133:. Anatolius was killed by a falling piece of marble, evidently within his own residence. "Anatolius was sleeping at the time in his customary bedchamber. ... One of these plaques, which was fastened to the wall next to the bed, was shaken loose from its fittings and wrenched off by the violence of the tremors. It came down with all its weight on his head, and smashed his skull. He had barely enough time to utter a deep and muffled groan of pain and then sank back on his bed. Death had overtaken him."
114:, a material quite expensive. The decorative material's role was to exhibit the wealth and refined taste of the residence's owner. "Adorned with a variety of marble plaques attached to the wall, of the kind that are lavishly and ostentatiously displayed by those who are inordinately fond of such superfluous and unnecessary
143:: "I doubt it, for an earthquake would be a most desirable and excellent thing if it knew how to discriminate the bad from the good, slaying those and passing these by. But, even granting that he was unjust, there were many more like him and worse, who escaped unharmed."
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He was unpopular because of his conduct. He claimed the goods of many wealthy houses, under the pretext of collecting what was due to the emperor. This allowed him to ignore the terms specified in the
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Agathias notes that
Anatolius was the only high-ranking individual to perish in the disaster. He notes contemporary belief that Anatolius had been punished for the injustice of his conduct.
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of recently deceased owners. The seized property fell under his control as a curator. Agathias implies that
Anatolius added parts of the seized property to his own estate.
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Agathias himself doubted that the death of
Anatolius was an instance of
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The
Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire: Volume III, AD 527–641
82:(administrator of the private property of the imperial family) and
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History of the Later Roman Empire from
Arcadius to Irene, Volume 1
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86:. The latter title means that Anatolius was a member of the
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121:On 14 December 557, Constantinople was hit by a
74:έπιμέλειαν τῶν βασιλέως οίκων τε καί κτημάτων
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206:Agathias: The Histories
48:. He was killed in the
290:Deaths in earthquakes
79:curator domus divinae
41:curator domus divinae
295:Byzantine officials
247:Martindale, John R.
190:Bury (1889), p. 474
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56:Biography
25:Ανατόλιος
17:Anatolius
226:(1889),
62:Agathias
197:Sources
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112:marble
101:wills
70:Greek
21:Greek
257:ISBN
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