Английская Википедия:4th century in Lebanon

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Шаблон:Short description

Файл:Labarum of Constantine the Great.svg 4th century in Lebanon Файл:Labarum of Constantine the Great.svg
Key event(s):
Шаблон:Flatlist
Файл:Rome-Capitole-StatueConstantin.jpg
Colossus of Constantine, whose reign is attributed to numerous changes that have permanently affected the course of Western history.[1]
Chronology:
Шаблон:Flatlist

Шаблон:History of Lebanon

This article lists historical events that occurred between 301–400 in modern-day Lebanon or regarding its people.

Administration

Файл:Istanbul - Museo archeol. - Diocleziano (284-305 d.C.) - Foto G. Dall'Orto 28-5-2006 (cropped).jpg
Sculpture of Diocletian.

Diocletian (r. 284–305) separated the district of Batanaea and gave it to Arabia, while sometime before 328, when it is mentioned in the Laterculus Veronensis, Constantine the Great (r. 306–337) created the new province of Augusta Libanensis (Шаблон:Literally) out of the eastern half of the old province of Phoenice, encompassing the territory east of Mount Lebanon.Шаблон:Sfn

Governors

In the fourth century, as a whole, almost 30 governors of Phoenicia are known with 23 governors of Phoenicia being in office between 353 and 394.[2] Amongst them was Sossianus Hierocles, who was a praeses at some time between 293 and 303.[3] The Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire (PLRE) states that, as praeses, he governed Phoenice Libanensis,[4] the province on the eastern side of Mount Lebanon. The district included Palmyra, where the inscription attesting to Hierocles' career is located.[5]

Consularis Governors of Phoenicia

Consularis Governor Date
Aelius Statuus Between 293 and 305
Sossianus Hierocles Between 293 and 303
Julius Julianus Before 305
Maximus ? Between 309/313
Achillius c. 323
Fl. Dionysius 328 – 329
Archelaus 335
Nonnus c. 337
Marcellinus 342
Apollinaris 353/4
Demetrius Before 358
Nicentius[6] 358 – 359
Euchrostius (?) 359/60
Julianus Before 360
Andronicus 360 – 361
Aelius Claudius Dulcitius Before 361
Anatolius 361
Polycles c. 361/2
Julianus 362
Gaianus 362 – 363
Marius 363 – 364
Ulpianus 364
Domninus 364 – 365
Leontius 372
Petrus 380
Proculus 382 – 383
Eustathius Before 388
Antherius 388
Epiphanius 388
Domitius 390
Severianus 391
Leontius 392

Events

300s

Файл:Edict on Maximum Prices Diocletian piece in Berlin.jpg
Piece of the Edict on Maximum Prices in the Pergamon Museum, Berlin
Файл:Pamphilus of Caesarea.jpg
Miniature painting of the martyrdom of Pamphilus

310s

Файл:MaximinusDaiaFinds.jpg
Coin of Maximinus
  • Maximinus issues a rescript encouraging every city to expel its Christians. This rescript is published in Tyre on May or June, 312 AD.[18]
  • Emperor Constantine converts to Christianity in 312 AD.
  • The Edict of Milan, is issued in February of 313 AD.
  • In 315 AD, the cathedral of Paulinus in Tyre is inaugurated by the Bishop Eusebius, who recorded his speech and thus a detailed account of the site in his writings.[19]
Файл:St Frumentius.jpg
Religious imagery of Frumentius
  • In 316, the Tyrian-born Frumentius and his brother, Edesius accompanied their uncle Metropius on a trip to the Kingdom of Axum by ship, the crew was massacred in a port on the Red Sea and the boys taken as slaves to the King of Axum. Frumentius and Edesius, who were both christian, gained favor with the king and his family, signaling the birth of Christianity in Ethiopia.[20]

320s

Шаблон:Multiple images

Файл:Mar Awtel.jpg
Mar Awtel, Kfarsghab, Lebanon
  • Christian Maronite saint Awtel dies in 327 AD.
  • Fl. Dionysius serves as the governor of Phoenicia in 328–329.[25]

330s

Файл:The Right Hand of St Gregory the Illuminator.jpg
The Right Hand of Gregory the Illuminator (who died in 331 AD) in the museum of the Holy See of Cilicia at Antelias, Lebanon

