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Showing posts with label Septimius. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Septimius. Show all posts

Severus, Septimius

Septimius Severus, marble bust, found on the Palatine, Rome; in the British Museum

Born 146, Leptis Magna, Tripolitania [now in Libya]
Died February 211, Eboracum, Britain [now York, Eng.]

in full Lucius Septimius Severus Pertinax Roman emperor from 193 to 211. He founded a personal dynasty and converted the government into a military monarchy. His reign marks a critical stage in the development of the absolute despotism that characterized the later Roman Empire.

The son of an equestrian from the Roman colony of Leptis Magna, Severus entered the Senate about 173 and became consul in 190. At the time of the murder of the insane emperor Commodus on Dec. 31, 192, he was governor of Upper Pannonia (now in Austria and Hungary) and commander of the largest army on the Danube River. He remained inactive while the Praetorian Guards murdered Commodus' successor, Publius Helvius Pertinax (March 193) and auctioned off the imperial title to Marcus Didius Julianus. Then on April 13 Severus was proclaimed emperor by his troops. Declaring himself the avenger of Pertinax, he marched on Rome. Julianus was murdered at Rome on June 1, and Severus entered the city without resistance several days later.

Severus replaced the Praetorian Guard with a new 15,000-man guard from his own Danubian legions. He temporarily pacified his rival in Britain, Decimus Clodius Albinus, by naming him caesar (junior emperor). In 194 he marched east and decisively defeated another rival, Gaius Pescennius Niger, governor of Syria. Severus then headed westward to confront Albinus, who had declared himself emperor. Albinus committed suicide following his crushing defeat near Lugdunum (now Lyon, Fr.) in February 197. Returning to Rome, Severus executed about 30 of Albinus' senatorial supporters. To justify his usurpation, he declared himself the adoptive son of the emperor Marcus Aurelius (ruled 161–180) and claimed descent from the emperor Nerva (ruled 96–98). He also named Caracalla, his son by his Syrian wife, Julia Domna, as co-emperor, and thus successor. Late in 197 Severus marched east to turn back an invasion of Mesopotamia (now in Iraq) by the Parthians, and two years later Mesopotamia was annexed to the empire.

By 202 Severus was back in Rome, where he spent the next six years making major changes in the structure of the imperial government. Since his power rested on military might rather than constitutional sanction, he gave the army a dominant role in his state. He won the soldiers' support by increasing their pay and permitting them to marry. To prevent the rise of a powerful military rival, he reduced the number of legions under each general's control. At the same time Severus ignored the Senate, which declined rapidly in power, and he recruited his officials from the equestrian rather than the senatorial order. Many provincials and peasants received advancement, and the Italian aristocracy lost much of its former influence.

Severus paid special attention to the administration of justice. The Italian courts outside Rome were removed from senatorial jurisdiction and put under the control of the praetorian prefect. After the fall (205) of the emperor's favourite, the praetorian prefect Gaius Fulvius Plautianus, the distinguished jurist Papinian became prefect. Severus also drew on the advice of the renowned jurist Ulpian in making extensive reforms of the laws. Despite his donations to the urban poor and his extensive building campaign, Severus succeeded in maintaining a full treasury.

In 208 Severus, accompanied by Caracalla and his younger son, Geta, led an army to Britain to subdue the parts of the island not under Roman rule. Severus succumbed to disease at Eboracum. With the exception of the rule of Marcus Opellius Macrinus (217–218), Severus' descendants remained in power until 235.


Odaenathus, Septimius

Died 267/268

Odaenathus also spelled Odenathus, or Odainath prince of the Roman colony of Palmyra (q.v.), in what is now Syria, who prevented the Sāsānian Persians from permanently conquering the eastern provinces of the Roman Empire.

A Roman citizen and a member of Palmyra's ruling family, Odaenathus had by 258 attained consular rank and become ruler of Palmyra. When the Roman emperor Valerian was captured by the Sāsānian king Shāpūr I (260), Odaenathus remained loyal to the Romans in order to prevent his city from falling under Sāsānian control. In 260 he inflicted a severe defeat on Shāpūr's army as it was returning home after sacking Antioch. When he then defeated the usurping emperor Quietus at Emesa (now Homs, Syria), Valerian's son and successor, Gallienus, rewarded the Palmyrene ruler with the title corrector totius Orientis (“governor of all the East”); in addition, Odaenathus styled himself king of Palmyra and, eventually, king of kings. Beginning in 262 he drove the Persians from the Roman provinces of Mesopotamia and Osroëne, and he probably also brought Armenia back into the empire. Although he failed to seize the Sāsānian capital of Ctesiphon, he had managed to restore Roman rule in the East. Odaenathus was preparing to drive Gothic invaders from the Roman province of Cappadocia in eastern Asia Minor when he and his eldest son, Herodes, were assassinated. After his death, his wife, Zenobia (q.v.), made Palmyra an independent kingdom before she was subjugated by the Romans in 272.