CORNELL UNIVERSITY LIBRARY FROM Date Due MQ^B ^^ ^ea:^ 3 1924 027 936 651 The original of tliis bool< is in tine Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924027936651 THE FALL OF EOME, AND THE EISE OF THE NEW NATIONALITIES. ON THE CONNECTION BETWEEN ANCIENT AND MODERN HISTOEY. BY JOHN G. §HEPPAED, D.C.L. SOMETIME FELLOW OF WADHAK COLLEGE, OXFOBD, AlTD HEAD ULSTER OF EIDDERMINSIEB SCHOOL. "Die Weltgeschlchte 1st das Weltgeilcht." SCHILLES. LONDON GEOEGE ROUTLEDGB AND SONS, Limited BROADWAY, LUDGATE HILL MANCHESTER AND NEW YORK 1892 A. \.2.o<^lc7^ ERINTED BY WILLIAM CLOWES AND SONS, LIMITED, STAMFOED STREET AND CHARING CR09S. PREFACE. An important Ustorical work is its own best introduction. This is not the case with books which are about history, rather than history itself. These require some explanation of the^r purpose and method, for they may deal with a matter in which the reader feels an interest, yet in a manner displeasing to his taste or foreign to his purposes as a stu- dent. I shall therefore explain, in as few words as possible, what I have endeavoured to do in these Lectures, and why I have endeavoured to do it. Our Universities of late have extended their field of his- torical study, and, whether as r. cause or consequence of the fact, the general public has begun to feel an interest in persons and times concerning which it was formerly well content to remain in ignorance. One of these periods, it has seemed to me, is, or must necessarily very soon be, that critical and cardinal period during which the old-world Civilization broke up, and the new Civilization had its birth. When a man devotes his time and thoughts to any particular subject, he is sure to form large ideas of its importance. Every one exaggerates his own specialUe ; and this is doubtless the case with myself Yet I cannot but think that most historical students wUl agree with the remark of a distinguished living historian, — " La dissolution de I'Empire romain d'Occident se rattache iv PEEFACE. aux origines de I'Europe moderne par le lien logique le plus 6troit, celui de la cause h I'effet ; et pourtant qui de nous en sait rhistoire?"* To make a humble contribution to the better understanding of this transitional period is the object of the folio-wing pages. I have said a " better understand- ing," not because I am presumptuous enough to attempt an improvement upon what Gibbon, Hallam, Milman, Stephen, Sismondi, Michelet, Guizot, Thierry, and other illustrious men, have written upon this important era, but becausa I trust that the ordinary reader, and also the young student, may be induced, by what they find here, to turn to those more formidable because more voluminous pages, and that in this way the knowledge of history may be generally extended. I pretend to no higher office than that of fur- nishing an introduction to these great names and these great works. But I have attempted to do so in this special way, because experience convinces me that without some atten- tion to detail in dealing with persons and events, persons and events pass away from the memory like the names and dates of a chronological table, and leave behind in the mind no living image' of the time. " Les details sont I'ame de I'histoire." t It has not, therefore, been my ambition to rival or add to the large number of Outlines, Landmarks, Abridgements, Analyses, and other forms of historical precis many of them exceedingly well executed — ^which are already before the public. I have rather attempted such a combination of narrative, anecdote, and disquisition, as seemed best adapted to create interest, and to convey that sort of information which would induce the student to seek for more. To this the objection may be made, that the method is superficial • * Am6dfe Thierry, K^oits de I'HiBtoire Romaiue. t Ibid. PREFACE. V and on this question Criticism has a fair right to pronounce its judgment without remonstrance on the part of him who adopts the method. Yet I will venture to hope, that what is imperfect is not necessarily superficial. As a matter of simple duty and good faith, I have done my best, by study of the original authorities, when accessible, to avoid that sort of superficiality which mis-states facts and misjudges men, or 'which builds up theories without examining the ground upon which they rest. To write a learned and pro- found book, even were I possessed of the ability, I do. not enjoy the needful opportunities, and certainly do not make the pretence. But I trust that I may conscientiously ask credit for honesty and industry in my work, so far as it goes. And in reference to the class of persons for whom it is mainly intended, I must declare my conviction that, prac- tically speaking, the alternative is not between profound and superficial knowledge, but between imperfect knowledge and no knowledge at all. If there shou!l-_be found any critic whose mind is so sternly constituted as to maintain that the latter is the preferable condition of the wo, I would remind him how imperfect, after all, is the histcTical knowledge of the most learned among us, and how needi '•1 are small beginnings even for the accomplishment of the greatest results. There may be an unfavourable judgment of another kind ; one which allows the propriety of the plan adopted, but condemns the defects in its execution. Such a judgment I have no right to deprecate or dispute. The excuse some- times made by members of my own profession, that they have none but spare hours and exhausted energies to bestow upon their task, though painfully true, has never appeared a 2 VI PBBFACE. to me legitimate. It is an excellent excuse for not writing a boot at all ; it is no excuse for writing a bad one. I shall not, therefore, plead it here ; but the fact may, at least, prove thus much : any want of success on my part is no argument against the utility or possibility of the labour I have undertaken. One possessed of leisure and University opportunities may achieve a signal success where an over- tasked schoolmaster, "Parnassoprocul et PermessidlT.ymph&," has signally failed. Few critics, at any rate, will feel so strongly as myself — because few have so long laboured in the same field — that the work which has been here done, might be much better done by many of those who possess the larger facilities for historical study which residence at the Universities confers.* I am by this reminded to say, though with much diffi-- dence, a few words respecting a matter upon which I have been requested to express an opinion. How far would it be possible to t'.ca^ the period of History here reviewed as a subject of University study ; under what head should such study be classified ; and what are the best instruments for iti prosecution ? These considerations involve several questions, and among them the much-controverted question as to the limits of Ancient, Mediaeval, and Modern History. I must confess myself one of those who do not believe — with a single exception — in the possibility of affixing any such limits at all. When, as Professor Owen tells us, it is im- possible to draw the line of exact demarcation between * It is right to explain that the subject o£ our own History has been left to a fellow-labourer, whose work appears contemporaneously — " The History of England, by the Eev. James White." Eoutledge & Co. PEEFACE. vii the animal and vegetable kingdoms ; when no man can accurately separate j'outh from age, or approximate to a physiological division of human Ufe, is it probable that we shall successfully effect such a division in reference to a s\ibject-matter which exhibits so close an analogy to the life of the individual, — the life, that is to say, of that com- bination of individuals which we call a "People;" or the aggregate life of all these in common, which forms the history of the world ? One thing is certain : no distinction founded simply upon' the processes of time will satisfy the needful conditions of such a division. ' The Modern cannot be separated from the Ancient simply by a reference to chronology. That which, in itself, or in its direct results, lives on into the Present, belongs to Modern History ; that which has perished with the Past belongs to Ancient History, even though of later date than the former. It is, of course, exceedingly difficult to determine what institutions and events have left an operative influence behind them, and what have not, — to point out those which are, so to speak, still visible in their living representatives, and those which have passed away without a memorial or an heir. But the inroads of the Huns and Vandals ilpon the provinces of the Empire can surely not have the same connection with Modem History as the passage of the Rhine by the Pranks, or the settlement of the Saxons in Britain, even though the events may have been nearly contemporaneous. The intrigues of Byzantine eunuchs, and the factions of the Hippo- drome, cannot be forced by a rigid synchronism into the same diviirx)!!- of -History as the rise of Representative institutions. We a-e still living under arrangements of viii PREFACE. Charch Government which existed side by side with the executive machinery of Roman imperialism ; yet Eoman imperialism is a thing of the Past, and Church Government is a living question. There is assuredly an event which was, in more than one sense, the new birthday of Humanity, and which, therefore, ■ may be said to have terminated Ancient History. But if our prejudices induce us to extend that name beyond the Christian era, then it is impossible to place our finger upon ' any other event, — as, for instance, the fall of Constantinople, — and to say, "There Ancient or Mediaeval History ceases, and Modern History begins." But, for all practical purposes, I venture to think that such divisions as will suit the requirements of study and teaching, may easily be made. One part of the great World- drama finds, as we have said, its natural conclusion in the coming of Christ, and the contemporaneous birth of the Empire and the Church. The next period, if we take a simply secular view of the subject, is clearly enough defined by the establishment of the Empire of Charlemagne. The stream of history is a metaphor as old as History itself. Following out the same metaphor, we may say, that the waters which had been rushing through a hundred channels and descending from a hundred hills, gathered, in the Em- pire of Charlemagne, into a single mighty lake, from which, at his death, they burst forth in the great rivers which represent the nationalities of modern Europe. The next period closes with the Reformation, the Thirty Years' War, and the Peace of Westphalia. The third finds its catastrophe in the French Revolution-, ard the Fall of Napoleon I. We are living in the foarth. How far these PREFACE. ix three last periods can be treated as one single whole, — how far, for instance, they can form a fit subject for the teaching of a single Professorship, — it is not for me dog- matically to pronounce. I will only venture to express a humble opinion that they cannot be satisfactorily so com- prised. With regard to the text-books to be employed in the study of that particular portion of history of which these pages treat, there is nothing which can be placed in comparison with the great work of Gibbon. Subsequent writers have hewn their materials from the gigantic quarry of the Decline and FaU, as the mediaeval Romans built the^ palaces with J^ - stones of the Flavian Amphitheatre. Yet the student of our own age will feel deeply the need of BOraS corrective to the tone of a work which, with all its learning imd elo- quence, embodies so much of the spirit of another century. The gorgeous magnificence of Gibbon's style is, after all, but the pomp of a funeral procession. It celebrates the obse- quies of a dying world; but there is no voice beside J;he grave to whisper hope beyond, — the hope of another and brighter future for Humanity, when the discords of the old society shall have given place to a principle of unity and universality, which, despite the diversities which agitate its surface, underlies, we earnestly believe, the new society, — the principle of the Fatherhood of the Chris- '■va. God, and the brotherhood of Christian men. Under this • the following pages have been written, and very ^e my reward if they in any way serve to inspire "t with the same sentiment. In the mean xhort him to the study of the original uperfect acquaintance with them X PREFACE. convinces me that much may be gathered from their pages which hks escaped Gibbon, or even the best and ablest of his successors, M. Am6d6e Thierry. Some I have very carefully examined, — Ammianus Marcellinus, Jor- nandes de rebus Geticis, the Gothic and Vandal Wars of Procopius, Claudian, Prudentius, and, above all, the letters and poems of Sidonius ApoUinaris, without a knowledge of which it is not too much to say no one can thoroughly understand the age. There is no reason why these, or some of these, might not be treated as the University treats Livy, Virgil, and Thucydides. The sources from which their infor- mation might be supplemented are innumerable. We have the Ecclesiastical historians ; we have the Pagan historians, some of which, as, for instance, Zosimus, ought to be read, to gain a view of Society from the Pagan stand-point ; the Panegyrists of the Emperors, the Lives of the Saints, Paulus Diaconus on the Lombard annals, Gregory of Tours for those of the Franks, — a monkish Herodotus, without the grace, and it is to be feared, without the veracity, of the old Ionian ; Eginhard's Biography of Charlemagne, and all the legendary literature of the Oarlovingian period. I Have" merely mentioned what may, in part, at least^Jie- mastered by the ordinary student. He who desires a really sound and scientific knowledge of the era must devote himself to the study of its laws, the Theodosian Code, the Codes of the Ostrogoths and Lombards, the Frank Capitularies, and the Acts of the Council of Toledo. But on these matters there are others who can speai with an authority to which I have^no claim. _ - ---l London, Jcmuary, 186 CONTENTS. PBKFAOB Pagi 111 BOUE : ITS BXTBBSAl OBOANIZATION 1 BOME : ITS INTEBITAL CONDITION 61 THB EABBABIAN BAOI^ . , 107 THE COLLI^OH — THE OEIfl!S — THE TEUTONS — THE TDEANIANS — j ATTILA AND THB HUJIS — THE AVAES 159 - n>4LT — THE PALL OF THE OiESABS — AEBOeASTBS — ALABIO — EICIMBE — 0KE8TE8— AUGUSTDLnS 230 ITAIiT — ODOAOEB — THEODOBIO — THB GBEEK INVASION — THE , LOMBABDS — THE FBANES AND THE FASAOY 270^ THB SLAVES — APEICA— rlHE VANDAIiS^^^ 347 THE EOHAN PEOVINCB OP OACL — THB BDEOUNDIANS — THB VISjeOTHB— THE FBANKS ...;.. .^.^ 406 \ciBABLBUAGNB. . . . . . /. 496 SPAIN—THE VANDALS, ALANI, SUBVI, ^^IGOTHS 528 ABAHIA— ^OHAUHBD— IBLAMI8U— THE SABAOENB S67 ~t& IK WS EBLATION TO THB OLD SOCIETY .. .>s(.. .. 615 ^tt TN BELATION TO THB NEW SOCIBTT 688 )aiOAL APPENDIX , 765 779 THE FALL OF EOME. " The city which thou seest no other deem, Than great and glorious Rome." Milton, Paradise Regained, " His ego neo metas rerum neo tempora pono ; Imperium Bine fine dedi." , ^ •ViBeiii, Mndd, i. 278. LECTURE I. Synopsis. — Importance of the Question as to the connection of Rome with the Modei'n World. — Opinions of Robertson ; of the later French Historians and Sir F. Palgrave. — Connection shown to subsist (i.) Froln the Roman Language ; (ii.) The Roman^Law ; (iii.) The Municipal Sys- tem ; (iv.) The Imperial Idea ; (v.) The Arts ofWar, Agriculture, &c. ; (tI.) Manners, Customs, and Words of Roman Origin. — Conclusion as to the continuity of History from the Era of the Caesars to our own. — ^Description of the Geographical Licdits of the Empire; itp armies; extent of the City ; its population ; importance of its cential site, and the means of communicatipn afforded by the Mediterranean and the Roman Roads. — The World beyond the limits of-the Empire. — The Empire itself divided into the two civilizations, Greek and Roman ; grave importance of the fact. — The effects of the policy of' Diocletian and Constantine. — Results of Constantine's treatment of the Army, adoption of Christianity, and transference of the Seat of Empire. — General Reflections. No event, perhaps we should rather say no series of events, in the secular history of mankind can equal in intei'est the fall of the Roman empire. Our minds are overwhelmed by the grandeur of the image which the name of Rome evokes. Through all the mutations of human affairs, and the vicissitudes of what men call Fortune, "Magni stat iiominis umbra ;" the giant shadow: broods^ over the birth of European civilization, and projects itself far onward into the depths of an unknown future. As to Rome all ancient 8 2 THE FALL OF ROME. history converges, so from Eome all modern history begins. Meanwhile she is to every educated man the source of a sentiment which, like the master passions of the human mind, transcends the power of external expression. Her world-wide glory ; her ten centuries of "dominion ; her colossal monuments ; the mighty work she has done in the mission of civilization; the pervading, and in many cases permanent influence exercised by her language, her laws, her institutions, and her arms, are more than the imagination can compass, or the intellect satisfactorily classify and com- prehend. And as we reflect that this long domination and widely-extended rule, the victories of this wise policy and this conquering sword, are now numbered among the things that have been, and that we can only trace at second hand the operation of their influences upon other institutions and among other races of men, — the dream of perished grandeur, which so haunts the fancy of the poet, becomes the gravest- lesson which the history of humanity can teach to the moralist 9,nd the statesman. Our present purpose, however, demands that we should deal with something more than the poetic and sentimental aspects of the subject. We mean to speak of Rome as she is connected with modern life, not as a thesis for the burning .eloqnence of Corinne upon the Capitol. Here, therefore, we are at once met by the question,— "May we not be deceiving ourselves?" Is there any ground for assuming such a connection-between the spirit of Eome and the life of the modern world, as to warrant our regarding them in combination? If the answer, in our own coiiutry at any rate, were derived from first impulses and notions, it would in all probability be in the i The popular mind depicts to itself a wild " Houi the northern nations upon Italy, followed by the o of the imperial mistress of the world, like those danapalus or the Carthaginian queen. A royal form REACTION AGAINST ROBERTSON'S THEORY. 8 upon a funeral pyre, high-heaped with the wealth of its household and its realm j a savage crowd surround the spot with shouts of barbarian triumph, burning torches, and brandished swords j and as the devouring flame be- comes more strong, it sweeps away into annihilation all, save a few sad memories, which once attached to the Monarch of world-wide fame and power. This view has perhaps been encouraged by our historical "writers, who have been over anxious to claim a Teutonic, and therefore national parentage, for the main developments of modern civilization. Robertson, who was long the leading authority, writes : — "Very faint vestiges of the Roman policy, iurisprudence. arts, or lit eratu re remained. New forms of government, new laws, new manners, new dresses, new languages, and new names of men and countries were everywhere intro- duced." * And elsewhere he speaks in the same way; The sonorous periods in which he pours his barbarians over Europe, and sweeps away the last remnants of Roman civilization with fire and steel, are among our earlier histo- rical recollections. Now it need not be said that a strong reaction against these opinions has arisen among late continental historians, and especially those of the French school. Children of the Romaic races, they see traces of Rome in all around them ; her influence they believe to have been paramount in the institutions and forms of social life which succeeded the fall of the empire ; and they regard the inroad of the German oationalities and the German spirit as an_j^teEEuptian,^ rather than as a serious alteration in the course of imperial civilization. But of all who advocate this viewj our own learned an- eloquent Palgrave has approached the topic with the greatest " schwarmerei," as it is called by our German neighbours — a word very inadequately translated by " enthusiasm." In his * Introduction to Charles V,, i. § 1. 4 THE FALL OF EOMB. estimation Eome is lall in all. The barbaric sovereignties, tlie whole character of modern monarchical institutions, the policy of the European commonwealths, the titles, badges, dignities, and functions of nobility, the mediaeval serfdom or villainage, the forms of national jurisprudence, municipalities, corporations, and guilds, great councils and parliaments, ro- mance and chivalry, architecture and arts, nay, even the very name and form of feudality itself, are derived from Eoman sources, and form part of the great legacy bequeathed, at Feast potentially, by the Empire to mankind. It is undesirable to accept either theory in its extreme form. Here, as elsewhere, a sober judgment will adopt a middle course. Modern society is composed of two elements ; its civilization owns a double parentage. The Teuton and the Latin have each contributed to make it what it is ; and the duty of exactly assigning to either the limit of the influence which he has exercised upon us, or of our own obligations to him, is a most delicate and difficult one. This cannot be fully attempted here. Gur task will be rather to consider briefly the Eoman element, for it is that which is most prominent during the early ages, of which we are about' to treat, and which, as we have said, our own writers have been inclined to depreciate and forget. In the first place, Eobertson's remark about the dis- appearance of the Eoman language must, I think, strike ns-., as very untenable. Scientific and comparative philology had not in his day been cultivated with the same success as at present. Still he might have known that we can trace to a Latin origin something like three-fourths of the moat widely-spoken language in Europe ; French, it has been well said, is " Latin squeezed."* Compare, for instance, the first linguistic monument where the process of transition * "How to Speak French." A little work by M. Albites, of Bir- mingham, which on this, as on many other subjects, contains an immens-^ amount of information in a very few -words. TflE LaMST LAltGUAGE. 6 may be traced, the oath which the two sons of Louis I. took to each other in a.d. 842 : " Pro Deo amur, et pi-o Christian poplo, et nostro commun salva- ment Pour Dieu amour, et pour Chretien peuple, et notre conimnn salut." The same may b.e said of the Italian, the Spanish, the Portuguese, and of the less-known Ehsetian and Wallachiau dialects. They have never entirely repudiated their origin : D ante regarded Virgi l as a fellow-co untryman. The mediseval dialects, which form the substratum of the modern French, still described themselves as the Romance or Roman tongue. In most cases a few simple rules enable the" student to detect the old Latin word beneath its modern corruption, and any intelligent man, who really understands the ori- ginal, has already more than half mastered these latter deflections from its type. Again, as a simple matter of fact, Robertson must have known that Latin for many centuries constituted almost the sole written language of the civilized world, and was spoken by all educated men and women, from Constantinople to the Scottish hills. For many centuries it was the only medium through which theology, history, poetry, science, and art conveyed their teaching to the world, and it has graven its impress upon them all. We are inclined to forget that even the Ncymum Organon and the Principia were first given to the world through the medium of the language in which Csesar's war-cry sohnded on the shores~pf Kent. When I say we are inclined to forget it, I mean those who only take a popular and superficial view of the matter. His nomen- clature, and the history and literature of his own special subject, will not sufier the scholar or the man of learning to forget it. He encounters traces of the Latin influence at every turn. Indeed he is often beneath this influence when he knows it not. It is the case with us all. The Roman 6 THE FALL OF EOMB. spirit has extended its ramifications so widely, and in such subtle shapes, that it reappears at times when we are wholly unconscious of its existence. « Nous avons en nous je ne salscombieu d'idees, de sentiments antiques, dont nous ne nous rendrons pas compte,"* says a great French writer of our own times ; and most men who have read history in the true historical spirit, will echo the remark. There is, however, one evidence of the permanence of the Latin tongue, palpable even to the common mind. Wherever the gorgeous ritual of the Church of Rome feasts the eye? of the multitude who, in Europe or the new world, crowd her spacious cathedrals, the grand old tongue of Italy, " the voice of Empire and of War," to them the voice of Salvation and of Faith, rolls its sonorous accents in their ear. Whatever we may think of the practice, the fact remains. It is im- possible to speak in the tone of Robertson respecting the disappearance of a language which for, eighteen centuries has gone up in the prayers of half Christendom to heaven. But b esides h jr langua ge Rom e has also left to modern- society her law. The Roman law has afforded a basis to half the existing codes of Europe, and has materially modi- fied the rest. On this subject the great work of course is that of Savigny, which was written to prove that the Roman law has never become entirely obsolete, but maintained a strange vitality from the fifth to the thirteenth century, reappearing in a multitude of laws, institutions, and customs. Learned men do not accept all the conclusions of the celebrated German jurist, but I think (speaking from the superficial and second-hand acquaintance with his theory - which is all that I can boast) that he has, in the main, facts and the truth upon his side. No one, at least, will dispute the influence, for instance, of the Roman law upon the Visi- goth legislation in Spain, modelled as was the latter upon the laws of Theodositis; of the Pandects of Justinian tipon the * Miohelet, "Diseoursd'Ouverture," 1834. THE ROMAN LAW. 7 Etablissemens of St. Louis ; of the jurists of the Empire upon ■the whole fabric of the jurisprudence of Germany, the Prus- sian Landrechts, the Gesetzbuch of Austria ; and, again, not only on the famous Code Napoleon, but on the principles of ' the Scottish law, and our own maritime and ecclesiastical codes. Hallam, in speaking of the Justinian code, condemns the too hasty supposition that it was ever entirely unknown in the West : " Some of the more eminent ecclesiastics, as Hincmar and Ivon of Chartres, occasionally refer to it, and bear witness to the, regard which the Eoman, Church had uniformly paid to its decisions."* Justinian's system was taught publicly in Italy early in the twelfth century, at the university of Bologna ; but the most active impulse was given to the study bythe^discovery of a copy of the Pande cts at Amalfi, in 1135 a.d., upon the capture of that city by the Pisans, Within fifty years Italy, we are told, was full of lawyers, and distinguished schools arose at Modena, Mantua, Padua, and Naples. It was the same in other countries. Montpellier and Toulouse were distinguished for their eminent masters. We know that the Eonian law was taught in Oxford by a Bolognese in the reign 6i Stephen, though it encountered there an opposition, which may explain the modified, yet positive, influence which it has exercised among ourselves.^ Hallam observes that he should earn but little gratitude for dwelling with obscure diligence upon a subject which attracts so •few. This would be still more the case with ourselves. Let us therefore remain satisfied with Hallam's own re- marks, applied directly to our own country, yet perhaps still more applicable to those of others. "Everywhere the clergy combined its study with that of their own canons ; it was a maxim that every canonist must be a civilian, and ' that no one could be a good civilian unless he were also a * Hallam, " Middle Ages," vol. iii. p. 413. t See Hallam'a remarks on Selden, vol. iii. p. 416. » THE FALL OP EOME. canonist. ' In all universities degrees, are granted in both laws conjointly ; and in all courts of ecclesiastical jurisdic- tion the authority of Justinian is cited when that of Gregory of Clement is wanting."* To language and literature we must add the municipal^ __s£iritj and the type of municipal institutions, as another heir-loom inherited from Eome. The great writert to whom we have already referred, traces the continuance of municipal institutions in certain French cities from the fall of the em- pire to the twelfth century, in which we first hear of com- munities with formal charters. The subject has been taken up by Eaynouard,. Thierry, and other distinguished men, among whom some doubt prevails as to matters of detail, and the limitations under which any such assertion as that of Savigny may be made. Few, however, will gainsay the statement of ' Guizot, . that ancient Eoman civilization has bequeathed the municipal system to modern Europe ; in an inferior, indeed, very irregular and much weakened, but nevertheless in the only real, the only constituted system ■which has outlived the Eoman world. - The little attention I have been able to bestow upon the subject convinces me further of the truth of another remark of the same able and learned man : " Between the municipal system of the Eomans and that of the middle ages the.! municipaj-ecclesiastic^stem interposed."+ It will be neces- ■ sary hereafter to speak more minutely upon the nature of this interposing link and of the system itself; at present we are only concerned with the fact that in the municipal form ancient civilization began, and in the same it closed. The first object which meets the eye amid the twilight in which the history of the West is born, is the city; the'last which rises above the debris of the empire, is the city also. It never entirely fades from view. Other elements, doubt- * Vol. iii. ch 9, pt. 2. t Savigny, ut supra. biuizot, Lectures on European Civilization," ii. THE ROMAN MtriiflCIPALlTIES. 9 l«sS, entered into the constitution of the municipal com- munities of the middle ages, the free cities of Germany, the . great towns of France and Flanders, and the boroughs of England. This has been conclusively shown by Thierry, in reference to certain communes in the north of France, whose -origin he ascribes to the Teutonic institution of guilds,'' •wjiifch were voluntary associations of a fraternal chai-acter among persons of the same trade, who engaged to assist one another in person and purse, and ratified their combination by some secret ceremonial of a religious character. But even these, directly or indirectly, in all probability owed somewhat to the example or influence of the great towns south of the Loire, — Perigeux, Bourges, Aries, Nismes, Marseilles, Toulouse, and Narbonne, which had never entirely lost the type of Roman institutions, and which still retained the Roman spirit. On the northern bank of the great central river of France it is not so easy to discern the same thing; though Raynouard adds Paris, Rheims, and Metz to the class. At any rate, the great Roman-Frankish city of Cologne is a conspicuous example. Historians discover others, subject to more or less controversy, in the different ' countries of Europe ; in the cities of Italy, which retained a civil government under the Ostrogoth, and e^en under the Lombard yoke ; in the free towns of Flanders and Hol- land, whose self-government goes back beyond any assignable date, and in consequence connects itself with the period of Roman domination ; in the legally incorporated communities of Spain, such as that of Leon, in 1020, -whose charter, granted, by King Alphonso V., makes mention of its common council as an established institution ; and even in those cities and towns of England, which Lyttelton declares were <' bodies corporate and communities long before the alteration introduced into France by the charters of Louis le Gros." * It is impoFsible at any rate to deny a species of affiliation * Hailam, "Middle Ageo," vol. i. p. 435. B 2 10 THE PALL OF EOME. betweea the old Italian muncipalities ' and the Lombard republics. It coloured their character throughout the middle ages j and even at the present moment, it is argued by a ■writer in the Times, that the relics of the old municipal form and spirit confer upon the cities of Central Italy a power of self-government which has preserved them from anarchy under the terrible trial to which they have been lately subjected. Another great idea inherited from Eome has prevented the entire severance of historic unity between ancient and modern life,- and transmitted ' an inspiration from the first to the second, which has come vividly forth in the working of the States-system of Europe. That idea is the idea of Empire, of centralized authority. The majesty of the Roman name did not pass away with thfe presence of Koman power. The imperial Image which haunted the Seven Hills still awed the imaginations of men. Rome herself was still the " Gran Latina Cittk, di oui qaanto il sol aureo gira Ne altera piti, ne piti onorata mira." The rude multitudes who poured over the Rhine and the Alps could not shake themselves free from the spell which had once been strong enough to charm or to coerce the world. They still paid an unconscious homage to the idea long after the reality had departed j and the idea, reacting upon their minds, produced for itself new and vigorous ' developments. " The name of the Empire," says Guizot, " the recollection of that great and glorious society, disturbed the memories of men, particularly of the senators of towns, of bishops, priests, and all those who had their origin in the Roman world. Among the barbarians themselves, or their barbaric ancestors, many had been witnesses of the grandeur of the empire: they had served in its armies j they had conquered it. The image and name of Roman civilization had an imposing THE IDEA OF EMPIEE. 11 influence upon them, and they experienqed the desire of imitating, of reproducing, of preserving something of it." "" Hence an intolerance of their native barbarism, and the isolation which was its predominant characteristic; a tendency to combine and cohei-e, a longing for some form of centralized power. Perhaps to this we owe in great measure the con- solidation of our modern nationalities under circumstances and influences very unfavourable to unity. Hence, too, the idea of a common Christendom inspiring the Crusades, and not unknown to the dreams of later statesmen, — witness the well-known project of a Christian commonwealth in the brain of the great Bearnais, which the dagger of Ravillac cut short. And doubtless the same idea, briefly and imperfectly realized by Charlemagne, was underlying the ambitious visions of popes and emperors, and gave to both Guelph and Ghibelline whatever real strength and vitality their respective prin- ciples possessed. " The conquests of Charlemagne and his predecessors," writes Professor Vaughan, " enforced a political organization, which carried some elements of Koman society into the heart of Germany. They left behind them the idea of the Roman emperor, which should one day grow to maturity, strike its roots from the German into the Italian soil, and so draw from under the very palaces of the Caesars a Roman prin- ciple of life to circulate through all its prerogatives, and to be exhaled through all its functions into the German atmosphere." t Ffench ambition has ever clung to the same phantom : "witness Francis I., Louis XIV., Napoleon the Great ; French expeditions beyond the Alps ; French occupations of the Capitol ; French " Kings of Rome ;" the coronation of Frenfch emperors by Italian pontifiij at Notre Dame ; the bloody fields of Magenta and Solferino ; the annexation of * Gaizot, Lecture iiy t Vaughan, Tntrodactory Lecture, p. 18. 12 THE FALL Of EOME. Italian Nice ; the bayonets which bristle round the ruined palaces of the Caesars, and occupy the approaches to the Vatican. Yet the German still guards, though no longer in a Lombard fortress, the iron Crown : no .stipulation was more sternly contested in that secret chamber at Villa- franca; and those who in "the '48" listened to the debates in the Paulkirche at Frankfort, know how, despite the most unfavourable circumstances, the traditions of the Kaisers hang round the place of their birth, and linger in the popular mind, though neither Hapsburg nor Hohen- zollern can give them life. " The Romans again have taught us t hg ar t of war ; a strange assertion it may seem to those who deem that war depends on gunpowder. But Dr. Arnold has shown, upon the authority of Napoleon I., that the tactics and campaigns of the ancient generals are as well worth the study' of military men as those of Marlborough and Tureiine. .And the name of Teacher may fairly be claimed by the earliest professors of the art, if their practice still continues to supply matter of interest and instruction to ourselves. " I assume," says Mr. Long, " that modern military science is to be derived from the Romans. Some of our own countrymen have had a high opinion of them in this line, as Lieutenant Clarke's sensible preface to his edition of Yegetius shows. And Captain John Bingham, in his Translation (1616) of Elian's ' Tactic of the Greeksj' says : ' ^lian hath in a small volume so expressed the arts, that nothing is more short, nothing more linked together in coherence of precepts, and yet distinguished by such variety that all motions requisite or to be used in a battle are fully expressed therein.' Roesch, who gave lectures on the military art, says that among all the ancient and modern military histories, he knows of none he found better adapted for lectures on Stra;tegy than the ' Commentarii.' " * * Preface to Ca;sar'a Comaientaries. , EOMAiSr STBATEGIOS, AGRICULTURE, &o. 13 YYou will probably indorse this opinion of Mr. Long ; nor ^^-you refuse your assent to another remark of the same g6irfliei|i|j|^ though our space will not permit its verification. " 1?heSRotnaiis have also taught us a great deal about civil administ|^«^, and about roads, canals, aqueducts, and draining ; ioVhiph we may add farming, both the cultiva- tion of land'^jiliithe management of stock," These n.rothe. great influences, material, moral, and intellectualjtrhieh may be traced back through the confusion of medi8evl|tl|&rop^-to imperial Eome. But independent of these, there m^ to be found among nearly all European nations a crowd of ideas, superstitions, practices, traditional notions and customs, , all springing more or less from the Roman element in their social constitution, which inter- penetrate their daily life, and mingle with their common habits of thought. That excellent work, " The Popular History of England," illustrates this so admirably in our own case, that I shall make no apology for quoting its words. " The customs of a nation, and whatever relates to its com- mon life, furnish as enduring traces of what has gone before as its laws and its language. There cannot be a more striking example jaf the blending of Roman and Teutonic modes of thought than is furnished by the names of our months an d of our ^weeka. January presents itself under thS influence of the ' Two-faced Janus ; ' March is the month of Mars ; July keeps to the memory of the mighty Julius; and August claims an annual reverence for the crafty spirit of Augustus. It was in vain that the Saxons would have superseded these popular titles by their wolf- monat for January ; and their lenet-monat (lengthening month) for March. In vain would they have made Osesar and Octavius yield tO' their ' hay-month ' and their ' barn- mcfnth.' And yet they have put their perpetual stamp upon our week days. The Saxon Woden set his mark upon Wednesday, and banished the Dies ilercwrii ; Thpr, the 14 THE FALL OF KOME. Saxon tlmnderer, was too mighty for the Roman Jiipit^, -who yielded up his Dies Jovis ; and that . endearing >«& of Woden, the Saxon Frea, dispossessed the Roman gojldess of love of her Dies Veneris. But,the Saxons have not, obliterated more trifling things. Many traditionary 'customs and superstitions which have conae down to -cI from the Roman period, still bear testimony to the Roman influence. Our parochial perambulations are the ancient Terminalia ; our May_-day is the festival of Flora. Our marriaga.-Cfirs.- , monies are all Roman : the ring, the veil, the wedding,^fts, the groomamen and bridesmaids, the bride-cake. Our funeral images and customs are Roman : the cypress and the yew, the flowers strewn upon graves, the black' for mourning. The lucky days of a century ago were the dies alhi of the Romans, and the unlucky the dies atri. If we ask why we say ' God bless you ' to the sneezer, we only ask a question which Pliny asked, and perform a ceremony which the stem Tiberius thought it necessary to perform. If we laugh at the credulous fancy of the simple maiden, who, when her ears tingle, says that a distant one is talking of her, we should recollect that the Romans believed in, some influence of a mesmeric nature which produced the same effect. We have faith^ in odd numbers, as Virgil records the faith, numero Deus irrvpare gaudet. ' A screech owl at midnight,' says Addison, ' has alarmed a family more than a ba!nd of robbers.' The terror was traditionary. ' The bird of night ' was ever an evil bird ; and no Roman super- stition entered more completely into the popular belief and was more referred to by the historians and poets. Indica- tions such as these of the influences of the obscure past may be as trustworthy records as half-obliterated inscriptions. They enable us to piece out a passage or two in the history of a people."* Finally, speaking of the death of the Roman empire, » Knight's " Popular History of England," vol. i. ch, 3. ROME NEVER PERMANENTLY OCCUPIED. 15 one fact must always be remembered — a ffict insisted upon by Guizot, and emphatically repeated by Sir Francis Palgrave. ! fiome herself neve r died. She never entirely passed into the hands of her enemies, or witnessed a per? manent Jaarbarian occupation. A hundred times on the verge of annihilation she Was never annihilated. A remnant always remained to restore the name of Home, and keep alive the tradition of the eternal city, even when Alaric or Genseric had seemed to trample her very ruins into dust. " Such is eminently the case," writes, Sir F. Palgrave, " with that due conception of the eternal city's destiny, which the illustrious historical investigator, nqw the honour and the reproach -of France, has presented with ^qual modesty and emphasis. Home never was permanently con-^ quered, — never accepted the stranger's yoke,- — never became subjected to the barbarian. Rome alone continued purely^ Koman after the imperial presence .departed ; province after province was lost j plague, pestilence, and fire desolated the city ; the inhabitants shrunk away witliin the walls ; a fierce and corrupt aristocracy, a depraved and cowardly populace, composed the community which defiled the Seven Hills ; but the succession was unbroken, and Kome was Rome, and is Rome still." The fact is a very remarkable one, and must Assuredly have exercised a palpable influence over the medifEval world. At present, however, we must recur to the Rome of the Empire, before a barbarian standard had crossed the Alps, or a conception of their coming fate had flashed upon the minds of her rulers or her people. Thus far I have dwelt upon facts which must, I think, convince the historical student at least of this truth. History is unintelligible to those who do riot read it in its natural continuity, and between the era of the Gsesars and the 19th century, no epoch, no point of time, can be discovered, at which it is possible to say, "Here this continuity bieaka off," I am therefore convinced, with many of the dj,i. 16 THE PALL OF EOMB. tinguished men who have of: late years written history, that to know our modern selves we must know Kome. In her soil are deeply fixed the roots of modern society. The tree may tower on high, spread forth its thousand branches, and wa:ve its multitudinous leaves in the light of day; but he who would estimate its nature and strength, must seek deep in earth and darkness for the source of its vital power. _ I do not say the analogy is an exact one, bnt modern history has jits birth in the death of the Koman empire^ and we must f recur to that gloomy period if we would understand its real character. The Roman empire, therefore, I shall endeavour to lay before you, and explain not only its external develop- ment, but the social conditions out of which arose its decay. I shall first speak more especially of the period between the consolidation of supreme power in thei hands of Au' gustus and the accession of Diocletian, who imparted a more artificial character, to the imperial policy, and intro- duced that elaborate but impotent administrative system which fell before the vigorous inroad of the nations of the North ; and, in conclusion, I shall briefly notice the sh^pe which this policy assumed in the hands of Oonstan~tine the Great, and that crisis in the constitution of the empire to , which his measures gave birth. ^' Place before you a map of the ancient hemisphere : ex- clude from your consideration the northern and north- eastern portion of Europe, beyond the mouths of the Rhine and Danube ; the whole of Africa south of the Great Desert, and the 10th degree of north latitude ; and Asia, west of the Caspian Sea and the great Mesopotamian rivers'. What strikes you as the central point in this vast portion, of the earth's surface ? It nearly coincides with the site of Rome. And this fact is of immense importance. From her local position alone Rome was fitted to be the capital of the ancient world. The pulsie of civilized life radigAed from and returned to that great centre, which could not THREEFOLD DIVISION OF THE ANCIENT WORLD. 17 have been elsewhere placed without a serious derangement of the vital energy of the whole body, and the activity of the limbs. I shall be reminded of this again when, after having considered the geographical limits of the empire of Rome, we come to see how her peculiar situation enabled her to extend the executive of a centralized administration to the extreme limits of her territory, with rapidity and ease. At present, let us observe how the whole area of the known world might, at this period, have bpen classified under a c^ripla^^division. First was the Roman empire, known, civilized, carefully organized, and governed by Eoraan officers, receiving almost daily direction from the* great central authority on the banks of the Tiber. Then there was the Barbarian world, imperfectly explored, . stretching far away into unknown wUder-nesses of morass and forest, inhabited by savage tribes of many distinct races, with crude forms of political government, or living in the semi-lawlessness of nomad and patriarchal life. Between the two was a crowd of half-independent Chieftaincies, or so-called Monarchies, allies or subjects of^ the "Roman people "—a world neither barbarous nor civilized, but dwell- ing in a moral and intellectual twilight, which darkened into shadow or brightened into day as it receded from or approached the great central luminary of Eorjie. The sup- posed limits of the Empire have been given by Gibbon ; but it is needless to repeat the'well-known passage, mor€ especi- ally as we shall attempt a brief outline of our own. Of what was this immense superficial area' made up? I must still refer you to Gibbon for particulars ; a general sketch may perhaps be sufficient for our present object. The Atlantic Ocean, with its bays ai\d channels, as it sweeps round from the foot of the Cimbrio peninsula to the Straits of Gibraltar, and southward again towards' the Canary Islands,' may be regarded as the real northern and western boundary of the Enipire. On the other side of the sea 18 , THE FALL OF ROME. which washes the north of GauV the Roman had indeed seized with a late grasp, -and precariously retained the pro- vince of Britain. The rampart of Hadrian and Severus, extending from the Solway to tlie Tyne, may be regarded as the real-limit of Romanized Britain. A more ambitious attempt was made to extend 'this limit to another rampart, called the Wall of Antonine, stretching from the Frith of Forth to the estuary of the Clyde ; but the inroads of the free Caledonian mountaineers rendered Roman authority very equivocal in this debatable ground, the scene of so much bloodshed in after-days. Here, at any rate, the Roman placed the last limits of the civilized world. Indeed, we may doubt whether he for a Ion" time allowed that Britain was within its boundaries. Horace speaks of the inhabitants as "the most remote of human beings." Virgil calls them " a race divided from all the ' world." - Ca,tullus lolds it to be the strongest proof of fidelity in friendship that Furius and Aurelius are ready to accompany him, '^ven unto the horrid Britons, last gf men." An ancieatjiistorian tells his readers, with the naivete of supreme ignorance, that "the world of the Britons is as large as our own." However these things may be, it is certain, from his own acc'Sa^tp that Julius obtained a very insecure footing in the isla^. Superstitious motives in- duced Cfettdins-toanne?; it as a province, in direct contra- diction to the avowed policy of Augustus. It was ably administered by Agricola for Domitian; it subsequently' saw the death, birth, and accession of heirs to the imperial purple ; but the revolts of Caractacus, Boadicea, and Oarau- sius witness to the fact that the spirit of independence was never entirely subdued. The government of Agricola was perhaps the period of its most entire subraission,\nd great- est material prosperity ; yet, of the British of Agrkola's time, Tacitus could write the prophetic words,— " The Roman sword had tamed them to submission, but not to GEOGRAPHICAL LIMITS OF THE EMPIRE. 19 slavery." We are not, therefore, -wrong in limiting the real Koraan empire by the Straits of -Dover and the coasts of Gaul— ;Gaul which was so indisputably her own. ■ "Eeturning to Africa, we find the boundary indicated by a somewhat indefinite line, drawn across the whole continent from west to east. Where no antagonism to the Roman axms, sate that of climate and the character of the country, was to' be encountered, the actual demarcation was -not very positively drawn. The Atlas, and the great African desert^ on the western side, the cataracts of the Nile, and the con- fines of Arabia on the eastern, may be considered, despite the declamation of Virgil, as the goals of Boman conquest towards the south. , On the east lay the Parthian empire. The vacillations of long warfare frequently changed the frontiers in this direction; but we may loosely place them at the Euphrates, the Tigris, the Armenian mountains, and the Euxine Sea. ' Gibbon says, perhaps with more precision, that Syri^ formed the eastern frontier of the empire, and- that this province, in its utmost latitude, knew no other bounds than the mountains of CappaBoda to the north, and towards the south, the confines of Egypt and the Eed Sea. On the north-east, at any rate, the Pontus presented an impassable barrier, alike to Roman ■victories and barbarian, inroads. An imaginary line drawn through it from the spurs of the Caucasus to the mouths of the Danube, and ■afterwards .produced along the course of the Danube itself, may be regardl^d as bounding the Empire on this side ; but between the Danube and the Rhine lay the vulnerable heel of this Achilles — the. weak point of the Empire. Towards the apex of the vast trianglej of wlilch these rivers formed as it were two sides, crowded wjlve after wave, the foes of Rome. Even at a very early period she held her own with difliculty against-fche German tribes.' The difficulty increased from year to year, until the emperor Prbiue constructed a gigantic ram- part "vall, which, commencing at Ratisbon, on the Danube, 20 THE FALL OF EOME. passed for two hundred miles, with true Eoman perse- verance, over hill, valley, river, and morass, until it finally touched the Ehine. The remains of this vast work, known as " The Devil's Wall," still move the traveller's wonder and the superstition of the Suabian peasant ; but " the experi- ence of the world," says Gibbc.n, " from China to Britain, has exposed the vain attempt at fortifying any extensive tract of country." Hardly had Probus died, before the Alemanni burst through the barrier he had raised, and left nothing bu,t its ruins to attest the insecurity of states which are protected by no better bulwark than those of wood and stone. A stronger and more permanent line of defence was formed by the great river whose banks the wall of Probus reached. ,^The jR hine w as a Roman intrench- ment, and Gaul a vast place cFwrmes. Among the thousand associations which crowd upon the mind when we gaze upon that historic stream, as it comes down broad and rushing from the bosom of the Alps, none is more moving than the thought that we have before us the bulwark of the old free life of the Germanic world, beyond which the demoraliza- tion and slavery of the toga could never permanently pass. The raids of Csesar and Germanicus acquired no lasting dominion in a land defended by the sword of Arminius, and even the disciplined valour of the legionary and the impe- rial name of Rome, produced but little effect upon the swift- footed and fierce barbarians who vanished before the eagles into the morasses which girt the Rhine, the shifting quick- sands of the Northern Ocean, or the gloomy and impenetrable depths of the Hercynian forest. „ Such were the geographical limits of the Roman Em- pire ; within them lay, in the time of Augustus, and according to his organization, nineteen provinces, each of which might have well been a royal realm. About the end of Nero's reign they were subjected to a new arrangement, and increased in number to thii:ty-five. No mere recap iti;- :tEOVl]SrCES OE the EMtlEE. 21 latlon such as a lecturer can give, will suflBce for those who ire desirous of accurately studying this portion of the >,ubject. I wiU, however, briefly place before you such an enumeration, as may enable those who have the advantage of a goo^ map, to acquire a more definite idea than mere words can give of Eoman grandeur and dominion. Remember, however, that the policy of Augustus introduced a distinc- tion between the provinces, which had no slight effect in consolidating and maintaining the imperial authority. , The fr ontier provinces, whose situation required the presence of powerful armies, he retained under his sole and di^ect control. These he called ftoyincise Imperatorise, and he adminstered their affairs by militaiy officers styled Pro- praetors, and Legati Qsesaris or Augusti. Their revenue was collected by procurators and paid into the fiscus, or imperial privy purse. The Provincise Senatgrise, on the contrary, were those whose long-established tranquillity and ascertained allegiance demanded no troops beyond the few who fulfilled the purposes of a police. They were governed by proconsuls, whose appointment was only for a single year ; and their taxes were collected by a quaestor, who paid them into the jErarium, cfr public treasury, nominally managed by the senate. We may easily imagine that under an arbitrary empei-or, there was little practical difference in the nature of the ' authority exercised in an imperial or senatorial province. In the first instance it may have been other- wise, and we cannot but admire the subtle policy oi Augustus, wlo in professing to select for himself the scene of difficulty and peril, really acquired the solid ele- ments of power. The whole Empire then in Nero's time consisted of thirty- eight provinces. Six of them had already been united to the Republic in the sixth century of its existence — Sardinia, Sicily, Corsica, Illyria, and the two Spanish provinces of Bsetica and Tarracopensis. Before the battle of Actium, 22 THE FALL 01? EOME. fourteen others had been added to the list ; two "c^^ districts, Achaia, Asia Minor, Macedonia", Narbonnese , Cyrenaica and Crete, Cilicia, Cyprus, Bithynia, Syria, q - ■ tania, Belgic and Celtic Gaul. The government of Augustus made ten others, Egypt, Lusitania, Kumidia, Gcdatja, the Maritime Alps, Noricum, Vindelicia, Eh^tia, PannoBia, and Moesia. Tiberius increased the empire by a single province only, that of Cappadocia. The yainglorious Claudius incorporated the two Mauritanias, Lycia, Judssa, Thrace, and Britain. Pontus, under' Nero, closes the list. Of these countries many still retain their original name with a slight variation; these require no further explanation. Noricum, Ehtetia, and Yindelicia comprised part of Bavaria, the duchy of Austria, Styria, the Tyrol, and the country of the Orisons.- Pannonia was nearly equivalent to trans- Danubian Hungary. Illyria and Dalmatia may be dis' covered by their modern appellations. But Gaul was much ' more extensive than modern France; it included Belgium and in part Holland, the Rhenish provinces of Prussia, and all Switzerland, except the Grisons. Achaia, from the pre- dominance for a short time asserted by the Achagan league, was the name under which the Romans annexed Greece and the Ionian Isles. Macedonia, Moesia, and Thrace are now the European provinces of Turkey beneath the Danube ; Turkey in Asia includes the rest. Of these provinces Sicily, Sardinia, Narbonnese Gaul, Bsetica or Southern Spain, Mace- donia, Achaia, Crete, Proconsular Asia, Bithynia, Paphlagonia, Pontus, were considered beyond the danger of insurrection, and consigned to the peaceful keeping of the Senate*' — A^ugustus guarded and managed these immense regions with an armed force, which to modern ideas appears strangely disproportionate. The European governments which occupy;, the same area, employ .in their fleets and land forces, accord- ing to the most moderate computation, something like four million of armed men. In the first year of the empire we \ancl THE AEMY Oi* THE EMPIRE. 23 find mention of but twenty-five legions and fourteen coliorts. If we compute the legion at 6,300, and the cohort at 60(3$ or perhaps 610 (excepting those of the garrison of Rome, which contained 1,000), we reach a grand total_i}£_l?:i,^PO men. It is, of course, easy to understand many of ihe reasons which swell the modern total and could not have influenced this ; stUl the contrast is a startling one. We must however add to the Roman aggregate the maritime forces under arms at the same time. These were not very considerable. Two prsetorian fleets, one stationed at Ravenna, the other at Misenum, patrolled the Mediter- ranean; they were each manned by a legion of mariners, about 6,000 fighting men. An auxiliary fleet (vicaria) from Frejus protected the coasts of Southern Gaul ; . a second perfor&ed the sSime office for those of the Euxine Sea. They consisted — certainly the latter did — of forty vessels ; we may assign half a legion to each. Beside these, two flotillas (fluviatiles) passed perpetually backwards and forwards on the two great frontier rivers of the empire, the Danube and the Rhine. In each were twenty-four galleys, and we may suppose that together they employed 3,000 men. Here then we have an additional item of 2L000, which, added to the foregoing; brings the sums iip to 19I,T)00. But Tacitus* intimates that tHe auxiliary troops furnished by friendly monarcha and nationalities were about equal in number to the legionaries. These have been com- puted at 171,500; therefore the grand „ aggregate of the armed forces of the Empire under Augustus may be stated at 362,.50O men. Nero made additions, which raised it to 391,100, and if we may credit the aocounta given to us, the legionaries alone of Marcus Aurelius amounted to 258,258; but if this was the case, that number was probably obtained by tl\e incorporation of mmita-ous auxiliaries. * Ann. iv. 5, 24 THE PALL OF EOME. I have been thus particular, because it is an interesting »and instructive fact, that the world could be governed by an amount of physical force less formidable than that which the mutual jealousy of modern states compels them seve- rally to maintain.* ~ In the midst of all these wide-spread dominions, the imperial City sat serenely upon her throne of seven hills, ordering and enforcing obedience by the mere terror of her traditions and'the inviolate dignity of her name. It would require not only unlimited artistic skill, but an unlimited breadth of canvas, to delineate a picture of this Queen of cities, her wealth, her splendour, and her extent, as she appeared to the eyes of those who witnessed the apogee of her power. ^ "All that -which .