The Roman Empire From Severus To Constantine May 2026

He took an active role in church doctrine, seeking to unify the faith.

Severus shifted the empire’s power base away from the Senate and toward the military. While this provided short-term stability, it created a dangerous precedent. His successors, including the notorious , expanded citizenship to nearly all free inhabitants of the empire (the Constitutio Antoniniana ), primarily to increase tax revenue for a ballooning military budget. However, the dynasty ended in chaos with the assassination of Alexander Severus in 235 AD, triggering a half-century of near-total collapse. The Crisis of the Third Century (235–284 AD) The Roman Empire from Severus to Constantine

Diocletian stabilized the economy through price edicts and reorganized the military into mobile field armies. However, he is also remembered for the "Great Persecution," a final, violent attempt to suppress the rising tide of Christianity and restore traditional Roman values. He took an active role in church doctrine,