- Domitius Modestus
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Domitius Modestus (floruit 358-377) was a politician of the Roman Empire.
Life
Of Arab origin, Modestus was comes Orientis from 358 to 362, succeeding to Nebridius and serving under the Emperors Constantius II and Julian. In 359 he was the president of a commission at Scythopolis, and in this office he judged with cruelty the defendants.
While he was in Antioch, Julian appointed Modestus as praefectus urbi of Constantinople, an office he held from 362 to 363.
Under Emperor Valens he was Praetorian prefect of the East (369-377) and consul in 372. During his office as Praetorian prefect he completed the building of the Cisterna Modestiaca (a cistern identified with Sarrâdshchane), whose building was begun by architect Helpidius in 363, while Modestus was praefectus urbi.
In 371 was appointed as president of a commission that was to judge some high officers who had been accused of practicing magic, in particular of having consulted a soothsayer to learn the name of the successor of Emperor Valens. Modestus acted very cruelly, torturing innocent people, thus extorting confessions from them. His consulate, the following year, was probably a reward for his handling of the process.
Despite the fact that he was strongly connected with the pagan officers and had been a pagan under the pagan Emperor Julian, under Valens he converted to Arianism, the Emperor's religion. Valens sent Modestus to meet the Nicene bishop Basil of Caesarea, to mediate between the two opposing Christian faiths, but Basil refused. Modestus was then ordered by Valens to use violence against the bishop, but he did not.
He is the addressee of 37 letters by Libanius.
Sources
- Burns, Paul (ed.), Butler's Lives of the Saints: New Full Edition January. The Liturgical Press. ISBN 0-8146-2377-8.
- Jones, Arnold Hugh Martin, John Robert Martindale, John Morris, Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire, volume 1, Cambridge University Press, 1992, ISBN 0521072336, pp. 605-08
Preceded by
Flavius Gratianus Augustus II,
Sextus Claudius Petronius ProbusConsul of the Roman Empire
372
with Flavius ArintheusSucceeded by
Flavius Valentinianus Augustus IV,
Flavius Iulius Valens Augustus IVPreceded by
SalutiusPraetorian prefect of the East
369–377Succeeded by
Maternus CynegiusPreceded by
HonoratusPraefectus urbi of Constantinople
362–363Succeeded by
JoviusPreceded by
NebridiusComes Orientis
358–362Succeeded by
IulianusCategories:- 4th-century Romans
- Arabs in the Roman Empire
- Comites
- Correspondents of Libanius
- Imperial Roman consuls
- Praetorian prefects of the East
- Urban prefects of Constantinople
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