martes, 7 de febrero de 2023

Flavius Julius Crispus Maximian Caesar (Emperador Romano) ★Bisabuelo n°48★ Ref: ER-0300 |•••► #CROACIA 🏆 🇭🇷 #Genealogía #Genealogy Ⓟ


 48 ° Bisabuelo/ Great Grandfather de: Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo →Magnus Maximus, Western Roman Emperor is your 48th great grandfather.


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Flavius Julius Crispus Maximian Caesar is your 48th great grandfather of→ Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo→  Dr. Enrique Jorge Urdaneta Lecuna

your father → Elena Cecilia Lecuna Escobar

his mother → Vicente de Jesus Lecuna Salboch, Dr.

her father → Ramón Lecuna Sucre

his father → Josefa Margarita Sucre y Márquez de Valenzuela

his mother → Coronel Vicente Vitto Luis Ramón de Sucre y García de Urbaneja

her father → Coronel Antonio Mauricio Jacinto Tadeo Rosalio Sucre Pardo y Trelles

his father → Carlos Francisco Francois Sucre y Pardo, Sargento Mayor

his father → Charles Adrien de Sucre y D´Ives

his father → Charles Antoine de Sucre y Martigny

his father → Antonio de Succre y Hontoy

his father → Francois dit Godefroy de Succre

his father → Antonio de Succre

his father → Jeanne de Thurut

his mother → Jeanne Grebert y Vredeau

her mother → Jacqueline Vredeau

her mother → Jean Vredeau, prévôt de Valenciennes

her father → Marie du Gardin

his mother → Marie de Saint Amand

her mother → Joan de Haudlo

her mother → Maud Haudlo

her mother → Maud FitzAlan

her mother → Isabella de Mortimer, Countess of Arundel

her mother → Roger Mortimer, 1st Baron Mortimer

her father → Gwladys Ddu verch Llewelyn

his mother → Llewelyn Fawr ab Iorwerth, Prince of Gwynedd

her father → Margred verch Madog, of Powys

his mother → Madog ap Maredudd, Brenin Powys

her father → Maredudd ap Bleddyn, Brenin Powys

his father → Bleddyn ap Cynfyn, Brenin Powys

his father → Angharad verch Maredudd

his mother → Maredudd ab Owain, King of Deheubarth

her father → Angharad verch Llewelyn

his mother → N.N. ferch Merfyn

her mother → Merfyn ap Rhodri Mawr

her father → Rhodri the Great, king of the Britons

his father → Merfyn Frych ap Gwriad

his father → Gwriad ap Elidir

his father → Elidir ap Sandde

his father → Sandde ap Alcwn

his father → Alcwn ap Tegid

his father → Tegid ap Gwair

his father → Gwair ap Dwg

his father → Dwg ap Llywarch Hen

his father → Llywarch Hen ab Elidir

his father → Saint Gwawr ferch Brychan

his mother → Prawst verch Tudwal

her mother → Gratiana ferch Maxen Wledig

her mother → Magnus Maximus, Western Roman Emperor

her father → Flavius Julius Crispus Maximian Caesar

his father

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Flavio Julio Crispo ( c. 300 – 326) fue el hijo mayor del emperador romano Constantino I, así como su colega menor (césar) desde marzo de 317 hasta su ejecución por su padre en 326. Nieto del augusto Constancio I, Crispo era el medio hermano mayor del futuro augusto Constantino II y se convirtió en co-césar con él y con su primo Licinio II en Serdica, parte del asentamiento que puso fin a la Guerra Cibalensea entre Constantino y el rival de su padre, Licinio I. Crispo gobernó desde Augusta Treverorum (Tréveris) en la Galia romana entre 318 y 323 y derrotó a la armada de Licinio I en la batalla del Helesponto en 324, que con la batalla terrestre de Crisópolis ganada por Constantino forzó la renuncia de Licinio y su hijo, dejando a Constantino como único augusto y la dinastía constantiniana. en control de todo el imperio. No está claro cuál era el estatus legal de la relación que la madre de Crispo, Minervina, tenía con Constantino; Crispo pudo haber sido un hijo ilegítimo.


