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Works Eusebius of Caesarea (260-339) Vita Constantini The Life of the blessed Emperor Constantine
Book I.

Chapter XLIX.--How Licinius oppressed the East.

For he was informed that in that quarter a certain savage beast was besetting both the church of God and the other inhabitants of the provinces, owing, as it were, to the efforts of the evil spirit to produce effects quite contrary to the deeds of the pious emperor: so that the Roman empire, divided into two parts, seemed to all men to resemble night and day; since darkness overspread the provinces of the East, while the brightest day illumined the inhabitants of the other portion. And whereas the latter were receiving manifold blessings at the hand of God, the sight of these blessings proved intolerable to that envy which hates all good, as well as to the tyrant who afflicted the other division of the empire; and who, notwithstanding that his government was prospering, and he had been honored by a marriage connection 1 with so great an emperor as Constantine, yet cared not to follow the steps of that pious prince, but strove rather to imitate the evil purposes and practice of the impious; and chose to adopt the course of those whose ignominious end he had seen with his own eyes, rather than to maintain amicable relations with him who was his superior. 2


  1. Licinius married in 313 Constantia, sister of Constantine. ↩

  2. Thus generally following the Church History (10. 8). ↩

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The Life of the blessed Emperor Constantine
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Introduction to the Life of Constantine

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Faculty of Theology, Patristics and History of the Early Church
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