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Diocletian

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Title: Diocletian


1
Diocletian
2
Early Life
  • Full name Gaius Aurelius Valerius Diocletianus
  • Born c. 22 December 244  3 December 311(Age 66)
  • On the Dalmatian Coast (present day Solin,
    Croatia)
  • Illyrian family low social status

3
Rise To Power
  • He began working his way through the military
    ranks
  • Duke of Moesia protected border and proved his
    value as a soldier
  • 282-Carus was pronounced emperor
  • Diocletian was promoted to commander of the
    cavalry arm of the imperial bodyguard
  • 283-granted honor of consulate by Carus

4
Rise To Power continued
  • 284- Carus dies while on campaign against the
    Persians
  • Empire left to his two sons, Numerian and Carinus
  • Numerian mysteriously dies of natural causes-
    Diocletian proclaimed emperor
  • 285-Battle of Margus- Carinuss men kill him
    giving Diocletian complete power over the empire

5
Early Rule
  • most immediate concerns were to bring the
    mutinous and increasingly barbarized Roman armies
    back under control and to make the frontiers once
    again secure from invasion
  • His long-term goals were to restore effective
    government and economic prosperity to the empire
    and believed stern measures were necessary to
    accomplish these goals
  • Divided the 50 providences into 100 and created a
    system of people to rule them
  • 285- He named Maximian co-emperor and his
    Augustan son in order to provide a successor in
    case of his death
  • He fought many wars with many different barbarian
    tribes including, the Sarmations and took the
    name Sarmaticus Maximus upon defeating them in in
    289
  • He and Maximian met in Milan (selection of
    location over Rome, displayed imperial view that
    center of Rome was wherever the leaders were) in
    291 to discuss the state of the empire

6
Tetrarchy
  • Diocletians daughter (Valeria) husband Galerius
    named his Caesar and given control of Egypt,
    Syria, Palestine, and the whole eastern border
  • Maximians daughters husband Constantius was
    named his Caesar and given Gaul and Britain to
    rule
  • This alliance was called the tetrarch from the
    greek for rule by four
  • Diocletian and Maximian considered each other
    brothers and Galerius and Constantius as their
    sons
  • He created an order to secession every Augusti
    would select a Caesar to secede them (there was
    no system before and with the frequent
    assignations of the time there were many issues
    over emperor secession)

7
Wars/Campaigns
  • Sarmation and Danubian tribes (285-300)
  • Alamanni (288)
  • Usurpers in Egypt (297-98)
  • Sassanid Persia (299)- Diocletian and Rome
    reached a lasting and favorable peace with this
    traditional enemy
  • 302-ordered that the leading followers of Mani be
    burnt alive along with their scriptures
  • Killed and enslaved Manicheans

8
Reforms
  • large increase in the number of bureaucrats at
    the government's command
  • greater number of governors (praesides) ruling
    over smaller regions and smaller populations
  • under the new system vicarii and governors were
    responsible for justice and taxation, and a new
    class of duces ("dukes"), acting independently of
    the civil service, had military command
  • The sharp increase in the number of edicts and
    rescripts produced under Diocletian's rule has
    been read as evidence of a thorough going effort
    to realign the whole empire on terms dictated by
    the imperial center
  • Diocletian's reign marks the end of the classical
    period of Roman law. Diocletian's system of
    rescripts shows an adherence to classical
    tradition, but Constantine's law was full of
    Greek and eastern influences

9
Reforms continued
  • The army expanded to about 580,000 men from a 285
    strength of 390,000 men. The growth was smaller
    in the East, which only expanded from 250,000 men
    to 310,000 men, most of whom manned the Persian
    frontier. The navy's forces increased from
    approximately 45,000 to approx 60,000
  • Compulsory Service- occupations so important to
    Romes function (bakers, farmers,soldiers,ect.)
    that Diocletian made those who held them stick to
    it for life
  • Diocletian introduced an extensive new tax system
    based on heads (capita) and land (iuga) and tied
    to a new, regular census of the empire's
    population and wealth
  • Inflation was a major issue during Diocletian
    Rome, the lack of gold and silver coinage made it
    impossible for a standard currency to be
    established
  • Diocletian released numerous edicts in attempt to
    fix the system, but his lack of understanding of
    basic supply and demand laws prevented these
    attempts from succeeding
  • Fortunately these edicts were quickly destroyed
    or edited
  • The Diocletianic Persecutions (30311), was the
    empire's last, largest, and bloodiest official
    persecution of Christianity (Diocletian believe
    in Olympiad gods)

10
Legacy
  • Diocletian left the imperial office on May 1,
    305, and became the first Roman emperor to
    voluntarily abdicate the position
  • Diocletian's reforms fundamentally changed the
    structure of Roman imperial government and helped
    stabilize the empire economically and militarily
    for nearly 100 years, those systems that were
    once near the brink of collapse during
    Diocletians childhood
  • He lived out his retirement in peace in his
    famous Dalmatian coast palace
  • He rejected opportunity to return in 308
  • His tetrarch system fell and led to civil war
    quickly after his and Maximians departure and
    there was civil war till 324 when Constantine
    came to power
  • Bureaucratic and military growth, constant
    campaigning, and construction projects increased
    the state's expenditures, and necessitated a
    major tax reform. From at least 297 on, imperial
    taxation was standardized, made more equitable,
    and levied at generally higher rates.

11
Sources
  • http//www.roman-emperors.org/dioclet.htm
  • Diocletian and the Roman Recovery by Stephen
    Williams
  • http//library.thinkquest.org/26907/emperors/diocl
    etian.htm
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