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  2. Juvenal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Juvenal

    Juvenal never mentions a period of exile in his life, yet it appears in every extant traditional biography. Many scholars think the idea to be a later invention; the Satires do display some knowledge of Egypt and Britain, and it is thought that this gave rise to the tradition that Juvenal was exiled.

  3. Early bishops of Jerusalem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Early_bishops_of_Jerusalem

    Juvenal (422–458), since 451 Patriarch; In 451 or 452, the anti-Chalcedonian clergy elected a rival bishop, Theodosius, who was forced into exile in 453. For the rival episcopal successions after this date: Greek Orthodox Patriarch of Jerusalem; Syriac Orthodox Bishop of Jerusalem; Latin Patriarchs of Jerusalem

  4. Juvenal of Jerusalem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Juvenal_of_Jerusalem

    Little is known about his early life. Juvenal was born in the late 4th century and was consecrated Bishop of Jerusalem in 422. [3]: 247–249 In 428/9 he consecrated the Laura of Euthymius, located on the road between Jerusalem and Jericho, and supplied it with presbyters and deacons.

  5. Satires (Juvenal) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Satires_(Juvenal)

    Juvenal returns to his theme of distorted economic values among the Roman elite – in this instance centered on their unwillingness to provide appropriate support for poets, lawyers, and teachers. It is the capricious whims of fate that determine the variables of a human life.

  6. Theodosius of Jerusalem (died 457) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theodosius_of_Jerusalem...

    He was installed as bishop of Jerusalem in opposition Juvenal in 451 or 452, but was forced into exile by the emperor Marcian in 453. [1] [2] Information about his life comes mainly from the works of John Rufus. These include a biography of Peter the Iberian and a narration of Theodosius' exile and death, the Narratio de obitu Theodosii ...

  7. Gyaros - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gyaros

    The Roman poet Juvenal, a near-contemporary of Tacitus, mentions this island twice in his Satires: first as a place of exile for particularly vile criminals (1.73), and second as a symbol of claustrophobic imprisonment (10.170). In the second reference, Juvenal compares the restlessness of Alexander the Great to that of a man imprisoned:

  8. Relegatio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Relegatio

    Relegatio (or relegatio in insulam) under Roman law was the mildest form of exile, involving banishment from Rome, but not loss of citizenship, or confiscation of property. It was a sentence used for adulterers, those that committed sexual violence or manslaughter , and procurers .

  9. James Duff Duff - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Duff_Duff

    Duff was the son of Colonel James Duff, a retired army officer living in Aberdeenshire, and Jane Bracken Dunlop.He and his twin brother Alan were among the first boys at Fettes College, Edinburgh; he came as a scholar to Trinity College, Cambridge, in 1878 and was elected a Classical Fellow in 1883, a post he held until his death.