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Constantine II, Constantius II and Constans
Flavius Claudius Constantinus
born in February AD ca. 317. Consul AD 320, 321, 324.
Became emperor in AD 337. Died near Aquileia, AD 340.
Flavius Julius Constantius
born in August AD 317. Became emperor in AD 337. Died at
Mopsucrene in Cilicia, AD 361.
Flavius Julius Constans
born in AD 320. Became emperor in AD 337. Died on in
Gaul, on the way to Spanish border, January AD 350.
Constantine II
Constantius II
Constans
At Constantine's death at Nicomedia in AD 337, three sons and two of
his nephews were destined by the late emperor to succeed him. Though two
of those sons were absent from Nicomedia. With the consent of the third,
Constantius, the other members of the imperial family, except two young
cousins were slaughtered by the soldiery.
The empire was thereafter by agreement parted between the three sons.
Constantine taking the west, Constans the centre and Constantius the
east. The eldest of the three new emperors was twenty one; their two
cousins, Gallus and Julian, the nephews of the great Constantine, were
in AD 337 aged twelve and six respectively.
From the outset Constantius was thoroughly occupied in coping with the
activities of the Persian King Sapor II. Was Constantius engrossed in
the quarrel with the Persian Sapor II over Armenia, then the real seat
of the struggle soon was in Mesopotamia, where the war raged for some
years without any decisive result. Both sides called into action Arab
horsemen, who raided and wrought havoc far and wide; nine pitched
battles were fought, in which, by admission of roman historians, the
advantage generally lay with the Persians. Constantius himself was twice
present; but it is safe to assume that his officers, not he, were
responsible for the military direction. Meanwhile Constantius' brothers,
Constantine and Constans, were quarreling and then actually fighting
over the possession of Illyria. The elder, Constantine, was slain in an
ambush near Aquileia (AD 340), and the younger, Constans, was recognized
throughout the western dominion. But Constans now conducted himself as
an irresponsible tyrant. Loyalties soon waned and when Magnentius was
acclaimed by the legions while the emperor was away hunting, Constans
could only flee for his life, only to be overtaken and slain on the
Spanish coast.
Magnentius
Flavius Magnus Magnentius
born in February AD ca. 303. Became emperor on 18 January
AD 350. Died at Lugdunum (Lyons), AD 353.
Magnentius
If Magnentius in AD 350 was recognized immediately in the prefectures
of Gaul and Italy, then in Illyria another general Vetranio was set up
as emperor.
In the east Constantius still locked horns with Sapor II. Alas the King
of Persia was called to see to other problems in the east of Persia, as
news reached Constantius of the death of Constans and two new emperors
being in place in the west. Both Sapor II and Constantius left
Mesopotamia, leaving behind a devastated no-man's-land. The two new
emperors meanwhile made haste to come to terms and to proffer their
equal amity to the surviving son of Constantine in the east. But for
Constantius reconciliation with his brother's murderer Magnentius was
impossible. Far more won over Vetranio as his ally and took to war
against Magnentius, defeating him at the grueling Battle of Mursa in
Pannonia where 50'000 of the best troops of the imperial armies were
left dead. Though Magnentius himself was not dead, he sought to continue
the war, but his troops gradually deserted him. By the time those who
remained were ready to deliver him to the enemy, if only to spare
themselves, he chose suicide. Had Constantius left his cousin Gallus in
charge of ruling the east, it was only to learn that Gallus was an
irresponsible tyrant and was already planning on treason. Gallus was
summoned to Pannonia where he met with an executioner's sword in AD 354.
Except for Constantius himself, the only surviving male descendant of
Constantine the Great was Julian, the younger brother of Gallus. Julian
lived in Athens devoting himself to literary and philosophical studies.
He had no practical experience of rule and sought none. Yet against his
will Julian was raised by Constantius to Caesar with the souvereignty
over transalpine Europe. The fact that the empire was too large to be
managed without viceroys was once more proving itself; especially since
the Persian King Sapor II, having dealt with his problems to the east of
Persia, was now back at the Roman borders to renew his ambitions.
The barbarians moreover were again swarming over the upper Danube.
Constantius occupied himself with the barbarian problem while his
lieutenants dealt with Sapor in Mesopotamia.
Though the Persian army was vastly superior in numbers, it eventually
exhausted itself in several vain attempts to conquer the stubbornly
defended fortress city of Amidia. Alas their numbers depleted and,
though the war went on, the great threat to the eastern empire was
averted. Meanwhile the reluctant Julian was proving himself a valiant
man of action in Gaul and on the Gallic frontier. A strong man was
certainly needed in Gaul; for in the civil war Magnentius had called to
his aid hosts of Franks and Alemanni, who promptly assumed the role not
of auxiliaries but of conquerors.
