Caesar Constantius Gallus (351–354 AD) and His Military Policy at the Near East Provinces of the Late Roman Empire

The paper addresses the military-administrative activities of Constantius Gallus, a nephew of Emperor Constantius II (337–361), who administered the Late Roman Empire’s eastern provinces from 351 to 354 on behalf of Constantius II, holding the title of caesar. Constantius Gallus’ military policies i...

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Main Author: Evgenii Aleksandrovich Mekhamadiev
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Ural Federal University 2020-12-01
Series:Античная древность и средние века
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.urfu.ru/index.php/adsv/article/view/4874
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spelling doaj-73993d1191e04082b78c8c1a0414e7cd2021-09-02T17:44:13ZdeuUral Federal UniversityАнтичная древность и средние века0320-44722687-03982020-12-01480395210.15826/adsv.2020.48.0033770Caesar Constantius Gallus (351–354 AD) and His Military Policy at the Near East Provinces of the Late Roman EmpireEvgenii Aleksandrovich Mekhamadiev0Санкт-Петербургский государственный университет, Санкт-ПетербургThe paper addresses the military-administrative activities of Constantius Gallus, a nephew of Emperor Constantius II (337–361), who administered the Late Roman Empire’s eastern provinces from 351 to 354 on behalf of Constantius II, holding the title of caesar. Constantius Gallus’ military policies in the east has been studied against the background of Greek and Latin sources along with the Talmudic texts written in Hebrew (in translations into modern Western European languages). This paper is aimed at the analysis of the main directions of Constantius Gallus’ military policy and his reform of the command structure of the troops stationed in the Roman provinces in the Near East in the period in question. This study allowed the author to clarify Constantius Gallus’ contribution to the general development of the Late Roman military organization in the eastern provinces of the Empire. The author has researched Constantius Gallus’ military polices by three topics: the struggle against the Persians in Syria and Mesopotamia; the military campaign against the rebellious Jews in Palestine; and the struggle against the Arab invaders into Arabia Petraea in 353. The research of these issues allows the author to conclude that, in his works, Constantius Gallus followed the separation of powers principle: he did not command the troops, neither he personally conducted military operations or interfered into the course of combat operations. He followed a simpler task of creating the mechanisms providing coordinated relations between commanders of expeditionary and frontier troops, coordinating joint actions of the commanders, and keeping conditions for effective collaboration of different kinds of troops.https://journals.urfu.ru/index.php/adsv/article/view/4874констанций галлвосточные провинцииперсыарабыэкспедиционные войскапограничные гарнизоны
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Evgenii Aleksandrovich Mekhamadiev
spellingShingle Evgenii Aleksandrovich Mekhamadiev
Caesar Constantius Gallus (351–354 AD) and His Military Policy at the Near East Provinces of the Late Roman Empire
Античная древность и средние века
констанций галл
восточные провинции
персы
арабы
экспедиционные войска
пограничные гарнизоны
author_facet Evgenii Aleksandrovich Mekhamadiev
author_sort Evgenii Aleksandrovich Mekhamadiev
title Caesar Constantius Gallus (351–354 AD) and His Military Policy at the Near East Provinces of the Late Roman Empire
title_short Caesar Constantius Gallus (351–354 AD) and His Military Policy at the Near East Provinces of the Late Roman Empire
title_full Caesar Constantius Gallus (351–354 AD) and His Military Policy at the Near East Provinces of the Late Roman Empire
title_fullStr Caesar Constantius Gallus (351–354 AD) and His Military Policy at the Near East Provinces of the Late Roman Empire
title_full_unstemmed Caesar Constantius Gallus (351–354 AD) and His Military Policy at the Near East Provinces of the Late Roman Empire
title_sort caesar constantius gallus (351–354 ad) and his military policy at the near east provinces of the late roman empire
publisher Ural Federal University
series Античная древность и средние века
issn 0320-4472
2687-0398
publishDate 2020-12-01
description The paper addresses the military-administrative activities of Constantius Gallus, a nephew of Emperor Constantius II (337–361), who administered the Late Roman Empire’s eastern provinces from 351 to 354 on behalf of Constantius II, holding the title of caesar. Constantius Gallus’ military policies in the east has been studied against the background of Greek and Latin sources along with the Talmudic texts written in Hebrew (in translations into modern Western European languages). This paper is aimed at the analysis of the main directions of Constantius Gallus’ military policy and his reform of the command structure of the troops stationed in the Roman provinces in the Near East in the period in question. This study allowed the author to clarify Constantius Gallus’ contribution to the general development of the Late Roman military organization in the eastern provinces of the Empire. The author has researched Constantius Gallus’ military polices by three topics: the struggle against the Persians in Syria and Mesopotamia; the military campaign against the rebellious Jews in Palestine; and the struggle against the Arab invaders into Arabia Petraea in 353. The research of these issues allows the author to conclude that, in his works, Constantius Gallus followed the separation of powers principle: he did not command the troops, neither he personally conducted military operations or interfered into the course of combat operations. He followed a simpler task of creating the mechanisms providing coordinated relations between commanders of expeditionary and frontier troops, coordinating joint actions of the commanders, and keeping conditions for effective collaboration of different kinds of troops.
topic констанций галл
восточные провинции
персы
арабы
экспедиционные войска
пограничные гарнизоны
url https://journals.urfu.ru/index.php/adsv/article/view/4874
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