330 - 349 A.D.

 

(Feature Photo: Arch of Constantine in Rome to commemorate his victory at the Battle of Milvian Bridge in 312, the arch was dedicated in 315)

 

330   

RULERS & ROYALTY: Constantine "The Great" is the sole ruler of the Roman Empire / Sylvester I is the 33rd Pope/Bishop of Rome

Constantinople (modern day Istanbul in Turkey) becomes the capital of the Roman Empire

Victricius becomes bishop of Rouen (in France); Victricius is an ex-Roman soldier who converted to Christianity while stationed in Gaul (modern-day France); "He was an implacable opponent of 'Pelagianism', which Rome claimed to be an attempt to revive the concepts of Druidism" (The Druids, Pg. 18)

 

331

RULERS & ROYALTY: Constantine "The Great" is the sole ruler of the Roman Empire / Sylvester I is the 33rd Pope/Bishop of Rome 

 

332

RULERS & ROYALTY: Constantine "The Great" is the sole ruler of the Roman Empire / Sylvester I is the 33rd Pope/Bishop of Rome

 

333

RULERS & ROYALTY: Constantine "The Great" is the sole ruler of the Roman Empire / Sylvester I is the 33rd Pope/Bishop of Rome

 

334

RULERS & ROYALTY: Constantine "The Great" is the sole ruler of the Roman Empire / Sylvester I is the 33rd Pope/Bishop of Rome

 

335

RULERS & ROYALTY: Constantine "The Great" is the sole ruler of the Roman Empire / Sylvester I,  the 33rd Pope/Bishop of Rome, dies

 

336   

RULERS & ROYALTY: Constantine "The Great" is the sole ruler of the Roman Empire

January 18, Pope Mark is installed as Pope/Bishop of Rome, but he dies on October 7

 

337  

RULERS & ROYALTY: Constantine "The Great," sole ruler of the Roman Empire, dies, and Constantine II, Constantinus and Constans I become co-emperors

May 22, Constantine "The Great" dies at Ancyrona, near Nicomedia, Bithynia (now Izmit, Turkey); He is buried in the Church of the Apostles in Constantinople

September 7, After having most of their family killed by the army to eliminate any competition, the three sons of Constantine the Great divide the Roman world between themselves; Constantine II, proclaimed Augustus by hist troops, receives Gaul, Britannia and Hispania (Wikipedia)

Pope Julius I is installed as Bishop of Rome

 

339   

RULERS & ROYALTY: Constantine II, Constantinus and Constans I are co-emperors of the Roman Empire

Eusebius (early Christian historian) dies

 

340

RULERS & ROYALTY: Emperor Constantine II of the Roman Empire, dies, and his co-emperors, Constantinus and Constans I continue to rule 

Constantine II, son of Constantine the Great, invades Italy to try and become sole emperor over his brothers (who are co-emperors with him of the Roman Empire right now), but he fails and is killed in battle

  

341

RULERS & ROYALTY:  Constantinus and Constans I are co-emperors of the Roman Empire

 

342

RULERS & ROYALTY:  Constantinus and Constans I are co-emperors of the Roman Empire

 

343

RULERS & ROYALTY:  Constantinus and Constans I are co-emperors of the Roman Empire

The defenses of Hadrian's wall have been repeatedly built since 122, and this year Constans, the Roman emperor, now personally leads an expeditionary force against the Picts (of what is now Scotland); The picts have been making raids and incursions into Roman Britain (The Anglo Saxons, pg. 17)

 

344

RULERS & ROYALTY:  Constantinus and Constans I are co-emperors of the Roman Empire

 

345

RULERS & ROYALTY:  Constantinus and Constans I are co-emperors of the Roman Empire

 

346

RULERS & ROYALTY:  Constantinus and Constans I are co-emperors of the Roman Empire

 

347

RULERS & ROYALTY:  Constantinus and Constans I are co-emperors of the Roman Empire

 

348

RULERS & ROYALTY:  Constantinus and Constans I are co-emperors of the Roman Empire

 

349

RULERS & ROYALTY:  Constantinus and Constans I are co-emperors of the Roman Empire