180:(a position he held until at least the next year), and his friend went to meet Attila, who treated them badly at the beginning, but later succumbed to their oratorical arts and the gifts they had brought: Attila would accept the terms of the peace of 448, he would stop attacking the Emperor Theodosius II and give up the strip of land south of the Danube obtained with the peace of 448; it seems that the granting of the release of many prisoners to the Romans was a concession made personally to the two prestigious guests.
162:. In 448 Anatolius concluded a peace agreement with Attila, agreeing to pay an annual tribute of 2,100 pounds of gold. In 450, however, Attila was again at war against the Roman Empire, on the pretext that the Emperor was harbouring fugitives from the Hunnic realm. To an offer of parley, Attila replied that he would deal only with ambassadors of
130:, dismounted and advanced on foot. Yazdegerd, informed that he was the Roman general, was baffled by such a demonstration of respect and retired to his camp with the whole army. He received the envoy of Theodosius, treating him with honor and accepted peace.
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141:. He built a church at Antioch which took the name of the "Basilica of Anatolius". He received several letters from
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and
Anatolius dissuaded the Emperor from supporting the uprising of the Armenians against the Sassanid Empire.
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53:, and held command of the Empire's eastern armies for 13 years. He led negotiations with
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from 433 to 446, reaching the consulate in 440, which he held with the
Western Emperor
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sent
Anatolius to parley with the Great King. Anatolius reached the
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In 442 Anatolius had donated a silver reliquary for the bones of
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In 443, Anatolius managed to conclude a truce for one year with
273:, "Anatolius 10", volume 2, Cambridge University Press, 1992,
27:
5th century
Eastern Roman Empire consul, diplomat and general
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In 451 Anatolius participated in various sessions of the
223:
The Roman
Eastern Frontier and the Persian Wars, Part 2
49:
in 440. He was very influential during the reign of
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106:in the mid-430s. In 440, he directed some works at
174:and Anatolius. Anatolius, who by then had become
156:; the following year, he is already attested as
41:. 421 – 451) was a diplomat and general of the
8:
346:Imp. Caesar Placidus Valentinianus Augustus
270:The Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire
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187:as dean of the imperial representatives.
65:In 421, Anatolius led one Roman army in
321:Imp. Caesar Flavius Theodosius Augustus
206:
7:
303:, Liverpool University Press, 2001,
247:Count Marcellinus and His Chronicle
152:. In 446, he ended his service as
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403:People of the Roman–Sasanian Wars
378:5th-century eastern Roman consuls
249:, Oxford University Press, 2001,
190:At the beginning of the reign of
288:, Blackwell Publishing, 1996,
1:
177:magister militum praesentalis
166:, and mentioned the names of
154:magister militum per Orientem
79:magister militum per Orientem
373:5th-century Byzantine people
388:Correspondents of Theodoret
98:, he built the fortress of
434:
296:, pp. 96–99, 134–135.
263:, John Robert Martindale,
145:, with requests for help.
355:Fl. Taurus Seleucus Cyrus
351:
330:
317:
284:Thompson, Edward Arthur,
261:Jones, Arnold Hugh Martin
110:and rebuilt the walls of
71:war against the Sassanids
114:in Arabia. In 440, the
108:Heliopolis of Phoenicia
213:This episode, told by
102:along the border with
57:on several occasions.
418:5th-century diplomats
122:attacked the Romans.
185:Council of Chalcedon
43:Eastern Roman Empire
383:Byzantine diplomats
225:, CRC Press, 2002,
94:In his capacity as
408:Byzantine generals
135:Thomas the Apostle
18:Peace of Anatolius
361:
360:
352:Succeeded by
311:, pp. 45–66.
299:Whitby, Michael,
281:, pp. 84–86.
137:to the church of
16:(Redirected from
425:
393:Magistri militum
318:Preceded by
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96:magister militum
86:as a colleague.
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76:Anatolius was
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37:: Ανατόλιος,
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337:Roman Empire
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240:Bibliography
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219:Persian Wars
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120:Yazdegerd II
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38:
30:
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265:John Morris
104:Persarmenia
69:during the
413:451 deaths
367:Categories
326:Fl. Festus
233:, p. 259).
202:References
196:Florentius
215:Procopius
159:patricius
143:Theodoret
61:Biography
31:Anatolius
398:Patricii
286:The Huns
116:Sassanid
335:of the
217:in the
192:Marcian
172:Senator
333:Consul
307:
292:
277:
253:
229:
139:Edessa
112:Gerasa
47:Consul
344:with
323:XVII,
168:Nomus
118:king
35:Greek
305:ISBN
290:ISBN
275:ISBN
251:ISBN
227:ISBN
45:and
341:440
369::
267:,
194:,
170:,
73:.
39:fl
348:V
33:(
20:)
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