Marinianus (consul 268) explained
Marinianus was Roman consul in the year 268, under Emperor Gallienus.[1] He was related to the Egnatia gens and has been speculated to be the cousin, son or nephew of Emperor Gallienus.[2] Marinianus and Valerianus Minor (Gallienus' brother), were killed during the autumn of 268 in a purge of Gallienus' partisans.[3]
Notes and References
- Book: Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire . 1971 . Cambridge University Press . Jones . A. H. M. . A. H. M. Jones . 558 . Marinianus 1 . Martindale . J. R. . John Robert Martindale . Morris . John . John Morris (historian) . https://archive.org/details/prosopography-later-roman-empire/PLRE-I/page/558.
- Grandvallet . Claire . 2006 . Marinianus, successeur désigné de Gallien ? . L'Antiquité Classique . 75 . 1 . 133–141 . 10.3406/antiq.2006.2595.
- https://web.archive.org/web/20220304135950/http://www.roman-emperors.org/gallval.htm "Valerian and Gallienus"