Infobox Roman emperor name Allectus full name title Roman emperor Emperor of the Britannic Empire image Quinarius Allectus galley RIC 0128.2.jpg caption Allectus on a coin, with a br galley on the reverse ... birth date birth place death date 296 death place Roman Britain Britain place of burial Allectus died ... Leonhard Schmitz title Allectus editor William Smith lexicographer William Smith encyclopedia ... moa idno acl3129.0001.001 q1 demosthenes size l frm frameset seq 147 ref History Allectus was treasurer ... Boulogne sur Mer Boulogne , and defeated his Franks Frankish allies in Batavians Batavia . Allectus ... Allectus Beaurains hoard.jpg 150px thumb left Medal of Constantius Chlorus Constantius I capturing London inscribed as LON after defeating Allectus. Beaurains hoard. His reign has left little record ... , took advantage of fog to avoid Allectus s ships stationed at the Isle of Wight , and landed near Southampton Water , where they burnt their ships. Allectus s forces were forced to retreat from the coast, but were cut off by another of Constantius s divisions and defeated. Allectus himself ... during the channel crossing, caught up with the remnants of Allectus s men, mostly Franks, at Londinium ... , restorer of the eternal light viz. of Rome . Legend Geoffrey of Monmouth included Allectus in his legendary Historia Regum Britanniae History of the Kings of Britain ca. 1136 . Here, Allectus ... of Cornwall. The last of Allectus s troops are besieged in London, and surrender on the condition they are granted ... of Britain Book 5 4 5.4 ref References reflist External links Commons Allectus S start succession ... Asclepiodotus Asclepiodotus years S end Persondata name Allectus alternative names short description ... Allectus Category British traditional history Category Roman emperors Category Ancient Romans in Britain ... ca Al lecte cs Allectus cy Allectus de Allectus es Alecto emperador fr Allectus it Alletto la Allectus nl Allectus pl Allectus ru sh Alekto fi Allectus ... more details
Unreferenced date May 2010 Infobox Former Country native name Imperium Britannicum conventional long name Britannic Empire common name Britannic Empire continent Europe region British Isles country Britain era Late Antiquity government type Monarchy year start 286 year end 296 p1 Roman Empire flag p1 Vexilloid of the Roman Empire.svg s1 Roman Empire flag s1 Vexilloid of the Roman Empire.svg image map image map caption capital Londinium common languages Latin popular religion Paganism official leader1 Carausius year leader1 286 293 leader2 Allectus year leader2 293 296 title leader Concise list of Roman Emperors Emperor The Britannic Empire was a short lived breakaway state of the Roman empire in the Late Antiquity late Roman Period . It was formed as a result of the Carausian Revolt revolt by the naval commander Carausius . It ended when Carausius s usurper, Allectus , was defeated by the Emperor Constantius Chlorus Constantius I in 296. Literature cite book last Casey first P. J. title Carausius and Allectus the British usurpers year 1994 publisher isbn 0 203 97435 2 See also Carausian Revolt British Empire Category Former countries in Europe Category Former empires of Europe sr sh Britansko Carstvo antika ... more details
in opposition to Allectus, a Roman who oppressed the people of Britain. ref Geoffrey of Monmouth ... He defeats and kills Allectus near London , and besieges the rest of his forces in the city. The Romans ... him, and takes his crown. s start s reg s bef before Allectus s ttl title List of legendary kings of Britain ... more details
image Quinarius.jpg thumb right A quinarius The quinarius was a small silver Roman currency Roman coin valued at half a denarius . Image Quinarius Allectus galley RIC 0128.2.jpg thumb Allectus quinarius The quinarius was struck for a few years, along with the silver sestertius , following the introduction of the denarius in 211 BC. At this time the quinarius was valued at 5 as coin asses . The coin was reintroduced in 101 BC as a replacement for the victoriatus , this time valued at 8 asses due to retariffing of the denarius to 16 asses in 118 BC. For a few years following its reintroduction, large quantities of quinarii were produced, mostly for circulation in Gaul . The coin was produced sporadically until the 3rd century. The term gold quinarius or quinarius aureus is used to describe the half aureus , which is valued at 12.5 denarii. This term has no ancient authority. External links http arendt.mcmaster.ca coins catalogue.php?glossary Quinarius More Information br Commons Quinarius coin stub Ancient Rome stub Category Coins of ancient Rome Category Numismatics bg de Quinarius nummus es Quinario eu Quinario gan hr Kvinar it Quinario moneta la Quinarius lt Kvinarijus pl Quinarius ro Quinarius ru tr Quinarius uk ... more details
