News

Elena, probably originally from Drepanum (later named Helenopolis), in the Gulf of Nicomedia, married Roman emperor Constantius Chlorus. He divorced her around the year 292 in order to marry the ...
This great and renowned sovereign of the Christians was the son of Constantius Chlorus (the ruler of the westernmost parts of the Roman empire), and of the blessed Helen. He was born in 272, in ...
As for men, Costas or Kostas is amongst the most common names in Greece and the diaspora. Constantine was the son of Constantius Chlorus, the ruler of the westernmost parts of the Roman Empire, and ...
Archaeologists uncovered a boundary stone, used to mark land borders during the Roman Empire, dated to a period during which the empire was jointly ruled by four emperors. The boundary stone ...
The inscription reads: "Diocletian and Maximian, the Augusti, and Constantius and Maximian, the Caesars, ordered the placement of this stone marking the boundaries of the fields of the settlements ...
He was the son of the Caesar Constantius Chlorus (305-306), who governed the lands of Gaul and Britain. His mother was Saint Helen, a Christian of humble birth. ‘The holy emperor St Constantine ...
She made a proper marriage to the Roman Emperor Constantius Chlorus, and bore him a son who became Constantine the Great. After Constantine had accepted Christianity, the Empress Dowager Helena ...
Cotton Cloth. The tunic tradition goes back to Flavia Helena, wife of Roman Emperor Constantius Chlorus (he is said to have picked her up in a Balkan tavern during one of his campaigns ...
Helena was likely born around 250 AD in Drepanum (modern-day Turkey). She married the Roman Emperor Constantius Chlorus, and their son was Constantine the Great. Helena converted to Christianity later ...
By 306 AD however, united and better organized, the Emperor Constantius Chlorus was forced to protect his northern frontier against Pictish attacks on Hadrian’s Wall. On several fronts throughout ...
At that time, Trier was regarded as the ‘Second Rome’, ruled over by the emperor Constantius Chlorus. The Imperial Baths were intended as the emperor’s gift to the city’s people ...