Despite his inexperience and his academic predilections, Julian proved
himself equal to the emergency, winning battles against heavy odds with
distinguished personal valour, and restoring law and order in the
devastated districts.
Until the reputation he was winning aroused the jealousy of Constantius,
whose own credit was being not at all enhanced by his operations in the
east, neither as soldier nor as ruler.
Jealousy rapidly developed into suspicion and probably into secret
designs against the life of the younger man.
Constantius ordered an immediate dispatch of the best of the legions of
Julian to the Mesopotamian front. The legions responded by calling upon
Julian to save the empire by assuming the purple of Augustus.
For some time Julian held out loyally, but the soldiery would take no
denial till he yielded, at last convinced that loyalty to the empire was
above loyalty to the emperor.
Julian the Apostate
Flavius Magnus Magnentius
born in AD 332 at Constantinople. Became emperor in
February AD 360. Died in Mesopotamia, 26 June AD 363.
Julian
Though Julian professed to demand only his own recognition as Western
Augustus, Constantius naturally refused to look on his as anything but a
rebel. When this was made clear to Julian and his legions there remained
no alternative but civil war. And suddenly Julian with no more than
three thousand men vanished into the forests and mountains of south
Germany to reappear on the lower Danube. Constantius, returning from his
inglorious campaign in the east, was taken ill in Cilicia, and died AD
361.
There was no civil war.
Julian the Apostate crossed over to Asia, his title of Augustus
undisputed, and never returned to Europe.
Julian reigned for no more than two years. He bears the name 'Apostate'
because he renounced the Christianity of his earlier years and
proclaimed himself the champion of the ancient gods.
Though, if Julian did refute Christianity, his method of suppressing the
religion he discarded was not that of persecution in the ordinary sense.
He went no further than to exclude Christian teaching and teachers from
the schools.
For the rest of his reign Julian remained occupied with the Persian war.
A victorious campaign in which he penetrated beyond the Tigris ended in
disaster. The army advancing under the direction of rashly trusted
guides, was lead into a trap. It was almost overwhelmed by the myriads
of foes by which it found itself surrounded. Yet valour and skill broke
every onslaught. But in the pursuit which followed the last repulse,
Julian was wounded by a javelin and was carried back to camp, only to
die. (AD 363)
Jovian
Flavius Jovianus
born in AD 330 at Singidunum. Became emperor in June AD
363. Died in Dadastana, winter AD 363/4.
Jovian
There was no surviving male descendant of the imperial house and
Julian had named no successor. The army chose an old soldier, Jovian,
who lived long enough to patch up a peace with Persia and withdraw. But
six months after his accession Jovian died.
Valentinian and Valens
Flavius Valentinianus
born in AD 321 at Cibalae, Pannonia. Became emperor early
in AD 364. Wives: (1) Marina Severa (one son; Flavius Gratianus); (2)
Justina (one son; Flavius Valentinianus). Died in Brigetio along the
Danube, 17 November AD 375.
Flavius Julius Valens
born in AD ca. 328 at Cibalae, Pannonia. Became emperor
early in AD 364. Wife; Albia Domnica (three children). Died near
Hadrianopolis, 9 August AD 378.
Valentinian
Valens
Again the choice lay with the soldiery. In AD 364 a barbarian of
Pannonian stock and common descent but proved capability was elected to
be Rome's new master, Valentinian.
By his first act the new emperor recognized the practical necessity for
partition. No one man could successfully hold in his own hands for long
the responsibility for both east and west. Valentinian chose for himself
his native west, and made his brother Valens Augustus of the east. This
time the division was permanent, though the empire still remained
nominally one.
For twelve years Valentinian ruled the west with vigour and, apart from
his savage mercilessness toward any opposition, with justice and
moderation.
Valentinian was rigid in his insistence on equal treatment for all
religions, he held the Gallic frontiers with a strong hand against
swarming Franks and Alemanni who he defeated in successful campaigns
beyond the Rhine.
It was on a campaign against the Quadi on the upper Danube that one of
those outburst of ungovernable rage which marred his character wrought
his own undoing inducing an apoplexy that killed him.
Gratian and Valentinian II
Flavius Gratianus
born in AD 359 at Sirmium. Became emperor 17 November in
AD 367. Wives: (1) Constantia; (2) Laeta. Died in Lugdunum (Lyons),
August AD 383.
