Quietus
Quietus | |||||||||
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Usurper of the Roman Empire | |||||||||
Reign | 260-1 (with Macrianus Minor) | ||||||||
Predecessor | Gallienus | ||||||||
Successor | Gallienus | ||||||||
Died | 261 Emesa, Syria | ||||||||
| |||||||||
Father | Macrianus Major | ||||||||
Mother | ? (of senatorial descent) |
Titus Fulvius Junius Quietus (died 261) was a Roman usurper against Roman Emperor Gallienus.
History
[edit]Quietus was the son of Fulvius Macrianus[2] and a noblewoman, possibly named Junia. According to Historia Augusta, he was a military tribune under Valerian,[3] but this information is challenged by historians.[citation needed]
He gained the imperial office with his brother Macrianus Minor, after the capture of Emperor Valerian in the Sassanid campaign of 260.[4] With the lawful heir, Gallienus, being far away in the West, the soldiers elected the two emperors. The support of his father, controller of the imperial treasure, and the influence of Balista, Praetorian prefect of the late Emperor Valerian, proved instrumental in his promotion.[5]
Quietus and Macrianus, elected consuls,[6] had to face the Emperor Gallienus, at the time in the West. Quietus and Balista stayed in the eastern provinces, while his brother and father marched their army to Europe to seize control of the Roman Empire. After the defeat and deaths of his brother and father in Thrace in 261, Quietus lost the control of the provinces in favour of Septimus Odaenathus of Palmyra, a loyal client king of the Romans who had helped push the Persians out of the eastern provinces and recovered Roman Mesopotamia in 260.[citation needed] Forced to flee to the city of Emesa,[7] he was besieged there by Odaenathus,[citation needed] during the course of which he was killed by its inhabitants, possibly instigated by Balista.[8]
Cultural depictions
[edit]Quietus appears in Harry Sidebottom's historical fiction novel series as one of the series' antagonists.
References
[edit]- ^ The coinage of Quietus and of his brother and co-emperor Macrianus Minor celebrated the army, the confidence in victory, and the foreseen arrival of happy times. All of these themes were very important in a time of emergency, when the Roman Empire had lost its Emperor in battle against the Sassanid Empire.
- ^ Jones, pg. 757
- ^ Historia Augusta, Tyranni Triginta, 12:10
- ^ Jones, pg. 758
- ^ Körner, www.roman-emperors.org/galusurp.htm#Note%202
- ^ Körner, www.roman-emperors.org/galusurp.htm#Note%202
- ^ Jones, pg. 757
- ^ (Zonaras xii.24)
Sources
[edit]- [this page does not exist]
- Jones, A.H.M., Martindale, J.R. The Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire, Vol. I: AD260-395, Cambridge University Press, 1971
External links
[edit]Media related to Quietus at Wikimedia Commons