350s

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Millennium: 1st millennium
Centuries:
Decades:
Years:
  • 350
  • 351
  • 352
  • 353
  • 354
  • 355
  • 356
  • 357
  • 358
  • 359
Categories:
  • Births
  • Deaths
  • Establishments
  • Disestablishments

The 350s decade ran from January 1, 350, to December 31, 359.

Events

350

By place[]

Roman Empire[]
  • January 18 – Western Roman Emperor Constans I makes himself extremely unpopular; one of his generals, Magnentius, is proclaimed emperor at Augustodunum in the Diocese of Galliae, with the support of the army on the Rhine frontier.
  • January – Constans I flees towards Spain, where he is subsequently assassinated at Castrum Helenae. Magnentius rules the Western Roman Empire and is far more tolerant towards Christians and Pagans alike.
  • March 1Vetranio is asked by Constantina, sister of Constantius II, to proclaim himself Caesar. Constantius accepts the new emperor and sends him funds to raise an army.
  • June 3Nepotianus, Roman usurper, proclaims himself emperor and enters Rome with a group of gladiators.
  • June 30 – Nepotianus is defeated and killed by Marcellinus, a trusted general sent by Magnentius. His head is put on a spear and carried around the city.
  • December 25 – Vetranio meets Constantius II at Naissus (Serbia) and joins forces with him. Vetranio is forced to abdicate his title, and Constantius allows him to live as a private citizen on a state pension.
Asia[]
  • King Pushyavarman establishes the Varman Dynasty in Assam.
  • About this time the Huns begin to invade the Sassanid Empire.[1]
  • The city of Anbar (Iraq) is founded by king Shapur II.
  • The Wei-Jie war breaks out in North China.

By topic[]

Art[]
  • The church of Santa Constanza in Rome is finished.

351

By place[]

Roman Empire[]
  • March 15 – Emperor Constantius II elevates his 25-year-old cousin Constantius Gallus to Caesar at Sirmium (Pannonia). He arranges a marriage with his sister Constantina and puts him in charge of the Eastern Roman Empire.
  • Constantius marches West with a large field army (around 60,000 men) to topple Magnus Magnentius in Pannonia.
  • May 7 – The Jewish revolt against Constantius Gallus breaks out. After his arrival at Antioch, the Jews begin a rebellion in Palestine. The Roman garrison in the town of Diocesarea is wiped out.
  • September 28Battle of Mursa Major: Constantius II defeats the usurper Magnentius along the valley of the Drava. The battle is one of the bloodiest in Roman military history. During the fighting Marcellinus, a general of Magnentius is killed; Magnentius himself survives.
  • Winter – Magnentius flees to Aquileia in northern Italy and fortifies the mountain passes in the Alps.
China[]

By topic[]

Art and Science[]
  • In India, a new process makes possible the extraction of sugar from sugarcane.
Religion[]

352

By place[]

Roman Empire[]
  • Emperor Constantius II invades northern Italy in pursuit of the usurper Magnus Magnentius, who withdraws with his army to Gaul. He declares an amnesty for Magnentius' soldiers, many of whom desert to him.
  • By the end of the year Constantius enters Milan.
  • The Alamanni and the Franks cross the Rhine and defeat the depleted Roman units left at the frontier. The Germans take control of around 40 towns and cities between the Moselle and the Rhine.
  • Constantius Gallus sends his general (magister equitum) Ursicinus to forcefully put down the Jewish revolt in Palestine. The rebels destroy the cities Diopolis and Tiberias, while Diocesarea is razed to the ground. Ursicinus gives the order to kill thousands of Jews, even children. After the revolt, a permanent garrison is stationed in Galilee.
Asia[]
  • War begins between the Huns and the Alans.
  • Ran Wei is destroyed by a Xianbei invasion, which also reaches the Yangtze River in the territory of the Jin Dynasty.