Unreferenced date December 2009 Aurelius Arpagius was a governor of one of the provinces of Roman Britain , probably Britannia Secunda . He is known from a single building inscription from Birdoswald RIB 1912 which describes the rebuilding of several buildings at the fort under the Tetrarchy, it dates to the period AD296 305. This was just after Rome had retaken Britain from Allectus . The case is often made that there was significant unrest under his reign. Yet there is very little firm evidence that there any significant violence in this period. DEFAULTSORT Arpagius, Aurelius Category Roman governors of Britain Category Ancient Romans in Britain ... more details
Taxobox name Mecocerus image Anthribidae Mecocerus wallacei.JPG image width 240px image caption Mecocerus wallacei from Borneo . Male and female regnum Animal ia phylum Arthropod a classis Insect a ordo Beetle Coleoptera familia Anthribidae genus Mecocerus genus authority Sch nherr, 1833 synonyms Mecocerus is a genus of beetle belonging to the family Anthribidae . List of selected species Mecocerus allectus Mecocerus asmenus Jordan Mecocerus assimilis Mecocerus gazella Mecocerus rhombeus Quedenfeldt, 1886 Mecocerus wallacei Pascoe, 1860 References http www.biolib.cz en taxon id125381 Biolib http www.ubio.org browser search.php?search all mecocerus Universal Biological Indexer Category Beetles Beetle stub ... more details
years, was assassinated by his subordinate Allectus , who assumed command. ref Panegyrici Latini 8 ... s ships to pass Allectus s fleet, stationed at the Isle of Wight , unseen. They landed ..., but in doing so, fell into the hands of another division and were routed. Allectus himself was killed ... the main body by the fog during the channel crossing, caught up with the remnants of Allectus s men ..., Allectus, Asclepiodotus and Constantius appear in Geoffrey of Monmouth s Historia Regum Britanniae ..., or Caracalla . The Romans send Allectus with three legions to remove him, but Allectus proves an oppressive ... defeats Allectus near London, and besieges his last legion in the city. The Romans surrender on the condition ... more details
, and his eventual murderer and successor, Allectus. ref name table Coins from these reigns are infrequently ... yet recorded . ref name rep The hoard containing significant numbers of Allectus Quinarius quinarii ... 40 Marcus Aurelius Probus Probus 276 282 1,327 Carus 282 283 113 Carausius 287 293 16 Allectus 293 296 ... more details
Unreferenced date December 2009 Britannia Secunda was one of the provinces of Roman Britain in existence by c. 312 AD and probably created as part of the administrative reforms of the Roman Emperor Diocletian after the defeat of the usurper Allectus by Constantius Chlorus in 296 AD. The governors of Britannia Secunda were of Equestrian order equestrian rank although few are known by name. Their capital was at York Citation needed date July 2008 . The province is named in the Verona List and probably encompassed all of what is now northern England and possibly north Wales . In 369 , a new province of Valentia Roman Britain Valentia was created, probably from a portion of Britannia Secunda. Provinces of Britain Further reading cite book last Frere first Sheppard authorlink Sheppard Frere title Britannia a history of Roman Britain publisher Harvard University Press year 1967 location Cambridge pages cite book last Mattingly first David authorlink David Mattingly title An Imperial Possession Britain in the Roman Province publisher Penguin year 2006 location London pages cite book last Creighton first John authorlink John Creighton title Britannia the Creation of a Roman Province publisher Routledge year 2006 location London and New York Late Roman Provinces state collapsed Category Roman Britain Category Late Roman provinces Category States and territories established in 296 cy Britannia Secunda de Britannia secunda es Britania Secunda id Britannia Secunda it Britannia Secunda ... more details
