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CHRISTIANITY AND CONSTANTINE'S IMPERIAL WOMEN

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 September 2023

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Abstract

It is known that various members of Constantine's family, of his own generation and the generation before, were Christian. It is often taken for granted that Constantine encouraged or required their Christian faith. However, in fact there is only evidence for Constantine's influence on the faith of his mother Helena. This paper examines the evidence for Christianity in the imperial family before Constantine became publicly Christian, and suggests that some of these women may even have been Christian independently of Constantine's influence.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of The Classical Association

Introduction

It is an unquestioned assumption of modern scholarship that Constantine's conversion kick-started the transformation of the Roman aristocracy and thus, eventually, of the Roman West into a predominantly Christian society. This assumption has dominated much of the broad-brush analysis of the period. Among others, A. H. M. Jones suggests that Christianity was less common among the aristocracy, partly because it was incompatible with classical culture;Footnote 1 MacMullen points out that a Christian emperor meant that Christianity benefited from respectability, prestige, and material rewards;Footnote 2 Lane Fox points to how crucial Constantine was in the ‘victory’ over paganism.Footnote 3

This narrative that Constantine prompted the conversion of the aristocracy is implicitly applied to his own family. It is certainly true that he prompted the conversion of his mother Helena, as explicitly mentioned by Eusebius of Caesarea.

Constantine made his mother such a God-fearer – she had not been one before – that it was as if she had been taught from birth by the common Saviour of all.

(Eusebius of Caesarea, Vita Constantini 3.47)

There are many other known Christians in Constantine's family: these include his half-sisters Constantia and Anastasia, his mother-in-law Eutropia, and his sons by his wife Fausta. However, Christianity in the family is always implicitly explained as arising either from Constantine himself, or (for some scholars) from his father. This may stem from the false assumption that late antique households had to be religiously uniform (based partly on Plutarch's statement that husbands should make their wives conform to their gods and their friends)Footnote 4 and may also stem from the assumption that Constantine's active vitriol against paganism later in his life must have been reflected in his domestic life as much as in his public policy.

The aim of this paper, then, is to examine the assumption that Constantine was somehow responsible for the faith of any of these individuals. Although the evidence can indeed be read this way, there is an alternative interpretation of the existing historical comments. It will here be suggested that, contrary to the usual narrative, there is no firm evidence whatsoever that Constantine influenced the faith of any of the imperial women except his own mother. In fact, some of those to be discussed were almost certainly Christian independently of Constantine's influence.

There is a wide range of modern understandings of how Constantine came to Christianity. Scholars differ on whether this occurred spontaneously at Milvian Bridge (whether or not influenced by a vision),Footnote 5 or whether he came to Christianity gradually through his lifetime.Footnote 6 They also disagree as to whether his faith was genuine Christianity (however that is taken),Footnote 7 a variant of monotheism or pragmatic polytheism, or entirely cynical and pragmatic.Footnote 8 Further, the evidence of Eusebius of Caesarea, one of the main sources, is often viewed as tendentious.Footnote 9 This paper does not seek to address the issue of Constantine's own faith, but hopes to be consistent with many of these theories; here it is only necessary to assume that Constantine presented as Christian by the time of his death (on the evidence of his baptism) and chose to associate himself with Christianity publicly from the mid 320s, for example at Nicaea, with the emergence of chi rho coins, and with Christian building programmes.

The methodology of this paper is to examine the evidence for Christianity in the imperial family, for his own generation and that of his parents, but excluding his children's generation. Any of those who may have been Christian independently of Constantine's influence will be indicated on the family tree at the end of the paper. (Helena is thus not marked, since it is explicitly stated that her son brought her to Christianity).

Words such as ‘independently’, ‘influence’, and ‘conversion’ are here used extremely cautiously. For example, ‘conversion’ can imply completely embracing Christianity, but may mean a lesser step of adopting Christian values and practices while simultaneously admitting others (for example, Sol Invictus worship or prayers to a non-specific supreme deity). It is of course difficult to assess the exact ‘influence’ on any individual's faith, so it is here acknowledged that influences may be sundry and diverse, including everything from direct pressure to family identity and prestige, from political expediency to personal inclination. Lastly, one aim here is to examine what influences there may have been on Constantine himself. ‘Independently’ is loosely taken to refer to individuals for whom there is a chance they may have ended up Christian even if Constantine himself had not, or who had significant Christian influences other than Constantine himself.

Admittedly this is all fairly open-ended, but in fact the loose designations still allow important conclusions to be drawn.

Anastasia

The first hint chronologically of Christianity in this family comes from the daughter born to Constantius and Theodora named Anastasia, an explicitly Judaeo-Christian name.

This name unquestionably indicates a Jew or Christian. In the West,Footnote 10 there are no other instances of the name in Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire this early in the fourth century; the sole occurrence in Prosopographie Chrétienne du Bas-Empire demonstrates an African bishop named Anastasius at the Council of Arles in 313.Footnote 11 The Liber Pontificalis tells us that Pope Felix (r. 355–365 ad) had a father named Anastasius.Footnote 12 Lastly, the church in Rome now known as Santa Anastasia is dated to the mid fourth century, but is referred to in the acts of the Roman Synod of 499 as titulus Anastasiae and thus probably belonged to an individual called Anastasia in the third century or during the Diocletianic PersecutionFootnote 13 (although another possibility is that it may have been named after the sister of Constantine here under discussion).Footnote 14 A handful of inscriptions in catacombs may evidence the name in Christian contexts.Footnote 15 As for the Jewish sphere, Ilan's catalogue of Jewish names in the West identifies eight individuals in Jewish contexts in the third to fourth centuries with the names Anastasius, Anastasis or Anastasia; all but one of these is in Rome.Footnote 16 In sum, then, Anastasia is a demonstrably Jewish or Christian name: there is no instance of it ever being found among pagans.

