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   Part I.   The Reign Of Diocletian And His Three Associates, Maximian, Galerius, And Constantius. -- General Reestablishment Of   Order And Tranquillity. -- The Persian War, Victory, And   Triumph. -- The New Form Of Administration. -- Abdication   And Retirement Of Diocletian And Maximian.   As the reign of Diocletian was more illustrious than that of any   of his predecessors, so was his birth more abject and obscure.   The strong claims of merit and of violence had frequently   superseded the ideal prerogatives of nobility; but a distinct   line of separation was hitherto preserved between the free and   the servile part of mankind. The parents of Diocletian had   been slaves in the house of Anulinus, a Roman senator; nor   was he himself distinguished by any other name than that which he derived from a small town in Dalmatia, from whence   his mother deduced her origin. It is, however, probable that   his father obtained the freedom of the family, and that he soon   acquired an office of scribe, which was commonly exercised by   persons of his condition. Favorable oracles, or rather the   consciousness of superior merit, prompted his aspiring son to   pursue the profession of arms and the hopes of fortune; and it   would be extremely curious to observe the gradation of arts   and accidents which enabled him in the end to fulfil those   oracles, and to display that merit to the world. Diocletian was   successively promoted to the government of Męsia, the honors   of the consulship, and the important command of the guards   of the palace. He distinguished his abilities in the Persian war;   and after the death of Numerian, the slave, by the confession   and judgment of his rivals, was declared the most worthy of

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