Flavius Valentinianus
born in AD 371 at Treviri. Became emperor 22 November in
AD 367. Died in Vianna in Gaul, 15 May AD 392.
Gratian
Valentinian II
On Valentinian's death, his elder son Gratian was at once recognized
as his successor. Gratian's mother had been discarded by Valentinian in
favour of a wife who bore him another son, Valentinian II, whom Gratian
immediately named as co-emperor.
Had since Constantine Christian emperors always been able to accept
several religions in being within their empire, then Gratian was the
first to be unable to tolerate this.
Had over time privileges been bestowed upon the church then the
privileges for the state religion had still remained. The latter were
now being withdrawn. In consequence none-Christians were beginning to
grow restive, whilst the Christian church was becoming increasingly
intolerant of others.
Meanwhile in the east still ruled Valens. His appointment as emperor
of the east proved to be the gravest error of judgement Valentinian had
ever made. The worst faults of Valens were feebleness and indecision,
not brutality. And to these weaknesses it was due that King Sapor II in
his old age finally was able to establish complete if detested mastery
over Armenia.
However, the great disaster in the reign of Valens did not befall the
empire till after the death of Valentinian.
About the middle of the century the widespread Gothic confederation had
been extending and consolidating its territories between the Baltic in
the north and the Danube and Black Sea in the south, under the
leadership of Hermanaric the Amal, whom all tribes recognized as King.
But during the same period a new and formidable foe was pouring from
Asiatic Scythia into European Scythia, the flood of the terrible Huns.
Now it rolled down on the Goths. Officially at the least the Goths were
now friends of Rome. Reeling under the shock, the Visigoths sought the
aid of Valens, who granted them wide lands for settlement on the
southern side of the Danube barrier. Their vast swarms, only in part
disarmed, were ferried across the river by hundreds of thousands, in
numbers which had been utterly underestimated. The cramped starvation
conditions to which they were subjected were wholly intolerable. Hence
arose on the hither side of the Danube defences a new enemy.
Valens had in effect created his own disaster. War now raged in the
Balkans, a war so critical that Valens called upon Gratian to come to
his aid.
But Gratian had hardly less serious embarrassment of his own, for the
Alemanni were upon him. It was not until he had won a decisive crushing
victory over them that he could report himself as on the march to effect
a junction with the army in the east.
But Valens would not wait. In the neighbourhood of Adrianople he flung
himself upon the Goths and in the battle that followed his army was
annihilated, he himself perished, and the triumph of the Goths was
complete (9 August AD 378).
Battle of Adrianople
The battle of Adrianoble stopped the advance of Gratian. Tremendous
though the disaster had been, Adrianople and the greater capital on the
Bosporus could defy the onslaughts of the Goths, who were no experts in
siege warfare. But for Gratian to have marched on the Goths would have
meant to risk disaster in both east and west. the Alemanni had been
disposed of only for the moment.
Gratian made haste to pronounce a new emperor in the east to take in
hand the Gothic problem.
His choice fell upon Theodosius, the son of a great captain and servant
of the state on whom in Gratian's first year the intrigues of traitors
had brought the undeserved penalty of treason. The son, who had already
had time to prove his capacity, had been suffered to retire into private
life; and was now raised to the purple at the age of thirty-three.
Theodosius and Magnus Maximus
Flavius Theodosius
born in AD 347 at Cauca in Spain. Became emperor 19
January in AD 379. Wives: (1) Aelia Flavia Flaccilla (two sons;
Arcadius; Honorius); (2) Galla (one daughter; Galla Placidia). Died in
Mediolanum (Milan), January AD 395.
Magnus Maximus
probably born at Callaecia, Spain. Became emperor AD 383.
Died AD 388.
Theodosius
Magnus Maximus
Theodosius took up his hard task with admirable skill and prudence,
but no lack of courage. Hermanaric had fallen before the Gothic war
began. The able successor who had led the united Goths to victory died,
and with his death their unity departed. Theodosius made no ambitious
attempt to retrieve the position by staking the fate of the empire on a
pitched battle. He risked no great engagements; but while he struck
minor blows against their divided forces he encouraged their internal
divisions. His diplomacy attached some of their leaders to the empire,
for which they had an almost superstitious reverence. In little more
than four years a comparatively enduring if precarious peace was
established.
Gratian meanwhile was losing the high reputation he had won. Of his
courage and his private virtues there could be no question, but the
appearance of high capacity may have been due to his early submission to
wise direction. Further he made the mistake of abandoning much of the
cares of state for amusements, which brought him into contempt with the
soldiery.
