The History of Rome - 141- Blood and Water
Episode Date: June 27, 2011Constantius and Constans shared the Empire for a decade until Constans was overthrown by a rebel general named Magnetius in 350 AD....
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Hello and welcome to the history of Rome.
Episode 141, Blood and Water.
When Constantine died in 337 AD, he left the empire saddled with an unwieldy five-way power-sharing system
that it appears he just sort of hoped would somehow find a way to work.
Well, by 340, it had found a way to work.
It found a way to work by killing off three-fifths of its members.
With the number of living Augustine now down to a manageable two, Constancius II and Constance
were able to share control of the Roman Empire for a decade without budding heads with each other
too much.
That did not mean they were mutually supportive best friends by any stretch of the imagination,
but it did mean that they mostly respected the legitimacy of the other, and as each had
more than enough to deal with in their own half of the empire, it meant that they were not
constantly at each other's throats.
In other words, the saber rattling was kept to a minimum, and civil war was avoided.
Indeed, when Constanches finally did march west to fight a civil war, it was not to take his
brother out, but to avenge his death.
Of course, this was not vengeance in the you killed my brother prepared to die since, so much
as the allowing an illegal usurpation would set an unacceptable precedent sense, but still,
The death of his brother did spur Constantius to some kind of action, which is about as nice a thing
as you can say about these guys at this point in history.
But before we can get into all that, we need to zip through the 340s AD, which are something
of a lost decade source-wise.
We know a few things, but until Amionis Marcellinus comes along and starts to fill in the gaps,
we are unfortunately left with a rather broad brush to help us paint the years of Constantius
and Constance's joint rule.
But like I said, we do know a few things.
Both of the emperors began their newly established joint rule by doing what emperors usually do
when they want to cement their legitimacy.
They made war on the enemies of Rome.
In the West, Constance spent most of 341 and 342 battling uncooperative Franks and appears
to have been mostly successful on those campaigns.
In early 343, he abruptly abutably abutably.
abandoned the Rhine and headed north to Britannia, where he made a rare winter crossing over to the island,
leading scholars to surmise that some sort of revolt had broken out that required immediate imperial attention.
The revolt cannot have been too big a concern, though, because by the spring, Constance was back in Trier, keeping an eye on the Rhine.
During this same period, Constanches operated almost exclusively out of Antioch, and spent most of his time fighting the Sasanid king Shapiro II.
As I mentioned last week, this new war between Rome and Persia had technically been initiated
by Shapur following the death of Constantine in 337, but we should not forget that it was likely
the now-dead emper's threatening rhetoric that laid the groundwork for this latest round of hostilities.
The two great empires fought mostly in Mesopotamia, and their armies were apparently
well matched because over the course of what would eventually be 13 uninterrupted years of war,
Constantius and Shapur fought at least nine major battles, and none of them were conclusive,
though I should mention that none of them are particularly well documented either.
Despite all the ambiguity, though, there is one great accomplishment that Constantius can point to.
On three separate occasions over the course of the long war,
Shapur laid siege to the key fortress city of Nispus,
and on all three occasions he was repelled and forced to withdraw.
But as notable an accomplishment as this was, though, it sort of leaves us asking the question
of what this whole war was about, if preventing the fall of a city turns out to be the big
upshot of it all.
To put it another way, for 13 years, blood and treasure was expended in massive quantities
on both sides, and in the end, nothing changed, nothing was resolved, and no one benefited.
Good work, everyone.
Beyond the standard imperial warmaking, the two emperors were also came.
busy through the 340s by what was fast becoming one of the defining features of imperial rule.
Christian church politics.
Constanches, as I mentioned last week, sympathized with the Aryans and promoted their candidates for
bishoprics whenever he could.
This theological leaning was on display, for example, when the emperor pushed for the Aryan
Yusebius of Nicomedia, who had been the one to baptize Constantine the Great, by the way,
to take over as the bishop of Constantinople in 338.
But it was perhaps nowhere more on display than in his dealings with Athanasius.
I didn't get into this last week, but about five minutes after the anti-Aryan bishop was returned home to Alexandria by Constantine II,
Constantius found cause to return him to exile.
There was basically no way the emperor was going to let a man with that much power and that much charisma
Rome free in his territory stirring up trouble.
So it was back to the west for Athanasius.
This would have probably been all well and good from an imperial point of view,
except for the fact that Constance had developed into something of a pro-Nycean partisan.
As with Constantine II, Constance's religious affinities probably had as much to do
with the general pro-Nasian orthodoxy of the Western Church as anything else.
but on two separate occasions in the early 340s, Constance met with Athanasius and found him to be a man of admirable virtue, who was getting the short end of it from his brother.
