Skip to content

Valentinian III – 425-455 AD

Spread the love

Valentinian III

valentinian iii Portrait

425-455 AD


Placidius Valentinian III was born in 419 AD the son of Constantius III and Galla Placidia. Placidia fled from the court of Honorius at Ravenna in 423 AD when her half-brother began to take an interest in her. She took her children to the court of Arcadius, her other half-brother in Constantinople. Eventually, her son Valentinian III was married to the daughter of Theodosius II, Licinia Eudoxia which thus marked him as the heir to the Western throne.

Following the death of Honorius and the defeat of the usurper Johannes, Placidia took her son back to Italy where he was proclaimed emperor with the scansion of Constantinople on October 23rd, 425 AD. For the first 12 years of Valantinian III’s reign, his mother Placidia ruled the Western division of the Empire as regent. Thereafter, the control of government passed from her hands to that of General Aetius who maintained control until his assassination in 454 AD.

Valentinian III’s primary interests in life were sports, religion, and seducing other men’s wives, and if he had perhaps restricted himself to those simple pastimes his reign might have been more successful.

Pope Leo attila the hun at Rome by Raphael

Under Valentinian’s reign, the Western Empire continued to decay. His greatest disaster was the loss of Africa to the Vandals. In 451 AD, Attila the Hun invaded Gaul, but his competent General Aetius and his Visigothic allies proved victorious over the Huns at the famous Battle of Mauriacus.

Perhaps Valentinian’s greatest political mistake was the murder of his most successful General, Aetius in 454 AD. This was the crowning stupidity of the Theodosian dynasty and resulted in his own assassination six months later by the ambitious senator Petronius Maximus.


Monetary System

valtn3 m

Mints: Constantinople, Cyzicus, Ravenna, Rome, Treveri

Obverse Legends:

D N PLA VALENTINIANVS P F AVG


DENOMINATIONS

Valentinian III Solidus Semissis Tremissis Miliarense Siliqua Centenionalis Half Centenionalis 1024x404

AU Solidus (4.50 grms)
AU Semissis (2.25 grms)
AU Tremissis (1.45 grms)
AR Miliarense (4.5 grms)
AR Reduced Siliqua (2.25 grms)
AR 1/2 Siliqua (1.12 grms)
AE4


The Monetary History of the World
© Martin A. Armstrong