Theodosius had hardly set the seal on his own reputation in AD 382 by
his much applauded treaty with the Goths, when the army in Britain, as
in the days of Carausius, renounced its allegiance to Gratian and
proclaimed an emperor of its own choice. The Spaniard Maximus
reluctantly accepted the dangerous honour.
In AD 383 Maximus crossed the Channel with a great force which depleted
the garrison of the island, and marched upon Lutetia (Paris) where
Gratian was residing. The soldiery in Gaul refused to move. Gratian
fled, but was overtaken at Lyons, where he was treacherously
assassinated, though without any connivance of the British emperor.
The successful usurper had nothing to fear from the boy Valentinian II -
or rather from his mother Justina - reigning at Milan. But he hastened
to send an embassy to Theodosius, repudiating and condemning the murder
which had been so hastily committed in his name, but justifying his own
assumption of the purple and inviting the friendly alliance of the
eastern emperor. Theodosius may well have felt that the pacification he
had just effected was too precarious to warrant him in plunging the
empire into a civil war, whose result would be doubtful, though justice
and honour demanded the punishment of Gratian's murderer. He contented
himself with recognizing the title of Maximus in the Gauls and Britain
as a third Augustus, provided that the souvereignty of Valentinian II in
Italy, Africa and western Ilyria were unquestioned. And to those terms
Maximus agreed.
But the excessive ambition of Maximus brought about his own downfall.
Justina was unpopular as Italy was fanatically Christian orthodox,
whereas she was an Arian heretic. Maximus seized this as an excuse to
invade Italy. Justina fled to Theodosius with Valentinian II and her
daughter. The emperor fell in love with the daughter and married her.
Theodosius' cautious policy was blown to the winds, Maximus was
promptly wiped out and Valentinian II was restored to the empire of the
west, where on his mother's death, he fell completely under the
influence of the orthodox part (AD 388).
His reign was brief although he had barely emerged from boyhood. The
supreme command in Gaul was conferred on the pagan Frank, Arbogast, an
able captain who had stood loyal to Gratian and had taken service with
Theodosius instead of Maximus. The Frank now gave way to aspirations of
his own. After a quarrel with Arbogast, Valentinian II committed suicide
or was murdered, and Arbogast set up in hi place his own puppet,
Eugenius in AD 392.
In AD 394 Theodosius disposed of the usurper, and divided the succession
in east and west between his own sons Arcadius (382-408) and Honorius
(AD 384-423). The latter at once became western emperor, and on the
death of Theodosius in AD 395 Arcadius succeeded him at Constantinople.
Honorius, Constantine III and Constantius III
Flavius Honorius
born in AD 383. Became emperor in January AD 395. Wife:
Maria. Died at Ravenna, AD 423.
Flavius Claudius Constantinus
birthdate unknown. Became emperor in AD 407. Died outside
Ravenna, AD 411.
Flavius Constantius
born in Naissus, birthdate unknown. Wife: Aelia Galla
Placidia (one son; Flavius Valentinianus; one daughter; Justa Grata
Honoria). Became emperor in AD 421. Died AD 421.
Honorius
Constantine III
Constantius III
The young heirs of the powerful Theodosius were feeble and
incompetent.
From the death of Theodosius to the disappearance of the western empire,
mighty figures stalked across the stage, but they were not of Roman or
Byzantine emperors but of barbarians: Vandal, Visigoth, Ostrogoth,
Frank, or - most terrible of all - Hun.
Theodosius had named as the guardian of his sons and chief of his
armies of the west a soldier of proven ability and worth, the Vandal
Stilicho, who discharged his office with more loyalty than Arbogast the
Frank. Virtualy the rule of the west was in his hands. While he was
engaged in crushing the dangerous independence of a Moorish prince and
tyrant, Gildo, in Africa, the misrule of prefect Rufinus at
Constantinople brought on a great rebellion of the Visigoths - that
branch of the Gothic race which had settled in Moesia and Illlyria, the
Ostrogoths remaining beyond the Danube - led by Alaric the Balt.
The Goths overran Greece practically unchecked and wrought much
destruction, till the appearance of Stilicho, his work in Africa
accomplished, stayed their conquering career. Alaric was in danger of
being enveloped, but escaped with great skill, and in fact frightened
the court of Constantinople into buying him off by appointing him to the
command in Illyria as an imperial officer.
