Emperor
Constantine
..............................................................After the gradual withdrawal of Roman troops
from Britain in the last decades of the 4th
century, several generals rose to power as Emperors over
the mainland British. Legend, particularly perpetrated by
Geoffrey of Monmouth, states that the British people looked to their
cousins in Brittany for such leadership. King Aldrien of Brittany declined the British High-Throne,
but offered up his young brother, Constantine in his
stead. Constantine landed in Britain with 2000 men and
overcame the barbarians already invading the Island's
shores to become High-King as Constantine Waredwr (the
Deliverer).
Constantine has been variously
identified with one of several near contemporary men of
this name appearing in ancient Welsh Royal pedigrees: the
Galfridian brother of King Aldrien of Brittany, a son of
the Emperor Magnus Maximus or a King of Dumnonia in South-Western Britain.
The latter is perhaps the most popular, yet also the most
unlikely and based on his grandson Arthur's
associations with Somerset and Cornwall. His alternative
name of Constantine Fendigaid (the Blessed) may
itself have appeared through confusion with one of these
men.
It seems likely that this man has
arisen to take his place in British Mythology from
memories of an historical British Emperor who was raised
to the Imperial throne by his own troops in 407.
Disenchanted with the rule of the legitimate Emperor
Honorius, the Roman army remaining in Britain had already
got through two self appointed Emperors in a single year.
Worried about renewed barbarian invasions on the
continent, they decided to promote the usurpation of a third in the shape of
the Emperor Constantine III. From his base in Britain,
Constantine was able to take perhaps the last of the
Roman troops in that country to Gaul. Here he
strengthened defences along the Rhine and was able to
head off the barabrians who, two years later, turned
south for Spain. Constantine sent his lieutenant, named
Gerontius, to conteract their move; but Gerontius
rebelled against his Emperor and encouraged the
barbarians in their efforts. Despite this renewed attack,
Constantine gained Imperial recognition from the Emperor
Honorius himself. However, his position was soon
discredited and Zosimus tells us how the British were
forced to throw off the shackles of Imperial rule and
look to their own defence against invading Saxons.
Constantine tried to assert his authority once more by
invading Italy in 411. He was captured by Honorius in
Arles, taken back to Ravenna and executed..
It is possible that while all this was
going on on the continent, Constantine was deposed in
Britain by his treacherous advisor, Vortigern, as related by Geoffrey. However, it would
appear that he has pushed Constantine forward in history
some fifteen years or more. If the Emperor's descendancy
is to be believed, his grandson, King Arthur, was
flourishing almost a hundred years after his death.
Sources
..............
Geoffrey Ashe (1990) Mythology of the British
Isles.
Peter C. Bartrum (1993) A Welsh Classical Dictionary.
Ronan Coghlan (1991) The
Encyclopaedia of Arthurian Legends.
David Day (1995) The Quest for King Arthur.
Phyllis Ann Karr (1997) The Arthurian Companion.
Thomas Malory (1485) Le Morte D'Arthur.
John Matthews (1994) The Arthurian Tradtion.
Geoffrey of Monmouth (1136) The History of the Kings
of Britain.
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