CHAP.
V.
Of
the Kingdoms represented by the
feet
of the Image composed of iron
and
clay.
DACIA
was a large country bounded on the south by the Danube, on the
east by the Euxine sea, on the north by the river Neister
and the mountain Crapac, and on the west by the river Tibesis,
or Teys, which runs southward into the Danube a little
above Belgrade. It comprehended the countries now called
Transylvania, Moldavia, and Wallachia, and the
eastern part of the upper Hungary. Its antient inhabitants
were called Getae by the Greeks, Daci by the
Latins, and Goths by themselves. Alexander the
great attacked them, and Trajan conquered them, and reduced
their country into a Province of the Roman Empire: and thereby
the propagation of the Gospel among them was much promoted. They were
composed of several Gothic nations, called Ostrogoths,
Visigoths, Vandals, Gepides, Lombards,
Burgundians, Alans, &c. who all agreed in their
manners, and spake the same language, [34] as Procopius
represents. While they lived under the Romans, the
Goths
or Ostrogoths were seated in the eastern parts of Dacia,
the Vandals in the western part upon the river Teys,
where the rivers Maresh and Keresh run into it. The
Visigoths were between them. The Gepides, according to
Jornandes, were upon the Vistula. The Burgundians,
a Vandalic nation, were between the Vistula and the
southern fountain of the Boristhenes, at some distance from
the mountain Crapac northwards, where Ptolemy places
them, by the names of Phrugundiones and Burgiones.
[Procop. l. 1. de Bello Vandalico.] The Alans, another Gothic
nation, were between the northern fountain of the Boristhenes
and the mouth of the river Tanais, where Ptolemy placeth the mountain
Alanus, and western side of the Palus Maeotis.
These
nations continued under the dominion of the Romans till the
second year of the Emperor Philip, and then for want of their
military pay began to revolt; the Ostrogoths setting up a
kingdom, which, under their Kings Ostrogotha, Cniva,
Araric, Geperic, and Hermanaric, increased till
the year of Christ 376; and then by an incursion of the Huns
from beyond the Tanais, and the death of Hermanaric,
brake into several smaller kingdoms. Hunnimund, the son of
Hermanaric, became King over the Ostrogoths; Fridigern
over the Visigoths; Winithar, [35] or Vinithar,
over a part of the Goths called Gruthungi by Ammian,
Gothunni by Claudian, and Sarmatae and Scythians
by others: Athanaric reign’d over another part of the
Goths in Dacia, called Thervingi; Box
over the Antes in Sarmatia; and the Gepides had
also their King. The Vandals fled over the Danube from
Geberic in the latter end of the reign of Constantine
the great, and had seats granted them in Pannonia by that
Emperor, where they lived quietly forty years, viz. till the
year 377, when several Gothic nations flying from the Hunns
came over the Danube, and had seats granted them in Maesia
and Thrace by the Greek Emperor Valens. But the
next year they revolted, called in some Goths, Alans
and Hunns, from beyond the Danube, and routed the Roman
army, slew the Emperor Valens, and spread themselves into
Greece and Pannonia as far as the Alps. In the
years 379 and 380 they were checked by the arms of the Emperors
Gratian and Theodosius, and made a submissive peace;
the Visigoths and Thervingi returned to their seats in
Maesia and Thrace, the Hunns retired over the
Danube, and the Alans and Gruthingi obtained
seats in Pannonia.
About
the year 373, or 374, the Burgundians rose from their seats
upon the Vistula, with an army of eighty thousand men to
invade Gallia; [36] and being opposed, seated
themselves upon the northern side of the Rhine over against
Mentz. In the year 358, a body of the Salian Franks,
with their King, coming from the river Sala, were received
into the Empire by the Emperor Julian, and seated in Gallia
between Brabant and the Rhine: and their King
Mellobaudes was made Comes domesticorumi
by the Emperor Gratian. Richomer, another noble Salian
Frank, was made Comes domesticorum,ii
and Magister utriusque Militae,iii
by Theodosius; and A. C. 384, was Consul with Clearchus.
He was a great favourite of Theodosius, and accompanied him in
his wars against Eugenius, but died in the expedition, and
left a son called Theudomir, who afterwards became King of the
Salian Franks in Brabant. In the time of this war some
Franks from beyond the Rhine invaded Gallia
under the conduct of Genobald, Marcomir and Suno,
but were repulsed by Stilico; and Marcomir being slain,
was succeeded in Germany by his son Pharamond.
While
these nations remained quiet within the Empire, subject to the
Romans, many others continued so beyond the Danube till
the death of the Emperor Theodosius, and then rose up in arms.