(Egypt whilome did devise, All that which Greece their temples to embrave, After the loDioke, Attioke, Doricke guise, Or Corinth, skill'd in curious jvorks to grave ; All that Lysippua practique art could form, Apelles' wit, or Phidias his skill, Was wont this ancient Gitie to adorn, And the heaven itself with her wide wonders fill ; All that which Athens ever brought forth wise, All that which Afrioke ever brought forth strange. All that which Asia ever had of prise, Was here to see ! " I entertain no such ambitious project. Who would willingly vie with the crowd of rhetoricians, poets, and panegyrists, who have exhausted' their ingenuity and eloquence upon the theme? "Eome, loveliest of created things," exclaims Virgil, in a burst of patriotic enthusiasm. " Rome, city of the world; capital of the nations," writes thfe ' rhetorician Aristides.t "City of cities," "Epitome of the Universe," are the titles conferred by contemporaries. " The * For an estimate of the armies of modern Europe, see the work of Count Franz de Champagny, " Les C^sars," vol. ii. A ppendix i. It has apparently been borrowed by Mr. White, iu hia " Eighteen Christiau Centuries." t Aristides Rhetor, "De Urbe Eoma." THE DIMENSIONS OP THE CITY. 26 Spreading heuses," says Pliuy, " have added many new cities to the older one." " It is impossible to say," Dionysius of Halicarnassus tells us, " where the city terminates and the couutry begins ! both are so intertwined together that they present the aspect of a city without bounds." In fact, it contained many cities ; there was a Scythian, a Cappadocian, a Jewish quarter. So numerous were the latter people, that Josephus speaks of a deputation, as we should call it, of some 8,000, who waited wifh a petition upon Augustus. An iminense number of foreign uationa (easterarum gentium w/uUitudo)* surrounded the funeral pyre of the great Dictator who had thrown open to them the Capital, lamenting him each in their own fashion. Distinguished amongst the rest were the Jews, who passed several continuous nights by the corpse. What then was the extent of ground really covered by this colossal city ? what the number of the multitude within its circumference ? The earliest legends point to a village on the Capitol,, then known by the appellation of Mons Satumjus j the tradition recorded by Yirgil, and Ovid telLs of another founded by the Arcadian Evander ; between them lay what afterwards became the Forum Eomanum. This was the central cradle of the' race ; the nucleus of that mighty wilderness of building which afterwards assumed the appearance of a world. The pro- gress of Home was rapid during the Republic; during the Empire it became portentous. The city soon climbed to the summits of the five remaining hills, and, descending their sides, filled the intermediate spaces with piles of masonry raised so high that one story, says Cicero, toppled over another, and seenied to be suspended in the air. She descended to the Tiber, and stretched herself like some great monster along its banks, crowning with roofs the Janiculum, and then the Vatican hill, northward to the • Suetonius; C. Jul. Caesar, 84. 26 THE FALL OF BOME. Milvian bridge, aad to the south in the direction of the great port which connected her with the Mediterranean and the outer world. In other directions it was the same. Toward Tiber and Pr^neste, she covered the fields of Latium with a cloud of edifices, "like the snow of Homer's Olympus," says the rhetorician Aristides, " which veils the summit of the mountains, the wide plains, and the cultivated farms of men."* On the second question, which regards the number of the pQ£ulatiOTj^it is nearly as difficult to form a correct judge- ment. Estimates have varied from between four and five million to between four and five hundred thousand. The first is a palpable exaggeration, and is to be attributed to the magniloquent statements of professed rhetoricians and rhetorical historians. These have, however, deceived the great mediseval scholar Justus Lipsius, who, in his work upon the subject, adopts the former estimate, and that too even for a later period, when the empire was rapidly declining. His authority was long paramount, but the reaction against it has run into the opposite extreme. Those who have fixed the number of inhabitants between five and six hundred thousand, are in error, for two reasons. In the first place,, they take the circuit of the city as drawn out by Marcus Aurelius as a basis for their calculations. This can scarcely have been the time when the population was most dense ; but, even if we waive this objection, we must remember that the lines of Marcus Aurelius were constructed for military defence, and as such must almost of necessity have omitted the greater part of the suburbs. Another consideration Las escaped them.(^They forget how closely the ancient popula- tions were gacked. A people, one half of whom were slaves and half of the remainder proletarian paupers, did not re- quire, or did not, at any rate, obtain, very extensive accommo- dationsy/ An Anglo-Saxon would probably marveL at the * Aristides, "De Urbe Eom^." POPULATION OF THE CITY. 27 menage of two-thirds oi. the inhabitants of modern Naples ; but ancient Home, with its vast barracks and subterranean cells for slaves, who also filled the temples and the baths, must have crowded men together far more densely than any modern city ; and indeed, the immense height and close pro- pinquity of ordinary dwelling-houses formed the subject, more than once, of legal enactment, as they were per- petually . the theme of satirists, writers of epigrams, and historians.* The negative sort of proof derived from these facts is supported by others of a more positive character. We know, for instance, that Julius Caesar found the number of fieedy citizens who received the government largess of corn to be 320,000 ; and despite all attempts at reduction, it still reached that number in the time of Augustus.t Again, Josephus, Tacitus, and Suetonius, inform us that the corn of Egypt and Africa was reserved for the support of the metropolis. J The amount of corn imported was about 60,000,000 modii, or bushels, which would suffice for about one million souls. These statements agree with what we have reason to believe of the relative proportion of proletarians and the remaining denizens of the city, including slaves. If we place the popu- lation of the city of Rome at something more than one million, slave and free, we shall probably be near the truth. Count de Champagny § arrives at nearly the same result by another analysis. After a careful examination of authorities, he divides the Roman £opulation under the Empire into four classes. The first, or financial and judicial autocracy, comprised ..£iur_siihdiyisipns, each containing about 1,000 citizens : 1. Senators, and sons of senators ; 2. The Equites, or Knights, as they are popularly but improperly called ; ' 3. Tribunes of the Treasury, functionaries nominated by the . « Juvenal ; Martial. t Suetonius, J. 0. 41 ; Dion. Hal. lib. 14. t Josephus, Belli Jud. ii. 16 ; Tacit. Ann. xi. 43 ; Suetonius, Claud. 18. § Les'C^sara. 28 THE FALL OF ROME. people ; 4. Citizens whose incomes reached the sum 200,000 sesterces. The secojid.he describes as the tiers-^tat of Eome, a crowd of inferior functionaries employed about the temples and the courts of law, forming a bureaucracy numerous and important ; to whom we must add, merchants, banters, farmers of the taxes, men of business of various sorts, who all had their "colleges," clubs, or guilds, for purposes of mutual protection and advantage. The third class were the proletarians, or captte censi, i. e. rated according to number, not property, who paid no taxes, and lived upon the " frumentations," or public largesses of corn. They amounted, as we have seen, to 320,000. The fourth class comprised the strangers and the slaves. Of the latter, w.e shall have occasion to speak at length. It is enough to say, that to the immense number of slaves in the hands of pri- vate individuals we must add those of the emperor, those, belonging to the state, and those of the army. The numbers of the latter class must have been immense, for each pre- torian, and most probably each legionary, had his own. As to the strangers, our own experience of London and Paris is enough to show in what multitudes they must have crowded, to a city which was at once the London and Paris of an- tiquity. Upon the whole, therefore, Count de Champagny concludes, that the free population may be estimated at 600,000, the strangers and slaves at an equal number, and the garrison under Nero, at 1 6,000, — amounting in all to 1,016,000. This must be considered as the highest point ever reached. The civil wars which followed upon the death of- Nero, the tyranny of Domitian and Comm6dus, the general declension of the Empire^ and the unpatriotic, anti- Eoman character of the later emperors, diminished mate- rially the numbers of those who dwelt in or resorted to Rome ; and we hear that as early as the time of Septimus Severus the daily consumption of corn had fallen to 75,000 bushels. CENTRAL SITUATION OF ROME. 29 I have thus endeavoured to give some idea — a very faint and vague one, I am sure — but still, perhaps, some idea of the imperial City and the world she governed with so light a rein. How it was that with so little apparent effort she performed so vast a labour, is an interesting speculation for political philosophers and statesmen. Much, we must repeat, is to be ascribed to the terror of the Roman name, and the almost superstitious awe with which centuries of success had taught men to regard it. Resistance to certain individuals who had assumed a right to wield the terrors of this name was, indeed, occasionally undertaken as a matter of personal rivalry, where each party sheltered themselves beneath the pretence to imperial authority ; bu,t resistance to Rome herself, as Rome, was scarcely dreamt of in the West ; or, if attempted in the German forests, was per- ' petually enfeebled and disorganized by sedition. We must also add the fact, that Rome had no rival power in all the world with whom a rebel might find refuge, as the political exile of Paris seeks safety in London or New York. It was in vain for the disaffected eques or senator to attempt flight, when the all-pervading power of the emperor was at hand to seize upon the fugitive, from the Pillars of Hercules to the Caspian Sea, and from the wall of Antonine to the cataracts of the Nile. But granting all this, there was something else to be taken into account, as we have already said, to which attention has not perhaps been.sufficiently accorded — the central situation of Rome itself among the vast regions over which her well-organized executive extended. The Mediterranean rolled like a great artery through this com- pact body of states and countries. The Mediterranean has from immemorial ages formed the highway of the nations as they passed to and fro on the mission of civilization. Its aspect takes hold of the imagination of the philosopher as strongly as that of the poet. More has been said and sung in its praise than has been said or sung of any other portion 30 THE FALL OP EOME. of the earth's surface, not excepting Italy itself. " What a noble subject for a poem the Mediterranean would be, sam General Paoli ; or " for twenty poems," adds Southey. " The grand object of travelling," was Johnson's comment on the remark, " is to see the chores of the Mediterranean. All our religion, almost all our law, almost all our arts, almost all that sets us above savages, has come to us from the shores of the Mediterranean."* Who does not remember the eloquent apostrophe of Byron ? But long before Byron, it had been described in glowing terms by one of the great triumvirs of the revival of letters — Justus Lipsius. "It is stretched across the world," he says, " like a baldric across the body of a man ; a magnificent girdlej studded with isles as with glittering gems, and uniting, at the momentiit dis-' tinguishes them, the. shores between which it flows." t; The cradle of civilization, it is associated in our minds with all the great events of ancient history, and most of the more important revolutions of modern times. Conquest, com- merce, civil liberty, and science, all seem to have started into life upon its banks, and pushed their pathway across its waves. All the great cities of the ancient world looked down upon its waters or their tributary seas,— Tyre, Car- thage, Athens, Corinth, Alexandria, Rpme,' Constantinople, Marseilles. The tide of conquest was perpetually rolling toward its shores. Shalmaneser, Sennacherib, Nebuchad- nezzar, sought, one after another, to win the Syrian seaboard. The great rulers of the Persian dynasty, Cyrus, Xerxes, and Darius, precipitated themselves upon Ionian and European Greece. Beside its waves, in a pass between the sea and the Cilician mountains, Alexander smote down the, Persian empire, and returned to found a capital for the world at the spot where it receives the waters of the Nile. Soon Carthao-e spread her commerce along its southern shore, colonized the * Boswell's "Johnson," vol. v. p. US, + Lipsius de Mag. Eoln. i. 3. THE MEDITERRANEAN. 81 coast of Spain, and passed upon her adventurous path beyond the Pillars of Hercules. Carthage, in her turn, surrendered the central sea, the symbol and means of empire to her rival Rome ; and Home embraced it more completely still, ■vj^ith the encircling arms of conquest, from Gades to Byzantium. Bat the hold of the Eoman empire is at length loosened by a dying grasp, and the empire of the Caliphs and the empire of Charlemagne come down to exchange defiance across its waters, like two paladins of chivalry on the opposite banks of a river which divides their hosts. Mean- while, the blue-eyed Scandinavian Vikings sweep like sea- eagles from the shores of the Baltic, through the portal? of Gibraltar, and teach Sicily and Apulia the terrors of the northern sword. The Crusades come next. The Mediter- ranean is covered with the fleets of Christendom, the red- cross banner is seen in every port, the glitter of steel is as ubiquitous on her bosom as the waves which ^glisten in the sun. The Crescent, too, has her turn, and the multitudinous galleys of the East swarm around Ehodes and the rock of Malta, as they follow the flying track of the gallant Brethren of St. John. New quarrels, new enterprises are decided in that watery arena. At last the greatest of modern con- querors is born within its bosom. The Corsican Bonaparte knows full well the traditions of glory and of dominion which cling round his native sea, and would make them his own^ It is the dream of French ambition that the Medi- terranean shall be a French lake. That dream is dissipated by the thunder of the guns which proclaim the victory of Nelson and the Nile. Our own eyes have seen the gallant armaments which Western Europe sent forth to arrest the onward march of the Muscovite towards these jealously- guarded waves ; our own ears have caught the sounds of battle as they rolled downward through the Dardanelles. Who could look without emotion upon a sea which has borne upon its breast the fleets which went forth to Salamis and 32 ■ THE FALL OF EOME. Syracuse,4;o the Agates Insute, Lepanto, Aboukir, SeU» topol 1 Who can look forward to its future fortunes without the belief that the destinies of nations may yet be decided on its wave?? It was, theia, this sea which Rome proudly called "nostrum mare,"— our own sea; and which the Arab boatman, faithful to the traditions of the past, still calls "the Sea of Koum." It was also stylod "the Great Sea;" and for the ancient and mediseval world, a mass of water which covered an area of 760,000 square miles, and stretched for 2,000 miles in length, from Phoenicia to the Straits of Gibraltar, may well have deserved the .name. It is but four hundred years since the great Genoese has opened out to European knowledge the vast oceanic spaces of the Atlantic and Pacific, which we should describe as great seas. But to Pome the midland sea was in every sense great, and to the facilities which it afforded for her government, and to her own position, as what a French poet, in speaking of another city, has called " a predestinated capital," is in no slight measure to be ascribed her prosperity and her power. By the waters of this convenient central basin, and by the rivers and seas with which it was con- nected, the produce and the news of the world were wafted to her gates, and her legions went forth into the remotest regions of the West, and North, and East. The Euxine and the Tanais connected her with the steppes of Tartary. , By the Nile she communicated with the cataracts of Syeneand the distant Ethiopians, with the Red Sea, the Persian Gulf, and all the commercial districts of India. She con],d pass by the Ebro through Spain up to the Tagus, and theac3 to the Lusitauian mountains and the shores of the Atlantic By the Rhone she penetrated into central Gaul, and opened out communication with the Loire and the Rhine rive q which gave her the command, for commercial and military purposes, of the whole of the west of Europe. These natural lines of water-traffic she skilfully connected by canals. The JROMAN EOADS. gS canal of jDrusUs united the Rhine to the Yssel ; that of Cor- bulo, the Khine to the Meuse. Cisalpine Gaul was crowded , ^th similar works of engineering skill. Tacitus records the bold project of cutting through the Isthmu^of Corinth ; and there were others of a scarce less enterprising character. ^ We should, however, form to ourselves a very insuffi-r cient notion of this immense system of internal communi- cation if we failed to take into account those gigantic works, relics of which still remain, to symbolize the genius of Rome — ^the Roman roads. Straight as an eagle's flight, these highways, built of the most solidly-compacted materials, passed onward from one limit of the Empire to the other, overleaping valleys and rivers upon viaducts, cleaving their way through rocks, or toUing straight on over the summits ' of almost inaccessible mountains. The resolute purpose of the people may be discerned in the traces which they have left behind them of their path over the face of the earth, — a path ever undeviatingly directed to their goal, and never turning aside, either from respect for the rights of prjDperty or the impediments of nature. From the central terminus at Milan several such lines passed through the gorges of the Alps, and connected Italy with Lyons and Mayence on one side, and with the Tyrol and the Danubian provinces on. the other. Augustus united Spain and southern Gaul by a grand route from Cadiz to Narboune and Aries. Lyons, again, was another common centre from which parted long military ways to Saintes, Marseilles, Boulogne, and Mayence ; thus forming a network of communication between the three seas-ihat surround Gaul and the Rhine. In Britain, most of us have had opportunities of tracing the direction of these colossal works. Any good map of the country will give us an opportunity of estimating their character by familiar examples. It would.be tedious to pursue the subject further, and it is enough to know that, without quitting these admirably-constructed routes, the Roman le^.cur.Xj C 34 THE FALL OF EOxVIE. leaving Narbonne, in Souther-n Gad, might pass the Khine at Mayence, travei-se the perilous confines of the Hercynian forest, ;and the hardly less perilous ground included u.iider the provinces of Ehffitia, Yindelicia, Pannonia, and Thrace i cross the Greek sea, make his way through Asia Minor, Palestine, and Egypt j and then, with his face once more towards the west, skirt the southern coast of the Medi- terranean till he embarked for Cadiz, \and thence pursued his path over the Pyrenees to the camp from whiph he had jtarted at Narbonne. We have seen the geographical- limits and political divisions of the Eoman empire — what lay beyond ? The Barbarian world. The answer is in the main correct.. Still, as I have before said, between the two were to be found a number of petty kingdoms or chieftaincies, enjoying various degrees of independence as " allies and friends of the Eoman people." They are described by the Roman historian some- what singularly, as in a state of "dubice libertatis," or standing in a scale of nicely-graduated dependence from entire submission to vague acknowledgment of Roman su- premacy. The kingdoms of Damascus, Comagene, Pontus, and numberless other similar principalities, paid tribute to the neighbouring proconsul, submitted to the Roman cen- sors, and, in short, stood in a relation to the imperial govern- ment very like that which the Spanish or German " marches" bore to the empire of Charlemagne, or the native Rajahs of Hindostan to the government of the East-India Company. Again, the petty princes of the Caucasus, the rulers of Albania and Iberia, the Armenian kingdom, and the little realm of Palmyra, ever hovering in their allegiance between the rival empires of Rome and Parthia, when the influence of the former predominated, rather claimed the protection than acknowledged the authority of the great city of th "Westr* Still, generally speaking, she gave them kings, re- * TaoituB, Attn. ii. 56. The world beyond the empike. 35 gulated the succession, and "sometimes exacted subsidies. Indeed, this was the case with the great Eastern antagonist of Eome, the Parthian empire itself. . Its kings were often educated on the banks of the Tiber, l^eneath the shadow of the imperial palace on the Palatine, and owed their throne to the intervention of the patron Csesar. There was ever a powerful faction at the Parthian court opposed to the ruling despot, which had its own candidate for the purple ready tp avail himself of every symptom oi revolution and domestic discontent. Ilome, true to the Machiavellian policy, " Divide and govern," was always at hand to protect this candidate, and interfere in his favour. How unchangeable' is the East! The policy of Hastings and Dupleix in Mysore and Bengal is precisely the policy of Tiberius towards the Parthian rulers ; and as we read the account of Roman n^iissions and embassies to the Parthian empire, we seem to be reading the transactions of a governor-general with Eajahs and Indian kings. Upon the whole, Eome preserved the peace tolerably well with her allies and good friends. - Their somewhat loose and vague adherence served her turn. But occasionally some ambitious emperor made a raid among them, and the admiring inhabitants of the capital heard of monarchies overthrown and whole countries annexed to their dominion. "Every day," says Gibbon, speaking of Trajan, " the astonished senate received the intelligence of new names and new nations that acknowledged his sway. They were informed that the kings of Bosphorus, Colchos, Iberia, Albania, Osfhoene, and even the Parthian monarch himself, had accepted diadems from the hands of the em- peror; that the, independent tribes of the Median and Car- duchian hills had implored his protection, and that the rich countries of Armenia, Mesopotamia, and Assyria were reduced into the state of provinces."* ' Now, when we review this immense variety cf "peoples, * Gibbon, i. ch. 1. 86 THE TALL OF EOMll. nations, and languages" which Eome had integrated into a coherent whole, we must, I think, be struck with one signi- ficant fact, — a fact which Gibbon has noticed, but hardly with that emphasis which it deserves. This complex civiliza- tion was composed of two separate elements, which differeo. greatly in their character, and in their influence upon the destinies of mankind. A line drawn from Dalmatia down the Adriatic, and cutting the African coast near the famous city of Cyrene, will pretty accurately divide these two civiliza- tions, the eastern of which was Greek, and the western Latin in its origin. Sicily, it is true, and Magna Grsecia He westward of this line ; but though Greek by colonization and by manners, they had at a very early period become integral parts of Eome, and remained Koman in their laws, institu- tions, and fortunes. " If," — I translate from the interesting work of Count Franz de Champaguy, — " after crossing the Libyan deserts, which cost Cato thirty days' march and Bo many hardships, we catch sight of a building as it rises in the distance, it will no longer be the thatched roof of the African, the rude Numidian cottage. No ; it h^s' somewhat of the purity and harmony of the Greek temple ; 'tis Berenice, 'tis Cyrenaica ! Here a new world begins : here, all at once, separated from the other only by that belt of sand, — the Eastern world — the World of Greece — arises before your eyes. Eome reigns not here save by her pro- consuls and her lictors; it is Greece that really reigns by language, by religion, by manners. Cyrene, that oasis of civilization cast into the midst of the desert, has bravely defended her Greek nationality against the barbarian. Here we enter upon the second portion of the Eoman world, into that Greece which has fallen beneath Eoman laws at an era when she had been alreacly civilized by colonization and the conquests of Alexander."* ■ This language is no less picturesque than true. The * Lea C^sars, vol. ii, ch. 1. THE TWO CIVILIZATIONS. 37 Roman world, that is, the world of the Empire and tha Caesars, had received its culture from two sources. Greek civilization propagated itself far and wide at a very early- period in many different directions. The coast of Asia Minor was of course entirely Greek ; the northern seaboard of the same peninsula was also Greek ; Byzantium, " the empire of the world," as Napoleon called it, was of Greek foundation. The shores of the Euxine, and even the Taurio Chersonese, received Greek settlers, and were the scenes of Grecian legend, the homes of Grecian art. We have all heard of, or perhaps have seen, the valuable relics which Russia had acoumulatfed in the museum at Kertch. To the south and west, Cyrene, the rival of Carthage, carried the language and influence of Greece to the very sands of the Libyan desert. Sicily and South Italy were, as has been said, Greek in dialect, institutions, manners, and name. The flourishing colony of Massilia, or Marseilles, was founded by Phocseans, that is, by Asiatic Greeks. Their traders penetrated into the fastnesses of Celtic Gaul, and gave the Greek alphabet to the painted' savages who brought them furs, amber, or tin from the unknown realms lying beyond the paje of civilized life.* The same men passed the Pillars of Hercules ; well-known traditions attest their presence on the west coast of Africa, and even under the shadow of that great peak whose summit, lost among the lofty clouds, gave rise to the legend of Titanian Atlas, bearing upon his mighty shoulders the superincumbent heaven. The conquests of Alexander were, however, the most conspicuous means of diffusing Greek civilization. From the ruins of his empire there sprang up Greek monarchies in Macedonia, Asia Minor,. Syria, Egypt, and Bactriana. Antioch, and above allj^ Alexandria, had the same origin. Erom the V latter emanated the chief intellectual in- * Csesar, de Bello Gallico, lib. ii. 88 THE FALL OF KOME. fluences which, after the fall of Athens, acted upon the ancient world. Eome, on the other hand, placed between the Celta of Cisalpine Gaul and the lonians of Magna Grsecia, received from the latter a civilization which she imparted to the first, and afterwards transmitted across the Alps. Her long struggle with Carthage made her mistress of Sicily, Africa, and Spain, and into these countries she intro- duced her institutions in the track of her victorious arms. Twenty-four years of incessant and bloody warfare brought the tribes of Transalpine Gaul to her feet, and it was in Southern Gaul that she most successfully planted her own image, and saw a new and Romanized world grow up on every side. Her grasp of Britain was less firm, but stUl the sword and policy of Agricola graved an unmistakable im- press of-Eome and her civilization upon our barbarous land. What little of civilized life was found on the opposite banks of the Khine and Danube clung around the camp of the legion, where was displayed to the rude tribes of Germany, a miniature picture of the Eoman city, with its artificial habits and social discipline. It will be seen, then, that Greece and Eome divided between them the civilization of the empire. Speaking in general terms, to the former belonged the eastern, to the latter the western half. The distinction was very positive, and of no little importance. Yet the statesmen of the Empire do not appear to have been fully alive to its force. They scarcely seem to have perceived that though the Greek had accepted the Eoman name, he was still an alien in tastes, feelings, habits, and national aspirations ; and as an alien would naturally avail himself of the first opportunity to assert independence, if not to aim at superiority. Con- stantine could hardly have purposed, by his. transference of the seat of government to a Greek town, that Greece should acquire an entire and lasting preponderance in the East. THE GREEK CIVILIZATION. 39 Yet such was undoubtedly the result. "When both races were united under one head, and obeyed a vigorous central authority on the banks of the Bosphorus, the difference was perpetually asserting itself in many inconvenient ways. At a later period it caused the partition of the Empire, and later still the great schism of Christendom. The eastern or Greek civilization partook of the national characteristics. Brilliant and intellectual, it was deficient in the more solid worth, which stability of principle and steadfastness of purpose alone confer. The immense mental activity, and the taste for the beautiful, with the power of producing it in concrete shapes, which formed the undoubted birthright of the Greek race, were developed into a love of sensuous enjoyment, which in its exaggeration becomes incompatible with the true dignity of men or nations, and is a significant symptom of their fall. The civilization, therefore, which Greece gave to the -world, however showy in itself, however capable of influencing the minds and life of others, could not impart to any people the attributes required for solid and permanent power. Such was precisely the condition of the East, with which Augustus and his successors had to deal. But in the west lay the real strength of the Empire, for the West, in imbibing civilization through the medium of Home, had also acquired somewhat of her sterner and more resolute spirit, and her aptitude for dominion. The plains of Pharsalia tried the men and decided the destiny of the two civilizations. Csesar knew to whom and to what he trusted when he played for the 'great stake of the empire of the world with the veteran legions of Gaul against the tumultuous levies of Greece and Syria. Even then, "the star of Empire glittered in the West." The perspicacious genius of Augustus discerned the fact. He spent the first years of his govempient in company with his minister, Agrippa, upon a progress through Spain and Gaul, which may be said io have entirely Romanized those provinces, and consolidated 40 THE PALL OF KOME. his own power. Henceforth no breath of rivahy or sedition west of the Adriatic and the Alps shook the throne of the Osesars. These countries, assimilated by the genius of Eome, henceforth shared her honours, her perils, and her /all. Thus, then, we see that to the Barbarian world Eome presented one front ; to the world already civilized by the Greek, another. To the first she condescended ; she dis- trusted the second. To the barbarian, conquered by her sword, she felt that she was all in all j the giver of every- thing he had, — the arts and appliances of social life, know- ledge, law, the first notions of political government : she knew that she could Romanize him — make him hers, and hers alone. The barbarian therefore she welcomed with open arms ; she strewed his country with colonies ; she gave Mm her institutions ; she educated his children, admitted them to the rights of citizenship, and bestowed upon them the honours of the senatorial order. Some of them even sat upon her throne. But with the Greek, and the men whom the Greek had taught, the case was widely difierent. They were already, inheritors of a civilization superior to any- thing which Eome could give, and therefore, partly from pride and partly from policy, she kept them at a distance. The Mistress of the world could ill brook superiority of any kind ; and completely as she had adopted the Greek language and literature in all things appertaining to her intellectual life, in her official capacity she clung jealously to native customs and forms of speech. Latin was the language of public life : it appears in the senate, in the acts of th^ legislature, in all imperial documents, at the tribunal of the proconsul, in the courts of law. It was a high ofience against the state if her magistrates employed another tongue.* Tiberius noticed with indignation a Greek -word which had. accidentally crept into a senatus-consultum.f Claudius with- drew the right of Eoman citizenship from a man who did * Valerius Maximus, ii. 2, § 2, f Suetonius, Tib. 71, EOMAN JEALOUSY OF GREECE. 41 not understand Latin.* We all remember the angry invec- tives of Cicero against Verres and Antony for appearing publicly in Greek costume. Yet, at the very same time, and among the same men, Greek was the language of litera- ture and daily lyW It -was every whit as familiar as their own. " Tou speak our two languages," said Claudius to a barbarian, who understood Greek and Latin. In Greek they wrote, conversed, scolded their slaves, criticised the last new book, made love — " Qtwties mtenienit illiid, Zdi^ Kai f «x4 !"1" Meanwhile the Greek did not return the compliment. He lectured his Roman masters on philosophy or rhetoric, he amused them by his wit and his buffooneries, but it was always in his own tongue. Their barbarian dialect he treated with contempt. Plutarch, who had discharged all sorts of public missions at Home, only attempted to read Latin late in life ; and even then, as lie teUs us in the Life of Demosthenes, did not trouble himself to do much more than guess at the meaning of the word?. The mutual jealous y and antagonism exhibited in the matter of language had other more important results. We never hear of Greek senators, Greek proconsuls, Greek candidates for the imperial ' throne. In Greece and the countries under Greek influence were comparatively few Roman colonies, and the fact is very significant. There is also another fact of no little signifi- cance. Alexandria was the second, in some respects the first, city of the Roman world. Almost a rival, she might pos. sibly become an antagonist of Rome. Alexandria therefore was a special object of Roman jealousy; a jealousy aggra- vated by the fact that Egypt was the granary of Italy. Singular restrictions were therefore from a very early period imposed upon intercourse with any part of the province, * Suetonius, Claud. 43. t Juvenal, vi. 194. C 2 42\ THE FALL OF P.OME. and by a special provision it was ordained that no Egyptian might, under any circumstances, -become a member of tlie senate. I might easily accumulate illustrations, but I have perhaps been tedious already. My excuse is, the necessity of study- ing carefully the mutual relation of these two civilizations, as some help towards understanding the division of the Empire between Rome and Constantinople, and the long train of consequences which followed upon the dissolution of ancient society into a Greek and Roman world, not the least memorable of which is the schism of Christendom into an Eastern and Western Church. The consequences of this indestructible opposition were developed in a long train of -events, but it is beyond dispute that this train of Events was practically inaugurated by Constantine the Great, when, on the 11th of May, 330 A.D., he eonsecrated upon the Bosghorus a new and rival Eome. This great change in the imperial policy was com- menced by his predecessor, Diocletian, and finally carried out by his successors. But it was Constantine himself who first actually broke with the traditions of old Rome, repub- lican as well as imperial, and thereby he has brought upon himself the bitter criticism, of all those' writers who were att^ached — many of them naturally enough — to the ajicient regime, its splendours, its triumphs, and supposed invinci- bility. Some of these have asserted that Constantine was actuated by merely personal motives in transferring the seat of empire to the East. " He felt that he !was unpopular in Rome ; his reception there had been but lukewarm, while the opposition of those devoted to the old faith, though smothered for the moment, wag implacable and menacing. The terrible tragedy of Faustus and Crispa had cast a gloom over the place of its perpetration: their avenging shadows haunted the presence of their murderer, and drove him from the spot." Probably this is true, if we regard it as a con- CONSTANTINE THE GREAT. 43 sequence rather than a cause of the imperial policy and dis- positions. Inheriting the traditions of Diocletian, and pro- fessing the Christian faith, Constantino must have seen that E.ome was not the place Vhere he could safely appear either in -one character or the other. There is no reason to doubt his sincerity in either capacity. His subsequent conduct proves that he entertained~a profound conviction of the ■wisdom and utility of the new regulations introduced by the Dalmatian peasant for the conservation of the imperial authority ; and, - waving for a moment the question of motives, his whole life after conversion attests his fixed determination to make Christianity take the place of the ancient cults as the state religion of Rome. And therefore he must have felt that the words of the old Latin Satirist were, in a new sense, appropriate to his situation : Qidd Somce/aciam, mentiri nescio ? "With his fixed purpose, and his opinions, had he striven after peace, his life at Rome must have been one long practical lie. Had he cast off the mask, and boldly avowed the revolution which he meditated,, his life must have -been a bloody and protracted combat — a combat of very doubtful issue, for it would have been fought in the stronghold of the enemy. At that era the Church could not have arisen under the shadow of the Capitol, nor would that Oriental and despotic absolutism, in which Constantine believed as the " salvation of society," have securely taken root within sight of the. Senate-house. Debased as was the ' Rome of Nero and Domitian, some republican memories still lingered within its walls ; though Liberty was dead, a senti- ment of Equality, as often happens, imperfectly survived. Possibly no more degraded race was to be found on the earth than the Roman patriciate ; yet there was that among them which rendered them unfit to fulfil the functions of eastern courtiers in the Neighbourhood of the Forum ; and even if e and tradition, and long prestige hsi.A re still remained the more powerful U THE FALL OF EOMB. influence of personal ambition. The imperial purple was a prize wHcli seemed to hover within the grasp of every Eoman senator ; but this was no longer possible under the rule of a master upon the eastern model, such as Diooletian wished to be, and Constantine was. The experiment essayed by the former at Nioomedia, was by the latter converted at Byzantium into a success. It would be too tedious to relate the whole process of that experiment here, or to detail with minuteness the means employed to carry it out. Such is the province of the professed historian; and to the regular histories we must refer for a description of the. machinery, civil, eocle' siastioal, and military, of the new administration. We can merely glance at one or two points which seem to possess special interest or importance. Diocletian, as we have said, saw that, if the empire was realJy to be governed as a monarchy, it must cease to be at the disposal of the strongest; military force which could be brought to bear upon the Capital, If the throne was ever to have stability or strength, it must, he felt, be rescued from the degrading weakness which had rendered it the prize of successive adventurers. His political measures, ' however disastrous in many of their, results, were steadily directed towards this end. Hence his gradual approximation to the type of an eastern despot ; his multiplication of an army' of functionaries, the useful ministers and interested adherents of a centralized absolutism • his disposition of the legions on the distant frontier ; his transference of the seat of government to Bithynia, or Subalpine Gaul. But he seems to have been staggered by the hopeless antagonism of the East and West, of the Greek and the Latin world, and therefore he attempted a corresponding partition of the empire. Heir to his ideas in other respects, Constantine could never induce himself to consent genius clung to the traditions of the TRANSFEREiSrCE OF THE CAPITAL. 46 mined that the successors of Augustus should still be masters of both worlds. It -was impossible, therefore, for him to fix his capital at Nicomedia or Milan. He sought a spot where the two worlds seemed to meet,, the two civilizations to mingle, hoping that, from such a vantage-ground, he might be en- abled to overlook and sway them both. For a moment he thought he had discovered the object of his search near the site of ancient Troy — a locality hallowed by the immortal legend of Homer, and calculated, it might be presumed, to exercise a powerful influence over both the Asiatic and the ' European imagination. But all sentimental considerations at once gave way before the marvellous ^natural advantages of Byzggtium, and its singular aptitude for his own special purpose. Probably no man, from the earliest Hellenic mariner to the last tourist of the nineteenth century, upoti whom that glorious panorama has burst after emerging from the narrow waters of the Dardanelles, ever failed to recog- nize the extraordinary character of that unrivalled site, which has made the city of Constantine " a predestinated - capital," a meet metropolis for the civilized world. The truth must have flashed upon the perspicacious genius of the emperor, and -ten centuries of existence, conferred upon a feeble rule and degenerate people, attest the wisdom of his choice. He lost no time in putting his intentions into effect, nor 'did he disdain the assistance which the report of miraculous guidance was sure to confer upon the under- taking. An eagle winging his flight across the strait, let fall a stone from his claw upon the site of the future city. A mysterious forerunner, invisible save to himself, preceded his steps, as he traced the areaofthe^newEome, and suffered him not to pause untU he had encircled a space of fifteen Btades. The accounts given of the time occupied in filling up this " ense inclosure with edifices are altogether fabulous. 3 months is the period assigned by some writers ; and 46 THE FALL OF ROME. even if we extend this to two or three years, such an architectural exploit appears incredible. It was the passion of the emperor, so far as possible, to reproduce old Kopie upon that distant shore. Seven irregular elevations still justified the epithet of the "Seven-hilled City." Many public buildings were constructed upon the exact model of those beside the Tiber; nay, the emperor is said to have erected private dwellings for his friends, where every stone, every piece of furniture, was copied from their former mansions within the walls of Rome. It was necessary to provide a population for the newly-erected Capital. Nor was Oonstantine scrupulous as to the means. Personal and courteous invitations brought many rich proprietors from Italy or the provinces: where invitation failed, more rigorous measures were tried. Among other arbitrary ordinances, we hear of one which forbade the owners of property in Asia to dispose of it by Will, unless they had previously built a house in Constantinople. Large masses of the lower orders were easily collected by the old expedients, pomps and shows, the games and races of the Circus, free distributions of corn, and even the pomp of religions processions, — for his enemies do not fail to reproach the emperor with this incon- sistency. Among this strangely accumulated society, Oon- stantine erected his throne, and surrounded it with a whole legion of functionaries, who ramified to the remotest parts of the Empire, and pushed from their stools the ancient aristocracy. Still further to secure the latter object, Constantine created a new nobility. Men entirely discon- nected with all the associations of old Rome formed the fittest support for a dynasty which was determined to work itself clear from all the old sources of rivalry and weak- ness. Availing himself of the existing official names as most calculated to conciliate respect, he attached to them privileges and prerogatives, and gradations of rank, which, perhaps for the first time in Europe, gave an example of th'' CREATION OP A NEW NOBILITT. 47 etiquette of a monarchical court. Undoubtedly the experi- ment waa tried by Diocletian ; but now the experiment had become an institution. The numerous and carefully-dis- tinguished titles of this new Patriciate, their various func- tions and duties, with the graduated scale of their dignities, have been given by Gibbon, and other historians of the epoch. It is unnecessary to repeat them at present j only let us remember that the result was the creation of .a class of persons widely differing from those who had previously stood in a similar proximity to the imperial throne. It was a great epoch in the history of the Empire, a crisis-in its social condition, and therefore we dwell upon it here. In many respects this newly-created aristocracy resembled more closely that which surrounded the throne of modern Euro- pean monarchs, than the proud patriciate which did not altogether fall with the fall of the Roman republic, but lived on, though transfigured and debased, into the imperial regime. To them, indeed, may be ascribed the origin of many qfficial usages still existing ; much of the overstrained and servile phraseology which has survived even the era of Puritan ascendancy, and the Peign of Terror ; and, as it has been thought, the outward trappings and insignia of modern nobility, the crest, if not the coat of arms. In all this the policy of Constantine is patent, though it has been grossly misrepresented and misconceived. To convert a despotism disguised under the forms of a republic into an actual monarchy; to separate himself from the traditions of the past; to break up the influences which had been fatal to the stability of the throne; to obviate the internal rather than the external perils which 'threatened society, and to establish order and unity of action throughout his wide-spread do- minions, — these were his- objects ; and in comprehending them, we possess the key to the somewhat involved enigma of his policy and his life. To the Christian Church, as the theoretical embodiment of Order and Unity, he looked for 48 THE FALL OF EOMB. aid in this great labour, and did not altogether look in vain, though he lived to experience bitter disappointment from her disunion. How far this may have been the secret of his attachment to the Christian faith, it is not for his fellow-men judicially to declare. But that he looked more to the outward action of the Church than to her internal spirit, — that he regarded her as the great organizer of society rather than as the great teacher and guardian of the souls of men, — ^is, I think, proved by the singular inconsistencies of his own private practice, by his vacillation in the treatment of Arius and Arian doctrine, by his evident determination at the close of his life to secure external uniformity among professing Christians at any cost. ' Of all the means, however, employed by Constantine to carry out the policy which has been described, his treat- ment of the army was the most remarkable and the most efficacious. With a few remarks upon this and another matter, which has not been altogether regarded by historians as it deserves, the present lecture must conclude. It seems a mere platitude to say that to her army Rome owed her greatness and her power. In fact, during the early days of the Republic, the army was Rome. The constitution of Servius TuUius identified the two, and it was long ere they were disunited. When the legion went forth to battle, with its heavy-armed citizens in the centre, its mounted nobles upon both wings, its scantily-furnished proletarians in the rear, it was in reality a mimic Rome, which, girt in iron and bristling with steel, opposed itself to the enemy. Hence it was felt in the early days of national growth " ubi castra, ibi RespuUica ; " the household Gods accompanied the eagles, and wherever her legions halted, in the Syrian sands or the morasses of the lower Rhine, there Rome planted a miniature image of herself, and established a worthy representative of her awful name. Hence in a great measure arose her military prestige ; her unexampled THE LEGION, THE KING-MAKEE. 49 strength in colonization and conquest. In process of time, tbe legion changed its character. In the days of Marius, its old aristocratical distinctions were abandoned in the ranks, and the proletariat admitted upon terms of equality. As Kome expanded and assimilated to herself the world, the constitution of the legion became more expansive also, until under Caracalla, the barbarians, sometimes the friends and sometimes the foemen of the Empire, were crowded beneath the imperial eagles. Long before this, indeed, Eome had ceased to depend for defence upon her own .sons. "Italy is resourceless," it was said, "the urban population un warlike; there is nothing stroi)g in the legions except what comes from abroad."* In the mean time, amid the universal corruption of the equestrian order, the cavalry contingent had disappeared, and this arm of the service was entirely furnished by the allied states. The legion was no longer the city in arms, the legionaries no longer citizens summoned to combat in the , cause of their fatherland ; they became mere mercenaries, presenting all the features which distinguish such a species of force, and originating all those evils which so long rendered standing armies objects of suspicion and dislike. But with the actual physical force at their command, they inherited much of the prestige which had descended from the days when the army was the representative of the state ; and to this they added an arrogance all their own, derived from the shameless facility with which the Bomau peojiie had accepted emperor after emperor at their hands. The legion felt it- self to be the king-maker wherever stationed, or however employed j but when one king-mak^r was found in Syria, another in Biitain, and a third in the Dalmatian provinces or Upper Germany, each eager to imitate the successful dictation of the other, — the result was utter anarchy, with unceasing alternations of treason, bloodshed, and misery. This was the giant evil which stared Constantine in the face^ * Tacitus, Ann. iii. 40. 60 THE FALL OF EOME. and banished, if not entirely from his mind, at any rate from his more immediate anxieties, what to his critics has appeared the greater peril of barbarian invasion. But this, like all ex post/ado judgments, is an unfair one. Constan- tino, so often victorious on the banks of the Danube and the Ehine, could not, by any exercise of human prescience, discover the terrible ven^eance^ which destiny had reserved for Eome in the depth of the Sarmatian deserts ; whereas, a brief and easy retrospect would recall to his memory the fate of his predecessors, the struggles of his own early life, and the sanguinary contest for empire with a rival com- mander at the Milvian bridge. Constantino therefore de- termined to put down the dictation of the army. He determined that it should no longer play the violent, and irresponsible part which it had so long played in the drama of domestic politics, ^and that for the future its function should be to defend, and not to confer the crown/ This object he mainly effected by breaking up the old consti- tution of the legion, by mnltiplying the divisions of the service and the number of oificers in high command, and by entirely isolating the army from the duties of civil life. The policy of the government had long resembled the astute arrangements of Austria, who garrisons Venice with her Croats, and dispatches her Italian grenadiers to Pesth or the banks of the Moldau, and her Bohemians to Mayence. - The legionaries levied in Britain were sent to serve in Syria, while Britain was guarded by the tribes of Southern Germany, and the line of the Dannbe protected by Asiatics or Africans. But the most fatal blow to the old military organization was, without doubt, inflicted by Constantine, in what he called the multiplication of the legions. This was effected by diminishing the number of each to fifteen hundred men, and thus also diminishing the importance,- the power, and -the esprit de corpg of each separate body. It was little probable that a small band of professions " CHANGES IN ITS CONSTITUTION. 51 soldiers, not much exceeding in number an Englisli regi- ment, and stationed apart from their fellows, would trouble themselves with questions of imperial policy, or deem them- selves capable of determining the succession to the imperial throne. ■ ^ Another measure of m,ilitary innovation or reform,- which has been severely criticised by his enemies, was the institu- ■ tion of three or four entirely distinct classes of military service. The Palatini formed the garrison of the numerous imperial residences ; the Comitatenses, or soldiers of the imperial suite, accompanied their inas.ter in his progresses or expeditions ; the Castriani, or Biparienses, garrisoned the river fortresses and frontiers of the Empire. The latter class, to whom the most important duties were intrusted, had neither the same pay nor the same privileges as their more fortunate brethren, and were subjected to the command of officers entitled counts and dukes of the frontier. The same policy of " Divide et impera " is evident here. An army thus split up into different and unequally-favoured classes, no longer possessed that unity of interest and action which rendered them terrible to the crown. One- consequence of these measures has called forth the severest criticism, and it certainly was a grave one. By- grouping his troops not according to their nationalities, but solely in reference to the nature of their service, Constantine admitted the' barbarians into the very heart of his military system, and placed thfem In 'positions of authority and emo- lument such as they had never hitherto acquired. We are told that a barbadian officer of the Palatini, or Comitatenses, was 'pampered with luxury and inflated by pride in the great cities of the Empire j while the Riparian of Boman birth wasted his life amid irksome and ill-paid duties in some dis- tant garrison. Naturally, the best-paid troops were also the best in quality ; and as these were gradually concentrated in central' positions, the outer circle of defences became more 62 THE FALL OF noAS. carelessly guarded. It cannot be denied that these results followed the policy of Constantine, and I think we must assume that they were intentional. They are to be explained, as I have said, by the fact that the emperor's thoughts were more bent upon sedition than upon war, his precautions directed more against the domestic traitor than the foreign foe. From the same cause he was drawn into more inti- mate relations with the men of the new blood. He greatly increased the numbers of those whom his predecessors had incorporated into the legions ; he kept some of their most distinguished leaders about his person, loaded them with honours, and enriched them by large grants of land. This was doubtless an offence to his contemporaries, and has been made the matter of grieVjOus reproach by the assailants of his policy. Prom a Roman and a Pagan point of view, they were in the right ; but should we, the children of the revolution this policy helped to bring to the birth, indorse their malignant censures andunavailing regrets ? As early as the age of Augustus, that which in the eyes of such censors is the crowning sin of Gonstantine^ the transference of the seat of empire to the East, — had presented itself to the thoughts of Roman statesman and the suspicions of the Roman public. There can be no doubt but that Horace alludes to it in terms of anxious depreca- tion more than once. " The whole of the j^Eneid," Mr. Merivale thinks, " may be read as a continued protest against this crime." But, if a crime in the earlier days of the great imperial experiment, it was a necessity when the experiment had been tried and found so grievously wanting. The struggle between Qtho, Gulba, Vitellius, and Vespasian utterly negatived all hopes of future success, broke up the foundations of society, and rendered government upon the old principles an impossibility. The eight years of anarchy which almost immediately preceded the advent of the family of Constantine to power, harassed by the rival ambitions of POLICY OF CONSTANTINE. 53 leadeKS, cruel aud selfisli beyond example, deservedly revived the hated title of the reign of Thirty Tyrants, and exhibited so dark a picture of suffering, insecurity, and crime, that they justified — we may say necessitated — the only policy which could bring them to a close. v A distinguished French writer has so admirably expressed the ideas which in a very imperfect form I have long enter- tained upon this great but scarcely appreciated crisis in the political disease of which the Empire died, that I must ask permission to conclude in his words. " That the heathen writers, that Julian or Zosimus, should have seen in these pacific sentiments" [he is speaking of Constantine's desire, during the later half of his reign, to avoid all collision with external enemies] " the indication of failing courage, result- ing from long prosperity ; that, forgetting how they admired in Augustus the moderation of satiated ambition, they should represent Constantino in the eyes of posterity as a sovereign rendered efieminate by the luxurious indulgences of absolute power, exhibits nothing more than their ordinary malevolence. Hate and scorn of the stranger had always been the habitual sentiment of eveiy Eoman, and now they were specially affected by such as professed a particullir attachment to the old customs and the old faith. But that modern and Christian writers, the civilized sons of those very barbarians whom Constantine received at his court, and them- selves brought up among the complex relations produced by the equilibrium of European states, should have repeated to us, with a somewhat servile fidelity, the same accusations, is what must give us more reason for astonishment. The re- proaches which they past upon Constantine were made by the men of the fourth century against all Christians in common. They could find no animositysuffioiently disdainful and patriotic for everything outside the circle of Eoman citizenship. And, in effect, Christianity, with an unseen action, was gradually sapping and bringing to the ground Si THE EALL OF EOME. the barriers which separated the Edman world from the rest of humanity. When men had treated and loved the Goth or Persian as a Christian brother, they could no longer detest and despise him as an alien. Ever since the time when Christianity had spr^d beyond the borders of the Empire, relations of a gentler character had established thenjselves between the Romans and their neighbours. More than once the persec^ed Christians had found, on what was called the barbarian border, an asylum against the refinements of cruelty practised by a civilized master. Constantine, whether he knew it or not, did not altogether escape the influence of these new sentiments ; not only had he enrolled barbarians among his body-guard, but he had placed xipon the benches of the council of Nice, bishops who, beneath their sacerdotal vestments, still wore the Germanic 'sagum' or the Persian robe. They were styled ' fathers,' as the others were ; and their suffrages, though expressed in barbaric tongues, had concurred with equal authority to define those Christian doctrines to which Constantine was devoted. From these relations were developed new points of view, which entirely changed the aspects of general policy. A sentiment more liberal and more humane replaced in the breast of the sove- reign himself the jealous patriotism of antiquity^ Hence- forth men were united one withi the other by bonds not identical with those of a political constitution. A Christian was naturally disposed to raise that state of siege in which, from prudential motives, ancient civilization had' inclosed itself."* -i There remains one other matter in the external organiz- ation of the Empire which cannot indeed be described as a special cause of its decline, but was rather one of those necessary predispositions which, upon a retrospect of its nature, seem to have indicated the inevitable occurrence of * L'Eglise et I'Empire Eomaiii, vol. ii. p. 225. FOLLOWS THE IMPERIAL TRADITIONS. 55 such a result. When Caracalla conferred the right of Eoman citizenship upon the civilized world, he -was only carrying out a policy inaugurated in the infancy of the Empire ; but he was no less manifestly bringi^g to a close the great work which the Empire, which Rome herself, had* been created to do. The day when this famous edict was proclaimed, lias been called a solemn day in the history of the human race. Nor is the expression unreasonable or extravagant ; for then, at last, was the mission of the imperial nation fulfilled, her task accomplished, her part in the great World-drama plaj'ed out. Ever since the first access of the Julian party to supreme power, it had been a fixed maxim of their policy to play off the interests of the Provinces against the tradition? of the Republic. Beneath the shadow of the Tarpeian,' iu the very spot overlooked by the temple of Capitolian Jupiter and hallowed by legends of the triumphs, the virtues, and heroic deeds of the Republic, the old spirit might perad- venture have been strong enough to reassert its empire even over the debased and impoverished multitude which bore the Eoman name. It was, therefore, necessary to introduce into the constitution of the state, and into the very bosom of the capital itself, a new element, which might counteract these undoubtedly dangerous recollections. This new ele- ment was found in the now Romanized provinces, more especially that of Gaul, whose distinguished- men might not unreasonably claim a share in that country with which they had so heartily identified themselves, and whose material prosperity they were so largely contributing to advance. Hence the admission upon equal terms of Gaulish senators into that august body, whose ancestors had awed the bar- barian warriors of Brennus as beings of a superior race. The august body were infinitely mortified and somewhat re- fractory, but they dared not resist. Like other aristocracies in similar circumstances, they revenged themselves by "bon- mots" upop the awkwardness and unfashionable costume of 56 THE PALL OP EOME. the provincials."