Julius Constantius
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Flavius Julius Constantius (d. September, 337) was a son of Western Roman Emperor Constantius Chlorus and his second wife Flavia Maximiana Theodora. He was a younger half-brother of Roman Emperor Constantine I the Great.
His father died on July 25, 306 when Julius Constantius was either a child or an adolescent. He is considered to have spend much of the 300s, 310s and 320s under virtual house arrest in Tolosa , Gallia Narbonensis, Gaul, Western Roman Empire under orders of his brother.
He first married Galla, sister of both Vulcacius Rufus and Neratius Cerealis. They had three known children.:
- Constantius Gallus (325/326 - 354).
- A son. Murdered in 337.
- A daughter. First Empress consort of his nephew Constantius II.
- Flavius Claudius Julianus (331/332 - 363).
Only five males survived the series of assassinations. His nephews and new Roman Emperors Constantine II, Constantius II and Constans along with his two own young sons. Constantius II is suspected to have ordered the assassination of his uncle.
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