For Paulus Diaconus in his Historia Miscell. lib. xiv.
speaking of the times next after the death of this Emperor, tells us:
Eodem tempore [37] erant Gothi & aliae gentes
maximae trans Danubium habitantes: ex quibus rationabiliores
quatuor sunt, Gothi scilicet, Huisogothi, Gepides
& Vandali; & nomen tantum & nohil aliud mutantes.
Isti sub Arcadio & Honorio Danubium transeuntes, locati
sunt in terra Romanorum: & Gepides quidem, ex
quibus postae divisi sunt Longobardi & Avares, villas,
quae sunt circa Singidonum & Sirmium, habitavere:iv
and Procopius in the beginning of his Historia Vandalica
writes to the same purpose. Hitherto the Western Empire
continued entire, but now brake into many kingdoms.
Theodosius
died A. C. 395; and then the Visigoths, under the conduct of
Alaric the successor of Fridigern, rose from their
seats in Thrace, and wasted Macedon, Thessaly,
Achaia, Peloponnesus, and Epirus, with fire and
sword for five years together; when turning westward, they invaded
Dalmatia, Illyricum and Pannonia; and from
thence went into Italy A. C. 402; and the next year were so
beaten at Pollentia and Verona, by Stilico the
commander of the forces of the Western Empire, that
Claudian calls the remainder of the forces of Alaric,
tanta ex gente reliquias breves,v
and Prudentius, Gentem deletam.vi
Thereupon Alaric made peace with the Emperor, being so far
humbled, that Orosius saith, he did, pro pace optima &
quibuscunque sedibus [38] suppliciter & simpliciter
orare.vii
This peace was ratified by mutual hostages; Aetius was sent
hostage to Alaric; and Alaric continued a free Prince
in the seats now granted to him.
When
Alaric took up arms, the nations beyond the Danube
began to be in motion; and the next winter, between A. C. 395 and
396, a great body of Hunns, Alans, Ostrogoths,
Gepides, and other northern nations, came over the frozen
Danube, being invited by Rufinus: when their brethren,
who had obtained seats within the Empire, took up arms also. Jerome
calls this great multitude, Hunns, Alans, Vandals,
Goths, Sarmatians, Quades, and Marcomans;
and saith, that they invaded all places between Constantinople
and the Julian Alps, wasting Scythia, Thrace,
Macedon, Dardania, Dacia, Thessaly,
Achaia, Epirus, Dalmatia, and all Pannonia.
The Suevians also invaded Rhaetia: for when Alaric
ravaged Pannonia, the Romans were defending Rhaetia;
which gave Alaric an opportunity of invading Italy, as
Claudian thus mentions.
Non
nisis perfidiâ nacti penetrabile tempus,
Irrupere
Getae, nostras dum Rhaetia vires
Occupat,
atque alio desudant Marte cohortes.viii
[39]
And when Alaric went from those parts into Italy, some
other barbarous nations invaded Noricum and Vindelicia,
as the same Poet Claudian thus writes:
——
Jam
foedera gentes
Exuerant,
Latiique auditâ clade feroces
Vendelicos
saltus & Norica rura tenebant.ix
This
was in the years 402 and 403. And among these nations I reckon the
Suevians, Quades, and Marcomans; for they were
all in arms at this time. The Quades and Marcomans were
Suevian nations; and they and the Suevians came
originally from Bohemia, and the river Suevus or Sprake
in Lusatia; and were now united under one common King called
Ermeric, who soon after led them into Gallia. The
Vandals and Alans might also about this time extend
themselves into Noricum. Uldin also with a great body
of Hunns passed the Danube about the time of
Chrysostom’s banishment, that is, A. C. 404, and wasted
Thrace and Maesia. Radagaisus, King of the
Gruthunni and successor of Winithar, inviting over more
barbarians from beyond the Danube, invaded Italy with
an army of above two hundred thousand Goths; and within a year
or two, A. C. 405 or 406., was overcome by Stilico, [40]
and perished with his army. In this war Stilico was assisted
with a great body of Hunns and Ostrogoths, under the
conduct of Uldin and Sarus, who were hired by the
Emperor Honorius. In all this confusion it was necessary for
the Lombards in Pannonia to arm themselves in their own
defence, and assert their liberty, the Romans being no longer
able to protect them.
