Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Constantine was a usurping Roman emperor who was recognized as coruler by the Western emperor Honorius in 409. Proclaimed emperor by his army in Britain in 407, Constantine crossed to the European continent with a force of British troops; by the end of the year he controlled eastern Gaul. An army.

  2. Oct 4, 2023 · Biography. Constantine the Great was born on February 27, 272 AD, in the city of Naissus, in modern-day Niš, Serbia. He was the son of Flavius Valerius Constantius, an army officer, and Helena, a humble innkeeper’s daughter. His early life was marked by frequent moves within the Roman Empire due to his father’s military assignments.

  3. Constantine I - Christian Emperor, Edict of Milan, Conversion: Shortly after the defeat of Maxentius, Constantine met Licinius at Mediolanum (modern Milan) to confirm a number of political and dynastic arrangements. A product of this meeting has become known as the Edict of Milan, which extended toleration to the Christians and restored any personal and corporate property that had been ...

  4. CurrentMagazine1596. Was Constantine a good emperor? Why or why not? It seems hard to tell if he was simply deemed "the Great" retroactively by Christian scholars that wanted to glorify him, when a lot of the Roman populace suffered under his reign. But he also switched to a more defensible capital at Constantinople and reunited the empire.

  5. May 31, 2017 · The Roman emperor, Constantine the Great (c. 272/280-337), is commonly viewed with a positive light. This perspective is likely deserved—the man achieved a lot of impressive feats in his lifetime. He ended Christian persecution in the Roman Empire and was the only survivor in the civil war between the leaders of the Roman Tetrarchy.

  6. Constantine II (emperor) Constantine II ( Latin: Flavius Claudius Constantinus; 316 – 340) was Roman emperor from 337 to 340. Son of Constantine the Great and co-emperor alongside his brothers, his attempt to exert his perceived rights of primogeniture led to his death in a failed invasion of Italy in 340.

  7. Apr 4, 2021 · Constantine the Great, born in Naissus, Upper Moesia, around 27 February AD 272 or 273, was a Roman emperor. He was the son of Helena, who was an innkeeper’s daughter, and Constantius Chlorus. The exact details of his parents’ marital status are uncertain, leading to the possibility that Constantine might have been an illegitimate child.

  1. People also search for