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The Thirty Tyrants, or Thirty Pretenders (Latin: Tyranni Triginta) were a group of 32 people declared by the author of the notoriously unreliable Historia Augusta, writing under the name Trebellius Pollio, to have been pretenders to the throne of the Roman Empire in the time of the legitimate emperor Gallienus. Scholarly consensus is that the author artificially increased the number of his protagonists in conscious parallelism with the Thirty Tyrants of Sparta. The list is a very mixed one, including:
The nine men felt by David Magie, the editor of the Loeb Classical Library edition of the Historia Augusta, to have been real pretenders to the throne at the time of Gallienus are: Postumus, Laelianus, Marius, Ingenuus, Regalianus, Aureolus, and Macrianus and his two sons. At least some of these men issued coins.
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