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valens

n. (non-gloss definition: a Roman cognomen)

Wikipedia
Valens

Valens (328 – 9 August 378), fully Flavius Julius Valens Augustus , was Eastern Roman Emperor from 364 to 378. He was given the eastern half of the empire by his brother Valentinian I after the latter's accession to the throne. Valens, sometimes known as the Last True Roman, was defeated and killed in the Battle of Adrianople, which marked the beginning of the collapse of the decaying Western Roman Empire.

Valens (usurper)

Valens (died 250 AD) is one of the Thirty Tyrants, a list of Roman usurpers compiled by the author(s) of the Historia Augusta.

According to Historia, this Valens was the uncle or great-uncle of another usurper, Valens Thessalonicus, who revolted against Emperor Gallienus. Valens senior would have revolted in Illyria against an earlier emperor, and would have been killed by his own soldiers after few days, as happened to his nephew.

It is possible that this Valens was Iulius Valens Licinianus, who usurped the purple in Rome during the absence of the Emperor Decius in the war against the Goths (250), and who was quickly executed.

Valens (disambiguation)

Valens was a Roman Emperor (364–378).

Valens may also refer to:

  • Valens (usurper), probably Iulius Valens Licinianus, usurper under Emperor Decius (250)
  • Valens, Ontario, a hamlet within Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
  • Valens, Switzerland, a resort in the canton of St. Gallen
  • Valens (company), an Israeli semiconductor company producing chips for the HDBaseT video standard
  • Valens, a protagonist in Gladius
Valens (company)

Valens Semiconductor is an Israeli Fabless manufacturing company providing semiconductor solutions for the development of HDBaseT devices. Valens provides semiconductor products for the distribution of uncompressed ultra-high-definition (HD) multimedia content. The company is the creators of HDBaseT technology standard and is part of the HDBaseT Alliance.

Usage examples of "valens".

I had promised Donna Pelliccia to go and see her at Valentia, and on my way I saw the ancient town of Saguntum on a hill at some little distance.

When I was at Valentia, a good bottle of wine was scarcely obtainable, though Malaga and Alicante were both close at hand.

When he had gone away my neighbour seemed inclined to be more communicative, and informed me that Nina was a dancer whom the Count de Ricla, the Viceroy of Barcelona, was keeping for some weeks at Valentia, till he could get her back to Barcelona, whence the bishop of the diocese had expelled her on account of the scandals to which she gave rise.

She asked me to leave Valentia a day before her, and to await her at Tarragona.

It was then May, and she was not to go to Valentia till September, so we shall hear what the letter contained later on.

The pension not being well paid, Sigismund made another resignation of his principality to his cousin Andrew Battori, who had the ill luck to be slain within the year by the vaivode of Valentia.

The manager of the company, Marescalchi by name, had entered into an arrangement with the Governor of Valentia to bring the company there in September to play comic opera in a small theatre which had been built on purpose.

Madame Pelliccia knew nobody in Valentia, and wanted a letter of introduction to someone there.

I reached Valentia at nine o'clock in the morning, and found that I should have to content myself with a bad lodging, as Marescalchi, the opera manager, had taken all the best rooms for the members of his company.

Though Valentia is blessed with an excellent climate, though it is well watered, situated in the midst of a beautiful country, fertile in all the choicest products of nature, though it is the residence of many of the most distinguished of the Spanish nobility, though its women are the most handsome in Spain, though it has the advantage of being the seat of an archbishop.