Jovian, proclaimed Roman emperor after the death…
February 364 CE
Jovian, proclaimed Roman emperor after the death of Julian at the walls of Ctesiphon in midsummer 363, restores tolerance in religious affairs, for he neither espouses any of the Christian heresies nor persecutes pagans.
As a Christian, Jovian suppresses the paganism that had been allowed to flourish under his predecessor.
Magical practices are forbidden and gifts to churches restored.
While still on his way from the frontier to Constantinople, he is found dead in his bed on February 17, 364, at Dadastana, an obscure town on the borders of Bithynia and Galatia, halfway between Ancyra and Nicaea.
A surfeit of mushrooms or the poisonous carbon monoxide fumes of a charcoal warming fire has been assigned as the cause of death.