About the book by Rosemary Sutcliff other books and uses of the term The Silver Branch disambiguation unreferenced date May 2011 Infobox book See Wikipedia WikiProject Novels or Wikipedia WikiProject Books name The Silver Branch title orig translator image Image Silverbranchcover.jpg 200px prefer 1st edition image caption author Rosemary Sutcliff illustrator Charles Keeping cover artist country United Kingdom language English language English series genre Children s literature Children s , Historical novel publisher Oxford University Press release date December 1957 english release date media type Print Hardcover Hardback & Paperback pages 223 pp isbn 0 374 46648 3 congress PZ7.S966 Shl 1993 oclc 27934892 preceded by The Eagle of the Ninth followed by The Lantern Bearers Sutcliff novel The Lantern Bearers The Silver Branch is a historical adventure novel for children written by Rosemary Sutcliff and published in 1957, with illustrations by Charles Keeping . Set in Britain in the 290s last decade of the third century AD , it is the story of two cousins in the Roman legion s who find themselves in the intrigue and battle surrounding the struggles between Carausius , a self proclaimed emperor in Britain, Allectus , Carausius treasurer, and Constantius Chlorus Constantius , emperor in Rome. The silver branch of the title is an article in the possession of a friend of the characters. Subtle allusions to it recur in other novels in the Eagle of the Ninth Eagle of the Ninth series , and it presumably refers to the otherworldly instrument mentioned in the medieval Irish narrative The Voyage of Bran . The Silver Branch follows The Eagle of the Ninth and precedes Frontier Wolf , The Lantern Bearers Sutcliff novel The Lantern Bearers and Sword at Sunset . External links http rosemarysutcliff.wordpress.com Blogsite on The Silver Branch and all Rosemary Sutcliff books by her godchild and literary executor DEFAULTSORT Silver Branch, The Category English novels Category 1957 novel ... more details
minister Allectus murders Carausius and seizes power employs Franks Frankish mercenaries. ref name CBH 296 Julius Constantius defeats Britons near Silchester , killing Allectus prevents retreating Franks ... more details
Panegyrici Latini 6 5, 8.6 8 ref Nevertheless, Carausius s grip on power was fatally undermined. Allectus ... up as king. Hearing of Carausius s treachery, the Romans send Allectus to Britain with three legions. Allectus defeats and kills Carausius and sets himself up as king in his place. ref Geoffrey of Monmouth ... kings of Britain after Allectus years s end Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME ... more details
Britannia Prima was one of the provinces of Roman Britain in existence by c. 312 AD. It was probably created as part of the administrative reforms of the Roman Emperor Diocletian after the defeat of the usurper Allectus by Constantius Chlorus in 296 AD. In the 3rd century, the Romans created Britannia Superior to separate southern Britain from militarized northern Britain. A century later, this region was further divided into four distinct provinces, namely Britannia Prima Wales and the West Country , Britannia Secunda, Flavia Caesariensis, and Maxima Caesariensis. Hence, Britannia Prima was part of the four regions which made up the Diocese of Britain. ref Frere, pp. 198 199. ref Provinces of Britain Roman rule after the 3rd century The Diocese of Britain was placed under the overall authority of the praetorian prefecture for the Gaullic region. Even though the late Roman civil administration of Britain is shadowy, it is only because of the survival of the Notitia Dignitatum that we can sketch the outline of Roman Britain. ref Mattingly, pp. 227 228. ref This document is the primary source of the changes and alterations made to the province of Britannia by the Roman government. The primary