119:, but he refused. He had already gotten the worst of his dispute with the Christians Aspar and Ardabur because of his devout paganism. He showed the letter he received from Zeno to Damascius. He joined a plot to assassinate Zeno and restore paganism, but was betrayed by his co-conspirators, among whom was Aspar's youngest son,
86:—but he feuded with his superiors and was draconian in meting out justice. He blamed the short duration of his success in politics to a few unjustifiable death sentences. The office he held, unspecified by Damascius, was probably that of a provincial governor. He feuded with
123:. These events probably took place before 478, since Damascius left Athens for Alexandria that year and would have lost personal contact with Severianus.
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After the abrupt end of his political career, Severianus returned to Athens. There
Damascius met him in 469. He was offered a high post—probably the
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Severianus wrote numerous letters. He encouraged
Damascius' brother Julian to study literature. He delivered commentaries on the speeches of
65:. His father was Auxentius and his grandfather Callinicus. His father wanted him to become a lawyer and to this end he specialised in
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Too ambitious for the professional philosophical life, Severianus entered politics. He rose to high office—Damascius calls him an
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while also studying poetry and rhetoric. His father refused his request to study philosophy under
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Riot in
Alexandria: Tradition and Group Dynamics in Late Antique Pagan and Christian Communities
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from 453 to 466. This suggests that his tenure fell within this period and lay in the East.
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and these were probably the superiors mentioned elsewhere. Ardabur was
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Nicholson, Oliver P. (2018). "Severianus". In Oliver
Nicholson (ed.).
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The
Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire: Volume II, AD 395–527
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Power and
Persuasion in Late Antiquity: Towards a Christian Empire
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descended from Roman colonists who had once settled in
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Severianus' life is known mainly from the writings of
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115:(474–491) on the condition that he become a
41:, including what was incorporated into the
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261:. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
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57:. He was born into a prominent family of
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30:politician who served under the emperor
279:The Oxford Dictionary of Late Antiquity
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291:. University of California Press.
109:praetorian prefecture of the East
247:. University of Wisconsin Press.
134:. He disdained the writings of
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317:5th-century Byzantine people
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287:Watts, Edward J. (2010).
327:Neoplatonists in Athens
17:Severianus of Damascus
322:Late-Roman-era pagans
312:People from Damascus
23:: Σεβηριανός) was a
253:Martindale, John R.
198:, pp. 998–999.
307:5th-century births
196:Martindale (1980)
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136:Callimachus
34:(450–457).
301:Categories
63:Alexandria
132:sophistry
128:Isocrates
117:Christian
67:Roman law
39:Damascius
243:(1992).
100:for the
59:Damascus
47:and the
92:Ardabur
73:at the
71:Proclus
55:Photius
50:Epitome
32:Marcian
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83:archon
142:Notes
88:Aspar
28:pagan
25:Roman
21:Greek
263:ISBN
113:Zeno
102:East
90:and
44:Suda
53:of
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19:(
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