Some modern scholars speculate whether the girl Anastasia was named by her father, Constantius.Footnote 17 Barnes here is typical: ‘The Jewish and Christian overtones of the name point unmistakably to the religious sympathies of Constantius.’Footnote 18 This hypothesis is taken in light of Eusebius of Caesarea's narrative that Constantine's father was a monotheistic god-fearer who therefore arguably taught Christianity, or at least monotheism, to Constantine himself. Barnes thus argues from this evidence that Constantine may have come across Christianity as a child.

However, pace Barnes, it seems unlikely that Constantius would have had any Christian sympathies. Firstly, the narrative of Eusebius only makes Constantius god-fearing, devoted to the one god, and so on, but even Eusebius never goes so far as to state explicitly that Constantius is Christian. ‘Anastasia’ is a strange name for a man to choose for his daughter when he is not explicitly Christian himself.

Secondly, Constantius did not publicly favour Christianity. Although he was famously lenient during the persecutions that struck elsewhere in the empire, and is held not to have harmed Christians themselves,Footnote 19 he still destroyed churches and obviously prevented worship to an extent that Constantine was said to reinstate it as soon as his father died.

When Constantine Augustus took up his rule, the first thing he did was to restore to Christians their worship and their God. This was his first act: to reinstate the holy religion. (Lactantius, De Mortibus Persecutorum 24)

Even if Constantius was only confiscating property, he was still publicly opposing worship, and it seems surprising that he would at the same time have given his daughter a Christian name and done something deeply provocative to his Eastern imperial colleagues during a time of persecution.

So Barnes is unlikely to be correct about Constantius’ religious sympathies. Alternatively, Grünewald recalls that Constantine was brought up at Diocletian's court, and thus presumably less influenced by his father's religion; further, Eusebius depicts Constantine as an adult trying to discover what god aided his father.Footnote 20 However, those who disagree with Barnes feel compelled to deny that Anastasia could have acquired the name at birth. In order to deny the argument that Constantius was a Christian, Grünewald is forced to deny that Anastasia can have been so named as a child. He suggests, therefore, that the name ‘Anastasia’ was merely a label later used to refer to this individual as a marker of her faith, and we do not know her true name.Footnote 21

Although Grünewald is right to question whether Constantius was Christian, the problem is that he is forced into a convoluted position regarding Anastasia's name. There is no other evidence at this period for individuals taking a secondary name, for example at baptism, as a marker of their faith. If anything, onomastic evidence indicates quite the contrary: Depauw and Clarysse's onomastic analysis of Egyptian papyri suggests that Christians could have explicitly pagan names at this period, whereas the reverse is unlikely.Footnote 22

The key point here is that both Barnes and Grünewald take it for granted that, if the child were named Anastasia, that would indeed indicate the faith of her father; yet there is no need to make this assumption. Instead of looking for the influence of Constantius, there is another possibility that is rarely considered in the modern literature:Footnote 23 that Anastasia was named not by her father, but by her mother, Theodora. There are a couple of reasons why this could be possible.

Firstly, it was in fact a Roman practice that children were named by the mother's family, at least in the classical period.Footnote 24 (We may note, however, that Constantine's children were not named by his wife's family.) Indeed, some of Theodora's other children may have been named on her behalf. She has a daughter named Eutropia, presumably after Theodora's own mother, and a son called Hannibalianus, after a family member who may have been either her blood father by her mother's first marriage (see family tree diagram) or a name from her mother's family.Footnote 25

Secondly, the Origo Constantini speaks of the senator Bassianus qui habebat alteram Constantini sororem Anastasiam (‘who had Constantine's other sister Anastasia’).Footnote 26 The use of ‘habebat’ is curious; the text is usually taken as implying that Anastasia and Bassianus were married, but this is not normal usage for habeo, which has more vulgar connotations when standing alone.Footnote 27 So it may be that it here refers to a contractual relationship or betrothal. This in turn suggests that Anastasia in 316 may have been under the age of twelve. She was thus born in 304 or thereafter, but Constantius died in 305, so it is quite possible that she was born while her father was sick, or even after he died. Her mother could then have had a greater say in naming the child.

So it is possible that it was her mother who named her. Anastasia's name would then indicate the Christian faith not of her father, but of her mother Theodora. If this assumption is true, Theodora is the earliest member of the imperial family to be Christian, from the first few years of the fourth century. Her faith therefore cannot have been influenced by Constantine's, firstly because his conversion is dated to 312 at the earliest, and secondly because Theodora spent most of her life living apart from Constantine – firstly at the Western court while Constantine was in the East, and thereafter in exile in Toulouse.

So, then, instead of assuming that Anastasia had to be named by her father, it is worth considering the fact that her name may have reflected her mother's faith. If this assumption is true, it must certainly follow that Theodora and Anastasia are both Christian independently of Constantine, since Anastasia was born at some point before Constantine's supposed conversion around the time of his war with Maxentius.

So far this is merely speculative, but the case is strengthened by consideration of another of Theodora's daughters, Constantia.

Constantia

Constantia is mentioned in a variety of sources as Christian, and particularly as playing a part in the Arian controversy.Footnote 28 As with the other women mentioned here, it seems to be implicitly assumed that her Christianity arose under Constantine's influence. However, a careful examination of the dates shows that this may not be the case.