* But "bon-mots" are feeble weapons against the will of Csesar and the course of fate. Augustus entered heartily into the same views, by the advice, a^ we are told, of his able minister Maecenas. At any rate, the policy upon which the emperor acted is clearly set forth in the language which Dio Cassias t places in that statesman's mouth : " Purify the Senate by the exclusion of unworthy members, and replace those whom you have been compelled to expel, by the most considerable and most wealthy nobles, not of Italy alone, but of the provinces and confederate countries." The advent, therefore, of Augustus to supreme power was warmly welcomed by the provinces, who began to under- stand how deeply their interests were involved in the transference of authority from a venal senate and factious aristocracy, to ai^ irresponsible absolutism, weighing equally upon all. Tiberius, Claudius, Hadrian, all actively carried out the same principles. The cosmopolitan spirit of Marcus Aurelius breaks out in his aspiration for the empire of free speech, equal laws, and common institutions ; J and the great Eoman jurists of the same era, Salvius, Papinian, and TJlpian, themselves not men of Eoman birth, are perhaps the first persons who ever gave a formal and technical ex- pression to the equality of all men in the eyes of the law. " By the law of nature," says one, " all were born free : subsequently, by the law of nations, the practice of slavery was established." § The dignity of the conception formed of man as a social being gained immensely by the doctrine, but the exclusive dignity attaching to Eoman citizenship received a shock from which it never recovered.' Other causes also had been long at work tending to bring about the same result. The old practice in relation to citizenship was far too narrow in its character for a state, the law of whose existence was unliinited expansion. Its restric * Suetonius, Vita Julii, c. 80. t 1". 19. t. El's eavTov, i. 1. *v § TJlpian, Leo. 4ta, De JustitiS et J\ir». THE EDICT OF CARACAIiLA. 57 tions opeMpd as a check upon commerce and the energies of growing civilization. The luxury of Eoman society had immensely increased its connection with all countries of the kno-wn world. The rude city of Eomulus could now with justice appropriate the somewhat hyperbolical praise be- stowed by the patriotism of Pericles upon his native Athens. Each day the winds of heaven wafted all the productions of all lands into her arms; At one and the same time, her tastes were gi-atified and her wants supplied by metals from the coast of Cornwall and the Soilly isles, — by furs from the wild regions beyond the Vistula, — by the jewels and silks of India, — ^by the ferocious denizens of African forests, — by perfume from Arabia, and spice from Malabar. The artificial requirements and the widely-extended traffic which these things imply, demanded a very different social and com- mercial system from the laws which sufficed the Latin shepherds and the Sabine farmers, for whom was framed the first legislation of the Republic. So it came to pass that the old formulas of Eoman right gave way by degrees before the new principles necessitated by the new state of things. Laws were modified or evaded, to suit the change of circum- stances and the demands of new interests and desires. The praetor's edict excepted- and excused violations of the letter of the old law j and at last, when the emperor became sole and irresponsible prsetor, the , cosmopolitan spirit of which we have already spoken, practically repealed all the restric- tions of the ancient code. The logical consequence of all this expressed itself in the edict of Caracalla, when it con- ferred the right of Eoman citizenship upon every community in the Empire.* And although the character of its author, and the purely fiscal and interested object of its apparent liberality, detract from the moral dignity of the edict itself, it * The full result, however, was not accomplished until the edict was supplemented by the legislation of Justinian, under which the only dis- tinction made was between subjects of the Cseaar and slaves. 58 THE FALL OF ROME. has no less an historical grandeur of its own, proving as it does that the work of assimilation and conquest was at an end, and that the little settlement of hunted brigands upon the hills which overlook the Tiber, had at last accomplished its des- tined function of absorbing the ancient world. Yet the fact that the world had become Eoman was scarcely a source of str^gth to the Empire. It was well for the world, but it was fatal to Eome herself. It unveiled the mysterious Divinity which had sat so long in awful and solitary grandeur upon the central throne of those seven Italian hills : it familiarized to the common mind the shadowy tei-rors of the great Name; and removed a moral bandage from the eyes of men. The Goddess had, as it were, become a human being, no longer gifted with supernatural attributes, and therefore no longer regarded in a supernatural light, or adorned with the reve- rent honours of divinity. The multitude no longer wor- shiped a power in which they had themselves been allowed to participate. The right of Roman citizenship, which had long been a rallying-cry for the natural and adopted sons of Eome in every region throughout the known world — had united them by a fraternal bond; — had raised them above their fellows by the consciousness of superior privilege — and animated their minds by a common- spirit of loyalty to the central authority from which these honours flowed ; this right was no longer a distinction, — no longer a source of either dignity or emolument. Every man was a Eo,man with- out eifort, and without merit of his own ; and as- all shared the advantages, social, legal, and commercial, which attached to the fact of citizenship, the right conferred no special pri- vilege, and inspired none of that special pride which the poverty of our language compels us to describe as esprit c^e corps. But when, among the outlying populations of the empire, the attraction towards Eome was withdrawn, the attraction to home and native fatherland began to acquire force. Patriotism became a possibility, and before long ITS IMMENSE KESULTS. 69 became a fact. Instead of one great local centre of attrac- tion and interest, there were many local centres. Above all, the innate and indestructible discord of East and West,— - of Greek and Roman civilization, long smothered by the overpowering predominance of the Latin element, — broke fiercely forth, and has never since been extinguished. Pro- positions for a division of the Empire had frequently been made, and indeed partially carried into effect long before the dismembering deed of Constantine, or the open partition between the sons of Theodosius. They resulted, of necessity, from the condition of the Empire itself, not from the folly or unpatriotic caprice of individual rulers. It has been usual to ascribe to the sunderance of the imperial body politic under Honorius and Arcadius the evils which produced its dissolution. And it is true that the division of the world into an Eastern and Western Home was, on the part of Home, an abdication of her function, and an acknowledgment that the work of a thousand years had at last been brought to a close. Henceforward the outward and artificial unity of the empire of the Caesars was a thing of the past : for the future was reserved the inner living unity of the kingdom of God. Yet the revolution is not to be regarded as an isolated and startling phenomenon ; still less as the consequence of a sud- den and irrational impulse in a ruler who had been previously remarkable for his wisdom. The germ of this wondrous future lay hidden in the edict of Caracalla, and the social neces- sities which it shadowed forth. "The change," writes an able living historian, " was doubtless fortunate for the future of the world, — we may doubt whether it was equally fortunate for the political grandeur of Rome. Be it what it may have been, this profound revolution was recognized rather than wrought out by the edict of Caracalla. Accordingly, as everything was ready for equality, men had not long to wait for the results. A few years after the imperial edict, we behold the purple won without diflSculty, and worn without embarrass- 60 THE FALL OF KOME. ment, not. only by provincials, fashioned, so to speak, into Eoman habits, like the Spaniard Trajan, or the African Septimius Severus, but by real aliens, deeply imbued with Oriental or barbarian manners, and with the intention to impose themselves, simply as what they were, upon the capital of the world." * But we are trespassing upon the subject of another lecture. It is time to consider the moral causes whose' secret operation sapped ancient civilization to its base, and evoked from the ruins a new order of things. * L'Eglise et I'Empire Remain, par M. A. de Broglie, vol. i. p. 31, LECTURE 11. THE FALL OF ROME. " Antiquam exquirite matrem." — Vibsil, ^n. ii. 1 Synopsis. — Policy by which the Roman Pawer was created and maintained. — Differed from modei-n Absolutism. — Inaugurated by the Republic- — Broken up by the Civil Wars. — Attempted revival by Augustus. — Modified success. — Strange effect of this upon modem opinion. — ^Ultimate failure, arising from the Corruption of Domestic Life, and neglect of the only influence capable of regenerating it. — Results seen in the practical Atheism of the age ; in its Superstition ; in its social demoralization. — Produced by poisoning in the family the fountains of national life. — Effect upon some important social ques- tions ; e. g. Education ; Divorce. — Strange Characters engendered by the Era : — the Emperor ; the Senator ; the Informer ; the Poisoner ; the Pantomimist ; tfte Client ; the Fortune-hunter ; the Parasite.— Two of more impbrtance^to the destinies of the Empire : the Gladiator and the Shows. — ^ThelSlaVe and Slavery. — Its dangerous character. — Demoralizes the popmatiotK of the Capital, and depopulates Italy. — These things, with §S<^daryN^uses, really destroyed the Empire. We cannot better recapitulate what has been said respecting the external aspects of Roman policy and dominion, than in the words of our own great poet, forming, as they do, one of those Tivid pictures which are only possible to the com- bination of true genius with large intellectual culture and accurate learning. " The city which thou seest, no other deem Than great and glorious Rome, Queen of the earth, So far renowned, and with the spoils enriched Of nations : there the Capitol thou seest Above the rest, lifting his stately head , On the Tarpeian rock — ^her citadel impregnable ; and there Mount Palatine, The imperial palace, compass huge and high ; The structure, skill of noblest architects, With gilded battlements, conspicuous far ; Turrets, and terraces, and glittering spires. 62 THE FALL OP EOME. Many a fair edifice besides, more like Houses of gods (so well I have disposed My airy microscope) ; thou raayst behold. Outside and inside both, pillars and roofs. Carved work, the hand of famed artificers, In cedar, marble, ivory,' or gold. Thence to the gates cast round thine eyes, and see What conflux issuing forth, or entering in ; Praetors, proconsuls, to their provinces Hasting, or on return, in robes of state ; Lictors and rods, the ensigns of their power ; Legions and cohorts, turms of horse and wings ; Or embassies from regions far remote, In various habits, on the Appian road, Or on the Emilian ; some from the farther south, Syene, and, where the shadow both way falls, Meroe, Nilotic isle ; and, more to west. The realm of Bocohus to the Black-moor sea ; From the Asian kings, and Parthian among these ; From India and the golden Chersonese, And utmost Indian isle Taprobane, Dusk faces with white silken turbans wreathed ; — From Gallia, Gades, and the British west, — Germans and Scythians, and Sarmatians north. Beyond Danubius to the Tauric pool, — All nations now to Home obedience pay." Home liad built up and maintained this mighty fabric of dominion by a policy and by institutions which it is impos- sible to describe a* large ; but the student would Ise seriously misled if he were induced to suppose that it was by the favourite arts of modern statecraft that this result was produced. The government of Rome was eminently a cen- tralized government ; but the ubiquitous and restless action which characterizes such administration in our own days, to her was utterly unknown. The Eoman proconsul or pro- prtetor did indeed periodically traverse the provinces, for the purpose of taking the census, collecting the prescribed revenue, conducting his military levies,' and superintending the progress of public works ; but with its strictly private or municipal affairs he very rarely interfered. The Syrian or the Gaul might regulate these as he pleased, attend to religion, commerce, or agriculture, and construct temples, theatres, and ports; no imperial official would ask his pur- POLICY OF THE REPUBLIC. 63 pose, or stay his Land. That great engine of modern despotisms, a paid police, was unknown. The " Cause of Order," or the " Pax Eomana," as they would have called it, did not require for its preservation any elaborate machinery of espionage, passports, deportations, or other ingenious ex- pedients, known to the absolutism of the nineteenth century. Rome, in fact, stood so utterly above the puny efforts of ordinary provincial revolt, — such a terror waited upon the traditions of her name, that she needed no other expedient than her own strong right arm to crush out, at once and for ever, all attempts at conspiracy and insurrection. The very notion of her fall would have paralyzed her subject populations, and seemed equivalent to the social collapse of the world. As a general rule, therefore, the provincial suffered and appealed, and suffered again, but did not dream of systematic resistance. Rome either amalgamated him . with herself, or finally and effectually convinced him of the irresistibility of her power. Nor, again, was this effected by the ever-impending menace of a gigantic standing army. A centurion and a few soldiers were sufficient to insure the tranquillity of a province. Italy, Spain, Asia Minor, and great part of Gaul, were for a long time positively denuded of a military force. The distribu- tion of the legions I have already described. From this it will be seen that about 150,000 men were sufficient to maintain the authority of Rome, at the apogle of her em- pire, throughout the Roman world. More than double the number does not satisfy the exigence of states which now include about one-fifth of her dominion. And, indeed, the troops permanently under arms were meant to combat, not so much internal treason, as assaults from without " The power of Rome," admirably remarks Count Champagny, " was not, as is the case with governments of our own time, a spring invisibly moving a vast machine, which, when its action ia arrested, becomes nothing better than a fragile and con- 64 tHE FALL OF ROME. temptible toy ; it was rather the mighty sword of our sires, which, though flung into a corner of the armoury, still inspires respect, and which, sure of its strength, may long linger in the sheath without being forgotten. The force of Eome was entirely a moral force. Modern governments must have their means of government visible, present, active, determined by a mathematical logic, for the purpose of bringing the wox'ld into some systematic mathematical order of their own conception. Mathematics have nothing to do with senti- mental traditions. Eome, on the contrary, was anything but a mathematician. As she did not trouble herself to discover a law of government in strict accordance with logic, she was content to accept, as maintainers of her power, influences of a less logical — I do not say less reasonable — kind ; all those influences, in short, which are found in human life — its memories, sentiments, and hopes. Rome built her power upon the past. To understand her power, therefore, we must go back to the past, make ourselves acquainted with the character of her conquest, take account of the force of her republican institutions, and the influence they exercised upon her policy for 600 years.'*"* We shall not, as you may well imagine, at present make any such attempt ; but the main features of that republican policy which consolidated a universal empire are intelligible enough, and widely known. A public morality based upon the family life and discipline ; an iron perseverance in the onward path of conquest, supported by a marvellously-trained soldiery, and tempered by a spirit of wise moderation, which enlisted the sympathies rather than aroused the animosity of the vanquished nationalities ; a military system which made the civil society an army almost ready for the field, and the army a civil society in the midst of its battles and campaigns ; a recognition at home of public right and pub- lic interest dominant over all personal objects, affections, * Lea C&ars, vol. ii. p. 69. BROKEN UP BY THE CIVIL WARS. 65 and ambitions ; an admirable system of colonization, -which planted an armed sentinel of civilization, a counterpart of Rome, -where nothing but forests, morasses, and barbarian huts had been found before; a conciliatory demeanour, which, by spreading far and -wide among savage tribes the amenities and benefits of refined life, in a shape indissolubly associated with Home, gradually modified the character of her bar- barian enemy, and, as in the conspicuous example of the Gauls, eventually identified him, in feeling as in fact, with the great people by whose spirit, rather than by whose sword, he had been subdued ; and, finally, to maintain these results, an. administrative system organized -with wonderful sagacity, avoiding the errors which cling to the modem conception of a centralized government, but not the less referring all things and subjecting all things to the central power, and turning all eyes to the City which sat upon the Seven Hills, as the goal of all ambitions, the arbitress of all destinies, the sole dispenser of honours, emoluments, and pains — these were the Roman arts of which the Roman poet boasted ; and he had a right to boast, for they established for a season the most complete dominion which has ever swayed the minds of men. This policy was in a great measui-e broken up by the civil wars ; for the civil wars broke up old Roman society. They were themselves the miserable, but most natural result of the decay of the Roman spirit, the corruption of the national manners by the inroads of Oriental luxury, the abandonment of the ancient traditionary reverence for authority, and the consequent neglect of that moral and military discipline which had gubdued -the world. The evil developed itself in many ways; most remarkably, perhaps, in the maladministra- tion of the provinces. " The despotism of the Empire was almost justified," as Professor G. Smith declares, "by the inis''overnment of the provinces during the senatorial regime, and the difiiculty, almost amounting to an impossibility, of 66 THE FALL OF ROME. any effectual reform."* The famous Yerrine orations of Cicero amply corroborate tMs statement. To the scholar it needs no corroboration; for the case of Verres, though a signal, was by no means a singular instance of the mischief inflicted by a bad man, and the misery endured by an oppressed nationality. The evil was aggravated by a circumstance upon whicli I think historians have not sufficiently insisted. However much we may admire the Eoman law as an . elaborate and nicely-adjusted system of jurisprudence, it exhibited one error of the gravest character : it was never independent of the existing political power of the state. If the people at large discharged the duties of our modern juries, the state officers were the judges. This, it may be easUy seeu, opened the door for pecuniary corruption and illegitimate influences of all sorts. Indeed, the entire separation of the judicial and administrative functions seems to be a modern conception, and one of the most valuable additions which has ever been made either to policy or law.t At Rome, their confusion placed the sacred interests of justice at the mercy of electioneering agents, class feeling, and prejudice of all kinds; It was in vain that the constitution of the great judicial tribunal was transferred from the senators to the knights, back 'again to the senators, or to both in combination. Corruption had' free scope, and verdicts were bought and sold, which in- volved the fortunes of the fairest and most important por- tions of the Eoman empire. From this tainted source, and from others also, the moral contamination spread. During the dreadful days which preceded the advent of the Csesarean family to power, the fountains of the great deep of human society were broken up, and a deluge of blood * Oxford Essays, 1856. t Or perhaps we should Bay mediseval ;' for, may it not have arisen from that singular institution, the office of Podesta, instituted by the Italian republics in the 12th century ? REVIVED BY AUGUSTUS. 67 and crime swept over the state. The genius of the aspiring Dictator for a moment stayed the storm. I can scarce venture to ascribe to him those far-seeing and disinterested views for which his modern admirers — and they are neither few nor insignificant — are determined to give him credit ; yet, with mixed motives, and gradually-developed aims, like those of our owh Cromwell, and perhaps those of all men in analogous situations, whether from personal ambition or public spirit, or from both combined, he laboured ener- getically for the regeneration of Roman society ; and, beyond all dispute, it was a great work, which was cu'9ll in towns as in the country, was exe- cuted) liJlipf^Y^S"'' * J jPoJ" ^6 mjist remember that what was the lias^Hbl* tbe i^sfcultural labourer, was also the case with the Jartifflli;. .'*^4 Si^ ^irts of civilized life which call forth the iskilN^'i -^a^fgSi of the modern workman, develop his jjjt,imigMti«s, tkft^ijiajike him valuable to his country as a citizen and a rriaS, were universally repudiated by the ' citizens of the Empire, and handed over unconditionally to the slave. The inference, as I told you, is patent enough. Eviscerate a nation of its middle class — ^the heads that plan, the hardy hands that execute all the material appliances of its civilization ; confine the name and privi- leges of citizen to the idler and the prodigal, too proud to dig, ^nd yet ashamed to beg ; too ignorant for intellectual ;, labour, and too sensual for virtue ; — do this, and, believe me, you need enter, upon no elaborate theories and nics r investigations to determine the causes of its ~ deciirie and fall. That I may conclude with more emphasis and au- thority than any views of my own could command, allow me to quote the language of an able modem historian upon ; this point. I am the more anxious to do so, as it refers especially to the last result of the slave system which I can , venture to bring before you. ; " Tyranny, the tyranny of the princes and the tyranny of jrthe magistrates, — difiierent in kind and far more burthen- ^jsome, — was not the principal cause of the ruin of the i' Empire. The real evil which undermined it proceeded ineither from the government nor from the administration. ^Had it been simply of an administrative nature, so many Sgood and great emperors would have found a remedy for it, ^ * Sismondi, Hist. Ital, Eep,, clj. 1, iifr > / THE FALL OF But it was a social evil, and its soi up by less than an entire renovatiol Slavery was this evil. The other ill! of them, at least, as the all-devourin demands of military government — - see, a consequence, a direct or indiree to trace the substitution of slave for the Empire, and the gradual deter as Greeks, Syrians, and Carthagin: Thracians, Germans, and Scythians, rudely the works left by their prede fabrication of which required any industry, soon becoming '^ imitations of imitations, grew ruder and ruder ; and as the j workmen who could achieve them became fewer and fewer, J their price was consequently on the rise. The salaries off those dependent on the state ought to have been raised in the same proportion ; and what marvel if the poor soldier, who had to pay fifty sous of our money for tha pound of 1 meat, and twenty-two francs for the commonest shoes manu- factured, was bent on seeking any alleviation of his wretched ness, and ready to make revolutions in- order to attain it, It was worse when Diocletian created another army of civi; functionaries. Till his time there existed a military powe: and a judicial power, which have been too often confounded.] He created, or at least completed, the administrative power. This highly necessary institution was, nevertheless, at thi beginning an intolerable charge on the already ruine^ Empire. Ancient society, very difierent from ours, was no incessantly reproducing riches by industrial means. Alwayi consuming, but, since the destruction of the industrial classes] never producing, the land was consequently required to yieL more, while its cultivators daily dwindled in nunabers an skill." "Well, then, may Michelet declare that history presents n^ more terrible picture than that left us by Laotantius of thi PEOXIMATE CAUSES OF THE FALL. 103 murderou^ struggle between the hungry treasury and worn- out people, who could suflFer and die, but could not pay ; and well, also,; may the Professor of Modern History at Oxford urge, in reply to Mr. Congreve : " Under the able reign of Diocletiap the earth swai-med with the consuming hierarchy of extortion, so that it was said that they who received taxes wMe more in number than those who paid them ; and from thjB general misery infanticide was common."* To this subject, and to the testimony of Lactantius, we shall be compelled to recur when we come to speak of the condition in which the barbarians found the provinces upon their first contact with them. It is not my intention to pursue into particulars the secondary and proximate causes of the fall of the Empire ,- the moral effect of the edict of Caracalla ; the orientar character of Diocletian's administration; his- abandonment of Rome ; his partition of the government into separate satrapies, with divided interests ; the trans- ference of the capital to Byzantium by Constantine ; the decay of the military spirit ; the diminution and altered organization of the legions; the decadence of the old religion; the enlistment of barbarian recruits ; the defenceless position of Rome, compared with that of .Constantinople, behind the Balkan and the Bosphorus; the political schism into an Eastern and Western Empire ; the -number and ferocity of the invaders, who came rolling ever onward from the steppes of Central Asia, like the ceaseless swell of the mighty Atlantic upon the seaboard of Europe ; these, and many other things, jnay have contributed to the great catastrophe; but they can only be deemed developments, or results of the one original cause — the extinction of the national life pro- duced by the dissolution of domestic manners, and the con- sequent demoralization of society. Rome, as a people, was dead. What boots it to speculate upon the exact accidents which at last detached the sceptre of empire from the • Oxford Essays, 1856, p. 303. 104 THE FALL OF EOME. fingers of a corpse ! The signs of her coming fate were inscribed in a language whicli all might read upon the social aspects of the world. The fingers of a hand came forth and wrote upon the wall : " God hath numbered thy kingdom, and finished it. Thou art weighed iu the balances, and found wanting. Thy kingdom is divided, and given to another race."* Note. — I have not thought it necessary to give a separate and distinct reply to the theory of Mr. Congreve, that Eoman imperialism was the type of all good government, and a desirable precedent for ourselves. Those who feel any penchant for the notion, I should strongly recom- mend to read the answer of Professor Gr. Smith, in the Oxford Essays for 1856, which is as complete and crushing as that gentleman's per- formances usually are. But in order to convey to the uninitiated some idea of the state of society under Ceesarean rule, and which a Csesarean rule, so far as mere government is concerned, if it does not produce, has never shown any tendency to prevent, let us give reins to imagina- tion for a moment, and picture to ourselves a few social and political analogies in our own England of the nineteenth century. An entire revolution has taken place in our principles, manners, and form of government. Parliaments, meetings, and all the ordinary ex- pressions of the national will, are no longer in existence. A free press has shared their fate. There is no accredited organ of public opinion ; indeed, there is no public opinion to record. Lords and Commons have been swept away, though a number of the richest old gentlemen in London meet daily at Westminster to receive orders from Buckingham Palace. But at the palace itself has broken out one of those sanguinary conspiracies which have of late become unceasing. The last heir of the house of Brunswick is lying dead with a dagger in his heart, and everything is in frightful confusion. The armed force of the Capital are, of course, " masters of the situation," and the Guards, after a tumultuous meeting at Windsor or Knightsbridge, have sold the throne to Baron Rothschild, for a handsome donation of twenty-five pounds apiece. Lord Clyde, however, we may be sure, is not likely to stand this, and in a few months will be marching upon London at the head of the Indian army. In the mean time the Channel fleethas declared for its own commander; has seized upon Plymouth and Portsmouth, and intends to starve out the metropolis by stopping the imports of "bread-stuffs" at the mouth of the Thames. And this has become quite possible ; for half the population of London, under the present state of things, subsist upon free distributions of com dispensed by the occupant of the throne for the time being. But a more fatal change than even this has come over the population of the capital and of the whole country. The free citizens and prentices of Loudon ; the sturdy labourers of Dorsetshire and the eastern counties ; the skilful artisans * P^niel, V. 26, 27, 28, NOTE. 105 of Manchester, Sheffield, and Birmingham ; the mariners and ship- wrights of Liverpool, have been long ago drafted into marching regiments, and have left their bones to bleach beneath Indian suns and Folar snows. Their place has been supplied by countless herds of negro slaves, who till the fields, and crowd the workshops of our towns, to the entire exclusion of free labour ; for the free population, or rather the miserable relics of them, disdain all manual employment : they divide their time between starvation and a degrading debauchery, the means for which are sedulously provided by the government. The time-honoured institutions of the bull-bait, the cook-pit, and the ring, are in daily operation, under the most distinguished patronage. Hyde Park has been converted into a gigantic arena, where criminals from Newgate "set to" with the animals from the Zoological Gardens. Every fortnight there is a Derby day, and the whole population pour into the Downs with frantic excitement, leaving the city to the slaves. And then the moral condition of this immense mass ! Of the doings of people about the palace we should be sorry to speak. But the lady patronesses of Almack's still more assiduously patronize the prize fights, and one of them has been seen within the ropes, in battle array, by the side of Sayers himself. No tongue may tell the orgies enacted, with the aid of French cooks, Italian singers, and foreign artistes of all sorts, in the gilded salons of Park Lane and Mayfair. Suffice to say, that in them the worst passions of human nature have full swing, unmodified by any thought of human or divine restraints, and only dashed a little now and then by the apprehension that the slaves may rise, and make a clean sweep of the metropolis with fire and steel. But n'importe — Vive la bagatelle I Mario has just been appointed prime minister, and has made a chorus-singer from the opera duke of Middlesex and governor-general of India. All wise men and all good men despair of the state, but they are not permitted to say anything, still less to act. Mr. Disraeli lost his head a few days ago ; Lords Pal- merston and Derby lie in the Tower under sentence of death ; Lord Brougham, the archbishop of Canterbury, and Mr. Gladstone, opened their veins and died in a warm bath last week. Foreign relations make a still greater demand upon the reader's imagination. We must con- ceive of England no longer as " A precious stone set in the silver sea. Which serves it in the office of a wall. Or as a moat defensive of a house ;" but rather as open to the inroad of every foe whom her aggressive and colonizing genius has provoked. The red man' of the West, the Caffie, the Sikh, and the Sepoy, Chinese braves, and fierce Orientals of all sorts, are hovering on her frontiers in "numbers numberless," as the flakes of snow in the northern winter. They are not the impotent enemy which we know, but vigorous races, supplied from resourceless founts of population, and animated by an insatiate appetite for the gold and silver, purple and fine linen, rich meats and intoxicating drinks of our effete civilization. And we can no longer oppose them with those victorious legions which have fought and conquered in all regions of the world. The men of Waterloo and Inkermann are no more. We E 2 106 THE FALL OF ROME. are compelled to recruit our armies from those very tribes before whose swords we are receding ! Doubtless the ordinary reader will believe this picture to be over- charged, drawn with manifest exaggeration and somewhat questionable taste. Every singU statement which it contains may be paralleled by the circumstances and events of the decadence of the Eoman empire. The analogous situation was with the subjects of this type of all good government, always a possible, often an actual, state of things. We think this disposes of the theory of Mr. Congreve. With it may advantageously be contrasted the opinion of a man of more statesman- like mind. " The benefits of Despotism are short-lived ; it poisons the very springs which.it lays open : if it display a merit, it is an excep- tional one ; if a virtue, it is created of circumstances ; and when once this better hour has passed away, all the vices of its nature break forth with redoubled violence, and weigh down society in every direction." So writes M. Guizot.* Is it the language of prophecy as well as of personal experience ? * History of Civilization in Faancej Leot, ij. LECTURE III. THE BAEBAEIAN EAOES, " Now these are the generations of the sons of Noah, Shem, Ham, and Japheth : and unto them were sons born after the flood By these were the isles of the Gentiles divided in their lands ; every one after his tongue, after their families, in their nations." — Gen. X. 1, 5. Synopsis. — The complexity of the subject. — Its comprehension as- sisted by the study of Ethnology. — The science rests on three bases : the physiological; the historical, the linguistic. — Its conclusions point (i.) to the Armenian table-land, (ii.) to the plateau of Ir^n, as the local origins of the human race. — Its division into three classes : the Turanian or Mongol ; the Semitic or Aramaic ; the Japhetic or Indo-European. — Migrations of the latter, east and west. — Course of the western migi'ations. — Division of its members into Celts, Slaves, and Teutons. — ^The physical and moral characteristics of the first ; of ' the second ; of the third. — The same of the Mongols. — ^Early opinions at Home respecting this barbarian world. — Reasons why its action on the Empire was so long delayed. We have already asked the question, What lay outside the Eoman empire, its provinces, dependencies, and allied states ? The answer is, " The barbarian world." The words, I am sure, convey to many of us an exceedingly indistinct image, or, perhaps it would be more correct to say, a num- ber of images, forming a complex whole, whose limits and characteristic marks are so indefinite that it becomes im- possible to combine them into a single, well-eompoSed, and intelligible picture. The Celt, the Teuton, the Goth, and the Hun ; the Vandal, the Avar, the Slave, and the Bul- garian ; the Frank, the Burgundian, and the Saxon ; German 108 THE BAEBAEIAN BACES, warriors, Scandinavian pirates, and the wild nomad races of central Asia, pass before the mind's eye like the fantastic figures in a magic lantern, which confuse the sight when present, and are undistinguishable in the memory when past. This, however, is a defect inherent in the nature of the subject, or, rather, in our own power of comprehending it ; and as such, I fear, can never be completely remedied. No one can hope to surpass Gibbon in lucid arrangement ; yet, with most of the students who have attempted to collect and classify their ideas, after perusing the pages of the Decline and Fall, the result is something like that which I have described. Perhaps some training in the science of ethnology would do more than anything else to clear our conceptions, and impress them permanently on the recol- lection. I do not of course mean that the student of history woxxld be in duty bound to master the whole science of ethnology, even had ethnology reached that stage when it could be taught as a positive branch of human knowledge. But an acquaintance with its elements would, at any rate, give us a few striking landmarks, which might serve to guide our steps amid the perplexing labyrinth of events through which we have to pass. Chronology and Geography have long been described, with universal consent, as the handmaids of History. Ethnology is her mother, and has, therefore, a still greater claim upon those whose attention the daughter has attracted. Or, to drop all metaphor, the origin of the separate races of the human family has obviously the closest possible connection with the history of those races, whether we regard the simple narrative of their rise and progress as human societies, or whether we examine more closely the moral and political influences which have been found to flow from some peculiarity in the national temperament and character. The agency of race in the reciprocal action of peoples upon each other has been immense; and even yet must be re- IMPORTANCE OF ETHNOLOGY. 109 garded as very considerable. With the other agencies of law, locality, and religion, it forms one of the great social influences which " In quaternion run. And mix and nourish all things." In it we may trace the germ of migration, colonization, and conquest ; and from the law of its action in these, the main instruments of civilization, we may, to a certain extent, deduce the law of human progress, and guess at the future destinies of the world. The question of race forms one of the largest elements in that important problem of modern politics at which sophists sneer, and which empirical state- doctors despise, but which every real statesman who is acquainted with the past and present of Europe, and who cares for its future, will never venture to neglect — I mean the Balance of power. The ethnological affinities of the various nationalities in Europe not only are intimately con- nected with the right understanding of its past, but, in some degree, they involve its future ; calling forth or checking the ambition of potentates, modifying the policy of governments, and contributing to the political strength or weakness of the great nations of the world. The allegiance of the Slavonic races, hovering between Austria and the empire of the Czar ; the Teutonic sympathies which alien- ate Holstein from Denmark, and attract it to Germany ; the common origin of the Romaic peoples, which from time to time seems inclined to ignore the natural ramparts of the Alps and the Pyrenees, and which has expelled the " Tedeschi " from the Lombard plains ; — these are all cases in point. " Government has no power," writes Dr. Ansted, " in uniting races whose blood is different. Language may conceal for a time, but cannot obliterate, their permanent character ; and for at least thirty centuries there have been as well-marked and important distinctions between the bearded and the beardless man, the red man and the white, 110 THE BAEBARIAN EACES. and the true Ethiopian and the negro, as there are at this day] while the essential points of distinction are clear now as they were at that distant period."* The diversity of physical type has not failed to be accompanied by a variety of moral characteristics, themselves also of a very perma- nent nature. " All the recent events in history," says an able writer in the North British Review, " as well as the tendency of opinion in all enlightened men, in all countries, who have been bred up under their influence, point to the conclusion that there is an original and indelible difference in the character of the different races of man ; and that each will best find its highest point of social advancement by institutions which have grown out of its ruling dispo- sitions. This is but an exemplification of the profound observation long ago made by Montesquieu, that no nation ever rose to durable greatness, except by institutions in harmony with its spirit." A living writer, who is mainly distinguished for the unhesitating contempt with which he treats opinions, principles, men, and facts, when they cannot be accommodated or tortured into conformity with his own theories, speaks in sneering terms of this as of many other generally accepted convictions.t But as he seems to admit the results, while he questions the causes, further contro- versy may for the present be dispensed with ; and I shall assume the practical value of ethnology, both in history and politics, as a truth which has not been as yet disproved. Let me, then, very briefly direct attention — I can do no more — to some of its best-established conclusions, in so far as they cast a light upon the subject of European history. Only let us remember this, the science is a difficult one because it is as yet in such an unsettled state. A few words at the commencement of a lecture may easily mislead * Manual of Geograptioal Science, p. 397. f Buckle, History of Civilization. THE BASES ON WHICH IT EESTS. Ill the student, if he does not pursue • his inquiries further. Though I have devoted some time and attention to the study, I feel most strongly — perhaps this is the reason why I do feel strongly — ^that I am in no wise qualified to be its exponent. Still, as something must^ be done, I will try, for ithe sake of those to whom the subject is a novel one, to set before you a few of those points which will best repay further examination. The science of ethnology may be approached in three diflFerent ways : more properly speaking, it reposes on three distinct foundations. These may be described as the historical, the physiological, and the philological. In other words, if we want to distinguish' between the varieties of the human species, we may interrogate History as to the evidence which she affords of their division into families and nations, with their subsequent changes of locality ; or we may seek from physical and anatomical science, the information it can give . concerning thfe differences of bodily form and structure which the nations of the world exhibit ; or, lastly, we may discover, from a careful analysis of lan- guage, the broad varieties of dialect which imply a variety of origin among the populations where they are spoken. The first method needs no explanation ; it differs in no respect from all other rightly conducted investigations into the matter which historical records contain. The second may easily be understood from the familiar illustration of colour. The white European, the black negro, the yellow- tinted Tatar, the red Indian of North America, carry in their very aspect, even to the most unscientific eye, a remarkable evidence of the diversity of blood and race.* You must not, however,' imagine that physiological science rests satisfied with this test — a test which by no means universally proves ethnological relationship. It has estab- * Latham, Man and his Migrations, p. 159. Usi THE BAEBAUIAN EACteS. lished others : the hair ; the skin j the bone ; the positioa of the "foramen (male," or aperture through which the spinal cord is connected with the brain ; the formation of the pelvis, and the facial angle, or, popularly speaking, the extent to which the forehead falls back from the root of the nOse ; — all these are taken into account by the ethnologist wh« proceeds to construct a classification on physiological prin- ciples. The third, or philological method, perhaps owes its origin to the comprehensive genius of. Leibnitz, which appears to have included almost all the subjects of human knowledge within its grasp. He composed an interesting treatise on the language of the Basques ; a matter of violent controversy, which has received within the last few months very valuable elucidation from the splendid work of Prince Lucien Buonaparte. I must not, however, digress into the history of this method, or of its most distinguished professors ; I can only shortly state results. Philologers maintain the existence of three main classes, into which nearly all the dialects spoken by men may be divided. First. Languageswithout any proper grammatical structure whatever. The roots of such are found to be monosyllabic. They cannot, however, enter into combination with each other, and therefore have no grammatical organization, properly so called. Neither have they particles to remedy this defect. The words are naked signs, and their significance is deter- mined only by their position. The Chinese is generally said to be the most remarkable example. Secondly. Languages, the roots of which are also mono- Syllabic, but which are capable of composition, and therefore possess a grammar, and an organization which depends upon the special character of their combination in each particular case. In this class it is said that the leading principle of the formation of words lies in the connection of verbal and pronominal roots ; and herein is founA the body and soul of the language. To this class belong the Sanscrit and all Physiological, histoeical, liIstguistic; lis its affiliated dialects, as tlie Greek and Latin ; in short, all the languages of the Western world with which you have any acquaintance j our own among the number. Thirdly. Languages whose roots are verbal only, and con- sist of two syllables. They require three consonants to be the vehicle of their primary meanings. The , grammatical forms are not produced solely, as was the case with the last class, by the composition of verbal and pronominal roots : a simple modification of the root is in itself sufficient. These are the Semitic languages, as they are called ; the most fa- miliar example of which is the Hebrew. "We may readily understand how complicated the consi- deration of these several particulars, historical, physiological, and linguistic, becomes, especially when the facts supplied to us from all these sources have to be sifted, compared, and reconciled. There is, however, this advantage — when all three agree, we seem to have reached a secure standing-placCj and are enabled to pronounce, with some degree of certainty, upon a conclusion in which all coincide. If, for instance, we find certain peculiarities of physical structure distin- guishing the great body of the inhabitants of the south-west of Asia from the South-European nations ; if, in examining their languages, we discover that those spoken by the former fall under the third-mentioned class, with consonantal and dissyllabic roots, while those spoken by the latter, possess monosyllabic roots, capable of combination and grammatical construction, and therefore belong to the second ; if, finally, History in her obscure records points to a distinct parentage for these two families of nations, assigning one, for instance, to Shem, the eldest son of Noah, and another to Japhet, his youngest-born ; and if, still further, the hints affiarded by legend and tradition upon the subject of the migrations of mankind, corroborate what is thus far probable, ethnology may venture to employ the precise and positive language of a science, and distinguish the Semitic from the Japhetic races, 114 THE BARBARIAN RACES. as distinct varieties of the human family. Such, then, is the method -which ethnology employs. I must, in the next place, state some of the results at which it has arrived by this method, premising that I -would not be understood to speak dogmatically upon points still the subject of contro- versy, although to enter at present upon such controversy is altogether beyond my purpose, and indeed beyond my' power. All tradition and all historical research concur -with Scrip- ture in pointing to the great table-land of Armenia as the local origin of the nations of the world. From the hoary summit of Ararat descended the venerable fathers of the human race. And indeed, even before the Noaic deluge, there is reason to believe that the same region was the cradle of all human beings. Dr. Donaldson, whom no one will suspect of too servile an adherence to the tradition of the Bible, distinctly says, " I am inclined to attach much more importance than some other eth-nographers to the geography of Eden as given in the book of Genesis; and I believe that the first seats of the human race are strictly defined by the four rivers there mentioned." Despite the aqueous action of " the waters covering tlie face of the earth," he is inclined to recognize the four rivers of Paradise in the Tigris, the Euphrates, the Oxus, and the Volga ; whereof the two last discharge themselves into the Caspian Sea. . It is probable that the area now covered by that vast inland lake was in antediluvian times the seat of a dense population. However these things may be, the great Armenian plateau, so far as we can now conjecture, was the first dwelling-place of the survivors of the flood. The earliest movements of its in- habitants must of necessity have been towards the west and the south-east ; that is to say, towards the peninsula of Asia Minor and the Mesopotamian plains. During this period, we have no trace of any variety in language or distinction in race. I agree with 'those ethnologists who believe that a TURANIAN, SEMITIC, HAMITIC. 115 population speaking languages of the Turanian type was at first spread over all this space ; that is to say, I think them right in holding that this was the earliest stage of all lan- guage, and that the different dialects of the Hamitio and Semitic, as ■well as those of the Japhetic or Indo-European class, were rather posterior developments than contempora- neous varieties of human speech. The tribes speaking what we have called the Turanian languages, are sometimes designated as " Sporadic," sometimes as "AUophylian;" terms intended to designate their entire want of social organiza- tion, and the absence of any positive law under which their languages may be connected or arranged. " The character- istic marks of union ascertained for this immense variety of languages are as yet very vague and general." This is the judgment of Professor Max Miiller, undoubtedly the best authority in this country; and, resting upon this authority, •we may venture to affirm that the various Turanian tongues cannot as yet be considered as evidence sufficient to prove the ethnical relationship of the tribes who speak them. Their character is, however, sufficiently distinct, as a whole, to separate them from that other class of languages which have been called the Semitic, and which seem to have de- veloped themselves out of the other under some particularly favourable conditions, both social and linguistic, which have been long placed beyond the reach of human cognizance. The same remark must be repeated in reference to the third great development of race and language, — the Japhetic or Arian, or Indo-European, the local origin of which may be traced to the country of the Medes and Persians, just as the local origin of the Semitic tongues may be traced to Meso- potamia and the borders of Syria and Arabia. We have, then, the following state of things in the earliest ages of the world, so far as ethnology can recover the picture. First, -like the primary strata of geology, a vast number of sporadic tribes, extending from the Ural Mountains to the Indian 116 THE SaEBAMAN races. peninsula, perhaps we might say covering all Asia, who spoke a language of the rudest and most primitive character, which has been perpetuated down to modern ages in the tongues of the Tatar and Mongol tribes of Asia, and in those of the Laps and Fins of Europe. Next, a more advanced social and linguistic organization, developing itself, ethnolo- gists say, about the 20th century B.C., on the banks of the Euphrates and the Nile. This was the rise of the combined Hamitic and Semitic races and languages ; the former being perhaps the earlier and the more imperfect element. On this point, however, no small controversy exists. Great names in philology, such as Bunsen and Max Miiller, are in favour of considering Hamitism as nothing more than a special form of Semitism, and altogether unconnected with the Turanian family. Others again, as Colonel Eawlinson, are inclined to regard it as the Turanian in its intermediate stage, when developing into a Semitic form, or, at any rate, decidedly Turanian in character. It will, perhaps, be for ever impossible to determine accurately the relations be- tween the two; we can only say that everything yet ascer- tained confirms the Scripture statement,* that the descend- ants of Shem and Ham long continued in connection, and appear to have interchanged localities by conquest and migration. At present we are only concerned with the fact that these second strata of population, the Semitic and Hamitic combined, extended themselves, the first over Assyria, Mesopotamia, Syria, Palestine, Arabia, part of Asia Minor, and some of the iEgean islands ; the second, over Egypt, Ethiopia, and detached portions of the Asiatic con- tinent. These then, are the homes of the Semitic races, or race, sometimes also called Aramaic, from Aram, son of Shem. Except in the case of the Hebrew people, they have not deeply influenced the ultimate destiny of the world. In modern history, as we shall have to deal with it, they play * Gen. X. 10, ad finem. JAPHETIC, OR INDO-EUKOPBAN. 117 an insignificant part, save in one signal instance, where they blazed forth with the devouring fire of Islamism, and " the naked locust-eaters of the Arabian desert, the rear-guard of the Semitic race,"* dashed out from their native sands to carry fire and sword, and the banner of the faith, far over Africa, and into the very heart of Europe. We have next to speak of a family of nations whose destiny has been very difierent, and whose connection with ourselves is much more intimate and important. In central Asia lies what has been called the plateau of Iran. It is a region lying east of the Euphrates, with the Caspian Sea and the Oxus on the north-east, the Indus and Indian Sea on the east and south, and the Persian Gulf on the south-west. Here, geographers assure us, wa^ a rich and pleasant land, abounding in all those material necessaries, and even luxuries of life, which are calculated to engender and support a teeming population. That it presents a very different aspect at the present time, may be explained by the fact, that it was originally irrigated by artificial means, and that the barbarian conquerors who, generation after generation, have swept across its surface, by destroying the watercourses, have reduced it to sterility. This plateau may be con-, sidered to consist of two distinct regions — Upper and Lower Irania. Upper Irania lies to the south, and comprises aU those mountain-chains which were the seat of that Persian race whose valour gained for them the dominant power in the second great empire of the world. Lower Irania was the seat of the race whom they supplanted — the Medes. It must not, however, be supposed that the term " Low " neces- sarily means a low-lying locality ; for the table-land of Media often rises to a great elevation, and the fertile valleys which intersect its hills were probably filled with a wealthy civilization, which excited the cupidity and ambition of the founders of the Persian monarchy. Be this as it may, the * Michelet. 118 THE BAEBAKIAN RACES. region which we have described, undoubtedly saw the first development of the languages once called Indo-Germanic, because a common basis can be traced for them in the tongues spoken between the Ganges and the Rhine. Further philological inquiry has detected the same element in nationalities not belonging to the German stock. The westerly Celts of Connaught and Brittany, and the in- habitants of all the Eomaic countries, have been reduced under the same class, which is now, therefore, styled the Indo-European ; and may, perhaps, some day claim even a wider name. The period of the first development of these languages in the Iranian plateau is antecedent to known history. "We can only say, that it was, in all probability, gradually matured among a people who were undisturbed by the struggle taking place more towards the west, between the Hamite, Semitic, and Turanian populations. In point of time, therefore, this linguistic type may be considered third in order ; and where it has come in contact with the others, is, like a third geological stratum, overlying the other two, except where the disturbing force of local circumstances has caused the primary and secondary to crop up. AVhat seems certain is, that from this race and region were thrown out, eastward and westward, at successive eras, great waves of population, some of whom spread over the Punjaub, or country of the Five Rivers, into the Indian peninsula, while others forced their way to Europe, and formed the basis of all the civilized nations of the West, both in ancient and modern times. The times and manner of these migrations are involved in an obscurity which no historical research has as yet been able to remove. There are, therefore, several hypotheses concerning their order, which, except in a work professedly devoted to ethnology, it would be impossible to discuss. The fact of an eastern migration into the lands beyond the Indus, rests upon the evidence of comparative philology. The primitive language of this district presents COURSE OF MIGRATIONS. 119 80 many, and, to the philologist, such, unmistakable traces of an origin common to itself and the languages of Europe, that no one doubts the identity, at some very distant period, of the races whose speech they were. Beyond this, our knowledge does not extend ; nor is it necessary for our present purpose to dwell upon the point. We are mainly concerned with the migrations to the West, but here again, unfortunately, we can only speculate and guess. Two narrow passes or " gates," may have enabled the inhabitants of the Iranian plateau to pass onward into the northern and western world — the Pylse Caspise, and the Pylse Syrise. By the former, perhaps, a migration swept round the north of the Caspian Sea, and, leaving few traces of itself in Asia, passed into the eastern parts of Europe, and formed the first element of peoples of which few, if any, traces can now be discovered in our European commonwealth. The " Syrian gates," which in later ages gave a passage to Alexander into the heart of Asia, most probably presented a path whereby a second Iranian migration, making their way between the Taurus and the Mediterranean, assailed the Semitic popula- tions in Asia Minor, drove them into its mountain-fastnesses, and, ultimately crossing the Dardanelles, effected a settlement in Southern Europe, as their brethren had done in the North. Several interesting questions meet us here ; and there are but few indisputably ascertained facts to aid us in answering them. The great families of the European, or Western Iranian migration, have been clearly determined by ethnologists; as the Celtic, the Slavonian, and the Teutonic. Now, of these, the Celts, Cymry, or Gaels, have been driven onward before the rest into the extreme western corners of the continent. Scotland, Ireland, the Isle of Man, Brittany, and the north-west corner of Spain, alone exhibit anything like unmixed relics of the great Celtic race and language, which must at one time have been spread far and wide over Central and Southern Europe. History, there- 120 THE BAEBAKIAN RACES. fore, and analogy show that the Celts were the earlier occupants of the territory which they have been compelled to abandon j for a conquering race, like the Saxons m England and the Moors in Spain, are ever found to force the conquered into their remote strongholds and mountain- fastnesses. The Celts were most probably followed by the primitive ancestors of the present Slavonian tribes — Russians, Poles, Servians, Illyrians, Carinthians, Styrians, Hungarians, Slovaks, Bohemians, Tsheks, and Gallicians.* These Sla- vonians, Sarmatians, or Scythians, are found beside the Celts in all their earliest settlements.^ They appear, however, to have clung to the flatter and more eastern portions of Europe, and not to have eifected any permanent lodgement in the highlands of Germany or the Alps. t The consider- ations which induce us to believe that this second great wave of Asiatic migration was of Slavonian character, are too com- plex for enumeration here ; for the present we may accept the conclusion, upon good ethnological authority. The third, and final Iranian migration, was, what we have called the Teutonic. There is, with respect to the tribes composing this migration, the singular circumstance that they divide themselves into two classes, speaking what are called the High and Low Iranian dialects respectively ; and that the peculiarities of each are undoubtedly reproduced in the High and Low German tongues with which we are ourselves acquainted. The migration was, therefore, probably two- fold in character. First came the Low Iranians, breaking through the Slavonian population which had preceded them from Asia, and finally settling in the north-west of Europe, where they formed the basis of the peoples who speak, or have spoken, Low German tongues ; the old Gothic, the Scandinavian dialects, Anglo-Saxon, Frisian, Flemish, and Dutch. They were followed by the High Iranian branch * Latham, Man and his Migrations, p. 166, t Donaldson, New Cratylus, § 73. DIVISION INTO CELTS, SLAVES, TEUTONS. 