objective for the creation of new provinces was to improve the link between Britain and the near Continent, where the praetorian prefect had a main base at Trier . Britannia Prima had two legions, the Second Augusta at Caerleon and the Twentieth at Chester. Of the four provinces in the Diocese of Britain, Britannia Prima was the largest, and it was generally focused on western England, with either Cirencester or Gloucester as the capital. The main reason to believe that Cirencester was the capital of Britannia Prima is an inscription from Cirensester itself, referring poetically to a rector or ruler of Britannia Prima by the name of L. Septimius. The governors of Britannia Prima were of equestrian rank, although few are known by name. The province is named in the Verona List and ... more details
dynasty . As Caesar title Caesar he defeated the usurper Allectus in Roman Britain Britain and campaigned ... rationalis Allectus , who assumed command of the British provinces until his death in 296. Constantius spent the next two years neutralising the threat of the Franks who were the allies of Allectus, ref ... army encountered the forces of Allectus, resulting in the defeat and death of the usurper. ref Aurelius ... months, replaced most of Allectus officers, and the British provinces were probably at this time subdivided ... London after defeating Allectus Beaurains hoard.jpg thumb Medal of Constantius I capturing Londinium inscribed as LON after defeating Allectus . Beaurains hoard. Between 303 and 305, Galerius began maneuvering ... more details
Use mdy dates date February 2011 Year dab 293 the pain medication Co codaprin Year nav 293 M1 year in topic File Venice The Tetrarchs 03.jpg thumb The four Tetrarchy Tetrarchs , Venice File Tetrarchy map3.jpg thumb Map of the Roman Empire under the Tetrarchy Tetrarchy 293 NOTOC Year 293 Roman numerals CCXCIII was a common year starting on Sunday link will display the full calendar of the Julian calendar . At the time, it was known as the Year of the Consulship of Valerius and Valerius or, less frequently, year 1046 Ab urbe condita . The denomination 293 for this year has been used since the early medieval period, when the Anno Domini calendar era became the prevalent method in Europe for naming years. Events onlyinclude By place Roman Empire March 1 &ndash Emperor Diocletian and Maximian appoint Constantius Chlorus and Galerius as Caesar title Caesar s. This is considered the beginning of the Tetrarchy , known as the Quattuor Principes Mundi Four Rulers of the World . The four Tetrarchs establish their capitals close to the Roman Empire Roman frontier Nicomedia northwestern Asia Minor becomes the capital of Diocletian Mediolanum Milan , near the Alps becomes the capital of Maximian History of Trier Augusta Treverorum Trier , in Germany becomes the capital of Constantius Chlorus Sirmium Serbia , on the Danube border becomes the capital of Galerius Diocletian s Palace is built at a small bay on the Dalmatia n coast, four miles from Salona , today s Split, Croatia Split , Croatia . Constantius Chlorus retakes some of the Gaul Gallic territories and conquers the crucial port of Bononia modern Boulogne sur Mer Boulogne . Carausius , Roman usurper , is murdered by his finance minister Allectus who proclaims himself emperor of Roman Britain Britain . Constantius Chlorus defeats the Franks on the Rhine frontier in Batavi Germanic tribe Batavia Netherlands . Asia King Bahram II of the Sassanid Empire Persian Empire dies after a 17 year reign, his son Bahram III ascends to th ... more details
the two powers for a generation. Similarly, Constantius defeated the British usurper Allectus , Maximian ... Carausius 286 293 Britania Allectus 293 296 Domitius Domitianus Aegyptus 296 297 Aurelius Achilleus ... more details
, Allectus , while Maximian held the Limes Germanicus Rhine frontier . The rebel leader was ousted ..., 71. ref Campaign against Allectus File Quinarius Allectus galley RIC 0128.2.jpg thumb right Allectus ... by his treasurer, Allectus . ref Barnes, Constantine and Eusebius , 15 Potter, 288 Rees, Layers of Loyalty ..., 73. ref Allectus was killed on the North Downs in battle with Constantius praetorian prefect, Julius ... more details