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Aurelius Victor

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Sextus Aurelius Victor (c. 320 – c. 390) was a historian and politician of the Roman Empire. Victor was the author of a now-lost monumental history of imperial Rome covering the period from Augustus to Constantius II.[1] Under the emperor Julian (361-363), Victor served as governor of Pannonia Secunda; in 389 he became praefectus urbi (urban prefect), senior imperial official in Rome.[2]

His surviving work, entitled De Caesaribus is a brief epitome of his history, and was originally titled in the two surviving manuscripts Aurelii Victoris Historiae Abbreviatae. The work was published in 361.

Aurelius was born to a poor family in North Africa to an illiterate father. He was educated, first at Carthage and then at Rome. In the late 350s he served in government administration in the Balkans. Following the publication of his history his reputation grew enough that Julian erected a bronze status of him in Naissus.[1]

Aurelius survived the death of the pagan Julian into the reighn of the fiercely anti-pagan Theodosius I (347–395).

Surviving works

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Four small historical works have been ascribed to him, although only his authorship of De Caesaribus is securely established:

  1. Origo Gentis Romanae
  2. De Viris Illustribus Romae
  3. De Caesaribus Aurelii Victoris Historiae Abbreviatae (for which Aurelius Victor used the Enmannsche Kaisergeschichte)
  4. Epitome de Caesaribus Libellus breviatus de vita et moribus imperatorum breviatus ex libris Sexti Aurelius Victoris (attributed)

The four have generally been published together under the name Historia Romana. The second was first printed at Naples about 1472, in 4to, under the name of Pliny the Younger, and the fourth in Strasbourg in 1505.[3]

The first edition of all four books was that of Andreas Schott (8 volumes, Antwerp, 1579). A recent edition of the De Caesaribus is by Pierre Dufraigne (Collection Budé, 1975).

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ a b Stover, Justin; Woudhuysen, George. "The Lost History of Sextus Aurelius Victor". Antigone. Retrieved April 19, 2025.
  2. ^ Ammianus Marcellinus, xxi.10.
  3. ^ Chisholm 1911.

References

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