121 of the same migration, who probably followed the same course, and, coming in contact with their brethren in Eastern 'Europe, partially displaced them, or modified the character of their central settlements. But on the south and west, they soon became predominant, peopling the highlands of Germany, and becoming the progenitors of the nations who now speak the High German dialects, and immensely influencing the character of others, when, for instance, as Franks and Burgundians, they crossed the Rhine. One curious fact I wUl mention with respect to these High and Low German languages, which correspond, as I have said, the first, to the High Iranian, or Persian type of the original stock ; the second to the Low Iranian, or Median. Undoubted affinities- connect the former with the Greek, while the Latin is evidently akin to the second, or even the Slavonized portion of the second. From this, it follows that the Latin language is the elder of the two, and that their common origin is to be sought at a point much further back in the world's history than was formerly supposed. But on this and many other matters of interest, as I am not lecturing upon ethnology, I cannot enlarge. I will only add, that if, as in respect of the Turanian and Semitic races, we also ask with regard to the great Japhetic, or Indo-European race, with its three families, Celtic, Slave, and Teutonic, — "What has been its influence upon the world of modern history ? the answer must be — It has peopled that world ; it has made that history ; it occupies, if we except the waning empire of the Orescenti and the insignificant Turanian subjects of Russia, the whole of Europe ; it has retained in Asia nearly all India, Persia, and extensive regions of Asia Minor ; it is now extending more or less over Northern Africa, and working its way upwards from the settlements of the Cape of Good Hope, and Tasmania ; it has nearly expelled the aboriginal in- habitants of the two mighty American continents ; it has 122 THE BARBARIAN RACES. appropriated another great continent in the southern hemisphere ; it is spreading day by day throughout the countless islands of the Pacific. The whole course of cir- cumstances into which the destiny of mankind is cast, all the objects of human policy, all the results of what is idly called accident, are working out the prophetic promise spoken to the race of old : " God shall enlarge Japheth, and he shall dwell in the tents of Shem, and Canaan shall be his servant." * This digression into matters connected with the science of ethnology, however brief and superficial, must, I fear, have appeared somewhat ~ tedious, perhaps inappropriate to our purpose ; but if it gives a somewhat more connected and coherent notion of that barbarian world whose relations with Eome form the prelude to modern history, I do not think our time will have been thrown away. It will, at any rate, enable us not only to classify, in some degree, the tribes by contact with which the Empire was harassed or overrun, but also to attach more definite ideas to what such classification implies, and to retain it in the memory. I shall, therefore, in the remainder of this lecture, endeavour to give some idea of the original locality and national character of those barbarian races which we have already described, the Celts, Cymry, or Gael; the Teuton ; the Slavo- nian j and the wild nomads of the Turanian or Mongol stock. First in order come the Celts, or, as in their relations to Rome we shall prefer to call them, Gaels, or Gauls. Were we merely speaking of the fall of the Roman empire, it would be unnecessary to treat of a race who, themselves long previously Romanized in institutions, feelings, and manner of life, may be rather said to have shared in that grand catastrophe, than to have caused it. Early in her history, Rome succumbed before the Gaulish foe with whom she disputed the north of Italy. Brenniis planted his standard * Gen. ix. 27. THE CELTS. 123 on the Capitol ; his gigantic follo-srers hewed down the venerable fathers of the state on their seats in the senate- house ; the barbarians' were undoubted lords of the city of the Seven Hills ; and long did legend and song recall the terrors of that memorable day. But the Republic, with that indomitable energy which she exhibited under circumstances of peril, more perhaps than any ancient or modem state, shook oiF the Gaulish yoke ; and though the Gaulish name in- spired a vague alarm, and, in the days of Marius, brought a real danger to the doors of Italy, the bloody and unsparing wars of Caesar, in which fell so many thousands of the race, for ever prevented the Celts from menncing the destinies of Home ; or, rather, we should say, amalgamated them with her own fortunes and her fate. With her fate, it is hardly correct to say ; for the Gaulish spirit and character has survived the fall of the Empire, and formed perhaps the largest element in the national character of the first people of continental Europe ; nay, has doubtless materially modi- fied our own. This, therefore, must plead our excuse for recurring a momeiit to the portraiture of the Gauls, as it was drawn by those before whose eyes they appeared "as a distinct nationality. Their physical aspect was imposing ; — gigantic ■ stature, long yellow hair, eyes of a grey or greenish -blue, a complexion so wondrously fair to the sight of the swarthier dwellers in the south, that the very name of Gael, or Gaul, has been derived from ya\a, the Greek word for milk, and immense muscular strength, ■were their most striking characteristics. These were in- creased in their effect by the fondness for personal decora- tion which is so often found in the savage mind. Massive collars of gold, and chains of the same material, hung upon their huge white necks and chests ; parti-coloured garments, of the most brilliant dyes, the origin of the Gaelic plaid, concealed their tall bodies and stalwart limbs. " They wear bracelets and armlets, and round their neck thick rings, all 124 THE BAKBAKIAN BACES. of gold, and costly finger-rings, and even golden corselets," says Diodorus Siculus. The same author speaks of their "dyed tunics, flowered with colours of every kind, and trews, and striped cloaks, fastened with a buckle, and divided into numerous many-coloured squares.* We all remember Virgil's description : — " Pair golden tresses grace the comely train, And every warrior wears a golden chain ; Embroidered vests their snowy limbs enfold, And their rich robes are all adorned with gold." Their appearance in line of battle, naked but for their arms and golden trappings, was admitted by the Eoman historians to have been terrible ; and their martial prowess, when well commanded, equalled their appearance, as the legionary, on many occasions, found to his cost ; more espe- cially when opposed to the Gaulish auxiliaries who followed Hannibal across the Alps. The moral characteristics of the race were not less remarkable or distinctive. Vainglorious, talkative, quick in temper and perception, restless and im- patient of rule, eager after political change, credulous, fickle, and licentious in their pleasures, — they struck strangers by the loudness of their tones, their boasting, their passionate fondness for news, and their gullibility, their sudden quar- rels, disregard of oaths, and desire for revolution and war. Such is the general impression to be derived from the lan- guage of Csesar, Strabo, Diodorus Siculus, and Livy. The firstt gives an amusing account of the manner in which they seized upon a stranger entering one of their towns ; stood round him in a circle, and compelled him to recount the news, which generally consisted of " wars and rumours of wars " among neighbouring chiefs and states. These were, of course, skilfully accommodated to the taste of the audience ; and as they instantly proceeded to deliberate upon what they heard, and act upon their deliberation, * Piod. Sic, lib. V, t Bell, Gall, iv. 5. CHAHAOTEEISTICS of the celts. 125 Csesar informs us that, very naturally, they were perpe- tually getting into hot water. I subjoin the passage from Strabo, with which Michelet commences the history of the great people who so largely share their blood, with his own commentary upon it. " The Gauls," says Strabo, following the philosopher Posidonius, "are, universally, madly fond, of war, hot in temper, and quick to fight ; in all other respects simple, and void of malice. Hence, when provoked, they march multitudinously, openly, and incautiously, straight against the enemy, so as to be easily out-generalled ; since they may be drawn on to engage where and when one chooses, and for any cause, being ever ready for battle, even though armed only with their own natural strength and audacity. Yet they are easily persuaded to useful employments, and sus- ceptible of culture and literary instruction. Presuming on their gigantic buUd and numbers, they soon collect in large multitudes, of their own free-will and accord, and at once take side with the injured party." Thus far Strabo. The historian adds : " Such Ls the first glance cast by philosophy on the most sympathetic and perfectible of the races of man." The genius of these Gauls, or Celts, is at first a mere restless activity, prompting to attack and conquest. It was through war that the nations of antiquity came into con- tact, and intermingled. A warring and noisy race, they overran the world, sword in hand ; led on, it would seem, less by greed, than by a vain and uneasy desire to see, know, and busy themselves with everything, bursting and destroy- ing, through mere inability to create. With their large, fair, soft, and succulent bodies, they are the infants of the nascent world j elastic and impulsive, but neither enduring nor persevering ; fierce in their joys ; vast in their hopes ; and vain ; for, as yet, nothing has withstood them.* Who does not recognize the characteristics of the modern * Michelet, Histoire de France, i. 1. 126 THE BARBARIAN RACES. Celt, however mucli they may have been modified by prox- imity of place, or admixture of blood, with r«;es of the German stock, the Saxon, or the Frank 1 The religion of this singular people — Druidism— is perhaps the most interesting of its traditions, — interest- ing, at least, to us, the busy Anglo-Saxon race, who have covered with forges and manufactories the lonely glens of the Druids' holy isle, where for many genera- tions he reared the massive " cromlech," or cut with a golden sickle the heaven-descended mistletoe from the bough of the sacred oak. Of Druidism, Csesar* has given us a very full account ; Rtid, though disgraced by rites of savage cruelty, it is entitled to a high place among barbarian cults, from its adherence to the great doctrine of the im- mortality of the soul, and the character for poetic genius and general intellectual culture possessed by the leading members of the order. This, it is true, was counterbalanced by the horrid practice of almost wholesale human sacrifice, wherein large wicker figures were filled with human beings — generally criminals, but innocent persons if criminals could not be obtained, — and subsequently destroyed by fire. But the instinct of expiation breaks out, more or less, in all barbarous superstitions, under very terrible forms ; and few are marked by the redeeming features which may be dis- covered in the religion of the Gauls. Druidism, moreover, was also a political, as well as a religious institution. Diodorus tells us, " Not only in the concerns of peace, but even of war, — not friends alone, but enemies .also, chiefly defer to the Druids and composers of verses. Frequently during hostilities, when armies are approaching each other with swords drawn and lances extended, these men, rushing between them, put an end to their contentions, taming them as they would wild beasts." + We cannot dwell longer upon the history and character of the Gaulish tribes. * De Bello Gallioo, lib. vi. 13. f Hiat, lib. v, o. 31. THE TEUTONS. 127 Let me refer you to one of the best-known, as it is certainly one of the best, works of the modem school of French historians, the " Histoire des Ganlois," by Amidee Thierry, from whom I will only quote a sketch of the personal characteristics of the race, which will be found to agree with what I have collected above from original sources : — " The salient features of the Gaulish family, those which, in my opinion, determine its difference from the other families of the human race, are these : a personal bravery, quite unequalled in the ancient world ; a spirit, frank, impetuous, open to all impressions, gifted with pre-eminent intelligence ; but, along with all this, an extreme restless- ness, no fixity of purpose, a marked repugnance to those ideas of order and discipline so powerful among the Ger- manic races, much ostentation, and, in short, a great deal of disunion, the result of inordinate vanity. If one was to compare summarily the two races, one might say that the sentiment of personality — the I — was developed too much among the Gauls, and not sufficiently in the Germans. So it is that in every page of the history of Gaul we find original characters, who vividly excite our sympathies, and concentrate it upon themselves, inducing us to forget the masses ; while, on the other hand, in German history, it is generally the masses who produce all the efiect." * Beyond the Eoman and Eomano-Celtic world, lay the German and Slavonian tribes. The latter, as we have already pointed out, were probably the first to approach the west of Europe from the Asiatic steppes ; but the former undoubtedly broke through and passed beyond them ; so that they long anticipated their contact with the Empire, as they also surpassed them in all the higher attributes of social life. The two races, however, were by no means separated from each other by the decisive demarcation which distinguished both of them from Eomanized Gaul. * Am, Thierry, Hist. Gaul. Introduotion. 128 tTHE BARBAEIAN KACES. Michelet remarks upon the vague and indeterminate natui>6 of their mutual boundaries. "On our side," he says, "the frontiers of the German language and population run down into Lorraine and Belgium. Eastwards, the Slavonic fron- tier of Germany has been upon the Elbe, then on the Oder, and then as unsettled as this capricious stream, which so often changes its course. Through Prussia and Silesia, at once German and Slavonic, Germany dips towards Poland and towards Russia ; that is to say, towards the boundless world of barbarism."* The description will tolerably well apply to the period of which we speak. The vast region contained between the Baltic and the Danube on the north and south, the Rhine on the west, and the Vistula and Oder to the east, may be described, with tolerable accuracy, as the locale of the Teutonic tribes. They may be divided in Suevic and non-Suevic, answering nearly to the High German, or Southern, and Low German, or Korthern, populations. The former occupied the south-eastern, the latter the north-western, division of this large space. The Suevic nations stretched from the Baltic and southern Scandinavia to the Carpathian Mountains ; the non-Suevic eventually touched both banks of the Rhine, and reached beyond the Elbe. Of the former, ihe largest and most important tribe were the Goths. " Intrusive above all the other populations of the earth, the branches of the Gothic tribes have brqught themselves into contact and collision with half the families of the world." f Starting from their home in the Scandinavian peninsula, they pressed upon 'the Slave populations of the Vistula, and, by a rapid course of conquest, established themselves in Southern and Eastern Germany.^ Here they divided themselves into two distinct * Histoire de France, ii. § 1. + Latham, Man and his Migrations, oh. v. t Jornandes, da Kebus Getiois. See, however, Latham's Ethnology of Europe, ch. is. ST7EVIC TEUTONS. 129 nationalities, between which rolled the broad waters of the Borysthenes. To the east, as their name imports, lay the Ostrogoths, The Visigoths, or West Goths, on the opposite bank of the river, extended their outposts to the Danube ; and thus came into more immediate aud earlier contact with the Eoman empire. The second great Suevic tribe, or federa- tion of tribes, were the Alemanni (All-men), who impressed their influence so strongly, upon their neighbours that they have given their name to the whole territory beyond the Ehine — "AUemagne." The Romans found them clinging to the banks of the Neckar and the Maine, from which well-wooded regions they perpetually descended upon the imperial provinces so vainly defended by the rampart-wall of Probus. North-east of these, towards the Baltic and the Vistula, were found, when history first notices them, two smaller tribes, which were, however, destined, in after-times, to win. by their swords the richest regions of Italy and France, and bequeath to them a name in perpetuity — the Lango-bardi, or Lombards, and the Burgundians. The Suevi proper, from whom the aggregate federation derived their name, formed part of the Alemannic league, and lay immediately to the east of this people. The Vandals originally occupied the ground between the Goths and the ^emanni ; but we subsequently find them in the Eoman provinces of Pailnonia and Illyricum, where Constantino the Great, for the sake of withdrawing them from the Gaulish frontier, had, by a very questionable policy, per- mitted them to effect a lodgement. These were the Ger- mans who, under Ariovistus, so boldly confronted Csesar in Gaul, and gave to the Roman armies the first taste of those tCTrCrs^ which were to be repeated, in more degenerate days, with such disastrous results. Caesar candidly confesses that his soldiers were panic-struck with the accounts which they received of their new adversaries, — their gigantic stature, marvellous valour and skill in arms, and the terrible flashing 130 THE BARBAEIAN RACES. of their eyes ia the day of battle, which no foe liad ever yet withstood. The whole camp was paralyzed with alarm ; the oldest centurions counselled retreat j all who could find a decent pretext slunk away, one after another, from the eagles ; the remainder passed the time in unmanly lamen- tations ; many actually shed tears ; nearly every man made his will ;* — evil omens for the future relations of Rome with those stout warriors of the Teuton woods, who boasted that they would not yield to the immortal Gods themselves ; that for years they had never slept beneath a roof; and that they could support the heaven upon their spears, t We next come to the second, or non-Sue vie division of the German race. Here, without doubt, the confederation of the Franks, or Freemen, . occupies the first place. We must be careful to remember that the name did belong to a confederation, not to a single people, and that this confedera- tion varied in members and influence for perhaps a' period of several centuries. Generally they occupied the regions west of those already specified, and were found between the Ehine, the Maine, the Weser, and the Elbe. The Chauci, the Sicambri, the Bructeri, with many others whose names may be found in any good map, but will scarcely linger in the memory, formed that memorable league which has succeeded in impressing its name upon the first country of continental Europe. Dr. Latham has a notion that the name " i"rank" denoted any German who repudiated Eoman supremacy. This theory, however, seems untenable, if it were only from the fact that " Franks " often formed the best troops of the imperial armies, and occasionally the bodyguard of the emperor. Indeed, they as often declared for Eome as for Germany ; and it was portion of the Frankish confederacy which made a brave but ineffectual stand agamst the irruption of the Suevi, Alani, Vandals, and Burgundians, which Gibbon • Caesar, de Bello Gailico, i. 39. f JUd. iv. 7. NON-SUEVIC TEUTONS. 131 has characterised as " the fall of the Boman empire in the countries beyond the Alps."* About the period when the Frankish league begins to play a prominent part in history, we find them divided into two great bodies, whose names will frequently recur. The Salii, or Salian Franks, on the west and south, were more exposed than their brethren to the influence of Roman civilization; and this fact, as we shall hereafter see, materially modified their character. The Elpuarian Franks, on the right bank of the Rhine, long retained stronger traces of the Germansspirit and German life ; and the difierence between the two tribes produced results of no small importance in the modern history of Gaul. To the non-Suevic division also belonged the Angles and Saxons, or Anglo-Saxons, as they are sometimes called in combination, and the Jutes, who spread over the Danish peninsula, Sleswig-Holstein, and the Frisian provinces of Holland. The nature of their posi- tion determined their character and fortunes— fortunes so important for ourselves and for the world. Debarred by distance and the intervention of powerful tribes from any development in the direction of Gaul and Germany, they turned their energies to the sea, and ravaged in predatory and piratical excursions both shores of the British Channel. Hence, at no distant day, the galleys of Hengist and Horsa, following a well-known route, appeared in the waters of the Thames at the critical moment which Dr. Arnold has termed the true birthday of English history, and beneath the banner of the white horse inaugurated that Anglo- Saxon empire, which has overspread the world. These are, however, matters which belong to a later era. At present, we are concerned with the character and life of the Teuton people at the period when they were preparing unconsciously to overthrow the Empire. Rome had assimilated the Celt ; and, doubtless, from this new blood she derived fresh energy and vigour, * Gibbon, v. 224. 132 THE BARBARIAN RACES. perhaps some centuries of life. She could not assimilate the Teuton : he was made of sterner stuff. One of the most interesting fragments of antiquity is that in which the Soman's first impressions of Germany have found a voice • it is a cry of mingled astonishment, admiration, and disdain. The pen of Tacitus has recorded the feelings with which a thoughtful Roman of the decadence regarded the men who were to overthrow and yet regenerate the civiliza- tion of his age. His little treatise on the manners of the Germans— written as an excursus to his' "Histories" — is not conceived in a scientific spirit, for the times knew nothing of the elements of social and political science, or of ethnology; nevertheless it forms the most valuable repertory of facts, to which those who subsequently discussed these subjects have had recourse. It contains many false notions, and perhaps ascribes specially to German savage life some things which are common to all savage life ; but it also distinctly points out the great characteristic features of the Teutonic mind, which may be said still to remain among all the nations which have received the German impress upon their social habits and political institutions. The proud spirit of independence, and free personality, the feeling of individualism, so to speak, as distinguished from the social spirit which made it impos- sible for the Greek or Roman to conceive of himself except as the constituent of a state ; the reverence for the dignity of woman, which lies so deep beneath the best institutions of modern times ; the spirit of clan, combining with and modifying the spirit of personal independence, and thus rendering colonization and foreign conquest a possibility ; the love of battle from the mere instinct of blood, and a cer- tain tendency to intemperance in food and intoxicating drinks, engendered in the damp forests of their native land, but unknown to the dwellers in the light and dry atmosphere of the countries bordering upon the Mediterranean ; a genial hospitality, arising in some degree from this vicious tendency, MENTAL CHAEACTEEISTICS OF TSE TEUTON. 133 and so in some degree also humaumng and refining it ; — these are the most marked attributes of the Teuton character as it presented itself to the philosophic. historian of the Empire, and they reproduce themselves more or less in the habits and history of all the great nations which spring from the Teuton stock. One other attribute must be added to the foregoing. We should very imperfectly estimate the cha- racter of the German mind, if we did not take into account a quality which Tacitus was perhaps unable to detect or comprehend. A sentiment of imaginative mysticism, indefinite and vague — and if this language be obscure, it is because we are speaking of what in itself is shadowy and intangible^seems to have entered deeply into the mental constitution of the dwellers in the dim aisles of those gigantic forests which once overspread the whole of central Europe. This is what Michelet calls " the profound impersonality of the German genius," * which he professes to recognize in the ancient sculptures which represent the race, and in the in- decision of look which characterizes their most eminent men. It has ever clung to their descendants^ and is the source of what, by a singular accident, has received the misnomer of the romcmtic spirit in poetry and art, as opposed to the more clearly-defined conceptions, and more systematic execution which distinguish the products of intellect and art in the ■ southern or classical nations. What perhaps most struck, by the force of contrast, the Roman mind, was the sanctity of domestic ties, the purity and chastity of manners which dis- tinguished these dwellers in the wild and solitary forest. The tone of Tacitus is that of a man who bitterly feels how much greater, after all, as a moral being, the barbarian may be than the civilized man, when civilization recognizes no higher aim than material splendour and that utility which subserves material wants. Other civilizations than that of the Empire may read a lesson in those brief pages where the * Histoire de France, liv. ii. § 1, note. 134 THE BARBARIAN RACES. ishilosopher of a worn-out world records his impression of the races from which that world was hereafter to be reconstituted. A striking result of tha superior purity of barbaric life and manners was also visible in the physical aspect of the progeny to which they gave birth. In the lapse of ages, this has been greatly modified, and we seldom now recognize beyond the Rhine those men of flaxen hair,' blue eyes, and gigantic stature, overtopping the Italian and the Gaul, who cowed the bold centurions of Caesar, and left the legions of Varus a prey to the wolves of the Hercynian forest. The German historian Menzel mentions that bones of an enormous size have been found in ancient burial-places, justifying the tra- dition of heroes who were seven feet higb; and that examples of extraordinary stature are still to be met with on the shores of the Baltic, and among the German Alps. " The gigantic shepherd of Sens," he says, " braving the Alpine region's of Berne and Unterwalden, presents the truest image of oiir forefathers. Caesar said that the Gauls fled at the sight of the Germans, and the emperor Titus, when commending them, said, ' Their bodies are great, but their souls are greater.' "* From this greatness of soul was born liberty, — liberty in the modern sense of the word j that liberty for which so many martyrs have bled, and are perhaps still to bleed. "Liberty," says Montesquieu, "that lovely thing, was discovered in the wild forests of Germany ; " and Lucan had said, sixteen centuries before him, " Liberty is the German's birthright." Our own great historians have not been slow . to add their testimony to the fact. "If our part of the world," is the recorded judgment of Hume, "maintains sentiments of liberty, honour, equity, and valour, superior to the rest of mankind, it owes these advantages to the seeds implanted by those generous barbarians ; " and Gibbon no less positively declares, " The most civilized nations of modern Europe issued from the woods of Germany ; and in * Menzel, Hist. Gev. i. § 8. SOCIAL CHAEACTEEISTICS OF THE TEUTOIST. 135 the rude institutions of those barbarians we may still dis- tinguish the original principles of our present laws and manners." The same writer accordingly devotes the ninth chapter of his first volume to the consideration of these institutions. Our plan does "not admit of such detail, we can only indicate a few salient points, a few great principles, from which the rest were evolved. , In the Persian language, " Irman " signifies a " brother in arms :" we have already seen that the Teuton was a cognate offihoot of the Iranian stock ; in his language, " Germanus " bears a similar import ; and, among the features of German life upon which Tacitus has most strongly dwelt, is the " Comitatus," or " brotherhood in arms." This notion of common and equal brotherhood seems to have distinguished from the first the Teutonic from the other Iranian and the Semitic races. With the latter, the feeling of patriarchal reverence for the head of the family or tribe appears to have acquired a predominating influence, which developed into submission to individual supremacy, and found its external expression in those colossal halls and magnificent palaces which the people of the East have ever delighted to rear for the head of the race and state, and of which the excavations at Nimroud exhibit so memorable a specimen. Very dis- tinct from this was the free German spirit, which, starting from the notion of brotherhood rather than that of parental authority, maintained an equality of position and privilege among all the warriors of the tribe, even when the exi- gences of migration or conquest had united them under the ' command .of a single chief. " Every one enjoyed personal freedom, and had an exclusive right over his own property. In the popular assemblies of each district, the eldest man present presided, and the majority decided. It was only during war that they obeyed a leader, whom they selected by raising him on their shield."* In these assemblies it ia * Menzel, i. § 7. 136 fiiE BARBAEiAN BACES. easj' to see the germ ofWitenagemotes and Parliaments, the parents of all free institutions. And in the same spirit, doubtless, originated the different orders and societies of knighthood ; the guilds and corporations of free citizens so common in the Middle Ages. . Menzel is therefore right in saying that the free intercourse between citizens possessed of equal privileges, and bound by the same duties, was the soul of the ancient German communities, and the foundation on which their whole history rests. Gibbon and Tacitus will supply more particulars ; it is only needful to say one word in conclusion, upon the somewhat controverted question of the religious instincts and practices of the Teutonic tribes. Perhaps the partiality of their descendants has attributed too high and pure a character to their idea of the Divine Being, and the right mode of approaching him. Tacitus recognized members of the Eoman Pantheon in the gods principally worshipped by the Germans, most probably Woden, or Odin, and Thor, from whom are derived the days of the Saxon week ; but he bears testimony to a nobler conception of the nature of the Divine Being subsisting among them, than is to be found in the Theogony of Greece and Italy. "They deem it unworthy of the dignity of heavenly beings to inclose their gods within walls, or to fashion their forms under human similitude." * Gibbon in- dulges in a characteristic sneer at the improbability of a nation unacquainted with the arts of architecture being enabled to think or act otherwise.^ But this argues little acquaintance on his part either with the history of religious worships, or the character of the savage mind. We may, at least, ascribe to the Teuton a religious instinct far above the ordinary fetichism of barbarian tribes and the practice of other races of common origin. And we are led to the same conclusion by the feeling with which they regarded theit women ; a feeling founded, perhaps, on a superstition, but * Tac. German. § 9. f Decline and Fall, ch. 9. Teutonic HEtiGiosf. 137 cfertainly an ennobling one, the germ of much that is generous and graceful in modern life. Often, says Tacitus, in the day of battle, the flight of armies has been arrested by the earnest entreaties, the bared breasts and dishevelled hair of the women whom defeat would have consigned to slavery. "They believe that something of the divine, some prescient power, dwells within them, and they never neglect either their advice or their prophetic answers."* For the rest, the Germans were not, it is to be feared, free from the common follies, superstitions, and enormities of heathenism. They were devoted to divinations and augury of all sorts : it is more than probable that they were degraded by human sacrifices. Traces may be discovered of an inroad upon the old and more rude Polytheism of ancient Germany by the Odin- worshipping tribes, the Goths, Burgundians, and Lom- bards, which imparted a more exalted character to the religious instincts of the national mind. " It gave to the Sueves a higher civilization, and bolder and more heroic aspirations. For, althongh the system of Odin was un- doubtedly far from having reached the elevation it subse- quently attained, particularly in Iceland, it already contained the elements of a nobler life and deeper morality. It pro- mised the brave immortality, a paradise, a Walhalla, where they would battle the whole day, and at eve sit down to the feast of heroes; whilst on earth it spoke to them of a sacred city of the Asi, Asgard, a happy and hallowed spot, from which the Germanic races had been formerly driven forth, and which was to be the object of their wanderings over the world. It is not improbable that the emigrations of the barbarians were in some degree prompted by this belief, and had in view the discovery of the sacred city, as another holy city was, at a later age, the object of the Crusade3."t Mr. Kingsley, in his interesting novel, * Tao. German, oh. 8. + Miohelet, Hiatoire de France, book ii. oh. 1. F 2 138 THE BAEBAMAN RACES. « Hypatia," has gracefully availed himself of the supersti- tion, and familiarized it in many quarters where it was probably altogether unknown. Such were our German progenitors, who, two thousand years ago, spread them- selves over the central regions of Europe, living a wild, free Ufe, which has often been compared to that of the red-men whom the Anglo-Saxon has expelled from their ancestral hunting-fields in the North-American continent. And iu fondness for the chase, strange alternations between great physical exertion and torpor, intemperance in food, and disinclination to agricultural and other labour, the parallel is sufficiently exact. But the German life exhibited some peculiarities, distinguishing it on the one hand from that of mere hunters or nomads, and on the other from the settled habits of civilized men. " It is well known," Tacitus tells us, "that the Germans are not dwellers in cities : they do not even allow contiguous abodes ;" a feeling which has long distinguished the Anglo-Saxon from the descendants of the southern races. "They live scattered and apart, as some fountain, field, or spring has attracted their fancy. Their villages are not constructed like ours, with houses combined into continuous rows ; each man sur- rounds his residence with a space of itnoccupied ground," — the origin of the famous Salic land, — "either owing to ignorance of the art of architecture, or as a protection against fire."* To the women they generally left the labours of the field; they loved the bath, and were addicted to beer ; dined together upon occasions where the interests of war or peace demanded consultation; were of all nations the most profuse in hospitality, the most madly enslaved by the passion of gambling ; were indulgent to their slaves ; did not vindic- tively pursue the homicide to death ; granted favours with freedom, but neither imputed them to others as obligations, nor regarded them as such themselves. Who cannot re- * Tac. Gerraania, c. 16. . BATTLE BETWEEN EOMANS AND GERMANS. 139 cognize traits of character which neither lapse of time nor change of locality has obliterated, or perhaps will ever obliterate ? After all, however, we should have but an imperfect picture of the Teuton, if we failed to see him in the day of battle j nor could any account of that which is the main object of our work — his collision with the Empire — be considered complete, without a brief sketch of one among those terrible conflicts which, for centuries, this collision almost every month called forth. Stout old Ammianus is telling us, with all the spirit of an eye-witness and a com- batant, how he fought the Alemanni under his beloved commander Julian : — " At the brazen blast of the trumpet, both sides, in great strength, moved forward to the combat. Flights of missiles were discharged to herald their approach : the Germans coming on with more speed than caution, with swords drawn, and yelling frightfully, enveloped our cavalry : more than ordinarily furious, they shook their horrid hair, rage flashed from their eyes ; while our resolute fellows, protecting their necks and breasts- with their bucklers, and giving point with their swords, or brandishing their death-dealing weapons, menaced the advancing foe. The combat thickened ; the cavalry steadily closed their ranks ; the infantry strengthened their flank, and protected their front with a thick serried row of shields ; dense clouds of dust whirled: upwards in the air ; charges were made on all sides, as, in the ebb and .flow of battle, our men pushed forward or gave way. Some of the enemy's most skilful warriors, by pushing with their knees, endeavoured to force back the opposing line j but, by their excessive efforts, be- came so involved with their enemies, that hand was locked with hand, and shield with shield. Heaven rang with the shouts of those who conquered and those who fell. Our cavalry are thrown into disorder ; they retire for support upon the foot ; their leader is .slain ; the Cuirassiers (Cata- 140 THE BARBARIAN RACES. phracti) leap from their horses, and make confusion worse confounded; but the steadiness of the legionaries, the per- sonal coolness, gallantry, and exhortations of the emperor, restore the fight. The Alemanni, upon the repulse of the cavalry, imagining the day to be their own, charge vehe- mently against our front line. But the Eomans stand fast ; the combat is equally maintained on both sides ; the Cornuti and Braccati, men of a hundred fights, attempt to daunt their enemy with frightful gestures, screams, and yells;* the tumult, commencing in a whisper, as the fury of the combatants gathers strength, swells into a mighty roar, like that of breakers lashing an iron-bound coast ; the air, hissing over-head with the rush of missiles, is darkened with dust ; it is impossible to see a yard in advance ; weapons and men's bodies are thrust upon each other in hopeless confusion. And now the fury and violence of the barbarians blazed forth like a conflagration, and strove to force an entrance into the densely-serried square of shields (testudo), at which they hewed in all directions with desperate strokes. In the mean time, the volleys of missiles never ceased ; the iron-tipped arrows flew in clouds, though sword-blades were hacking one another in close encounter ; breastplates were Joeing cloven asunder ; and the wounded who had not quite lost all their blood, struggling up to strike again. Both parties had met their match : the Alemanni were superior in strength and stature, the legionaries in discipline, expe- rience, and skill ; the former savage and tumultuous, the latter cautious and calm ; the one trusting to their enormous physical force, the other to their courage. Over and over again the Roman, forced back by the mere weight of the shock, recovered his groimd ; while the barbarian, as his limbs failed him, supported himself on his left knee, and in this position provoked the blow of his adversary, — an indi- * The word in the original is " hamtus," whioli denotes tlie noisa made by an elephant. THE SLAVES. 141 cation of unyielding obstinacy carried to its highest pitch. A band of chosen warriors forming themselves into a circle, among whom their kings were distinguishable, and dashing forward, broke through our front, and, followed by the multi- tude, reached our reserved line, which, composed of men in closer array, stood like a tower against the foe, and renewed the combat with fresh spirit : waiting their opportunity, they followed up the enemy, as the Mirmillo chases the Eetiarius ; and as in his blind fury he exposed his sides, they pierced them with their swords. The barbarian^, recklessly throwing away their lives for a chance of victory, strove hard to break our compact formation. We mowed them down . by whole ranks at a time ; but fresh combatants took their place ; the ceaseless groaning of the dying, at last shook their courage. Thoroughly broken in spirit by their losses, and reserving all their remaining energy for flight, they quitted the field in all directions at the top of their speed. As the passengers and crew from a wreck are driven hither and thither by the storm through the boiling eddies of the deep, so disappeared the barbarian host, — a result which no man who was there that day will deny, was to be wished rather than to be expected."* I have been compelled to compress the account of this interesting and somewhat difficult author, yet I have endeavoured faithfully to render every expression of importance. Even from this rude at- tempt, the reader may picture to himself how our fathers fought for the empire of the world, and estimate the justice of M. Guizot's criticism, when he declares that Ammianus is a rude old soldier, destitute alike of imagination and of taste. But we must turn to another race, — the Slavonian.t * Ammianus Marcellinua, xvi. 36 — 51. "i" I liave preferred this epelling to "Solavoniau," — an attempt to give the peculiar aspirate of the tongue. But as this seems to be gradually disappearing from ihe more refined dialects, it is perhapt befit to omit it, 142 THE BARBARIAN RACES. This also has its special interest, for there are not wanting political prophets who declare that in its turn the Slavonian race will exercise a predominant influ- ence upon Europe and the world, and whose confidence in the ascending star of the Muscovite has not been shaken by the repulses which Russia has of late received in her progress to universal empire. " A great deal is said about the future prospects of this stock," writes Dr. Latham, " the doctrine of certain able historians being, that as they are the youngest of nations, — a term somewhat difficult to define, — and have played but a small part in the world's history hitherto, they have a grand career before them, a prospect more glorious than that of the Eomano-Celtic French, or the Germanic English of the Old and New World. I doubt the inference, and I doubt the fact on which it rests."* There is but little in the character of the race itself which fits it for achieving so high a destiny; but the conception is not new to the ambitious spirit of its leaders. The Russian nation is in its origin half Asiatic, half Slave. " The nucleus of this grand empire," says Thierry, "destined to experience so many revolutions of fortune, was attempted to be formed in the sixth century, on the borders of Asia and Europe, by the alliance of two barbarian races conspiring against the Roman empire. Its first object was the pillage of the valley of the Danube, its first war-cry, 'To the City of the Csesars !' Has it materially changed since then ? "t Significant words, to which we shall have occasion to recur. The Slavonian tribes, then, or Sarmato-Slavonians, — for Sarmatian seems to have the best title to be considered the generic name, though, chronologically speaking, of earlier advent in Europe than the Teutons, appear to have sufiered displacement by the latter in more than one instasce, and generally to have succumbed to the superior warlike energy of their neigh- * Man and his Migrations, ch. v. t Attila et ses Successeurs, vol. i. ji. 397. OEIGIN OF THE NAME SLAVE. 143 bours, of whatever stock. Their pi-incipal representatives in modern Europe are the Bussians, -with the various Polish nationalities, the Servians, the Hungarian Slovaks, the Slaves of the Austrian empire, such as the Illyrians, Styrians, Carinthians, and the Tcheks of Bohemia. A large infusion of Slavonic blood has also taken place among the modern Greeks, a fact which accounts for the Russian sympathies of this spurious Hellenic race. A controversy has been. main- tained respecting the origin of the name. The fact that, like Lydian, Phrygian, or Cappadocian in ancient times, it has become among ourselves the synonyme of servitude, does not of course determine its real meaning. Those who bear it, naturally dignify its import and themselves by assigning to it the signification of "glory;" — the Slavonians to them- selves are, therefore, "the glorious race." But the truth seems to be, that "Slava," in its primitive meaning, was nothing but "speech," and that the secondary notions of "fama," "gloria," followed from this, as it does in other tongues.* Now, every nation are to themselves and their own notiojjs, the speakers of intelligible language ; while strangers are BdpSapoi, " barbarians," speakers of unknown tongues. Slave or Slavonian was, therefore, nothing more than the gentile appellative, derived from the use of the national tongue, and intended as antithetical to " foreigner." In the ancient historic world, the Slaves played an insignifi- cant part. Some have identified them with the Scythians of Herodotus, who, when they came into more immediate contact with the Greeks, received the name of "Evtroi, wliich the Latins transformed into Veneti, and the Germans into Wenden, or Tanar. They called themselves Serbi, or Servi, a name retained by their modern descendants the Servians. Like the Celts, they seemed destined to be driven into corners in the old world. We hear in Osesart of Veneti on the Atlantic sea-board, where, doubtless, they were min- * 1 Cor. xiv. 11. + De Bell. Gall. ii. 34 ; iii. 8. lii THE BARBAEIAN RACES. gied with Celtic tribes ; and other Veneti have acquired historic glory for the name, by settling beside the northern angle of the Adriatic, in a district where afterwards arose the beautiful and glorious city of Venice. We are, however, more concerned to determine their locality in the fourth century after Christ, when, in combination with members of the Mongol or Turanian stock, they broke in upon the Eoman frontier. A vast triangular space between the Baltic and the Black Sea, having its apex at the Carpathian Mountains, and for its base a very indefinite line, bisecting European Russia from N.W. to S.E., may serve to indicate in general terms the situation of the Slavonian tribes at this era. But being hard pressed by the Teutonic populations on one side, and the wild nomads of Asia, the Bulgarians, Avars, and Huns, upon the other, they do not seem to have succeeded in establishing free nationalities of their own, but were more or less in subjection to their neighbours. After the death of Attila, being released from subservience to the Huns by the disruption of their empire, and neglected by the Germans, who were pouring hotly over the Balkan and Alps, they acquired a degree of independence which they never pre- viously enjoyed, and we hear of their forming alliance with a portion of the Huns, and with the Bulgarians, against the Greek empire.* Of the Slaves themselves, we hear of three principal branches, or aggregates of tribes. The most eastern were the Antes, who stretched over the Euxine, and extended into the country between the Dnieper and the Don. These are, most probably, the progenitors of the great Eussian people. The western group were Yeneti, Venedi, or Wends, who rested upon the "Baltic, and reached to the Carpathians. It is with this particular portion of the Slavonian family that the Greeks and Romans, as we have said, were acquainted. Between them were the Slovenes or Sclavenes, who appear to have possessed less organization • See the next Lecture. CHAEACTEEISTICS OF THE SLAVES. 145 and gentile coherence (if we may use the expression) than the other two, and are found mingled sometimes with the eastern and sometimes with the western branch, in their migrations and enterprises. The future fortunes of the Slavic race will be briefly touched upon in another lecture. Their personal and social characteristics are distinguishable from those of the Teuton and the nomad Mongol of the Asiatic steppes, who severally bowed their neck beneath the yoke. Long servitude is not favourable to the development of the nobler qualities of our nature, and the Slave, less fiery than the German, and less ferocious than the Avar, the Bulgarian, or the Hun, exhibited in the hour of triumph a subtle cruelty which has identified with his name some of the most terrible tortures ever inflicted upon humanity. An unclean race, dwelling in miserable hovels of mud and reeds, which were scattered at rare intervals among impervious forests and morasses, they lived a life of promiscuous inter- course, and were either entirely naked within doors, or clad themselves in the skins of beastsj or a suit of dark tissue woven by the women, from which the nation derived a particular name. They are said to have smeared their bodies with soot, and to have eaten the flesh of all sorts of animals, even the most noisome and disgusting. As they loved enjoyment, they possessed some of the virtues of hos- pitality, and in exhibiting these to the stranger, they were distinguished for the veracity and good faith which marks the actions of the Bedouin of the desert under similar cir- cumstances. But a very different picture is drawn of the Slave when engaged in war. There, duplicity, cunning, and cruelty were his characteristic attributes. Armed with a long lance, a bow, and a quiver of poisoned arrows, the Slavonian warrior stole warily upon his enemy, and never missed his mark. He is described as being skilled in all the stratagems with which the Mohican or the Iroquois wars upon hostile tribes, creeping for miles upon his belly under UG THE BARBARIAN RACES, brushwood, crouching for whole days in ambush behind a rock, or concealing his entire body for hours beneath the water, while he breathed through a hollow reed. His moral and religious instincts were of the lowest kind. Of marriage he scarce had any notion; his worship was a fetichism oi the ordinary sort practised among savages, mingled with sorcery. Some writers speak of a singular dualistic religious theory subsisting among certain tribes, which, in its Mani- chsean character, strongly recalls the East, and is no slight indication of their Iranian origin. They believed in the existence of a Good and Evil Being, but paid adoration to the last alone, having, as they supposed, nothing to apprehend from the beneficence of the first, or White Divinity. Their Black God, or Zernaboch, as likely to do them more harm, they regarded with abject terror, and appeased with horri- ble rites. Such is the picture of the Slaves, as drawn by their terrified enemies, the later historians of the Empire,"" and therefore, in all probability, exaggerated. But it contains much which may be recognized in less oflFensive form among the modern representatives of the race. These, like their ancestors, are, generally speaking, sallow- skinned, with long, lank, dark hair, and small deep-set eyes, of finely-formed frames, though not exhibiting the stalwart chest and shoulder which marks the Teuton and the Celt. The cunning in all species of deception, ambuscade, and stratagem, of which Procopius speaks, is still discernible in the national character, and has also its more favourable development in productive skill, and a very remarkable faculty of imitation. Their courage is more passive than active in its character, and the Slavonian blood is deficient in that fiery ardour, the elcm which precipitates the Frank and his kindred races upon the foe. The wild but plaintive spirit of the hereditary bondman yet lives in his national * Procopius, &o. TURANIANS OE MONGOLS. 147 music, as it breaks upon the ear, in the low, melancholy wail of the wind-instruments from the bands of Croat and Slavonian regiments on the Glacis of Vienna. Whether these are the attributes of a conquering and dominant race, time alone can prove, and we will not anticipate by con- jectures the disclosure. Yet it is hard for us, who come from a stock distinguished by a more expansive genius, a more indomitable blood, to believe — whatever be the faith incul- cated at St. Petersburg — that the Slavonian shall ultimately rule the world. But beyond the Teuton, beyond the Slave, beyond the limits almost of what was deemed the habitable world, lay another world of barbarism, more wild and terrible stilL The steppes of northern and central Asia have from immemorial time projected on the West vast hordes of hardy horsemen, attracted by the charms of a softer climate and more fertile land. They belonged to the great Turanian or Mongol family of nations, terms not exactly identical ; for Dr. Latham ha^ observed, that, as a linguistic appella- tive, the former has a larger range ; whereas in anthropology, the second is the wider class. It is needless to repeat the questions connected with their ethnology, of which we have already treated. The fourteenth chapter of Gibbon will give you a classification of their tribes, and an interesting account of theirmovements, so far as they are connected with European history. In modern days they are best known as Tartars or Tatars. The former designation they derived from the pious aspiration of St. Louis, that the armies of Christendom might be successful in consigning to their native Tartarus the hordes of Tchenghis-khan. Four great divisions of this family have played a conspicuous, if not a lasting part upon the theatre of the world, — conspicuous for devastation and for blood. The Mongols proper, the Fins, the Turks, and the TJgrians have arisen from time to time, as a marvel or a terror to the Western world. Of one of these 148 THE BARBARIAN RACES. formidable races, and their still more formidable leader, we shall soon have occasion to speak at length. Attila, king of the Huns, has won for himself a name in history which stands beside that of Csesar and Napoleon, though unillu- mined by the light of posthumous glory which gilds the memory of those children of victory. To the ecclesiastical writers of succeding times, he appeared, as Thierry has called him, an emissary of Providence, a Messiah of misery, suffering, and ruin, sent to chastise the crimes of Rome. In their imaginations, excited by mysticism and suffering, his personality was merged in his mission, and they ^ affixed tb him the name of the "Scourge of God," by which he has ever since been known to the Christian world. Like a destroying angel, he came and went from the great wall of China to the Atlantic Ocean ; and where that terrible deluge of horsemen had once passed, nothing was left but a confused debris of the civilization it had overwhelmed ; no roof- tree remained standing; no grass was ever seen to grow; the land was as a howling wilderness, ungladdened by the sight of "Tlooks, or herds, or human face divine." The hearts of men between the Volga and the Pyrenees quailed for generations after his death, at the thought of Attila the Destroyer, and three separate streams of tradition have brought down to modern Europe the terrors of that memorable name. The Huns will serve for us as an ethnological type of all those tribes of Turanian stock — Avar s, Bulgarians, Turk s — who appeared, each with more appallinj"aspect than the other, from behind the Ural Mountains and the Caspian Sea, on the frontiers of the falling empire. Long ages before, their redoubtable character, and the miseries which attended on their steps, had been sketched by the inspired eloquence of the prophet Joel. " A great people and a strong : there hath not been ever the like, SIDONIUS APOLLINAltlg. 149 neitlier shall be any more after it, even to tile years of many generations. A fire devoureth, before them, and behind them a flame burneth : the land is as the garden of Eden before them, and behind them a desolate wilderness ; yea, and nothing shall escape them. The appearance of them is as the appearance of horses; and as horsemen, so shall they run. Like the noise of chariots on the tops of mountains shall they leap, like the noise of a flame of fire that devoureth the stubble, as a strong people set in battle array. Before their face the people shall be much pained ; aU faces shall gather blackness. They shall run like mighty men ; they shall climb the wall like men of war ; and they shall march every one on his ways, and they shall not break their ranks : neither shall one thrust another ; they shall walk every one in his path : and when they fall upon the sword, they shall not be wounded. They shall run to and fro in the city ; they shall run upon the wall ; they shall climb up upon the houses ; they shall enter in at the win- dows like a thief. The earth shall quake before them ; the heavens shall tremble : the sun and the moon shall be dark, and the stars shall withdraw their shining."* It is curious to compare with this singular passage the language of contem- poraries. A Romanized Gaul, or Gallo-Eoman, one Gains Sollius, had been elected bishop of Clermont, in Auvergne, in the fifth century, when the alarm caused by the Hunnic invasion was at its height. In accordance with the literary fashion of the times, he received the name of Sidonius Apollinaris, and it is under this appellation that Montesquieu, Gibbon, and Guizot all alike refer to his descriptive notices of the age in which he lived, as equally graphic and trust- worthy. His character was a strange mixture of heathen scholar and Christian priest, his abilities above the common average, his taste and style of composition thoroughly arti- ficial, and full of false glitter and afiectation. Still it cannot * Joel, ii, 2—10. 150 THE BARBAKIAN EACES. be denied that he was mixed up with some of the most im- portant political transactions of his time ; that he possessed a keen power of observation, and no little skill in picturesque description. Both Goth and Hun passed before his eyes, and he -has daguerreotyped them both. 1 should despair of con- veying in an English version, the peculiar character of the Latin hexameters, written about the year 468 A.D., in which he paints the ferocious followers of Attila ; but the main features agree with the accounts of more prosaic historians. " They are a nation," he says, " fierce in soul and frame. Even from the face of the infant, newly-born, looks forth the naCive horror of the race. Their thick bullet skulls rise into a peak at the top ; their eyes are invisible in twin caverns beneath their brows, yet their sight is keen and reaches far. The mother flattens, with bandages, the infant's nose, lest hereafter it should be in the helmet's way,* and so the affection of the mother deforms the child she has borne for war alone."t Ammianus Marcellinus, a stout old soldier who met them in the field, is equally exact, and not more coniplimentary. His account was written about one hundred years pre- viously, A.D. 375, and conveys the first impressions made by this wild race upon the men of "Western civilization. " The Huns," he says, " surpass in barbarism and ferocity all that we can conceive of barbarous and ferocious. Erom earliest infancy they seam their faces with long gashes made by some iron instrument, to prevent the growth of hair, so that they grow up to old age beardless and of most uncomely aspect. Their body is short and thick-set, their neck and shoulders * A sufficiently absurd reason. It was probably done to keep up the phyBical characteristics of the dominant part of the race, and so became a badge of aristocratic birth. So Thierry : " II est plus sensd de croire que les Mongols, ^tant devenus les dominateurs des Huns, leur physionomie_ent tout le prix qui s'attache aux distinctions aristoora- tiques : on tint h honneur de se d^former pour sembler de la race des Dialtres." — Sistoin d'Attila, vol. i. p. 9, note. t Sidon. ApoU. Pan. Anthem, v. 245, THE HUNS. 151 immense, their limbs firmly knit together, and their whole appearance such, that you would imagine them brute creatures on two legs, or the rudely-fashioned images hewn out of logs of wood, which are sometimes placed on the parapet of a bridge. They do not live like men, but like animals, and make no use either of fire or any sort of cookery for their food. It consists either of the roots of wild plants, or more than half-raw meat, which they warm in riding,' between their thighs and their horses' backs. Of wheeled carriages they make no use, and have not even huts for dwelling-places ; for they would never consider themselves in security beneath a roof Ever traversing the mountain or the forest, they are inured from earliest infancy to all possible hardships, — hunger, thirst, and cold. In their migrations they are followed by their flocks and herds : the women and children are inclosed in covered carts. "Were you to ask these wild beings where they came from, or where they were born, they could not tell you ; they do not know. Their dress consists of a coarse linen tunic, and a sort of helmet made of the skins of wild rats patched together. The tunic is dark-coloured, and rots upon their persons ; for while it lasts, it is never changed. A sort of hood, or casque, which they carry on their necks ; buckskins rolled round their hairy legs, complete their equipment. Their shoes, shapeless and of huge size, are so inconvenient that they cannot walk in them, and, conse- quently, are quite incapable of fighting on foot ; " a fact which gives to Jerome ground for one of his bitterest re- proaches to the degenerate Roman legionary who quails before such a foe. " To see them, you would think they were glued to their little horses, which are extremely ugly, but unwearied, and swift as lightning. It is on horseback that their whole lives are spent. Sometimes they sit astride ; sometimes like women. On horseback they hold their as- semblies ; there they buy and sell, eat and drink, or sleep 152 I'HE BARBARIAN RACES. and dreain,* reclining on the necks of their steeds. In battle they rush on without plan or order, under the leading of their different chiefs, and pour upon the enemy with frightful cries. If they meet a resolute resistance, they disperse for the moment, but return to the charge with the same rapidity, overturning and sweeping before them every- thing in their path. They have no idea of esoalading a fortified place, or carrying an intrenched camp by storm. Nothing, however, can equal the skill with which they discharge, at a prodigious distance, their arrows, tipped with pointed bone, as hard and deadly as steel. They fight at close quarters, with a sword in one hand and a net in, the other, with which they envelop their enemy while he is engaged in parrying their blows. The Huns are fickle, faithless, changeable as the wind; a prey to the furious impulse of the moment : they know no more than brute beasts the distinction between right and wrong. Their language is obscure, tortuous in construction, and full of metaphor. As for religion, or religious instinct {religio vel superstitionis reverentia), they have none ; nor do they practise any form of worship. Gold is the object of their passionate adoration."t I have preferred to translate the de- tailed account of a contemporary, a man of sense and obser- vation, who had seen and fought with this famous race, rather than any of the perhaps more highly-painted pictures which may be found in writers of later date. "We must not, however, omit the earliest notice which occurs of the European branch of the family. Tacitus, it seems, had heard of the Fins ; and he tells us, undoubtedly from hear- say, "They are a marvellously savage race, and have neither arms, horses, nor household gods : their food is herbage; their clothing skins; their sleeping-place the bare ground : their only Lope of sustenance rests in their * "In altum soporem ad usque varietateuiefifunditursoainiorum," t Amm. Marcell. xxxi. 2. The capital op- attila. 