The city took its name from the emperor Constantine in 330 ad.
The goddess temples were closed down by emperor Constantine in the 4th century.
Emperor Constantine did not give up; during the last years of his reign he began preparing another expedition.
In the 4th century, Christianity was eventually taken up by the emperor Constantine.
In the early 4th century, the Emperor Constantine added a basilica.
Though it's actually the Emperor Constantine I've been talking to.
And yet that, precisely, is what the early Church did with the Emperor Constantine.
The emperor Constantine I had previously built an oratory on this same spot.
The emperor Constantine I rebuilt much of the city and erected a new public bath.
Only when the emperor Constantine issued a nearly pure new coin called the solidus did inflation come under control.