List of Roman usurpers

The following is a list of usurpers in the Roman Empire. For an overview of the problem and consequences of usurpation, see Roman usurpers. In the Byzantine Empire (476–1453), rebellion and usurpation were so notoriously frequent (in the vision of the medieval West, where usurpation was rare) that the term "byzantine" became a byword for political intrigue and conspiracy. For usurpation in the Byzantine Empire, see List of Byzantine usurpers.

Key

Usurpers who became legitimate emperors

Further information: List of Roman emperors

The following individuals began as usurpers, but became the legitimate emperor either by establishing uncontested control of the empire or by confirmation of their position by the Roman Senate.

First Imperial civil war; the year of the four emperors

Second Imperial civil war

Crisis of the Third Century

Usurpers not considered legitimate emperors

The following individuals proclaimed themselves emperor (or were proclaimed or appointed as emperor), but are not considered as legitimate emperors because they did not oust the ruling emperor, or did not establish control of the whole empire, or were not accepted by the senate or other imperial colleagues.

They are listed here under the emperor whose rule they attempted to usurp. The noted date is the attempted year of usurpation.

Claudius: 41–54

Galba: 68–69

Titus: 79–81

Domitian: 81–96

Marcus Aurelius: 161–180

Septimius Severus: 193–211

Elagabalus: 218–222

Alexander Severus: 222–235

Maximinus Thrax: 235–238

Gordian III: 238–244

Philip the Arab: 244–249

Decius: 249–251

Gallienus: 253–268

Main article: Gallienus usurpers

Claudius II: 268–270

Aurelian: 270–275

Probus: 276–282

Carus, Carinus, Numerian: 282–284

Diocletian: 284–305

Galerius: 305–311

Constantine I: 309–337

Constantius II: 337–361

Valentinian I: 364–375

Theodosius I: 379–395

Honorius: 395–423

Valentinian III: 423–455

Anthemius: 467–472

Julius Nepos: 474–480

Unsuccessful regional usurpers after the fall of Rome (476)

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, April 12, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.