153 arrows, which, from want of iron, they point with bones.""' With respect to the question of their religion, or rather the absence among them of all religion, Thierry is right in remarking that this did not prevent their devotion to sorcery and magic in its grossest forms. They practised certain peculiar modes of divination, which were found by European travellers of the fifteenth century still in vogue at the court of the successors of Tchenghis-khan. The course of conquest and contact with a higher civilization than their own, taught the rude nomads some of the arts, and inspired them with some of the tastes of more settled life. Their encampments on the emerald meadows which skirt the Danube assumed the appearance of regular villages, gay with fluttering streamers, and the painted roofs and walls of their wood-built huts. The royal residence did not dis- dain the accessories of art. Priscus, a Greek historian, who accompanied Maximin, the ambassador despatched to the court of Attila by the Greek emperor Theodosius, has left, in an interesting book, which will well repay perusal, an intelligent account of all he heard and saw at the Hunnie capital in central Hungary. His description of the stone baths erected for Attila by Onagesius, a Greek architect, and of the elaborate architecture of the wooden palaces of Attila and his queens, has been somewhat pompously given by Gibbon ; but even the greater simplicity of the original * Tao. Germania, c. 46. It is scarcely worth while to translate tha very similar description of Claudian ; but, for the sake of the curious, we append it : — " Est genus extremes Scythise vergentis in ortua Trans gelidum Tanain, quo non femosius uUum Arctos aKt : tnrpes habitus, obscoenaque visu Corpora ; mens duro nunquam cessura labor! ; Prseda cibus, vitanda Ceres, frontemque secari Ludus, et occoisos pulchrum jurare parentes, Nee plus nubigenas duplex natura biformes Cognatis aptavit equis : acerrima nullo Ordine mobilitas, insperatique recursus." Claudian, in Rufinum, i. 323, 164 THE BARBAEIAN KACES. is suflScient to show that the artists who constructed these buildings — ^very much in the same manner, it would seem, as the Swiss now carve their wooden toy-houses — had ad- vanced far beyond the tastes or the wants of the rude "sleepers on horseback," as they first emerged from their Asiatic deserts. In commerce they were as little advanced as in the other arts of life ; yet one branch of them appears to have originated the trade in furs, which they procured in the Siberian forests.* Such were the barbarians who, beyond the Teutons of Tacitus, beyond the Slavonic tribes who lay outside of them, nay, far beyond "the limits of the World," were for many ages connected, in the Roman mind, with nothing more than grotesque or superstitious associations. The tales of happy Hyperboreans ; Oxiones, with the heads of human beings strangely wedded to brute forms ; Agathyrsians, with blue streaming hair; and savage dwellers in gloomy twilight, where the sun never rises upon the Ehipsean mountains, may have amused the gossips of the Forum, or sometimes, in more philosophic circles, have given rise to speculation concerning these strange beings and remote realms ; but it was long before they caused real political alarm. In the Augustan age, under the complete admi&is- trative system of Tiberius, — even in those perilous days when the conflicts between Otho, Galba, and Yitellius disclosed, perhaps for the first time, the inherent weakness of imperial rule,— the dark thundercloud of barbarian war which hung upon the horizon of the Empire was as yet " no bigger than a man's hand." The eagles were still, in the proud language of the Eoman historians, " the gods of the battles." The legionaries, though recruited in Britain, Gaul, or Spain, still upheld the glorious traditions of the Eepublic among the hills of Wales, in Armenia, in Pales- tine, on the Rhine. The splendid ritual of Paganism still * Jornand. E. G. 24. EOME- UNCONSCIOUS OP HER FATE. 155 dazzled the eyes of the multitude, although its inner life was gone ; — " The oracles were dumb ; No voice nor hideous hum Ran through the arched roof in tones deceiving ; " but the snowy steer still fattened in the pastures of Cli- tumnus, to fall at the altar of Capitolian Jove ; still, with the silent virgin the pontiff scaled the Capitol, unconscious how soon he was to surrender his time-honoured name to the minister of a more ambitious system, and more widely dominant faith ; — still the long triumph wound its glittering coils far up the Sacred Way, and showed to the vainglorious rabble of the Circus and Suburra, the spoils of barbaric nations, and the persons of captive kings ; — still Janus sent forth his degenerate sons to war, and at the return of peace the temple-gates were solemnly closed, and Mars Gradivus crowned beside the shrine ; and still, thotigh the days of the Empire were numbered, and the spoiler at her gates, Terminus stood fast where Eome's first fathers, with reverent hands, and minds prophetic of her mighty destinies, had fixed his place. At the very hour when destruction was impending, how could these things be 1 "When her limbs were almost collapsing, and the dews of death Were already on her brow, how could the Queen of the nations preserve her ancient and imperial mien ? It is not difficult to discern some of the causes which, for a time, maintained the cohesion of the Empire, and pre- vented its disintegration, by the forces which had begun to act upon it from within, and from without. " Several causes preserved the Empire in unity and strength, in spite of the obvious defects of its organization. The Huns and the Scythians were still hidden in their wastes ; and, with the single exception of Judsea, the foreign nations which com- posed the Roman dominions were either decrepit or im- mature. The exhausted provinces of the Seleucidse ; the 166 THE BARBARtAlT RACES. decayed kingdom of the Ptolemies ; the -worn-out common- wealths of Greece ; the effete barbarism of Gaul and Spain ; and the rude chaos of Celtic Britain, had no eleaents of national strength to oppose to the united and vigorous race which, from the Alps to the end of Colchia, formed the sovereign people of Eome. And, as the Empire was now established thoroughly in these countries by .means of colo- nies or of military garrisons, there was no alternative in the general weakness but that of submission to its domination. But, though fear was as yet the main bond of the Roman empire, the provinces, if politically subject, had few reasons to regret their fate. They had, most of them, escaped a much worse servitude : their governors, however despotic they were, usually respected their religion and general institutions ; they retained their social rights and domestic laws ; and, occasionally, some of their higher citizens were raised to eminent places in the Eoman state. And, although they were feeble as separate nationalities, they yielded all the elements of power to bold and energetic masters ; and the youth of Gaul, of Spain, and of Asia Minor, when broken in to the Homan discipline, formed immense and perfectly organized armies entirely free from patriotic ideas, with no hope but that of rising in the service, and with no country but that within sight of their eagles. Hence, the Empire was very often at peace j and in war was able to crush its foes, although it pressed on a mass of subject nations as yet deprived of political freedom. "'j^ " Again, the double administration of the Senate and the Caesars was not so destructive as might be imagined, although we think it was injurious to the Empire. As head of all the armies of Rome, the emperor wielded the power of the sword throughout a feeble and demoralized world ; and, though forced to delegate it to his lieutenants, he remained their military chief and superior, and inspired them with a fear and respect peculiarly strong in the Eoman breast. REASONS WHICH DELAYED THE FALL OF ROME. 157 Even in the provinces of the Senate he was the real arbiter of affairs ; he ruled, if he did not appoint, the pro- consuls ; and, virtually, he was the source of law and authority. Throughout his own provinces he was quite supreme ; in them no check upon him could exist, and his legates and procurators were wholly his instruments. As regards Italy, he commanded the preetorians in person, and thus he was her military despot ; at Eome, either by himself or his agents, he was consul, censor, and tribune of the people j and thus he centralized the executive government in himself. He had an undefinable control over the Senate j he was the legal champion of the Plebs ; he had by law much legislative and judicial authority ; and he could always throw the sword into the balance. Against this vast and unlimited power, the Senate had nothing to oppose but its ancient majesty and legal rights ; and thus, though it was called an imperial estate of the realm that made a partition of the sovereignty, it was in fact altogether subordinate. Hence, the real constitution of the Empire at this period was a military monarchy, veiled under the form of a part- nership : there were but few efficient checks on despotism, and the double administration of the Senate and the Caesars was a delusion. Accordingly, the Empire to a great extent was preserved from the anarchy of two independent govern- ments ; though it seems to us that the name of the double administration was now injurious to the state ; and that the worthless restraints upon the Caesars were only a cause (^ irritation or revolution. ' The image of the Republic,' as Tacitus calls it, alarmed the visions of these despots ; and this was the reason why so many of them hallooed on the vile mob of Home against the Senate, and so often proscribed its best and noblest members. So, too, the 'majesty of the Senate ' was the name inscribed on the banners of Galba and "Vitellius, and thus a mere incapable phantom became an instrument of revolution. Hence we cannot regret that, 158 THE BARBARIAN RACES. henceforward, since a free government was no longer possi- ble for Rome, the influence of the Senate becomes weaker and weaker, and that the unity and power of the Empire are made more perfect by the complete sovereignty subse- quently attained by the emperors."* ^ * 2746 rimes, December 29, 1859. EECTUEE IT. THE COLLISION— THE CELTS— THE TEUTONS— ATXILA AND THE HUNS— THE AVAES. " Quum barbaries penitus commota gementem Irrueret Ehodopen, et mixto turbine gentis. Jam deserta suas in nos transfunderet Arctos ; Danubii tote vomerent quum prcelia ripae, Quum Getiois ingens premeretur Mysia plaustris, Flayaque Bistonios operirent agmina campos." Claddian, de Quarto Conmlaiu Sonorii, 49 — 54. Synopsis. — ^The Celts: — Their first descent upon Italy to attack tbe Etrurians ; besiege Rome under Brennus ; join the expedition of Hannibal. — The Cimbri and Teutons repulsed by Marius. — Gaul com- pletely subdued by Csesar. — Bomanized under the Emperors. — The Teutons : — Germans defy Caesar under Ariovistu's ; slaughter the legions of Varus ; never subdued by Home. — ^Their various relations to the Empire till the irruption of the Barbarians, A.D. 376. — This* year the Visigoths cross the Danube ; forced onward by the Huns.- Sketch of the Gothic empire : its history. — War with the Eastern empire. — Battle of Adrianople : its results. — ^The TnBANlANS and Slaves : — The Huns in Central Asia divide into two branches ; the western branch occupy the land of the Goths. — delations with the Empire till the time of Attila. — The history of Attila j his quarrel with both Empires ; establishes a barbarian empire of his own ; loses the great battle of ChMons ; again invades Italy ; dies ; his empire ■ broken up.^Eeappearanee of Turanians in Europe, under the name of Avars ; receive tribute from the Greek emperor ; are pursued by the Turks ; establish a powerful kingdom under Baian ; reduce the Slaves ; at war with the Greeks ; form an alliance with the Persians ; lay siege to Constantinople, and are repulsed. — ^Kingdom broken up by a revolt of the Slaves under 'Samo. — Slavonians settled in South Europe by the Greek emperor. — Turanians reappear in the ninth century. — Hunugara and Maygars. With this immeasurable mass of external barbarism, Kome came into contact by slow degrees. Many centuries elapsed during the process, which began by the conquest and assimilation of. Gaul, and terminated by the collapse of 160 THE COLLISION.^THE CELTS. Italy under the pressure of the Germanic tribes. With the former, we have but little to do. The history of the Celtic Gauls had already terminated by absorption into that of tlieir conquerors, even before the "origines" of modern history commence. The -whole history of the Celtic race has been divided by their able historian, M. A. Thierry, into four periods. The first was that of nomad existence, when Asia, Europe, and Africa were alike visited by their roving bands. Their name became a terror to the woild ; they burnt Eome, plundered Delphi, settled themselves in the peninsula of Asia Minor, were found upon the banks of the Nile, laid siege to Carthage. The second period was that of national development and settled life. Their social charac- teristics were singular in themselves, and produced singular results. " One might deem," says Thierry, " that the theo- cracy of India, the feudality of the middle ages, and the democracy of Athens, had met in the same soil, and asserted, one after another, their supremacy." In Cisalpine Gaul this national life was affected by intercourse with Eome ; in southern Gaul it was materially modified by Greek civiliza- tion ; in the remaining part of the same country it partook of the gloom and rigour of the north. The third period comprises their struggle for existence with Rome, and their fall. Everywhere the Soman sword was the instrument employed by destiny to achieve their ruin. After two cen- turies of resistance, Italian Gaul at last succumbed. The ■Galatse still bravely struggled in Asia Minor, when all the other nations of the East had accepted the yoke. It was only after a long and sanguinary war, after immense sufier- ings, and heroic efforts of patriotism, that GanL proper bowed to Csesar's exterminating sword. Beyond the ocean, the great Britannic leaders, Caractacus, Boadicea, Galgacus, renewed and continued the strife. Yet all this was only preparatory to the fourth period, — the period of the organ- ization of Gaul into a Eoman province, and of the complete BEENNUS ON THE CAPITOL. 161 assimilation of the Celtic race. Of this we shall hereafter speak ; at present we. are to glance briefly at the relations of the Celts to Italy and the Eoman empire. Tradition, as we just remarked, records the movements of warrior bands of Celts at early periods, even in what we are accustomed to regard the ancient history of Greece and Borne. Etrurian civilization was probably anterior to that of either, yet Etrurian civilization was disturbed by the roving Celts, who scaled the mighty barrier of the Alps and descended upon the fertile vales beneath. Under the name of Isambra, they settled in the basin of the Po, and spread their populous villages — towns they cannot be called — over its ricli alluvial soil. Fresh tribes poured through those mountain-passes, "which have ever been regarded as the gates of Italy, and surged up against the Cyclopean walls of the Etrurian cities. Suffering under one of those terrible inundations, Etruria called upon her rival, Eome. The young Republic, like an infant Hercules, defied the men of the north ; she paid the penalty of her scorn in the defeat of her armies on the field of battle, and the slaughter of her senators and matrons in the Capitol. The Eoman historians, with that national vanity which is perhaps pardonable when it forms a large ingredient in national greatness, assert that the celebrated Camillus avenged his countrymen, and put the Gauls to the sword in the very hour of victory, amid the devastation they had made. It is but little probable. There are traces of their presence for nearly twenty years upon the banks' of the Tiber, and they did not depart without gold and spoil. Henceforth, for many years, the Gaul was a terrible reminis- cence and a dangerous foe to Eome. A long and sanguinary struggle, in which her armies were often in peril, at last freed the Eepublic from the presence of these unwelcome strangers ; but it required the skill and valour of one of her best soldiers, — Marcellus, the sword of Eome, — to. efiect the deliverance. The Gauls, however, were not destroyed, not G 162 THE COLLISION.— THE CELTS. even intimidated. The best and foremost of the soldiers of Hannibal, they nearly repeated, after the fatal field of Cannse, the exploits of Brennus within the walls of the capital. After the Punic wars, Kome, inspired with ven- geance and perhaps with alarm, turned and smote fiercely her ancient enemy. She carried the war beyond the Alps, and employing the Greek colony of Massilia, or Marseilles, as a 2»'^d d, terre, pushed steadily her political influence among the tribes of the various Gallic confederacies. - But now an unforeseen event, "immense and appalling as a second deluge," says Michelet, arrested the progress of Eome, and nearly swept her hot only from Gaul, but from Italy itself The Baltic, owing to some unknown convulsion of nature, burst its barriers. Flying before its waves, Gauls and Germans, Cymry, or Cimbri, and Teutons, rolled on- ward in immense multitudes towards the south. To their natural courage was added the stern goading of necessity and the fury of despair. Defeating a Eoman army which attempted to bar their passage, they poured in to Gaul to the number ot 300,000 warriors, exclusive of aged men, women, and chil- dren, who brought up the rear in the rude waggons of their nation. The living torrent passed on, leaving famine and desolation behind, sufferings so bitter that the wretched inhabitants in their dire extremity fed on human flesh. Arrived at the banks of the Ehine, they found themselves face to face with the Roman empire, that Roman empire which they or their kinsmen had encountered on the distant Danube, in Macedonia or in Thrace, and which seemed to their untutored minds to fill the world. Awestruck by the grandeur of the imperial image, they shrunk back with superstitious fear, and humbly asked the Romans to grant them lands which they were willing to purchase with the service of their swords. The request was refused ; the Romans crossed the Rhine, and paid for their temerity by a defeat. Then, one consular army after another was cut to THE CELTS IN PROVENCE. 163 pieces. Nothing but ignorance and a lingering dread of the great empire of the south kept these capricious barbarians be- yond the Alps and saved the capital. But a terrible tragedy, enacted in Provence, soon excited as much alarm in Eome as if their standards could have been descried from the Jani- culum. The Eoman consul, C. Servilius Csepio, about this time cruelly sacked Tolosa, now Toulouse, a town belonging to the Tectosages, a Gallic tribe who had cried for help to the kindred invaders. The booty he attempted by treachery to appropriate to his own use. This caused a quarrel with his colleague, and in the opinion of the age called down upon his devoted head the anger of the gods. Be this as it may, he chose to fight alone. In one of the most furiously- contested conflicts known in history, the Gauls exterminated him and his army of 80,000 soldiers, slaying every living being they found in either camp, and casting gold, silver, arms, and even horses, into the Rhone. Italy was at their mercy. Happily for Eome and for the civilized world, the fascination which the south exercises upon northern minds, attracted them to the Pyrenees rather than to the Alps. But Eome knew that the descent upon Italy must come, and come at an early period. In her alarm, she called upon one of her most famous sons, Marius the Arpinate, who had been serving in Africa, to deliver her from this hitherto invincible enemy. " This hardy sol- dier, almost as terrible to his own country as to the enemy, and savage as the Cimbri he was about to oppose, was to Eome a saving god."* He wearied and outmanoeuvred the barbarians in the' south of France. They broke into two bodies ; the Cimbri taking the road through Helvetia and Noricum, while the Teutons intended to carry the in- trenched camp of Marius by storm, and, passing over the dead bodies of its defenders, to enter Italy by the passes of the maritime Alps. The general rendezvous was in the * Michelet. 164 TflE COLLISION.— THE CELTS. Lombard plains. It was on the latter body that the bolt of Eoman vengeance first fell, and i* was as sudden and as terrible in its effects as if it had really fulminated from the throne of Capitolian Jove. The Teutons, repulsed in a pre- liminary skirmish and reproached by their women, who themselves from the top of their waggons drove back the Eoman legionaries, were wrought up to a pitch of frantic and fatal excitement. They precipitated themselves into a river. The Romans took them in the rear, and the battle soon became nothing but wild flight and exterminating slaughter. At the lowest computation, a hundred thousand men perished upon these bloody plains, which to this very hour retain in their appellation a signal memorial of that day of butchery. The traveller from the north who visits B.C. 102. . . PourriSres, in Provence, the Campi putridi of the ancients, is reminded by a name redolent of corruption and the charnel-house, that his step is on the grave of his Ger- man sires. Nor are there wanting other memorials of the strife. The peasant long dressed his vines with the thigh- bones of the gigantic Teutons who fell upon that memorable field. A temple to Victory had been erected immediately after the battle ; on its site arose the church of St. Victoire, and up to the era of the French revolution, an annual pro- cession commemorated the deliverance of Rome. A pyramid raised in honour of Marius remained till the fifteenth century, and the town of Pourrieres took for its municipal arms the Triumph of Marius as represented on a Roman bas-relief. Meanwhile, the Cimbri were slowly winding their way through the defiles of the Noric Alps. They reached the neighbourhood of the rendezvous in the valley of the Adige ; but their brethren were not there : they were feeding the raven and the kite in Gaul. The Cimbri, in ignorance of their fate, determined to await their arrival, and unhappily for themselves, omitted the opportunity of following the army of Catulus, which fell MAEITJS DEFEATS THE CIMBRI AND TEUTONS. 165 back behind the Po. ■ During this delay, the softer climate, the ■wines, and luxurious food of Italy, produced their usual effect upon the hardy frames of the northern savages. And what was still worse, Marius had time to throw himself between them and the capital. With true barbarian sim- plicity, they sent an embassy to Marius, and asked lands for themselves and their brethren. " Your brethren have the lands we have given them," said the Roman, " and will keep them for ever !" He then produced the captive Teutons who had followed his camp from Gaul. The Cimbri undis- mayed, bid him name the day and the place where he would fight for Italy. He appointed the third day, and some open ground near Vercelli. The Cimbri, utterly devoid of strategic skill, allowed themselves to be decoyed into a position with the sun and wind in their faces. The result was what Marius anticipated. Choked by the rolling clouds of dust and dazzled by the sun, the barbarians soon became an un- manageable mass, and with their crowded columns and rude weapons, which bent after the first stroke, made but an ineffectual resistance to the serried ranks of Rome, armed with that well-tempered and terrible broadsword which had cleft its way from the Latian plains to the Persian Gulf, and to the PillarS of Hercules. The men were cut to pieces. They had still to deal with the women; an easy prey it might seem to victorious legionaries. But the women were cast in no less heroic mould. Preferring death to dishonour, they first strangled their children, casting them beneath the wheels of their vaggons, and then hung themselves, fastening the noose to the horns of their oxen to insure being trampled to pieces. Even the dogs of the horde fought to the death ; it was necessary to call out and employ the light troops, who destroyed them with arrows. Thus did Rome escape her first great peril from the barbaric world. We have dwelt upon it, because it was the first, an antetaste of those dire and bloody struggles which were in after-ages to dye 166 THE doLLISION.-THE CELTS. the plains of Italy with Eoman blood, and avenge long centu- ries of cruelty and crime. And we have also dwelt upon it because it explains the cause of that which is not well un- derstood, — the determined and sanguinary perseverance with which Rome carried the sword amongst the Gallic tribes, and the successful efforts which she made to assimilate them to herself. Influenced by the remembrance of this alarm, and anxious to prevent its recurrence, or fired perhaps by the traditionary glories of his predecessor in the leadership of the popular party, the great Dictator descended from the Al s, resolved by fair means or by foul, to destroy all chance of peril for the future, and set his heel upon the neck of the adversary of Rome. To carry out this object he was ashamed of no subterfuge, and spared no blood. And indeed it is to the existence of this fixed purpose in his resolute mind that we are indebted for the birthday of our own civilization. He was told that Gaul perpetually de- rived aid from an island whose white clifis were visible across a storm-tossed ocean from her northern shore. Here was the sacred seat of her religion," the stronghold of those fanatic priests, who could at any moment excite the savage Celtic race to a sanguinary fury. Hence then the determi- nation of the Roman to extirjjate the evil at its root, and hence the dawn of that long day of civilization and glory which has since shed its splendour upon the white-clified isle. Csesar completely succeeded j but to do so he fought fourteen years without intermission, won battles on the Jura, among the volcanic passes of Auvergne, in Belgium, and in the Armorican peninsula; led large armies twice to the shores of . the Western Ocean, and once across the Rhine, and ■ ' * is said to have sacrificed two millions of men. Then he changed his policy. He favoured Gaul and the Gauls in every possible way. Even the tribute which he was com- pelled to levy, he disguised under the honourable appellation of military pay. He enlisted the bravest Gallic warriors THE CELTS LATINIZED. 167 under his standard, and they followed him fearlessly over the Alps and across the Rubicon to the gates of Rome. One distinguished legion was entirely composed of Gauls. From the crest which they wore upon their helmets, they were styled the " Legion of the Lark," no unfit symbol of the gaiete de coeur with which the Celtic warrior so often rushes upon death.* Henceforward no real opposition was organized by the Celtic race against Rome. Druidism in the time of Tiberius made a final efibrt under Sacrovii", a name which is perhaps only the Latin representative of ' ' ' " Druid j" but this, though aided by the Belgas, said by Csesar to be " the bravest of the Gauls," was speedily put down by the armies of the Rhine. The war waged in the time of Vespasian can hardly come under the category of revolt. It was a struggle for empire; but the empire would still have been Roman even had it rested in Gallic hands. Civilis, indeed, a Batavian, hated Rome with the hatred of a Hannibal, to whom he was fond of comparing himself, and, aided by the German national prophetess Velleda, obtained some considerable advantages over the Roman forces. A wild report that the Capitol had been burnt in the struggle between Otho and Vitellius, spread rapidly through the pro- vinces, and the Druids, declaring that the Palladium of Rome, the pledge of her eternal existence, had perished, proclaimed that G!aul was to take her place as mistress of the world.f But when the armies sent against Civilis had disbanded j when tributaries and allies had joined the revolt ; when the peril of Rome was imminent, and no Roman appeared to stem the torrent, the Empire was saved by a man of alien blood. Another Batavian, Cerealis, by displaying the eagles, soon renewed the allegiance of the recreant legionaries, and reduced both Civilis and Velleda to submission. Thoroughly cowed, they, disclaimed the intention of carrying out any national movement, and alleged that * Suetonius, Vit. Julii, o. 25. t Tacit. Hist. iv. 54. 168 THE COLLISION.— THE CELTS. tliey bad only taken up arms in favour of Vespasian against Vitellius. Henceforward the influence of Gaul upon the Empire was as great as that of the Empire upon Gaul. Indeed, it had already been as great. Koman laws, customs, social habits, and political institntions, even the Roman language, were dominant in Gaul, properly so called, and neai'ly dominant in Britain. The only portion of the Celtic ]-ace who retained their independence and national character- istics were the hardy Pictish and Scottish mountaineers, who, under Galgacus, bared their painted breasts to the Roman broadsword, or in after-days descended from the Grampians upon the debateable land which lay between the walls of Hadrian and Antoninus, and pursued the retreating ^teps of Roman civilization to the very shores of the sea which rolled between them and Roman Gaul. There the Celt had become completely Latinized in feeling as well as in manners. His national sentiment was merged in the prouder sentiment of Roman citizenship; a magnificent tem- ple arose at Lyons to the divinity of Augustus, and sixty statues, symbolizing the sixty states of Gaul, surrounded the statue of the emperor. The emperor Claudius, who was himself a Gaul by birth, readmitted, after Csesar's example, Gauls into the Senate.* To furnish Germanicus with men, money, and horses, against the German enemy, was esteemed in Gaul an act of most exalted patriotism. The hardy races who for four-and-twenty years had resisted the sword of Ciesar, and extorted from him no scanty, encomiums upon their energy and valour, are described by the historlajis of the Empire, as " rich and lazy." " Southern Gaul is not a province, it is Italy itself," says Pliny. Many of the men- most distinguished for literature, politics, and arms in the * "The oration which he pronounced upon this occasion, A.D. 48, tind •which is still preserved at Lyons on tablets of bronze, is the first authentic monument of our national history, the patent of our admis- sion into this vast initiation of the world." — Michelet, BisCoire de France, i. 3. C^SAR AND ARIOVISTTJS. 169 late Komau annals were Gauls. Cornelius Gallus, the friend of Virgil, was a native of Frejus. M, AntoniuSjthe leading orator of Rome, the teacher of Cicero and Csesar, was a Gaulish slave. His countrymen ever after maintained a leading reputation for eloquence in the Roman courts. Trogus Pompeius, the first compiler of a universal history, was of Gaulish origin. Petronius, the father of Romance, was born near Marseilles. Nor were Gauls without a more direct influence upon the political destinies of the Empire. Vindex, who dethroned Nero, was a native of Aquitaine. Vespasian owed his elevation to " Baccas," or " Bee," born at Toulouse. Provence gave birth to Agricola, the first soldier and ad- ministrator of post-Christian Rome. Nismes gave to her the best emperor who ever sat upon the seat of the Caesars, Antoninus Pius. Rome then completely Latinized the Celt, assimilated him, made him her own. The Teuton was, morally speaking, of far less malleable materials, and was never assimilated to his foe. The relations of Rome with Germany were always those of war, generally war to the knife. Caesar found in Ariovistus a spirit as haughty as his own, and soldiers as brave as the legionaries, prepared to contest the dominion of Gaul. His star did not desert him ; he had his usual fortune in the conflict, and gained a victory. But, so far as Germany itself was concerned, the victory was a barren one. His laborious and skilful passage of the Rhine, un- dertaken with the object of spreading the terrors of the Roman name through all the central tribes of Germany, did not for a moment dismay those resolute savages, who boasted that they could uphold the heavens upon their lances, and had not slept beneath a roof for years. They renewed the struggle, and continued it until they stood as conquerors upon the Capitol. The darkest disaster in the Roman story, — a disaster which destroyed the pres- tige of her hitherto invincible arms, broke the heart of the G 2 :70 THE COLLISION.— THE TEUTONS. successful master of the world, and inspired the Roman mind with an alarm never afterwards wholly calmed,-^ was wrought by the sword of Arminius upon the . helpless legions of Varus, in the dark recesses of the Teuto- burger Wald. It was something more than the loss of a certain number of men, good and tried soldiers though they were, which weighed upon tlie mind of Augustus on his deathbed. It was a foreboding of what was to co'me, — a sort of prophetic sentiment, which dimly saw, in these untamed sons of the forest, the inheritors of all his labours and of all the long glories of the Eoman name. Impressed with these ideas, he had, during his life- time, sent the princes of the blood royal to combat on ■ the German frontiers. After his death, Tiberius, who had won bis own best laurels in this strife, continued the same policy. The ablest, most promising, and most popular prince of this era owed the greatest part of his reputa- tion to the exploits on the banks of the Weser, from which he derived the surname of Germanicus. TVTany military operations, which may be partly traced in the chronological appendix at the close of this volume, show that the struggle , between Rome and Germany was continued, with brief inter- missions, during the three first centuries of the Empire. And although, as we have already seen, there was during this time no apprehension of the ultimate result, yet there is sufficient to show that the nations beyond the Rhine had begun to excite an attention not altogether unmingled with alarm. The very existence of the treatise of Tacitus, " De Moribus Germanorum," is a proof of this. And, indeed, in his other works the same writer uses language which shows that he did not altogether underrate the valour and exploits of these formidable neighbours. " Arminius," he says, " did not, like other monarchs and chiefs, assail the infancy of the Roman people ; he assailed them at the summit of theii THE DEFEAT OF VARUS. 171 power and glory, often holding his own in battle, and never vanquished."* " Twice, and twice only," exclaims Suetonius, " did Augustus suffer grievous and disgraceful defeat, and both times in. Grermany."t The historian Florus admits) with candour, that the Germans might rather be described as con- quered in action, than subdued in war. " Upon the Roman empire," he says, " unbounded even by the ocean, the defeat of Yarns imposed the limit of the Rhine." J And in the same spirit Tacitus speaks of the Roman emperors as cele- brating triumphs over the Germans, rather than conquering them, a conquest, he adds, truly long in the achieving. More passages might easily be adduced, but these are suflS.cient to show that the force of the German genius and the German sword was not altogether unknown at Rome. And Rome in two ways indicated her appreciation of both. She availed herself of the turbulent character of the first to apply the Machiavellian maxim, " Divide and rule." " Oh that our foes would ever thus be ready to cut each other's throats ; since in the declining destiny of an empire, for- tune can grant no greater boon than the discord of its enemies." § And the same philosophical observer acknow- ledges that to the prosecution of a policy like this, Rome owed more than to the force of arms. || The second, the German .sword, she bought off with gold, and employed in her own service. Even the great Dictator had done this. His Germanic legionaries won the battle of Pharsalia. For a long series of years the throne of those who succeded him was girt by the Goth and Frank, arid guarded by their sturdy swords. The Praetorian life-guards of the emperor, in the time of Tiberius, according to the narrative of Tacitus, were Germans. IT Many writers have condemned * Ann. ii. 88. + Vit. Oct. § 23. + Flor. iv. 12. § Tao. Ger. 33. II Ann. ii. 26. II Ann. i. 24. 172 THE COLLISION.— THE TEUTONS. this practice of barbarian enlistment, and seen in it one of the causes of the fail of the Empire. They do not see that it was a simple necessity. It may have taught the disci- pline of Rome to the enemies of Eome ; but, without it, Eome could not have held Italy for a month. The de- generate rabble of foreigners and freedtoen who filled her streets would not have stood a single shock of northern war ; it would be as reasonable to array the Lazzaroni of Naples against the German or English bayonet. Such, then, — and so widely different from those which she bore to Gaul, — were the relations of Eome to Germany, during the four centuries and a half that preceded the ■*-.D. 37 . g^.g^t (.y[gig which historians have generally agreed to call the " Irruption of the barbarians." In the one race we may detect the elements of a vigorous natural life— development, progress, and dominion ; in the other, the seeds of a national death — corruption, feebleness, decay. Gibbon has endeavoured to sneer away the virtues of our Teutonic ancestors ; Adelung has visited them with a still more ungenerous and systematic depreciation ; but there is no reason to dispute the general conclusions of a late writer : — " That the Germans possessed a pre-emiuent capacity for development, progress, and dominion, might be gathered from other works of Tacitus, even though the ' Germania' had not been written. The attitude which the Germans assumed towards the Romans on their first meeting in Gaul, and in their subsequent intercourse, was never that of mere savages. They did not, indeed, undervalue the Roman power ; they knew that it was terrible, that it had hitherto been irresistible. They neither recklessly sought a collision with Csesar, nor did they timidly shrink from it, when they thought their rights invaded j for they had a proud con- sciousness of what was in themselves. They were not overawed by the superiority which long ages of -wealth and DELATIONS OP EOME AND GERMANY. 178 civilization had conferred upon tteir opponents. They did not, as is the custom with mere savages, slink away before the face of those who came armed with the power of know- ledge, and adorned by the arts of life ; nor did they seek to denationalize themselves by slavishly aping what they could not readily acquire. They looked their superiors boldly and calmly in the face ; they kept up their pride in their own race and name, and considered the TJbii degraded by the adoption of the Roman dress and manners. They quickly learned from their enemies what it suited their purpose to know. In the service of the Empire, they became the most skilful soldiers ; they formed the bravest legions ; they decided the fate of the most important battles ; they furnished the ablest generals and statesmen, — men who, single-handed, sustained the imperial throne, yet, in the very heart of the emperor's palace, never ceased to be Germans. And when at last they threw themselves upon the Eoman empire, with the determination to take posses- sion of its fairest provinces, no difficulties and no disasters could deter them. Though often defeated, they were never conquered ; a wave might roll back, but the tide advanced ; they held firmly to their purpose till it was attained; they wrested the ball and sceptre from Roman hands, and have kept them until now." * Our purpose does not require that we should particularize every incident in the relations of Rome to the external world between the final subjugation of Britain by Agricola, when she may be regarded as most strong, and the passage of the Danube by the Visigoths, when she was already on the brink of ruin. During this long period the barbarian world, like a cauldron, seething and foaming with its waters in a strange agitation, dashed race against race, throwing some up to the surface,- and overwhelming others in a vortex of strife. The Alans * The Franks, by W. 0. Perry, oh. i. ad flnm. 171 THE COLLISION— THE TEUTONS. appear in the east, and assail tlie Parthian empire, which calls upon its ancient rival for aid. The Dacians cross the Danube, and are bought off by the gold of Domitian. Par in the depths of Central Asia the Huns begin to stir and divide into two great hordes. On the shores of the Baltic the ocean quits its bed, and produces a physical convulsion, which results in a like disturbance and displacement of the surrounding tribes. Sarmatians, Marcomanni, Quadi, Van- dals, are forced southward, and, spreading far and wide, overleap the natural barriers which guard the sacred soil of Italy, and appear under the walls of Aquileia. Marcus Aurelius dies combating the last-named tribe. Soon the Franks are seen for the first time upon the Ehine, In the year 241 A.D., the great Aurelian, the future conqueror of the East, overthrows them near Mayence. In 254 A.D. they in- vade Gaul, and make their way through Spain as far as Mauritania. Probus defeats them twice in 277 A.D., and settles some of them by the Black Sea. But the daring exiles set off in their frail barks, and, sailing up the Medi- terranean, plunder all before them. They pass the Pillars of Hercules, and arrive at the mouth of the Rhine, where they disembark in safety. History records no more romantic exploit. In 293 a.d. Constantius settles a colony of them in Gaul. Julian has hard fighting with them in 358, but subdues the Salians. About the middle of the third century, the terrible Goths are ori o,-> fo'^ the first time seen in force upon the fron- tier, and Decius dies m battle against them. Another ten years sees an act of doubtful policy, pregnant with danger to the destinies of Rome. In 271 a.d., Aurelian allows the Goths to settle in trans-Danubian Dacia, and the name of Romrni Dacia is henceforward confined to part of Moesia, south of the great river. The assaults of barbarism come THE "IRRUPTION OP THE BARBARIANS." 175 thick and fast. The Alemanni, a Teuton tribe of ■whom we have already spoken, force their way into Italy, and overrun the Umbrian plains. The danger becomes too obvious to be neglected, and the emperor Probus constructs that gigantic, but ineffectual rampart, described in a previous lecture. He exhibits towards the Franks the same timid policy with which Aurelian had treated the Goths, and grants them lands in Gaul. Circumstances rendered the transaction of grave importance. The fiscal tyranny of the Empire had by this time rendered life insupportable to the poorer pro- vincials. Peasant insurrections, exact antetypes of the Jac- querie of later times, were raging with great fury throughout Gaul. Under the name of Bagaudse,* these ignorant and desperate men had from time to time rendered whole dis- tricts a waste of bloodshed and devastation. The Frankish sword, enlisted in the service of Rome, seemed to the politic administrators, who, in dealing with her destinies, dreamt of little but revenue, an admirable curb for these savage spirits. They granted, therefore, lands to their Frank auxiliaries in those fair regions, which they never after- wards abandoned, and to which they have given a name second to none in the annals of European nations. Probus was slain in battle, notwithstanding his successes and his wall. The emperor Julian repeated the grant to another body of the Trankish confedera- tion, who, receding before the barbarous Quadi, crossed the Rhiile, and obtained a location in Brabant. We have now reached the period when historians uni- versally agree that the first great and permanent impulse towards its downfall was given by barbarism to the fabric of Eoman power. Before this era there had been irrup- tions, settlements, and conflicts ; but they were partial, of a mere local character, without any large and lasting * The etymology of this word ia very uncertain. See a long note in Michelet, i. S. m THE COLLISION.— THE TEUTONS. influence upon the destinies of the Empire. Sarmatian horsemen, clad in complete steel, and stout Dacian infantry, were perpetually crossing the Danube, for plundering raids upon the opposite banks, and giving to the Roman generals who repulsed them the sterile honours of a triumph, or occasionally triumphing themselves, and defeating Italian armies in the field ; but, upon the whole, they were driven back, probably by their own brethren serving be- neath the Eoman eagles.* But the passage of the Danube by the West Goths, in the year 376 A.D., was an event of a different character ; for, from that time, Eome never recovered her imperial prestige ; while the barbarian na- tions steadily advanced to the position of powerful and independent kingdoms. It is therefore desirable to describe, with somewhat more exactness, the causes which produced this memorable movement, and determined its direction. At the period of which we are writing, the later decades of the fourth century, the populations belonging to the three great Teutonic, Slavonic, and Turanian or Mongol races, had become intermingled, and, so to speak, interlaced with each other, by the action of war and migration. In general terms, the Teuton held the Scandinavian peninsula, the countries on the right bank of the Ehine, the left bank of the Danube, and the northern coast of the Black Sea, almost as far as the river T-anais, or Doft. The north-east of Europe, all the great Russian steppes, to the foot of the Ural Mountains, were occupied by the .Turanian tribes, known as Fins or Zoumi, who \vere unceasingly recruited by exhaustless hordes, sweeping ever onward from the wilds of Tartary, upon their small but hardy steeds. The imagination requires some material assistance, such as that afforded by contemplating the admirable de- lineation of the earth's surface on the great globe of Mr. Wyld, before we can form any idea of the immen- * Tac. Hist. 7. 79 ; iii, 46. THE HDNS FORCE FORWARD THE GOTHS. 177 sity of space included ■within the limits of northern and central Asia, or of its capacity to pour forth such mighty and unceasing tides of population. A movement of tribes beyond the Caspian Sea, occasioned by war or any other cause, and necessitating a change of locality, caused its pulsations to be felt far onward throughout eastern, and then through western Europe, to the very walls of the Roman fortresses along the Rhine. Thus it came to pass that the Asiatic tribes were ever exerting a pressure upon their barbarous neighbours, which gradually propelled them upon the Empire. The Slaves, in particular, conquered and thrown back by the Teutons on the south and west, felt the full weight of the Turanian migrations upon the east and north, and were compressed by their adversaries on both sides as within a vice, or between the legs of a compass, into central Europe. Of the existence of these outermost barbarians, the Romans had some small notion in the first century, but little more. A few vague words "of Ta- citus,* already quoted, describe the Fenni or Fins, as a race of marvellous ferocity, utterly destitute of all that constitutes the wealth of civilized life, clad in skins, feeding oh the grass of the field, and living by the use of arrows, which they pointed with fish-bones for want of iron. Yet it was one of these wild races which proximately caused the fall of Rome. As early as the second century of our era, the geographer Ptolemyt mentions the appearance of the Xovvoi, or, as the Latins called them, the Hunni, among the Slave populations on the banks of the Dnieper ; and another writer speaks of them as camping between the Caucasus and the Caspian Sea, from which inaccessible locality they extended their plundering raids into Asia Minor. J This federation of no- mad robbers appears to have gathered strength and consist- ency during the next hundred and fifty years. In the fourth * Germ. § 46. + Ptol. iii. 5. t Dion. Per. v. 730. 178 THE COLLISION.— THE TEUTONS. century we find them on both slopes of the Ural chain, extending nearly from the north pole to the Caspian, and ravaging at their will, Europe on the one side, and Asia on the other. Jornandes, the Gothic historian of this period, or, more correctly, the abridger of the great work of Cassiodorus upon the annals of his countrymen, tells us in his characteristic style, that the stem of the Hunnic stock "budded forth into two infuriated branches " (iw bifariam populorum rahiem puUuldrunf).'^ Of these, the eastei'n branch, much less hideous than the other, say the Greek historians, gave to themselves the appellation of White Huns. Their locality was the neighbourhood of the Caspiin Sea. The western, or Black Huns, turned towards Europe. M. Thierry, unwilling to plunge into the laby- rinth of doubt and conjecture in which modern learning has lost itself more than once upon this subject, states, nevertheless, his conviction that the "domination Hun- nique " included the Turkish tribes towards the east, the Fins on the west, and a sovereign Mongol race much more decidedly Asiatic in its attributes than the Fins. It is at least, as we have already seen, under an exaggerated form- of the Mongol type, that contemporary history describes - Attila and his formidable horsemen. The Goths, who had by this time attained to a high comparative civilization, were, of all the Teuton tribes, most harassed and appalled by the apparition of the Black Huns upon their borders. In their alarm they indulged in the wildest imaginations. Jornandes ascribes to these strangers a birth half human, half demoniacal, and tells us they were at first a puny race, dwelling among morasses, hideous to look upon, and pos- sessing no other connection with humanity than the faculty of speech.t The Goths themselves were the greatest of all the barbarian tribes which overthrew the Empire, whether we consider the exploits they performed, or the * De Eeb. Get. § 24. f IMd. § 8. THE GOTHS. I79 nationalities which they founded.* Other races may have been more distinguished in special qualities; — the Vandals for golicj, the Lombards for nobleness of nature, the Franks for fury in the day of battle, the Burgundians for mechani- cal^ skill ; but the great Ostrogoth and Vi-siffoth d nmina.- tions in Italy, Gaul, and Spain, fill a larger space than that of any others in the picture which this critical period of history presents ; for the Frank empire of Charlemagne seems to belong to a difierent epoch, and to be of a different character. Many writers have spoken of the Scandinavian peninsula as the earliest ascertained home of the Gothic tribes. It is certain that, owing to some convulsion of nature or some' social necessity, arising from incrtase of numbers, they descended in company with the Gepidje, a kindred people, upon the Slavic populations which lay to the south of them, and from thence upon the fron- tiers of the Roman empire. As this is the first formal mention of them in history, their original locality has generally been said to have lain on the shores of the Baltic. But, as we might expect from the ethnological theory of migration already explained, there are traces of the Goths before they ever reached the countries which we call Denmark and Sweden. They are supposed to have occupied Boiohemum, as Bohemia was then called, in common with the Marcomanni ; or, according to another account, they were spread about the sources of the Vistula. The progress of their northern conquest may be traced by the names of Gothia, Codanus sinus, and Jutland ; for the , Jutes were only Goths under a slightly-varied appellative. ' When, however, they re-descended to the south, they van- quished the Venedi, the Burgundians, the Roxolani, the Jazyges, and the Finni, extending themselves by degrees * The etymology seems tolerably certain. Qoih is ecjuivalent to the Saxon Outh, or Yt,^ — " war" or " battle." Hence also Jtite, Jutland. From the same ropt comes "God," who is, in a Teuton imagination, the first and greatest of warriors. 180 THE COLLISION.-THB TEUTONS. from the Vistula and the Theiss to the Volga. They may henceforth be considered as consisting of three great com- munities,— the Gepidse, who dwelt to the north of the two divisions of the Bastarnic Alps, or the eastern range of the Carpathians; and the Goth, properly so called. The latter, upon arriving at the banks of the Borysthenes, the modern Dnieper, divided into two bodies. One of them, crossing the stream, and extending themselves as far as the Volga, assumed the name of East Goths, or Ostrogoths. The remaining division were content to stretch themselves in the opposite direction, and, under the name of Visigoths, or West Goths, occupied almost all the ground between the Borysthenes and the Theiss. It is beside our purpose to dwell upon their relations with the Eoman empire before the time of their final passage of the Danube. They were formidable and turbulent fleighbours. More than once, in the reigns of Maximin, Gordian, and A.D. 235— . j)g(ji^g^ jjjjgy crossed the frontier river, ravaged the Eoman territory, andeven captured important cities, as was the case with Philippopolis ; they imposed a ^'^' ' tribute upon the emperor Gratian, were repulsed by Claudius II., and occupied part of Dacia, which the Romans abandoned in despair. But, undoubt- ' ■ ' edly, their most remarkable exploit was an earlier one — the conquest of the little kingdom of the Bosphorus, a dependency of Rome, and the passage of the straits, in flat-bottomed boats, covered with a sort of percthouse, and entirely constructed without iron. The siege *%nd capture of Trebizond, whose spoils filled their ships, and whose mariners, chained to the oar, navigated them back to the European shore, was the chief result of this first adven- turous enterprise. A second passage of the straits, with increased forces, placed the rich cities of Bithynia and Asia Minor in their hands. It was followed by a third, in which perished the world-renowned fane of the Ephesian Diana, THE GOTHS AND THE EMPIEE. 181 and, as we may imagine, the vested interests of the crafts- men in silver shrines who persecuted St. Paul. Almost the same epoch heheld these invincible barbarians traverse Greece and menace Italy ; dismantle the Parthenon, and threaten to spoil the Capitol. They were finally defeated, as we have said, by Claudius II., A.D. 269, in several engagements, through Moesia, Thrace, and Mace- donia ; and, finally, at Naissus, in Dardania, where they are said to have left 50,000 men upon the field. Aurelian, " restitufor orhis," — the restorer of the world, — vindicated in part his title to that name by the expulsion of the Goths from Thrace. His successor Probus claimed a similar triumph over these unwearied adversaries, yet was constrained to build against them his celebrated rampart from the Danube to the Ehine, still known as the Teufels-mauer, or Devil's Wall, by the Suabian boor. The great Constantine, though wielding the now united forces of the Empire, and directing them with consummate skill, can only be described as "successful" against the Goths, whom he subdued by policy, rather than by force of arms. Availing himself of a war in which they were engaged against the Sarmatians, he assisted the latter to inflict upon their and his enemies some rude blows; but the Concessions in the treaty of peace, concluded almost immediately, do not seem to injply any very solid success. It is, at any rate, time for us to turn to an event which rendered nugatory all these " Ihccesses " and " triumphs," and has justly been regarded by historians as the "beginning of the end," — the disastrous passage of the Danube by the barbarian , destroyers of the old Roman world. The Visigoths, as we have seen, the nearer neighbours of the fempire, acting sometimes as its enemies and sometimes as its allies, gradually acquired a footing in Dacia and on the Danube, The Ostrogoths had to deal with tlie bar- 182 THE COLLISION.— THE TEUTONS. barous tribes of Slavic or Sarmatian descent, who encircled them on every side. By their wise policy, valour and skill in war, they obtained a positive ascendancy, and founded a considerable empire, long the glory of the Gothic name, and widely celebrated among the traditions of their race. From the Baltic to the Tanais the name of the Gothic king was feared, and his word very generally obeyed. All nations have their heroic sovereign, their Charlemagne, St. Louis, Alfred, Peter, Frederick the Great. In ancient Ostrogoth annals this place is occupied by Ermanaric, of the A^ial race, whom Jornandes* compares to Alexander the Great, for his personal qualities and the extent of his conquests. The list of the latter, enumerated by the same historian, would convey little information to niodern ears. We are, however, enabled to gather from it that not Slaves alone, but tribes of kindred Germanic origin, such as the Gepidse, and even the Visigoths, felt the weight of his iron hand. As nearly as can be now made out, his dominions included southern Eussia, Lithuania, Courland, the Polish provinces, with great part of Germany ; and the Byzantine emperors were perhaps more indebted to fortune than any other cause for their successful resistance to his advance towards the Bosphorus. Among the tribes subject to this Ostrogoth empire were the Eoxolani, who dwelt beside the Tanais. In the restlessness of enforced submission, they intrigued with the stranger. A plot was discovered, organ- ized by a Eoxolan chief, having for its object the introduc- tion of the Huns. The aged monarch, now upwards of a hundred years old, broke out into his native fury. He had the wife of the conspirator torn in pieces by wild horses. Her brothers enticed the old man into an ambush, and attempted to poniard him. Though of immense age, he survived the attack ; but while he was recovering from his wounds, the * Eeb. Get. § 23. Cf. Amm. Marc. xxxi. 3. " IrineDrichi latb patentes et uberes agros bellioosissimi regis." THE EMPIRE OF ERMANARIC. 183 Huns determined to accept tbe overtures whicli had been made to them, and commenced their advance. Such seem to have been the facts of the case ; but the superstitious fancy of the Goths in after-times assigned to the agency of demons an event so terrible to their fortunes. An evU spirit, in the shape of a hind, was said to have guided the Hunnic hunters from place to place, till at last they reached the Gothic frontier, when it immediately disappeared. This was in the year 374 a.d. The Huns first came in contact with the Alans, a pastoral people who inhabited the steppe between the Volga and the Don. Incapable of offering any effectual resistance, the Alans united themselves to the immense hordes which formed the invading army, and then this " tempest of nations," as Jornandes calls them, burst upon the Ostrogoth empire.* The old king, unable to sustain the ignominy of defeat, stabbed himself to the heart : the nation were compelled to submit. It was next the turn of the Visigoths. They attempted to defend the line of the Dniester, but soon fell back upon the Pruth, from which they imagined they should still find an inacces- sible retreat among the Carpathian Mountains in their rear. But the Visigoth kingdom was at this time a divided house ; there was a Christian party and an old conservative pagan party, who abominated and persecuted the Christians. The sympathies of the laiter were naturally directed towards Rome, and they were determined to seek an asylum within her dominions, " far away," writes the historian, " from all - knowledge of the barbarians." t Athanaric, the leader of the opposite party, opposed the resolution with vehemence. He had sworn an oath of eternal hatred to Home ; he had solemnly pledged himself never to set foot upon her soil. But his influence was counteracted by a man very remark- able in the annals of German literature, as well as in those of the Christian faith. The Gothic bishop TJlphilas, de- * Reb. Get. § 24. t Amm. Mar. xxxi. 3. 