Constance soon came to the decision that Athanasius was the lawful bishop of Alexandria, and that he ought to be allowed to return home and serve as such.
But as Constance was hardening his pro-Nycean position, Constantius was hardening his pro-Aryan position.
In 341, while the emperor was an Antioch, a bishop Eusebius died, and before Constantinus could react one way or the other, the clergy in Constantinople elevated the anti-Aryan Paul of Constantinople to the bishopric of the capital city.
When Constanches found out what had happened, he was livid, not just because he hadn't been consulted, but because he had already deposed and exiled Paul once before in order to clear the way for Eusebius.
Fuming over the appointment,
Constantius ordered his master of the horse
to go to Constantinople and personally oversee the re-banishment of Paul.
But when the commander arrived,
he found the people of Constantinople
are ready to defend Paul's right to the office,
so much so that in the heat of the moment
they barricaded him inside his house and then set it on fire.
The master of the horse,
one of the most senior military officials in the empire,
was killed in the blaze.
And then, to top things off, his body was dragged through the streets in triumph.
I wonder what Constancius is going to think about all this.
Constanches, surprisingly, took the news of his top lieutenant's murder in stride and decided to
allow the people to have their bishop.
Just kidding.
When word of what happened reached Antioch, Constancius flew into a rage, saddled up his horse,
and double-timed to Constantinople, where he planned to separate as many heads from as many bodies as he could find.
When he arrived in the capital, though, he was greeted by a population that seemed so genuinely remorseful,
who supplicated themselves so completely that Constantius' anger was tempered.
Instead of massacring the whole lot of them then, the emperor settled on cutting their free grain allotment by 50%.
It goes without saying that Paul was once again,
from the city.
Satisfied that things had been set right, the emperor returned to Antioch to continue the war
against Persia.
But that would not be the end of it.
Constantius' willingness to exile anti-Aryan bishops from his provinces eventually came to
affect relations with his brother, and in time lead to the closest brush with civil war
the two emperors faced during their decade in office together.
The various eastern exiles, including Athanasius and Paul, took up residence in Rome,
where they were sheltered and defended by the bishop Julius.
Pretty soon, Constance was being hit up from all sides
to do something about Constantius' mistreatment of all these good and decent men of God.
So in 343, Constance called for an ecumenical council to meet in Sardica,
to rehabilitate Athanasius and his fellow expatriates,
but when the outnumbered Eastern bishops determined that the whole thing was rigged against them,
they walked out en masse,
and as a result, the Council of Sardica not only failed in its stated goal to reunite the church,
but it also failed to even make the list of official ecumenical councils.
By 346, tensions between East and West came to a head,
and after getting the brush off time and again, Constance finally decided that the only way to get his older brother's attention was to threaten war.
Allow Athanasius and his compatriots return to the East,
or I am going to invade your territory and force you to do it.
This threat did indeed get Constantius's attention and set off a flurry of diplomatic correspondence
between Antioch and Sirmium, where Constance had taken up provocative residence.
Died down by his protracted war with the Sassanids,
Constanches could not afford to waste political or military capital on theological arguments,
and though the thought of allowing Athanasius to return to Alexander's,
Alexandria rankled him, Constantius basically backed down and gave in to his brother's demand.
When Athanasius returned to Alexandria, he was greeted by the population like a conquering hero
and immediately reclaimed the bishopric of the city. For the next four years, an uneasy
truce would stand between emperor and bishop, until the death of Constance in 350 removed
Constantius's impediment to action, and Athanasius was banished once again. But despite the
return of so many controversial bishops to their home provinces, the late 340s were pretty much
the same as the early 340s as far as the Eastern Empire was concerned.
Constanches waged war against Shepur and Shapur waged war against Constantius, exactly the
same thing that had been going on for the last decade.
But in the West, Constance began to slip up.
Though he had begun his reign with a great deal of promise, of late he had begun to fall into
the same trap that had ensnared previous young rulers.
Surrounded by sycophants, the 20-something Augustus of the West was losing touch with
reality.
The common complaint was that he was giving himself over too much to hunting and banqueting
and other extracurricular activities while neglecting the real business of ruling half
the empire.
Compounding this problem with charges that he was treating his court and his subjects with
unnecessary cruelty.
Now, this didn't have to become a problem so large that it would eventually destroy him,
but Constance forgot the most basic rule of imperial rule.
Make sure the army is taken care of.
He was not taking care of the army, and so the army took care of him.
If anyone is surprised by what's about to happen, just go and listen to the back episodes again,
because it's not like these things haven't happened before.
Constance's main problem is that he had become enamored with an elite archery corps
who acted as his personal bodyguard,
and while he lavished gifts and attention on them,
he neglected the officers and soldiers out on the frontiers.
