Aristaenetus (consul 404)

Aristaenetus (c. AD 365 – after AD 404) was a Roman politician who was appointed consul in AD 404 alongside the western emperor Honorius.

Biography

Aristaenetus was the son of Bassianus (a notarius in the eastern court around the year 371) and Prisca. His grandfather was Thalassius, the praetorian prefect of the East.[1] Possibly a pagan, he was related to the rhetorician Libanius, under whom Aristaenetus was a pupil.

Aristaenetus was a supporter of Flavius Rufinus, and through his influence Aristaenetus was made praefectus urbi of Constantinople in the second half of AD 392.[2] He also visited Antioch for some purpose in AD 393.[3] In AD 404, he was made consul posterior in the East alongside the emperor Honorius, although his position was not recognized in the West by the power behind the western court, the magister utriusque militiae, Stilicho.[4]

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gollark: But there is absolutely no chance that they have developed something 3 times faster at single-threaded workloads than the already rather good M1.
gollark: I think they have 8 high performance cores versus 4 or so before, so it is at least plausibly somewhat over twice as powerful at that.
gollark: That's obviously not true except possibly in multicore.

References

  1. Martindale & Jones, pgs. 124-125; 906
  2. Alan Cameron, Jacqueline Long, Lee Sherry, Barbarians and Politics at the Court of Arcadius (1993), pg. 180
  3. Martindale & Jones, pg. 125
  4. Burns, Thomas S., Barbarians Within the Gates of Rome: A Study of Roman Military Policy and the Barbarians, Ca. 375-425 A.D. (1994), pg. 195

Sources

  • Martindale, J. R.; Jones, A. H. M, The Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire, Vol. I AD 260-395, Cambridge University Press (1971)
Political offices
Preceded by
Flavius Theodosius Augustus,
Flavius Rumoridus
Consul of the Roman Empire
404
with Flavius Honorius Augustus VI
Succeeded by
Flavius Stilicho II,
Flavius Anthemius
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