184 THE COLLISION.— THE TEUTONS. scended from some captive Roman family, and^ educated under the eye of Christian parents, bad been, at a very early age, sent upon a mission to Constantinople, where Constantine the Great, in pursuance of his fixed policy, caused him, despite his years, to be consecrated bishop by his own chaplain, Eusebius of Nicomedia. From that moment the virtuous and simple-minded Goth was devoted, heart and soul, to the conversion of his countrymen. For the purpose of introducing among them a translation of the Scriptures, he constructed a Gothic alphabet, based upon the Greek character, which may be regarded as the origui of German literature. A specimen of this singular work, the earliest birth of the prolific German mind, may be seen in the elegant compendium of German literature edited by Professor Max Miiller, of Oxford. The story of the transla- tion is well known. The worthy bishop entirely omitted the book of Kings, conceiving that the martial exploits of the Jewish people would kindle into too fierce a flame the belligerent spirit of his children, who, as the historian quaintly says, " required the bit in this matter, rather than the spur." To such a man, no wonder that the Danube seemed a Jordan, beyond which lay a promised- land of peace. He therefore threw himself with eagerness into the ideaj- and volunteered his advocacy with the Greek emperor Valens, who was then at Antiooh. Valens was an Arian, and a controversialist, in an age when controver- sialists would compass sea and land to make one proselyte. When the poor bishop applied for aid in his dire extremity, he persecuted him with discussions on the hypostatic union. All along the road to Antiooh he placed relays of disputants, who, under pretext of civil attentions, pressed upon him unceasingly the necessity of repudiating the confession of Nice, and recurring to that of Rimini, which he had previously recanted. The unfortunate bishop was in despair. His countrymen were camped upon the banks of the Danube, PASSAGE OF THE DANUBE. 185 and suffering grievously from want of food : behind them ■were tlie Huns, whose horsemen they hourly expected to behold upon the horizon ; before them was a mighty river, swollen with rain. Many attempted to cross, but they and their frail rafts were instantly dashed to pieces by the Eoman military engines. Ulphilas, a simple-minded man, was easily persuaded that the whole theological discussion only involved metaphysical subtleties, which should not for a moment be placed in comparison with the fate of a perish- ing people. He assented to the emperor's proposition, and engaged, upon the part of the Gothic nation, that they should adopt the Arian confession, the emperor, on his part, consent- ing to appoint commissioners for the purpose of assigning to them lands upon the Eoman bank of the Danube. Hence arose for Christendom long schism and violent persecutions, — for the Goths soon adopted the ordinary zeal of converts, — and for Rome, a series of events which terminated in her destruction. Upon the return of TJlphilas, the Eoman commissioners conveyed the Visigoths across the Danube, according to the terms of the agreement, — first the women and children, and subsequently the men without arms. The unromantic old soldier who recounts the transaction, breaks out into quite a poetic style. As he speaks of the "numbers numberless" who night and day were ferried across the stream in rafts, and skiffs, and even hollowed trees, he is reminded of the hosts of Xerxes,* of the Cimbri and Teutons pouring over the Alps. " They came," he says, " like ashes from Etna in eruption. The individuals appointed to count the multi- tudes sank hopele.ssly under the task. Should a man ask their number, ' Libyci velit asquoris idem Diaoere quam multae Zephyro volvantur arense !' "t Then commenced a scene which contemporary historians, though accustomed to deeds of violence and depravity, re- , * Amm. Mar. xxi. 4. t Virgil, Geor. ii. 105. 186 THE COLLISION.— THE TEUTONS. cord -vfrith sentiments- of marked abhorrence. The corrupt Boman officials seized upon the Gothic matrons of stately figure, and the fair-haired and blue-eyed maidens, for their paramours. Nor was this all : many of the most vigorous youths were entrapped and sold into slavery. The multitudes who had crossed the stream in dependence upon the emperor's promise of support, were cheated, fed upon the most unclean food, furnished to them at an extravagant price, or starved to death. A single pound of bread could only be obtained by the payment of a slave ; a small quantity of meat was sold for ten pounds of silver. Treachery was added to their other wrongs. Lupioinus, the Roman commandant, invited the Gothic chiefs, Fridigern and Alavivus, to a banquet, and attempted their assassination. The young men owed their escape to the swiftness of their horses. Infuriated by the treatment which they themselves, their countrymen and countrywomen, had received, they organized an implacable revolt against the Eoman power. Success in several skir- mishes furnished them with arms, — indeed, they had most imperfectly observed the part of the compact which provided that they should lay them aside. They swept everything before them with fire and sword ; plundered towns, villages, and private dwellings ; and spared neither sex nor age. This ravage continued for more than a year ; fresh bands crossed the Danube in combination with Alans and Huns. The regents of the Ostrogoths, Alatheus and Saphrax, made common cause with their former foes, and joined the inroad. This news roused Valens from his theological reveries in thfe East ; the spirit of the old soldier revived within him, and it was further inflamed by the flattery of his ignorant courtiers, who urged him to make an end of the insolent enemy, before Gratian, the o.,Q ■western emperor, who was marching to his aid, could arrive to share and diminish the honours of victory. On the 9th of August, the two armies met on the plains of Adrianople, amid clouds of dust, and under a scorching sun. BATTLE OF ADRIANOPLB. 187 The impetuosity of Valens and his contempt of the enemy ruined all. The Romans, drawn into a false position, blinded and confused, were hewn down in indiscriminate slaughter. The unhappy emperor either fell upon the field of battle, or met with a still more miserable death upon the night after the -action, in a wretched cottage where he had taken refuge, and which some Gothic plunderers set on fire. Four counts of the Empire, with six-and-thirty other officers of distinction, were left upon the bloody field. The victors attempted to capture Adrianople, but being unfurnished with the means of taking the city, and, like all barbarians, unskilled in sieges, they were compelled to abandon the design, and advanced directly upon the eastern capital. Here, however, they encountered still greater impediments. Returning, therefore, upon their steps, they ravaged the provinces of Macedonia, Thrace, and Illyricum, with an unrelenting cruelty, which seemed to the ecclesiastical his- torians of the time the direct judgment of Heaven, as denounced by the terrible language of the ancient prophets. The fury of the Goths, says St. Jerome, extended to all creatures possessed of life ; the beasts of the field, the fowls of the air, the fish of the sea, they mercilessly destroyed them all ! Such were the results of the battle of Adrianople. No day so disastrous had dawned for Rome, say contemporary writers, since the fatal field of Cannse. JBut from Cannse she recovered with regenerated strength and splendour ; it was not so in this case. The immediate effects, indeed, of the battle of Adrianople, so far as the Eastern empire was concerned, were arrested by the prudence and resolution of Valens' successor, the great Theodosius ; but its effects upon the empire of the West were never remedied. The Goths, repulsed before the ramparts of Constantinople, which still sustained the shadowy power of the Greek Csesars, turned their thoughts to the fallen and more undefended , West. Nor had they long to wait. Eive years before the close of 188 THE COLLISION.— THE TURANIANS. the century, Eufinus, a Gaul by birth, minister of Arcadius, sent the Visigoths oyer the Alps.* Then began that " Hourra " of the Northern nations upon Rome, the recital of which, would form a long and terrible drama of blood. Its first act concludes with the sack of the Eternal City, by Alaric, king of the Goths. But tbese things belong to the story of Italy, upon whicb we shall enter in the next Lec- ture. At present we must speak of the fortunes of an empire which, including regions as extensive as those under the sway of Rome, threatened at one time to establish an equilibrium between barbarism and civilization ; an equi- librium which, the superior physical force of the first would speedUy have disturbed, had its social strength and power of gpiifflcal cohesion corresponded to its means of conquest. Et was, as we have seen, the inroad of the Hunnish hordes which precipitated the Ostrogoths upon the Visigoths, and the latter upon the Eastern empire. The Ostrogoths, for the time at least, completely succuBibed, and professed allegiance to the victors. " The Ostrogoth," writes Jor- nandes,+ "after the death of their king Ermanaric, were completely separated from the Visigoths, and, submitting to the Huns, remained in their own country." Into the wide regions vacated by the Visigoth migration, the Hunnish horsemen poured, as the tempest pours into the rarified regions of the atmosphere. Living by rapine, and having no fixed settlements in one spot, they wandered far and_ wide along the Danube, generally avoiding conflict with the Empire, but assailing, and subduing, or displacing the barbaric tribes who dwelt upon the frontier. Upon the latter, their coming produced something like the efltect of a strange animal in an ant-hill. All was confusion, agitation, and a perpetual hurrying to and fro, hardly to be grasped by the eye, and certainly incapable of being delineated by the pen. - * Vide Lecture V. t'Jornandes, de Eeb. Get. c. 48. ^HE ASIATIC HX7NS. 189 I'he indications of settled life and transient civilization which had arisen along the line of the Roman empire, from the Black Sea to the Gaulish cities, disappeared, and the nomad life of Asia was introduced into the heart of Europe. Aetius, the Roman patrician, in an evil hour, availed himself of the aid of the Huntish chieftain Rona, in the confusion which ensued in the West upon the death of Honorius. The Huns -were not actually engaged in any combat, but they claimed Pan- nonia as their reward, nor did Aetius dare to refuse. Along with the province, he conferred upon the Hun the title of " General of the Roman armies," and disguised the degrada- tion of a large yearly tribute under the name of " military pay." Hence the connection in their early life between Attila, the nephew of Rona, and the Roman Aetius, a^ji the anomaly that Attila, the most terrible adversary of Romej^" should have been a titular commander of her forces. Of this hereafter. As yet, no powerful intellect had been found to combine these nomads into a nation, and render them for- midable to the world by concentrating their strength, as it was in after-ages concentrated, by Timour or Tchengis-khan. Black Huns and White Huns, rolling wave after wave into Europe, and following the standards of rival chieftains, always jealous of each other, and often openly at war, were incapable of the organized and united action which would have enabled them to contend against the Empire. Yet, as they ploughed no fields and planted no seed, to the Empire they were com- pelled to look for food when they had exhausted the scanty stores of the Teuton and Sarmatian tribes whom they drove before them. We hear of them, accordingly, as mercenaries in the service of Rome, and they fought for her well against the Goths, and against one another. It was a charge of Hunnic cavalry in the service of Honorius which, at the battle of Florence, decided the defeat of Radagasius, and saved Rome for a short season from the fate which she experienced at the hand of Alaric. It was a Hun who sent to Arcadius the head 190 THE COLLISION.— THE TUKANIANS. of a Gothic general, Gainas, taken in open revolt against Eome, in his unavailing place of refuge beyond the Danube. For the first fifty years, therefore, after their arrival in Southern Europe, their relations with the Empire were peaceful enough, and the latter gladly made use of them as a counterpoise to the growing power of the Goths. But though they did not directly turn their own arms against Italy or Constantinople, their advent was the indirect cause of formi.dable and permanent encroachments upon the im- perial territory. The tribes whom they displaced appear to have gathered as it were into two great bodies, and projected themselves by difierent routes upon those re- gions of the civilized world where they hoped to win subsistence by their swords. One immense army, A.D. 405. gQjjgjg^jjg of 200,000 warriors, crossed the Ty- rolese Alps under Kadagasius, and made straight for the gates of Florence.* Sitting down before the city, they attempted to besiege it ; but from want of strategic skill, were soon themselves cut off, and beleaguered by the forces of Stilicho j as were the Athenians at Syracuse, and ourselves at Sebastopol. The result was fatal to the barbarians, and to the fair fame of Stilicho ; for Eadagasius, having been entrapped into a surrender, was treacherously beheaded, while his followers were sold for slaves, and dispersed throughout the Italian cities. The fortunes of the other division were more prosperous. A great multitude, com- posed of Burguudians, Yandals, Alans, and Suevi, burst over the Bhine, easily overcoming the feeble resistance ofiered by the Ripuarian Franks. They speedily made the whole country the prey of their bow and spear, and after dividing it among themselyes, crossed the Pyrenees, and founded the first barbarian king- doms in the Iberian peninsula. This is the invasion of "which Gibbon declares that it sealed the fate of Roman * 2osimua, v. 26. THE HUNS AND THE EMPIRE. 191 civilization, because the tribes composing it never again retraced their steps. The Roman garrisons were withdrawn from the more distant parts of the Empire to protect Italy. The fortresses were dismantled on the Rhine, and Gaul left exposed to their fury. For a period of four years they ravaged its seven provinces, and then passed, as we have said, over the Pyrenees into Spain. To their fortunes we shall recur hereafter ; meanwhile we must fbllow the progress of the Huns. Gradually advancing towards the west, they came in contact with the remainder of the Burgundians who had 'not yet crossed the Rhine. They were pagans,- but, alarmed by the approach of the irresistible Asiatics, they applied to a bishop amongst their already Christianized brethren on: the opposite bank of the river, for the rite of baptism) Believing themselves invincible in their new faith, they attacked the Huns and cut them to pieces. The Hunnish monarch, Oktar, died during the course of the night, and the event they interpreted as an interposition in their favour, like that which smote the hosts of Sennacherib be- neath the walls of Jerusalem. A day of vengeance was soon to come. Oktar was one of four brothers, all of them chief- tains of their race. The authority of the whole four was soon to be concentrated in the son of one of them, Attila, or Etzel, the youngest child of Mourzoixkh, surnamed by the nations whom he swept with the besom of destruction, "the Scourge of God." The name itself, in the Hunnic dialect, is identical with that of the Volga, which river has received its modem appellation from the Bulgarians. We may therefore suppose him to have been bora upon its banks at the latter end of the third century. Upon his father's death he succeeded to a joint authority over the tribe with his elder brother Bleda. The latter soon vanished from the scene, murdered by his brother's treachery, says Jornandes, and we find Attila,' by the force of a genius for 192 THE COLLISION.— THE TURANIANS. war and policy seldom equalled, never perhaps surpassed, gradually drawing all power into his own hands, and gather- ing to his standard not only the Huns who had already reached central Europe, but vast numbers of their wilder kinsmen from regions far beyond the Caspian, and all the barbarian tribes whom they had subdued. One of Attila's uncles, j^ona, had perhaps anticipated the ambitious con- ceptions ofbis nephew. Accurately acquainted with the condition of the Empire through his relations with the Roman patrician Aetius, he boldly asserted that it was the destiny of the Huns to divide the world with its ancient mistress, and claimed as their heritage all countries north of the Danube, while he conceded those on the south to Eome. .Certain tribes who dwelt within the limits thus reserved by the Hunnic mon9.rch for himself, ventured to make an alliance with the Byzantine court. Eona instantly protested, called the Greek emperor to account, and insisted upon a conference to settle the question. During the interval of preparation he died, and it was to the young chieftains, Bleda and Attila, that the imperial envoys addressed them- A.D. 434. , . ,. ^ , , selves, m an audience granted to them on a plain upon the right bank of the Danube, near the Roman city of Margus. Attila was resolved to carry out his uncle's policy : he showed himself haughty and unyielding :— " Break off at once all connection with the ultra-Danubian tribes; restore your captives; form no alliance with any tribe or people against the Huns ; increase your tribute, or if you choose to call it so, your payment for military service, , from 300 to 700 pounds of gold. Do this, or war." To every attempt at explanation or remonstrance there was but one answer, " This, or war." The unfortunate envoys, who had orders to conclude "peace at any price," were obliged to give way, and thus was concluded the famous treaty of Margus, with which Attila so often menaced the Empire. The ambitious dream of Eona soon became the ATTILA AND THE BISHOP OF MAEGUS. 193 fixed idea of his abler nephew; and in devoting himself to its accomplishment he was determined to spare neither friend nor foe. One after another, every existing power in his own race and in the barbarian world beyond the Danube and the Ehine, was made the vassal of his wilf. Then "this terror of the universe," this man "born to shake the world," as Jornandes calls him,* turned upon his only remaining rivals. His first attempt was against the Eastern empire. In all ages of the world an ambitious monarch at the head of some half-million of wellTtrained soldiers has always easily found a pretext for war. The pretext in the present case was a sufficiently idle one. It was pretended that the Eoman bishop of Margus had surreptitiously in- troduced himself into the sepulchre of the Hun- nic kings, and stolen from it the buried treasure. The Huns j.mmediately fell upon a Roman town during the time of a fair, and pUlaged everything before them, slaying the men and carrying joff the women. To all complaints from Constantinople the answer waa<" The bishop, or your lives." The emperor thought, and with reason, that to give up an innocent man to be massacred, would be displeasing to Heaven, would alienate the clergy, and only appease for a moment the demands of his merciless enemy. He refused, though timidly and in vague terms. The Huns replied by scouring Pannonia, laying Sirmium, its capital, in ruins, and extending their ravages far south of the Danube to the cities of Kaissa and Sardica, upon both of which they wrought the extremity of their vengeance. A truce of four years only increased their fury and aggravated its effects. The war was suddenly recommenced. This time they reached Thessaly, and renewed with a somewhat similar re- sult the far-famed passage of Thermopylse by the hordes of Xerxes, Two Roman armies were put to complete rout, and * Jornandes, de Eeb. Get. c. 35. H 194 THE COLLISION.— THE TUEANIANS. seventy cities levelled to the ground. Theodosius purchased the redemption of his capital by the cession of territory extending for fifteen days' journey south of the Danube, by an immediate payment of 6,000 pounds of gold, and the promise of 2,000 more as an annual tribute. It may be doubted -whether he might not as well have thrown open its gates and combated the enemy in the streets. So fright- ful was the pressure of this demand upon the upper classes, that many families were reduced to abject poverty, starved to death, or*sag- themselves in their despair. Perhaps Attila was satisfied with his success, perhaps he respected the strong defences of Constantinople, At any rate, he turned his thoughts to the less exhausted fields of the "Western empire. With a policy well worthy of his barbaric astuteness, he determined to smite her through Gaul. The Yisigoths, displaced from their eastern possessions by the advent of his ancestors, had established there a flourishing kingdom, which maintained somewhat dubious relations with the imperial court beyond the Alps. At present, however, Goths and Romans were at peaco, The Hun resolved to play off one against the other j he therefore at the same time menaced and courted both. To the Eomans he professed that, in his capacity of general of the Empire, his only object was to punish their faithless servants the Goths. To the ..Goths he proclaimed that he was about to set them free from Roman chains. In the mean time, he assembled a vast army for the invasion of Gaul. His pretext for quarrel with the Western empire was as characteristic as the affair of Margus. When the Huns were besieging Sirmium, the bishop of the town, by way of preserving the sacred vessels of his church, got them by some means into the hands of Attila's own secretary, Constancius, a Gaul. The latter pledged the vases to a Roman dealer, a certain Sylvanus. The pledge not being THE VASES OF SIRMIUM. 195 redeemed, Sylvanus, as he had an undoubted right to do, sold the vessels to an Italian bishop for his church. The transaction reached the ears of Attila. He instantly cruci- fied his secretary, claimed the vessels as his own, and de- manded either their restoration or the person of Sylvanus. The vessels having been employed for a consecrated purpose, could not be placed in the hands of an unbelieving pagan, and Sylvanus had committed no crime at all, still less one deserving of crucifixion. It was in vain that all sorts of compromise and pecuniary compensation were suggested. The answer was as usual, " Sylvanus, or the vessels." This, it must be admitted, was "a very pretty quarrel as it stood," but the cunning Hun had another in reserve. Long before mis the Princess Honoria, sister of the Emperor Valen- tinian, in a fit of very un-Roman romance, or more probably of feminine''spitefulness, having been banished to Constanti- nople for some suspected intrigue, and condemned to con- ventual life, adopted the singular expedient of transmitting her ring as a gage d' amour to the redoubtable and repulsive barbarian whose name was in every mouth at Constantinople. , The king of the Huns had the usual oriental notions about women, and was therefore very little likely to appreciate such advances ; but though unassailable by love, he was fully alive to policy. He foresaw the possibility dl making politi- cal capital out of the affair, and retained the ring. "What use he made of it we shall presently see, but in the mean time, while meditating the destruction of Home, he received news from Constantinople which roused him to the utmost pitch of indignation. The Eastern sceptre had fallen into a strong grasp. Theodosius having been killed by a fall from his horse, his sister JPuXchgria was proclaimed Empress of the East. She bestowed her hand on Marcian, a man of courage and a soldier, who speedily informed Attila that he was perfectly willing to meet him as a friend, and 196 THE COLLISION.— THE TURANIANS. pay him as an ally ; but that if he made his appearance in the character of a foe, he should find an army as able as it would be willing to repel his aggression. The bar- barian blood flamed up at this defiance. It was retorted with interest. On the same day, and at the same hour, the messengers of the Hun presented themselves before the emperors of the East and West charged with the same message : "Attila, thy lord and mine, bids thee pre- pare for him a palace, — for he comes." The trage- A.v. 50. ^.^^ Seneca paints in some spirited lines a tiger by the banks of the Ganges, gazing on two well-fed steers, and rolling his glaring eyeballs from one to the other, un- certain upon which he shall first spring. It is no unfitting image of the fierce barbarian standing for a moment in doubt whether he shall fall in his fury upon Constantinople or upon Rome. Strategic considerations, as well as those of policy, turned him towards the last. "We have seen his pretexts for war; another soon offered itself, and at the same time suggested the mode in which his armies should operate. The Franks had established themselves upon the lower Rhine, somewhere in modern Belgium, and had chosen for hereditary monarchs the " long-haired " or "free-born" Mero- vingian family, by the ancient and picturesque custom of elevating the future sovereign on a buckler. Olodion was the first who received this dignity, and for twenty years ■ he ruled his rude warriors with prudence, and, de- sjnte the Roman opposition, extended his dominion by their ' valour. At his death he left two sons. Discord, as was so often the case, arose between the brothers. Meroveus, the younger, sought the aid of Rome, and was, according to the fashion of the times, adopted by Aetius. The elder threw himself into the arms of Attila, and ofiered as the price of his assistance the passage of the Rhine. This was precisely what the Hun desired. Nor was internal treachery wanting. / ATTlLA INVITED INTO GAUL. 197 Gaul, as we have seen, -was harassed by the insurrection of its miserable and oppressed peasantry or Bagaudse. One of these insurrectionary chieftains, a physician named Eudoxus, pursued by Roman vengeance, took refuge with Attila, and promised him the aid of all the brigands, criminals, and revolted peasants in the country. The astute monarch availed himself of the local knowledge of the fugitive, but before committing his fortunes to the chances of war, he determined to strengthen himself by an alliance with Gen- seric, king of the Vandals, who had by this time become masters of Africa, a foe almost as formidable to Rome as Attila himself. Genseric had attempted a design as ambi- tious as that of Attila, — a federation of all the barbarians quartered in the Empire against its-authority, and had for this purpose married his son to the daughter of Theodoric, the Visigothic king of the south of France. The unfortu- nate girl having excited her husband's suspicion, he muti- lated her features in a frightful manner, and sent her back in this condition to her royal father. This insult he knew would produce eternal enmity between Visigoth and Vandal, and therefore he eagerly courted, by lavish presents, the friendship of the common enemy of both. Attila no less eagerly responded, and the two concerted a combined attack upon Italy from the Alps and from the Mediterranean. All things seemed to indicate that the decisive hour was at hand, and the monarch of the Huns gathered up his strength for the effort. All the realms of barbarism, from the frozen fields of Lapland and Siberia to the banks of the Indus and the Rhine, sent forth their savage legions at his call. Never before, in the history of the world, never since, except per- haps in the expeditions of Timour and Tchengis-khan, was so vast and wild a host gathered beneath the standard of a single leader. Five hundred thousand fighting men were assembled in central Europe, ready to precipitate themselves 198 THE COLLISION.— THE TURANIANS. upon Gaul. The catalogue of Sidonius might rival that of Homer.* You shall have the enumeration as given by M. Thierry :— " History has left for us the melancholy catalogue of this army, whose masses encumbered not only the banks of the Danube, but all the surrounding country. Never since the days of Xerxes had Europe witnessed such a gathering of nations, known or unknown : the battle-roll included five hundred thousand warriors. Asia figured there in the per- son of her most hideous and ferocious representatives : the black Hun and the Acatzir, armed with their long quivers ; the Alan, with his ponderous lance and cuirass of plaited horn ; the Neuri and the Bellonoti ; the Geloni, painted and tattooed, whose weapon was a scythe, and who wore, by way of an ornament, a cloak composed of human skin. From the Sarmatian plains had come the Bastarnse in their waggons, half Slaves, half Asiatics in blood, resembling the Germans in their equipment for war, the Scythians in their manners, and being polygamists like the Huns. Germany had furnished her most distant tribes, dwellers in the ex- treme west and north : the Euge from the banks of the Oder and the Vistula ; the Scyrian and Turcilingian, who came from the banks of the Niemen and the Dwing,, names,- then obscure, but soon to acquire a terrible significance : they marched to battle with the round Scandinavian buckler and short sword. There, too, were to be seen the Hevuli, swift in the chase and invincible in fight, the terror of their kindred Germans, who exterminated them at last. Neither * " Subito commota tumultu Barbaries tolas in te transfuderat Arctos, Gallia I pugnacem Eugum comitante Gelono, Gepida trux sequitur ; Scyrum Burgundio cogit, Chunus, Bellonotus, Neurus, Bastarna, Toringus, Bructerus, ulvosa quem vel Nicer abluit unda, Prorumpit Franous ; cecidit cito secta bipenni Hercynia in lintres, et Rhenum texuit alno." SiDON. ApoLL., Pern. Aviti, 318—325. AVITUS AT THE VISIGOTH COTJKT. 199 the Ostrogoth nor the Lombard were disobedient to the call; they were there, with their ponderous infantry so dreaded by Eome."* This heterogeneous host, extending its front from Basle to the mouth of the Ehine, passed the river in two great divisions, one towards its source, and the other near its embouchure, in somewhat the same manner as did the allied armies in 1814. Attila directed them upon Orleans, which, standing at the highest part of the curve formed by the great central river of France, the Loire, was then, as after- wards, the most important strategic position in Gaul. It was guarded by some Alans in the service of the Empire, but their king, Sangiban, influenced either by terror or the hope of reward, promised to deliver up the keys of the gates upon the arrival of the Huns.- Meantime Aetius had been organizing the means of resistance. Uncertainty as to the intentions of Attila had delayed him long behind the Alps iij a position which he dared not quit so long as the capital was itself menaced. But as soon as the project of the Hun became patent, he descended into Southern Gaul, bringing with him all the barbarian auxiliaries he could collect, and hastened to form a junction with Theodoric, the Yisigoth king. But here he was arrested by an unexpected obstacle. The Yisigoths would not move. An autograph letter from Yalentinian j promises, entreaties, and represen- tations of the common danger, were of no avail. " The Eomans have got us both into this scrape," was the answer ; ■ " let them get us out of it." It was then seen how powerful is the agency of personal influence even upon the destiny of nations. What the emperor, Aetius, and the imminent peril of the civilized world had been unable to accomplish, WHS effected by the persuasions of a single man.t Among • Hiatoire d'Attila, vol. i. p. 141. ■(• " Orbia, Avite, aalua, cui npn nova gloria nunc eat. Quod rogat Aetiua voluisti, et non nocet hostia. [Vis t 1 200 THE COLLISION.— THE TUEANIaI^-S. the pleasant hills of Auvergne, dwelt a Eomanized Celtio senator, Mecilius Avitus, who had. served the Empire with signal success in peace and war, and who had contrived to create an atmosphere of almost Angustan refinement and grace around him in that distant region, where he led a happier life than when, in after-days, he so unwisely wore the imperial purple. The account of this little Auvergnat society, half Roman, half Gaulish, in the fifth century, as given by its reader's son-in-law Sidonius, is one of the most pleasant episodes of the history of the time.* But upon it we must not dwell. Avitus, who was the object of intense admiration at the Gothic court, urged upon the king that it would be consistent neither with his honour nor . his safety, to permit the Hun to establish himself upon the left bank of the Ehine. . The old king yielded to the representations of his friend, and gave the word to arm. His warriors received the command with rapture. At the sound of the Gothic horn, so dreaded in the day of battle, the " legions of the leather cuirass" crowded to the Roman eagles, and Sidonius, in an enthusiastic outburst, compares the object of his panegyric to the "Arabian phoenix," at whose call, " all the fowls of the air gather from the utmost regions of heaven, while the welkin is too narrow for their rushing wings."t And indeed the name and glory of Aetius had attracted to take their part in this grand struggle, all the semi-civilized world of barbarism. The distant Bretons of the Armorican peninsula answered to the call. There too were to be found the Eipuarian Franks and the Salian Franks, the latter under Meroveus, the protege of Rome, eager to meet their unworthy brethren, who had taken Via ? prodeet ; inolusa tenes tot millia nutu, Et populis Geticis sola est tua gratia limes, Infensi semper nobis paeem tibi prsestant." SiDOK. Apoll., Pom. Ainti, v. 339— S43. * Sidon. Apoll., Epist. ii. 2. •{• JUd. Pan. Aviti v, 354. SIEGE OF OELEANS. 201 Service witt Attila ; the Burgundians burning to avenge their wrongs ; the Helvetian mountaineers, who had followed Aetius from the Alps. Sangiban too, with his Alans, despite his treacherous designs, dared not be absent. The various Teutonic bands who had acquired any settlement beyond the Rhine, — Sueves,Letes, and independent Franks, — Sarmatae from the neighbourhood of the modern town of Autun, even Saxon wanderers from tlie mouths of the Seine and Loire ;* — all swelled the ranks of the great army which went forth to roll back Asiatic barbarism from the Westt What in the mean time was the fate of Orleans ? Anianus (St. Agnan), its bishop, like so many other Christian bishops in those troublous times, was the only real representative of authority left to direct and console the trembling inhabitants. He had sought Aetius in the south, and, wit^ the pathetic language of 9, Hebrew prophet, assured him that if he and his army did not arrive within six weeks, that is to say, before the 14th June, at the gates of the city, Orleans would have become the prey of the barbarian, and a place of desolation. Aetius gave the re- quired promise ; but we have seen the difficulties which retarded its performance. The citizens of Orleans struggled bravely with their swarming assailants, and gazed anxiously from their walls towards the south ; but no Eoman spears were seen flashing in the bright sunshine of Tourraine. Deferred hope sickened into despair, and capitulation was in the thoughts and on the lips of all. The eventful day arrived, and the pious Anianus himself prayed fervently on his knees, and exhorted his flock to pray for the promised succour. Three times was the messenger sent, like sister Anne, to the sum- * " Quin et Aremoricus piratam Saxona tractua Sperabat, oui pelle salum sulcare Britannum liudus, et aBSUto glaucum mare findere lembo.' SlDON. Apoll., Pan. Aviti, 368 — 370. + Jornandes, de Keb. Get. c. 36. H 2 202 THE COLLISION.— THE TURANIANS. mit of the hightest watch-tower, to see if he could discern the tokens of deliverance. Twice he returned without intelligence. The third time, just as the battering-rams of Attila were shaking down the gates, a cloud of dust in the horizon proclaimed that the avengers were at hand. A charge of cavalry swept up to the walls, and behind were seen the imperial eagles, mingled with the standards of the Goths, and the Roman legions in their serried ranks. Such is the dramatic account which the worthy Gregory of Tours,* bent upon glorifying his fellow-saint Agnan, has handed down of this ever-memorable day, — a day long celebrated by a religious solemnity in the Church of Eome, where, says M. Thierry, " the names of Agnan, Aetius, and the Gothic Thorismond, were mingled in its prayers." There seems, how- ever, little doubt but that Orleans had already capitulated when the relieving army arrived, and that a terrible struggle took place in its streets. The Huns recklessly engaged in plundering, and^ entangled among the houses, were taken at a disadvantage ; and, after suffering severely, fell back to a position where their multitudinous cavalry ^'^' ' might act with more effect. The spot chosen for deciding the great question whether Asia or Europe, barbarism or civilization, should rule the world, was in the plains of Champagne, between Chalons-sur-Marne and Mery- sur-Seine. The final struggle was inaugurated by a tre- mendous conflict at the latter place, between the Gepidse, composing the rear-guard of the Huns, and the Merovingian Franks, who marched in the Eoman van. The Frankish battleaxe forced back the sword and spear. The combat con- tinued the whole night ; but when morning rose, 1,500 corses attested the fury of the combatants. Next day was fought that great fight of Chalona — " one of the four decisive battles of history," the very thought of which overpowered the imagination of contemporaries, and beggared all their resources * Gregory of Tours, ii. 7. BATTLE OF CHALONS. 203 of language. " Bellum," says Jornandes, in his rugged Latin, " atrox, multiplex, immane, pertinax, cui simile nulla usquam narrat Antiquitas, ubi talia gesta referuntur, ut nihil est quod in vitS, suli conspioere potuisset egregius, qui hujus miraculi privaretur aspectu."* A few miles on the Stras- burg side of ChMons are the remains of an ancient camp, at a place called in the guide-books " Fanum Minervse." Around these stretches a wide plain, through which runs the river V^sle, here a narrow stream, probably the "rivulus humili rip4 prolabens" of Jornandes. A dull foreboding oppressed the Huns. Attila exhibited extreme agitation all the night, and like the Babylonian monarch, summoned the diviners to read his fate. There, beneath the royal tent, pitched in the extreme west of Europe, Calmuck sorcerers from the steppes of Asia, with their horrid rites, asked the question of destiny, on the answer to which the fate of both worlds hung. "Attila shall be defeated, but the leader of the enemy shall fall," was the response. The death of Aetius, the companion of his own youth, the only man, as he well knew, capable of holding together the Roman empire, seemed to the king of the Huns well worth the loss of a battle. He determined to engage, but previously encou- raged his people with a speech, which Jornandes reports in full. Like the speeches of Livy, it is of very doubtful authen- ticity ; but it breathes the ferocious spirit of " the Scourge of God." He tells his warriors, " To assault, is half the way to victory : these hordes of degenerate Romans, with their unworthy allies, will not, cannot withstand the fury of your eyes in the shock of battle. Fortune would never have made the Huns victorious over so many nations, did she not mean to reserve for them the raptures of this strife," an expression immortalized by a modern poet.t At three o'clock in the afternoon, Attila came forth from his intrenched camp in order of battle. On his left were the Ostrogoths, * Jornandes, ut sup. t Byron, Ode to Napoleon. 204 THE COLLISION.— THE TUEAJSTIANS. under Valamir, the best-trained soldiers in his army. His right was occupied by Ardaric, with the remains of the GepidsB, and the other tribes who had followed his standard to the war. He himself took up his position in the centre with his Huns, for greater security, says Jomandes, but most probably with the intention of bursting through the opposing line with his irresistible cavalry, and thus cutting the Roman army in two. Aetius assumed the command of his own left, where stood the legionaries ; on the right he placed the Visigoths, confronting their Ostrogoth brethren; his centre was composed of Franks and Burgundians, and the Alalni, of whose loyalty he had reason to doubt. Pro- bably foreseeing the impetuous charge of Attila, he strengthened his own wings, that he might overlap and surround him by driving back the wings of the enemy. Something of the kind occurred. Attila and his uncon- quered horsemen carried all before them ; but on the Eoman right the Visigoths, after a terrible hand-to-hand struggle, in which the brave old Theodoric fell, drove back the Ostrogoths from the field, and, transported by the excite- ment of success, fell furiously upon the left centre of the victorious Huns. On the right, Aetius, who had more than held his ground against Ardaric, closed in upon them with the legionaries. The battle was now over, and Attila, fighting his way through the melee, with the greatest diffi- culty I'egained his camp. An attempt was made to carry it by assault; but dense flights of arrows from behind the wooden waggons, directed with the unerring aim of the hunters of the desert, kept the enemy at bay. Such was the great battle of Chalons, which saved Gaul and the civilization of Europe. It might have been yet more de- cisive, had not the Eoman army immediately broken up. Aetius is said to have feared the Goths, and to have counselled their new leader, Thorismond, son of the slain Theodoric, to anticipate his brother's claims, and secure the DEATH OF AETIUS. 205 kingdom by an immediate return to his capital, Toulouse. It is much more probable that the selfishness of the Gothic prince himself suggested the scheme, and disarranged the plans of Aetius. However, whether prompted by Roman advice or in pursuance of his own policy, it is certain that Thorismond instantly withdrew. Attila, fearing a stratagem, . made no attempt to assail Aetius, but, says Jomandes, when a long silence followed the departure of the foe, he deemed himself master of the field, and, with the joys of' victory, resumed the dreams of ambition. His first thought was of vengeance. Rome, and the man who had saved Rome, were its objects. Palling back beyond the Rhine, he devoted his energy to amassing a fresh force as formidable as that which fought at Chalons. "Was Attila really vanquished?" asks M. Thierry. " Certainly not," he replies ; he was not, at any rate, in the opinion' of his countrymen, to whom waggons well filled with booty, and long trains of captives, were always as&- cient assurance of success. To secure these, the king of the Huns led his army back by Troyes, Cologne, and Thuringia, devastating the lands in defiance, and burning the Roman cities. To every traveller who makes the tour of the Rhine, an abiding memorial of his progress is presented, where one of the most famous churches of Cologne keeps watch over the consecrated bones of St. Ursula and her eleven thousand virgins. The following spring he passed the Julian Alps, and reappeared, terrible as ever, on the Italian plains. Meantime, "the last of the Romans" -was sufiering the wrong which a debauched and despotic court always inflicts sooner or later upon a great man. The parasites of Valentinian accused Aetius of betraying the Empire after the defeat of the Huns, and of employing Attila, the friend of his youth, as a bugbear to terrify the emperor. " Thus only," they said, " could he find the means of keeping all real power in his own hands." . There can be no doubt that Aetius was E^mbitious ; but it is most unlikely that be was ^ 206 THE COLLISION.— THE TUKANIANS. traitor. His designs probably extended no fnrtlier than the marriage of his son with Eudoxia, the daughter of the emperor, a design which the emperor himself had encou- raged. But be this as it may, his unpopularity at court enfeebled his power in the field. Attila was already on the summit of the Julian Alps. The court of Ravenna was paralyzed with alarm, but Aetius was without anything that could be called an army of defence. Remembering his. brave comrades of Gaul, Franks, Burgundians, and Visi- goths, Aetius wished to place the emperor in safety among them before engaging in this last desperate struggle for Italy. The proposal called forth a storm of indignation and obloquy. Aetius could do nothing but fall back beyond the line of the Po, transport Valentinian from Ravenna to Rome, and await the arrival of the succours which he had requested from the brave emperor of ■ the East. Aquileia was at this time the most important city of Northern Italy. It stood in a lovely plain, "girt with green vine- yards, and blooming with flowers as for a fete."* The Huns swept over this beautiful spot, as the conflagration over the prairie, leaving nothing behind them but black- ness and ashes, and sat down before the city. The gigantic earthen mounds which encircled their encampment may still be seen in ruin^ near Udine. The place was sur- rounded by a river and defended by a strong wall, flanked with lofty towers. Against these defences the Hunnish hordes dashed up like the ocean, and recoiled like its spray. As at Orleans, the barbarian arms and tactics were of little avail against stone walls. Squadrons of charging horse, and clouds of unerring arrows, could not carry ditches and ramparts. They attempted other means without more success. In vain the Huns swarmed day after day to assault and escalade ; day after day they were driven back. Three months passed away, and the hot * Herodian, Hist, viii., quoted by Thierry. SIEGE OF AQUILEIA. 207 season ■was at hand. The barbarians lost heart ; even Attila himself, in profound dejection, meditated a; retreat, -vrhen one day, -while contemplating as usual the wall which had foiled so many efforts, he observed some storks flying away with their little ones from a ruined tower. He instantly felt that the place was doomed, and impressed his army with his own conviction. " Behold," said he, " these birds, with prophetic knowledge of the future, are quitting a city about to perish, and desert at the approach of peril the towers so soon to fall."* The Huns had ever regarded their monarch with superstitious awe. In the present case they fully believed the prophecy, and the prophecy, like many others, wrought its own fulfilment. They multiplied their military engines and means of assault, they attacked the place with redou- bled fury, and at last surmounted the wall. Aquileia was a heap of ruins, but from its ashes sprung a phoenix, which by the splendeur of its plumes long fixed upon itself the gaze of men. Flying from Aquileia and all the neighbouring towns in the Venetian district, as it was even then called, the terrified inhabitants sought refuge from the horsemen of the Hun in an archipelago of inaccessible islands, surrounded and secured by the northern waters of the Adriatic. This lonely spot, for long ages the haunt of the seabird and the solitary fisherman, thus became the cradle of the long glories of republican Venice, — "a city," writes her enthusiastic admirer, " which was to be set like a golden clasp on the girdle of the earth, to write her history on t]ie white scrolls of the sea-surges, and to word it in their thunder, and to gather and give forth, in world-wide pulsation, the glory of the East and of the AVest from the burning heart of her fortitude and splendour." t Summer, was now at hand, and the Italian climate had done its usual work upon the frames of the northern barbarians. Sickness * Jornandes, de Keb. Get. c. 42. t Stones of Venice, vol. ii. p. 10. 208 THE COLLISION.— THE TURANIANS. and death were rife in the camp of the Huns, the strongest suffered from debility. After the sack of the northern cities, all in the barbarian camp, save the unconquered spirit of the king himself, were anxious to postpone fresh opera- tions until another year. Attila resolved to force his way over the Apennines, give battle to Aetius before the walls of Rome, and pass in vengeful triumph up the Sacred Way, which had seen the imperial people trample for so many centuries upon the necks of barbaric kings. But it was no longer now the Rome which refused to speak of peace even while the enemy was at her gates. She deemed it best to anticipate his arrival, and sent an embassy to deprecate the victor's wrath, the principal place in which was occupied by\ the venerable pontiff Leo IV., canonized by the Church of Rome with the name of " Great." Leo was a man of rare ability, eloquence, firmness, and knowledge of the times. In the curious taste of the day, he was styled the Cicero of Catholic rhetoric, the Homer of Theology, the Aristotle of the Philosophy of the Faith.* To his personal reputation he added the prestige of his position as chief officer of the Church, a prestige not without its effect even upon the barbarian mind. No better envoy could have been chosen, and it is not surprising that the success of the mission should have been elevated by mediseval ecclesiastical writers into a miraculous confirmation of the authority of ''tlie supreme head of the Church. But many considerations weighed upon the mind of Attila. His army was reduced in numbers, enfeebled and disorganized by disease ; his generals discontented, and unwilling to advance. Somewhat of the ancient awe still clung around the name of Rome ; the terror of ten centuries of dominion could not pass away in a single hour, and the fate of the Gothic spoiler Alaric had been regarded with a feeling of superstitious dread throughout all the barbarian world. When, therefore, the ambassadors met * Vita S. Leon. Magni, apud Bell., quoted by Thierry, p. 219, ATa?ILA EETIEES FROM ITALY. 209 the king of the Huns in the neighbourhood of Mantua, he condescended to listen to their overtures, and on the 6th July, consented to quit Italy, in con- ^'^' sideration of an annual tribute. But his compliance was only in accotdance with the maxim " reculer pour mieux sauter." Never abandoning his design upon Rome, even at the hour of his departure he provided himself with a pretext for return. " Send," said he, " my affianced bride Honoria, with her dowry, into the land of the Huns, or I will come with spring to seek her at the head of an army."* "With this menace upon his lips, he departed for his wooden city on the banks of the Danube. But he did not return by the way which he came, for in the present condition of his array be was most unwilling to encounter the legions of the Eastern empire, as he debouched from the defiles of the Julian Alps. He retired, therefore, by the passes of the Alps of Noricum, and his soldiers, notwithstanding the treaty of peace, plundered the town of Augsburg or Augusta, which lay upon his way. Whilst crossing the little river Lech, a tributary of the Danube, an incident occurred which excited the superstitious foreboding of his followers. A female in the garb of a. sorceress or Druidess of Gaul, rushed forward in his path, and seizing his bridle-rein, exclaimed, " Back, At^a, back !" Whatever may have been the purport of the warning, whether it was meant to apprise the king of a coming danger, or to deprecate the abandonment of Italy, the termination of the great conqueror's career which fol- lowed so closely upon the words, attached to them in after- times a significance which they would not otherwise haye acquired. The winter was passed in the exchange of haughty recriminations and defiance with the Eastern court. Despite his avowed intention of visiting Home for his bride, he declared to Marcian that, if the tribute promised by Theo- dosius were not paid, he would come in person to Constanti- * Jornandes, 4e Eeb. Get. c. 42. 210 THE COLLISION— THE TUKANIANS. ' nople to exact it. Marciaa was not the man to be awed even by the king of the Huns. He retorted threat for threat, strengthened his defences, and levied troops. But an event was at hand which was to defer the doom of the imperial city for exactly a thousand years. During the winter, says Jornandes, Attila determined, in addition to his innumerable wives ("innumerabiles nxores") to take to himself another, a maiden of exceeding beauty, named Ildico. Tradition varies as to her origin. She is on the one hand represented as a Bactrian princess, on the other as daughter of a Burgundian or Erankish king. The name certainly has a Teutonic sound, and seems still to survive in Hildegarde; nor is the fact unimportant in reference to what followed. Attila had apparently pursued the old Homeric practice, he laid waste the native city and slaughtered the relatives of his future- bride before admitting her to his seraglio. His nuptials were celebrated with barbaric pomp, but on the followiug morning he was found dead in his bed, weltering in gore. Ildico was seated by his side apparently overwhelmed with grief. The account given by the Huns, and perpetuated in their national traditions, is, that he had ever been subject to bleeding at the nose, and that the haemorrhage having broken out w.hile he was reclining on his back, he had been stifled in his own bloQ4;_^Crerman tradition asserts that the free daughter of the forest avenged the murder of her kinsmen and her own shame by the poniard. The Latins added, that she was aided by an emissary of Aetius, who had been surreptitiously introduced 'into the household of the Hun. It is idle now to discuss these different tales. The fact remains, Attila was no more ; and by his death was broken up that great confederation of barbarism, held together by his commanding genius and iron will, which at one time equalled in dimensions, and threat- ened soon to surpass in power, the empire of Eome. The history of the successors of Attila may be found in ATTJLA'S EMPIEB BEOKEN UP. 211 the interesting work of M. Tliierry. It is impossible to follow it out here. Immediately after his death, the Ger- mans refused to submit to the divided rule of his sons. The army of AttUa split up into two great camps; on the one side were the Gepidse and Ostrogoths, with the majority of the Teutonic nations ; on the other the Hun.s, the Alans, the Sarmatians or Slavonians, and the few Germans -who still .owned allegiance to the memory of Attila. A vast plain between the Drave and the Danube was selected to decide .this vital struggle, known as the battle of KetS,d, which, though less famous in history, may perhaps claim equal im- portance with that of Chalons, as an arbiter of the destinies of civilization. Jornandes revels in his picture of the strife, and becomes almost as savage as the combatants while he describes their furious passions, their weapons, and their wounds. Fortune at first seemed to favour the Huns ; but German steadfastness prevailed ; Goths and Gepidse scattered the less-disciplined bands of Asia ; and Ardaric, the king of the latter tribe for the time, established himself in the royal residence of Attila, and assumed the leading position in the barbarian world. Gibbon succinctly describes the fate of AttUa's immediate descendants. It is not necessary to add anything to that description, for the Huns proper disappear as a great power after the disastrous dissolution of their confederation. The battle of Net^d, I say, broke the power of the Huns ■ and put an end to their ephemeral empire. Under the sons and successors of Attila they either retired into Asia, or gradually wore out their strength in unavailing struggles against the Ostrogoth domination and in combinations with other barbarian tribes to plunder the possessions of the Byzantine Csesars. But the races of Turanian stock were still destined to reappear more than once upon the stage of European politics, and to play there no undistinguished parts. The empire of Attila was scon partially revived bjr 212 THE COLLISION.— XHE TURANIANS. the kinsmen of his Huns, and acquired au extension, notvin- deed quite equal to the dominion of that " Tamer of nations," yet one not undeserving of comparison with it, in respect of its power, its military exploits, and the influence which it exerted upon both branches of its Roman rival. The Avars, as they were incorrectly called, by appearing at the critical moment, enabled the Lombards to annihilate their here- ditary enemies the Gepidse, and thus accomplish their long- cherished project of invading Italy.* And to the Greek the Avars proved a still mere formidable foe. They broke down the defences of the Danube, and permanently esta- blished themselves between that river and the Save ; they conquered, and after conquest, organized the Slavic tribes against the common enemy; they almost unceasingly ravaged the northern provinces up to the very walls of the capital, and imjjosed upon the Byzantine court a tribute which the strongest and wisest of its sovereigns were only too glad to pay. They carried their audacity further still. Allied with the Persian, the ancient rival and enemy of Rome, they appeared upon the European bank of the Bosphonis, while the troops of Chosroes occupied the Asiatic side, and nearly inflicted upon the wealthy and magnificent Constantinople what Rome had sufiered from the Goths of Alario and th^ pirate hordes of the Vandal king; The first appearance of the Avars in Europe was accom- panied by some singular circumstances, which, as they seem to have escaped the notice of Gibbon, it may be as wellto . describe. Amid the ceaseless flux and reflux of populations in Central Asia, and the numberless revolutions among the tribes of Turanian origin, which it would be an abuse of the term to call political, the Avars appear to have acquired a strong and widely-spread dominion over their neighbours. Conspicuous among these were the Guars, also called Khouni (Xuvvoi), a word which at once identifies them with the * See Lecture VI. OtTAK feHOtriJl ASSUME THE NAME OF AtARS. 213 Huns, ■who received this appellation from the Greek his- torians. They seem to have submitted unwillingly enough to their masters, until the advent of a stronger race involved both in a common captivity. Far away, in the very centre of Asia, at the foot of the Altaic range, two thousand mUes distant from the Caspian and Chinese seas, the Bay of Bengal, and the Siberian shore, dwelt the great Khan of the Turks, " king of seven nations, and lord of the seven climates of the world." This potentate reduced the Avars beneath his sway; but some unknown cause appears to have rendered him suspicious of their allegiance. A visit of investigation became necessary : it was paid with consequences the most frightful. Three hundred thousand human beings fell vic- tims to his wrath. For the space of four days' journey the earth was covered with decaying corpses.* The blow was fatal to the Avars ; but it gave freedom to their former dependents, the Guar Khouni. "Watching for an oppor- tunity, they at last found one in the engagements or neglect of their new lords, the Turks ; and gathering together their wives and their children, their flocks and their herds, they turned their waggons towards the setting sun. This immense exodus comprised upwards of two hundred thou- sand persons. The terror which inspired their flight ren- dered them resistless in onset ; for the avenging Turk was behind their track. They overturned everything before them, even the Hunnic tribes of kindred origin, who had long hovered on the north-east frontiers of the Empire, and, driving out or enslaving the inhabitants, established them- selves in the wide plains which stretch between the Volga and the Don. In that age of imperfect information they were naturally enough confounded with the greatest and most formidable tribe of the Turanian stock known to the nations of the West. The report that the Avars had broken * Theophylact, quoted Histoire d'Attila et ses Suooesseuvs, vol. i, t>. 396. 214 THE COLLISION.— THE TURANIANS. loose from Asia, and were coming in irresistible force to overrun Europe, spread itself all along both banks of the Danube, and penetrated to tbe Byzantine court. Witli true barbaric cunning, tbe Ouar Khouni availed themselves of the mistake, and by calling themselves " Avars," largely increased the terrors of their name, and their chances of conquest. Their success was very great ; so great, indeed, that they soon felt themselves in a position to demand lands and a pension from the emperor Justinian. Justinian •was approaching his dotage ; he had, at any rate, lost that ad- ministrative energy which rendered the early part of his reign worthy of the palmiest days of Rome. He hesitated as to his reply. Motives of policy finally prevailed : he accepted the offer of the Ouar Khouni to act against the other barbarian enemies of the Empire, and promised them an annual tribute, disguised under the name of pay, but de- ferred the question as to territorial settlement. For the next five years this policy was successful ; for the Avars employed them in ext^fftiinating the Hunnic tribes north and east of the Blac k SeW and taking pos- session of their lands. But in the mean time, the Turks had disoovei'ed the disappearance of the Ouar Kjhouni. Their anger was intense. " They are not birds to fly through the air," said the great Khan ; " they are not fish to hide in the depths of the sea : they are on the earth, and I will have them." His wrath was naturally enough directed towards the ruler who had received his rebellious vassals, slaves of his slaves, and rewarded them with territory and gold. An embassy was dispatched to Constantinople ; and, for the first time in history, the Turks made their portentous appearance in the capital of the Eastern empire. Nearly a thousand years were to elapse before they laid her walls in ruins, and reared the standard of a faith of which she as yet had never heard, upon the fanes where worshipped the ancient Mistress of the world. But even at this distant period a BAIAN, KHAN OF THE AVARS. 