CONSTANTINE I, Roman Emperor

or Constantine the Greatkŏnˈstəntēn, –tīn, 288?–337, Roman emperor, b. Naissus (present-day Niš, Serbia and Montenegro). He was the son of Constantius I and Helena and was named in full Flavius Valerius Constantinus.

Rise to Power

When his father was made caesar (subemperor), Constantine was left at the court of the emperor Diocletian, where he was under the watchful eye of Galerius, who was caesar with Constantius. When Diocletian and Maximian resigned in 305, Constantius and Galerius became emperors.

Constantius requested that Constantine be sent to him in Britain, and Galerius reluctantly complied. Constantius died at York the next year. There, his soldiers proclaimed Constantine emperor, but much rivalry for the vacated office ensued. In Italy, Maxentius, supported by the Romans and by his father Maximian, vied with Severus and Galerius. Constantine, accepting the lesser title of caesar from Galerius, remained aloof while Maxentius and Maximian defeated Severus and Galerius.

Constantine made an alliance with Maximian, marrying his daughter Fausta and recognizing Maxentius after a fashion. When Maximian, in dispute with his son, fled to Constantine, Constantine received and sheltered him until Maximian, in an attempt to regain the throne, undertook (310) a revolt against Constantine's rule in Gaul. Unsuccessful against Constantine, Maximian was forced to commit suicide.

Constantine, having already declared against Maxentius and ignoring the fact that Galerius had recognized Licinius in the East, now considered himself emperor. When Galerius died in 310, still another claimant to the imperial throne appeared in Maximin (d. 313), who allied himself with Maxentius against the alliance of Licinius and Constantine. While Licinius attacked Maximin, Constantine moved into Italy against Maxentius. The rivals for Italy met (312) at the Milvian or Mulvian Bridge over the Tiber near Rome. Before the battle Constantine, who was already sympathetic toward Christianity, is said by Eusebius of Caesarea to have seen in the sky a flaming cross inscribed with the words, "In this sign thou shalt conquer." He adopted the cross and was victorious. Maxentius was routed and killed. The battle is regarded as a turning point for Christianity.

In 313 Constantine and his fellow emperor, Licinius, met at Milan and there issued the so-called Edict of Milan, confirming Galerius' edict of 309, which stated that Christianity would be tolerated throughout the empire. The edict in effect made Christianity a lawful religion, although it did not, as is sometimes believed, make Christianity the official state religion.

No longer having Maximin to contend with, Licinius challenged Constantine, and a brief struggle followed. Constantine, victorious, took (315) control over Greece and the Balkans, and the uneasy peace that followed lasted until 324, when Licinius again vied with Constantine. This time Licinius lost his throne and ultimately his life.

A Christian Empire

Constantine was now sole ruler of the empire, and in a reign of peace he set about rebuilding the strength of old Rome. Constantine continued to tolerate paganism and even to encourage the imperial cult. At the same time, however, he endeavored to unify and strengthen Christianity.

In 314 he convened a synod at Arles to regulate the Church in the West, and in 325 he convened and presided over a council at Nicaea to deal with the troubles over Arianism (see Nicaea, First Council of). Thus Constantine evolved the idea of the ecumenical council. In 330 he moved the capital to Byzantium, which was rebuilt as Constantinople, a city predominantly Christian and dedicated to the Virgin. He seems to have favored compromise with Arianism, and in 335, in defiance of the Council of Tyre, he exiled St. Athanasius.

As the founder of the Christian empire, Constantine began a new era. He was an absolute ruler, and his reign saw the culmination of the tendency toward despotic rule, centralized bureaucracy, and separation of military and civil powers evolved by Diocletian. Constantine's legal reforms were marked by great humanity, perhaps a result of Christian influence. Though he had done much to unify the empire, at his death Constantine divided it again, providing for his three surviving sons and also to some extent for the sons of his half brother. These nephews were soon killed (though others, notably Julian the Apostate, survived), but complex contests ensued between Constans I, Constantine II, and Constantius II.

Historians differ greatly in their assessments of Constantine's motives and the depth of his Christian conviction. Early Christian writers portray him as a devout convert, although they have difficulty explaining his execution in 320 (on adultery charges) of Crispus, his son by his first wife, and Fausta, his wife. Some later historians see him as a political genius, expediently using Christianity to unify his empire. An intermediate interpretation pictures him as a pagan gradually converted to Christianity (he was baptized on his deathbed), using his new belief for personal ends much as earlier emperors had used the imperial cult.