El tutor de Crispo en retórica fue el historiador latino tardío del cristianismo primitivo, Lactancio. Crispo puede ser el joven príncipe representado en la Gema Constantiniana, un gran cameo que representa a Constantino y su esposa Fausta, aunque la representación puede ser del propio hijo de Fausta, el futuro augusto Constancio II. Mientras estaba en Augusta Treverorum, el prefecto pretoriano de Crispo para la prefectura de la Galia fue el gran Junius Annius Bassus. Después de su elevación al rango imperial, momento en el que también fue titulado princeps iuventutis ("Príncipe de la juventud"), el retórico latino Nazario compuso un panegírico conservado en el Panegyrici Latini, que honraba las victorias militares de Crispo sobre los francos en c. 319. Crispo fue tres veces cónsul romano, para los años 318, 321 y 324.


A los dos años de la derrota y rendición de Licinio, Constantino no sólo había matado a su cuñado y ex co-augusto, sino que también había ejecutado a su sobrino Licinio II, hijo de su hermana Flavia Julia Constantia. Según las historias latinas de Amiano Marcelino y Aurelio Víctor, después de un juicio cuyas circunstancias reales son misteriosas, Constantino ejecutó a Crispo en Pola (Pula) en 326. Fausta, cuyo hijo Constancio II se convirtió en césar en noviembre de 324, también fue ejecutado, y el historiador griego tardío Zósimo y el escritor griego bizantino Joannes Zonaras escribieron que Constantino había acusado a Crispo de incesto con su madrastra. Después de su muerte, Crispo fue sometido a damnatio memoriae.


Primeros años

El año y el lugar de nacimiento de Crispo son inciertos. Se considera probable que haya nacido entre 299 y 305, posiblemente ya en 295, en algún lugar del Imperio Romano de Oriente. La fecha más temprana es la más probable, ya que estaba siendo instruido en 309-310 por Lactancio. [1] Su madre Minervina fue concubina o primera esposa de Constantino. No se sabe nada más sobre Minervina. Su padre sirvió como rehén en la corte de Diocleciano en Nicomedia, asegurando así la lealtad del padre de Constantino, Constancio Cloro, que era César de Maximiano en el oeste en este momento.


En 307, Constantino se alió con los augustos italianos, y esta alianza se selló con el matrimonio de Constantino con la hija de Maximiano, Fausta. Este matrimonio ha hecho que los historiadores modernos cuestionen su relación con Minervina y Crispo. Si Minervina fuera su esposa legítima, Constantino habría necesitado asegurar un divorcio antes de casarse con Fausta, lo que habría requerido una orden oficial por escrito firmada por el propio Constantino, pero tal orden no es mencionada por fuentes contemporáneas. Este silencio en las fuentes ha llevado a muchos historiadores a concluir que la relación entre Constantino y Minervina era informal y a suponer que ella había sido una amante no oficial. Sin embargo, Minervina ya podría haber muerto en 307. Un Constantino viudo no necesitaría divorciarse.


Ni la verdadera naturaleza de la relación entre Constantino y Minervina ni la razón por la que Crispo quedó bajo la protección de su padre probablemente se conocerán nunca. La descendencia de una aventura ilegítima podría haber causado problemas dinásticos y probablemente sería despedida, pero Crispo fue criado por su padre en la Galia. Esto puede verse como evidencia de una relación amorosa y pública entre Constantino y Minervina que le dio una razón para proteger a su hijo.


La historia de Minervina es bastante similar a la de la madre de Constantino, Helena. El padre de Constantino más tarde tuvo que divorciarse de ella por razones políticas, específicamente, para casarse con Flavia Maximiana Teodora, la hija de Maximiano. Constancio, sin embargo, no descartó a Constantino como su hijo, y tal vez Constantino eligió seguir el ejemplo de su padre aquí también.


