wordswarm: free dictionary lookup
look up a word or phrase
My Projects: Payphone Project . USPS Mailbox Locator . Found Photos . "The Etude" Magazine . Discarded Umbrella Carcasses . My Receipts
Telephone Exchange Names . My Film Photography . Sepulchral Portraits . WanderLIC . Old Receipts . Sorabji.ME . Sorabji.com
Wordswarms From Years Past



Adjacent Words

Constant Lambert
Constant of aberration
constant of gravitation
Constant of integration
constant of proportionality
constant quantity
constant-width font
CONSTANT; CONSTANTLY
Constanta
constantan
Constantia
Constantin Brancusi
Constantina
Constantine
Constantine II
Constantine IX Monomachus
Constantine the African
Constantine the Great
Constantine V Copronymus
Constantine VII Porphyrogenitus
Constantine, Donation of ///nnConstantinople, Council of

Constantine I definitions



submit to reddit

WordNet (r) 3.0 (2005)

n
1: Emperor of Rome who stopped the persecution of Christians and in 324 made Christianity the official religion of the Roman Empire; in 330 he moved his capital from Rome to Byzantium and renamed it Constantinople (280-337) [syn: Constantine, Constantine I, Constantine the Great, Flavius Valerius Constantinus]

Merriam Webster's

biographical name died 337 the Great Roman emperor (306-337) • Constantinian adjective

Britannica Concise

First Roman emperor to profess Christianity. The eldest son of Constantius I Chlorus, he spent his youth at the court of Diocletian. Passed over as successor to the throne, he fought to make himself emperor. Victory at the Milvian Bridge outside Rome (312) made him emperor in the West; according to legend, a cross and the words in hoc signo vinces ("By this sign thou shalt conquer") appeared to him there and he forthwith adopted Christianity. In 313 he issued, with Licinius, the Edict of Milan, granting tolerance to Christians; he also gave land for churches and granted the church special privileges. He opposed heresies, notably Donatism and Arianism, and convoked the important Council of Nicaea. After defeating and executing Licinius, he gained control of the East and became sole emperor. He moved the capital from Rome to the site of Byzantium, which he renamed Constantinople (324). In 326 he had his wife and eldest son killed for reasons that remain obscure. He angered the Romans by refusing to participate in a pagan rite, and never entered Rome again. Under his patronage, Christianity began its growth into a world religion. Constantine is revered as a saint in the Orthodox church. King of Greece (1913-17, 1920-22). Son of King George I of the Hellenes (1845-1913), he was educated in Germany and was commander in chief of Greek forces in the Balkan Wars. He succeeded his father in 1913, but his neutralist, yet essentially pro-German, attitude during World War I caused the Allies and his Greek opponents to depose him in 1917. He was restored to the throne in 1920, but after a catastrophic war in Anatolia he abdicated in favor of his son, George II, in 1922.





wordswarm.net: free dictionary lookup