Her Christian faith is well attested. The first chronological reference to her faith comes from Philostorgius, who mentions that Constantia persuaded her local bishops to sign up to the Nicene Creed.

Philostorgius also admits that everyone agreed to the Definition of the Faith at Nicaea, except for [two Egyptian bishops]. But the rest of the band of Arian leaders – I mean Eusebius of Nicomedia whom Philostorgius calls ‘the Great’, Theognis of Nicaea and Maris of Chalcedon and the rest of the posse – accepted the council's ruling, albeit fraudulently and treacherously…They signalled their agreement to the synodical decrees, since Constantia, the emperor's sister, proposed this course to them. (Philostorgius, Epitome 1.9)Footnote 29

The Greek is ambiguous as to what course exactly Constantia recommended, but the point here is that the text implies a working relationship between Constantia and the three local bishops (Chalcedon and Nicaea were both in north-western Asia Minor, close to Nicomedia).

One possibility is that Constantine may have encouraged her conversion when he was with her at the time of her marriage to Licinius in Milan (313), or from afar in the years thereafter. Pohlsander considers that she was ‘well familiar with or perhaps in some way committed to’ Christianity even from the time of her marriage.Footnote 30 However Constantia was already promised to Licinius around 310 while Maxentius was alive,Footnote 31 so before Constantine's dream at Milvian Bridge (if indeed this date is assigned to his conversion). The battle occurred in October 312, and she was married to Licinius around February 313.Footnote 32 It is unlikely that Constantine was particularly close to Constantia at this point: her brothers had been exiled from court to Toulouse,Footnote 33 and Constantia as a young woman may well have been with her mother or at some residence away from court.Footnote 34 Still, it is possible Constantine exerted some pressure on her at this stage. But we do not know that he even conceived of Christianity as an important political tool in 313, since we do not even know that he intended to conquer Licinius at that point, and Sol Invictus coins show his public persona did not yet fully embrace Christianity publicly. Lastly, Constantia could realistically have been expected to support her husband's religious practices rather than her half-brother's.

Another possibility is that Constantia became a Christian when Constantine defeated her husband and arrived in the East. However, the dates are quite tight: he wins Nicomedia in autumn 324, and the first council discussing the Arian controversy was held at Antioch only a few months later in the winter of 324/5 (the council of Nicaea following in May to July of 325).

This is not impossible (especially in the wake of one's husband's defeat), but it is more likely that she was Christian before his arrival. One tenuous indication of this comes from the letter written to her by the bishop of Caesarea, also called Eusebius; she asked for an image of Christ and he replied that Christ cannot be represented in a picture.Footnote 35 The authenticity of the letter is sometimes questioned (for example, Gero feels it is more likely to be genuine based on considerations of theology and language; Barnes, on the other hand, suggests that, while genuine, it may have been altered in a later century).Footnote 36 If it is genuine, it may be datable to before 324 because of the fact that Eusebius addresses her as basilissa, a title that was only technically correct while Licinius was emperor. (On the other hand, as Gero points out, Eusebius could still have used the title as flattery after that date.Footnote 37)

But there is stronger evidence that Constantia was Christian before 324, because the literature points to the court connections of the bishop Eusebius of Nicomedia, ‘the Great’. The Arian controversy had already been rumbling for a few years under Emperor Licinius, and Eusebius was appealed to as an arbiter and senior disputant because of his great influence.

Eusebius of Nicomedia particularly took up the debate…Now at this juncture Eusebius possessed great influence, because the emperor resided at Nicomedia…So many of the bishops deferred to Eusebius. (Socrates Scholasticus, Historia Ecclesiastica 1.6)

Socrates suggests that Eusebius’ episcopal influence stems from the fact that he is known at court; the Nicomedian bishop may even have had preferential treatment in convening synods during the Arian controversy.Footnote 38

It should be emphasized that this occured under Licinius, before Constantine's arrival. The preferential treatment received by Eusebius may have arisen because he was familiar with Licinius. Constantine later accused Eusebius of continuing loyalty to the earlier emperor,Footnote 39 although of course Constantine eventually forgave Eusebius and was even baptized by him.Footnote 40 This may even have been a family connection; Ammianus Marcellinus tells us Eusebius was a distant relative of the emperor Julian,Footnote 41 which may indicate he was related to an official in Licinius’ court.Footnote 42

But Licinius was probably not a Christian, and may have even suppressed Christianity, so the bishop must have been acquainted not so much with Licinius but rather his wife Constantia. Certainly they seem to be connected in the sources. For example, while most sources suggest Constantia interceded with her brother on behalf of her husband Licinius,Footnote 43 one source mentions that Eusebius went with her.Footnote 44 Moreover, their collusion in religious affairs later on hints that this relationship arose partly because Constantine's sister was a member of his flock: later narratives confirm she shared his arianizing theology.Footnote 45 Indeed, since Licinius’ residence was at Nicomedia,Footnote 46 she may have known Eusebius from the time of his translation there around 317 ad.Footnote 47 So all in all, it is likely that Constantia was a Christian already before the arrival of Constantine in 324, a position held also by Vogt and Pohlsander.Footnote 48

So, then, Constantia's Christianity is likely to have been influenced from a variety of directions, but not necessarily primarily by Constantine. If we agree that Anastasia and Theodora were Christian, then we can consider another possibility, namely that Constantia may, like her sister, have been brought up Christian.

