Classica et Christiana, 18/1, 2023 /179

Andrea PELLIZZARI (Università di Torino)
De mortibus usurpatorum. L’eliminazione violenta degli usurpatori tra IV e VI secolo d.C. [De mortibus usurpatorum. The violent elimination of the usurpers between the 4th and 6th cen­turies AD]

Keywords: usurpators, emperors, violence, Late Antiquity.

Abstract: De mortibus usurpatorum. The violent elimination of the usurpers between the 4th and 6th centuries AD. Usurpation as a feature of the imperial system was charac­te­ris­tic of the last historical phase of the Roman empire. The legitimate emperor was often a usurper who had succeeded, who had managed to defeat his adver­sa­ry militarily and who had convinced his subjects – and posterity – through pro­pa­­ganda that his right to rule was indisputable. Vic­to­ry in battle was in fact pre­sen­t­ed as a sign of the divine predilection that had chosen its champion. The de­feat of the adver­sary was the sign of his delegiti­mi­sa­tion in the eyes of God and in the eyes of men; it was accomplished by his eli­mi­na­tion, which could take place either by death in combat or by suicide following de­feat, or through his execution through often infamous rituals that expressed the ri­tualistic overthrow or the contra­passo always associated with these ceremonies.

FULL TEXT:

PDF

DOI: 10.47743/CetC-2023-18.1.179