Valerian and Gallienus, too busy to protect …

Years: 260 - 260

Valerian and Gallienus, too busy to protect the Gauls against the Franks and the Alamanni and the East against the Persians, have had also to tolerate the formation of the Gallic empire under the praetorian prefect Marcus Cassianius Latinius Postumus.

Postumus and another general, Silvanus, praetorian prefect and former co-director of Roman policy on Gaul (along with Postumus), had remained in Colonia (modern Köln, or Cologne) with Gallienus' sixteen-year-old son Publius Licinius Cornelius Saloninus, newly appointed caesar, after the emperor left the Rhine River for the Danube about 258.

Silvanus in summer 260  amid the chaos of an invasion by the Alamanni and Franks, demands that all booty be handed back to the treasury and its original owners.

The legions, reluctant to submit to these orders, proclaim Postumus emperor.

Postumus now besieges and attacks Cologne, where Silvanus has sided with Saloninus.

The troops loyal to Saloninus elevate him to the rank of Augustus, but Postumus, after breaching the walls of the city, has Silvanus and Saloninus killed; later he will erect a triumphal arch to celebrate his victory.

The Gauls, reeling under devastating barbarian raids and incensed at the ineffective defense mounted by their Roman emperors, support the creation of the rival Gallic empire under Postumus, who, recognized as emperor in Gaul, Spain, Germany, and Britain, sets up the capital of his empire at Cologne, complete with its own senate, consuls and praetorian guard.

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