They, of course, began to talk amongst themselves
about how annoying it was that these pretty boy archers were getting all the love.
After a few years of enduring what they felt was supreme disrespect,
act, this talking amongst themselves became more of a clamor, and the leading officers of the Rhine
legions began to think seriously about finding a replacement emperor. By 349, a conspiracy had
solidified around Magnentius, a popular general who was serving as the commander of the
official Imperial Guard units, as opposed to Constance's unofficial archery guard.
According to the legend, Magnentius and some of his fellow officers were gathered for dinner in
January of 350 at Augusta Dunham, modern Atoon in France, when Magnentius excused himself
from the table. Upon the general's return, the other officers noticed that he was draped in a
purple cloak. They cheered and hailed him as emperor, and just like that, the West was in revolt.
Constance, enjoying himself at some unspecified spot near Augusta Dunham, heard of the revolt and
began making plans to resist, until he discovered just how out of time.
touch he had become.
Apart from his personal guard and a few members of the court, absolutely no one lined up
to defend him.
I don't know how popular he thought he was, or even if he cared how popular he was,
but it had to have come as a surprise to find out just how unpopular he was.
The legions up and down the Rhine immediately joined Magnentius' banner.
Constance was all alone, fearing capture if he tried to pass directly,
through the Alps, the fugitive emperor made instead for Spain, where he planned to hop a ship
to Italy and hopefully regroup. But Magnentius' agents caught up with him in the foothills of the
Pyrenees, and Constance was executed. He was somewhere between 27 and 30 years old, and had been
in Augustus for almost 13 years. The usurpation of Magnentius and the murder of Constance
kicked off a frenzy of activity across the empire. In the far east, Constanceius'
received word that his brother had been killed, and immediately he began working on a plan
to extract himself from his war with Persia, so he could personally go put the revolt down.
Magnentius was trying to head all this off by asking Constancius to just go ahead and recognize
him. After all, the empire needed a strong hand in the West. The Eastern legions were bogged down
with a war, so why not just do the sensible thing, and let me, a strong and popular general,
run things for you out here.
But Constantius wasn't having it.
You don't get to overthrow a member of the family and just get away with it.
Magentius was right about one thing, though.
The Eastern legions were bogged down in a war,
so as much as he wanted to,
Constanches couldn't immediately pick up and march west.
As the emperor worked up a plan to put the war with Perjon hold, however,
his sister Constantine, the widow of Hannibalianus, apparently took matters into her own hands
and wrote to a general closely allied with the Constantinian family named Vatronio, asking him to take matters into his own hands.
As one of the senior commanders of the Danube region, Vatronio was well positioned with a large army to oppose the rising power of Magnentius.
Spurred on by the emperor's sister, Vatronio declared himself Augustus,
in March of 350.
Now, Constanches cannot have been too happy about this declaration, but he recognized his own
weak position and the need for a powerful ally, and Vitranio, backed by Constantia, was promising
to be a powerful ally.
So the Eastern Augustus went ahead and accepted the general self-elevation as legitimate.
For now.
The rise of Vitronio had the intended effect, and finally put a stop to Magnentius's unchecked
expansion. Since being declared Augustus in January, the general had gotten all the provinces
in Gaul, Britannia, Hispania, and Italy lined up behind him, and he was looking to press on
into Constance's Illyrian territory. If he could nail down Illyria, then it was just a hop-skip
over to Constantinople. Whether he was actually looking to capture the capital as anyone's guess,
but at the very least the threat would have made his bargaining position that much stronger.
But with Vitranio, now standing firm against him with the Danube legions at his back,
Magnentius was forced to settle for what he had already acquired.
There would be no directly threatening Constantinople.
Magnentius would have to figure out a different way to convince Constantius to legitimize him.
Through the rest of the spring, a stalemate ensued, with Magnentius commanding the West,
of a Tronio holding down the center, and Constantius desperately trying to get out of Syria.
Into this mix, a fourth player emerged onto the stage in June of 350.
Napotianus, the lost nephew of Constantine, suddenly appeared at the gates of Rome
backed by a small army of gladiators.
Since the Eternal City was by this point a strategic backwater, Magnentius had not garrisoned the city,
and his supporters there had to rely on a citizen militia for protection.
This citizen militia was no match for Napotianus's gladiators, and the forgotten prince
was basically able to stride right through the gates and declare himself master of Rome.
For the next 28 days, it looked like Magnentius might be in real trouble.
Not only had he stopped acquiring new territory, but he was already losing territory,
and to a random Constantinian cousin and a couple of gladiators, no less.
But fortunately for Magnentius, the seizure of Rome only was a little bit of the seizure of Rome only,
occurred because the general had put the eternal city pretty far down on his list of priorities.