And
now Stilico purposing to make himself Emperor, procured a
military prefecture for Alaric, and sent him into the East
in the service of Honorius, the Western Emperor,
committing some Roman troops to his conduct to strengthen his
army of Goths, and promising to follow soon after with his own
army. His pretence was to recover some regions of Illyricum,
which the Eastern Emperor was accused to detain injuriously
from the Western; but his secret design was to make himself
Emperor, by the assistance of the Vandals and their allies:
for he himself was a Vandal. For facilitating this design, he
invited a great body of the barbarous nations to invade the Western
Empire, while he and Alaric invaded the Eastern.
And these nations under their several Kings, the Vandals under
Godegisilus, the Alans in two bodies, the one under
Goar, the other under Resplendial, and the Suevians,
Quades, and Marcomans, under Ermeric, marched
thro’ Rhaetia to the side of the Rhine, [41]
leaving their seats in Pannonia to the Hunns and
Ostrogoths, and joined the Burgundians under Gundicar,
and ruffled the Franks in their further march. On the last of
December A. C. 406, they passed the Rhine at Ments,
and spread themselves into Germania prima and the
adjacent regions; and amongst other actions the Vandals took
Triers. Then they advanced into Belgium, and began to
waste that country. Whereupon the Salian Franks in
Brabant took up arms, and under the conduct of Theudomir,
the son of Ricimer, or Richomer, abovementioned, made
so stout a resistance, that they slew almost twenty thousand of the
Vandals, with their King Godegesilus, in battel; the
rest escaping only by a party of Resplendial’s Alans
which came timely to their assistance.
Then
the British soldiers, alarm’d by the rumour of these
things, revolted, and set up Tyrants there; first Marcus, whom
they slew presently; then Gratian, whom they slew within four
months; and lastly Constantine, under whom they invaded Gallia
A. C. 408, being favoured by Goar and Gundicar. And
Constantine having possessed a good part of Gallia,
created his son Constans Caesar, and sent him into
Spain to order his affairs there, A. C. 409.
In
the mean time Resplendial, seeing the aforesaid disaster of
the Vandals, and that Goar [42] was gone over to
the Romans, led his army from the Rhine; and, together
with the Suevians and residue of the Vandals, went
towards Spain; the Franks in the mean time prosecuting
their victory so far as to retake Triers, which after they had
plundered they left to the Romans. The Barbarians were
at first stopt by the Pyrenean mountains, which made them
spread themselves into Aquitain: but the next year they had
the passage betrayed by some soldiers of Constans; and entring
Spain 4 Kal. Octob. A. C. 409, they conquered every one
what he could; and at length, A. C. 411, divided their conquests by
lot; the Vandals obtained Boetica, and part of
Gallaecia; the Suevians the rest of Gallaecia;
and the Alans Lusitania and the Carthaginian
Province: the Emperor for the sake of peace confirming them in those
seats by grant A. C. 413.
The
Roman Franks abovementioned, having made Theudomir
their King, began strait after their conquest of the Vandals
to invade their neighbours also. The first they set upon were the
Gauls of Brabant [Galli Arborici: whence the region
was named Arboricbant, and by contraction Brabant]: but
meeting with notable resistance, they desired their alliance: and so
those Gauls fell off from the Romans, and made an
intimate league with the Franks to be as one people, marrying
with one [43] another, and conforming to one another’s
manners, till they became one without distinction. Thus by the access
of these Gauls, and of the foreign Franks also, who
afterwards came over the Rhine, the Salian kingdom soon
grew very great and powerful.
Stilico’s
expedition against the Greek Emperor was stopt by the order of
Honorius; and then Alaric came out of Epirus
into Noricum, and requested a sum of money for his service.
The Senate were inclined to deny him, but by Stilico’s
mediation granted it. But after some time Stilico being
accused of a traiterous conspiracy with Alaric, and slain 10
Kal. Sept. A. C. 408; Alaric was thereby disappointed
of his money, and reputed an enemy to the Empire; he then broke
strait into Italy with the army he brought out of Epirus,
and sent to his brother Adolphus to follow him with what
forces he had in Pannonia, which were not great, but yet not
to be despised. Thereupon Honorius fearing to be shut up in
Rome, retired to Ravenna in October A. C. 408.
And from that time Ravenna continued to be the seat of the
Western Emperors. In those days the Hunns also invaded
Pannonia; and seizing the deserted seats of the Vandals,
Alans, and Goths, founded a new kingdom there. Alaric
advancing to Rome besieged it, [44] and 9 Kal. Sept.
A. C. 410 took it: and afterwards attempting to pass into Africa,
was shipwrackt. After which Honorius made peace with him and
got up an army to send against the Tyrant Constantine.
