4th-century Roman person
C7661
concept
A 4th-century Roman person is an individual who lived within the Roman Empire during the 300s CE, shaped by the era’s political transformations, military conflicts, and the growing influence of Christianity.
All labels observed (4)
| Label | Occurrences |
|---|---|
| 4th-century Roman person canonical | 15 |
| 4th-century Roman | 2 |
| 4th-century Roman aristocrat | 1 |
| late 4th-century person | 1 |
Instances (19)
| Instance | Via concept surface |
|---|---|
| Flavius Julius Crispus | — |
|
appears on Roman imperial coinage as Caesar
surface form:
Crispus
|
— |
| Hannibalianus | — |
| Dalmatius | — |
| Gallus | — |
| Aelia Flaccilla | — |
| Maximinus Daia | — |
| Flavius Valens | — |
| Valentinian II | — |
| Julius Constantius | 4th-century Roman aristocrat |
| Flavius Claudius Constantinus | — |
| Vetranio | — |
| Constantina | — |
| Constantine II | — |
| Himerius of Tarragona | late 4th-century person |
| Emperor Valens | — |
| Dalmatius (Caesar) | 4th-century Roman |
| Ursicinus | — |
| Gratian the Elder | 4th-century Roman |