Rome has uncovered the four large marble maps illustrating its evolution and expansion, from its foundation to the apex of its empire, hanging on the Via dei Fori, in front of the Colosseum, which had ...
Scientists have deciphered a Roman boundary stone inscribed with Greek text which was recently discovered in northern Israel, ...
He conquered land across three continents, ruled over states from Egypt to modern-day India, and never lost a battle – before ...
Unearthed in Upper Galilee, 3rd century CE artifact might prove rumored tensions between Emperor Diocletian and local ...
They're exploring a theory that Tirthas and Golgol might be two of the unnamed villages identified in the 19th-century Survey of Western Palestine ... of the Roman Empire during the Tetrarchy ...
The 1,700 year old hoard of Roman gold coins was found in Luxembourg and is being hailed as one of the most significant ...
The coins feature portraits of eight emperors, but three coins portrayed an unexpected ruler: Eugenius, an illegitimate emperor of the Western Roman Empire who reigned for only two years (392 to 394).
Eight emperors are shown on the coins. However, three of the coins featured an unexpected ruler–Eugenius, who only ruled the Western Roman Empire from 392 to 394 CE. Eugenius came to power ...
In the United States, as in Europe, the advent of national citizenship has mirrored and fueled the growth and centralization ...
The rarest find included three coins with the depiction of Emperor Eugenius, as he reigned just two years from 392 to 394 A.D. Eugenius was emperor of the Western Roman Empire but was installed by ...
Eugenius had come to the throne with the help of the powerful generate Arbogast, emperor of the Western Roman Empire following the death of Valentinian II. Coins bearing Eugenius' image—such as ...
Eugenius controlled the Western Roman Empire from 392 to 394, but he was never considered a legitimate ruler by the Byzantines. He was caught and executed at the Battle of the Frigidus in 394.