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Roman empress and second wife of Constantine I For the opera, see Fausta (opera). For the Catholic saint, see Saint Fausta.

Fausta
Augusta
Female head statueFausta, most probably before her marriage to Constantine, Louvre
Roman empress
Tenure307–326
Born289
Rome, Italy
Died326 (aged 37)
SpouseConstantine I
Issue
DynastyConstantinian
FatherMaximian
MotherEutropia

Flavia Maxima Fausta Augusta (289–326 AD) was a Roman empress. She was the daughter of Maximian and second wife of Constantine the Great, who had her executed and excluded from all official accounts for unknown reasons. Historians Zosimus and Zonaras reported that she was executed for adultery with her stepson, Crispus.

Family

Fausta was the daughter of Emperor Maximian. To seal the alliance between them for control of the Tetrarchy, in 307 Maximianus married her to Constantine I, who set aside his wife, Minervina, in her favour. Multiple sources say she had a role in her father’s downfall, though this story may have been invented.

Fausta was held in high esteem by Constantine, and proof of his favour was that in 324 she was proclaimed augusta; previously she held the title of nobilissima femina. Their sons became emperors: Constantine II, r. 337–340, Constantius II, r. 337–361, and Constans, r. 337–350. She also bore two daughters: Constantina and Helena. Constantina married her cousins, firstly Hannibalianus and secondly Constantius Gallus, and Helena married Emperor Julian.

Execution

In 326, Fausta was put to death by Constantine, following the execution of Crispus, his eldest son by Minervina. The circumstances surrounding the two deaths were unclear. Various explanations have been suggested; in one, Fausta is set jealously against Crispus, as in the anonymous Epitome de Caesaribus, or conversely her adultery, perhaps with the stepson who was close to her in age, is suggested.

According to the Latin Epitome de Caesaribus and the Ecclesiastical History of Philostorgius (as epitomized by Photius), Fausta was executed by being locked in a bath which was over heated, in connection with the death of Crispus, which "people " was caused by Fausta's accusation of unclear nature.

But Constantine, having obtained rule over the whole Roman Empire by remarkable success in wars, ordered his son Crispus to be put to death, at the behest (so people think) of his wife Fausta. Later he locked his wife Fausta in overheated baths and killed her, because his mother Helena blamed him out of excessive grief for her grandson.

Zosimus, on the other hand, suggests adultery as the reason:

He killed Crispus, who had been deemed worthy of the rank of Caesar, as I have said before, when he incurred suspicion of having sexual relations with his stepmother Fausta, without taking any notice of the laws of nature. Constantine’s mother Helena was distressed at such a grievous event and refused to tolerate the murder of the young man. As if to soothe her Constantine tried to remedy the evil with a greater evil: having ordered baths to be heated above the normal level, he deposited Fausta in them and brought her out when she was dead.

Gregory of Tours reports that the pair plotted treason. In Zonaras' version written in the 12th century, Crispus' death was caused by Fausta's retaliatory accusation of rape following her unsuccessful sexual advances toward him. But when Constantine realized his innocence, he punished her, mirroring the myth of Phaedra and Hippolytus.

The mode of her assassination is not otherwise attested in the Roman world. David Woods departs from the traditional view that Crispus and Fausta were executed and offers the connection of overheated bathing with contemporaneous techniques of abortion, a suggestion that implies an unwanted, adulterous pregnancy from her relationship with Crispus and a fatal accident during the abortion.

Fausta, as Salus, holding her two sons, Constantine II and Constantius II

Constantine I ordered the damnatio memoriae of Fausta and Crispus around 326 with the result that no contemporary source records details of her fate: "Eusebius, ever the sycophant, mentions neither Crispus nor Fausta in his Life of Constantine, and even wrote Crispus out of the final version of his Ecclesiastical History (HE X.9.4)", Constantine's biographer Paul Stephenson observes. However, in 355/6, Julian praised Fausta's beauty, nobility, and moral virtue in his panegyric to Constantius II, revealing that the damnatio memoriae may have been lifted during the reign of her son.

In popular culture

Fausta is an important antagonist in Dorothy L. Sayers' chronicle-play The Emperor Constantine (1951). In addition, Fausta was portrayed by Belinda Lee in the film Constantine and the Cross (1961).

Notes

  1. She received the honorific Augusta in 324 AD.

References

  1. Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire, Vol. 1 p.326
  2. https://www.jstor.org/stable/299163
  3. On 8 November 324 according to Prof. Dr. Klaus Rosen, Konstantin der Grosse: Kaiser zwischen Machtpolitik und Religion, Klett-Cotta, Stuttgart 2013, ISBN 978-3-608-94050-3, pp. 248–49.
  4. Woods, David (1998). "On the Death of the Empress Fausta". Greece & Rome. 45 (1): 70–86. doi:10.1093/gr/45.1.70.
  5. 41.11–12; According to some sources, she had accused Crispus of rape, and Constantine had Crispus executed. Stephenson remarks that if Fausta had reported a false tale of treachery and was killed in Constantine's subsequent remorse, the damnatio memoriae against Crispus was not in fact repealed.
  6. Schlumberger, Jörg A. (1974). Die Epitome de Caesaribus. Untersuchungen zur heidnischen Geschichtsschreibung des 4. Jahrhunderts n. Chr. Munich: C.H. Beck. pp. 41.11–12.
  7. Epitome de Caesaribus, 42.11–12
  8. Barnes, Timothy. Constantine Dynasty, Religion and Power in the Later Roman Empire, 145.
  9. History of the Franks, 1.36
  10. Garland, Lynda. Questions of Gender in Byzantine Society, 108.
  11. Woods, D. (1998). "On the Death of the Empress Fausta" (PDF). Greece and Rome. 45 (1): 70–86. doi:10.1093/gr/45.1.70.
  12. Stephenson 2010:222.
  13. Paul Stephenson. Constantine: Roman Emperor, Christian Victor. Abrams; 2010. ISBN 978-1-4683-0300-1. p. 224.
  14. Julian, "Panegyric in honour of Constantius", 9. The full text of Panegyric in honour of Constantius at Wikisource

Bibliography

  • (in French) Jean-Luc Desnier, Zosime II, 29 et la mort de Fausta, Bulletin de l'Association Guillaume Budé, n°3, octobre 1987. pp. 297–309 read on line.
  • (in Spanish) Esteban Moreno Resano, 'Las ejecuciones de Crispo, Licinio el Joven y Fausta (año 326 d.C.): nuevas observaciones', Dialogues d'histoire ancienne, vol.41, n° 1 (2015) pp. 177–200 read on line.
  • (in French) Gérard Minaud, Les vies de 12 femmes d’empereur romain – Devoirs, Intrigues & Voluptés , Paris, L’Harmattan, 2012, ch. 12, La vie de Fausta, femme de Constantin, pp. 285–305.
  • J.W. Drijvers, 'Flavia Maxima Fausta: Some Remarks', Historia 41 (1992) 500–506.

External links

Royal titles
Preceded byGaleria Valeria
(or Minervina)
Empress of Rome
307–326
with Galeria Valeria (307–311)
Valeria Maximilla (307–312)
Flavia Julia Constantia (313–324)
Succeeded byDaughter of Julius Constantius
Roman and Byzantine empresses
Principate
27 BC – AD 235
Crisis
235–285
Dominate
284–610
Western Empire
395–480
Eastern Empire
395–610
Eastern/
Byzantine Empire

610–1453
See also
Italics indicates a consort to a junior co-emperor, underlining indicates a consort to an emperor variously regarded as either legitimate or a usurper, and bold incidates an empress regnant.
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