his new father-in-law.

  2. Constantine made his mother, Helena (Constantius’s wife or concubine), empress when his army proclaimed him emperor in 306 CE. Constantine himself had two wives: Minerva (or Minervina), who bore Constantine his firstborn child, Crispus; and Fausta, the daughter of the previous Western emperor who bore him three sons.

  3. Crispus (born c. 305—died 326, Pola, Venetia) was the eldest son of Constantine the Great who was executed under mysterious circumstances on his father’s orders. Crispus’s mother, Minerva (or Minervina), was divorced by Constantine in 307. Crispus received his education from the Christian writer Lactantius.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
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  5. Minervina (fl. 290–307) Roman consort. Name variations: Flourished around 290 to 307; consort, possibly 1st wife, of Constantine I the Great, Roman emperor (r. 306–337); children: Crispus (b. around 305); possibly Constantina (c. 321–c. 354).

  6. www.biographies.net › biography › minervinaBiography of Minervina

    Who is Minervina? Minervina was the first wife of Constantine the Great. He married her in 303 AD, and the couple had one son, Crispus. When Constantine wanted to strengthen his bonds with the other Tetrarchs, in 307 AD he set aside Minervina and married Fausta, daughter of Augustus Maximian.

  7. Sep 14, 2014 · That was how Minervina Dario-Singson, the matriarch behind the successful brood of Singsons from Candon, Ilocos Sur, was greeted by her father’s arms right after she was born 95 years ago.

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