The altar was removed from the curia by the Emperor
Constantius II in 357. It was later restored by the Emperor
Julian, who was the only emperor after the conversion of
Constantine I to adhere to the
traditional religion of Rome. The altar was again removed by
Gratian in 382. After Gratian's death,
Quintus Aurelius Symmachus, a
senator and
Prefect of Rome who sought to preserve Rome's religious traditions, in 384 wrote to the new Emperor
Valentinian II requesting the restoration of the altar. In the imperial court in
Milan, the young emperor denied the request.
Ambrose,
Bishop of Milan successfully persuaded Valentinian to resist the request to preserve the altar. However, he was not the main person behind the resolution that removed the altar though he did participate in the debate. Further petitions to restore the altar were deflected in 391 by an edict of the Emperor
Theodosius I as part of his efforts to ensure that Christianity was the only religion practised in the empire. The altar was restored by
Eugenius during his short-lived rule (392–394), according to
Paulinus of Milan in his
Life of Ambrose. Writing in 403,
Claudian mentioned that the statue (if not the altar) was then in the Senate House. Sheridan states "Some think that removals and restorations refer to both the Altar of Victory and the Statue of Victory. Others think that the Statue was never removed from its place. There is no statement in the ancient authors as to what happened to the Statue when the Altar was removed and certainty on this point is unattainable." Sheridan further suggests that "the fate of the Altar and Statue of Victory was finally sealed by the law of 408 against heathen statues," citing
Codex Theodosianus XVI,10, 19. ==Notes==