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Usurper of the Roman Empire From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sextus (possibly Gaius) Julius Saturninus (died 280 AD) was a Roman usurper against Emperor Probus.[1]
Julius Saturninus | |||||||||
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Usurper of the Roman Empire | |||||||||
Reign | 280 | ||||||||
Born | Gaul or Africa | ||||||||
Died | 280 Palestine | ||||||||
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Julius Saturninus was a Gaul by birth (others have him as a Moor) and was a friend of Probus, who appointed him governor of Syria around 279.
After Probus had left Syria for the Rhine in 280, unruly soldiers and the people of Alexandria pressured a reluctant Saturninus to accept imperial office. Having fled from Egypt, he changed his mind in Palestine and proclaimed himself emperor. Ancient sources conflict on what happened next: the Historia Augusta states that Probus sent men to kill the usurper, while according to an account by Zosimus, before Probus could respond to the threat, Saturninus was dead, killed by his own troops.[2]
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