Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Magnus Maximus

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Roman emperor from 383 to 388
"Maxen" redirects here. For other uses, seeMaxen (disambiguation).

Magnus Maximus
Golden coin depicting man with diadem facing right
Roman emperor
(in theWest)
ReignEarly Spring 383 – 28 August 388
PredecessorGratian
SuccessorValentinian II
Co-emperors
BornGallaecia,Hispania
Died28 August 388
Aquileia,Venetia et Histria,Italia
SpouseElen (traditional)
Issue
Detail
DynastyTheodosian (disputed)
ReligionNicene Christianity

Magnus Maximus[1] (Classical Latin:[ˈmaːgnusˈmaːksimus]; died 28 August 388) wasRoman emperor in theWest from 383 to 388. He usurped the throne from emperorGratian.

Born inGallaecia, he served as an officer in Britain underTheodosius the Elder during theGreat Conspiracy. In 383, he was proclaimed emperor inBritannia, and inGaul the next year, while Gratian's brotherValentinian II retainedItaly,Pannonia,Hispania, andAfrica. In 387, Maximus's ambitions led him to invade Italy, resulting in his defeat byTheodosius I at theBattle of Poetovio in 388. In the view of some historians, his death marked the end of direct imperial presence in Northern Gaul and Britannia.[2]

Life

[edit]

Birth, army career

[edit]

Maximus was born inGallaecia, Hispania, on the estates ofCount Theodosius (the Elder) of theTheodosian dynasty, to whom he claimed to be related.[3][4][5] In their youth, Maximus and Theodosius I served together in Theodosius the Elder's army in Britannia.[6] Maximus would become a distinguished general in the following years; as he would gain the support of his fellow soldiers and the admiration of the Romano-Britons whom he defended, which would lead to his eventual immortalisation in Welsh legend in the centuries following.[7] He served under Count Theodosius in Africa in 373.[8] Assigned to Britain in 380, he defeated an incursion of thePicts andScots in 381.[3] HistorianAnthony Birley sees this as evidence that he had become thedux (commander) of the army in Britain.[9]

Rebellion and bid for the throne

[edit]

The Western emperorGratian had received a number ofAlans into his bodyguard, and was accused of showing favouritism towards these foreigners at the expense of Roman citizens.[3] In the spring of 383,[10] the discontented Roman army proclaimed Maximus emperor in Gratian's place.Orosius, who wrote that Maximus was "an energetic and able man and one worthy of the throne had he not risen to it by usurpation, contrary to his oath of allegiance," claimed that he was proclaimed emperor against his will,[11] butZosimus portrays him as inciting the troops to rebel against Gratian, as he was upset about Theodosius becoming emperor while he himself was not promoted.[12] Stephen Williams and Gerard Friell preferred the latter version, based on the rapid success of the revolt.[13]

Maximus went toGaul to pursue his imperial ambitions, taking with him at least part of the Roman garrison in Britannia. Although many sources such as J. B. Bury claim he took most of the Roman troops with him, the number of troops withdrawn from Britain is unknown.[3][14] After five days of skirmishing nearParis he defeated Gratian,[3] who fled the battlefield and was killed atLyon on 25 August 383. Following negotiations between the remaining emperors, an accord seems to have been reached in 384 withValentinian II and Theodosius I recognizing Maximus asAugustus in the West while Maximus acknowledged Valentinian's rule of Italy, Africa andIllyricum.[15]

Administration

[edit]

Maximus made his capital atAugusta Treverorum (Treves,Trier) in Gaul, and ruled Britain, Gaul, and Spain. He issued coinage and a number of edicts reorganising Gaul's system of provinces. Some historians believe Maximus may have founded the office of theComes Britanniarum as well, although it was probably Stilicho who created the permanent office.[16]

Maximus was known as a persecutor ofheretics. It was on his orders thatPriscillian and six companions were executed forheresy, although the actual civil charges laid by Maximus were for the practice ofmagic. Prominent churchmen such asSt. Ambrose andSt. Martin of Tours protested against this involvement of the secular power in doctrinal matters, but the executions were carried out nonetheless.[17] Maximus thereby not only established his credentials as an upholder of orthodoxy, but also strengthened his financial resources in the ensuing confiscations.[18] TheGallic Chronicle of 452 describes the Priscillianists as "Manichaeans", a differentGnostic heresy already condemned in Roman law underDiocletian, and states that Magnus Maximus had them "caught and exterminated with the greatest zeal".[19]

