The invasion of Persian territory, always a lure in antiquity, is one to which Julian is not immune.
Motivated by a desire for military glory and a decision to reassert Rome's preeminence in the East, he assembles, despite counsels of prudence from Rome and the Levant, the largest Roman army (sixty-five thousand strong and backed by a river fleet) ever to head a campaign against Persia.
Despite counsels of prudence from Rome and the Levant, Julian leads his huge force into Sassanian territory in 363, wreaking havoc and approaching the very gates of Ctesiphon on the Tigris (below modern Baghdad), a major Sassanian city.
The Persians, aided by the desert, famine, treachery, and the incompetence of the Roman army—corrupted perhaps by large numbers of hostile Christians—once again prove themselves superior.
On June 25, during a disastrous retreat from the walls of Ctesiphon, below modern Baghdad, Julian is wounded by a spear, thrown “no one knew whence,” which pierces his liver.
He dies the next night at age thirty-one, having been emperor for twenty months.
Julian's successor, Jovian, chosen by the army's general staff, is a Christian, but not a fanatic.
To extricate his army from Persia, the new ruler immediately concludes an ignominious peace with Shapur, ceding to the Persians a good part of Galerian's conquests of 298, including all Roman territory east of the Tigris River, …