Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 September 2009
The relationship between Constantine and the ancient cults of Roman civilization remains one of the most important and discussed features of late antique history. It is a relationship which has defied those who see in his victory over Maxentius a sudden, monolithic shift in the religious consciousness of the ancient world, because the sources stubbornly refuse to yield to such a tidy interpretation. In this paper I review a body of evidence that reveals Constantine to be a flesh-and-blood emperor, confronting the difficulties of transition and reining in his own passions, sometimes for narrow political reasons and sometimes for what might be taken as statesmanship. What follows is neither exhaustive nor definitive. It is an attempt to gauge the complexity of some of Constantine's problems and assess his skills in dealing with them.
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2. Two panegyrics delivered before him had made explicit reference to the importance of the gods as part of the adventus: Pan. Lat. 6 (7), 8, 6–9 (A.D. 310): Te primo ingressu tuo tanta laetitia, tanta frequentia populus Romanus excepit, ut, cum te ad Capitolini Iovis gremium vel oculis, ferre gestiret, stipatione sui vix ad portas urbis admitteret. The Roman people at your first entrance [to the city] welcomed you in such large numbers and with such great joy that, although they yearned to carry you with their very eyes to the lap of Capitoline Juppiter, they could barely offer you access to the gates of the city through their thronging crowds. Cf. 8 (5), 8, 4 (A.D. 312). See MacCormack, S., Art and Ceremony in Late Antiquity (Berkeley and Los Angeles, 1981), 22–33Google Scholar.
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5. Josephus, , BJ 7. 4. 1 (68–74)Google Scholar shows that Vespasian went straight to the Palatine and offered his thanks there to the lares, not Juppiter. Cf. the admittedly dubious SHA ‘Heliogabalus’ 15. 7 for a refusal by the emperor to attend ceremonies on the Capitol. The duties were performed by the Urban Praetor.
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9. Lactantius, , DMP 48Google Scholar. 2 (CSEL 22. 228–9):… haec inter cetera quae videbamus pluribus hominibus profitura… quibus divinitatis reverentia continebatur, ut daremus et Christianis et omnibus liberam potestatem sequendi religionem quam quisque voluisset, quo quicquid est divinitatis in sede caelesti, nobis atque omnibus qui sub potestate nostra sunt constituti placatum ac propitium possit existere (Trans. J. L. Creed). Cf. for a similar expression of God-fearing, letter of Constantine to Aelafius, , Vicarius Africae in 314Google Scholar: CSEL 26. 204–6.
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14. VC 4. 10. See also 3. 15 (Vicennalia) and idem, Laus Constantini 2. 5–6. Philip ‘the Arab’ had also abhorred sacrifice: Orosius 7. 20. 3. For Christian attitudes towards blood sacrifice, see Bradbury, , art. cit. (n. 1), 129ffGoogle Scholar, although he does not make the connection with magic and divination.
15. CT 9. 16. 3:… quibus non cuiusque salus aut existimatio laederetur, sed quorum proficerent actus, ne divina munera et labores hominum sternerentur (trans. C. Pharr).
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17. CT 9. 16. 2:… nee enim prohibemus praeteritae usurpationis officia libera luce tractari.
18. Dio 56. 25. 5 (A.D. 11): ‘… the seers were forbidden to prophesy to anyone alone or to prophesy regarding death even if others should be present.’ Suetonius, , Tiberius 68Google Scholar: ‘… he lived a life of extreme fear and was even exposed to insult. He forbade anyone to consult soothsayers secretly and without witnesses.’ See Cramer, F., Astrology in Roman Politics and Law (Philadelphia, 1954)Google Scholar, Part II; also Liebeschuetz, , op. cit. (n. 16), 120 ffGoogle Scholar, with the apposite quotation from Ulpian, , De Officio Proconsulis 7Google Scholar: ‘… those who consult about the health of the emperor are punishable by death or some still heavier punishment; and about their own or relative's affairs by a lighter sentence.’ See MacMullen, R., op. cit. (n. 16), 129 fGoogle Scholar.
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20. See MacMullen, R., ‘Judicial Savagery in the Roman Empire’, Chiron 16 (1986), 147–66Google Scholar, here 155.
