Valentinian II

Valentinian II (Latin: Flavius Valentinianus; 371  15 May 392), was Roman emperor from AD 375 to 392.

Valentinian II
Bust of Valentinian II
Roman emperor
Reign22 November 375 – 15 May 392
PredecessorValentinian I
SuccessorEugenius and Theodosius I
Co-rulersValens (East, 375–378)
Gratian (375–383)
Theodosius I (East, 379–392)
Magnus Maximus (384–388)
Victor (384–388)
Born371
Died15 May 392 (aged 21)
Vienne
Full name
Flavius Valentinianus Augustus
Regnal name
Dominus Noster Flavius Valentinianus Iunior Augustus[1]
DynastyValentinian
FatherValentinian I
MotherJustina
ReligionChristianity

Early life and accession (371-375)

Flavius Valentinianus was born to Emperor Valentinian I and his second wife, Justina. He was the half-brother of Valentinian's other son, Gratian, who had shared the imperial title with his father since 367. He had three sisters: Galla, Grata and Justa. The elder Valentinian died on campaign in Pannonia in 375. Neither Gratian (then in Trier) nor his uncle Valens (emperor for the East) were consulted by the army commanders on the scene. Instead of merely acknowledging Gratian as his father's successor, Valentinian I's generals acclaimed the four-year-old Valentinian augustus on 22 November 375. The army, and its Frankish general Merobaudes, may have been uneasy about Gratian's lack of military ability, and so raised a boy who would not immediately aspire to military command.[2][3]

Reign from Milan (375–387)

Solidus of Valentinian II

Gratian, forced to accommodate the generals who supported his half-brother, governed the trans-alpine provinces (including Gaul, Hispania, and Britain), while Italy, part of Illyricum, and North Africa were under the rule of Valentinian. In 378, their uncle, the Emperor Valens, was killed in battle with the Goths at Adrianople, and Gratian invited the general Theodosius to be emperor in the East. As a child, Valentinian II was under the influence of his Arian mother, the Empress Justina, and the imperial court at Milan, an influence contested by the Nicene bishop of Milan, Ambrose.[4]

Justina used her influence over her young son to oppose the Nicean party which was championed by Ambrose. In 385 Ambrose refused an imperial request to hand over the Portian basilica for the celebration of Easter by the Imperial court.[5] When he was summoned to be punished to the Imperial palace, the orthodox populace rioted, and Justina's Gothic troops were prevented by the arch-bishop himself, standing in the doorway, from entering the Basilica. Justina was forced to back down.[6] Afterwards, Justina ordered legislation to rescind the penalties enacted by Gratian and Valentinian against heresy, proclaiming universal toleration.[7] When Ambrose was found, as no doubt she had intended, to have determinedly infracted the new laws, Justina again tried to have him banished, and Ambrose was forced to barricade himself, with the enthusiastic backing of the people, within the walls of the Basilica. The Imperial troops besieged him, but Ambrose held on, reinforcing the resolution of his followers by allegedly unearthing, beneath the foundations of the church, the bodies of two ancient martyrs.[8] Theodosius, the orthodox emperor of the east, interceded, forcing Justina to again relent.[9] Magnus Maximus was to use the emperor's heterodoxy against him. Valentinian also tried to restrain the despoiling of pagan temples in Rome. Buoyed by this instruction, the pagan senators, led by Aurelius Symmachus, the Prefect of Rome, petitioned in 384 for the restoration of the Altar of Victory in the Senate House, which had been removed by Gratian in 382. Valentinian, at the insistence of Ambrose, refused the request and, in so doing, rejected the traditions and rituals of pagan Rome to which Symmachus had appealed.

In 383, Magnus Maximus, commander of the armies in Britain, declared himself Emperor and established himself in Gaul and Hispania. Gratian died while fleeing him. For a time the court of Valentinian, through the mediation of Ambrose, came to an accommodation with the usurper, and Theodosius recognized Maximus as co-emperor of the West. In 386 or 387, Maximus crossed the Alps into the Po valley and threatened Milan. Valentinian II and Justina fled to Theodosius in Thessalonica. The latter came to an agreement, cemented by his marriage to Valentinian's sister Galla, to restore the young emperor in the West.[4] In 388, Theodosius marched west and defeated Maximus. Although he was to appoint both of his sons emperor (Arcadius in 383, Honorius in 393), Theodosius remained loyal to the dynasty of Valentinian I.

Reign from Vienne (388–392)

A solidus minted by Valentinian II. On the reverse, both Valentinian and Theodosius I are celebrated as victorious.

After the defeat of Maximus, Theodosius remained in Milan until 391. Valentinian took no part in Theodosius's triumphal celebrations over Maximus. Valentinian and his court were installed at Vienne in Gaul, while Theodosius appointed key administrators in the West and had coins minted, which implied his guardianship over the 17-year-old.[10] Justina had already died, and Vienne was far away from the influence of Ambrose. Theodosius's trusted general, the Frank Arbogast, was appointed magister militum for the Western provinces (bar Africa) and guardian of Valentinian. Acting in the name of Valentinian, Arbogast was actually subordinate only to Theodosius.[11] While the general campaigned successfully on the Rhine, the young emperor remained at Vienne, in contrast to his warrior father and his older brother, who had campaigned at his age. Arbogast's domination over the emperor was considerable, and the general even murdered Harmonius, a friend of Valentinian suspected of taking bribes, in the emperor's presence.[12]

The crisis reached a peak when Arbogast prohibited the emperor from leading the Gallic armies into Italy to oppose a barbarian threat. Valentinian, in response, formally dismissed Arbogast. The latter ignored the order, publicly tearing it up and arguing that Valentinian had not appointed him in the first place. The reality of where the power lay was openly displayed. Valentinian wrote to Theodosius and Ambrose complaining of his subordination to his general. In explicit rejection of his earlier Arianism, he invited Ambrose to come to Vienne to baptize him.

