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Tetrarchy

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Roman Republic
Roman Empire
PrincipateDominate
Ordinary Magistrates:
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The Tetrarchs, a porphyry sculpture sacked from a Byzantine palace in 1204 CE, Treasury of St. Marks, Venice
The Tetrarchy, showing the prefectures of Gaul, Italy, Illyricum and the East

The Tetrarchy (Greek: "leadership of four people"; aka the Latin Quadrumvirate, "government by four men") was a system of government created in 293 CE by the Roman Emperor Diocletian in order to solve serious military and economic problems in the Roman Empire. This involved dividing his power over the empire into east and west sectors: he retained control of the East and his colleague Maximian controlled the west. Eight years later, feeling more focus was needed on both civic and military problems, he furthered the division of power by naming one "Junior Emperor", or Caesar, under each "Senior Emperor", or Augustus. Thus the Tetrarchy, a rule of four, was established and lasted until c. 324 CE.

The first tetrarchs were:

Tetrarchies existed elsewhere in the ancient world: for instance, the kingdom of Galilee under Herod Antipas was a tetrarchy.

See also

Roman Emperors by Epoch (see also: List – Concise List – Roman Empire)  
 PRINCIPATE  CRISIS of the 
 3rd Century 
 DOMINATE  LATE EMPIRE

(most Tetrarchies)

  • Constantine
    Dynasty -
    Brittanic
    Emperors
  • Valentinian
    Dynasty

Theodosian Dynasty
(Tetrarchy, unifica-
tion and final split)


Emperors of the
Western Empire


Byzantine Emperors

-> (Italy:)
Barbarian Kings

-> (Much later in Western Europe:)

Holy Roman Emperors

-> (Continuing in Eastern Europe:)

Byzantine Emperors







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