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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › MaximianMaximian - Wikipedia

    Maximian has been implicated in a massacre of Coptic Christian troops from the headquarters unit of a legion raised in Thebes at Aucanus in modern Switzerland in early 285, during the preparations for the campaign against the Bagaudae. Maximian traveled to Gaul, engaging the Bagaudae late in mid-285.

  2. Jul 19, 1998 · Maximian was a Roman emperor with Diocletian from ad 286 to 305. Born of humble parents, Maximian rose in the army, on the basis of his military skill, to become a trusted officer and friend of the emperor Diocletian, who made him caesar July 21, 285, and augustus April 1, 286. Maximian thus became.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Learn about the life and achievements of Maximian, a Roman emperor who ruled in the late third century AD. He was a friend and colleague of Diocletian, a military commander, a persecutor of Christians, and a father of Maxentius.

  4. Sep 14, 2020 · Learn about Maximian, a coarse and capable military commander who rose to power under Diocletian and became a colleague in the Tetrarchy. Read about his campaigns, his abdication, his return and his fall in the late 3rd century AD.

  5. Maximian was a subemperor under Diocletian from 285 to 305, and then became an emperor in his own right. He faced several rebellions and conflicts in the West, and eventually committed suicide in 310.

  6. May 13, 2023 · Armed with Herculean strength and a fierce determination, Emperor Maximian rose to power, commanding the Western Roman Empire with an iron grip. A skilled warrior and strategist, he navigated a world riddled with barbarian invasions and political intrigue, leaving a lasting, albeit complex, legacy on the pages of Roman history.

  7. Maximian (Marcus Aurelius Valerius Maximianus), the son of shopkeepers near Sirmium, he rose through the ranks of the army. An excellent general, he was called by his old comrade-in-arms *Diocletian to assist him as his Caesar (21 July 285), with responsibility for Italy, Africa, Spain, Gaul, and Britain.