The Goth accepted the position, but as a stepping stone. Italy was
the objective on which he had fixed his ambitions. The were
miscellaneous and for the most part barbarian troops now at his disposal
were ready to follow him. And in AD 403 Honorius and Italy were
terrified by an apparently wholly unexpected invasion. The genius of
Stilicho, who with amazing energy gathered together troops from every
possible quarter, saved the situation. in the duel between the two great
captains Alaric met with a heavy defeat at Pollentia, and the caution of
the Gothic chiefs compelled him for the time to abandon the contest.
Though the withdrawal of Alaric only left the way open for a fresh
flood of mixed barbarians to pour into Italy in AD 406, under their
chief Ragadaisus. They swept over the plain of the Po, over the
Apennines into Tuscany on their way to wipe out Rome. But while they
delayed to besiege Florence Stilicho again gathered troops in the north,
spread them round the besieging hosts, cut off the supplies of the
barbarians and reduced them by sheer starvation. Radagaisus with a third
of his forces was compelled to capitulate. He himself was slain. The
rest of the horde, Vandals, Sueves, Burgundians, Ostrogoths, Huns and
Alans were deliberately allowed to retreat unmolested across the Alps,
and their various bands were soon spoiling and looting in Gaul on their
way to Spain, reinforced by their respective homelands (AD 406).
Thus it was only Italy that was spared of the invaders, who in AD 407
were harrying Gaul.
And the harrying of Gaul was the excuse for the army of Britain to
proclaim its own Augustus. Constantine III, probably a native Briton,
was raised to the purple and set out to Gaul to save it from the Germans
and add it to his own empire, taking with him a substantial part of the
British garrison. The Vandals, Sueves and Alans, however, did not seek
to remain permanently in Gaul to dispute possession with Constantine,
but took their devastating way through the south to Spain, where they
established themselves.
On the middle Rhine the Burgundians appear to have remained in
effective possession. Constantine III pushed into Spain, established his
dominion in Aragon, and succeeded in extorting from Honorius his own
recognition as a third Augustus.
Constantine's movement to Gaul in AD 407 is commonly referred to as the
Roman evacuation of Britain.
Meanwhile Stilicho's ambitions evidently centred on the relations
between the eastern and the western empires, in both of which he sought
to be the power behind the throne (as he already was in the west).
The key to this position was the possession of the whole of Illyria, and
he meant Alaric to be his agent.
The eastern court had no inclination to be dominated by him, and the
relations between Constantinople and Ravenna (Where for greater security
Honorius had fixed his residence) were strained. Stilicho could not
afford to wholly neglect the rebellion of Constantine III, but he left
him to Alaric, with whom he had made his own bargain, and again Alaric
only took as much action as he considered sufficient.
Early in AD 408 Arcadius, leaving the throne to the six year old
Theodosius II. Almost everyone believed that Stilicho, who had married
the feeble Honorius to his own daughter, meant to make himself emperor.
His enemies formed a plot and gained ascendancy over the mind of
Honorius. At the height of his apparent power, Stilicho was suddenly
arrested, condemned without trial as a brigand and an 'enemy of the
state' and executed. But no evidence of any treasonable designs on his
part was ever forthcoming. Among those most active in his downfall was
Heraclian, who was rewarded by being made Count of Africa.
Stilicho's fall opened the way on one hand to friendly relations with
Constantinople, and on the other to the ambitions of Alaric. It was the
expression of the simmering hostility of Italy towards men of barbarian
blood, in fact the massacre of many of the foreigners in the country,
which gave the Gothic king more than adequate excuse for swooping on
Italy before the year was out.
Alaric marched straight on Rome, ignoring Honorius in Ravenna. The city
was rapidly reduced to starvation, and plague broke out. Alaric demanded
all the treasure within it and all the barbarian slaves.
For a brief period Alaric and Honorius existed alongside each other in
Italy. But in the next year the emperor's evasions irritated the Goth
into setting up the prefect Attalus as puppet emperor.Honorius, however,
was made safe in Ravenna by the arrival of troops from the east. Attalus
was declined to be altogether a puppet and was subsequently deposed.
Further negotiations with Honorius broke down. Alaric lost patience and
on August 24, AD 410 he let loose his Goths and other followers on Rome,
which was sacked for three days.
Though Alaric did not proclaim himself emperor. He ravaged southward,
and was planning an invasion of Africa, the granary of Italy, when at
the end of the year he died.
He was succeeded by his brother-in-law, Athaulf, who abandoned the
designs on Africa.
In AD 412 the Visigoths crossed the Alps into Gaul.