On 15 May 392, Valentinian was found hanged in his residence in Vienne. Arbogast maintained that the emperor's death was suicide. Most sources agree, however, that Arbogast murdered him with his own hands, or paid the Praetorians. Zosimus writing in the early sixth century from Constantinople, states that Arbogast had Valentinian murdered;[13] ancient authorities being divided in their opinion.[14] Ambrose's eulogy is the only contemporary Western source for Valentinian's death.[15] It is ambiguous on the question of the emperor's death, which is not surprising, as Ambrose represents him as a model of Christian virtue. Suicide, not murder, would make the bishop dissemble on this key question.[16]

The young man's body was conveyed in ceremony to Milan for burial by Ambrose, mourned by his sisters Justa and Grata. He was laid in a porphyry sarcophagus next to his brother Gratian, most probably in the Chapel of Sant'Aquilino attached to San Lorenzo.[lower-alpha 1]

At first Arbogast recognized Theodosius's son Arcadius as emperor in the West, seemingly surprised by his charge's death.[18] After three months, during which he had no communication from Theodosius, Arbogast selected an imperial official, Eugenius, as emperor. Theodosius initially tolerated this regime but, in January 393, elevated the eight-year-old Honorius as augustus to succeed Valentinian II. Civil war ensued and, in 394, Theodosius defeated Eugenius and Arbogast at the Battle of Frigidus River.

Significance

Valentinian himself seems to have exercised no real authority, and was a figurehead for various powerful interests: his mother, his co-emperors, and powerful generals. Since the Crisis of the Third Century the empire had been ruled by powerful generals, a situation formalised by Diocletian and his collegiate system which collapsed a year after his abdication in 305. Constantine I and his sons, strong military figures, re-established the practice of hereditary succession adopted by Valentinian I. The obvious flaw in these two competing requirements came in the reign of Valentinian II, a child.[19] His reign was a harbinger of the fifth century, when children or nonentities, reigning as emperors, were controlled by powerful generals and officials in the West and in the East until mid-century.

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gollark: It's not as if things have to exactly match natural language.

See also

  • List of unsolved murders

Notes

  1. The bottom of the sarcophagus may be identical to a porphyry tub (labrum) now in the Duomo of Milan.[17]

References

  1. Cooley, Alison E. (2012). The Cambridge Manual of Latin Epigraphy. Cambridge University Press. p. 506. ISBN 978-0-521-84026-2.
  2. Valentinian II, Roman emperors.
  3. Curran 1998, p. 86.
  4. Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Valentinian I. s.v. Valetinian II." . Encyclopædia Britannica. 27 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 851–852.
  5. Edward Gibbon, The Decline And Fall Of The Roman Empire, (The Modern Library, 1932), chap. XXVII., p. 976
  6. Gibbon, p. 977
  7. Gibbon, p. 978
  8. Gibbon, p. 979
  9. Gibbon, p. 980
  10. Croke 1976, pp. 235f.
  11. Williams & Friell, p. 126.
  12. Croke 1976, p. 237.
  13. Historia nova, IV. 53 which relies heavily on the history by the pagan Eunapius
  14. Croke 1976.
  15. De obitu Valentiniani consolatio
  16. of Milan, Ambrose (2005), Political Letters and Speeches, JHWG Liebeschuetz, tr, Liverpool University Press, p. 359.
  17. Johnson, Mark J (1991), "On the Burial Places of the Valentinian Dynasty", Historia, 40 (4): 501–6.
  18. Croke 1976, p. 244.
  19. Williams & Friell, p. 42.

Bibliography

  • Croke, B (1976), "Arbogast and the Death of Valentinian II", Historia, 25 (2).
  • Curran, J (1998), "From Jovian to Theodosius", The Cambridge Ancient History, XIII: the Late Empire AD 337–425, Cambridge: University Press
  • McEvoy, Meaghan A. (2013), Child Emperor Rule in the Late Roman West, A.D. 367-455. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Williams, S; Friell, G (1994), Theodosius: the Empire at Bay, Routledge, ISBN 9780713466911
  • "Imperial laws chart", Fourth century. This list of Roman laws of the fourth century shows laws passed by Valentinian II relating to Christianity.
Valentinian II
Born: 371 Died: 15 May 392
Regnal titles
Preceded by
Valentinian I
Roman emperor
371–392
With: Valens, Gratian and Theodosius (Later Theodosius I as main emperor)
Succeeded by
Theodosius I
Political offices
Preceded by
Gratian,
Flavius Equitius
Consul of the Roman Empire
376
with Valens
Succeeded by
Gratian,
Merobaudes
Preceded by
Gratian,
Merobaudes
Consul of the Roman Empire
378
with Valens
Succeeded by
Ausonius,
Quintus Clodius Hermogenianus Olybrius
Preceded by
Honorius,
Flavius Euodius
Consul of the Roman Empire
387
with Eutropius
Succeeded by
Magnus Maximus,
Theodosius I,
Maternus Cynegius
Preceded by
Timasius,
Promotus
Consul of the Roman Empire
390
with Neoterius
Succeeded by
Eutolmius Tatianus,
Quintus Aurelius Symmachus
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