Marcellinus (died 31 September 351 AD) was a Roman Empire officer under Roman Emperor Constans and usurper Magnentius.
Marcellinus was comes rerum privatarum of Emperor Constans. He played a major role in the election of Magnentius to the rank of Augustus at Augustodunum, on January 18, 350. Marcellinus organized a party for the birthday of his sons, and invited many of the superior officers: Magnentius, acting like interpreting a drama, vested the imperial robes, and was hailed Augustus by the officers; when the troops heard the cries, they supported Magnentius' election.[1]
Magnentius raised Marcellinus to the rank of magister officiorum; after the usurpation of Nepotianus (3 June 350), Marcellinus was sent to Rome to deal with the matter, and he succeeded in suppressing the revolt (30 June), killing Nepotianus and his mother Eutropia, half-sister of Emperor Constantine I.[2]
Marcellinus also met Emperor Constantius II's messenger, Flavius Philippus, and escorted him to Magnentius, in a failed embassy to avoid a battle between Constantius and Magnentius.[3] Marcellinus disappeared in the following Battle of Mursa Major (28 September 351), in which Magnentius was defeated. Most likely, he was killed, and his body lost.
Notes
editReferences
editPrimary sources
edit- Aurelius Victor, Epitome de Caesaribus.
- Zosimus, Historia Nova.
Secondary sources
edit- Morris, John; Arnold Hugh Martin Jones; John Robert Martindale (1971). The Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire. Cambridge University Press. p. 546. ISBN 0-521-07233-6.