While Athaulf was still lingering in Italy, the empire of Constantine
III was collapsing. It extended from Britain to Aragon. It broke down,
partly owing to the revolt of one of his officers in Spain, Gerontius,
and partly because in AD 411 the place once held by Stilicho was to some
extent filled by another able soldier, Constantius. Gerontius was
besieging Constantine III at Arles, when Constantius intervened on the
hypothesis that both were rebels.
Gerontius retreated to Spain, where he was murdered, Constantius
captured Arles, and with in Constantine III, who was executed. No sooner
had Constantius returned to Italy, which Athaulf was evacuating, then a
new emperor, Jovinus, was proclaimed in Gaul. Yet another complication
arose when in early AD 413 Heraclian, Count of Africa, proclaimed
himself emperor, too. Worse still, Heraclian, having already amassed a
great fleet, sailed for Italy.
Though Heraclian's rebellion proved an utter fiasco. He was captured and
executed in midsummer. But meanwhile it had not been possible for
Constantius and Honorius to take direct action in Gaul. Instead they had
had to bargain with Athaulf, who then crushed Jovinus.
Now the princess Galla Placidia enters the stage. Being the sister of
Honorius she was captured and carried off for bargaining purposes by
Alaric during his sack of Rome. However, the princess had in Constantius
a devoted admirer, who wanted her back. Naturally emperor Honorius also
understood a stain on his honour that his sister should be a hostage of
the barbarians.
It was part of the bargain with Athaulf that should be returned. But the
Roman part of the bargain, the supply of corn to Athaulf's troops, had
been foiled by the rebellion of Heraclian. Consequently Athaulf, instead
of returning the princess, married her himself in AD 414, apparently
with her own willing consent, - but without that of her brother.
The marriage failed to draw Athaulf any closer to the imperial court,
and Athaulf set out with his Goths and his bride to conquer Spain. There
he was murdered in AD 415, and his successor Wallia struck a bargain
with Rome, to make war with the other barbarians in Spain. Placidia was
at last sent back to Ravenna, where she reluctantly accepted the hand of
Constantius.
The Vandals, Alans, and Sueves in Spain hastened to seek peace with the
empire, which they obtained; Wallia and his Visigoths were settled in
Aquitania instead as 'federates'. This meant they occupied most of the
soil upon condition of military service to the empire, under their king.
A similar settlement was made with the Burgundians on the Rhine. In AD
417 Wallia was succeeded by Theodoric I, probably a grandson of Alaric.
The position in Britain by this time is by no means clear.
Constantine III had not left the island denuded of troops but only
depleted. The Roman magistrates and the Roman government did not
disappear, but hey had to make the best they could of the situation,
utilizing their own resources. And the situation became progressively
more difficult was the raids of the unsubdued Picts and Scots on the
north, Irish Celts on the west coast and Saxon rovers on the east and
south coasts increased in intensity and frequency. But many years were
still to pass before the raiders established a permanent footing. In AD
421 Constantius was associated with Honorius as western emperor, but
died after a few months. Princess Placidia quarrelled with her brother,
who had developed an embarrassing affection for her, and retreated with
her small children to Constantinople. Honorius, after a reign of
twenty-five years, during which nothing whatever is recorded to his
credit, died at the age of forty in AD 423.
John
Johannes
birthdate and place unknown. Became emperor in AD 423.
Died May/June AD 425.
John
The obvious successor to Honorius was Placidia's child Valentian III,
but a usurper named John, a rival of no particular merit, had to be
suppressed before Placidia could effectively take up the regency in AD
425.
Valentinian III
Flavius Placidus ValentinianusJohannes
born AD 419. Became emperor in AD 425. Wife: Licinia
Eudoxia (one daughter; Placidia). Died 16 March AD 455.
Valentinian III
The leading figure in the west, however, for nearly thirty years to
come was Aetius (AD395-454), a native of Moesia, but of Italian descent.
He possessed Gothic connections, his wife being of noble Gothic house,
and Hun connections because he had passed long time as a hostage among
the Huns.
When John the usurper was overthrown, Aetius had been engaged in
bringing a Hun force to his aid. But on John's death, Aetius made his
peace with a reluctant Placidia, and was entrusted with the rule of
Gaul, where he checked the aggressive expansion of the Burgundian
Gunther in the east and the Goth Theodoric in the west and south, as
well as the Salian Franks on the Scheldt.
But the most notable movement during Placidia's regency was that of
the Vandal-Alan group which had taken possession of southern Spain. In
AD 428 Boniface the Count of Africa, had broken with the imperial
government, and invited the help of the Vandals in his own ambitious
projects. Africa offered a more promising field than Spain. The Vandals,
led by their crafty and able King Geiseric, crossed to Africa and
proceeded to ravage Mauretania in a merciless fashion.
