Jovinus (consul)
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Flavius Jovinus (around 310-370 AD), was a Roman general and consul of the West Roman empire of Gaulic or Germanic origin, born and buried in Durocortorum (present day Reims).[1]
He was named Magister equitum in Gaul by emperor Julian.[2] He became magister militum under emperor Jovian (363-364), kept his rank under Valentinian I (364-375), and pushed back several incursions of the Alemanni such as the one in 366 in Scarponna (Dieulouard). In 367 he became consul.
Biography[]
Jovinus was named Magister equitum (head of cavalry) in Gaul by emperor Julian. When in 363 emperor Jovian wants to replace him by one of his own men, Jovinus is proclaimed (emperor ???) by the legions in Gaul, but he refuses the purple and calms his troops. A grateful Jovian reinstates him as magister militum (top military commander).[3][4] On three occasions in 366, he gave battle to the Allemanni that had crossed the Rhine: in Scarponna (Dieulouard), on a river[5](likely the Moselle), and finally at Châlons en Champagne. In 367 he became consul of the west Roman empire together with Lupicinus.
Having converted to Christianity, he lets build the church of Saint-Agricole and Saint-Vital on the location of the current Saint-Nicaise de Reims abbey church. In this church he was buried in 370, in a white marble sarcophagus which he had brought from Italy. The sarcophagus of size 1.48m x 2.85m x 1.33m weighs approximately 2 metric tons and is decorated with a lion-hunt scene, and a scene of the dead man preparing to leave. Since 1958 it is in the musée d'archéologie de Saint-Rémi in Reims. Since 1880, the attestation of the tomb to Jovinus is disputed, however.[citation needed]
He is also attributed to the foundation of Joigny (Joviniacum), and Joinville.
View of the whole sarcophage.
Detail of a lion.
Detail of one of the horsemen.
The tomb of Jovinus as it was presented in the old church of Saint-Nicaise in Reims, gravure (1878), Reims, Carnegie library (Reims)
See also[]
References[]
- ^ Jean-Yves Sureau, Les Rues de Reims, mémoire de la ville, Reims, 2002.
- ^ Ammianus Marcellinus, Res gestae, XXI 8,3
- ^ Ammianus Marcellinus, Res gestae, XXV 8,11
- ^ Biographie universelle ou dictionnaire historique. 3. Paris: Furne. 1833..
- ^ Ammianus Marcellinus, Res gestae, XXVII 2
- Bagnall, Roger S.; Alan Cameron; Seth R. Schwartz & Klaas A. Worp (1987). Consuls of the Later Roman Empire. Oxford University Press. ISBN 1-55540-099-X.
- Jones, A.H.M.; J.R. Martindale & J. Morris (1971). The Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire Volume 1: A.D. 260–395. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-07233-6.
External links[]
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- 310s births
- 370s deaths
- 4th-century Gallo-Roman people
- Imperial Roman consuls
- Magistri equitum (Roman Empire)