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A Dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology (ed. William Smith) | 10 | 10 | Browse | Search |
Samuel Ball Platner, Thomas Ashby, A Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome | 2 | 2 | Browse | Search |
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Your search returned 12 results in 11 document sections:
Samuel Ball Platner, Thomas Ashby, A Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome,
BASILICA IUNII BASSI
(search)
BASILICA IUNII BASSI
consul ordinarius in 331 A.D. (not
317, cf. Gotting.
Nachr. 1904, 345), situated on the Esquiline east of S.
Maria Maggiore.
The inscription, in mosaic, was copied in the sixteenth
century (Iunius
Bassus, v.c. consul ordinarius propria impensa a solo fecit
et dedicavit
feliciter, CIL vi. 1737) in the apse of a richly decorated
hall belonging
to it. He died in 359 (ib. 32004).
In the time of Pope Simplicius (468-483) the hall was
dedicated by
the munificence of the Goth Valila (or Flavius
Theodobius) as the
church of S. Andrea cata Barbara Patricia (LP xlviii. 1).
Drawings of the fine decorations in marble and mosaic
were made
by Giuliano da Sangallo (Barb. 31' and text, p. 47) and at
the end of
the sixteenth century (see Hulsen in Festschrift fur Julius
Schlosser
(Vienna, 1926), 53-67, at the end of which a list of the
drawings is given;
add Windsor, Portfolio 5, No. 60 (Inv. 12121), for which
see PBS vi. 186,
n. 2; and Holkham, ii. 8, 9, 11; Badde
Samuel Ball Platner, Thomas Ashby, A Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome, Chronological Index to Dateable Monuments (search)
Abla'vius
1. Prefect of the city, the minister and favourite of Constantine the Great was murdered after the death of the latter. (Zosimus, 2.40.)
He was consul A. D. 331. Their is an epigram extant attributed to him, in which the reigns of Nero and Constantine are compared. (Anth. Lat. n. 2 (61, ed. Meyer.)
A Dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology (ed. William Smith), (search)
A Dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology (ed. William Smith), (search)
Grego'rius Nysse'nus, St.
bishop of Nyssa, in Cappadocia, and a father of the Greek church, was the younger brother of Basil the Great.
He was born at Caesareia, in Cappadocia, in or soon after A. D. 331. Though we have no express account of his education, there is no doubt that, like his brother's, it was the best that the Roman empire could furnish. Like his brother also, he formed an early friendship with Gregory Nazianzen.
He did not, however, share in their religious views; but, having been appointed a reader in some church, he abandoned the office, and became a teacher of rhetoric. Gregory Nazianzen remonstrated with him on this step by letter (Epist. 43), and ultimately he became a minister of the church, being ordained by his brother Basil to the bishopric of Nyssa, a small place in Cappadocia, about A. D. 372.
As a pillar of orthodoxy, he was only inferior to his brother and his friend. The Arians persecuted him; and at last, upon a frivolous accusation, drove him into bani
A Dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology (ed. William Smith), Hermogenia'nus (search)
A Dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology (ed. William Smith), or Clau'dius Apostata (search)
Julia'nus, Fla'vius Clau'dius or Clau'dius Apostata
surnamed APOSTATA, "the Apostate," Roman emperor, A. D. 361-363, was born at Constantinople on the 17th of November, A. D. 331 (332?).
He was the son of Julius Constantius by his second wife, Basilina, the grandson of Constantius Chlorus by his second wife, Theodora, and the nephew of Constantine the Great. [See the Genealogical Table, Vol. I. pp. 831, 832.]
Julian and his elder brother, Flavius Julius Gallus, who was the son of Julius Constantius by his first wife, Galla, were the only members of the imperial family whose lives were spared by Constantius II., the son of Constantine the Great, when, upon his accession, he ordered the massacre of all the male descendants of Constantine Chlorus and his second wife, Theodora. Both Gallus and Julian were of too tender an age to be dangerous to Constantius, who accordingly spared their lives, but had them educated in strict confinement at different places in Ionia and Bithynia, and aft
A Dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology (ed. William Smith), (search)