This was not what Boniface had intended. He returned to his allegiance
to Rome, but when he fought the Vandals he was so heavily defeated that
he threw up the contest and retired to Italy, where his rivalry with
Aetius brought about an armed conflict in which he was killed (AD 432),
while the entire province of Africa was at the mercy of Geiseric. The
position in Gaul was too critical to permit a reconquest of Africa. But
Geiseric was quite ready to make peace in AD 435, on terms which left
him practically master of Mauretania and part of Numidia.
In his conflict with Boniface, Aetius was in actual rebellion. But his
rival's fall restored his ascendancy, which became a virtual supremacy
when Placidia had to surrender the regency on the marriage of
Valentinian III, at eighteen to his cousin Licina Eudoxia at
Constantinople in AD 437. The treaty had no sooner been made with the
Vandals, then Aetis found himself forced to curb first the Burgundians
and then the Visigoths. The former he broke by calling in aid from the
Huns, with whose King Rugila he had always been on the most friendly
terms. The Visigoths, who aimed at establishing themselves at the
Mediterranean coast, were pushed back into Aquitania. But, stretched as
he was, Aetius could not spare the forces to check the continued
aggression of the Vandals in Africa.
So the Vandal Geiseric, inspite of the treaty of AD 435, extended his
African dominion will he won Carthage. Then, satisfied of the weakness
of Italy, he collected a fleet and attacked Sicily.
The menace brought the eastern empire to the aid of the west. The
arrival of the eastern fleet, saw Geiseric willing to peacefully
withdraw from Sicily, returning to Carthage in AD 442.
Had the Hun King Rugila died in AD 434 then his two nephews jointly
inherited his powers. On of those sons, Attila, in AD 441 had attacked
the eastern empire, overrunning the Balkans and devastating all he came
across. Constantinople itself was not attempted, as it was deemed
impregnable. In AD 443 Theodosius II came to terms, doubling his annual
subsidy to Attila and agreeing to a no-man's-land between the two
empires. The conflict erupted again in AD 447, only to be halted in AD
449 with unchanged conditions. In AD 450 Theodosius II died, succeeded
by the able Marcian.
But this was no longer of interest to Attila who now had his eyes set on
the west.
A curious episode had perhaps determined Attila's course. The court at
Ravenna proposed to marry Valentinian III's sister Honoria to a safe and
distinguished but elderly husband. She objected and sent secretly to the
mighty Hun, inviting him to rescue her.
Attila accepted the message as a betrothal and claimed his bride and
half her brother's empire as a dowry (AD 450). Valentinian III raged and
rejected the demand. Meanwhile Attila marched on Gaul. He told Ravenna
that he was coming to save the Romans from the Goths and he told the
Goths that he was coming to join them against the Romans. But the
diplomacy of Aelius and the intelligence of Theodoric sufficed to
combine Romans and Visigoths against the Hun.
Attila swept, devastating all in his path, over the Gallic frontier,
with Orléans (the city of Aurelius) as his objective. Theodoric effected
a junction with Aetius; Attila began to retreat, though turned near
Châlons, and suffered a crushing defeat (AD 451), while Theodoric
himself was killed. Though already in the next year Attila was back,
this time throwing himself at Italy to enforce his demand for Honoria's
hand. Aetius, faced with a hugely superior foe, could not afford a
pitched battle, leaving Atilla to destroy Aquileia, before marching on
Rome. Tradition says that Attila was finally overawed by Pope Leo,
another story says that the plague broke out in his camp, at any rate,
Rome was miraculously delivered from the Hun as he suddenly withdrew
without a fight.
In 453 Attila died and the whole terrifying, flimsy fabric of his
empire dissolved. the Huns were helpless without a head. Ostrogoths,
Gepids, Rugians, Herulians arose and overwhelmed them at the battle of
Nedao in Pannonia in AD 454.
Aetius, often referred to as 'the last of the Romans', met
with the same reward as Stilicho the Vandal. The mind of the emperor was
poisoned against him and he was charged with treason and was slain by
emperor Valentinian III himself in AD 455.
Petronius Maximus
Flavius Petronius Maximus
born in AD ca. 396. Became emperor March AD 455. Died at
Rome, 31 May AD 455.
Petronius Maximus
When Valentinian III was murdered in the same year, Maximus bought
the crown and forced the widowed Eudoxia to marry him.
