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Flavius Valerius Constantinus (272 - May 22, 337), commonly known as Constantine I or
Constantine the Great, was proclaimed Augustus by his troops on
July 25, 306 and ruled an ever-growing portion of
the Roman Empire to his death. Constantine is famed for his refounding of
Byzantium as "New Rome," which was always called "Constantine's City"— Constantinople. With the "Edict of Milan" in 313,
Constantine and his co-Emperor removed all onus from Christianity. By taking the personal step of convoking the Council of Nicaea (325) Constantine began the Roman Empire's unofficial
sponsoring of Christianity, which was a major factor in that religion's
spread. His reputation as the "first Christian Emperor" was promulgated by Lactantius and Eusebius and gained ground in the succeeding
generations.
Early life
He was born at Naissus in Upper Dacia to Constantius I Chlorus and an innkeeper's daughter, Helena. Constantine was
well educated and served at the court of Diocletian in Nicomedia as a kind of hostage after the appointment of his father as one of the two
Caesari, at that time a junior emperor, in the Tetrarchy in 293. On the death of his father Constantius in 306, he managed
to be at his deathbed in Eburacum (York), where troops loyal to his
father's memory proclaimed him Emperor. For the next 18 years, he fought a series of battles and wars that left him first as
emperor of the west, and then as supreme ruler of the Roman Empire.
Bronze statue of Constantine I outside York Minster, near where he was
acclaimed Emperor in 306
Constantine as a "Christian"
Constantine is perhaps best known for being the first Roman Emperor to endorse Christianity, traditionally presented as a result of an omen - a fiery cross in the sky, with the inscription
"By this sign shalt thou conquer" - before his victory in the Battle of Milvian Bridge in 312, when Constantine is said to have instituted the new standard to
be carried into battle, called the labarum. The deity of the dream-omen reported in
the Christian biographies was not publicly identified at the time. Bronze coins struck for emperors often reveal details of their
personal iconography. During the early part of Constantine's rule, representations first of Mars and then, from AD 310, Apollo as
Sun God consistently appear on the reverse of his coinage. Mars had been associated with the Tetrarchy, and Constantine’s use of this symbolism served to emphasise the legitimacy of his rule. After
his breach with his father’s old colleague Maximian in 309-10, Constantine
began to claim legitimate descent from the 3rd century emperor Claudius Gothicus, the hero of Naissus. Gothicus had claimed the divine protection of Apollo-Sol. In AD 310 Constantine
experienced a vision in which Apollo-Sol appeared to him with omens of success. Thereafter the reverses of his coinage were
dominated for several years by his "companion the unconquered Sol", SOLI INVICTO COMITI read the inscriptions. The
depiction of his personal tutelary god represents Apollo with a solar halo, Helios-like, and the world-globe in his hands.
According to a number of historians and researchers, this is the god Constantine embraced with the omen at the Milvian Bridge: a
syncretic Sun God, (Sol Invictus), with relations to Mithraism, which had many common points with Christianity.
Another aspect of Constantine that might indicate an incomplete acceptance of Christianity to a modern view was his cruelty:
he executed his own wife and eldest son in 326 for unknown reasons. He also had Licinus
strangled after his defeat, something he had publicly promised not to do.
Christian historians, ever since Lactantius have adhered to the view that Constantine "adopted" Christianity as a kind of
replacement for the official Roman paganism. Though the document called the
"Donation of Constantine" was proved a forgery
(though not until the 15th century, when the stories of Constantine's conversion were long-established "facts") it was attributed
as documenting the conversion of the Roman Empire to Christianity for centuries. Even Christian skeptics have accepted this
formulation, though seeing Constantine's policy as a political rather than spiritual move.
Whether or not Constantine's personal deity was Sol Invictus or Christ Crucified, by the end of the 3rd century, Christian
communities and their bishops had become a force to contend with, in urban centers especially. Christians were preferred for high
government positions; the Church was granted various special privileges; and churches like the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem and the Church of the
Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem were constructed. Christian bishops took
aggressive public stances that were unknown among other cult leaders, even among the Jews. Proselytism had had to be publicly
outlawed, simply to maintain public decorum. In the essential legions, however, Christianity was despised as womanish, and the
soldiers followed Mithras and Isis. Since the
Roman Emperors ruled by "divine right" and stayed in power through the support of the legions, it was important for them to be
seen to support a strong state religion. The contumely of the Christians consisted in their public refusal to participate in
official rites that no one deeply believed in, but which were an equivalent of an oath of allegiance. Refusal might easily bring upon all the Roman people the loss of the gods' support;
such were the usual justifications for occasional lynchings of Christians by Roman soldiers, the fare of many martyrologies.
