Authors: Michael Kulikowski
Gainas | Gothic general in Roman service who led the eastern army back to Constantinople in 395, where he organized the murder of Rufinus. Sent to suppress the revolt of Tribigild in 399, he himself rebelled against the government in 400, but was killed trying to flee the empire after being defeated by Fravitta. |
Galerius | emperor 293–311 (caesar 293–305; augustus 305–311), he was a general of Diocletian and Maximian made caesar along with |
Galla Placidia | c. 390–450, imperial princess, daughter of Theodosius Ⅰ, sister of Honorius, mother of Valentinian Ⅲ. Captured in the siege of Rome, she married Alaric’s successor Athaulf, but after his murder was returned to the imperial government and married to Constantius Ⅲ. |
Gallienus | emperor 253–268, his reign is generally portrayed as a long catalogue of disasters, among them devastating Gothic raids in the eastern provinces. |
Gallus | caesar of Constantius Ⅱ 351–354 and elder brother of Julian, he was executed by Constantius in 354. |
Gildo | north African aristocrat given a sweeping command as |
Gouththikas | Gothic priest with whom the martyr Saba intended to spend Easter 372. |
Gratian | emperor 367–383. The son of Valentinian Ⅰ, who became the ruler of the western empire after his father’s death in 375. He acquiesced in the proclamation of Theodosius in 379 rather than exacerbate the crisis in the East after Adrianople, but was overthrown and killed in the usurpation of Magnus Maximus in 383. |
Guntheric | Gothic king in 249, he invaded the eastern provinces in company of Argaith. |
Gunthigis (Baza) | barbarian general in imperial service to whom the sixth-century author Jordanes served as secretary. |
Hadrian | emperor 117–138 under whom the expansion of the Roman empire ceased. |
Heraclian | comes Africae |
Honorius | emperor 393–423. Youngest son of Theodosius, nominally the western emperor after his father’s death in 395, but in reality controlled by Stilicho, whose daughters Maria and Thermantia he |
Ingenuus | usurper against Gallienus in 260. |
Jordanes | |
Jovian | emperor 363–364. He was elected by the officers of Julian’s field army to extract them from Persian territory after Julian’s death, but did so by means of unpopular concessions to the Persians, dying after less than a year on the throne. |
Jovius | praetorian prefect of Italy and rival of Olympius at the court of Honorius after the death of Stilicho, he attempted to negotiate a treaty with Alaric in 409. |
Julian | emperor 361–363. Nephew of Constantine and by 354 last surviving male relative of Constantius Ⅱ, who made him caesar in 355. After becoming sole emperor in 361, he attempted to de-Christianize the empire, but failed to do so because he died prematurely on campaign in Persia. |
Julius | magister militum |
Junius Soranus | dux Scythiae |
Justina | second wife of Valentinian Ⅰ and mother of Valentinian Ⅱ. |
Justinian | emperor 527–565 who reconquered territories in the Latin West that had once been imperial provinces but which had been barbarian kingdoms for many decades. |
Licinius | emperor 308–324, rival of Constantine for control of the whole empire after the civil wars of 306–313. |
Lupicinus | comes rei militaris |
Magnentius | usurper 350–353, he overthrew Constans in 350, but was defeated by Constantius Ⅱ in 353 in a civil war that badly weakened the Rhine frontier. |
Magnus Maximus | usurper 383–388, he overthrew Gratian and was briefly tolerated by Theodosius, until his invasion of Italy forced Valentinian Ⅱ to flee to the East and provoked civil war with Theodosius. |
Marcus Aurelius | emperor 161–180, his wars against the Marcomanni occupied many years of his reign and disrupted conditions on the middle Danube frontier. |
Maria | elder daughter of Stilicho and Serena, married to Honorius in 398. |
Maxentius | usurper, 306–312. Son of the augustus Maximian, Maxentius was proclaimed augustus at Rome but never recognized as a legitimate emperor. He died in battle against Constantine in 312. |
Maximian | emperor 285–305. Co-emperor of Diocletian from 285, and one of the two augusti in the tetrarchy formed in 293 with the appointment of Constantius Ⅰ and Galerius as caesars, he was the father of Maxentius, who revolted after Maximian’s abdication. |
Maximus | Roman |
Modares | Gothic general in imperial service under Theodosius, he won the first success against Fritigern’s followers in 379, a year after Adrianople. |
Nero | emperor 54–68 and the last member of the Julio-Claudian dynasty. |