In a threatening letter addressed to Valentinian II, most likely composed between the spring of 384 and the summer of 387, Maximus complains of Valentinian's actions towards Ambrose and adherents of theNicene Creed, writing: "Can it be that Your Serenity, venerable to me, thinks that a religion which has once taken root in the minds of men, which God himself has established, can be uprooted?" in response to "the disturbance and convulsion of Catholic law."[20]

Conversely, Maximus's edict of 387/388, which censured Christians at Rome for burning down a Jewishsynagogue, was condemned by bishopAmbrose, who said people exclaimed, "the emperor has become a Jew".[21]

Final conflicts and execution

[edit]

In 387 Maximus, with a combined mix of frustration, fueled byJustina’s religious policy in Mediolanum in attempting to makeArianism coexist and even supersede Nicaean Christianity and the ambitions of his own mind for greater power within the Empire, launched a surprise invasion of Italy in 387. He managed to force emperor Valentinian II out of Mediolanum and the 16 year old emperor fled with his mother and court to Theodosius I, who treated them as honored guest, but gave them the cold shoulder for some time on the issue of restoring Valentinian’s rule in Italy. After becoming smitten by and marryingGalla, the young daughter of Justina and sister of Valentinian II, the two emperors’ subsequently invaded from the east; their armies, led byRichomeres and other generals, campaigned against Maximus in June–August 388. Maximus was defeated in theBattle of Poetovio,[22][23] and retreated toAquileia. Meanwhile, theFranks underMarcomer had taken the opportunity to invade northern Gaul during this period of civil war, further weakening Maximus's position.

Andragathius,magister equitum of Maximus and the killer of the Emperor Gratian, was defeated nearSiscia, while Maximus's brother, Marcellinus, fell in battle atPoetovio.[24] Maximus surrendered in Aquileia and, although he pleaded for mercy, was executed. The Senate passed a decree ofDamnatio memoriae against him, but his mother and at least two daughters were spared.[25] Theodosius's trusted generalArbogast strangled Maximus's son,Victor, atTrier in autumn of the same year.[26]

Fate of family

[edit]

Magnus Maximus is known to have had a wife, who is recorded as having sought spiritual counsel fromSt. Martin of Tours during his time at Trier. Her name and her fate after Maximus's downfall have not been preserved in definitive historical records (but see the Welsh tradition below). Unlike his son Victor, Maximus's unnamed mother and daughters were spared by Theodosius I; the daughters were sent to a relative and the mother was given a pension.[27][28][29]

One of Maximus's daughters may have been married toEnnodius,[30] proconsul Africae (395). Ennodius's grandson wasPetronius Maximus, another ill-fated emperor, who ruled in Rome for only 77 days before he was stoned to death while fleeing from the Vandals on 24 May 455. Other descendants of Ennodius, and thus possibly of Maximus, includedAnicius Olybrius, emperor in 472, but also several consuls and bishops such asSt. Magnus Felix Ennodius (Bishop ofPaviac. 514 – 521). We also encounter an otherwise unrecorded daughter of Magnus Maximus,Sevira, on thePillar of Eliseg (9th century), an early medieval inscribed stone in Wales, which claims that she marriedVortigern,king of the Britons.[31]

Role in British and Breton history

[edit]

Maximus's bid for imperial power in 383 coincides with the last date for evidence of a Roman military presence in the westernPennines and the fortress ofDeva. Coins dated later than 383 have been found in excavations alongHadrian's Wall, suggesting that troops were not entirely stripped from it, as was once thought.[32] In theDe Excidio et Conquestu Britanniae writtenc. 540,Gildas says that Maximus "deprived" Britain not only of its Roman troops, but also of its "armed bands...governors and of the flower of her youth", never to return.[33]

Having left with the troops and senior administrators, and planning to continue as the ruler of Britain in the future, his practical course was to transfer local authority to local rulers. Welsh legend supports that this happened, with stories such asBreuddwyd Macsen Wledig (English: The Dream of Emperor Maximus), where he not only marries a wondrous British woman (thus making British descendants probable), but also gives her father sovereignty over Britain (thus formally transferring authority from Rome back to the Britons themselves).