I mean, come on, since when has Rome been the key to anything?
So Napotianus held Rome for exactly the amount of time it took for Magnentius to find out what
happened, organize an appropriate response force, and then send it back down the peninsula.
Now that he had Magnentius' attention, Napotianus didn't stand a chance.
The professional soldiers of the legions easily bested his gladiators,
and Napotianus himself died in the fighting.
This small blip aside, the stalemate between Magnentius,
Vitranio, and Constantius continued for most of the rest of the year,
until finally the Eastern Augustus hit upon some luck in his dealing with the Persians.
It seems that right around this same time,
Shapur began having problems of his own.
With the bulk of the Sassanid army locked down fighting Rome,
unruly scythians had begun raiding his northern.
frontier. So just as Constancius was looking for a way out of the war to go deal with Magnentius,
Shapur was looking for a way out so he could go deal with the Skythians. As the winner of 350
approach, the two rival leaders agreed to a temporary ceasefire that would allow them each to
pull back from Mesopotamia and go handle business on other fronts. The truth would wind up
holding for the next eight years, until after finally pacifying his northern borders, Shepur
decided to take another crack at Rome. For those of you who are reading ahead, that next round
of fighting will be the one that eventually kills Julian the Apostate and leads to Jovian's
infamous peace agreement of 363. Truce in hand, Constanceus was now ready to march west and crush
Magnentius. But as much as he trusted the Persian king to abide by the agreement, he did not
really trust the Persian king to abide by the agreement. The emperor, already
inclined towards paranoia was worried that the minute he turned his back, Shapur would jump him
from behind. Fearing that the lack of a strong imperial presence would incline the Persian
toward just this sort of trick, Constantius decided that he needed a stand-in emperor.
Someone who would keep the Persians from breaking the peace, provide the backbone the legions
needed to maintain their vigil, and, perhaps most importantly, protect Constanches' interests
in the east.
But with most of his male relatives having been killed off at one point or another,
the list of acceptable candidates, read, blood-related candidates, was now down to two,
the boys who had survived the massacre of the princes, now 25-year-old Constancius
and his younger brother, 18-year-old Julian.
Constanches, of course, chose to elevate Gallus, who was not only older, but he didn't
have his head shoved in a book all the time.
In a ceremony at Antioch, Constancius formerly invested Gallus with the title Caesar and gave him authority over the eastern provinces.
To seal the deal, Gallus was wed to Constantina, the outspoken sister of Constancius, who was also the one to so recently prod Vitronio into action.
That she was Gallus's own cousin was neither here nor there.
Peace with the Cesson is established and a loyal Caesar holding down the fort in Antioch, Constanius could finally,
finally marched west and exact the full measure of his revenge on Magnentius.
As I said before, it's not necessarily that Constancius was broken up about Constance's death,
or even that he thought Magnentius would make a bad ruler.
It was just that in a world where his own claim to the throne rested entirely on the fact
that he was the blood son of Constantine, while allowing someone from outside the family
into the imperial circle kind of undercut the entire rationale for his own rule.
The days of the Tetrarchy with its idealized vision of merit-based advancement were dead, dead.
The empire was back to classic kinship rules, where blood runs thicker than water.
Next week, Constanches will make sure that everyone gets the message that kinship rules are back in effect.
And we will watch as the reign of Magnentius very quickly turns in to the short reign of Magnentius.
but having reasserted the supremacy of the Constantinian family,
Constantius II will soon enough prove that while blood may run thicker than water,
that did not mean that at the end of the day,
Constanches cared about anyone's blood but his own,
which is to say that we will also get to watch next week,
as the reign of Constantius Galus very quickly turns into the short reign of Constantius Galus.
Before we go this week, you know how last week I opened by saying that the tours were an absolutely fantastic time and that we hope to be doing them again very soon?
Well, I couldn't be more excited to announce that very soon means October 2011.
Version 2.0 of the official history of Rome, Roman history tour, is ready to launch and will begin on October 21st, 2011.
So if the first round of tours didn't work out for you, then by all means go to
History of Rome Tour.com and send us an email that says, I'm in.
As before, additional tours can be scheduled to accommodate demand if we have that wonderful
problem again, but the October 21st trip is locked in and ready to go.
Space is limited, so sign up today.
For those of you who just slap their heads, realizing that there is no way they can make October work,
well, you're in luck, because we are also going to go ahead and throw open reservations for a third round of tours that will begin on February the 24th, 2012.
Between the October 2011 dates and the February 2012 dates, you can make this work, right?
Let's go hang out in Rome and look at cool stuff together.
I promise you, it is an absolutely fantastic time.