Eutropia and Fausta

From the family tree, we see that we now have three women within an immediate family unit showing evidence for Christianity ‘independently’ of Constantine, namely Theodora and her two daughters Constantia and Anastasia.

The case is not so clear for the other women of the family, Theodora's sister Fausta (Constantine's wife) and her mother Eutropia. It is possible that both were Christian, but the evidence does not allow us to say with certainty when or how their conversions occurred.

Eutropia was not only Christian, but fervently so: Constantine himself described her as hosiōtatē, ‘extremely holy’.Footnote 49 Sozomen tells us she herself went to Palestine and prayed at the ‘old oak of Abraham’ (that is, the Oaks of Mamre); it was there she encountered the idolatrous practices that she asked her son-in-law to ban, and a church was also built on the spot.Footnote 50 However, we do not know when her Christian faith developed.

As for Fausta, Constantine's wife, even less is known due to her damnatio memoriae. The earliest historical statement as to her faith comes from Zonaras, who states she was a pagan and encouraged Constantine to be one;Footnote 51 however, Zonaras is a late source (twelfth century) and at this point he is trying to explain why Constantine was still a pagan before his conquest of Maxentius.

Archaeological evidence may offer one clue. An excavation on Rome's Caelian Hill, near the medieval complex of St John Lateran, has been identified by the excavator Santa Maria Scrinari as being a part of Fausta's palace, depicting imperial ideology.Footnote 52 It should be noted that Scrinari's identification is not universally accepted,Footnote 53 so the evidence is presented here tentatively. A large mural along a corridor depicts members of the imperial household, painted almost life-size (Constantius, Constantine, Fausta, Theodora, and so on);Footnote 54 below them is an epigraphical band that identified the figures. Another panel appears to be more mythological, depicting hippocamps and dolphins to the left and a charioteer to the right. Close to the charioteer is an inscription; much of it is unclear, but it includes a small staurogram () accompanied by an alpha and omega and the words in [h]oc signo est patris victoria (‘the fatherland's victory is in this sign’).Footnote 55

According to Scrinari, this script (lettering ‘a1’) is from the first application of the plaster, around 315.Footnote 56 Dating of this earliest phase is provided by two inscriptions referring to the fourth consulate of Licinius in 315 ad. This has potentially exciting ramifications: the dating makes it one the earliest manifestations of this symbol in a Constantinian context, if not the earliest itself.Footnote 57 If this was indeed Fausta's palace, and she had a place in commissioning the mural (which, as mentioned, is by no means certain), she was already using Christian symbols at a period when Constantine was publicly still issuing Sol Invictus coins.

There are few other contemporary clues, but Fausta may been present at the church council in her residence in October 313.Footnote 58 Although this does not necessarily indicate her own faith, there are no indications pointing in any other religious direction. There is also tentative evidence of Fausta's association with two churches that may have borne her name, in Milan and Carthage, and indeed a possible connection between her domus and the later Lateran constructions.Footnote 59

So, then, Eutropia was certainly Christian, and Fausta may have been. The question is how they came to be so, and what assumptions come to bear when we have no other information. The most obvious conclusion might seem to be that Constantine prompted or encouraged their conversion. Chronologically speaking, we know that in the 310s Constantine already had the Christian tutor Lactantius to educate his sons, indicating a policy for his household even if he was cautious about publicly presenting himself as Christian. We know that Eutropia was politically pressurized in other areas, for example in disowning the legitimacy of her son Maxentius.Footnote 60 As for Fausta, she would have been even more susceptible to Constantine's influence, on two levels: firstly as his wife she might be expected to support any new religious programme from her imperial husband, and secondly she was probably young enough to be influenced by any religious regime at court.

This is all valid, but it is important that this is maintained in the realm of hypothesis and not certainty. It is false to assume that religion was required to be uniform across a family or household in this period, especially as many cults were focused on one gender in particular (see further below on the sociological analyses of Salzman and Brown). Moreover, conversion of older generations (such as Constantine influencing his mother-in-law) should be seen sociologically as an exception rather than the rule. In all, there is no evidence whatsoever that Constantine required his family to convert (not even his mother).

The argument that Constantine converted these women for political reasons is also weakened by the fact that we do not hear of the men of the family being Christian – in particular Theodora's sons, the brothers of Anastasia and Constantia, even after they were re-established at court in the 320s; indeed, there is no evidence for Christianity among the men of the family before Constantine's own sonsFootnote 61 (pace those such as Vogt who suggest Emperor Julian's father must have been ChristianFootnote 62).

However, the sections on Anastasia and Constantia above allow us to suggest another possibility for the faith of Eutropia and (if she was Christian) Fausta. If Theodora and her two daughters were Christian, then it is quite possible that there may be some link between Theodora's faith and that of her mother and sister. Indeed this could be what is meant by Eusebius of Caesarea's comment that, before the Persecution, even some of the tetrarchs had Christian ‘wives and children and servants’Footnote 63 who were permitted to speak openly about their faith. This could refer to Diocletian's wife Prisca and daughter Valeria, who may or may not have been Christian,Footnote 64 but we may note that both Eutropia and her daughter Theodora were also tetrarchic wives.

