Gaius Julius Priscus: Difference between revisions
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{{Short description|Brother of Roman Emperor Philip the Arab}} |
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{{Unreferenced stub|auto=yes|date=December 2009}} |
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'''Gaius Julius Priscus''' (fl. 3rd century) was a Roman soldier and member of the [[Praetorian Guard]] in the reign of [[Gordian III]]. |
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==Life== |
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Priscus was born in the [[Roman province]] of [[Syria (Roman province)|Syria]], possibly in [[Damascus]], son of a [[Julius Marinus]] a local Roman citizen, possibly of some importance. The name of his mother is unknown, but his brother was [[Philip the Arab|Marcus Julius Philippus]], later the [[Roman Emperor]] known as "Philip the Arab". |
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⚫ | Priscus was probably older than Philip, since the latter's political career was pushed by the former's own influence. According to several inscriptions, Priscus was Praefectus of the province of [[Mesopotamia]] a frontier province at the border of Persia, therefore highly militarized. He was the Procurator of [[Macedonia (Roman province)|Macedonia]], second in command to [[Egypt]]'s governor and held judicial responsibilities in [[Alexandria]]. Priscus became a member of the Praetorian Guard around 242 during Gordian III Persian campaign, and, when [[Gaius Furius Sabinius Aquila Timesitheus|Timesitheus]] – the praetorian prefect – died in 243, he convinced the young emperor to substitute him with his own brother Philip. For a year, Priscus and Philip served as ''de facto'' regents of Gordian III. |
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{{Persondata <!-- Metadata: see [[Wikipedia:Persondata]]. --> |
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⚫ | After Gordian's death in 244, Priscus's brother Philippus became the new emperor. As his brother and trusted ally, Priscus remained in the East, while Philip travelled to Rome. Priscus held supreme power in the Eastern provinces and was referred to in inscriptions as ''Rector Orientis''. His rule was severe and oppressive. Following his brother's directives, Priscus collected heavy taxes that eventually led to rebellion and the uprising of [[Jotapianus]], one of the four usurpers reported for Philip's reign. Apparently, Priscus managed to control this rebellion. Nothing is known on Priscus after the outbreak of Jotapianus' revolt and the facts surrounding his death are lost to history. |
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| NAME = Priscus, Gaius Julius |
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[[Category:3rd-century Romans]] |
[[Category:3rd-century Romans]] |
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[[Category: |
[[Category:3rd-century Arab people]] |
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[[Category:Arabs in the Roman Empire]] |
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[[Category:Crisis of the Third Century]] |
[[Category:Crisis of the Third Century]] |
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[[Category:Praetorian prefects]] |
[[Category:Praetorian prefects]] |
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[[Category:People from Roman Syria]] |
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[[Category:Julii|Priscus, Gaius]] |
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[[bg:Гай Юлий Приск]] |
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[[br:Gaius Julius Priscus]] |
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[[es:Prisco]] |
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[[it:Gaio Giulio Prisco]] |
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[[la:Gaius Iulius Priscus]] |
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[[pl:Gajusz Juliusz Pryskus]] |
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[[ru:Гай Юлий Приск]] |
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Latest revision as of 15:01, 23 December 2023
Gaius Julius Priscus (fl. 3rd century) was a Roman soldier and member of the Praetorian Guard in the reign of Gordian III.
Life
[edit]Priscus was born in the Roman province of Syria, possibly in Damascus, son of a Julius Marinus a local Roman citizen, possibly of some importance. The name of his mother is unknown, but his brother was Marcus Julius Philippus, later the Roman Emperor known as "Philip the Arab".
Priscus was probably older than Philip, since the latter's political career was pushed by the former's own influence. According to several inscriptions, Priscus was Praefectus of the province of Mesopotamia a frontier province at the border of Persia, therefore highly militarized. He was the Procurator of Macedonia, second in command to Egypt's governor and held judicial responsibilities in Alexandria. Priscus became a member of the Praetorian Guard around 242 during Gordian III Persian campaign, and, when Timesitheus – the praetorian prefect – died in 243, he convinced the young emperor to substitute him with his own brother Philip. For a year, Priscus and Philip served as de facto regents of Gordian III.
After Gordian's death in 244, Priscus's brother Philippus became the new emperor. As his brother and trusted ally, Priscus remained in the East, while Philip travelled to Rome. Priscus held supreme power in the Eastern provinces and was referred to in inscriptions as Rector Orientis. His rule was severe and oppressive. Following his brother's directives, Priscus collected heavy taxes that eventually led to rebellion and the uprising of Jotapianus, one of the four usurpers reported for Philip's reign. Apparently, Priscus managed to control this rebellion. Nothing is known on Priscus after the outbreak of Jotapianus' revolt and the facts surrounding his death are lost to history.