Nicomachus Flavianus | Roman aristocrat who joined the rebellion of Arbogast in 392, lending legitimacy to the usurpation of Eugenius, he killed himself after defeat at the battle of the Frigidus. |
Olympius | magister officiorum |
Paria | grandfather of Jordanes and secretary to the barbarian chieftain Candac. |
Postumus | usurper 260–269. Proclaimed emperor after successfully defeating a barbarian invasion, he ruled a separate ‘Gallic empire’ that was not suppressed until the reign of Aurelian. |
Priscus Attalus | Roman senator of Greek origin who led the senatorial embassy requesting that Honorius negotiate with Alaric. Made urban prefect by Honorius, he then became a usurper with Alaric as his sponsor. He was deposed by Alaric in 410, remaining with the Goths until 415 when Wallia handed him over to Honorius, who allowed Attalus to retire to the island of Lipari. |
Probus | emperor 276–282. His reign is little known, but he fought many frontier wars against various barbarians, including the Goths. |
Procopius | usurper 365–366, he could claim kinship with the Constantinian dynasty and rebelled against Valens, but was suppressed in 366. The fact that some Tervingian leaders supported Procopius provided the excuse for Valens’ Gothic war of 367–369. |
Profuturus | general of Valens sent to Thrace with Traianus in 377 to fight the Goths, he was killed at the battle of Ad Salices. |
Promotus | general of Theodosius sent to suppress the Balkan revolt of 391, but killed there in an ambush and replaced by Stilicho. |
Radagaisus | Gothic king who appeared suddenly in 405 leading an invasion across the Alps through Raetia into Italy until his defeat by Stilicho outside Florence in 406. |
Rausimod | Sarmatian king defeated by Constantine at Campona in 323. |
Richomeres | comes domesticorum |
Rothesteus | Gothic king and father of Atharid, the Gothic noble who commanded the death of Saba in 372. |
Rufinus | praetorian prefect of the East, left behind in Constantinople by Theodosius to run the East during the imperial campaign against Eugenius, but killed in 395 by the eastern troops returning under the command of Gainas. |
Saba | Gothic Christian and martyr under the |
Sansalas | Gothic priest in the village of the martyr Saba. |
Saphrax | Gothic |
Sarus | Gothic general in Roman service beginning in 407, he caused the final breakdown of negotiations between Alaric and Honorius and was later killed in battle with his long-standing enemy Athaulf in 412. |
Saturninus | magister equitum |
Sebastianus | retired western general promoted by Valens in spring 378 to take overall command of the Gothic war, he won some victories but was killed in the battle of Adrianople. |
Septimius Severus | emperor 193–211, North African emperor of Punic origin and the father of Caracalla. |
Serena | Theodosius’ niece and adopted daughter, wife of Stilicho and mother of Eucherius, Maria and Thermantia, she was murdered during Alaric’s first siege of Rome with the approval of her cousin Galla Placidia. |
Shapur Ⅰ | Sassanian king of Persia 240–272 and the most dangerous enemy of the Roman empire in this period. |
Sigesarius | Gothic homoean priest in the entourage of Alaric and Athaulf who baptised Priscus Attalus. |
Stilicho | Roman general and member of the imperial family, husband of Theodosius’ niece and adopted daughter Serena, father of Eucherius, Maria and Thermantia. Stilicho was regent for Honorius after Theodosius’ death in 395, but his claims to similar regency over Arcadius in the East were rejected by the eastern court. The death of Arcadius |
Sueridus | Gothic commander of a regular unit in the Roman army along with Colias, he joined the revolt of Fritigern in 377 after a dispute with the |
Tacitus | emperor 275–276, assassinated while campaigning against Gothic invaders in Asia. |
Tacitus (historian) | |
Themistius | |
Theoderic Ⅰ | Gothic king 418–451. A relative by marriage of Alaric, he led the Goths after their settlement in Aquitania in 418. |
Theodoric | (“the Great”) Ostrogothic king of Italy 489–526. The lost Gothic history of Cassiodorus was dedicated to him. |
Theodosius Ⅰ | emperor 379–395. Proclaimed emperor and recognized by Gratian shortly after emerging from retirement, he concluded the Balkan Gothic war in 382, thereafter facing the western usurpations of Magnus Maximus and Eugenius, before his premature death. |
Theodosius ‘the Elder’ | father of Theodosius Ⅰ and the best general of Valentinian Ⅰ, executed in obscure circumstances after Valentinian’s death in 375. |
Thermantia | younger daughter of Stilicho and Serena, married to Honorius in 408 after the death of his first wife, Thermantia’s elder sister Maria. |