This does not preclude the influence of Constantine, but shows that, at very least, there were additional factors at work in the faith positions of Eutropia and Fausta. (Indeed some scholars have suggested that even Eutropia's son Maxentius may have been Christian, due to Eusebius's curious statement that he ‘pretended to be a Christian’;Footnote 65 that position is not necessary for the current argument.Footnote 66)

While Constantine's influence is politically plausible, the mutual interaction of the faith of the women in this family is sociologically so. As far back as 1961, Peter Brown emphasized the role of kinship when it comes to religious affiliations. More recently, Michele Salzman examined evidence for transmission of religion between generations in the fourth century and has found that children continue in the religion of their parents around 90 per cent of the time, whether they be pagan or Christian.Footnote 67 In Salzman's sample, it transpires that Christian women transmit their faith to their daughters for every single case in the sample (although her sample is admittedly small). This tallies with the later picture as portrayed by Yarborough: for example, Jerome's well-known companion Paula passed her Christian faith on to her four daughters, but her son is brought up pagan by the family's guardian and only converts after his sister Blesilla's death.Footnote 68

In Constantine's family, the close relationships between these Christian women suggests a mutual influence; further, many of these women appear as Christian before there is any evidence for Constantine's own Christianity. Salzman's analysis would suggest that, if one woman in the family is Christian, it is not surprising to find Christianity among her daughters too. Conversely, it may have been harder for a woman to pass her faith onto her sons; and, as already mentioned, while Theodora's daughters appear to be Christian there is not any similar evidence for her sons. The sociological evidence also suggests that Constantine would have been less concerned about converting ‘up’ the family tree (that is, the older generation).

But at the end of the day, we do not know one way or the other whether Constantine prompted Eutropia's or Fausta's conversion. So these two women are still circled on the family tree to denote they are Christian (or may be, in Fausta's case), but they are only circled with a dotted line, to indicate that the timing and source of influence is unknown.

Influence in the other direction?

So far we have examined the possibility that the faith of these women was not primarily influenced by Constantine, but we can go further and ask whether his own faith was in fact influenced by theirs. We have highlighted the possibility that Theodora was Christian already from the opening years of the century, so there is even a chance that it was these women, and not his father, who prompted Constantine's own interest in Christianity in the first place.

One example of this is that the emperor was known to be persuaded by his sister Constantia in the matter of the Arian controversy. She was much loved by her brother;Footnote 69 he named a city after her,Footnote 70 issued a medallion for her after her death,Footnote 71 and was by her bedside as she died. After the events of the Arian controversy already mentioned, she further influenced events in a number of other ways. She interceded with her brother to allow Eusebius of Nicomedia and his colleague Theognis of Nicaea home from exile, proclaiming that God had given her a dream telling her these men had suffered unjustly.Footnote 72 Later she introduced an ‘Arian presbyter’ to Constantine, who persuaded Constantine to recall Arius; Socrates explicitly states that one reason Constantine may have agreed was ‘out of desire to please his sister’.Footnote 73 This ‘presbyter’ may have been Eusebius himself.Footnote 74 As a result of all this, later orthodox writers saw her as being a bad (that is, Arian) influence on her brother:Footnote 75 so her influence on him is acknowledged in the literature.

A second piece of evidence is a passage in Zosimus, which is tendentious historically but informative sociologically.

Constantine's conscience was tormented [for murdering his son and his wife in 326 and] for breaking his oath, so he went to the pagan priests to be purified from his offences. But they said no kind of cleansing existed that could purify him from such enormities.

An Egyptian from Spain, who had come to Rome and who had become friendly with the imperial women, fell into conversation with Constantine and assured him that Christianity could take away all his sin…Footnote 76

The courtier from Spain persuades Constantine that Christianity can help him, and Zosimus goes on to say that Constantine subsequently converts to Christianity. The Spanish courtier is probably to be identified as Ossius, bishop of Cordoba, with ‘Egyptian’ being a disparaging term for a cheap magician or charlatan.Footnote 77

It is necessary to take this passage carefully. Zosimus, as a pagan historian, is repeating the pagan account of Constantine's conversion, found also in JulianFootnote 78 but refuted by Sozomen.Footnote 79 Moreover, Christian accounts dated Constantine's conversion to the battle of Milvian Bridge, and this is usually followed by modern scholars for pinpointing the beginning of Constantine's Christian interest. Still, Zosimus’ narrative is suggestive on a number of points. Firstly, it implies that there were Christians among the imperial women (the plural indicates that this is not just Helena); indeed, if the ‘Egyptian’ is indeed Ossius then their close association with a bishop could indicate that they were more outward or regular in Christian praxis than Constantine himself (compare Constantia's association with Eusebius). Secondly, it suggests that Christian women could be seen as influencing the men of their household, and that Zosimus felt his audience would find this convincing.

On the wider scale this was perfectly plausible: Brown and Yarborough both emphasize the role of aristocratic women in conversion,Footnote 80 although Salzman shows that the available data do not uphold the validity of this assumption.Footnote 81 Still, it may be that these women either influenced or accompanied Constantine's spiritual journey whatever scholars take that to be to be, whether an instantaneous conversion in 312, a gradual development through his lifetime, or even a cynical juxtaposition of Christianity and solar monotheism until his death.Footnote 82

Conclusion

Turning to the family tree, five names are circled as Christian. Of these, three are circled with a continuous line denoting that they could have been Christian independently of Constantine, namely Theodora and her daughters Constantia and Anastasia. Two names are given dotted circles, to denote that we do not know about their faith journey: these are Constantine's mother-in-law Eutropia and his wife Fausta.

This emphasizes visually the points already covered above. Firstly, despite the scholarly speculation about Constantius’ faith, the only Christian individuals who could be independent of Constantine are not on Constantine's blood side – even Eusebius never says that his father Constantius was a Christian. Rather, all the Christian individuals are on his wife's side of the family. They are also very closely related: the elder Eutropia, her two daughters, and two of her grand-daughters. Secondly, taken chronologically the first individual in the family who is Christian is not Constantine, but arguably his sister-in-law and mother-in-law Theodora. Thirdly, all of the imperial individuals showing evidence for Christianity before the mid 320s (other than Constantine) are women.

It is not the intention here to write a new narrative of Constantine's spiritual journey; all that has been said in this article is consistent with either a conversion experience in 312 or a gradual building in Constantine's faith over the following decade. Rather, the intention is merely to contribute to our understanding of his faith experience: namely, that he seems to have had Christians already among his wife's family when he himself came to the Christian faith.

This article may serve as a corrective to some understandings of Constantine's proselytizing policy. It is sometimes thought that Constantine may have compelled or encouraged individuals to convert to Christianity. This may indeed have happened in the case of Eutropia or Fausta, but the point emphasized here is that there is no evidence for this assumption. We do not have any hint that Constantine ‘required’ anyone to convert, not even his mother; and there is no evidence that he did in fact prompt the conversion of any of his family in this period whether directly or indirectly, through preferential treatment. Yet this narrative of ‘encouraged’ conversion appears to underlie some scholarly assessments. For example, Barnes assumes that Constantine's letter to Palestine demanded pagans to be tolerant to Christians, but not the reverse;Footnote 83 similarly, Grant suggests that Fausta's continued adherence to paganism was one reason that may have contributed to her murder.Footnote 84 Yet there is no evidence that Constantine enforced conversions in his family (although he may have done), far less that he would murder anyone who preferred not to. Indeed, there is no evidence that Constantine would persecute pagans personally;Footnote 85 such persecution by Christians only really erupts later in the century.Footnote 86

It is, of course, correct to rely on the evidence of writers such as Eusebius of Caesarea to inform us about Constantine's faith and that of his family. However, at the same time we should not forget the biases in such evidence. Eusebius wants to show Constantine as a key player in the Christianization of the empire, and thus naturally would not mention his female in-laws as much. Moreover, by 326 at least four members of this family had suffered damnationes memoriae, namely Maximian, Maxentius, Fausta, and Crispus. By implication the roles – and faiths – of related individuals such as Eutropia or Theodora would not have been extolled in the glittering way Helena's was.Footnote 87

Lastly, sociological analysis of religious influence within families demonstrates that it was not felt necessary for different members of a household to share a religion; that influence works down the generations, not up them; and that influence works within gender units. If Constantine prompted his mother's conversion, this should be taken as the exception rather than the rule.

It may be that the women of the family were Christian because of Constantine's influence, but it should be emphasized that Constantine himself was only one of many factors that would have influenced the faith of these women. Indeed when the evidence is taken chronologically, it seems more likely that some of these women influenced Constantine's Christianity rather than the other way round.

References

1 Jones, A. H. M., ‘The Social Background of the Struggle between Paganism and Christianity’, in Momigliano, A. (ed.) The Conflict between Paganism and Christianity in the Fourth Century (Oxford, 1963), 1920Google Scholar.

2 MacMullen, R., Christianizing the Roman Empire (New Haven, 1984)Google Scholar.

3 Fox, R. Lane, Pagans and Christians (Harmondsworth, 1986)Google Scholar.

4 Plut. Moralia 140D.

5 J. F. Matthews and D. M. Nicol, ‘Constantine I’, Enyclopedia Brittanica <https://academic.eb.com/levels/collegiate/article/Constantine-I/109633>, accessed 13 September 2019.

6 For example Potter, D., Constantine the Emperor (Oxford, 2015)Google Scholar.

7 For example, Elliott, T., The Christianity of Constantine the Great (New York, 1996)Google Scholar.

8 Originally found in Burckhardt, J., The Age of Constantine the Great (New York, 1940)Google Scholar. For a more recent example, see Kee, A., Constantine Versus Christ (London, 1982)Google Scholar.

9 For a discussion, see Cameron, A. and Hall, S., ‘Introduction’, in their translation of Eusebius, Life of Constantine (Oxford, 1999)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

10 The name had been common enough in the East for several hundred years. For references, see G. F. Grassi, ‘Semitic Onomastics in Roman Aquileia’, in F. M. Fales and G. F. Grassi (eds.), Proceedings of the 13th Italian Meeting of Afro-Asiatic Linguistics, held in Udine May 21st – 24th 2007 (Padova, 2010), 12.

11 <https://archive.org/details/prosopography-later-roman-empire/PLRE-I/>, accessed 29 May 2023; Concilia Galliae, Subscriptions to the Canones ad Silvestrum. On textual variants of the name, see A. Mandouze, Prosopographie de l'Afrique Chrétienne 303–533 (Volume 1 of Prosopographie Chrétienne du Bas-Empire) (Paris, 1982), q.v.

12 Liber Pontificalis 1.38 (Felix).

13 Acta Synhodi ad 499: Subscriptions. See further R. Krautheimer, Corpus basilicarum Christianarum Romae, volume 1 (Vatican, 1937), 50–51.

14 J. Vogt, ‘Pagans and Christians in the Family of Constantine the Great’, in Momigliano (n. 1), 47.

15 Using the database of inscriptions at <http://www.manfredclauss.de/>, accessed 13 July 2019 (searching for anastas* before 330).

16 T. Ilan, Lexicon of Jewish names in Late Antiquity. Volume 3: The Western Diaspora, 330 BCE–650 CE (Tübingen, 2008), 212 (men's names), 403 (women's names).

17 As well as Barnes, T. D., Constantine and Eusebius (London, 1981)Google Scholar, see, for example, Smith, J. Holland, Constantine the Great (London, 1971), 47Google Scholar; Grant, M., The Emperor Constantine (London, 1998), 16Google Scholar; and survey in Grünewald, T., Constantinus Maximus Augustus (Wiesbaden, 1990), 80–1Google Scholar.

18 Barnes (n. 17), 4.

19 Optatus Adversus Donatistas 1.22; Lactantius De Mortibus Persecutorum 15, 24.

20 Grünewald (n. 17), 82; Eusebius of Caesarea Vita Constantini 1.27–28.

21 Ibid., 81–2: ‘Anastasia wäre dann ein “signum” der Betreffenden, deren “nomina” uns unbekannt sind’ (So ‘Anastasia’ was an identifier for the party concerned, whose name is unknown to us).

22 M. Depauw and W. Clarysse, ‘How Christian was Fourth Century Egypt? Onomastic Perspectives on Conversion’, VChr 67.4 (2013), 425–7.

23 For one example, see Grant (n. 17), 17.

24 B. Rawson, Children and Childhood in Roman Italy (Oxford, 2003), 111.

25 On both possibilities, see for example B. Leadbetter, ‘The Illegitimacy of Constantine and the Birth of the Tetrarchy’, in S. Lieu and D. Monstserrat (eds.), Constantine. History, Historiography and Legend (London, 2002), 75–7.

26 Origo Constantini 14.

27 C. T. Lewis and C. Short, A Latin Dictionary (Oxford, 1945), q.v.

28 Philostorgius Epitome 1.9; Rufinus Hist. Eccl. 10.12; Socrates Scholasticus Hist. Eccl. 1.25; Sozomen Hist. Eccl. 2.27.

29 Ὅτι καὶ αὐτὸς συνομολογεῖ πάντας ὁμοφρονῆσαι τῷ ἐν Νικαίᾳ τῆς πίστεωs ὅρῳ, πλὴν Σεκούνδου τοῦ Πτολεμαΐδος, ᾧ καὶ Θεωγνᾶς ὁ τῆς Μαρμαρικῆς ἠκολούθησεν. τὸ δὲ ἄλλο στῖφος τῶν Ἀρειανῶν ἐφόρων, Eὐσέβιός τε, φημί, ὁ Νικομηδείας ὃν οὗτος ἀποθειάζει μέγαν καὶ Θέογνις ὁ Νικαίας, καὶ Μάρις ὁ Καλχηδόνος, καὶ ἡ ἄλλη φάλαγξ πρὸς τὴν σύνοδον μετετάξατο· ἐν δόλῳ μέν, καὶ oὗτoς φησι, καὶ τὸ ὁμoιoύσιoν ἐν τῇ τoῦ ὁμooυσίoυ φωνῇ ὑπoκλέψαντες· πλὴν γε συμφρoνεῖν τoῖς συνoδικoῖς ψηφίσμασιν ἀναδεξάμενoι, Κωνσταντίναs [sic] τῆs τoῦ Κωνσταντῖνoυ βασιλέως ἀδελφῆς εἰσηγησαμένης αὐτoῖς τὴν εἰς τoῦτo παραίνεσιν.

30 H. Pohlsander, ‘Constantia’, AncSoc 24 (1991), 156.

31 Lactantius De Mortibus Persecutorum 43.

32 Barnes (n. 17), 71.

33 Ausonius Commemoratio Professores Burdigalensium 16.

34 Pohlsander (n. 30), 154.

35 Ibid., 156.

36 S. Gero, ‘The True Image of Christ: Eusebius’ Letter to Constantia Reconsidered’, JThS 32.1 (1981), 460–70; T. D. Barnes, ‘Notes on the Letter of Eusebius to Constantia’, Studia Patristica 46 (2010), 313–18.

37 Gero (n. 36), 464 n. 2.

38 Holland Smith (n. 17), 165, 189, suggests that Eusebius was able to get round bans on synods, and meet with his own bishops. It may be that Licinius’ ban on synods had the intention of hindering Eusebius’ opponents. See also Barnes (n. 17), 376 n.154, and S. Corcoran, The Empire of the Tetrarchs (Oxford, 2000), 195, 285, citing Eusebius of Caesarea Vita Constantini 1.51, 2.66.

39 Theodoret Hist. Eccl. 1.19.

40 Jerome Chronicon a. 337.

41 Ammianus Marcellinus 22.9.

42 J. Bidez, ‘Notes sur quelques passages des écrits de l'empereur Julien’, in P. Thomas (ed.), Mélanges P. Thomas (Bruges, 1930), 54–65.

43 Zosimus Hist. Eccl. 2.28.2; Aurelius Victor Epitome de Caesaribus 41.7, Origo Constantini 28.

44 Vita Constantini from Codex Angelicus A (Philostorgius Hist. Eccl., Anhang V, GCS, 180).

45 Jerome Ep. 133.4; Socrates Scholasticus Hist. Eccl. 1.25; Sozomen Hist. Eccl. 2.27; Theodoret Hist. Eccl. 2.2.

46 Licinius’ known movements are given in T. D. Barnes, The New Empire of Diocletian and Constantine (Cambridge MA/London, 1982), 81.

47 Pohlsander (n. 30), 156.

48 Vogt (n. 14), 47; Pohlsander (n. 30), 156.

49 Eusebius of Caesarea Vita Constantini 3.52: Ἓν καὶ τοῦτο μέγιστον τῆς ὁσιωτάτης μου κηδεστρίας γέγονεν εἰς ἡμᾶς εὐεργέτημα… (‘In this, an immense benefit has been brought to me by my exceptionally holy mother-in-law…’).

50 Sozomen Hist. Eccl. 2.4; see also Socrates Scholasticus Hist. Eccl. 2.4.

51 Zonaras Epitome 13.1.2.

52 V. Sta M. Scrinari, Il laterano imperiale. Vol. 1: Dalle aedes Laterani alla Domus Faustae (Vatican, 1991), especially Chapter 4. See also S. McFadden, Courtly Places and Sacred Spaces, doctoral thesis, University of Pennsylvania (2007), Chapter 5, <https://repository.upenn.edu/dissertations/AAI3292052/>, accessed 31 May 2023.

53 For scholarly alternatives to Scrinari, see E. W. Nash, ‘Convenerunt in domus Faustae: S. Optatus Milevitani 1.23’, RQA 71 (1976), 1–21; P. Liverani ‘L'ambiente nell'antichità’, in C. Pietrangeli (ed.), La basilica di S. Giovanni in Laterano (Firenze, 1990), 23–8. Nash suggests another house is the Domus Faustae, but that this was not Constantine's wife but another aristocratic woman; Liverani's early works critique Scrinari's hypothesis, but more recently his position is that it is impossible to know one way or another about the house Scrinari excavated. See also the literature on the Domus Faustae cited by McFadden (n. 52), 83 n. 6.

54 McFadden (n. 52), 195–7.

55 Scrinari (n. 52), 164–5 (discussion), 172 (transcription), 185 (image). There are also chi rhos proper on this mural (as opposed to a labarum or staurogram). However, these are from a later stage and written over earlier text. They are accompanied by the words CONSTANTS IMP [RO]MANORUM, thus confirming a date after 333 for this part of the mural: Scrinari (n. 52), 166 (discussion), 172 (transcription), 190 (image).

56 Scrinari (n. 52), 163, 167.

57 Other uses of the chi rho, if not strictly the labarum, at this time include the much-cited Ticinum medallion (RIC vii Ticinum 36; note also the Siscia series, dating from 316 onwards). There are also possible examples on North African milestones from before 313; P. Salama, ‘Les provinces d'Afrique et les débuts du monogramme constantinien’, BSAF 1998:1 (2002), 137–59.

58 Optatus Adversus Donatistas 1.23.

59 For discussion of the various church buildings mentioned here, see I. Image, ‘Hard to Find Another Woman Like Her: Constantine's Empress Fausta’, CW (forthcoming).

60 Origo Constantini 4.12.

61 See, for example, Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire, entries for Dalmatius, Julius Constantius, Hannibalianus.

62 Vogt (n. 14), 47.

63 Eusebius Hist. Eccl. 8.1.3.

64 Depending on interpretation of Lactantius De Mortibus Persecutorum 15.1.

65 Eusebius Hist. Eccl. 8.14.1; D. de Decker, ‘La politique religieuse de Maxence’, Byzantion 38 (1968), 472–562.

66 For recent assessments see B. Green, Christianity in Ancient Rome. The First Three Centuries (London, 2010), 217–20.

67 M. Salzman, The Making of a Christian Aristocracy (London, 2002), 228 Table 5.3 and 226 Table 5.1. See also M. Salzman, ‘Aristocratic Women: Conductors of Christianity in the Fourth Century’, Helios 16.2 (1989), 207–20, at 215.

68 A. Yarborough, ‘Christianization in the Fourth Century: The example of Roman women’, ChHist 45 (1976), 149–65.

69 Socrates Scholasticus Hist. Eccl. 1.18, Theodoret Hist. Eccl. 2.2, and further examples at Pohlsander (n. 30), 160–1.

70 Eusebius of Caesarea Vita Constantini 4.38; Socrates Scholasticus Hist. Eccl. 1.18; Sozomen Hist. Eccl. 2.5.7–8.

71 Pohlsander (n. 30), 163–4.

72 Sozomen Hist. Eccl. 3.19.

73 Socrates Scholasticus Hist. Eccl. 1.25; Sozomen Hist. Eccl. 2.27.

74 Cf. Sozomen Hist. Eccl. 2.34.

75 Jerome Ep. 133.4.

76 Zosimus Hist. Nova 2.29.

77 Holland Smith (n. 17), 213; C. M. Odahl, Constantine and the Christian Empire (London, 2010), 208–9.

78 Julian Caesars 336.

79 Sozomen Hist. Eccl. 1.5.

80 P. Brown, ‘Aspects of the Christianization of the Roman Aristocracy’, JRS 51 (1961), 6–8; Yarborough (n. 68).

81 Salzman ‘Aristocratic Women’ (n. 67).

82 See Barnes (n. 17), 274, for some scholarly views of Constantine's faith. For a very different (and more recent) angle, consider J. Bardill, Constantine, Divine Emperor of the Christian Golden Age (Cambridge, 2012), who holds that Constantine was a universalist throughout his life.

83 Barnes (n. 17), 210, on Eusebius of Caesarea Vita Constantini 2.60. Barnes’ interpretation is disputed by J. Curran, ‘Constantine and the Ancient Cults of Rome: The Legal Evidence’, G&R 43.1 (1996), 68–80, at 73.

84 Grant (n. 17), 114.

85 Curran (n. 83), 76–7.

86 MacMullen (n. 2), 86–101.

87 Compare Barnes (n. 17), 270.