ThePillar of Eliseg in Wales. The pillar's inscription and theHistoria Brittonum trace the sovereignty of contemporary Welsh kingdoms back more than 500 years to Maximus.

The earliest Welsh genealogies give Maximus (referred to asMacsen/Maxen Wledig, orEmperor Maximus) the role of founding father of the dynasties of several medieval Welsh kingdoms, including those ofPowys,Gwynedd andGwent.[34][35] He is given as the ancestor of a Welsh king on thePillar of Eliseg, erected nearly 500 years after he left Britain, and he figures in lists of theFifteen Tribes of Wales.[36]

After he became emperor of the West, Maximus returned to Britain to campaign against thePicts andGaels (following Gaelic settlements inWales andScotland), probably in support of Rome's long-standing allies theDamnonii,Votadini, andNovantae (all located in modernScotland). While there he likely made similar arrangements for a formal transfer of authority to local chiefs—the later rulers ofGalloway, home to the Novantae, claimed Maximus as the founder of their line, the same as did the Welsh kings.[32]

The ninth centuryHistoria Brittonum gives another account of Maximus and assigns him an important role:

The seventh emperor was Maximianus, He withdrew from Britain with all its military force, slew Gratianus the king of the Romans, and obtained the sovereignty of all Europe. Unwilling to send back his warlike companions to their wives, families, and possessions in Britain, he conferred upon them numerous districts from the lake on the summit of Mons Iovis, to the city called Cant Guic, and to the western Tumulus, that is Cruc Occident. These are the Armoric Britons, and they remain there to the present day. In consequence of their absence, Britain being overcome by foreign nations, the lawful heirs were cast out, till God interposed with his assistance.

Modern historians believe that this idea of mass British troop settlement inBrittany by Maximus may very well reflect some reality, as it accords with archaeological and other historical evidence and later Breton traditions.

Armorica declared independence from the Roman Empire in 407, but contributed archers forAetius's defence againstAttila the Hun, andRiothamus, who may have ruled there as king, was subsequently mentioned in contemporary documents as an ally of Rome's against theGoths. Despite its continued usage of two distinct languages,Breton andGallo, and extensive invasions and conquests by Franks and Vikings, Armorica retained considerable cultural cohesion into the 13th century.

Maximus also established a military base in his nativeGallaecia, which persisted as a cultural entity despite occupation by theSuebi in 409, seeKingdom of Galicia.

Aetius sent large numbers ofAlans to both Armorica and Galicia following the defeat of Attila at theBattle of the Catalunian Plains. The Alans evidently assimilated quickly into the local Celtic cultures, contributing their own legends, e.g., to the Arthurian Cycle of romances.[citation needed]

Welsh legend

[edit]

Legendary versions of Maximus's career in which he marries the Welsh princessElen may have circulated in popular tradition in Welsh-speaking areas from an early date. Although the story of Helen and Maximus's meeting is almost certainly fictional, there is some evidence for the basic claims. He is certainly given a prominent place in the earliest version of theWelsh Triads which are believed to date fromc. 1100 and which reflect older traditions in some cases. Welsh poetry also frequently refers to Macsen as a figure of comparison with later Welsh leaders. These legends come down to us in two separate versions.[36]

Geoffrey of Monmouth

[edit]
Illustration from a 14th-century Welsh manuscript thought to intend to depict Magnus Maximus. Llanbeblig Hours (f. 3r.)
EnglishWikisource has original text related to this article:

According toGeoffrey of Monmouth's fictionalHistoria Regum Britanniae (c. 1136), the basis for many English and Welsh legends, Maximianus, as he calls him, was a Roman senator, a nephew ofCoel Hen through Coel's brother Ioelinus, and king of theBritons following the death of Octavius (Eudaf Hen). Geoffrey writes this came about because Octavius wanted to wed his daughter to just such a powerful half-Roman-half-Briton and to give the kingship of Britain, as a dowry, to that husband, so he sent a message to Rome offering his daughter to Maximian.[37]

