Jews under Emperor Constantine the Great

I'm writing a historical novel set in the Roman Empire during the reign of Constantine. Does anyone here know, broadly speaking, the legal status and treatment of Jews between roughly 325 - 337 A.D.? For instance, were there any restrictions on Jews living in the city of Rome itself? Were there any prohibitions against Jews worshipping or building synagogues? Were they subjected to any mistreatment or persecution during this time period? Any information you know would be great. I've been researching this area for a while and can't find anything concrete on the subject.
 
Can't recall any mistreatment, other than the laws agains circumcision of slaves and later the ownership of slaves by Jews, marriage to Christians, and most importently, he renewed the Hadrian law of no Jewish settelment in Jerusalem.

Other then that it was pretty ok IIRC.
 
Second-class freeborn citizens, IIRC. If any jew converted to Christianity his fellow Jews couldn't reason with him to return to Judaism (and he couldn't return of his own volition, either.) Also Christians could recruuit Jews into Christianity but the jews couldn't recruit any Christians into Judaism.
 
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