215 prescient alarm appears to have possessed the imagination of the Christians. The strange Asiatics were regarded with mixed curiosity and terror by the luxurious sons of Con- stantinople. Justyiian was disabused of his delusion, and suffered himself to be reproached for his credulity. "He dismissed the ambassadors with lavish presents and studied politeness ; nor did he fail to express his deep disgust at the cheat which had been practised upon him. Still, however, he hesitated to break openly with the Avars ; for the Avars, aided by the terror which their name inspired, and by their supposed connection with tlie Empire, had by this time ac- quired a fatal hold upon the banks of the Danube, and founded a dominion which in power, if not in extent, rivalled the territory won for a moment by the "Scourge of God." In this limited space we cannot pursue its history ; but in its relations with the rival empire of civilization, it obtained all the advantages which strength, cunning, audacity, and unbounded perfidy were likely to assert over imbecility and decay. Even in the time of Justinian, the Greek empire occupied the humiliating position of a tributary. But Justin II., the successor of Justinian, was an arrogant pedant, ,and, consequently, a fool. He was incapable of appieciating the dangers of his situation'; or, if he ever became alive to them, he imagined they might be combated by rhetorical common-places and magniloquent boasts about the Roman name. On the other hand, Baian, the Avar khan, was a man of no small genius for policy and war, and distinguished in no common degree for the special qualities which brought success to the barbarian ^rms, — indomitable valour in the field, and unscrupulous perfidy in his political relations. His reign, which lasted for twenty years, was the most brilliant period of the Avar annals. During this period the Avar empire was firmly established on both banks of the Danube ; the valleys of the Balkan, or, as it was then called, the Hsemus, were traversed 216 THE .COLLISi0^f.— THE TUKAisriA3srs. witli entire impunity by tte Avar horsemen ; and tLe Save was spanned by a bridge, without opposition from the Eoman governor, who had been deceived by the gross and pubhc perjury of Baian. In the presence of 'the Eoman oflicials and his own magnates, the khan swore by all the Gods of his nation, and by Him whom the Christians worshipped, that he had no sinister intention, no military object, in the construction of this bridge. It was still incomplete when he passed a large army across, and declared war. The result was, that the important triangular territory between the Brave and the Save, with the pointed edge towards Constanti- nople, was permanently occupied ; the large Eoman city of Sirmium, — so dear to the Greek emperor's heart, and so im- portant to his interests that he declared he would rather spare a daughter to the barbarian, — after a bloody and pro- tracted siege, was carried by assault, its churches pillaged, and the inhabitants put to the sword j the Eoman armies were continually and ignominiously defeated, and the Empire itself subjected to ah increased tribute, which, being simulta- neously hard pressed by other foes, it was fain to pay. The Avars were terrible to the Byzantine Greeks, but they were still more terrible to their own barbarian neigh- bours, the Slavic tribes, who had by this time occupied, in immense numbers, the centre and south-east of Europe. These unfortunate creatures, of apparently an imperfect, or, at any rate, imperfectly-cultivated intelligence, endured such frightful tyranny from their Avar conquerors, that their veiy name has passed into a synonyme for the most degraded servitude. In peace, their houses, their flocks and herds, and fields, their vdves and daughters, were at the disposal of their brutal masters, while they were themselves driven away into the depths of forests and morasses, yet all the while compelled to keep up the payment of a burdensome tribute. In war their position was more pitiable still. Driven to the field in herds before the Avar warriors, they AVARS COME IN CONTACT WITH FRANKS. 217 were placed, though imperfectly armed, in the front of the battle, and compelled to meet the shock of the imperial legionary, with his iron-clad body and sweeping sword. If they recoiled, as they necessarily must, they were goaded onward by the pike of their masters and allies in the rear ; and thus ^.cquired, from the complacent facetiousness of contemporary writers, the epithet of " Bifurci," or " pricked on both sides." A day of terrible retribution was at hand, when these degraded beings, restored to a sense of man- hood, and subjected to military organization by a Frank adventurer, wiped out the stain of these long years of ignominy in the blood of their former lords. This is, however, to anticipate. With the Franks themselves the Avars soon came into contact j for their insatiable passion for plunder conducted them over almost the whole of central Europe. But here their success was not so satisfactory. Their first encounter with the sons of the warriors whose battleaxes had hewed down the hordes of Attila upon the plains of Chalons, ter- minated in a rude repulse upon the banks of the Elbe, whither Sigebert, grandson of Clovis, had led the battalions of his people. A second encounter was not quite so for- tunate for the Franks : they were forced to give way before their enemies ; and the ecclesiastical writers ascribe the result to the sorcery and magic of the Huns. As the Ouar Khouni had called themselves Avars in the East, in ac- cordance with a popular error, they availed themselves of a similar error in the West, and assumed the dreaded name of the followers of Attila, who ravaged Orleans and fought at ChMons. Phantom warriors, it seems, dealt fatal blows upon the Christians from the midst of clouds and darkness and storm ; so firm a hold has the belief in this form of supernatural agency upon the human imagination, and so far was primitive Christianity from eradicating it. Notwithstanding, however, " their incantations and their 218 THE COLLISION.— THE TURANIANS. mighty magic," they finally and completely succumbed to the sword of Charlemagne, under circumstances which shall be related in their proper place. ■ In the mean time we must recur to the fortunes of Baian. The close of his life, like that of several other great con- querors, was a bitter contrast to its commencement. The Empire at last found a man and a soldier. At the head of their levies, Priscus entirely outmanoeuvred the Avars, drove Baian beyond the Danube, and defeated him in five succes- sive general actions. Nor did he pause here. Once more the eagles entered Pannonia, the scene of so many vic- tories, and for the last time in history crossed the Theiss. It was nearly all over with the Avars. Another year of such warfare, and they would have been compelled, to re-seek the deserts of Asia. But it was not given to a vicious and emasculate society, like that of Con- stantinople, to achieve deliverance for itself or for the world. In one of its ceaseless and turbulent revolutions, the wise and brave emperor Maurice was slain. He was succeded by a common centurion, one Phocas, a man pro- foundly vicious, ignorant, sensual, cowardly, and cruel, the very worst man, in short, to deal with the critical cir- cumstances of the time, whom the time produced. He speedily undid all that the wisdom of Maurice and the military skill of Priscus had efi'ected. From a base desire to court popularity with the legionaries, the Roman armies were recalled from their glorious but toilsome service, and the Avars were saved to work still greater mischief than heretofore. They had, however, smarted too severely in the last campaign to attempt anything against Constantinople, at any rate for a time, and accordingly turned their steps towards the west, whither they had learnt the way by occasionally sending contingents to the Lombard legions. Upon the West, therefore, the new khan determined to descend ; but this time against his former friends the Lombards, who were V EOMHILDA AND THE AVAR KHAN. 219 now permanently established in Italy. The small patrimony of Ghisulpb, a Lombard duke, lay directly in his path ; its capital town, Forum Julii, near to Aquileia, was at that time occupied by his widow, Eomhilda, supported by a competent garrison. The defence was resolute, and might have been successful ; but female perfidy was the cause of its ruin. The licentious Lombard was smitten with the person of the gallant and splendidly-arrayed Avar, as he rode round the fortifications. Determined to satisfy her passion, she en- tered into a clandestine engagement to open the gates at night, upon condition of becoming his wife. In the sense which an oriental and a barbarian would attach to the word, he fulfilled his promise ; but he fired and plundered the city, slaughtered the fighting men, and dragged off into slavery the remaining population. Eomhilda herself he subjected to a cruel and degrading insult, and then placed her among his menial servants. The foray had so far been successful, and the Avar khan set out for his Pannonian home in true freebooting style, laden with plunder, and accom- panied by an immense train of captives, whom he hoped either to employ as slaves or exchange for a valuable ransom. Their numbers were found to render rapid pro- gress impossible ; and delay had become perilous. Halting at a place called Campus Sacer, " the sacred plain," the khan deliberated as to the expediency of butchering the whole multitude. While the deliberation was in progress, the three sons of the late duke made their escape, undec circumstances which read like a romance. The youngest, a mere child, being unable to sit his horse, was recaptured ; but as his captor was leading his bridle-rein, the boy brained Lim by an unexpected blow, and galloped off into the forest, ■where he soon rejoined his brothers. This event put an end to all hesitation respecting the captives ; they were [in- stantly slain upon the spot, and the " Campus Sacer" be- came accursed for an effusion of innocent blood, which was 220 THE COLLISION.— THE TUKAKIANS. regarded as terrible even in those terrible times. A more evil fate awaited Eombilda. Subjected to a punishment so atrociously cruel that it cannot be recounted in a civilized age, she was left in her death-agonies upon the ground, to declare to Italy the vengeance of the khan and his abhor- rence of her treachery. I have dwelt for a moment upon this matter, though it possesses no political importance or significance, because it seems to bring-before us, better than any mere record of battles and sieges, the manners of that strange, wild time, in which modern society had its birth, but which remains so utterly unrealized, even in the imagina/- tions of educated men.* The next exploit of the Avar was one which proved him capable of a treason more vile than that which he had so outrageously avenged. It was nothing else than an attempt, in violation of the universal practice of all civilized nations, to carry off the Greek emperor, at a solemn conference, which the Avar had himself proposed. The emperor was ad- vancing to the appointed spot, near Selymbria, to the north of the great wall of defence which the Byzantines, with Chinese perspicacity, had been at immense pains to construct. He had brought with him an enormous quantity of baggage j all the necessary and ornamental trappings of a large suite ; the whole apparatus of a Roman theatre, with its scenery and actors ; the cars, the horses, the drivers, and, we may presume, the factious partisans of the Hippodrome. He rode himself at the head of the long procession, clad in his purple mantle, and wearing his golden crown. Thousands of curious spectators accompanied the cortege, and all was in the inextricable confusion common upon such occasions. On a sudden the Avar cavalry were seen advancing from the horizon with the speed of the wind. All doubt as to their intentions was instantly removed by a furious charge. The * The whole story is to be found in Paulus Diaconus de Geetis Langobardorum, iy. 38. AVARS ATTEMPT TO SEIZE THE EMPEROR. 221 emperor^ warned at the last moment by a peasant, was com- pelled to ride recklessly for his life, dropping his imperial mantle upon the ground, and concealing his golden crown in his sleeve. The Avars slaughtered the unresisting crowd, and made a magnificent harvest of the gold and jewels, the embroidered vestments, the chariots and horses, and the theatrical properties which fell into their hands. It was, after all, however, what our neighbours expressively call a " covp manque." Baian called for his royal prisoner ; they brought him the 'abandoned purple. The Avar, too cunning to compromise himself, yet unwilling to lose that for which he had ventured so much, ordered his cavalry to advance without him, and try the effect of a surprise upon Con- stantinople. The untiring horsemen galloped unchallenged through the defences of the long wall up to the very en- trance of the capital ; but they found the gates closed, the sentinels placed, and the archers upon the rampart. Heraclius had arrived before them. After inflicting some damage upon the splendid churches in the suburbs, they returned to the khan, who instantly disavowed the whole affair, and, with profuse expressions of regret at the insub- ordination of his subjects, resumed his diplomatic intercourse with the emperor. What was it possible to do with such a man, and such a race ? The most suitable and obvious treatment, humiliation by the sword, was impossible. There had lately occurred in the Greek emjiire one of those singular social crises, which, just as they cannot previously be antici- pated, so, after their occurrence, are seldom rightly accounted for or understood. Nothing could be worse than the universal corruption, debasement, and national debility which had followed upon the usurpation of Phocas. The coxirt and government were in the last stage of imbecility and sen- sualism ; the populace had become unmanageable ; the treasury was empty ; the army nowhere to be found. Only two of the common soldiers, who had marched with the 222 THE COLLISION.— THE TURANIANS. traitor Phocas to dethrone his master, could be discovered on the roll-call. Heraclius had certainly been able to ex- tinguish the tyrant ; but to remedy the disorders of his weak and reckless administration seemed impossible. The Empire was withont defenders and without funds ; and while the Avars were as usual sweeping over all its pos- sessions in Europe, its old hereditary enemy the Persian was gaining triumph after triumph, and adding territory to territory in the East. - Under Chosroes, the famous Nushirvan of oriental legend, the Persian bauds yearly overran Syria, Palestine, and Asia Minor ; so audacious were their inroads, that they established themselves per- manently in sight of the metropolis ; and just as Destiny was preparing for the final ruin of the Empire by the bbth of the Arabian prophet, for the first time in men's memori^, as the presage of a more terrible future, the tents of Asiatic " marauders were seen, where now the cypresses of Scutari look down upon the glittering pinnacles of Staraboul. As sometimes happens, the very magnitude of the evil appears to have produced its remedy. The Persians had sacked Jerusalem, sacrilegiously despoiled the church reared by the pious care of the empress Helena, and carried away the true Cross into the interior of their country. Scarcely had the sacred lance and sponge been saved from the wreck, and secretly conveyed to Constantinople. Among its ex- citable population, in a,n age when religion was inextricably mixed up with its external symbols, and their importance, for that reason, immensely magnified, the efiect of these events was something quite beyond our power to imagine ; perhaps we may rather say, would have been beyond our power to imagine, had we not been acquainted with the scenes enacted by Greek and Latin Christians at the Holy Sepulchre in Easter week. The loss of the Cross seemed to the men of that generation what the loss of the sacred volume, were such a loss possible, would have seemed to the Puritans of AVAES BESIEGE CONSTANTINOPLE. 223 the Commonwealth, or the fanatics of the Covenant. The intelligence was received with tears and groans, mingled with fury. Then ensued a crisis of religious excitement and exaltation which roused the whole Byzantine population from the depths of their debasement, and kindled a martial enthusiasm which anticipated by centuries the first crusade. The scene of the plateau of Clermont was rehearsed in the Hippodrome of Constantinople. " Deus vult" " Deus vult" re-echoed in those Sybarite halls, so long the abode of luxury and pleasure ; the people recovered their almost departed manhood ; and the emperor, shaking off the sloth into which he seenis to have fallen from despair, placed himself at the head of the movement, and conducted it with a degree of genius and military skill unsurpassed by Narses or Belisarius, or, indeed, by any sovereign or leader of the Lower Empire. In a series of campaigns planned and carried out among the Armenian mountains, and inspired, perhaps, by the traditions of the immortal retreat of the Ten Thousand, the Romans threw themselves upon the rear of the Persians, and, assailing the base of their operations, thoroughly disorganized their armies, and snatched from them the fruits of their former successes. Chosroes was ter- ribly defeated Jiear the Euphrates, and perished very shortly after. To HeracHus belonged the glory of the last triumph of the Roman arms won on Asiatic ground, ere they were finally expelled beyond the seas by the irresistible onslaught of Islam. But at present the Avars are our theme : we are con- cerned with the fortunes of the Empire only so far as these • are mixed up with them ; and we have paused upon this episode simply because it brought the khan and his people once more to the walls of Constantinople, and nearly ena- bled them to anticipate, by nine hundred years, the great catastrophe in which their kinsmen of Turanian stock, the Mongol Turks, played so conspicuous a part. During the 224 THE COLLISION.— THE TTJEANIANS. progress of tlie Persian wax, Cliosroes came to an under- standing with, the khan, and purchased his assistance, The pillage of Constantinople was the proffered price. ■ It was arranged that the Avars were to assail the city upon the European side, while Schaharbarz, the Persian general, ap- peared upon the opposite bank of the Bosphorus. The Persians possessed no fleet, but their allies were to supply the want with all the boats which they could collect upon the Danube and the other rivers that discharge themselves into the Black Sea. The early part of June was fixed for the rendezvous ; but the khan was de- termined to win, and spent so much time in extraordinary preparations, and the construction of military engines, that it was not until the 27tb of July that he reached the suburbs, though he had passed the long wall nearly a month before. This enabled the citizens to organize a regular defence, in which they were materially assisted by the arrival of one of the most distinguished divisions of the Asiatic army, despatched by Heraclius to save his throne and capital. The besieged, however, did not neglect the chances of diplomacy, and sent an envoy to ascertain the intentions of the khan, who, it must be remembered, was still their excellent friend and ally. There was no longer either equivocation or disguise. This time, at any rate, the Avar expressed himself with perfect plainness and sim- plicity. ^ " Go," said he to the envoy who, in the name of the Roman magistrates, had forbidden his further advance, " go, and perish along with your people ; but be sure to tell them this : if they do not give up to me everything they possess, I will raze their city to the ground, and carry off every single soul among its inhabitants into slavery." The assault began on the 31st of July, and was continued, without ceasing, for five days. In vain the barbarian brought up all his engines, swept the parapets with the unerring Mongol bow, and rolled his twelve huge timber towers close KEPULSE OF THE AVARS. 22£ tip to the wall of the beleaguered city. The Greeks en- countered the attack -with at least equal resolution and ingenuity. A tall mast, the invention of a mariner, was erected on the rampart, and a species of crane constructed, from which depended, by pulleys, a skiff (navigiolum), or basket, containing several volunteers, who discharged burn- ing pitch from their perilous elevation upon the inflammable towers. The siege made no progress, and the Avar became impatient. He determined upon a night-attack, in con- junction with the Persians, whom he had, however, not yet been able to bring across the Bosporus, so formidable and vigilant was the Eoman fleet. A large body of Slave auxiliaries were, as usual, destined for the forlorn-hope. While the Avars assailed the fortifications on the land side, the Slaves were to penetrate into the Golden Horn in the rude vessels which they had brought from the Danube. But the besieged were on the alert : they dis- covered the plan of the attack and the signal for its commencement. Prematurely kindling a fire upon the summit of a lofty tower, they decoyed the Avars into a naval ambush, in which they were inclosed like thunnies in a net. Then the ponderous war-galleys, with brazen leaks and triple banks of oars, dashing among the wretched logboats of the assailants, and, favoured by the obscurity of the night, smashed, overturned, and sunk them on every side. The crews were precipitated into the water ; the Golden Horn became a veritable "chamber of death," and the doomed barbarians were knocked on the head, speared, and hewn in pieces, or thrust beneath the waves, until the galleys of the victors could scarcely make their way through the blood-stained and encumbered water. The khan perceived that his chance was over ; and after committing most malignant devastation in the beautiful suburb of the Fig- trees — Sykse, now Galata — sulkily withdrew his army, never more to be gathered together for a great enterprise. 226 THE COLLISION.— THE TUEANIANS. The subsequent history of the Avars need not detain us long. No great man supplied the place of Baian, and tho ■whole people rapidly sunk into that feeble and debased condition which is naturally the result of luxury engrafted upon gross barbarism. We hear of their accumulating the most delicate and costly products of Eastern looms, the most exquisite workmanship of Byzantine goldsmiths, and remaining unsatisfied still ; but " man and steel, the soldier and his sword," were scarcely found among a race who, by their aid, had actually subdued a large portion of the known world. The most formidable blow to their declining power proceeded from a source which they but little anticipated. The intercourse of their warriors, during the intervals of warfare, with the women of their Slavic vassals, resulted in the birth of a race nanied by the Chroniclers Vendes, who, like the Parthenii of Spartan story, participated too strongly in the fiery blood of their fathers to submit with indifierence to that degrading serfdom which they inherited on the maternal side. It was with these half-castes that the first resistance to Avar doroination originated. But almost simultaneously the whole Slavic race were, as we have said, roused from the apathy of ages, and induced to assert their manhood, by a Frank adventurei', or "merchant" in the phraseology of the time, who bad been in the habit of conveying his wares into the country on the backs of long trains of pack-horses and mules. This Frank, whose name was Samo, was un- doubtedly one of the most extraordinary men of his time ! brave, enterprising, and skilful, he seems to have breathed the Teutonic spirit of self-reliance and hardihood into this down-trodden race ; at any rate, he taught them to defeat their masters, and establish a very considerable dominion for themselves. We cannot' dwell upon his fortunes or theirs, for we shall come upon them again in the history of the Franks, with whom Samo, himself a Frank, but now also, unhapDJlj, an apostate, very speedily came into collision. SAMO, AND THE SLAVE INSURRECTION. 22? We are, liowever, perhaps concerned to know that the Slaves; under the leadership of Samo, not only drove back the Avars to the east and north, but also en- tered into relations with the Greek enapire, which relations resulted in the still further circumscription of the Avar territory, and in the establishment of two dynasties of their own race, whose names still occupy a place upon the map of Europe. On the northern slopes of the Carpathians, between the Oder and the Vistula, were settled a mixed race of Vendes and Slovenes, or Slavonians, who called themselves Khorwates, Khrobates, or Croats, that is to say, "moun- taineers." To these rude warriors, the emperor Heraclius, influenced by an easily intelligible policy, offered part of the lands evacuated by the Avars. The Croats, or rather a branch of them, eagerly accepted the offer, and were located in the ancient Dalmatia, among the Istrian mountains, and on the coast of the Adriatic Gulf The islands of the gulf and the principal maritime cities were retained under Roman, that is to say, Byzantine dominion. From this dates the first existence of Austrian Croatia. Servia had a similar origin j for Servia was peopled by another influx of Slavonians, calling themselves Srp, or, according to Greek interpi-e- tation, "Serbes." Heraelius, in pursuance of the same policy, invited their approach, upon the departure of the Avars, and settled them in Upper Mcesia, Dardania, and Dacia ; thus assigning to them a function which they may even yet discharge, that of an outlying, independent out- post against a preponderating northern power. These new nationalities entirely shut out the Avars from all interference in the affairs of Southern and Western Europe, and buck- lered the Empire against their blows. At the same time they quarrelled with their own kinsmen, the Bulgarians, who . had constituted no small portion of their strength, and forced them into the arms of their great enemy the Greek emneror, who welcomed their advances with warmth, and 228 THE COLLISION.— THE TURAlJlANS. pensioned them in the usual way. The Avars, thus cut bfi. from their natural and hereditary method of keeping alive their military spirit, and maintaining their power — brigandage and foreign war, — were thrown entirely upon their internal resources. But without settled government, without agri- cultural industry, or the material means of prosperity, such social activity as they retained, was almost of necessity directed to evil ends. Bloodshed and internal dissension, combined with luxury in that grossly sensual form which barbarism adopts, worked out, by the inevitable law of falling empires, its irretrievable ruin. " From the year 630 A.D.," writes M. Thierry, "the Avar people are no longer mentioned in the annals of the East ; the successors of Attila no longer figure beside the successors of Con- stantino. It required new wars in the West to bring upon the stage of history the khan and his people."* In these wars they were finally swept oflF from the roll of European nations. We shall hereafter have to recount how, behind their barbaric Hrings, or Rings, they awaited, and succumbed to the sword of Pepin and Charlemagne. So ended the second great effort of the Turanian races to establish an empire on European soil. But the Hunnic stock has never been entirely extirpated by German steel. In the ninth century, the Hunugars, or Maygars, a tribe of Avar blood, once more conquered their way into Europe, and founded a dynasty, which has played no mean part in the annals of Christendom. This is still a living link to bind us to that history which perhaps may have seemed, while it was recounted, a thing entirely of the past. " But," as says M. A. Thierry, " history shows us, since the middle of the fourth century, in the central and lower valleys of the Danube, an uninterrupted succession of Hunnish tribes, perpetuating the traditions of Attila. Is this permanent * Attila et sGs Suocesceurs, vol. ii. p. 125. SETTLEMENT OF SLAVES IN SOUTHERN EUROPE. 229 Bettlement of the Huns in the eastern countries of Europe, and in the very heart of Europe itself, nothing more than a question purely arohseological and. speculative ? The late war will furnish for us the answer. The valleys of the Volga and the Don, the slopes of the Oural, the steppes of the Caspian and the Black Sea, still contain the races which came in the fourth century with Balamir, in the fifth with Attila, in the sixth with the Avars, in the ninth with the Hungarians, to occupy the centre of Europe, and to menace more especially Greece. It is now fifteen centuries since the battle-cry, 'To the City of the Csesars !'• was first heard in those wild lands ; and since that day it has never ceased to re-echo there. Will the nations whoni the Einno-Huns have planted in Europe, and who have become assimilated to ourselves in manners and culture, remain for ever strangers to that movement which agitates their brethren 1 It is the secret of the future ; but we may assert with confidence, that sooner or later they.are destined to resolve the problem which preoccupies the world."* It may, at some other time, be our duty to recount the fortunes of the sons of Arpad, their establishment in Hun- gary, their conversion by St. Stephen ; their gradual incor- poration into the great society of European commonwealths; their sufierings from Tatar invasion ; their, rescue from renewed barbarism by the princes of the house of Anjou ; the glorious reigns of John Huniades and Matthias Corvinus; their ill-omened connection with the house of Austria. But these are the events of times long distant from our present goal. * A ttila et ses Suocesseurs, Preface, L E C T U E E y. ITALY— THE FALL OF THE C^SAES— ARBOGASTES— ALAMO— BICIMBK—OKESTES—AUaUSTULUS. " Italia ! Italia ! tu oui dife la sorte Pono iufelice di bellezza, ond' hai Funesta dote d' infiniti guai, Che 'n fronte soritti per gran doglia parte." FlUOAJA. "Jack Cade. — Go to, tell the king from me, I am content he shall reign ; but I'll be protector over him." — King Henry VI., Part II. act ir. sc, 2, Synopsis. — Italy the link .between the old world and the new. — Arbogastes, the Frank, its first barbarian master. — His defeat and destruction by Theodogius, emperor of the East. — Division of the Empire into East and West. — Rise of Alaric.' — Struggle between him and Stihcho. — Stilicho murdered.^Alario sacks Eome ; dies. — Depar- ture of the Goths for Gaul and Spain. — Genserio, king of the Vandals, in^vited to Italy by the empress Eudoxia ; sacks Home ; carries off spoils and captives to Africa. — The last quarter of the fifth century the crisis in the great drama of the Fall of the Empire. — The actors in it.^Eicimer dethrones Avitus ; substitutes Majorian ; has him assassinated. — Interregnum. — Zeno, the Eastern emperor, obtains the throne for Anthemius. — Eicimer supports Olybrius, the "Vandal can- didate ; slays Anthemius, and sacks Rome. — Eiciraer and Olybrius die. — Gundobald, the Burgundian, master of the situation ; appoints Gly- cerins. — Julius Nepos, nominee of the Greek court, dethrones Glycerins, and makes him a bishop. — He is himself dethroned, and driven into exile by Orestes. — Interregnum. — Romulus Augustulus, son of Orestes, made Csesar by the soldiery. — Orestes refuses partition of lands to his army. — Odoacer promises it ; defeats Orestes, and decapitates him ; sends Augustulus, the last of the Csesars, into honourable imprison- ment ; is made king of Italy. Italy may, in some sort, be regarded as the link between the old world and the new. There died out the ancient Empire ; th^e, nnder the Ostrogoth and Lombard, arose SPECIAL FEATURES OF ITALIAN HISTOBY. 231 the earliest type of the existing European nations ; there, in the duchies of the latter power, were developed the germs of the feudal system ; there, too, the city first assumed its true social importance, and, with its own rise and growth, fostered the rise and growth of free civil institutions, com- merce, and general intelligence ; and there, in the compli- cated relations and clashing interests of the Mediasval Republics, originated, as Machiavelli believes, the great idea of a Balance of Power, which has been since matured into the doctrine of the European equilibrium. There, again, broke the dawn of revived learning, of letters, and of art, and, kindling into the light of a glorious day, wrought, first an intellectual, and then a moral revolution in the condition of Christendom ; and there, finally, was the birthplace and the home of that marvellous power which, by a strange metempsychosis from material to moral dominion, succeeded to the sceptre of the Caesars, and for thirteen centuries has exercised, for evil or for good, a more than Csesarean empire over the minds of men. But, above all, it is more especially to Italy that 'we owe, according to the belief of her eloquent and profound historian, the first conception s)£ that which is the fundamental truth of modem society. The Italian communities being the first to combine the interests of conquerors and conquered, were also the first to discern that men are not to be governed in the interests of any one class, but for the development of all their powers, moral as well as intellectual, and for the general happiness of the whole body. " From the moment," says Sismondi, " they formed their own governments, and formed them for the common good, they prospered : while every other nation sufiered, they rose in intelligence as well as virtue They rose from the practice to the theory of civil society, and: showed, not only to their own country, but to future nations and ages, the object to which all human associations should tend, and the best means by which to S32 ITALY. attain to it."* To the story of Italy, tlierefore,— of interest at all moments, of surpassing interest at tlie present mo- ment, — we turn first. , The flight of the Visigoths before the overwhelming in- road of the Huns, and their settlement upon the A.D. 876. gQ^(.j,ern bank of the Danube, commences, as we have already seen, that long series of events which terminated in the fall of the Boman empire, the extinction of the political life of the old world, and the first rude development of our modern nationalities. The prudence of Theodosius averted from the Eastern empire the peril which followed upon the rout of Adrianople ; the capital was saved ; and more than a thousand years elapsed before a barbarian banner floated over the palace of the Byzantine Csesars. Very difierent was the fate of Italy. Her natural northern rampart of the Alps ofiered but a trifling obstacle to armies unen- cumbered by artillery or baggage, and accustomed from infancy to -the hardships of savage life ; and, the Alps once crossed, there was little in strength of strategic position, still less in the moral strength derived from national spirit, to arrest their onward progress. " Quisquamne reclusis," asks the last of Boman poets, "Alpibus alterius Latii fore credidit umbram?"t — "The passage of the Alpa once opened, who believed that a shadow of Boman power would remain?" The first to avail themselves of this obvious weakness were the Alemanni, who formed, as it were, the point of the great Teutonic wedge, with whom old Ammianus had so many stout battles under Julian, and against whom the emperor Probus had constructed his wall of defence. Ascertaining from a countryman who had been, as was now usual, enlisted in the body-guard of Qratian, the Boman emperor, that a strong force was about to march out of Italy for the purpose of aiding Valens in ■ * Sismondi, Hist. Ital. Eep., Introduction, + Claudian, de Bello Getico, v. 97. EEVOLT OF MAXIMUS. 233 the struggle with the Goths, which we have already de- scribed, they suddenly dashed across the Ehine into Eoman Gaul.* The movement was premature, for the legions were not yet beyond recall, and Gratian had also obtained the aid of the Franks. A bloody battle was fought at Argen- taria, in Alsace ; the king of the Alemanni fell upon the field, and the invaders were for this time repulsed. Theo- dosius in the East was shortly afterwards no less successful against the Ostrogoths, or a part of the Ostrogoth tribe, who, after their displacement by the Huns, had been roam- ing like freebooters through Central Europe, and at last reappeared on the frontier. The imperial troops ensnared and slaughtered large numbers on the Lower Danube, and, in accordance' with a policy which was becoming common, Theodosius settled the remainder in the fertile provinces of Phrygia and Lydia. Meanwhile a revolt was organized in Britain, which cost the emperor of the West his throne. One Maximus, a Spaniard by birth, occupying a high official position in that province, forced on step by step into insur- rection, by a soldiery and people of whom he appears to have been the idol, raised the standard of revolt in the island, and passed over into Gaul, attended by a large mul- titude, — 130,000 men and 70,000 women, sajsvZosimus, the Byzantine historian. + This colony, settling in tt^e Armorican peninsula, gave to it the name of Brittany, whiclr^^bas since retained. The rebel forces were soon victorious overlhe two em perors who had agreed to share the Eoman throne. Gr^tism they slew at Lyons ; Valentinian they speedily ex- ->;^ pelled from Italy. Success probably induced am- bitious projects, which included the whole Empire, East as well as "West. They had now, however, to deal with a far more formidable adversary — the politic and wise Theo- dosius. Theodosius adopted the cause of his brother em- * Leot. IV. p. 186. t Lib. iv. o. 36, I 2 234 ITALY. peror, influenced, it is said, by a romantic passion for Galla, tte sister of tire exile. Grave historians dispute the truth of -what they call an unworthy motive. We may venture to be less severe, and, with Gibbon, " rejoice to find in the revolutions of the world some traces of the mild and tender sentiments of domestic life." At first the Greek temporized with the enemy ; when he saw his opportunity he declared war. The reader is so fatigued and confused by the names of great battles, which, he is told, and truly enough, decided for the time the fate of the civil- ■ ■ ■ ized world, that the combat of Sci^ia, a town of Pannonia, where Theodosius rescued the empire of the West, and restored it to Valentinian, will probably pass away at once from his memory. Yet it was a stern and bloody struggle, in which the bold barbarians who fought on either side gave ample indication of the stuff of which the men of modern Europe were to be made. "Valentinian regained his throne ; but in one' brief year the imperial puppet was once more thrust aside by the strong hand of a stranger. Arbogastes, master- general of the armies in Ga)il, had greatly distinguished himself in the late war. This ambitious soldier, presuming upon the weakness of his master's character, had gradually filled all the public offices ^vith creatures of his own, and was evidently paving the way to an open assertion of that supreme authority which he already practically possessed. Valentinian, in a sudden acces of resolution, summoned the traitor to Trives, and deprived him of his command. In three days, as might have been expected, Valentinian was found dead in his bed, and Arbogastes was undisputed ruler of the Roman empire. Arbogastes, therefore, was the first of those Italian mayors of the palace, — masters of their nominal masters, through whose agency was wrought the transition from the Empire to the new nationalities of Europe. But the times were not yet ripe for undisguised DEFEAT OF AEBOGASTES. 235 barbarian rule. It better suited his purpose to thrust the imperial purple upon Eugenius, a wretched rhetorician, who had been his secretary, than to ^'^' ^^^' assume it himself. Once more Theodosius, urged on by his own indignation and the tears of his colleague's widow, appears in the character of a deliverer. Arbogastes allowed him to descend from the Alps,. and then assailed him with the solid infantry of Gaul and Germany on the level ground. It was well nigh all over with the Eastern troops, who were compelled to fly, or tate refuge on some inaccessible heights in their rear. The roll of ^'^' ^^^' Eoman emperors might have been spared some ignominious names, had not treachery interfered. Ecclesiastical historians ascribe the eventual success of Theodosius to the direct in- tervention of portents, marvellous as those which assured the triumph of Israel, on that eventful day when the sun stood still upon Gibeon, and the moon in the valley of Ajalon. But the sudden defection of the Gallic legions from Arbogastes, and the accession of strength which they conferred upon the opposite side, is sufficient to account for the refluent tide of fortune, without resorting to the inter- vention of the miraculous. Eugenius was decapitated on the field j Arbogastes was completely, hopelessly defeated ; and, after wandering as a hunted fugitive among the Alpine passes, anticipated the vengeance of his enemies by falling on his sword. The eventful life of Theodosius approached its close. He made dispositions before his death for the famous divi- sion of the Empire among his sons. To Arcadius he left the throne of the East, Asia Minor, Syria, Egypt, Thrace, Dacia, Macedonia, and Eastern Illyricum. Honorius he summoned to Milan, and there placed in his hands, Bri- tain, the sovereignty of Italy, Spain, the two Gauls, Africa, Noricum, and Western Illyricum. At the same time be nominatgd the renowned Stilicho, a Vandal by 236 ITALY. birth, general-in-chief of the legions in that division. He could have made no better selection. Stilicho, the ablest man of the age, had been the emperor's comrade in war, and most prudent adviser in peace. " Together," Claudian makes him say, " we have stained the Odrysian Hebrus with Gothic blood ; together we have scattered in flight the horsemen of Sarmatia, and stretched our wearied limbs on Alpine snows, or traversed the frozen Danube in our car. Since, then, the will of Heaven calls me hence, do thou succeed to my imperial cares j do thou alone cherish these pledges of my love, and protect my twin children by the strength of thy arm."* Soon afterwards the great Theodosius died of dropsy, in his fiftieth year. If Stilicho ruled the "West in his master's name, he deserved to do so ; and it was well for the West that he did. The same thing cannot be said of JRufinus, the actual ruler of the, East, a man consigned to perpetual infamy by Claudian, the last poet of imperial Rome. His ambition and rapacity knew no bounds. " As the ocean," says Claudian, " receives the " Danube and the Nile, and yet exhibits no visible expansion to the eye, so Eufinus swallows the wealth of nations, and his appetite is insatiate still."t This man, disappointed in a design to wed his daughter to Arcadius, and jealous of the influence of Stilicho, who, ambitious as himself, claimed the guardianship of both emperors, is accused, by contem- porary historians, of inviting the Huns into Europe, and the Goths into the Empire. " Tunc impius ille Proditor imperii, conjuratusque Getarum, Distulit instantes eluso principe pugnas, Hunnorum laturus opem, quoa affore bello N6rat, et inyieis mox se oonjungere castris."t The exact causes of the great Gothic war which followed are not easy to discover ; nor, under such circumstances, * Claudian, de 111° Cons. Honprii, v. 147. t In Eufinum, i. 183, J IMd. i. 318. ALARIC INVADES GREECE. 287 is it of much importance to inquire into their nature. What is of more importance to notice is that the name of Alaric, who had already served in the Roman' armies, now first appears as an independent leader of those fright- ful inroads which eventually brought him as victor to the gates of Rome. He descended upon Greece by the world- famous pass of Thermopylae. The only man who cpuld have arrested his advance had been excluded from the scene of action by the mean jealousy of the Byzantines and the secret ambition of Rufinus. Claudiau, in a fine burst of patriotic indignation, proclaims to the world how different would have been the results had his favourite hero been allowed to act : — " Prodita non tantas vidisset Grsecia clades, Oppida semoto Felopeia Marte vigerent, Starent Arcadiae, starent Lacedsemonis arces ; Non mare f umSaaet geminum flagrante Corintho, Nee fera Cecropias traxissent vinoula matres."* But, as it was, Thermopylae no longer maintained its tradi-- tional strength ; the straits were carried without a blow, and the whole of northern Greece clean swept of treasure and population. Athens capitulated at once ; Argos, Corinth, and Sparta followed the example, and suffered the wrong and ravage which have stamped infamy upon the Gothic name. The court of Byzantium, influenced by jealousy of Stilicho, whp had appeared on the scene, and forced, after an action near Pholoe, in Arcadia, the Goths to retire across the Gulf of Corinth, made a strange return for these insults. They appointed Alaric master- general of Eastei'n lUyricum j and his Gothic kinsmen, recognizing the rising star of his destiny, and exult- ing in the prospect of the plunder of the world under * Claudian, in Eufinum, ii. 188 ; and cf. De Laud. Stilicli. i. The 29th and 30th chapters of the " Decline and Fall " contain an elaborate and eloquent account of these wars ; and the compression which I have been obliged to employ is, therefore, less to be regretted. 238 ITALY. the banners of sucli a leader, proclaimed him " King of the Visigoths," and all the tribes of kindred name. Like AttUa, at a later period, he hovered for a while between the two em- pires, and then gathered up his strength to strike the weakest. After a considerable time, spent in vigorous preparation on both sides, we find him and Stilicho again opposed to each other, and each at the head of a mighty host, upon the plains of Pollentia, about twenty-five miles from Turin. A Vandal and Goth were about to contend for the empire of Eome and the Western world. The dawn of Easter Sunday saw the Goths engaged in their devotions. The omen was not so happy for them as for the Scots at Bannockburn. Stilicho fell upon their intrenchments with equal skill and impetuosity, slew large numbers, and made ' himself master of their camp. It contained the spoils of Greece, the master-pieces of Athenian genius, and the wonders of wealth and art which had decked the chambers of Corinthian courtesans ; but it also contained a prize more precious still — the spouse of Alaric, laden with the gems and gold in which it had been her ambitious dream to ascend the Capitol as Empress of the West. " Never," says Claudian, " did we so deeply plunge our steel into the Scythian throat ; never with such a slaughter tame the pride of the Tanais or the Danube. O," he exclaims, " Celebranda mihi cunctis Pollentia saaclis, meritnm nomen, felioibus apta triumpliis, Virtutia fatale solum ! memorabile buslum Barbarize."* The traditions of the great fight were also perpetuated by a contemporary poet. " Mirabere seris," writes the Christian Prudentius — " Posteritas sseclia inhumata cadavera latfe Qu£e Pollentiuos texerunt ossibus agros." f The check was a rude one ; but Alaric had sworn to find * Claud, de Bello Getioo, v. 635. f Prudent, in Syram, ii. EAVENNA. 289 in Italy a kingdom or a grave ; and while his enemies were ^•^joying the honours and more substantial advantages of victory, he made a dash at Eome in their rear. With any other opponent than Stilicho he might have succeeded ; but StUicho, ever vigilant, had thrown, before his arrival, a formidable force into the city. Baffled again, the fierce bar- barian accepted a compulsory truce ; but, while returning from Italy under its conditions, he faithlessly fell upon "Verona, then, as now, the key of the neighbouring country. The untiring Stilicho, however, was on the watch, and attacked the besiegers front and flank. On this occasion Alario only escaped by the swiftness of his horse, and Home was respited for a season. Her next peril was from Rsdagasiu s, at the head of the left wing of the vast barbarian migration, , „ ■, , -1,1 A.D. 405. which, as we have seen, fled west and south before the Huns. The fate which befell Eadagasius before the walls of Florence we have already recorded,* and shall not now recur to it. The fortunes of Alaric are the more natural theme for those whose object it is to trace the action of barbarism upon the gradually declining state of the Empire. Tor a short time- we lose sight of him ; but he reappears in the somewhat extraordinary character of gene- ral-in-chief of the Eoman armies in lUyricum, this time by appointment of Stilicho, who was probably actuated by jealousy of the Eastern empire, or, perhaps, by a renewal of his own designs upon it. As might have been expected, the Goth availed himself of his position to carry out the one fixed idea of his mind, and, declining to operate against the Greeks, took up a position from which he menaced Italy. The Eoman court now occupied Eavenna, which had become the capital of Italy, owing to its situa- tion which was considered more secure than that of either Milan or Borne. The nature of this security we learn * Lecture IV. p. 190. 240 ITALY. from the Byzantine Prooopius, who saw the place in the campaigns of Belisarius, whose secretary he was. It was derived from its position amid the Adriatic lagunes and the mudbanks of the Po. " Ravenna lies," says the Greek, " in a plain sloping down to the Ionian Gulf, which is some two furlongs distant. It can neither be assailed by land nor sea. Shallows and shoals prevent the access of any vessels. On the other side the flooding of the Po, and the numerous marshes caused by its waters, encircle the town in all directions, and render it inaccessible to infantry. A most marvellous phenomenon occurs here : every day the sea rushes in, for the space of a day's journey to a well-girt man, and becomes navigable far inland. In the evening it ■•■rolls back. Vessels come up with the flow, and return with the ,ebb, and this takes place all along the coast to Aquileia. This phenomenon occurs at the full moon."* Such a spot, however suitable for a fortification, was detestable as a resi- dence. Its imperfect drainage and fetid canals, coupled to the entire absence of vegetation and fresh water, rendered it an abomination to the strangers compelled to sojourn within its walls. Sidonius, who saw it on his way to Rome, vents his wrath and disgu&t in an epigrammatic tirade, which, as it gives a lively idea of a place henceforward so famous in Italian history, we may be permitted to transcribe. "What a town, or, rather, what a morass, you live in," he writes to his friend Candidianus ; " where your ears are pierced by the mosquitoes of the Po, and deafened by the croakiag of your fellow-citizens, the frogs. With you all the laws of nature are undergoing a perpetual inversion : your walls topple over, your water stands fast ; your towers float, your ships settle down ; your sick people go about, your doctors lie in bed ; your baths are cold, and your dwellings blaze ; the living are half dead with thirst, the dead swim about in the water • the housebreakers keep * Prooopius, de Bello Gothico, i. 1, ALAEIC MARCHES UPON ROME. 841 awake, the authorities go to sleep ; the clergy are usurers, the Syrian usurers" — who, as Jerome tells us, were famed for their avarice—" chant the offices of the Church ; the soldiers traffic, and the tradesmen fight ; the old men play at ball, and the young men at dice ; the eunuchs devote themselves to arms, and the barbarian auxiliaries to letters."* In this strange spot an idea of resistance was entertained by the Senate, who were suddenly convoked. It was the last deli- beration of that venerable body, who had survived the fields of Cannse and Philippi, the long tyranny of the Csesars, and the strange vicissitudes of a thousand years. But StUicho, the only man in the country competent to pronounce an opinion, knew too well the weakness of Italy, and would not recom- mend further opposition in a regular campaign. In ac- cordance with his advice, the king of the Goths was bought off by the payment of 4,000 pounds of gold. Alaric turned his back for the moment upon Home ; but his departure proved fatal to the great man who alone was capable of resisting his progress. The enemies of Stilicho had long en- deavoured to undermine his power; they now represented his relations with Alaric as cowardice or treason. The emperor was weak, or wicked enough, to lend himself to their de- signs, and Eavenna witnessed a judicial assassination, which forms one of the deepest degradations ever inflicted upon the Eoman name. The hero of so many victorious fights, decoyed from the altar of sanctuary by the perfidy of Count Heraclian, bowed his head beneath the axe of the executioner. Rome had now lost both her sword and shield, and stood defenceless before the enemy. Alaric was not the man to let slip his oj^portunity. As the subsidy had not yet been paid, he availed himself of the excuse to appear again in Italy. His countrymen in the service of the Em- pire, discerning the signs of the times, threw off their alle- giance to Eome, and joined the banners which promised * Sidoniua ApoU. Epist. i. 8. 242 ITALY. renown and rapine to the whole Gothic race. Aquileia and Cremona threw open their gates ; Eavenna was too remote from the line of march to necessitate a siege ; the passes of the Apennines were undefended ; and Alaric found him- self, almost without striking a blow, before the walls of the capital of the world. It contained at this time a population of about 120,000 souls, without supplies of food or adequate means of defence. The Goths made no attempt to storm the ramparts ; they sat quietly down, and inclosed the wretched citizens in a " cordon," through which nothing could force its way. The sufferings of the besieged were intense. Thousands died daily from starvation or disease. Under these circumstances there remained but one course — immediate submission ; and the Senate soon forgot the resolute bearing which it had assumed in the presence of Stilicho. It could not, however, forego its magniloquent language ; and the address of the envoys who came to propose terms to Alaric, described, in swelling words, the dignity of the imperial city, and the thousands of fighting men who still crowded her streets. " The thicker the hay," replied the Goth, with a barbarian laugh, " the easier it is mown." He then proceeded to declare his terms : — " All your gold ; all your silver ; the best of the precious fur- niture within your walls ; all your slaves of barbarian birth." " What then would you leave us ? " exclaimed the dismayed ambassadors, " Your lives," was the stern reply. Eventually the victor was induced to withdraw, by the pay- ment of a less ruinous, but still most costly ransom. Five thousand pounds of gold J 30,000 pounds of silver; 4,000 robes of silk ; 3,000 pieces of fine scarlet cloth ; 3,000 pounds, A D 408 "^^'S^* °^ pepper, were, jpordingvto Zosimus, th© market price of the Mistress of the world. But, in addition to this, 40,000 liberated -slaves joined the host which marched beneath the standard of the Gothic king, and, in the succeeding year, swelled its numbers to 100,000 men. BESIEGES THE CITY. 243 It has ever been considered a problem most difficult to solve, why Alaric, -with this overwhelming force at his command, did not at once make himself master of Italy, and ascend the throne of the CiBsars. Perhaps the lingering prestige which still hung round the city of a thousand victories, or a superstitious reverence for the relics of saints and apostles, and the dignity of the Church within its walls, asserted an indefinable influence over his mind ; perhaps strategic or political considerations, at which we have no means of guessing, stayed his hand ; perhaps, from his very first negotiations with Stilicho, . he had never aimed at a higher position than that of titular sovereign prin ce, in subordi- nation to the Empire. The truth of these, or of any other suppositions, cannot now be tested. Certain it is that he contented himself with demanding from the ministers of Honorius the office of master-general of the Italian pro- vinces, subsidies for his army, and an independent command in Dalmatia, Venetia, and Noricum. "Quern Deus vult perdere, prius dementat." Never was the adage more truly illustrated than in this case. The ministers of Honorius refused to listen to conditions from the insolent barbarian who had dared to treat on equal terms with the Majesty of Eome j but Alaric had learned by experience the path to victory, and soon showed that he had not forgotten it. His first act was to seize upon Ostia, at the mouth of the Tiber, a position which enabled him to cut oflf the supplies of the capital. The terrors of the former famine had not yet passed from men's minds. The Romans could not en- dure their repetition ; and they attempted to deprecate the wrath of the conqueror by deposing Honorius and electing Attalus, prefect of the city, to the imperial purple. The Expedient was for a moment successful ; but Alaric soon found that the tool to whose elevation he had consented, would not serve the purpose for which he was designed. He therefore publicly degraded him from the purple, on the 2U ITALY. plains of Rimini, in sight of his whole host. Still he offered peace. The infatuated courtiers who governed the emperor, induced their master to declare, in an insane proclamation, that the guilt of Alaric precluded him for ever from the honour of an alliance with the Empire. Then Alaric once more turned his face towards Rome ; but, this time, with a stern and vindictive purpose in his heart. It was in vain that the nobles attempted to organize a defence. The fears of the population and the treachery of the slaves, many of whom were connected by birth with the barbarians outside the walls, disclosed an easy path to victory. At midnight the Salarian gate was flung open to the Goths. According to Roman tradition, Porsenna, Brennus, and Hannibal, at the head of hosts as mighty, had recoiled, ba,f&ed, and beaten from those inviolate walls. But now, as ever, it was shown that the bulwark of a state is to be found, at such a crisis, not in ramparts reared by artificial skill, but in the spirit of its sons. No Horatius kept the bridge, " as in the brave days of old ;" no Camillus scornfully kicked the beam of the balance wherein his country's honour was on the point of being bartered for her safety; no Scipio arose to redeem her in the last extremity of her peril. The old heroic race was gone. The barbarian army poured into the gates, but no man struck a single blow for Rome. In the dead of night the A.D. 410. r^ ^^■ ^ , - . , (jotnic trumpet rang unanswered m her streets, and awakened the terrified inhabitants to a scene of outrage and despair never as yet witnessed within her walls ; but, alas ! too often to be repeated. The Queen of the Wotld, whose foot had so long been on the neck of the nations, was exposed for five days and nights to the vengeful fury, the cupidity and lust, of the wild bands who had left their frozen fields and forests for the license of this hour. Some regard for religion and for mercy was shown by the Gothic king ; for Alaric was a Christian. He exhorted Ms followers to spare the lives of the unresisting, and to respect the shrines THE SACK OF ROME. 2iS of the holy apostles St. Peter and St. Paul, as inviolable sanctuaries. But we, who have read of the sacks of Mag- deburg and Badajos by the soldiery of professedly-civUized and Christian powers, may well understand how little effect such injunctions could have had upon tha excited passions of German and Scythian brigands. Rome contained the spoils of the world. They were quickly transferred to the baggage-train of the victors. Gold and jewels ; vestments of silk ; precious fabrics of Eastern looms ; exquisite statues, coveted for the value of the metal they contained ; the massive plate of patrician houses ; the costly vases which had ornamented the boudoirs of imperial ladies, were seen defiling, day after day, high piled in Gothic waggons, through streets covered with corses of the slain. The effects of this terrible shock to civilization were felt far and wide. Fugitives thronged the shores of Egypt and Syria. St. Jerome tells us, that every day men and women, who had passed their lives in patrician luxury, arrived at his hermitage in Beth- lehem, begging their daily bread. The news of the dreadful event made his tongue cleave to the roof of his mouth, and his pen drop from his hand. " For twenty years," he bitterly cries, "Roman blood has been flowing every day between Constantinople and the Julian Alps. Scythia, Thrace, Macedonia, Dardania, Dacia, Thessalonica, Epirus, Achaia, Dalmatia, the two Pannonias, — all belong to the barbarians, who ravage, rend, and devour everything before them. How many noble matrons and maids have been the toys of their lust ; how many bishops in chains, priests butchered, churches destroyed, altars turned into stables, relics profaned ! Sorrow, mourning, and death are every- where. The Roman world is crumbling into ruin !" It is the disadvantage of a work brief as this must neces- sarily be, that we cannot dwell upon collateral matters, — . upon the accidental disclosures of contemporary writers, which often give a truer picture of the times, than the best 246 ITALY. narrative of its leading events. It is from tHe pages of Jerome that, we might best derive such a delineation. Perhaps no one has thoroughly understood the age in its most remarkable aspects, -who has not studied the writings of that extraordinary man, as he poured them forth from the depths of his fervid religious enthusiasm and bitter despair. There, better than elsewhere, we discern the great cardinal principles which separated the Christian life, in its social aspects, from the old pagan life of the world, and placed the two in irreconcilable opposition, — the equality, I mean, of the slave to his master as a spi- ritual being ; the universal brotherhood of men ; svcd the emancipation of woman from the debasement in which pas- sion and the dominance of brute-force had placed her. Far more vividly than any other man, he felt and depicted the frightful havoc which had overwhelmed the world. "What is anywhere to be seen," he says, "but conflagration, ruin, cap- tivity, despair, and death ; the slaughter of friends and the faces of foes ; one universal shipwreck of society, from which there is no escape save on the plank of penitence and faith." Nor was a less powerful impression produced upon the other great churchman of the age. The end of all things seemed at hand. " All the East," says Augustine ; " all the remotest regions of the world, which had once revered the name and owned the sway of Rome, bewailed her fall ;" he him- self could not bauish the thought from his mind as long.as he lived. To the mind of churchmen, thoroughly imbued with the doctrine inherited from apostolic teaching, of the speedy coming of their Lord amid the clouds of heaven, how could it seem otherwise 1 "Whether from motives of policy or mercy, or because he panted for fresh fields of conquest, Alaric quitted Home on the sixth day after he had entered it. With the native instinct of the barbarian, he still sought the South. The rich and lovely island of Sicily, long the granary of Eome, GOTHS ENTER GAUL AND SPAIN. 