the Apostate

E831893

The Apostate is the epithet of Roman emperor Julian, known for rejecting Christianity and attempting to restore traditional pagan religion in the 4th century.

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All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
the Apostate canonical 1

Statements (47)

Predicate Object
instanceOf Roman emperor
Roman pagan
birthDate c. 331
birthName Flavius Claudius Julianus NERFINISHED
birthPlace Constantinople NERFINISHED
causeOfDeath battle wound
countryOfCitizenship Roman Empire
deathDate 26 June 363
deathPlace near Samarra
dynasty Constantinian dynasty NERFINISHED
educatedIn Neoplatonism NERFINISHED
epithet the Apostate NERFINISHED
father Julius Constantius NERFINISHED
formerReligion Christianity NERFINISHED
implementedPolicy attempted exclusion of Christians from teaching classical texts
restoration of pagan temples
revocation of some privileges of the Christian church
knownFor attempting to restore traditional Roman pagan religion
philosophical writings
rejecting Christianity
religious policies favoring pagan cults
languageSpoken Greek
Latin
militaryRank general
mother Basilina NERFINISHED
movement Neoplatonism NERFINISHED
notableBattle Battle of Strasbourg NERFINISHED
notableEvent Persian campaign of 363 NERFINISHED
notableFor last non-Christian Roman emperor
notableWork Against the Galileans NERFINISHED
Hymn to King Helios NERFINISHED
Hymn to the Mother of the Gods NERFINISHED
Misopogon NERFINISHED
positionHeld Caesar NERFINISHED
Roman emperor
predecessor Constantius II NERFINISHED
reignEnd 363
reignStart 361
relative Constantine the Great NERFINISHED
religion paganism
ruledOver Eastern Roman Empire NERFINISHED
Western Roman Empire NERFINISHED
spouse Helena NERFINISHED
successor Jovian NERFINISHED
timePeriod 4th century
title Augustus NERFINISHED
Caesar of the West NERFINISHED

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Julian the Apostate epithet the Apostate