…the Persian capital, Ctesiphon. The reconquest …

Years: 283 - 283
August

…the Persian capital, Ctesiphon.

The reconquest of Mesopotamia avenges all the previous defeats suffered by the Romans against the Sassanids; for this, Carus receives the title of Persicus Maximus.

The emperor makes an augustus of his elder son Carinus, left in charge of governing the west of the empire in Carus' absence.

Wwhile preparing to follow up his success against the Persians and carry arms yet further into Sassanian territory in the summer of 283, Carus dies suddenly and mysteriously during a violent storm, allegedly struck by lightning, though rumor names Praetorian prefect Arius Aper as his assassin.

He had reigned for less than a year.

His sudden death, variously attributed to disease, the effects of lightning, or a wound received in the campaign against the Persians, causes the Roman army to conclude a peace and withdraw.

Numerian’s acclamation in December, without opposition, as emperor in the East, suggests that his father’s death may well have been due to natural causes.

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