Sneha Girap (Editor)

Censorinus (usurper)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Role
  
Usurper


Name
  
Censorinus Censorinus

Died
  
270 AD

Censorinus (usurper)

Appius Claudius Censorinus was a fictional usurper against Roman Emperor Claudius II, (in ca AD 269) according to the unreliable Historia Augusta. He is included in the list of the Thirty Tyrants.

It is claimed that he had a lengthy career, having served twice as a consul, twice as a praetorian prefect, thrice as a praefectus urbi, and four times as a proconsul. He served under Valerian in the Roman–Persian Wars and was wounded in combat. His wounds forced him to retire from military service. He was already an old man and long retired when the troops of Bononia revolted and proclaimed him an Augustus. He was killed by his own soldiers, because he enforced too strict discipline. His reign lasted only a few days.

All these details supplied by the Historia Augusta are bogus. His name and career are meant to reflect traditional Roman values, and may form part of the author's agenda when he wrote the Historia Augusta.

Francisco Mediobarbo Birago, a 17th-century numismatist, reported the existence of a coim commemorating the 3rd year of Censorinus' reign. The lack of sources for such a coin, make it likely that it was a forgery of some kind. Louis-SĂ©bastien Le Nain de Tillemont suggested that Censorinus and Victorinus could be the same person.

References

Censorinus (usurper) Wikipedia