Roman Legions > Legio IV Italica
Legio IV Italica
The Legio IV Italica' ("Italian Fourth Legion") was a legion of the Imperial Roman army founded in AD 231 by emperor Alexander Severus. The legion remained in existence in ca. 400.Contents [hide]1History2References3Sources3.1Primary sources3.2Secondary sourcesHistory[edit]The legion was Formed during the reign of Alexander Severus in 231, with Italian and Pannonian soldiers, and perhaps took soon part in the expedition against the Sassanids in 231-231[1]Its first commander, IV Italica and some legions at this time were commanded by Equestrian Praefectus Legionis compared to the Senatorial Legatus Legionis, was Maximinus Thrax, the former common soldier and future emperor.[2]It participated in all Maximinus' campaigns in the Danubian area in 235-238.[3] Under Gordian III, it returned to the eastern frontier in 242-244 to fight the Sassanids, under the prefect Serapamo,[4] with its base set perhaps in the province of Mesopotamia.[5][dubious – discuss] Later, Nischer speculates it may have been based in the Gaul under Diocletian.[6]It is mentioned in the Notitia dignitatum, as a pseudo-comitatenses legion under the magister militum per Orientem. It perhaps survived until the reformation of Justinian in 545.[7]References[edit]Jump up ^ Herodian, VI, 3.1; Parker, 176.Jump up ^ Herodian, VI, 8.2-3; Historia Augusta, "The Two Maximini", 5.5; Gonzales, vol.I, p.165.Jump up ^ Gonzales, p.166Jump up ^ Historia Augusta, "The Three Gordians", 25.2; Ritterling, c.1326; Gonzales, p.166.Jump up ^ Luttwak, p.231-232; Gonzales, p.166.Jump up ^ J.Kromayer e G.Veith, p.483, map 54, illustration 147; Nischer, p.22.Jump up ^ Diehl, p.146; Runciman, p.125; Gonzales, p.166.Sources[edit]Primary sources[edit]Herodian, Storia dell'Impero dopo Marco Aurelio, VI.Historia Augusta, "The Two Maximini". Note that the Historia Augusta is a late-4th-century hoax.Notitia dignitatum, Orientis.Secondary sources[edit]C.Diehl, Justinienne et la civilisation byzantine au VI siecle, vol.I, New York 1901.Gonzalez, Julio Rodriguez (2003). Historia de las legiones Romanas (in Spanish). Madrid.J.Kromayer e G.Veith, Heerwessen und kriegfuhrung die griechen und romer, Munich, 1928.E.Luttwak, La grande strategia dell'impero romano, Milan, 1976.J.C.Mann, A note on the legion IV Italica, ZPE 126, Bonn.E.C.Nischer, The army reforms of Dioclatian and Constantine and their modifiacations up to the time of the Notitia Dignitatum, Journal of Roman Studies n.13, Londra 1923.H.M.D.Parker, "The legions of Diocletian and Constantine", in Journal of Roman Studies 23, 1933, London.Ritterling, Emil, [1]S.Runciman, La civilizacion bizantina, Madrid 1942.Roman Legions
List of Legions
Legio I
- Legio I Adiutrix
- Legio I Armenaica
- Legio I Iovia
- Legio I Isaura Sagittaria
- Legio I Italica
- Legio I Macriana Liberatrix
- Legio I Maximiana
- Legio I Minervia
- Legio I Parthica
Legio II
- Legio II Adiutrix
- Legio II Armenaica
- Legio II Augusta
- Legio II Flavius Constantia
- Legio II Gallica
- Legio II Herculia
- Legio II Isuara
- Legio II Italica
- Legio II Parthica
- Legio II Triana Fortis
Legio III
- Legio III Augusta
- Legio III Cyrenaica
- Legio III Diocletiana
- Legio III Gallica
- Legio III Isaura
- Legio III Italica
- Legio III Parthica
Legio IV
V - VIII
- Legio V
- Legio V Alaudae
- Legio V Iovia
- Legio V Macedonica
- Legio VI
- Legio VI Ferrata
- Legio VI Herculia
- Legio VI Hispana
- Legio VI Victrix
- Legio VII Claudia
- Legio VII Gemina
- Legio VIII Augusta