By topic[]

Art and Science[]
  • The earliest sighting of a supernova occurs in China.
Religion[]
  • May 17Pope Julius I dies after a 15-year reign in which he has made himself the chief opponent of Arianism. He is succeeded by Pope Liberius as the 36th pope, who immediately writes to Constantius II requesting a council at Aquileia to discuss the former Alexandrian patriarch Athanasius, who opposes the Arian belief to which the emperor subscribes.

353

By place[]

Roman Empire[]
  • Battle of Mons Seleucus: Emperor Constantius II defeats the usurper Magnentius, who commits suicide in Gaul in order to avoid capture. Constantius becomes sole emperor, and reunifies the Roman Empire.
  • Constantius II sends his official Paulus Catena to Britain, to hunt down the opponents supporting Magnentius. Flavius Martinus, vicarius of Britain and supporter of Constantius, opposes the persecutions; he is then accused by Catena of being a traitor. In response, Martinus tries to kill Catena with a sword; he fails and then commits suicide.
  • Constantius II assembles a conciliabulum at Arles, and condemns Athanasius as Patriarch of Alexandria.

By topic[]

China[]
  • Wang Xizhi, Chinese calligrapher, produces "Preface to the Poems Composed at the Orchid Pavilion" in running script style. It becomes a model for future calligraphers.

354

355

By place[]

Roman Empire[]
  • January 1Arbitio and Lollianus Mavortius begin their term as Roman consuls.[2][3]
  • August 11Claudius Silvanus, accused of treason, proclaims himself Roman Emperor.[4] After 28 days, Ursicinus arrives from Rome and has Silvanus murdered.
  • November 6 – In Mediolanum (Italy), Emperor Constantius II raises his cousin Julian the Apostate to the rank of Caesar. He takes command of the western provinces and marries Constantius' sister, Helena.
Europe[]
  • The Lentienses, a Germanic tribe, are fined by the Roman commander Arbetio under Constantius II for several incursions against the Roman Empire.
  • The Franks besiege Colonia Agrippinensium for ten months.
Asia[]
  • The Huns of Central Asia begin their great drive westwards with an advance into Scythia (modern Russia). They overcome and absorb the Alans, a nomadic and warlike horse breeding people from the steppes northeast of the Black Sea.

By topic[]

Religion[]
  • Pope Liberius refuses to sign a condemnation of Athanasius, Patriarch of Alexandria, imposed at Milan by Constantius II. Liberius is exiled to Beroea (Greece) and replaced by Felix II. He becomes an antipope and bishop of Rome.

356

By place[]

Roman Empire[]
  • February 19 – Emperor Constantius II issues a decree closing all pagan temples in the Roman Empire, and ordering the banishment once again of the anti-Arian patriarch of Alexandria, Athanasius. He tries to have him arrested during a vigil service, but Athanasius flees to the Nitrian desert in Upper Egypt.
  • The veneration of non-Christian images is banned in the Roman Empire.
  • Siege of Autun: Julian receives a report that Augustodunum (Autun) is under attack by the Alemanni. The city walls are in poor state and in danger of falling.
  • Battle of Reims: Julian is defeated by the Alemanni at Reims (Gaul).
  • Battle of Brumath: Roman forces pursue Germanic warbands through the Gallic countryside. Julian wins an open battle near Brumath (Alsace).
  • Rhaetia (Switzerland) is invaded by the Alemanni.
  • Winter – Siege of Senonae: Julian over-winters at Senonae (Bourgogne). German federated troops (foederati) desert and hostile warbands besiege the town.
Asia[]

By topic[]

Religion[]
Anthony the Great
  • Anthony the Great (pictured) dies at his hermitage near the Red Sea in mid-January at age 105 (approximate), having preached against Arianism, and having tried to codify guidelines for monastic life. His followers subsequently establish the Monastery of Saint Anthony, beginning the tradition of Coptic monasticism.
  • Construction begins on the first basilica of Saint Peter in Rome.