Caradocus, theDuke of Cornwall, had suggested and supported the marriage between Octavius's daughter and Maximian. Maximian accepted the offer and left Rome for Britain. Geoffrey claims further that Maximian gathered an army as he sackedFrankish towns along the way. He invaded Clausentum (modernSouthampton) unintentionally and nearly fought the army of the Britons underConan Meriadoc before agreeing to a truce. Following further negotiations, Maximian was given the kingship of Britain and Octavius retired. Five years into his kingship, Magnus Maximus assembled a vast fleet and invadedGaul, leaving Britain in the control of Caradocus.[37]

Upon reaching the kingdom ofArmorica (historically, the region between the Loire and Seine rivers, later comprising Brittany, Normandy, Anjou, Maine and Touraine), he defeated the king and killed thousands of inhabitants. Before departing to Rome, he summonedConanus, the rebellious nephew of Octavius, and asked him to rule as king of the land, which was renamedBrittany. Conan's men married native women after cutting out their tongues to preserve the purity of their language.Geoffrey of Monmouth presents this legend to explain the Welsh name for Brittany, Llydaw, as originating fromlled-taw or "half-silent". Given that Conan was well established in genealogies as the founder of Brittany, this account is certainly connected to an older tradition than Geoffrey.

Following the death of Caradocus, rule of Britain as regent passed toDionotus, who – facing a foreign invasion – appealed to Maximus, who finally sent a man namedGracianus Municeps with two legions to stop the attack. He killed many thousands before the invaders fled toIreland. Maximus died inRome soon after and Dionotus became the official king of the Britons. Unfortunately, before he could begin his reign, Gracianus took hold of the crown and made himself king over Dionotus.

While a broadly positive account of Maximian, theHistory concludes with the success of the barbarian invaders, and laments, "Alas for the absence of so many warlike soldiers through the madness of Maximianus!".[37]

The Dream of Macsen Wledig

[edit]
EnglishWikisource has original text related to this article:
Main article:The Dream of Macsen Wledig

Although theMabinogion taleThe Dream of Macsen Wledig is written in later manuscripts than Geoffrey's version, the two accounts are so different that scholars agree the Dream cannot be based purely on Geoffrey's version. The Dream's account also seems to accord better with details in the Triads, so it perhaps reflects an earlier tradition.

Macsen Wledig, the Emperor of Rome, dreams one night of a lovely maiden in a wonderful, far-off land. Awakening, he sends his men all over the earth in search of her. With much difficulty they find her in a rich castle in Wales, daughter of a chieftain based atSegontium (Caernarfon), and lead the Emperor to her. Everything he finds is exactly as in his dream. The maiden, whose name isHelen or Elen, accepts and loves him. Because Elen is found a virgin, Macsen gives her father sovereignty over the island of Britain and orders three castles built for his bride.[38]

In Macsen's absence, a new emperor seizes power and warns him not to return. With the help of men from Britain led by Elen's brotherConanus (Welsh: Cynan Meriadoc,Breton: Conan Meriadeg), Macsen marches across Gaul and Italy and recaptures Rome. In gratitude to his British allies, Macsen rewards them with a portion of Gaul that becomes known as Brittany.

Coel Hen

[edit]

According to another legend, Maximus appointedCoel Hen, perhaps the legendary "Old King Cole", as governor of northern Britain, ruling fromEburacum (York). Following Maximus's departure for the continent, Coel became high king of northern Britain.[39]

Other links with Caernarfon

[edit]

Magnus Maximus and Elen are traditionally given as the parents of Saint Peblig (or Publicus, named in the Calendar of theChurch in Wales), to whom a church dedicated stands in Caernarfon. The church is built on an important early Christian site, itself built on a RomanMithraeum or temple ofMithras, close to the Segontium Roman Fort. A Roman altar was found in one of the walls during 19th century restoration work. The present church dates mainly from the 14th century.[40]