Geiseric the Vandal - summoned to by the widowed empress - arrived two
months later with a fleet. The mob tore Maximus limb from limb, which
though did not prevent Geiseric from occupying Rome, sacking it with
methodical and conscientious thoroughness, and retiring with a host of
captives, including Eudoxia and her two daughters, the younger of whom
he married to his son Hunseric.
Avitus
Marcus Maecilius Flavius Eparchius Avitus
born in Gaul. Consul AD 456. Became emperor 9 July AD
455. Died on way to the Alps from Placentia, AD 456.
Avitus
A few weeks later a new emperor was proclaimed by the Goths at Tolosa
(Toulouse), Avitus, the lieutenant of the Aetius, who had been
instrumental in forming the alliance between Romans and Goths against
Attila.
Marcian in the east and Avitus in the west both threatened Geiseric ,
who defied them both. Avitus dispatched his armies under the generalship
of Ricimer, a Sueve and grandson of the Visigoth Wallia, and Ricimer won
a naval victory over the Vandals.
Meanwhile Theodoric II, posing as imperial champion, attacked the
Sueves in Spain, breaking but not destroying their power. Avitus was
bound closely to the Goths, while Italy detested them - and Ricimer was
a Sueve !
Avitus had to beat a hasty retreat from Italy. Ricimer set up the Roman
Majorian, an officer of distinction, as emperor, and the deposed Avitus
was consoled with a bishopric AD 457).
Majorian
Julius Valerius Majorianus
Became emperor 1 April AD 457. Died on 7 August AD 461 at
Dertona.
Majorian
Majorian bestowed on Ricimer the title of Patrician - in effect first
minister - which had already been borne by Stilicho, Constantius and
Aetius before him.
Majorian declined to be Ricimer's puppet, but the fleet he collected
against the Vandals met with disaster, giving Ricimer sufficient excuse
to depose him.
In his place the puppet emperor Libius Severus was set up.
Libius Severus
Libius Severus
Became emperor AD 461. Died on 14 November AD 465 at
Dertona.
Libius Severus
Though Libius Severus soon died and for a time there was no emperor,
save Leo at Constantinople. In AD 467 Leo appointed the Greek Anthemius,
son-in-law of Marcian, as western Augustus.
Anthemius
Procopius Anthemius
born in Galatia. Consul AD 455. Became emperor AD 467.
Wife: Euphemia (a daughter; Alypia). Died on March/April AD 472 at Rome.
Anthemius
Ricimer was placated by receiving the new emperor's daughter to wife.
Then east and west combined to crush the Vandals who were masters of the
Mediterranean. Though Geiseric once more managed to keep the upper hand
and the joint Roman fleet under Basiliscus met with disaster in AD 468.
With the Vandal controlling the sea, he consequently held
Mediterranean commerce at his mercy.
Meanwhile the Visigoths, under Euric, were bringing southern Gaul under
their control. Britain had slipped away, Jutes and Saxons taking a grip
of her. The same fate was befalling northern Gaul. To the east of Gaul
the Burgundian kingdom was gathering ever more strength.
In AD 472 Ricimer resolved to depose Anthemius, having proclaimed
Olybrius (husband of the elder daughter of Valentinian III) emperor in
his place.
Olybrius
Anicius Olybrius
Became emperor March/April AD 472. Wife: Placidia (one
daughter; Juliana Anicia). Died November AD 472.
Olybrius
Anthemius was captured and put to death. But within a few weeks
Ricimer himself died.
For a time his place was taken by his Burgundian nephew Gundobad.
Olybrius died, and after some delay in AD 473 Gundobad set up a puppet
emperor, Glycerius, whom Leo in Constantinople declined to recognize.
Glycerius
Glycerius
Became emperor March AD 473. Deposed by Julius Nepos AD
474.
Glycerius
So Gundobad returned to Burgundy and Leo proclaimed Julius Nepos
emperor in AD 474.
Though already the following year Julius Nepos was a fugitive from
Rome, ejected by his 'master of the soldiers', Orestes, who made his own
son, contemptuously known as Romulus 'Augustulus', emperor.
Romulus Augustus
Romulus Augustus
Became emperor 31 October AD 475. Abdicated 4 September
AD 476. Date of death unknown.
Romulus Augustus
At the same time Zeno, the successor to Leo, was a fugitive from
Constantinople, ejected by Basiliscus. Both usurpers fell in AD 476. In
the east Zeno was restored, but in the west the Germanic mercenary
Odoacer seized power.
Odoacer chose not to be Augustus himself, nor to serve another
western Augustus, but to be the viceroy of one Roman emperor in
Constantinople.