357

By place[]

Roman Empire[]
  • April 28 – Emperor Constantius II enters Rome for the first time to celebrate his victory over Magnentius. He address the Senate and the Roman people.
  • August 25Battle of Strasbourg: Julian, Caesar (deputy emperor) and supreme commander of the Roman army in Gaul, wins an important victory against the Alemanni at Strasbourg (Argentoratum), driving the barbarians back behind the Rhine.
  • The Imperial Library of Constantinople is founded.
  • Ammianus Marcellinus describes the Pantheon as being "rounded like the boundary of the horizon and vaulted with a beautiful loftiness".
  • Winter – Constantius II receives ambassadors from the Persian Empire. They demand that Rome restore the lands surrendered by King Narseh.
Asia[]
Ireland[]
  • Saran, King of Ulster, is overthrown.

By topic[]

Religion[]
  • Late in the year Pope Liberius travels to Sirmium (Pannonia) and agrees to sign documents that effectively undo the Nicene Creed (which has implicitly disavowed Arianism) and to sever his relationship with the former Alexandrian patriarch Athanasius, who is replaced as bishop of Alexandria by his Arian opponent George of Cappadocia.
  • At about this date, the relics of St Andrew the Apostle are taken from Patras to Constantinople by order of the Emperor Constantius II, and deposited in the Church of the Holy Apostles.[6]
  • At about this date, Basil of Caesarea visits Egypt.

358

By place[]

Roman Empire[]
  • Emperor Constantius II builds new forts to secure upper Mesopotamia. Persia's king Shapur II sends an emissary to Constantinople with gifts and a letter wrapped in white silk. He requests that Constantius return the lands of his ancestors from the Euphrates to the frontier of Macedonia. Constantius tactfully refuses to cede any territories.
  • The Salian Franks capitulate to Julian the Apostate in Gaul. He allows them to form a Roman foederati in Toxandria. Frankish settlers are established in areas in the north and the east to help with the defense of the Rhine frontier.
  • An invasion of Pannonia by the Quadi and the Sarmates is repulsed by Constantius II.
  • August 24 — An earthquake destroys Nicomedia, and damages 150 cities in Macedonia, Asia and Pontus.[7]

By topic[]

Religion[]
  • Constantius II recalls Pope Liberius to Rome, where he receives a joyous welcome from the Christians. Antipope Felix II prudently retires to his estate near Porto (Portugal).
  • Eudoxius becomes Patriarch of Antioch.
  • The last universally binding decision of the Great Sanhedrin, establishing a fixed Hebrew calendar.

359

By place[]

Roman Empire[]
  • King Shapur II the Great of the Persian Empire invades southern Armenia. The Romans implement a scorched earth policy and place strong guards at the Euphrates crossings.
  • Siege of Amida: Shapur II besieges the Roman fortress of Amida (modern Diyarbakir). After seventy-three days the city is conquered and the population is massacred by the Persians. Ammianus Marcellinus is a fortunate survivor and flees to Singara (Iraq).
  • The first known Prefect of the city of Constantinople, Honoratus, takes office.
  • Famine in Upper Rhineland: A fleet of 800 river boats, built for the Rhine, cross to the British east coast, and carry back enough corn to raise the famine.[8]
  • Winter – Shapur II halts his campaign, due to heavy casualties during the Persian invasion.

By topic[]

Art[]
Religion[]
  • July – Emperor Constantius II convenes the Council of Rimini, to resolve the crisis over Arianism in the Church. Some 400 bishops of the Western Roman Empire attend, while the Eastern bishops simultaneously hold a meeting at Seleucia. Given Saint Jerome's comment that, "The whole world groaned in astonishment to find itself Arian", it appears to have failed. Pope Liberius rejects the new creed at Rimini.

Significant people[]

  • Constantius II, Roman Emperor
  • Magnentius, Roman usurper
  • Julian, Roman Emperor

Births[]

350

  • Honoratus, archbishop of Arles (approximate date);
  • Hypatia of Alexandria, female Neoplatonist philosopher (approximate date);
  • Murong Wei, emperor of the Xianbei state Former Yan (d. 385);
  • Plutarch of Athens, Greek philosopher (approximate date);
  • Theodore of Mopsuestia, bishop and theologian (approximate date);
  • Zhang Xuanjing, ruler of the Chinese state Former Liang (d. 363).

