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Information Is Beautiful
Information Is Beautiful
@infobeautiful@vis.social  ·  activity timestamp 4 months ago

Visualising the lifetimes (and deaths) of major Roman Emperors

(by Reddit user: u/Western-Flatworm-537)

A chart titled "Roman Emperors 27 BCE - 395 CE" showing a timeline of Roman emperors with information about their lives, reigns, and manners of death. The chart is organized in rows, with each row representing a different period. Each emperor's name is listed, along with symbols indicating their birth, death, reign, and manner of death (assassination, captivity, suicide, unnatural causes, or unknown). The chart provides a visual overview of the succession of Roman emperors and their fates.
A chart titled "Roman Emperors 27 BCE - 395 CE" showing a timeline of Roman emperors with information about their lives, reigns, and manners of death. The chart is organized in rows, with each row representing a different period. Each emperor's name is listed, along with symbols indicating their birth, death, reign, and manner of death (assassination, captivity, suicide, unnatural causes, or unknown). The chart provides a visual overview of the succession of Roman emperors and their fates.
A chart titled "Roman Emperors 27 BCE - 395 CE" showing a timeline of Roman emperors with information about their lives, reigns, and manners of death. The chart is organized in rows, with each row representing a different period. Each emperor's name is listed, along with symbols indicating their birth, death, reign, and manner of death (assassination, captivity, suicide, unnatural causes, or unknown). The chart provides a visual overview of the succession of Roman emperors and their fates.
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JoJaSciPo
JoJaSciPo
@strangetruther@masto.ai replied  ·  activity timestamp 4 months ago
@infobeautiful

From the 17th to the 63rd and last, I'd only heard of 3.

Only one emperor ruled longer than the 2nd by more than a year, and none ruled longer than the 1st.

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Jeff
Jeff
@overeducatedredneck@bitbang.social replied  ·  activity timestamp 4 months ago
@infobeautiful fun cross reference: https://www.theawl.com/2012/05/roman-emperors-up-to-ad-476-and-not-including-usurpers-in-order-of-how-hardcore-their-deaths-were/
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nachtet
nachtet
@nachtet@norden.social replied  ·  activity timestamp 4 months ago
@infobeautiful was für Dich @realakela ?
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Yora
Yora
@yora@mastodon.gamedev.place replied  ·  activity timestamp 4 months ago
@infobeautiful The Roman Empire was pretty much in a constant state of collapse for its entire history, with only a few exceptions.
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Feyter
Feyter
@feyter@mastodon.gamedev.place replied  ·  activity timestamp 4 months ago
@infobeautiful so there only had been two people that became emperor and at one point stopped being emperor without dying in the process.
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Evan Prodromou
Evan Prodromou
@evan@cosocial.ca replied  ·  activity timestamp 4 months ago
@infobeautiful why end with Theodosius?
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earthling
earthling
@appassionato@mastodon.social replied  ·  activity timestamp 4 months ago
@infobeautiful

See

Dark History of the Roman Emperors by Michael Kerrigan, 2012

Five of the first eleven emperors of Rome were assassinated and another two killed themselves rather than face the fury of their subjects.

#books
#biography
#history
#AncientRome
#RomanEmperors

Nero sang while Rome burned. Caligula proclaimed himself a god. If not mad enough already, he also gave one of his horses a place on the senate. Rome rejoiced when many emperors died, only to find that they hated the next one just as much. From the death of Julius Caesar in 44BC to the fall of Rome in 476AD, Dark History of the Roman Emperors presents a wry and witty look at five centuries of Roman mayhem, murder, incest, infanticide, sadism, sexual depravity and madness. Featuring such notorious names as Claudius, Tiberius and Commodus, this book retells all of the most eye-opening accounts of imperial misdeeds, drawing on many original Roman sources. Illustrated with striking images of the protagonists and their deeds, from ancient statues to medieval engravings and renaissance paintings, Dark History of the Roman Emperors is an entertaining and visually spectacular account of the skulduggery of the greatest empire the world has ever known – and the hubris that came with it.
Nero sang while Rome burned. Caligula proclaimed himself a god. If not mad enough already, he also gave one of his horses a place on the senate. Rome rejoiced when many emperors died, only to find that they hated the next one just as much. From the death of Julius Caesar in 44BC to the fall of Rome in 476AD, Dark History of the Roman Emperors presents a wry and witty look at five centuries of Roman mayhem, murder, incest, infanticide, sadism, sexual depravity and madness. Featuring such notorious names as Claudius, Tiberius and Commodus, this book retells all of the most eye-opening accounts of imperial misdeeds, drawing on many original Roman sources. Illustrated with striking images of the protagonists and their deeds, from ancient statues to medieval engravings and renaissance paintings, Dark History of the Roman Emperors is an entertaining and visually spectacular account of the skulduggery of the greatest empire the world has ever known – and the hubris that came with it.
Nero sang while Rome burned. Caligula proclaimed himself a god. If not mad enough already, he also gave one of his horses a place on the senate. Rome rejoiced when many emperors died, only to find that they hated the next one just as much. From the death of Julius Caesar in 44BC to the fall of Rome in 476AD, Dark History of the Roman Emperors presents a wry and witty look at five centuries of Roman mayhem, murder, incest, infanticide, sadism, sexual depravity and madness. Featuring such notorious names as Claudius, Tiberius and Commodus, this book retells all of the most eye-opening accounts of imperial misdeeds, drawing on many original Roman sources. Illustrated with striking images of the protagonists and their deeds, from ancient statues to medieval engravings and renaissance paintings, Dark History of the Roman Emperors is an entertaining and visually spectacular account of the skulduggery of the greatest empire the world has ever known – and the hubris that came with it.
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Alessandro Corazza 🇨🇦
Alessandro Corazza 🇨🇦
@alessandro@mstdn.ca replied  ·  activity timestamp 4 months ago
@infobeautiful Crazy how Diocletian is the only one who enjoyed a peaceful retirement. That's the health benefits of cabbage for you.
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