Decimus RusticusDecimus Junius Rusticus (sometimes Rusticus Decimus) of Treves (then Augusta Treverorum) and Lyon (Lugdunum) (c. 370 – before 423) was a Master of the Offices and the praetorian prefect of Gaul between 409 and 410 or 413. He was one of those responsible for the withdrawal from Britannia. [citation needed] LifeIn 407, the Roman army in Britain chose as their leader Flavius Claudius Constantinus. He crossed the Channel to the continent, and by May 408 had made Arles his capital, where he appointed Apollinaris, grandfather of Sidonius Apollinaris, as prefect. This was probably due to his hereditary claim to Gaul. Withdraw from BritainIn 409, the Germans began a revolt against Constantine with reinforcements from east of the Rhine. Part of his military forces were in Hispania, making them unavailable for action in Gaul, and some of those in Gaul were swayed against him by loyalist Roman generals. The remaining forces Britain were thus called into Gaul. Severe Saxon raids followed that year, and Apollinaris was ousted in favour of Rusticus as praetorian prefect of Gaul. Perhaps feeling they had no hope of relief under Constantine, both the Romano-Britons and some of the Gauls expelled Constantine's magistrates in early 410, who rejected Roman law and armed themselves to ensure their own safety. Honorius, aimed at reclaiming his dominion from Constantine and the Visigoths, later sent a rescript to British communities in 410 telling them to look to their own defence. It is assumed that the remaining Roman magistrates usurped power in the essentially lawless province as de facto warlords, but little evidence supports that the magistrates attacked one another who had differing native ideologies. The result was the foundation of Sub-Roman kingdoms which were slowly established in the ashes of Roman Britain, and by 460, the entirety of the province was divided between small local kingdoms ruled by Roman-claimed descended Brittonic leaders. Although Roman law, culture, and societal structure remained in the island, it evolved and merged with ancient Celtic traditions. Death and LegacyIn either August or September 411, Honorius appointed a new general, Flavius Constantius in another attempt to suppress Constantine, who successfully besieged Arles. Despite Constantius' assurances that Constantine would be able to safely retire to a clerical office, Constantius had both him and Rusticus imprisoned, and further had them beheaded during his return to Ravenna.[1] About him, Sidonius Apollinaris to his friend Aquilinus:
Marriage and descendantsHe married before 400 Artemia (b. c. 375), the daughter of Artemia of Clermont-Ferrand (then Augustonemetum) in Auvergne (Arvennia) (born say 355), and they were the parents of a son (b. c. 400), who was a Vicarius of a province in Gaul under the father of Sidonius Apollinaris between 423 and 448. This son then married Tullia of Lyon (born say 410), daughter of Eucherius of Lyon and wife Gallia(?), and they were the parents of Aquilinus (c. 430 – c. 470), a nobleman at Lyon, schoolfellow and friend of Sidonius Apollinaris and the father of St. Viventiolus and his brother St. Rusticus, Archbishop of Lyon. Sources and references
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