340s

  • Marcellinus, is attested as praeses of Phoenice in 342 AD.[28]

350s

  • Apollinaris is consularis of Phoenice, 353/4.
  • The Letter 492 of Rhetorician Libanius to Vindonius Anatolius of Beirut is written in 356, in the letter, Libanius writes that Anatolius, a native of Phoenicia, had spent some time “among us”, (i.e. in Antioch).[29]
  • In about 356, the Emperor Constantius II writes to Axumite King Ezana and his brother Saizana, requesting them to replace Frumentius as bishop with Theophilos the Indian, who supported the Arian position, as did the emperor. The king refused the request.[30][31]
  • Nicentius is consularis of Phoenice 358 – 359
  • Euchrostius is consularis of Phoenice 359/60

360s

  • In 360, Dominus the Elder, a law school professor, declines the invitation of Libanius to leave the Law School at Beirut and to teach with him at the rhetoric school of Antioch.[32]
  • Andronicus is consularis of Phoenice, 360 – 361.
  • Anatolius is consularis of Phoenice, 361 AD.
  • Polycles is consularis of Phoenice, Шаблон:Circa.
  • Julianus is consularis of Phoenice, 362 AD.
Файл:Dorotheus of Tyre (Menologion of Basil II).jpg
Miniature from the Menologion of Basil II of the martyrdom of Dorotheus
  • Around 362 AD, Julian the Apostate burns a basilica that existed in Beirut.[33]
  • The 107-year-old Dorotheus of Tyre, bishop of Tyre, is martyred in 362 AD.[34]
  • Gaianus of Tyre is the consular governor of Phoenicia in 362.
  • Marius is consularis of Phoenice, 363 – 364.
  • Ulpianus is consularis of Phoenice, 364.
  • Domninus is consularis of Phoenice, 364 – 365.
  • In 365 AD, Tyre and Sidon alongside several other coastal cities are damaged by a tsunami caused by the Crete earthquake.[35]

370s

  • Leontius is consularis of Phoenice, 372 AD.
Файл:Baalbek - temple of Jupiter.jpg
The remains of the temple of Jupiter

380s

  • Petrus is consularis of Phoenice, 380 AD.
  • The Edict of Thessalonica is issued on 27 February AD 380, making Christianity the sole official religion of the Roman empire.
  • Diodorus is bishop of Tyre, 381 AD.[36]
  • Proculus is consularis of Phoenice, 382 – 383.
  • Frumentius dies Шаблон:Circa.
Файл:Commemorative stelae of Nahr el-Kalb 05.jpg
Commemorative inscription of Proculus (Inscription #11), Nahr el-Kalb. (Zoom-in for epigraphic details)

390s

  • Domitius is consularis of Phoenice, 390.
  • Severianus is consularis of Phoenice, 391.
  • Leontius is consularis of Phoenice, 392.

Education

In the 4th century, the Greek rhetorician Libanius reported that the school attracted young students from affluent families and deplored the school's instructional use of Latin, which was gradually abandoned in favor of Greek in the course of the century.[38][39][40][41]

Historically, Roman stationes or auditoria, where teaching was done, stood next to public libraries housed in temples. This arrangement was copied in the Roman colony at Beirut. The first mention of the school's premises dates to 350.[42]

Professors

Dates[43] Names

(uncertain names in italic)

Summer 356 to March / April 364 Domninus (Domnio)
October 363 Scylacius
Summer 365 Anonymous
Summer 388 Sebastianus?