The medieval English kingEdward I was influenced by the legendary dream of Macsen Wledig/Magnus Maximus. In the dream Maximus had seen a fort, "the fairest that man ever saw", within a city at the mouth of a river in a mountainous country and opposite an island. Edward interpreted this to mean Segontium was the city of Maximus's dream and drew on the imperial link when buildingCaernarfon Castle in 1283.[41] It was apparently believed that Maximus died in Wales. According to theFlores Historiarum, during the construction of the Castle and the nearby planned town, the body believed to be of Magnus Maximus was discovered entombed; King Edward ordered its reburial in a local church.[42]

Later literature

[edit]

Magnus Maximus appears as a character in the Erik Hildinger’s novelFortuna at the Rudder, first as general and then as a usurping emperor. The prominent place of Macsen in history, Welsh legend and in theMatter of Britain means he is often a character or referred to in historical and Arthurian fiction. Such stories includeStephen R. Lawhead'sPendragon Cycle,Mary Stewart'sThe Hollow Hills,Jack Whyte's Camulod Chronicles,M J Trow's Britannia series,Nancy McKenzie'sQueen of Camelot andRudyard Kipling'sPuck of Pook's Hill. The popular Welshfolk songYma o Hyd, recorded byDafydd Iwan in 1981, recalls Macsen Wledig and celebrates the continued survival of theWelsh people since his days.

Primary sources

[edit]

He is mentioned in a number of ancient and medieval sources:

References

[edit]
  1. ^Birley, Anthony (1983)."Magnus Maximus and the persecution of heresy".Bulletin of the John Rylands Library.66 (1): 24.doi:10.7227/BJRL.66.1.2.[Chronicle ofSulpicius Severus] 2.49.5: 'iam tum rumor incesserat clemens maximum'... The reading 'Clementem' led to the mistaken view that the emperor was calledMagnus Clemens Maximus.
  2. ^"The New Cambridge Medieval History:c. 500c. 700" by Paul Fouracre,Rosamond McKitterick, p. 48
  3. ^abcdeJ. B. Bury ed. (1924),The Cambridge Medieval History, p. 238
  4. ^Bartrum., Peter Clement (1993).A Welsh Classical Dictionary; People In History And Legend Up To About A. D. 1000. The National Library of Wales. p. 494.ISBN 9780907158738.
  5. ^McLynn 1994, p. 154.
  6. ^Errington 2006, pp. 31–32.
  7. ^Wijnendaele, J. (2020).Ammianus, Magnus Maximus and the Gothic Uprising.Britannia, 51, 330-335. doi:10.1017/S0068113X20000045
  8. ^Ammianus Marcellinus,The Later Roman Empire(Penguin 1986) p. 417
  9. ^Birley 2005, p. 443.
  10. ^Birley 2005, p. 447.
  11. ^Orosius,Historium adversum paganos 7.34.9
  12. ^Zosimus,Historia Nova 4.35.2-3
  13. ^Williams & Friell 1994, p. 37.
  14. ^Casey 1979, p. 67.
  15. ^McEvoy, Meaghan (2013).Child emperor rule in the late Roman West, AD 367-455. Oxford classical monographs. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 87.ISBN 978-0-19-174954-4.
  16. ^Craven, Maxwell (2023).Magnus Maximus. Amberley Publishing Limited. p. 167.ISBN 978-1-3981-1137-0.
  17. ^A Momigliano,Essays in Ancient and Modern Historiography (Oxford 1977) p. 113
  18. ^K Cooper ed.,Making Early Medieval Societies (2016) p. 34 and p. 44
  19. ^Ames, Christine Cadwell (15 April 2015).Medieval Heresies: Christianity, Judaism, and Islam. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 45–46.ISBN 9781107023369.
  20. ^Omissi, Adrastos (May 2022)."Two letters of the usurper Magnus Maximus (Collectio Avellana 39 and 40)".Classical Quarterly.72 (1):391–415.doi:10.1017/S000983882200043X.ISSN 0009-8388.S2CID 253923880.
  21. ^Ambrose, Patrologia Latina, 16–17 (1845), nos. 40
  22. ^Pan. Lat. II.34
  23. ^For a summary of the invasion of Italy and subsequent campaign against Theodosius see Hebblewhite, M. (2020) Theodosius and the Limits of Empire, 81ff
  24. ^Pan. Lat. II.35-6
  25. ^Ambrose, Ep. 40.32
  26. ^Susan Wise Bauer, "The History of the Medieval World: From the Conversion of Constantine to the First Crusade", W. W. Norton & Company, 22 Feb 2010 (p.68)
  27. ^Ashe, Geoffrey (1960).From Caesar to Arthur. London: Collins. p. 114.ISBN 978-7-270-00620-8. Retrieved8 April 2025.{{cite book}}:ISBN / Date incompatibility (help)
  28. ^Saint Ambrose (1881). "Letter XL, Ambrose to Theodosius, 388 AD". In Walford, Rev. H. (ed.).The Letters of S. Ambrose, Bishop of Milan. London: James Parker & Co. p. 268. Retrieved8 April 2025.[Y]ou have recalled the daughters of your enemy, you have committed them to be nurtured by their relative, you have bestowed money from your treasury on the mother of your enemy.
  29. ^Birley 2005, p. 450.
  30. ^Drinkwater, John; Elton, Hugh, eds. (2002).Fifth-Century Gaul: A Crisis of Identity?. Cambridge University Press. p. 118.ISBN 0-521-41485-7. Retrieved13 January 2020.
  31. ^Bartrum, Peter C. (1993). "Severa daughter of Maximus".A Welsh Classical Dictionary: People In History And Legend Up To About A. D. 1000.Aberystwyth: National Library of Wales. p. 672. Retrieved8 April 2025.
  32. ^abFrere, Sheppard Sunderland (1987), "The End of Roman Britain",Britannia: A History of Roman Britain (3rd, revised ed.), London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, p. 354,ISBN 0-7102-1215-1
  33. ^Giles, John Allen, ed. (1841),"The Works of Gildas",The Works of Gildas and Nennius, London: James Bohn, p. 13, The History, ch. 14.
  34. ^Phillimore, Egerton, ed. (1887),"Pedigrees from Jesus College MS. 20",Y Cymmrodor, vol. VIII, Honourable Society of Cymmrodorion, pp. 83–92
  35. ^Phillimore, Egerton (1888),"The Annales Cambriae and Old Welsh Genealogies, from Harleian MS. 3859", in Phillimore, Egerton (ed.),Y Cymmrodor, vol. IX, Honourable Society of Cymmrodorion, pp. 141–183
  36. ^abRachel Bromwich, editor and translator. Trioedd Ynys Prydein: The Welsh Triads. Cardiff:University of Wales Press, Third Edition, 2006. 441-444
  37. ^abcG Monmouth (1966).The History of the Kings of Britain. Penguin 1966, pp. 136–147
  38. ^S Davies trans,Mabinogion (Oxford 2007) p. 108
  39. ^Kessler, Peter."Magnus Maximus".The History Files. Retrieved13 January 2020.
  40. ^"Church of St Peblig, Caernarfon".www.britishlistedbuildings.co.uk. British Listed Buildings. Retrieved13 November 2015.
  41. ^Allen Brown, Reginald (1984).The Architecture of Castles: A Visual Guide. B.T. Batsford. p. 88.ISBN 0-7134-4089-9.
  42. ^Taylor, Arnold (1986).The Welsh Castles of Edward I. Hambledon Press, London. p. 78.ISBN 0-907628-71-0.

Sources

[edit]

External links

[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related toMagnus Maximus.
Magnus Maximus
 Died: 28 August 388
Regnal titles
Preceded byRoman emperor
383–388
With:Valentinian II,Theodosius I andVictor
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded byRoman consul
388
withTheodosius I andMaternus Cynegius
Succeeded by
Legendary titles
Preceded byKing of Britain
383–388
withDionotus (regent)
Succeeded by
Roman andByzantine emperors and empresses regnant
Principate
27 BC – AD 235
Crisis
235–284
Later Roman Empire
284–641
Western Empire
395–476
Eastern Empire
395–641
Eastern/
Byzantine Empire

641–1453
See also
Italics indicates a junior co-emperor, underlining indicates an emperor variously regarded as either legitimate or a usurper
Texts and tales
Four Branches of theMabinogi
Arthurian
Other
Characters
Animals and
creatures
Locations
Items
Works
Translations
Characters
Topics
International
National
People
Other
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Magnus_Maximus&oldid=1321010038"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp