John (Mauro-Roman king)

John (Greek: Ἰωάννης, romanized: Iōannēs), referred to as John the Tyrant and sometimes given the nickname Stotzas the Younger (Latin: Stutias Iunior) after his predecessor, Stotzas, was a Berber military leader and briefly King of the Mauro-Roman Kingdom following the death of his predecessor. Given his name, Ioannes, John was probably, like Stotzas, of Eastern Roman descent and only briefly commanded his army against the Eastern Roman Empire.[1]

John
King of the Mauro-Roman Kingdom
Reign545–546
PredecessorStotzas
SuccessorEventually Garmul
Died546
Constantinople
(modern-day İstanbul, Turkey)

After the defeat of Stotzas, John was chosen by the combined Berber-Eastern Roman rebel army and he supported the Vandal restoration attempt of dux Numidiae Guntarith, who seized the province of Africa proconsularis in spring 546 and killed the imperial governor Aerobindus in Carthage. When Guntarith began to consolidate his regime with purges and mass executions, the strategos Artabanes managed to have Guntarith assassinated just five weeks after the rebellion began. John, who had taken refuge in a church, was arrested by Artabanes and sent in chains to Constantinople, where he was said to have been crucified.[2]

References

Citations

  1. Sarantis 2016, p. 16.
  2. Martindale 1992, pp. 643–644.

Bibliography

  • Martindale, John Robert (1992). The Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire: Volume 3, AD 527-641. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0521201599.
  • Sarantis, Alexander (2016). Justinian and Africa, 533–548. The Encyclopedia of Ancient Battles.



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