Family influence is sometimes adduced to account for a personal adoption of Christianity: Helena in this agenda is said to be
"probably born a Christian" though virtually nothing is known of her background, save that her mother was the daughter of an
innkeeper and her father a sucessful soldier, a career that excluded overt Christians. Certainly Helena demonstrated extreme
piety in her later life, in her trip to Palestine, where she discovered the True
Cross and established basilicas.
Constantine and Licinius' Edict of Milan (313) neither made paganism
illegal nor made Christianity a state-sponsored religion. What it did was legalize Christianity, return confiscated Church
property, and establish Sunday as a day of worship. Though the church prospered under
Constantine's patronage, it also fell into the first of many public schisms. He called the First Council of Nicaea to settle the problem of Arianism, a dispute about the personhood and godhood of Jesus. It produced the Nicene Creed, which favoured the
position of Athanasius, Arius's opponent, and became official doctrine.
As the general custom, Constantine was not baptized until close to his death, when his choice fell upon the Arian bishop,
Eusebius of Nicomedia. Few Christian authors have
emphasized that Constantine the Great died peacefully secure in the Arian faith.
Persian reaction
Beyond the limites, east of the Euphrates, the Sassanid rulers of the Persian empire had usually tolerated their Christians. A Letter from Constantine to
Shapur II, supposed to have been written in 324 urged him to protect the Christians in his realm... With the edicts of toleration
in the Roman empire, the followers of Christ would be regarded as allies of Persia's ancient enemy. The persecutions began.
Shapur II (ruled 310 - 379) wrote to his generals:
- You will arrest Simon, chief of the Christians. You will keep him till he signs this document and consents to collect for
us a double tax and double tribute from the Christians . . . for we Gods have all the trials of war and they have nothing but
repose and pleasure. They inhabit our territory and agree with Caesar, our enemy. (quoted in Freya Stark, Rome on the
Euphrates 1967, p. 375)
It was not an unreasonable demand in the circumstances. The Sassanids were perennially at war with Rome. Christians were now
suspected for potential treachery. The "Great Persecution" of the Persian Christian churches occured in a later period, 340-363,
after the Persian Wars that reopened upon Constantine's death. In 344 came the martyrdom of Catholicos Shimun bar Sabbae, with
five bishops and 100 priests.
Other achievements
His victory in 312 over Maxentius at the
Battle of Milvian Bridge resulted in his becoming Western Augustus, or ruler of the entire western half of the empire. He
gradually consolidated his military superiority over his rivals in the crumbling Tetrarchy until 324, when he defeated the eastern ruler, Licinius, and became sole emperor.
Constantine rebuilt the ancient Greek city of Byzantium, naming it Nova
Roma, providing it with a Senate and civic offices similar to the older Rome. After
his death it was renamed Constantinopolis (or Constantinople), and
gradually became the capital of the empire.
Constantine also passed laws making the occupations of butcher and baker hereditary, and more importantly, supported converting the coloni (tenant farmers) into serfs -- laying the foundation for mediaeval European society.
Although he earned his honorific of "The Great" from Christian historians long after he had died, he could have claimed the
title on his military achievements alone. In addition to reuniting the empire under one emperor, Constantine won major victories
over the Marcomanni and Alamanni
(306-08), the Vandals and Marcomanni (314-15), the Visigoths in 332 and the Sarmatians two years later. In fact, by 336, Constantine had actually
reoccupied most of the long-lost province of Dacia, which Aurelian had been forced to abandon in 271. At the time of his death, he was
planning a great expedition to put an end to raids on the eastern provinces from Persia
by conquering that nation--something no Emperor since Trajan had contemplated.
Constantine's pro-Christian policies also led to anti-Jew policies, the forerunner
of the mediaeval persecution of Judaism.
He was succeeded by his three sons, Constantine II, Constantius II
and Constans, who secured their hold on the empire with the murder of a number of
relatives and supporters of Constantine. The last member of his dynasty was his grandson, Julian, who attempted to restore paganism.
Geoffrey of Monmouth and a Constantine made British
The English chronicler Geoffrey of Monmouth, who offered
a genealogy of British kings that linked them to the Fall of Troy and has an uneven reputation for credulity and professional
care, claimed that the Helena who was mother of the noble Constantine was actually the Helena, the daughter of "Old King Cole", Cole, the mythical King of the Britons. It was indecorous, Geoffrey considered, that a king might have less-than-noble antecedents. Monmouth said
that Constantine was proclaimed "king of the Britons" at York, though that title is not mentioned in any text. To say that there
is little proof to support this claim is generous, but a few myth-loving citizens of the UK long to set Constantine alongside
Arthur.
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