York’s Roman Emperor
Peter Furtado previews a major exhibition opening in York at the end of the month.
It is common to think of Britain as a remote and relatively unimportant part of the Roman empire, most distinctive for marking its northerly limits with its complex of walls and garrisons. But on one occasion at least, exactly 1,700 years ago, events in Britain determined the fate of the whole empire and, probably for the first time, the history of Europe as a whole.
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If you enjoyed this article, you might like these:
- Constantine: Britain’s Roman Emperor
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- Ptolemy of Egypt; The Emperor Constantine; The Roman Near East 31 BC-AD 337; The Oxford Illustrated History of Roman Britain
- Ptolemy of Egypt; The Emperor Constantine; The Roman Near East 31 BC-AD 337; The Oxford Illustrated History of Roman Britain
- Constantine and Eusebius
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