Jovian |
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-, 330-364 | 20.11.11 | |
Romersk general. Blev af sine tropper udråbt til kejser 363, men døde året efter.
Jovianus, Flavius (d. 364), romersk kejser, valgt af tropperne 363 fe.Kr. efter Julianus' død; som kristen ophævede han sin forgængers forholdsregler mod kristendommen; med perserne sluttede han en ugunstig fred, døde 364, før han nåede Konstantinopel. (HK5/1922) |
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Born in AD
330 at Singidunum, Jovian was the son of the commander of imperial bodyguard
(comes domesticorum) of Constantius II. At the death of emperor Julian in June AD 363 the throne was offered to the praetorian prefect Saturninus Secundus Salutius, who declined reasoning he was too old and ill to hold such elevated position. And so instead the troops acclaimed the commander of the imperial guard, Jovian, emperor. As the news
reached the Persian king Sapor II (Shapur II), that a the new Roman emperor
was only a second choice, it only encouraged him to further increase his
attacks on the Roman force in Mesopotamia. No sooner was Jovian back on Roman soil, he condemned his predecessor Julian's pagan faith and restored Constantine's subsidies to the Christian church. Jovian sought
urgently to get back to Constantinople, being well aware of just how insecure
his position was as long as he remained away from the capital in the east.
Particularly after his humiliating treaty with Sapor II. |