Architecture

References

  1. Norwich, John Julius (1996). Byzantium (First American ed.). New York. pp. 54–57.
  2. A.H.M. Jones, J.R. Martindale, J. Morris, Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire, vol. I: AD 260–395, Cambridge 1971 (hereinafter: PLRE I), pp. 1105–1110 (fasti). For the reviews, often negative, and corrections to the first volume of PLRE, cf. A.H.M. Jones, “Fifteen years of Late Roman Prosopography in the West” (1981–95), [in:] Medieval Prosopography 17/1, 1996, pp. 263–274.
  3. Шаблон:CIL; Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire 1.432 s.v. "Sossianvs Hierocles 4", citing L'Année épigraphique 1932, 79 = Supplementum Epigraphicum Graecum 7.152.
  4. Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire 1.432 s.v. "Sossianvs Hierocles 4".
  5. Simmons, 848.
  6. Martindale, J. R. & A. H. M. Jones, "Nicentius 1", The Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire, Vol. I AD 260-395 (Cambridge: University Press, 1971), p. 628
  7. Princeton/Stanford Working Papers in Classics, Explaining the maritime freight charges in Diocletian’s Price Edict, Version 1.0, April 2013, Walter Scheidel, Stanford University.
  8. Philip F. Esler, ed. (2000). The Early Christian World, Vol.2. Routledge. pp. 827–829. Шаблон:ISBN.
  9. 9,0 9,1 Basil Watkins, The Book of Saints, 8th ed. (Bloomsbury, 2016 [1921]), p. 734.
  10. Шаблон:Cite book
  11. Шаблон:Cite web
  12. Saints of April 2: Amphianus
  13. Шаблон:Cite CE1913
  14. Шаблон:Cite book
  15. Eusebius, De Martyribus Palestinae 7.1f, cited in Barnes, Constantine and Eusebius, 152.
  16. Шаблон:Cite web
  17. Christa Müller-Kessler, The Unknown Martyrdom of Patriklos of Caesarea in Christian Palestinian Aramaic from St Catherine’s Monastery (Sinai, Arabic NF 66), Analecta Bollandiana 137, 2019, pp. 63-71
  18. Eusebius, De Martyribus Palestinae 4.8; Barnes, Constantine and Eusebius, 152; Keresztes, 384; Mitchell, p. 117.
  19. Medlej, Youmna Jazzar; Medlej, Joumana (2010). Tyre and its history. Beirut: Anis Commercial Printing Press s.a.l. pp. 1–30. Шаблон:ISBN.
  20. RUFINUS, Historia Ecclesiastica, lib. I, cap. ix, in P.L., XXI, 478-80; Acta SS. Oct., XII, 257-70; DUCHESNE, Les missiones chrétienne au Sud de l'empire romain in Mélanges d'archéologie et d'histoire (Rome, 1896), XVI, 79-122; THEBAUD, The Church and the Gentile World (New York, 1878), I, 231-40; BUTLER, Lives of the Saints, 27 Oct.; BARING-GOULD, Lives of the Saints (London, 1872), 27 Oct.
  21. maghdouche.pipop.orgШаблон:Dead link
  22. Sozomen, H. E. I. 17, Theodoret, H. E. I. 7, and the Acts of the Council of Nicæa, ed. Labbei et Cossartii, I. p. 51
  23. Hitti, Philip K. (1951) History of Syria including Lebanon and Palestine. New York: The Macmillan Company. p. 363 fn.
  24. Cowper, B. H. (1861). Syriac Miscellanies. London:Williams and Norgate. pp. 9–10. Preterist Archive website Шаблон:Webarchive Retrieved 2 April 2018.
  25. Biographical notes: PLRE I, p. 259 [s.v. Flavius Dionysis 11].
  26. Le Quien, Oriens christianus
  27. Encyclopedia Americana, vol. 2 Danbury, Connecticut: Grolier Incorporated, 1997. Шаблон:ISBN.
  28. PLRE I 545; 546.
  29. Libanius, Ep. 492, 2: σὺ γὰρ δὴ Φοίνιξ ὢν καὶ διατρίβων τὰ μὲν ἐκεῖ, τὰ δὲ παρ’ ἡμῖν.
  30. "Letter of Constantius to the Ethiopians against Frumentius", Bible Suite, Christian Booksheld
  31. "Frumentius of Axum", Blackwell Reference Online
  32. Collinet 1925, p. 121
  33. Kassir (2002); Kassir, S. Histoire de Beyrouth, Ed. Fayard, Paris p.51, 2003.
  34. Шаблон:Cite web
  35. Шаблон:Cite web
  36. Шаблон:Cite web
  37. Commemorative stela of Nahr el-Kalb at Livius.org
  38. Collinet 1925, p. 39
  39. Clark 2011, p. 36
  40. Sadowski 2010 pp. 211–216
  41. Rochette 1997 pp. 168, 174
  42. Collinet 1925, p. 62
  43. Collinet 1925, p. 192
  44. Шаблон:Cite book

Sources

Шаблон:Roman Archaeological sites in Beirut & Lebanon