Bibliography

The chief contemporary historians of Constantine's reign are Lactantius and Eusebius. See also biographies by N. H. Baynes (1931, repr. 1972), L. B. Holsapple (1942), A. H. M. Jones (rev. ed. 1962), J. H. Smith (1971), and F. G. Slaughter (1972); C. B. Coleman, Constantine the Great and Christianity (1914); G. P. Baker, Constantine the Great and the Christian Revolution (1930, repr. 1967).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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...Constantine." Journal of Roman Studies 63 (1973...Timothy D. "The Emperor Constantines Good Friday...Barnes, Timothy D. Constantine and Eusebius . Cambridge...Empire of Diocletian and Constantine . Cambridge, MA...Baynes, Norman H. Constantine the Great and the Christian...Age of the Soldier Emperors: Imperial Rome A...
...approached the Roman frontier, but...Tiridates, Constantine sent his son...refuge with the Romans, but Constantine preferred to...more direct Roman control of Armenia...cede anything, Constantine prepared to...Armenia, the Romans were forced...when the Roman Emperor was killed and...
...subsidy paid by Constantine to the Gothic kings...triumph of the Roman arms of which Eusebius...he says that the Emperor was the first to...acknowledge the Romans as their masters...Sarmatae turned to Constantine and asked for shelter on Roman territory. Some...on the part of Constantine. They were not...
...advance the path that the Roman Empire was to tread, the Emperor Augustus. Just as Constantine had had his mighty...Augustus. Augustus, like Constantine, if we look back on...striking parallels, Constantine is left far behind...achievements of the two Emperors. What Constantine...
...171, with the start of Roman campaigns agamst <ciiii...Aurelius, :llrdrd h.l I 1943): 30ff. C;outrat...autumn: Wolff (199(I), ??. In Von Domaszewskis...Wolff (199()), 17-I ti. 1 19. Perhaps decorated...Conservatori and on the Arch of Constantine. See M. Wegner, 13e...
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...Like all Roman emperors before him, Constantine represented...practices of the Roman imperial...reminders that Constantine was first...foremost a Roman emperor, and a Christian...theologians. As I hope to have...Christian Constantine was by the...reference to the emperors new god...
...universal scope of Roman law: in theory...power. As the emperor could issue decrees...religion. But I would question...practice for granted. I turn now to the...The Jews in the Roman Empire. (33...the Days of the Emperor Justinian, pp...38.) Albert I. Baumgarten...
...Byzas and the pagan emperor Severus) to a...prolapsing of time after Constantine; the patriographic...Law-King, so Constantine as Founder was...pairing the two emperors as builder-creators...patriographic texts pins Constantine into the fabric...city in ways that I believe strongly...retained in East Roman memory as the perfect...
...to Constantine; Geoffreys Constantine, of course, had nothing...25) built by the departing Romans in a final gesture of good...It is a great symbol of Roman culture and of British incapacity...audience would think only of Romans in connection with that wall...though no one says that Constantine the usurper actually built...
...Spiritual Direction in the Roman Catholic Tradition. by...to his declaration, "I live now, not I, but Christ lives in...on the throne, "See, I make all things new...accepted and sanctioned by Emperor Constantine. This acceptance, however...
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...of Constantine, of Roman Britain and of the rise...Europe introduce Britains Roman Emperor, including...Constantinople, the Emperors new capital. The old...Bacchus and traditional Roman legends. Peter Furtado Constantine the Great--Yorks Roman Emperor runs from March 31st...
...Christian Roman Emperor Appropriate...over which I preside...province of Constantine, now in...conversion of Emperor Constantine...Christian emperors. The Christian...25th was a Roman civil holiday...AD 274 by Emperor Aurelian...emblem on Roman coins. Sol...of divine emperors. But despite...later pagan emperors to control...Saturnalia. Constantine, the first Christian emperor, was brought...
...Sculptures: Colossal Head of Emperor Constantine I "The Great". by Colleen Carroll...bust that depicts him. Emperor Constantine I, also known as Constantine the Great, was sole leader of the Roman Empire from 325 until his death...
...on the other Constantine is seen ascending...evidence suggests that Constantine was using the Christian...much as earlier Roman emperors had done with their...intact and that the emperor was justified in...magnificence. Constantine kept himself at...the Church, but I am perhaps a bishop...
Constantine and George II...this column), I can say without...Drakes new book, Constantine and the Bishops...Fredriksen argues that Roman Emperor Constantine converted to Christianity...government (as I pointed out this...
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...SHRINE: A Mosaic of Emperor Constantine, Who Built the Holy...exist. There are, I was to discover...was the Jerusalem I got to know in the...underneaththeHolySepulchre. Roman amphorae are scattered...Sepulchrebuilt by the Emperor Constantine around 326AD. Its...
...Julius Caesar; the Roman Emperor Who Fascinates to...no doubt true, I dont find it particularly...post-Republic Romans, he was worshiped...a line of divine emperors. In Christianized...below Augustus and Constantine. Yet "hardly any...recognition." I think here Mr...within the context of Roman society." Nevertheless...
...with Help from Constantine the Great, the...By 70AD, the Romans under the Emperor Vespasian and...end, when the Roman emperor Constantine the Great adopted...Protestant Zion. I will not cease...until World War I, when all these...
...Former MPs Book on Romans and Religion; Hes...to a Study of the Roman Empire? RACHAEL...the death of the Emperor Julian - the "Goose...come back to you. I was sitting in the...Roman Empire? "I found it so fascinating...so prolific." "I thought I would bring...mother of the Emperor Constantine was Christian because...
...there when the Romans invaded Wales and...same invaders. Roman Emperor Constantine got his Christian...weekend break? If Constantine and his cohorts...Church do so now? I wont be holding...we lost to the Romans once upon a time...
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encyclopedia articles on: Constantine I Roman Emperor  - 36 results

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CONSTANTINE I , Roman emperor or Constantine the Great kon st...tin, 288? 337, Roman emperor, b. Naissus...son of Constantius I and Helena and was...subemperor), Constantine was left at the court of the emperor Diocletian , where...Galerius became emperors. Constantius requested...supported by the Romans and by his father...
CONSTANTINE II , Roman emperor 316 40, Roman emperor, son of Constantine I. When the empire was divided at the death (337) of Constantine I, among the brothers Constantius II, Constans...
MAXIMIN , d. 313, Roman emperor (Galerius Valerius Maximinus), d...himself with Maxentius against Licinius and Constantine ( Constantine I ); Maxentius was crushed by Constantine, and Maximin was defeated by Licinius...
LICINIUS , Roman emperor 250 325, Roman emperor...He allied himself with Constantine I and defeated Maximin...subsequently quarreled with Constantine, who defeated him...resumed in 324, and Constantine defeated Licinius at...
CONSTANTINE THE GREAT see Constantine I , Roman emperor. ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
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