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younger Theodosius.   

   Chapter XXXIII:   

   Conquest Of Africa By The Vandals.   
   Part I.   Death Of Honorius. -- Valentinian III. -- Emperor Of The East. -- Administration Of His Mother Placidia -- Ętius And   Boniface. -- Conquest Of Africa By The Vandals.   During a long and disgraceful reign of twenty-eight years,   Honorius, emperor of the West, was separated from the   friendship of his brother, and afterwards of his nephew, who   reigned over the East; and Constantinople beheld, with   apparent indifference and secret joy, the calamities of Rome.   The strange adventures of Placidia gradually renewed and   cemented the alliance of the two empires. The daughter of the   great Theodosius had been the captive, and the queen, of the   Goths; she lost an affectionate husband; she was dragged in   chains by his insulting assassin; she tasted the pleasure of   revenge, and was exchanged, in the treaty of peace, for six   hundred thousand measures of wheat. After her return from   Spain to Italy, Placidia experienced a new persecution in the   bosom of her family. She was averse to a marriage, which had   been stipulated without her consent; and the brave Constantius, as a noble reward for the tyrants whom he had   vanquished, received, from the hand of Honorius himself, the   struggling and the reluctant hand of the widow of Adolphus.   But her resistance ended with the ceremony of the nuptials:   nor did Placidia refuse to become the mother of Honoria and   Valentinian the Third, or to assume and exercise an absolute   dominion over the mind of her grateful husband. The generous

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