MarcusAureliusMarius was emperor of the Gallic Empire in 269 following the assassination of Postumus. According to later tradition, he was a blacksmith...
not allow them to sack the city. An officer in Postumus' army, MarcusAureliusMarius, was installed as Emperor upon Postumus's death, but died very shortly...
Titus Aelius Aurelius M. f., son of MarcusAurelius, probably died young. Titus Aurelius M. f. Fulvus Antoninus Geminus, son of MarcusAurelius and twin brother...
6–7; Birley, MarcusAurelius, pp. 48–49. HA Marcus v. 3; Birley, MarcusAurelius, p. 49. Birley, MarcusAurelius, pp. 49–50. HA Marcus v. 6–8, qtd. and...
MarcusAurelius Claudius "Gothicus" (10 May 214 – August/September 270), also known as Claudius II, was Roman emperor from 268 to 270. During his reign...
(1987), p. 45. Primary sources Aurelius Victor, Liber de Caesaribus Epitome de Caesaribus (sometimes attributed to Aurelius Victor) Eutropius, Brevarium...
Birley, Marcus Aurelius, p. 131. HA Marcus ix.4; Birley, MarcusAurelius, p. 131. HA Marcus ix.5–6; Birley, MarcusAurelius, p. 131. HA Marcus ix.1; Birley...
Marcus Piavonius Victorinus was emperor in the Gallic provinces from 268 to 270 or 269 to 271, following the brief reign of Marius. He was murdered by...
common finds, with a few scarcer examples including Aemilianus, MarcusAureliusMarius, Quietus, and Regalianus. Modern numismatists use "antoninianus"...
his father, Marcus Annius Verus (III), MarcusAurelius was raised by his grandfather, Marcus Annius Verus (II). Educated at home, Marcus became an adherent...
MarcusAurelius Severus Alexander (1 October 208 – 21/22 March 235), also known as Alexander Severus, was Roman emperor from 222 until 235. The last emperor...
died aged four months and seven days. MarcusAureliusMarius, emperor of the Gallic Empire in AD 269. Gaius Marius Victorinus, a respected grammarian, rhetorician...
family in Roman politics, but two: Marius's younger brother, MarcusMarius, also entered Roman public life. In 134 BC, Marius joined the personal legion of...
cage and was humiliated for the Persian emperor's pleasure, according to Aurelius Victor. Upon his death, Valerian's body was allegedly skinned and stuffed...
assassinated from within include Claudius, Caracalla, Elagabalus, MarcusAureliusMarius, and Severus Alexander. After the fall of the Western Roman Empire...
it was since the time of Marius that a barbarian population had not laid siege to centers in northern Italy. MarcusAurelius fought a long and exhausting...
Claudius Gothicus (268–270) Usurpation of Laelianus (269) Reign of MarcusAureliusMarius (269) Augustodunum Haeduorum Naissus (268/269) Lake Benacus (268...
usurper Gallienus, Roman emperor (b. 218) Laelianus, Roman usurper MarcusAureliusMarius, Roman emperor (Gaul) Postumus, Roman emperor of the Gallic Empire...
Emperor Marcus Aurelius. Aurelius's Meditations on Stoicism and on Plato, and the public lectures of the rhetorician Fronto, open Marius' eyes to the narrowness...
Jingfeng), Chinese general and politician (b. 198) MarcusAureliusMarius, Gallic general and emperor Marcus Cassianius Latinius Postumus, Gallic emperor Ulpius...
p.245 Southern 2001, p.116, 225 Aurelius Victor, De Caesaribus, par. 29.4–5 in Liber de Caesaribus of Sextus Aurelius Victor, critical edition by H. W...
Polfer, Michel (2000), "Postumus (A.D. 260-269)", De Imperatoribus Romanis Aurelius Victor 33.8; Eutropius 9.9.1 Potter, David Stone, The Roman Empire at Bay...
philosophy after another, becoming secretary to the Stoic emperor MarcusAurelius, Marius tests his author's theory of the stimulating effect of the pursuit...
Jingfeng), Chinese general and politician (b. 198) MarcusAureliusMarius, Gallic general and emperor Marcus Cassianius Latinius Postumus, Gallic emperor Ulpius...
Tarquinius Catulus AD 259–260: Marcus Cassianus Postumus AD 260–274: (!) Gallic Empire Marcus Cassianus Postumus MarcusAureliusMarius Victorinus Tetricus I /...
had been making incursions into Roman territory since the reign of MarcusAurelius, had broken through the Roman frontier at the Danube and crossed the...
suffered a major defeat in a battle at Misiche, north of Ctesiphon, in 243." Aurelius Victor, Liber de Caesaribus, 27."7-8".; Sibylline Oracles, XIII, "13-20"...