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  1. The name "Pescennius Niger" means "black Pescennius", which incidentally contrasts him with one of his rivals for the throne in 194, Clodius Albinus, whose name means "white Clodius". [26] Cassius Dio's "Roman History" reports that, when a priest of Jupiter saw in a dream a "black/dark man" (ἄνθρωποι τὸν μέλανα) breaking into the emperor's camp, this was interpreted as ...

  2. Pescennius Niger. From Wikimedia Commons, the free media repository. Pescennius Niger (c. 140–194) was a Roman usurper in the Eastern Roman Empire from 193 to 194.

  3. Pescennius Niger (died 194) was a rival Roman emperor from 193 to 194. An equestrian army officer from Italy, Niger was promoted to senatorial rank about 180. Most of his earlier service had been in the eastern provinces, but in 185–186 he commanded an expeditionary force against deserters who had seized control of a number of cities in southern Gaul .

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Lucius Pescennius Niger. Lucius Pescennius Niger (c.140-194): Roman general, emperor for a short while in 193-194. Lucius (or Gaius) Pescennius Niger was born in Aquinum, a modest provincial town in Italy, between 135 and 140. He was the son of a Roman knight named Annius Fuscus and his wife Lampridia. These were the years of the emperor ...

  5. Click to enlarge. Pescennius Niger , Emperor of Rome (193-194). He was a native of central Italy, and during the reigns of Marcus Aurelius and Commodus had kept the Germans from invading Roman territory. In 192 he suppressed an outbreak of the Jews and Saracens. After the death of Pertinax the praetorian guards proclaimed Didius Julianus ...

  6. Niger himself now hastened to the scene but was defeated near Nicæa, with the result that most of the cities of the Province of Asia came into the hands of Severus. Niger fled to reach Antioch. The possession of this city was decided by a battle fought south of Issus in which Pescennius Niger was defeated. While making his escape to the ...

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  8. Michael L. Meckler. Gaius Pescennius Niger was governor of Syria in the year 193 when he learned of the emperor Pertinax's murder. Niger's subsequent attempt to claim the empire for himself ended in failure in Syria after roughly one year. His life before becoming governor of Syria is not well known. [ [1]] He was born in Italy to an equestrian ...

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