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Flavius Julius Crispus was the son of Constantine the Great. Like his father, he was reportedly a great soldier and tactician, well educated in the east by Christian scholars and had a wide amount of experience in governing.

Suppose Constantine doesn't have him and his wife killed in 326 and Crispus continues to be a capable Caesar until Constantine's death in 337. What I can infer is that the 340s and 350s will be more stable thanks to the influence of a well experienced and regarded Augusti that doesn't need to share as much power as his brothers/cousins did OTL.

But what else? What would policy be? And what effects on the empire would this have?
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