Cualquiera que fuera la razón, Constantino mantuvo a Crispo a su lado. Las fuentes sobrevivientes son unánimes en declararlo un padre amoroso, confiado y protector para su primer hijo. Constantino incluso confió su educación a Lactancio, uno de los maestros cristianos más importantes de la época, quien probablemente comenzó a enseñar a Crispo antes de 317.



Reverse of a solidus of Crispus, marked: securitas reipublicae ("the security of the Republic")

Carrera

By 313, there were two remaining augusti in control of the Roman Empire—Constantine in the west and his brother-in-law Licinius in the east.


On 1 March 317, the two co-reigning augusti jointly proclaimed three new caesares: Crispus, alongside his younger half-brother Constantine II, and his first cousin Licinius Iunior. Constantine II was the older son of Fausta but was only two years old at the time of his proclamation. Thus only Crispus assumed actual duties.


Constantine apparently believed in the abilities of his son and appointed Crispus as Commander of Gaul. The new caesar soon held residence in Augusta Treverorum (modern Trier), regional capital of Germania.


In January 322, Crispus was married to a young woman called Helena. Helena bore him a son in October of that year. There is no surviving account of the name or later fate of the son. Eusebius of Caesarea reported that Constantine was proud of his son and very pleased to become a grandfather.


Crispus was leader in victorious military operations against the Franks and the Alamanni in 318, 320 and 323. Thus he secured the continued Roman presence in the areas of Gaul and Germania. The soldiers adored him thanks to his strategic abilities and the victories to which he had led the Roman legions.


Crispus spent the following years assisting Constantine in the war against by then hostile Licinius. In 324, Constantine appointed Crispus as the commander of his fleet which left the port of Piraeus to confront Licinius' fleet. The subsequent Battle of the Hellespont was fought at the straits of Bosporus. The 200 ships under the command of Crispus managed to decisively defeat the enemy forces, which were at least double in number. Thus Crispus achieved his most important and difficult victory which further established his reputation as a brilliant general.


Following his navy activities, Crispus was assigned part of the legions loyal to his father. The other part was commanded by Constantine himself. Crispus led the legions assigned to him in another victorious battle outside Chrysopolis against the armies of Licinius.


The two victories were his contribution to the final triumph of his father over Licinius. Constantine was the only augustus left in the Empire. He honoured his son for his support and success by depicting his face in imperial coins, statues, mosaics, cameos, etc. Eusebius of Caesaria wrote for Crispus that he is "an Imperator most dear to God and in all regards comparable to his father."


Crispus was the most likely choice for an heir to the throne at the time. His siblings Constantine II, Constantius II and Constans were far too young and knew very little about the tasks of an emperor. However, Crispus would never assume the throne.


Execution


Reverse of a solidus marked: dn··crispus·nob·caes·

In 326, Crispus' life came to a sudden end. On his father's orders he was executed, apparently without trial, at Pola, Istria, in the Augustan regio of Venetia et Histria.[2] According to Sidonius Apollinaris, Crispus was killed by "cold poison".[3] Soon afterwards, Constantine had his wife Fausta killed also, according to several sources in a hot bath or bathroom.[4] Both Crispus and Fausta suffered damnatio memoriae, their names being erased from inscriptions.[5]


The reason for these deaths remains unclear. The most common explanation given by scholars is based on the accounts of Zosimus and Zonaras: that Crispus was executed due to suspicions that he was involved in an illicit relationship with Fausta.[6] Recent scholars have been skeptical of this explanation. For instance, T. D. Barnes argues that as Crispus was based at Trier, and Fausta at Constantinople, they would not have had the opportunity to have an affair, while Hans Pohlsander suggests that the similarity of Zosimus' story to the myth of Phaedra and Hippolytus makes its veracity doubtful.[7] However, David Woods accepts the ancient evidence that Crispus and Fausta were believed to have had a relationship, suggesting that Fausta fell pregnant, and Crispus was implicated. According to Woods' theory, Fausta's death was caused by an attempted abortion, while Crispus committed suicide by poison in Pola, having been exiled there as punishment for his adultery.[8]