21. CT 9. 16. 1:… superstitioni enim suae servire cupientes poterunt publice ritum proprium exercere.
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23. CT 16. 10. 1:… ceteris etiam usurpandae huius consuetudinis licentia tribuenda, dummodo sacrificiis domesticis abstineam, quae specialiter prohibita sunt.
24. CT 16.2.5.
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26. Op. cit. (n. 6), 85–6.
27. See Fraschetti, A., ‘Costantino e l'abandono del Campidoglio’ in Giardina, A. (ed.), Societὰ romana e impero lardoantico II (Rome and Bari, 1986), 85Google Scholar.
28. Cf., e.g., Eusebius, , HE 10Google Scholar. 8. 10; 16; VC 1. 52; 54; 56. Nöthlichs, , Massnahmen, 25–6Google Scholar; 30.
29. For what follows, see Bradbury, art. cit. (n. 1) and the items in nn. 34 and 35 below.
30. VC 2. 44.
31. VC 2. 44.
32. VC 2. 45. Cf. Socrates, , HE 1Google Scholar. 3.
33. CE, 97, 224, 269.
34. The phrase was ‘mostly such as were devoted to the saving faith’.
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38. Oratio 30. 6. Cf. 30. 37: [Constantine was punished for being a desecrator] ‘leaving aside the fact that he did not proceed against the sacrifices.’ Bradbury, , art. cit. (n. 1), 128Google Scholar makes well-judged remarks on Libanius' capacity for protreptic rhetoric, but I interpret the circumstantial evidence differently.
39. VC 2. 60.
40. See, e.g., Dörries, H., Das Selbstzeugnis Kaiser Konstantins. Abhandlungen der Akademie der Wissenschaften in Göttingen, Philologisch-historische Klasse 34 (Göttingen, 1954), 51–4Google Scholar.
41. CE, 210: ‘An emperor with these convictions could not be expected to tolerate pagan practices which all Christians found morally offensive.’
42. Drake, H. A., ‘Constantine and the Pagans’, GRBS 29 (1988), 309–18Google Scholar, here 315.
43. Ibidem: ‘[Eusebius] knowingly creating a false impression of his [Constantine's] actual practice and long-term policy in the central field of the suppression of paganism.’
44. Galerius: Eusebius, , HE 8Google Scholar. 17. 1 and Lactantius, , DMP 34Google Scholar. Edict of Milan: see n. 8 above. Donatists: Optatus, De Schismale Donatistarum App. 9 (CSEL 26. 212–13). Gallienus’ edict of toleration: Eusebius, , HE 7. 13Google Scholar. Bradbury, , art. cit. (n. 1), 125–6Google Scholar is also sceptical of the ‘quiet supersession’ but I differ in the interpretation of Libanius and CT 16. 10. 2.
45. Art. cit. (n. 35), 72.
46. Barnes, , CE 265–71Google Scholar, here 267.
47. Ibidem, 266.
48. VC 1.3. 4.
49. Op. cit. (n. 8), 627.
50. Seeck, , op. cit. (n. 11), 177Google Scholar. He entered the city on 18th July and the main festival was celebrated on the 25th. He had held a celebration the previous year at Nicomedia: ed. Helm, 231.
51. Zosimus, , HN 2Google Scholar. 29. 1–5.
52. For a full discussion of the incident, see Paschoud, F., Cinq Études surZosime (Paris, 1975), 24–62Google Scholar.
53. Dedicatur Constantinopolis omnium paene urbium nuditate: ed. Helm, 232.
54. Edicto Constantini gentilium templa subversa sunt: ed. Helm, 233.
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56. Oratio 30. 6.
57. Laus Constantini 9. 6. For my views on the religious ambivalence of statues, see Curran, J., ‘Moving Staues in Late Antique Rome: Problems of Perspective’, Art History 17 (1994), 46–58CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
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63. Aurelius, C. Matrinius is a local example: CIL XI. 5283Google Scholar. At Rome, see Proculus, L. Aradius Valerius: CIL VI. 1690Google Scholar, 1691.
64. ILS 705, 11. 45–7:… ne aedis nostro nomini dedicata cuiusquam contagione superstitionis fraudibus polluatur (trans. Lewis and Reinhold).
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