351

352

353

354

  • November 13Augustine of Hippo, African bishop (d. 430)
  • Apa Bane, Christian hermit and saint (approximate date)
  • Paulinus of Nola, French bishop and writer (d. 431)
  • Pelagius, English monk and theologian (d. 418)[9]

355

356

  • 31 MarchAelia Flaccilla, Roman empress and wife of Theodosius I (d. 386)
  • John II, Byzantine bishop, theologian and writer (d. 417)

358

  • Aignan of Orleans, Christian bishop (d. 453)

359

Deaths[]

350

Nepotianus died on June 30, 350
Saint Paul I of Constantinople

351

352

353

354

  • Constantina, daughter of Constantine the Great (b. c. 320)
  • Constantius Gallus, Roman consul and statesman (b. 326)
  • Fu Xiong (or Yuancai), Chinese general and politician
  • Pei, Chinese princess and wife of Zhang Chonghua
  • Ran Zhi, Chinese nobleman and prince of Ran Wei
  • Xie Ai, Chinese general of Former Liang (b. 301)

355

356

  • Amasius of Teano, bishop Teano (also known as St. Paris)
  • Anthony the Great, Egyptian monk and Desert Father
  • Cai Mo (or Daoming), Chinese official and politician (b. 281)
  • Qiang (or Mingde), Chinese empress and wife of Fú Jiàn
  • Rav Nachman bar Yitzchak, Babylonian scholar and rabbi
  • Sanctinus of Meaux, French bishop and missionary (b. 270)
  • Vetranio, Roman statesman, usurper and co-emperor
  • Yin Hao (or Yuanyuan), Chinese general and politician

357

358

  • Duan, Chinese princess and wife of Murong Chui
  • Paulinus of Trier, Christian bishop and saint

359

  • Barbatio, Roman general (magister militum)
  • Hosius of Corduba, Christian bishop (b. 256)
  • Junius Bassus Theotecnius, Roman politician
  • Xun Xian (or Lingze), Chinese general (b. 322)
  • Zhang Guan, Chinese general and regent

References[]

  1. ^ Roberts, J: "History of the World.". Penguin, 1994.
  2. ^ E.J. Bickerman, Chronology of the Ancient World (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1968), p. 64
  3. ^ Timothy David Barnes (1981). Constantine and Eusebius. Harvard University Press. p. 399. ISBN 978-0-674-16531-1.
  4. ^ Ammianus Marcellinus, History, 15.2.3.
  5. ^ "List of Rulers of Korea". www.metmuseum.org. Retrieved 21 April 2019.
  6. ^ According to Jerome.
  7. ^ Noel Emmanuel Lenski (2002). Failure of Empire: Valens and the Roman State in the Fourth Century A.D. University of California Press. pp. 386–. ISBN 978-0-520-23332-4.
  8. ^ Wheeler, M.Inst.C.E, William Henry (1896). A History of the Fens of South Lincolnshire, being a description of the rivers Witham and Welland and their estuary, and an account of the Reclamation, Drainage, and Enclosure of the fens adjacent thereto. (2nd ed.). J.M. Newcombe (Boston), Simpkin, Marshall & Co. (London). p. 5. doi:10.1680/ahotfosl2e.50358.
  9. ^ "Pelagius | Biography, Beliefs, & Facts". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 30 March 2020.
  10. ^ Vagi, David (2016). Coinage and History of the Roman Empire. Routledge. p. 476. ISBN 978-1-135-97125-0.
  11. ^ Henry Fynes Clinton (1845). Fasti Romani: Tables. University Press. pp. 363.
  12. ^ Jennifer Holmgren (1982). Annals of Tai: Early T'O-Pa History According to the First Chapter of the Wei-Shu. Faculty of Asian Studies. p. 91. ISBN 978-0-909879-16-7.
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