Other explanations put forward for Crispus' death include that he was executed in order to ensure the succession of his half-brothers, Constantine's sons by Fausta, and that it was unrelated to the death of Fausta; that it was due to Crispus suggesting that Constantine should retire; or that it was due to Crispus plotting against Constantine, possibly with Fausta and Licinius.[9] J. W. Drijvers concludes that the true explanation for the deaths of Crispus and Fausta will never be known.[10]


Consequences

It is said that Constantine looked to pagan priests who were friends of his, such as Sopater of Apamea, for the purification of his soul, but they refused, considering the act committed by Constantine as unforgivable, including the fact that he previously believed in a Christian woman who in her own son, who had shown her love and loyalty so many times.[11]


In literature

Crispus became a popular tragic hero after the success of Bernardino Stefonio's neo-Latin tragedy Crispus, which was performed at the Jesuit Collegio Romano in 1597. Closely modelled on Seneca's Phaedra, this became a model of Jesuit tragedy and one of the main bases for Alessandro Donati's 1631 Ars Poetic and Tarquinio Galluzzi's 1633 Defense of Crispus. The play was adapted for the French stage by François de Grenaille as L'Innocent malhereux (1639) and by Tristan l'Hermite as La Morte de Chrispe ou les maleurs du grand Constantine (1645). It was performed as an opera in Rome (1720) and London (1721), where it was entitled, Crispo: drama,[12] not to mention Donizetti's 1832 opera Fausta. The story is also retold and embellished in chapter 31 of Sir Walter Scott's novel Count Robert of Paris. When Evelyn Waugh reworks the story in his novel Helena (1950), Crispus is innocent.


References

Citations

 Barnes, Timothy, Constantine: Dynasty, Religion and Power in the Later Roman Empire, 2011, pp. 177–78.

 Guthrie 1966, p. 325.

 Pohlsander 1984, p. 100.

 Woods 1998, pp. 70, 74.

 Woods 1998, p. 72.

 Pohlsander 1984, p. 101.

 Woods 1998, p. 73.

 Woods 1998, pp. 78–80.

 Pohlsander 1984, pp. 105–6.

 Woods 1998, p. 74.

 Sozomen, Hist. Eccl. i. 5.

 Marc Fumaroli, Heros et orateurs. Rhetoriques et dramaturgie corneliennes, Geneva: Droz, 1996

Sources

Guthrie, Patrick (1966). "The Execution of Crispus". Phoenix. 20 (4): 325–331. doi:10.2307/1087057. JSTOR 1087057.

Pohlsander, Hans A. (1984). "Crispus: Brilliant Career and Tragic End". Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte. 33 (1).

Torino, Alessio (2008). Bernardinus Stephonius S.J. Crispus-tragoedia. Rome: Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei.

Woods, David (1998). "Sobre la muerte de la emperatriz Fausta". Grecia y Roma. 45 (1): págs. 70–86. doi:10.1093/gr/45.1.70.

Enlaces externos


Wikimedia Commons alberga contenido multimedia sobre Crispus.

Cargos políticos

Precedido por

Ovinius GallicanusCaesonius

Bassus

Cónsul

romano 318

con Licinio Augusto V Sucedido por

Constantino Augusto V

Licinio César

Precedido por

Constantino Augusto

VI Constantino César

Cónsul

romano 321

con Constantino César II Sucedido por

Petronio ProbianoAmnio Anicio Juliano

Precedido por

Acilio Severo

Vettius Rufino

Cónsul

romano 324

con Constantino César III Sucedido por

Sexo. Anicius PaulinusValerius Proculus


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Agregado por: Ing. Carlos Juan Felipe Urdaneta Alamo, MD.IG.


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