At
the same time Gerontius, one of Constantine’s
captains, revolted from him, and set up Maximus Emperor in
Spain. Whereupon Constantine sent Edobec,
another of his captains, to draw to his assistance, the Barbarians
under Goar and Gundicar in Gallia, and supplies
of Franks and Alemans from beyond the Rhine; and
committed the custody of Vienne in Gallia Narbonensis
to his son Constans. Gerontius advancing, first slew
Constans at Vienne, and then began to besiege
Constantine at Arles. But Honorius at the same
time sending Constantius with an army on the same errand,
Gerontius fled, and Constantius continued the siege,
strengthned by the access of the greatest part of the soldiers of
Gerontius. After four months siege, Edobec having
procured succours, the Barbarian Kings at Ments, Goar
and Gundicar, constitute Jovinus Emperor, and together
with him set forward to relieve Arles. At their approach
Constantius retired. They pursued, and he beat them by
surprize; but not prosecuting his victory, the Barbarians soon
recovered themselves; yet not so as to hinder the fall of the tyrants
Constantine, Jovinus [45] and Maximus.
Britain could not be recovered to the Empire, but remained
ever after a distinct kingdom.
The
next year, A. C. 412, the Visigoths being beaten in Italy,
had Aquitain granted them to retire into: and they invaded it
with much violence, causing the Alans and Burgundians
to retreat, who were then depopulating of it. At the same time the
Burgundians were brought to peace; and the Emperor granted
them for inheritance a region upon the Rhine which they had
invaded: and the same, I presume, he did with the Alans. But
the Franks not long after retaking and burning Triers,
Castinus, A. C. 415, was sent against them with an army, who
routed them and slew Theudomir their King. This was the second
taking of Triers by the Franks. It was therefore taken
four times, once by the Vandals and thrice by the Franks.
Theudomir was succeeded by Pharamond, the Prince or
King of the Salian Franks in Germany. From thence he
brought new forces, reigned over the whole, and had seats granted to
his people within the Empire near the Rhine.
And
now the Barbarians were all quieted, and settled in several
kingdoms within the Empire, not only by conquest, but also by the
grants of the Emperor Honorius. For Rutilius in his
Itinerary, written in Autumn, Anno [46] Urbis
1169, that is, according to Varro’s computation then in
use, A. C. 416, thus laments the wasted fields:
Illa
quidem longis nimium deformia bellis;x
And
then adds,
Jam
tempus laceris post longa incendia fundis
Vel
pastorales aedificare casas.xi
And
a little after,
Aeternum
tibi Rhenus aret.xii
And
Orosius in the end of his history, which was finished A. C.
417, represents now a general pacification of the barbarous nations
by the words comprimere, coangustare, addicere
gentes immanissimas;xiii
terming them imperio addicta,xiv
because they had obtained seats in the Empire by league and compact;
and coangustatas,xv
because they did no longer invade all regions at pleasure, but by the
same compact remained quiet in the seats then granted them. And these
are the kingdoms, of which the feet of the Image were henceforward
composed, and which are represented by iron and clay intermixed,
which did not stick one to another, and were of different strength.
i
1922: Comptroller of the Household.
ii
1922: Comptroller of the Household.
iii
1922: Count of the Horse and Foot.
iv
1922: At that time there were Goths and other powerful tribes
dwelling beyond the Danube. but of these the more important
are four, viz. the Goths, Huisogoths, the Gepides,
and the Vandals. The sole difference between them being one
of name and nothing else. In the days of Arcadius and
Honorius they crossed the Danube and settled in Roman
territory, and the Gepides from whom afterwards the
Longobards and Avares sprang as distinct peoples,
inhabited the country districts surrounding Singido and
Sermium.
v
1922: the scanty remnants of a mighty nation.
vi
1922: calls them an annihilated nation.
vii
1922: humbly and sincerely entreat him for the blessings of peace,
and whatsoever dwelling places seemed to him good.
viii
1922: By treachery alone, did the Getae gain the opportunity
for invasion and burst in upon us, while our forces were held fast
in Rhaetia, and our cohorts were struggling in a distant
field.
ix
1922: —— Already the tribes had discarded their pact;
and the Latians fierce at the noise of that misfortune were
defending the passes of Vindelicia and the fields of Noricum.
x
1922: Lo, yonder fields, all too deformed with war’s long
stay.
xi
1922: Now ’tis time, after war’s long conflagrations,
upon the devastated farms to build huts for shepherds.
xii
1922: May the dweller by the Rhine, ne’er again leave his
ploughing.
xiii
1922: suppress, drive to bay, subdue tribes of the utmost barbarity.
xiv
1922: subdued to the Empire.