Examples of using Maximinus in English and their translations into Serbian
{-}
-
Colloquial
-
Ecclesiastic
-
Computer
-
Latin
-
Cyrillic
After this, Maximinus threw Katherine in jail.
Finally he was brought to the arena andpresented to the emperor Maximinus.
Roman emperor Maximinus II was born 20. November 270.(died 313).
In the East, Galerius remained Augustus and Maximinus remained his Caesar.
Maximinus committed suicide at Tarsus in 313 after being defeated in battle by Licinius.
In 311, upon Galerius' death, Licinius shares the entire empire with Maximinus Daia.
Maximinus considered Constantine's arrangement with Licinius an affront to his authority.
On the death of Galerius,in May 311, Licinius shared the entire empire with Maximinus Daia.
Keen to put an end to the incursion of the Germanic tribes, Maximinus crossed the Rhine and raided their villages.
But Maximinus, with a satanic stubbornness, not only remained unpersuaded, but even ordered that all these people, too, be decapitated!
Constantius and Galerius then ascended to the post of Augustus,and Severus and Maximinus were named as Caesars.
On the death of Galerius in 311, Maximinus divided the Eastern Empire between Licinius and himself.
Having shown clear support for the Gordians,they could expect no clemency from Maximinus when he reached Rome.
Galerius offered to call both Maximinus and Constantine"sons of the Augusti", but neither accepted the new title.
The troops killed Severus and his mother in 235 CE at Moguntiacum, andthen elected Maximinus to be their leader.
It should come as no surprise that Maximinus spent heavily on campaigns, conducting near constant warfare and doubling soldier pay.
The right of nomination was conceded to Galerius, who selected two creatures of his own, devoted, as he believed,to his interests, Maximinus Daza and Severus.
After a fierce battle with heavy losses near Baden and Wurttemberg, Maximinus prevailed, and established a short-lived peace in the region.
Suspicious of the nobility, Maximinus had many of Alexander Severus' close advisors killed, fearing they were plotting his demise(at least two conspiracies were uncovered).
As a result, the already overtaxed populace was forced topay even higher taxes, which further alienated them from the ruling class- hurting Maximinus' popularity.
After these disastrous events, the Senate was still determined to overthrow Maximinus I and quickly elected two senate members, Pupienus and Balbinus, as new co-emperors.
Unfortunately, Maximinus Daia did not enjoy the benefits of this luxurious residence- he died or was killed in 313, after the lost battle in the civil war with the Tetrarch Licinius.
After the death of Maximian in 309 or 310, relations with Constantine rapidly deteriorated, andMaxentius allied with Maximinus to counter an alliance between Constantine and Licinius.
The first conspiracy involved stranding Maximinus on the other side of the Rhine in hostile territory(during a campaign there) by destroying a bridge behind him;
Born Gaius Julius Verus in about 173 CE in Thrace(the area between the Aegean Sea and Black Sea that includes portions of Bulgaria, Turkey and Greece today),young Maximinus entered the Roman military in 190 CE, and due to his enormous size and great strength, he quickly rose through the ranks.
Although the Senate on the whole despised Maximinus, considering him a peasant and barbarian, they ultimately approved his position- it helps to have the army at your back.
This agreement proved disastrous: by 308 Maxentius had become de facto ruler of Italy and Africa even without any imperial rank,and neither Constantine nor Maximinus- who had both been Caesares since 306 and 305 respectively- were prepared to tolerate the promotion of the Augustus Licinius as their superior.
It was built by Maximinus Daia, a ruler who wanted to leave a lasting memorial of himself in his hometown, following the example of his uncle tetrarch Galerius, who had built Felix Romuliana.
Schaff and Wace note that Lucian was imprisoned and put to death during the persecution of emperor Maximinus Daia, in 311 or 312, and therefore conclude that, if the fragment is genuine,Anthimus suffered martyrdom not under Diocletian but under Maximinus.
Learning of this, Maximinus continued his march to Rome, but by this time, even his own troops had grown weary of him, particularly after a long, unexpected siege of Aquileia that saw famine and disease spread throughout their ranks.