247 tempted him to cross the narrow channel which separates it from the Italian goast. His followers were as eager as himself, but more superstitious, and more distrustful of the unknown perils of the sea. A tempest dispersed their rude galleys on the first attempt to cross ; but while they hesitated before undertaking a second expedition, the great leader died. The wild grief of his warriors was exhibited in a most characteristic way. Beneath the walls of Consentia, rolled the waters of a small river, the Busentius or Busen- tinus. This they diverted from its course by the labour of the captives who accompanied the camp, and, excavating a large space in the original bed of the stream, placed in it the body of their king, amid a profusion of the most precious things which they had broug"ht with them from the sack of Rome. They then turned back the river to its ancient course, and slew the slaves who had performed the work, that the hand of the spoiler might never desecrate the spot where slept the conqueror of Italy. Their pre- cautions were successful. As of the great leader of the armies of Israel, so may it be said of the leader of the Goths — No man knows the tomb of Alaric. The Goths had been two years in Italy ; they remained two more. Gibbon depicts them during this time as passing days of luxurious delight in the voluptuous villas of Tuscu- lum and Campania, sheltered from the burning rays of noon beneath the leaves of spreading planes, and quaffing from goblets of gems and gold, large draughts of rich Falernian, which the fair hands of the trembling daughters of Roman senators proffered to their lips. The genius of Mr. Kingsley"' has given a still more graphic portraiture of the strong, sensu- ous, yet not altogether ungraceful life, of these huge northern giants, beneath the soft perfumed air, and amid the beau- tiful women and intoxicating wines of the South. Resi- dence in Italy may have engendered Roman sympathies, . * Hvpatia. 248 . ITALY. or the restless spirit of the barbarian may have sought alliance with Rome as the readiest means of entering upon the track of other conquests. But from some motive or other, Ataulphus, Adolphus, or Astolphus, who ' ■ ■ had been chosen to succeed his brother Alaric, offered his sword to Honorius against the enemies of the Empire beyond the Alps. In the character of a Eoman general he advanced into Southern Gaul, made himself mas- ter of the important cities of Narbonne, Toulouse, and Bor- deaux, and founded the great kingdom of- the Visigoths, which soon stretched over the fertile regions on both sides of the Pyrenees. Of its history, which connects itself with that of Gaul and Spain, we shall hereafter speak,* when we review the condition of Spain and Gaul. At present we are concerned with Italy ; but it is no part of our purpose elaborately to trace the intriguing annals of the imperial court after the death of the dethroned Honorius. Tbe events of the next quarter of a century are mainly con- nected with the history of the ephemeral empires of the Vandal and the Hun. The Huns first appear upon the scene, and, as they affected the establishment of an antago- nist empire, rather than the subjugation of Eome itself, it has been found convenient to treat of the rise, progress, and dissolution of that attempt in a previous lecture.t Of the Vandal dynasty in Africa we shall hereafter speak. The thread of the Italian narrative is, however, easily recovered. Honorius at last had closed his disgraceful life ; the empress Placidia' governed in the name of her son Valentinian, who was a minor. Such a court as was the Eoman court, beneath the rule of a woman, was the fittest of all possible arenas for political intrigue. Two great generals or counts, Aetius, of whom we have heard so much, and Boniface, disputed the first place in her favour, * Lecture VIIL f Lecture IV, GENSEEIC INVITED INTO ITALY. 249 and, as a natural consequence, tlie practical supremacy in the state. Boniface was administering the province of Africa. Aetius persuaded the empress to recall him, and at the same time persuaded Boniface not to obey the recall. The latter he induced to believe that the order of the empress was the summons to instant death ; to the empress herself he represented the refusal of the prefect as an overt act of treason to her authority. ■ Boniface gazed around him in his extremity for assistance, and caught sight of the Vandals standing on the shores of Spain, and looking intently over the waters of the Mediterranean upon the fair unravaged land, which he still administered for Rome. In an evil hour he summoned them to his aid. That aid was too readily granted. The Yaudals (whose history we shall recount in a future lecture) had by this time deposed their legitimate king, and were then obeying the be- hests of his brother Genseric, a more frightful barbarian than any who had as yet arisen among the foes of Eome. The circumstances of his eventful life, with the origin, growth, and character of Vandal domination in Africa, shall be hereafter detailed : we have now only to do with him and his people a^ the pillagers of Eome. Once more, as in the case of Attila, a woman, and a Roman princess, gave the invitation which brought shame and outrage to her country. "Valentinian, in the course of his unbridled debauchery, had basely decoyed and then violated the wife of Petronius Maximus, a noble Roman. Maximus avenged himself by the dagger of a bravo, and assumed his master's place. We cannot pity the murderer of Aetius ; but it is equally impossible to sympathize with the usurper who forced Eudoxia, the wife of Valentinian, into wedlock with himself, the assassin of her husband. The example of Honoria and her affianced Hun appears to have worked upon the imagination of the empress. In her despair she called upon the terrible king' of the Vandals to deliver her person 250 ITALY. and avenge her wrongs. Within three months, Genseric was at the mouth of the Tiber. The Romans, in wild agitation, could devise no better means- of defence than the slaughter \ of Maximus, their emperor, in a street tumult, while he was attempting to secure his own safety by flight. On the third day the enemy was at the gates. L^stjU lived, and hoped, or perhaps believed, that the same veBerahle presence which had arrested the Hun, would exert a similar influence upon the mind of his ferocious confederate. Once more, at the head of a long procession of clergy, and arrayed in sacerdotal robes, he approached a mighty host of armed barbarians thirsting for blood and spoil. Ecclesiastical writers ascribe to him the glory of a second moral victory, a second deliverance of the metropolis of the Christian world from the sword of her enemies. The Vandal king received him with unexpected mildness, and promised mercy~to the unresisting, and prbtection from fire to the principal buildings of the city. It is impossible to ascertain how far such promises were given in good faith. For fourteen days, from the 15th to the 29th A D. 455. June, the city was delivered over to rapine ; and the Yandal and the Moor were found to be more cruel and insatiate plunderers than the Goth. Whatever had sur- vived the former sack, — whatever the luxury of the Roman Patriciate, during the intervening forty-five years, had accumulated in reparation of their loss, — ^the treasures of the imperial palace, the gold and silver vessels employed in the churches, the statues of pagan divinities aid men of Roman renown, the gilded roof of the temple of Capitolian Jove, the plate and ornaments of private individuals, were leisurely conveyed to the Vandal fleet and shipped off to Africa. To this systematic spoliation we must assign the loss of most of the best-known monuments of national history and of foreign conquest, contained in the im- perial city. Amongst these were the precious records and PLUNDERS ROME. 251 ornaments of the Capitol j the golden table, and the candlestick of seven branches, torn by Titus from the Temple of Jerusalem. They were pillaged simply for their value in the melting-pot. No grace of art, no charm of historic association, affected the rude mipds of the African pirates, who, by a strange mockery of fortune, became masters of all the treasures which, during ten centuyies" of civilized life, had been accumulated in the marble palaces of the metropolis of the world. Capna, Nola, and all the pro- vincial towns, not fortified su m ciently~to~~&taad a siege, shared the same fate. The memory of the abhorrence with which Europe regarded their deeds still lives in language ; and most modern nations have fixed the stamp of eternal scorn to the Vandal name, by employing it to denote what- ever is an outrage upon the sense of grace and beauty, which is the common inheritance of cultivated minds. The empress met the fate which, despite her wrongs, the reader will perhaps deem that she deserved. She went forth to meet her champion arrayed in imperial robes. The " age of chivalry" had not, indeed, "departed;" but, unhappily for her, it had not yet arrived. She was instantly stripped of her valuable wardrobe, — her gold, her jewels, her silken trains, — and was transported into Africa with her three daughters. They were accompanied by 60,000 captives. Theirs was indeed a melancholy lot — the Zoiikiov ^fiap — the day of slavery — the foreign land — the finger of scorn — the barbarian lord, described in Andromache's foreboding words, by the first and greatest of the masters of the human heart. There were not, however, wanting alleviations. Of the fortunes of those prisoners who fell into the hands of the Moorish allies of Genseric, nothing can be conjectured ; but in Carthage itself Christian sympathy shone forth iu pleasing colours, affording the only bright picture in the annals of those dark and terrible times. Deogratias, the worthy bishop of Carthage, spared neither of his substance 252 ITALY. nor of his labour, to relieve the miserable captives ; lie even sold the consecrated vessels of the Church, and changed two basilicas into hospitals for the wounded and diseased. Private charity was almost equally active. Still the exiles of Carthage filled a world with " lamentation, and mourning, and woe;" and it is no marvel if the fond expectation of the faithful gathered strength, and men looked day by day for that awful Presence in the clouds of heaven, which should redeem the wrongs of the nations, and rescue the souls of God's elect. But it was not the world — it was only Piome, that hastened to its fall. The last quarter of the fifth century saw this grand drama brought to a solemn close. No twenty-five years in human history exhibit incidents of such absorbing interest, more strange vicissitudes in the fortunes of great men and the government of states, bo vast a catastrophe coming down upon the civilization of the world. They witnessed the actual fall of the Roman empire and the destruction of Italian independence ; the final severance of the East and West, the establishment of foreign domination over the succession to the throne of the Csesars; in a word, the extinction of the old-world order of things and the com- mencement of a new life for humanity. This immense revolution was mainly wrought out by three men, all of barbarian birth : Pacimer a Sueve, Odoacer a Eugian, and Theodoric an Ostrogoth. These men stand out from the epoch in giant proportions, but they do not stand alone. Around them revolve many figures of subordinate interest and importance, who were, however, largely instrumental in carrying out the great work. We see emperors of the West, the puppets or instruments of barbarian masters, permitted for a brief while to assume the fatal splendours of the Csesarean purple — Avitus the Gaul, Majorianus the soldier, Anthemius the Greek, Olybrius his rival and suc- cessor. Glycerins an Italian count, Nepos the nominee of the IMPORTANCE OF LAST QUAETEE Ol? Vth CEiSTTUEY. 263 Byzantine court, and finally, Eomulus Augustulus, the son and representative of Orestes the Pannonian, who closed the roll of Roman Csesars. We see emperors of the East, the two Leos, and the Isaurian Zeno, ever intriguing from Byzantium to recover their hold on the Western empire, and for their personal interests selling Italy to the bar- barian sword ; statesmen, lite Orestes, the Romanized secretary of the king of the Huns, Boethius, Basilius, Syramachus, vainly ende'avouring to maintain the dignity of the senatorial order and the political existence of Rome ; churchmen exercising the most important influence in these troublous times, reconciling enemies, moderating the fury of barbarian conquerors, protecting their flocks from famine and sword, nurturing the Church with their labours and their substance, or sometimes with their blood, and founding, amid scenes of terrible peril, missionary churches in savage lands. Such were Sidonius in Auvergne, Epiphanius at Pavia, Se.verinus on the Danube. Again, we see soldiers of fortune, Aspar, the two Theodorics, Videmir, and Tufa, — popes, patriarchs, Greek princesses and heretics, a varied crowd, intermingling, fighting, destroying, and devouring «ach other, like the creatures which the microscope reveals in a drop of stagnant water. The arrangement of these characters on the historic stage, , the estimate of their motives, their vices or their virtues, and the narrative of the parts they played, would demand a master hand, and would also form no unworthy task for its dramatic skill. But the task could not be accomplished satisfactorily except in a separate work, and such a work is still among the things which the historical student has most earnestly to desire.* My limits, unfortunately, confine me * SingulEtrly enough, Bince these words were written, this has been done. The " E^cits de I'Histoire Eomaine," by M. Amdd^e Thierry, accomplish, in his own admirable style, all that is required. These pages were unfortunately in the press before his just-published work reached my hands, and I have therefore been enabled to avail myself 254 ITALY. to a meagre narrative, wticli, however, must be longer and more specific than it will be possible to employ elsewhere in the present work ; for here we touch upon the very cardinal and critical period of that era in the world's history with which it is our object to deal. Twenty-nine miserable years passed away. The Visigoth power was now paramount on both sides of the Alps. Theodoric, grandson of the great Alaric, despite the policy of his brother Thorismond, had ascended the throne of that kingdom which his uncles, Adolphus and Wallia, consoli- dated in Gaul and Spain. He made Toulouse his capital, and soon obtained a predominance in the counsels of Gaul. At Rome all was feebleness and confusion. When the populace tore to pieces Maximus, the coward who fled before the face of the Vandals, Theodoric II., king of the Goths in Gaul, persuaded Avitus of Auvergne, who had once saved the Empire from the Huns, to ascend the throne.* But Avitus was not a man of the iron stamp which the age required. The time had passed when a Roman, or Romanized Gaul, had any chance of retrieving the destinies of the Empire, or even of directing of it only to a very limited extent. It is a source of great satisfaction to me to find that he has anticipated my ideas upon the importance of this critical period of history ; and 1 may perhaps be permitted to quote fromhis preface the following confirmation (pp. 10, 11) :-^"Les causes derniferea de la grande catastrophe qui s^pare le monde ancien du raonde moderne, sout comprises dana ces vingt-six ann&s : dislocation des ressorts du gouvernement remain ; oppression des empereurs par lea patrices barbares, pr^fets du pretoire des C^sars, durant oette agonie de i'Empire ; antagoniame de I'Orient et de I'Occident ; essai des provinces pour se conatituer en dtats ind^pendants ; dictature demi-barbare, derai-romaine, i^lev^e sur lea ruinea du principat ; march^ pasa^ solen- nellement entre I'empereur de Constantinople et un roi barbare pour lui livrer I'ltalie, et installation d'un peuple stranger au midi des Alpes : voila ce que renferme ce quart de sifeole, p^riode supreme de la nationality italienne." M. Thierry has also, I perceive, assigned that importance to Sidonius which led me to defer special notice of him to a distinct work, and has given many of the passages which I had selected as interesting and valuable, * Lecture IV. EICIMEE APPOINTS MAJOEIAN. 255 its affairs. All power, as is wont to be the case in such periods, had passed into the stronger hands of those who ■wielded the actual physical force of the state. Rome had employed barbarian soldiers as her servants until they oecame her masters. Like the mayors of the palace in Erank history, and like successful military adventurers in every age, they engrossed all real authority, even when they allowed its names and titles to remain in the feeble hands of others. Count Ricimer, a Sueve, but connected with the Goths by maternal descent,* cousin of Theodoric, and pupil of Aetius in the art of war, had distinguished himself greatly in the Vandal invasions, and was now generalissimo of the Roman armies. This man, to adopt an expression of M. Thierry, renewed, after a lapse of 500 years, the dictatorship of Sylla, and died quietly in his bed. He be- came absolute at Rome, and persuaded Avitus that a mitre ■would better become his brow than an imperial crown. Again, then, as in the case of Arbogastes, a barbarian had , the sceptre in his hand ; but again, also, the barbarian re- fused to close his grasp. The shadow of the great Name was upon his spirit, and inspired him with a politic hesitation, perhaps with a superstitious awe. He clothed with the purple his ancient comrade Majorian, a distinguished man, bred in the school of Aetius, — a soldier and a patriot, t * "Invictus Eioimer, patre Suevus, a genetrice Getes." — Sidohiub Apoilinams, Pan. Majoriani. •)• The panegyric of Sidoniua is less inflated than usual, and was probably deserved : — " Imperium jam consul habet, quem purpura non plus Quam lorica operit, cujus diademata frontem Non luxu sed lege tegent, meritisque laborum Post palmam palmata venit ; decora omnia regni Accumulant fasces, et priuceps consule creseit." Sid. Apoll., Pan. Maj. v. 2—6, 256 ITAL"?. Eacimer imagined that an emperor of his own making would be a willing tool. In this he was deeply deceived. Majorian was one of the best men who had ever mounted the imperial throne, and, had opportunity been granted to him, would have played a noble part in the history of his times. He attempted to revive the best traditions of the past, and to govern as a Roman, but also as a reformer. He met the fate of all reformers in an entirely hopeless age. It had been his ambition to humble the Vandal ; and his mili- tary and naval preparations seemed to insure success. The resources of Italy, Gaul, and Spain were put into requisi- tion. Whole fore3t.s descended into the sea ; the trees cut were as numerous as the waves.* It is said that, like our own Alfred, he disguised himself, and personally visited in Africa, the capital, and even the arsenal of his enemies. As he passed the threshold, the suspended arms clanged with an ominous sound. We may discredit the romantic story ; but, as Gibbon says, it would not have been imagined save in the life of a hero. Traitors were found, instigated, it is said, by Eicimer, who disclosed his plans to the Vandals. They availed themselves of the information to destroy his fleet, in the har- bour of Carthago nova, the modern Carthagena. Soon after- wards he perished in a sedition of his own soldiery, who acted, there can be little doubt, under en- couragement from Eicimer. The Sueve substituted one Severus, a Lucanian, of whom history says nothing save that, after a reign of less than four years, he became dis- tasteful to his patron, and perished, as he probably deserved, * " Interea duplioi texia dum littore classem Inferno superoque mari, cadit oinnis in sequor Silva tibi, nimiumque diu per utrumque recisua Apennine, latua, navalique arbore dives Non minua in pelagug nemorum quam mittis aquarum ; * * * He ' >ic « Non tantia major Atrides Carpathium texit ratibua." SiDON. Apoll., Pun. Maj, v. 440— 448i ANTHEMIUS EMPEROR. 257 by poison. Kicimer, now completely dominant, was in no hurry to give the Eomans a new master and himself a possible rival. Things continued in this stalte from the close of the year 465 till the spring of .467. It was a degrading position for Rome ; and it seemed necessary to bestir herself, if she was ever to have a new emperor ; for Eicimer would do nothing. In her difficulty she applied to Constantinople, and Leo, flattered by the request, sent the most distinguished man in his dominions. This was Anthemius, commander of the JEgean. fleet, son-in-law of the emperor, and connected by descent with the great Con- stantino. He had formerly married a daughter of the old emperor, and might, had he so chosen, have opposed the election of Leo himself with every chance of success. He preferred distinction in a private station ; and the same feeling made him hesitate before accepting the throne of the West. The hesitation was natural ; for the acceptance involved a condition of which he bitterly complained, but which it was utterly impossible to avoid. Eicimer demanded his daughter in marriage. To the proud Greek it seemed the sacrifice of another Iphigenia ; but he was compelled to assent. It was among the tumult of exultation and feasting, occasioned by this marriage, that Sidoniua arrived ^' ' on a political mission at the court of the new emperor. He found business entirely suspended ; the whole city, as it seemed to him, had gone mad, and he hides himself in a private chamber to write a letter to his friend.* Soon he himself became one of the most influential personages in the new court ; and, forgetful of the fate of his father-in-law Avitus, bestowed a panegyric upon the new emperor from * " Hoc ipso tempore quo hsec mihi exarabantur, vix per omnia theatra, macella, praetoria, fora, templa, gymnasia, tbalassio fescenninus expli- caretur, atque etiam nunc e contrario studia sileant, negotia quiescant, judicia conticescant, differantur legationes, vacet ambitus, et inter scurrilitates histrionum totus actionum seriamm status peregrinetur,''— giD. Aeoll., Spial. i. 5. K 258 X ITALY. Greece, quite as fulsome, and much more voluminous, than any he had heard in the streets. The relations between Ricimer and Anthemius, with pride and coldness on one side, and a determination to domineer on the other, were not likely to be very intimate or very lasting. Anthemius had brought with him from Greece Greek prejudices and habits, and, what was worse, Greek theology. This soon rendered him ■unpopular with the Latins and the Latin Church. Eicimer skilfully availed himself of the fact, and speedily came to an open rupture w ith his son-inj affit. Epiphanius, bishop of Pavia, one of the great and influential churchmen who in that age shared the moral power of emperors and barbarian generals, for a moment reconciled, or seemed to reconcile, the two. The truce was a hollow one. E-icimer, hanging about Northern Italy with a most formidable force, was only biding his time. Nov was his opportunity long delayed. Great events had happened at Constantinople. Aspar, the Alan, a patrician of barbarian birth, who occupied towards the Greek emperor a position very similar to that in which Ricimer himself stood to Anthemius, had been assassinated by Zeno's eunuchs ; and Zeno, with unconcealed delight, communicated the fact to his western brother. The eX' ample might prove suggestive. Ricimer took the alarm, and determined to be beforehand with his adversary. Most opportunely, a rival candidate had just appeared, under the patronage of the Vandals, who, encouraged by the disastrous defeat of the great expedition against them, had determined to interfere in "Western politics. One of the three princesses, daughters of Valentinian, who had been carried off from Rome after its sack by Genseric, had, after her release from Carthage, espoused Olybrius, a distinguished senator of the Anician house, to whom, before her disastrous deportation, she had been warmly attached. Olybrius, it seems, had long before entertained ambitious designs, grounded perhaps on the hope of this alliance : the "Vandal king connived at the GLYCERruS EMPEROR. 259 marriage, with the intention of employing the spouse of the imperial lady for his own purposes. After a delay of several years, the occasion at last arrived. The Vandal made friends with Eicimer, his former enemy, and instigated Olybrius to join him in Italy for the purpose of dethroning Anthemiua. Ricimer and Olybrius met in iNorthern Italy, at the begin ling of the year. Throwing aside all disguise, they in- stantly proclaimed war, and marched upon Home. '^'^' Save some Gaulish mercenaries under Belimer, a gallanl; officer, the unfortunate Anthemius had few troops upon whom to rely. The siege of Rome was to him and his party a slow torture, moral and physical ; for every day the enemy won some advanced post or street, and every day the strict blockade increased the severity of the famine within the walls. At last, nothing was left to Anthemius but to take the advice of the senators and fly. As he was hastily making for Ostia, on the 11th July, he was overtaken and slain by the hand of Ricimer himself, say the chroniclers, to whom dramatic effects of this sort are ever dear. Rome once more underwent the horrid fate of a city taken by assault. Thrice within sixty years had she been sacked "from turret to foundation-stone ; " on the two former occasions by the Goth and the Vandal j this time, in the bitter mockery of fate, by her own general and her own armies. Ricimer and Olybrius did not long enjoy their triumph. Faithless and cruel in their lives, in their deaths they were not divided. The first perished forty days after the death of his father-in-law, in lingering tortures, believed by the historians of the time to have been a retribution for his deeds of blood ; in sixty- five days more, his accomplice followed him to the grave. The rdle of king-maker was for a moment vacant : it was grasped by a not very powerfal hand. The Burgundian Gon- debaud, or Gundobald, nephew of the Patrician, had na- turally been appointed, by the gratitude of Olybrius, to hia. uncle's place and duties. It came to pass, therefore, that 260 ITALY. upon the death of Olybrius, this somewhat obscure indi- vidual found that " greatness had been thrust upon him," and that he was, in fact, the disposer of the throne of the Ciesars. After four months' delay, he selected for the vacant seat one Glycerins, an Italian, captain A.D. 473. ^j ^i^g guard to the late emperor, a man altogether unsuited to a great destiny. Gundobald himself, whose heart was on the opposite side of the Alps, and whose only ambition was to revenge himself upon his Burgundian brothers, who had driven him into exile, soon found that his presence was required in Gaul by domestic affairs, and left his protSge to shift for himself. He was soon involved in trouble ; for by this time the Ostrogoths, under Videmir, probably directed by the treachery of the Eastern empire, demanded lands, and, in the usual barbarian fashion, de- clared they would take them if not given. Glycerius had a good army and a good position. His enemies were half- starved and discouraged. He had an excellent chance of exterminating them, or, at the least, of driving them out of Italy. He preferred to point to the long line of the Savoyard Alps, and say to the barbarian : " Behind those mountain-tops lies Gaul, a good land and a pleasant one. There dwell your brethren the Visigoths. They will wel- come you with open arms ; and, by our imperial authority, we will grant you lands beside them." That right had long ceased, practically, to belong to the Eoman emperors ; but, availing themselves of the pretext, the Ostrogoths scaled the Alps, and, pouring into Gaul, inflicted the frightful desolation of which we shall have to speak hereafter. The craven and selfish Glycerius was fated soon to meet his reward. The result of his compact with Yidemir rendered him contemptible in the eyes of all who bore the Roman name : the army were discontented with the man who had sold their honour to the barbarian ; his domestic admini- stration was utterly venal and base. In the mean time, Leo, JULItJS NEPOS EMPEEOE. 261 the Greek emperor, indignant at the death of Anthemius, and more indignant still that an obscure Burgundian should dispose of a throne which he ia fact regarded as his own fief, had fixed upon a candidate, and supported him with a large force. Julius Nepos was nephew to Mar- cellinus, a brave and skilful captain, formerly the idol of the camp, and one of those promising men whose lives the dagger of Eicimer had cut short. He was at this time successfully governing Dalmatia, as a sovereign prince. Leo summoned him to Constantinople, married him to a niece of the empress Verina, and landed him at Ravenna, by the help of a powerful fleet. Glycerius fled instantly from his capital ; Julius occupied his vacant palace, and was immediately proclaimed Csesar, in the name of the Eastern emperor, in the midst of an applauding multitude, attracted, most probably, more by curiosity than zeal ; for Julius was too much like a mere nominee of the foreigner, to excite much enthusiasm in Italy. Glycerius fled to Rome ; but the Senate declared for neutrality, and closed its gates. He collected a few troops, and awaited his rival. Julius appeared with an army, which he had gathered together by bribes, promises,' and flattery. Though not strong, they inspired their opponents with terror. Glycerius again fled, without attempting a general action, and was caught, while attempting to escape by the fort. Crouching and terrified, he was brought before the conqueror, who, instead of having him decapitated, cut his hair, and made him, on the spot, bishop of Salona, a small town, capital of Dalmatia, the province which he had him- self administered, and which he believed to be devoted to his interests. He had better have followed the ordinary practice ; for Glycerius lived to turn and sting with venom that was deadly, Rome opened -her gates to the conqueror, and inaugurated him as Augustus with great solemnity. But she had not 262 ITALY. forgotten the reign of Anthemius, and showed little pleasure at the renewal of a similar experiment. Julius endeavoured) by the modesty of his demeanour and the impartiality of his administration, to conciliate popularity. Many reforms were effected, many deserving persons promoted to high place, and many corrupt officials cashiered. The provinces were in raptures. Sidonius, ever ready with a panegjrric, hails him as "Augustus glorious and supreme, in morals as in arms."* But it was too late. Troubles had arisen in Gaul not to be overcome either by policy or force. Euric, king of the Yisigoths, interpreting, rightly enough, the fall of Glycerius as the installation of his enemies in power, got together hia warriors, and fell savagely upon Roman Gaul. Among the mountains of Auvergne alone did he encounter any resolute resistance. Sidonius, the brave bishop, and his equally brave brother-in-law Ecdicius, held out, amid immense sufferings within the walls of Clermont, under the shadow of the gigantic Puy-de-D6me, and close beside Gergovia, almost the last stronghold of that primitive Gallic freedom which had so long defied the arms of Csesar. Euric recoiled for the moment, but, infuriated by the repulse, he swore to have Auvergne. As this meant the entire extinction of Romanism beyond the Alps, the last Csesars held it in a desperate grasp. Julius adopted every possible expedient : he sent ambassadors, and the holy bishop Epiphanius himself, who had never been known to faiU^in negotiation, for the purpose of reasoning with the Goth ; he convoked all the noblesse of Italy — an unprecedented measure — to meet him at Milan, and advise upon the state of affairs. All was in vain. Euric insisted upon Auvergne, and nothing hut Auvergne. For that he would give up the Narbonnaise. To save even this much, the emperor consented. " Shame,'' * Sidon. Apollinaris, v. 16. Compare, also, tte letter to Audal, tha new prefect of Home, viii. 7. THE PATRICIAN ORESTES. 263 writes Sidonius ; " our slavery has been made the price of the security of others — the slavery of Auvergne ! "* Evil fortune appeared to pursue the doomed emperor. In Gaul he had been compelled to sacrifice his best friends and most faithful servants to his worst enemies. From Constanti- nople he received the bitter intelligence that Leo, his friend and patron, was no more. The sedition which followed his decease, showed that aid was no longer to be expected from the East. But the severest blow of all was that which placed him in the hands of a man who had the will and the power to seal his fate.t This man was Orestes the Patrician, a Pannonian, who had been an officeT'^bout the person of * Sidon. ApoUinaris, Epist. vii. 7. + The following sketch of Orestes will help us to understand one of the most interesting men of the age, and, indeed, the character of the age itself : — "De tons lea aventuriers remains ou barbares que pro- duisit le V"= Siecle, ce aifecle des grands aventuriers de I'ancien monde, aucun n'ofirit dans sa vie de plus dtranges contrastes que oet Oreste, sorti de la tente d'Attila, pour aller fermer, sur le trdne imperial d'Occident, en la personne de son fils, la succession de Jules Cesar, et d'Auguste. Ne k Pettau, en lUyrie, d'une famille honnSte de pro- vinoiaux, il s'^tait alli^ lb une plus illustre, en ^pousant la fiUe da Comte Romulus, personnage considerable, m6me hors de sa province, et honors de plusieurs missions par les Cfers de Ravenne. Aveo une merveillense souplesse d'esprit, que n'embarrassaient les scrupules de conscience, Oreste savait toujours accommoder son patriotisme aux vicissitudes de sa patrie. Remain au temps oii la Pannonie ^tait romaine, barbare loraque les Huns roocupirent, mais pr6t k redevenir Romain au premier retour de fortune, il servit loyalement, k mesure qn'elles se pr^sentferent, toutes leg causes que lui imposa la n^cessit^ Attila n'eut pas de ministre plus fidfele, I'Empire de plus dangereux adversaire, taut que dura la domination des Huns. Mais h, la mort du Conqudrant, il regarda ses engagements com me rompus, et refusant de prendre part aux luttes de ses compagnons d'armes, il vint avec sa famille et ses tr^sors, se fixer en Italie, oil 11 d^pensait noblement la part qu'il avait touch^e dans le pillage de I'Empire. Ainsi rendu h, sa premifere situation, le secr^aire d'Attila se montrait un bon et utile Romain. Sa profonde connaissance des mceurs et des interSts le fit rechercher par les ministres des empereurs, et par les empereurs eux- m^mes. II se glissa dans leur intimity, fut bientdt de leurs conseils, et obtint un commandement dans le corps des domestiques, poste envi^ et rfellement important, en ce qu'il servait de marchepied & tout."- -Am. Thibbkt, lUcits de VSistoire Somaine, ch. vi. ad mil. S64 ITALY. Attila, and had even fulfilled the office of ambassador to Constantinople. Upon his master's death, he offered to the Empire the dubious service of his sword, and it was eagerly- accepted. Cleverly keeping aloof during the late struggle, he had been employed by Julius to re-organize the imperial army, under the walls of Rome. In the process he con- trived to gain the affections of the soldiers, and -was now waiting an opportunity to make use of their attachment. Fatally for himself, Julius gave him the very opportunity he desired, by ordering him to lead a strong division of his troops into Gaul, and there superintend the surrender of Auvergne to Euric and his Goths. The army were indignant at the transaction, and at the part in it assigned to them- selves. Why should they be banished beyond the Alps? Why should they assist strangers to receive a reward which their own valour, and their own services much better merited 1 Were they ever to serve a degenerate and cowardly Greek for nothing ? When would there arise a man of their own blood to lead them once more to victory, and to bestow upon them its prizes ? How far these menacing murmurs owed their origin to the Patrician him- self, — ^whether the soldiery were instigated to insurrection by their commander, or the commander forced into treason by the cupidity and ambition of his soldiery, can never now be satisfactorily known ; but one thing is certain, to this man and his army is to be ascribed the " beginning of the end." Sulkily quitting Rome, they continued their march towards the north, until they reached a spot where the road bifur- cated to Eavenna and MUan. From this spot they could dominate all Italy, and here, therefore, they boldly threw off the mask. Julius, buried in false security at Eavenna, did not discover the designs of his general until it was too late. There were no means of defence at hand. No sooner had Orestes assailed the causeway -which con- nected Eavenna -with the mainland, than Julius em- HOMULXJS AXJGUSTULtrS. 286 batked with his Dalmatians, and made the best of his way to Salona. There he found his former rival and predecessor on the throne, whom, it may be remembered, he had con- tumeliously converted into a bishop. What a strange revolution of Fortune's wheel ! — what a Tt-epintTeta, as the Greeks called it, or coming round of the course of events ! And what a subject for an historical picture, is the meeting of these two discrowned monarchs in the little Dalmatian town. Nepos had better have sought the neighbourhood of any other man in Europe ; for afterwards, when fortune began again to dawn upon him, in the troubles between Odoacer and Theodoric, and the eyes of men were once more turning towards the East for aid, Glycerius had him basely assassinated in his country house, on the 9 th of May, A.D. 480. But this is to anticipate. Orestes entered Ea- venna on the 28th of March, 475. Imitating the policy of his predecessors, he refused the purple, and would not even enter the palace. A very inconvenient interregnum ensued, which was broken by what M. Thierry calls a coiip de tJiedtre, but which was just as probably an outbreak of the entirely unmanageable soldiery. A party of them forced their way into the residence of the Patrician, seized upon his young son, and elevating him upon a buckler, after the barbarian practice, paraded him through the streets, amid much ap- plause, as the new Augustus. He had already been christened Romulus ; and his youifi and small stature, which was too short for the purple robe forced upon him by the soldiers, caused the conversion of^the second name into its diminutive Augustulus. thus the last of the Csesars united in his own person the names of the founder of Eome and the founder of the Empire. It was a bitter mockery of fate, that the memory of the victor of Aotium, and of the first of the Roman kings, should be recalled to the memory of their descendants at the very moment when the work they had done was about to be irredeemably destroyed ; when K 2 266 ITALY. "the Empire without bouuds" iad collapsed within the walls of what was now only an Italian town, and "the eternal glory" was to pass away from their own people for ever* To make an emperor was comparatively an easy task,— it had been often done of late ; but to keep him in his place was a very different matter. The band») of Orestes did not forget the reasons for which they had gathered beneath his standard. If they made revolutions, they were determined it should be for their own benefit, as well as for that of their leaderj and they clamoured for the lands which they felt themselves to have deserved as fairly as the Ostrogoth or the Frank. Their demand was for one-third of Italy. Orestes might well hesitate : a boundless perspective of misery openeo. out before his eyes, the certain result of this gigantic confiscation. Besides, a change had come over him, not unusual in the circumstances. His sympathies were attracted towards the people who were now his sub- jectSrj he could not forget the glorious traditions of their past, and probably entertained hopes for their future. "At the bottom," says M. Thierry, " he was Roman at heart, and, flattered by the trust which the Italians reposed in him, he would have blushed to attach 'his name to so savage a spoliation." t He refused the demand. The refusal was fatal to himself, to his son, to the dynasty of the Eoman Caesars. The Man had long been awaiting the Hour : he appeared in the person of Odoacer, son of Edecon, another minister of Attila's, chief of the Heruli, and an officer in the Patrician's service ; the boldest, most unscrupulous, and most successful of all the barbarian mercenaries who had crossed the Alps. A singular anecdote is related of his youth. Having left his country wiQi a small band of * Virgil, Mn. i. 278. + E&its de I'Hiatoire Eomaine, oh. vii. ODOACEE. 267 adventurers who were seeking service in Italy, lie passed by the cell of St. Severinus near the Danube, a bishop of piety and immense influence, as ■well as of unnumbered good works, whose history forms a long and interesting episode in the troubled annals of the times. In entering the humble cell, one of the visitors, ayoung man of immense proportions, was compelled to bow his head, and even when inside, to remain in a stooping position. Regarding him. with a penetrating glance, the saint augured his future greatness from his mien, and declared it in prophetic words. " Go," said he to the young man ; " go to Italy, clad in thy poor and ragged sheepskins ; thou shalt soon give greater gifts to thy friends."* The young man treasured up the words in his heart, and remembered them at the critical moment. His martial stature and soldier-like appearance soon found him a patron in the person of his father's colleague, the Pannonian Orestes, and a place in the body-guard of the emperor, then stationed at Ravenna. In all the wars of the time, Odoacer distinguished himself by his immense physical strength, his fearlessness, and the influence which such a character enabled him to exercise over his fellow-soldiers. He now found himself among the Rugi, Alani, Scyri, and Turcilingi, who were in some sort his own people. They were the very men to whom Orestes owed most, and who were naturally most jealous of the withdrawal of his sympa- thies, and the favour he had shown to the Romans. Odoacer stepped boldly forward, and proclaimed that if they would follow him, they should have the lands which their ungrateful and unworthy leader had refused. The standard of revolt was immediately raised, and the barbarian army, largely recruited by their brethren, whom the scent of blood had lured like * I am itidebted to both Gibbon and M, Thierry for this anecdote. The latter appears most completely to have caught the spirit of the eainfa pi-opheoy ; but is not "tu es grand, et pourtant tu granderas encore," ratlier free for "eum gloriosum fore" ? And we should surely read cito for citra, in the Latin quotation from the Vit. H. beverini. 268 ITALY, vultures from beyond the Alps, advanced against their former master. Orestes secured his son in Eavenna, and went forth to meet his enemy in the Lombard plains, so qften dyed with the blood of nations. He could make no stand, and was compelled to shut himself up in Pavia. But neither his courage nor the sanctity attaching to the great Epiphanius, its bishop, which had so often awed both emperors and bar- barian kings, was in this instance able to save the town. Its splendid buildings and its chua-cheswere wrapped in flames; the whole place resembled a caldron of fire. In the con- fusion, Orestes was made prisoner. The barbarian victor fell .into no such mistake as that of Nepos : he caused Lis former patron and master to be conveyed to Piacenza, and there put to death, upon the anniversary of his tri- umphant entry into Eavenna the preceding year. The execution took place the 28th of August : on the 4:th of September he was before Eavenna, which contained the young Augustulus, and the few remaining partisans of Italian nationality. ■ A battle was fought j but it could have only one result. The barbarians poured into the town, and spreading through all quarters, speedily discovered the unhappy prince, who had cast aside the purple in his terror, and dragged him before Odoacer. He is said to have wept and prayed for mercy. Odoacer, fearing nothing from such a foe, and commiserating his youth and his beauty, which was great, spared his life, and con- signed him, with an annual pension of 6,000 pieces of gold, to the luxurious keeping of a Campanian villa, which received its name from Lucullus, and had previously be- longed to both Marius and Sylla. There, where the Capo di Miseno looks down upon the blue waters of the Bay of Naples and the bright islands which stud its breast, in per- haps the most beautiful situation in the world, amid the groves, the fountains and grottos, the baths and the halls of marble, and surrounded by all the appliances of splendid ODOACEE. 269 luxTiry accumulated by the most luxurious man in Rome, it was possible for tbe last of Boman emperors to reflect ■upon the condition to which that luxury, more than any other cause, had reduced the Empire. But did he, or any other ruler of men, ever elicit practical good for himself or for his people from arich a oontemplaii'Iori t LECTURE ?L ITALY— ODOACEE—THEODOEIC— THE GEEEK INVASION —THE LOMBAEDS— THE FEANKS AND THE PAPACY. ." II faut distinguer dans le roi des Ostrogoths deux hommes, un Th^odoric harbare, livr^ aux instincts les pins sauTages de sa race, et un autre civilisS, eleve h. Constantinople, intelligent, g^n^reux par occasion, mais empruntant trfes-souvent h, la politique Byzantine ses proprea armes centre elle-meme." — M. A. Thiebbt, EScits de I'Hutoire Eomaine, Preface. " Eoyally laughed he then ; Dear was that craft to him, Odin All-father Shaking the clouds. Cunning are women all. Bold and importunate ! Longbeards their name shall be ; Eavens shall thank them. Where the women ^are heroes. What must the men be like ? Theirs is the victory ; What need of me." KiNGSLET, Bypatia, Synopsis. — Odoaoer, king of Itahf. — His wise administration; damaged by the partition of lands.— <^trigues of the Greeks in favour of Nepos. — Senate declare one emperor sufficient. — Odoaoer made patrician. — Zeno, the Greek emperor, deposed ; .applies for aid to Theodoric, king of the Ostrogoths. — Odoacer involved in hostilities beyond the Alps; offends the Germans. — Qajftrel between the two Theodorics at Constantinople; their reconciliation. — Theodoric the Amal assails Constantinople. — The emperor compelled to listen to his demands; grants him a Pragmatic to reduce Italy. — March of the Ostrogoths. — Prolong:ed conflict between Odoacer and Theodorie.^The former makes terms in Eaveuna, and is assassinated. — Theodoric sole king of Italy ; his wisdom, power, and administration ; dies. — Ital/ vnvaded by the Greeks under Belisarius ; reduced to a province.— !• Revolt of the Goths ; put down by Narses. — Narses recalled ; invites the Lombards, —Alboin, king of the Lombards, exterminates the ODOACER KING OF ITALY. 271 GepidsB, and invades Italy ; his reign. — Anarchy. — Clef. — ^Autharis. Agilulf. — Involved relations with the Papiioy. — Gregory the Great. — i The Franks brought into Italy against the Lombards. — Charles Martel the Frank, and Luitprand the Lombard. — Pepin le Bref and Astol- phus. — Dotation of the Exarchate to the Popes. — Desiderius and Charlemagne. — Renewal of the Dotation. — Coronation of Charle- magne, Christmas, a.d. 800. — How far were its results foreseen by the actors ? Odoacee was really now master of Italy, in a sense, and to a degree, mucli more complete ttan any of his barbarian pre- decessors. The throne of the Csesars had fallen at last j yet that fe,ll, which it was once supposed would convulse the whole civilized world and involve civilization itself in the crash which it must produce, seems to have been received by contemporaries with little emotion. A few dry lines in the chroniclers occupy the place of funeral dirge or panegyric. Jornandes alone, says M. Thierry, some years later, blows his barbarian trumpet over the tomb of the Empire, but it is to proclaim the advent of his Goths.* This apathy appears to have excited the surprise of historians, yet, after all, it was natural enough. So long and gradual had been the preparation, that it left nothing to startle or alarm ; so many other men had won nearly the same position in Italy as the vigorous soldier of fortune who now was arbiter of her fate, that the situation was not regarded as an exceptional one. And in the second place, it was not yet certain that it would be perpetual^ Ifepos, the candidate of the Greek emperor, still lived, and the Greek emperor had by no means aban- doned his' claim to interfere in the succession of the Eoman Csesars. He possessed the will, and might, as heretofoi-e, possess the power, to set aside the barbarian ruler, and sub- stitute what would be considered the authority of a Eoman in his place. Lastly, men are not much excited by events which do not produce any material effect upon their fortunes. Ifo such effect was produced, or could be expected, in this 272 ITALY. case : the change from a Csesar and a senate to a barbarian king wrought no revolution in their outward lives, nor did . it disclose to their eyes the prospects of any revolution in the future. They had suffered so much, and lost so much ; they had descended so far in the steep path which led to ruin and degradation, under their former government, that there was little prospect of their enduring more, or sinking fur- ther under a new rule. On the contrary, if they were capable by this time of political forecast, they probably anticipated an amelioration. Eor these reasons, therefore, - they accepted very quietly the domination of Odoacer, and made no dirge over the glories of their past. The conduct of Odoacer himself contributed to the same result. Like his predecessors, he eschewed the violent con- trast between the past and the present, which would have been exhibited by a barbarian seated on the throne and wearing the purple of the Csesars. Personally, he appears only to have been anxious to retain the title of "king ;" and this may account for the various appellations which he received from his contemporaries : — king of the Heruli ; king of the Eugi, Soyri, and Turcilingians ; or King of the Nations. His administration has been highly, and not imdeservedly, commended by Gibbon. " The laws of the emperors were strictly enforced, and the civil administration of Italy was stiU exercised by the praetorian prefect and his subordinate officers. Odoacer devolved on the Roman magis- trates the odious and oppressive task of collecting the public revenue, and he reserved for himself the merit of seasonable and popular indulgence." * But whatever may have been the merits of his policy, he laboured under one fatal dis- advantage, which no wisdom or forbearance could remedy. He had promised one-third of Italy to the barbarian mer- cenaries, and the fulfilment of that promise he could not possibly evade. The result was that almgst unlimited _ Ik /-U-Li-^ PARTITION OP LANDS IN ITALY. 273 misery from which. Orestes shrank. These men possessed no one qualification for the new position in which they were placed. Other barbarian settlements may have succeeded, as for instance that of the Visigoths and Burgundians in Gaul j but then these migratory bands carried with them, in however rude a form, the elements of settled and social life : they had their flocks and their herds, their wives and their little ones ; the soldiers of Odoacer had nothing but their swords. It was seen in the previous partitions of land by Sylla and Augustus, that men who had grown grey beneath the eagles were altogether unfitted for domesticity. Even under favourable conditions, we are assured by Tacitus that the experiment of converting legionaries into colonists was unsuccessful, as they were entirely unaccustomed to contract marriage or bring up families. The reason he assigns is a remarkable one, very characteristic of the Roman genius, and of the system by which they constructed so large an empire. " The men were not sent," he says, " as in former days, by whole legions at a time, with their tribunes, centu- rions, ■ISSr soldiers of each separate rank, so as by common consent and common affection to create a little republic among themselves " (ut communi consensu et caritate rem- publicam efficerent).* What the soldiers of Rome herself failed to effect, was certainly not to be effected by her rude invaders from beyond the Alps. ~ In Cicero's days, scarce any of the property confiscated by Sylla remained in the hands of his military colonists or their representatives ; it was not long before the lands acquired by Odoaoer's mercenaries had passed altogether away from them, and they were as destitute and rapacious as heretofore. Though, therefore, Odoacer still continued the machinery of the imperial government, and its wheels stiU revolved from the effects of the impulse which had been acting upon them for so many years, a very grievous state of things arose throughout all the peninsula. Exactions 274 ITALY. more oppressive, and poverty deeper than ever, exhausted the miserable inhabitants. The officials are even said to have revived an old imperial expedient, and to have multiplied the months of the year, that they might increase the amount of the yearly tribute. Under these circumstances, it was plain that the chance of retaining his position depended, for Odoacer, very much upon the dispositions of the Greek emperor, and the proba- bility of his interference. For the present, the confusion of affiiirs at Constantinople was so great that the " King of the Nations" had little to fear from that quarter. By the intrigues of the empress-mother Verina, Zeno had been ejected from the throne and banished the country, while his place was supplied by one Basiliscus. Determined to avail himself of every aid which might facilitate his return, he applied to Theodoric, who had just succeeded to the Ostrogoth throne, a prince of pure Amal blood, and, as we have already seen, of Byzantine education. Theodoric eagerly accepted his overtures, for he had many inducements to assist the. exiled emperor. In part, perhaps, he was movg^by an ancient friendship, contracted during his early residence at the Greek court ; but the most potent reasons for his conduct were to be found in jealousy of a rival, another Ostrogoth, - though not an Amal, Theodoric, the son of Triar, a powerful chieftain in the nominal service of Basiliscus ; and secondly in a deeply-cherished ambition, for which he trusted to find an opportunity in the chapter of accidents, should he succeed in mixing himself up with the affairs of the East. For the moment, he was at ISTovse, on the Danube, 'on the look-out for fresh settlements. He instantly marched upon Constan- tinople, at the head of his warriors. He was too late, for the revolution had been accomplished without him. Zeno, however, from motives of policy, received his former friend with warmth, loaded him with honours, and affected to believe himself deeply indebted to the Ostrogoth for hia ■xam BjsjNATJi; auueft odoacee. 276 restoration. And now, for the first time, he was enabled to devote his attention to the affairs of Italy. True to the policy of his predecessors, he determined to support a By- zantine candidate, and listened to the earnest prayers of Nepos, who, from his Dalmatian retirement, appealed in pathetic terms to Zeno, as to one who, like himself, had been a dethroned monarch and a banished man. Theodoric, re- siding in the imperial palace, necessarily became acquainted with the state of affairs, and at once betrayed the thought of his heart, — a thought never abandoned through long years of discouragement, — ^by offering to reseat Nepos on the Boman throne with his own Ostrogoths and at his own risk. Zeno managed to decline such perilous aid, but manifested his fixed intention to restore Nepos. The situation became a grave one for Odoacer ; but his barbarian cunning was not without a resource. He, too, had a dethroned emperor in his keeping, and he resolved himself to play the same card as his adver- sary had played. He compelled Komulus Augustulus to write to the Roman senate from his Campanian villa, and advise them to declare to Zeno that a single emperor was now suffi- cient for the wants of both Italy and Greece, and that they felt their personal safety entirely secure under the excellent protection of Odoacer. The Koman patriciate appear to have felt that the great drama was at last played out, and they hastened with decency to close the scene. Acquiescing in the suggestion of their late master, they transmitted the de- sired message to Constantinople ; and as an earnest of their sin- cerity, sent, or v^ere compelled by Odoacer to send with it, as an offering to Zeno, the ornaments of the imperial palace, and all the insignia of imperial power which their researches could discover, in Italy. The diadems, the purple mantles, and doubtless other royal properties, which had once adorned the persons of Augustus, Trajan, or Theodosius, -went to furnish, as M. Thierry says, a cabinet in the palace of the Greek em- peror; or found, perhaps, a still more undignified resting-place 276 ITALY. in some curiosity-shop at Constantinople : they were never again required by a Roman emperor of the "West. Odoacer added his own request to that of the compliant senate. Zeno was flattered, perhaps well satisfied to have another powerful barbarian leader subjected to his influence. He graciously acceded to the united entreaty, and appointed Odoacer Patrician and governor of Italy in his own name, reserving, however, the rights of Nepos, whom he recommended to the senate as their legitimate emperor. Odoacer accepted the - position, affected to consider that Zeno had granted the prayer of the senate, and ignored altogether the existence of the Dalmatian claimant. Yet still, in some parts of the Empire, as in Gaul, the deposition of Nepos had never yet been acknowledged ; public documents were drawn np,,and o£G.cial acts performed in his name.'. It is impossible to say what were his actual chances of success, when they were cut short by the treacherous murder of May, 480 A.D.* This changed everything. Zeno ceased to trouble himself about Italy, for he felt that it would be difficult to discover another eligible candidate, and his own affairs were quite enough to engross his serious attention. The opportunity was not lost upon Odoacer, who strengthened himself by alliances on every side, recruited his troops, and looked to his fortified places. One consequence of these political complications deserves specially to be remembered. Since the shameful cession of Auvergne by Glycerins, the Narbonnese province was the only part of Gaul still retained by the Eoman govern- ment ; but the Narbonnese province had persisted in refusing to acknowledge Odoacer, and, in default of a Western emperor, professed allegiance to the Byzantine court. The King of the Nations, released from all appre- hensions with respect to Nepos, revenged himself by imme- diately ceding "the Narbonnaise" to the Visigoths. Thus perished for ever Eoman dominion beyoud the Alps. Not * Lecture V. p. 265. GOVERNMENT OF ODOAOEE. 27^ a foot of land was left to her in that splendid province, won by the expenditure of so much blood and gold, a province in ■which she had almost reproduced herself, and certainly had found the greatest ornament, as well as the surest safe- guard of her empire. The king of Italy, as he was now called, had not given up a valuable possession in Gaul from material weakness or mental imbecility. He obtained a magnificent equivalent in Sicily, •which island he purchased from the Vandals after somewhat humiliating their arrogance by the triumph of his arms. This seems to have been the period of his wisest and most successful administration. Italianizing himself as much as possible, he was gradually doing away with many of the disadvantages imposed upon him as a ruler by his violent usurpation and barbarian birth. He acted through the senate, giving them, at any rate in appearance, the initiative in matters of legislation ; though himself an Arian, he conciliated the clergy, and frequently found them funds ; as for instance, when he so handsomely aided the holy Epiphanius to rebuild the churches of Pavia : finally, he gathered around him the most distinguished men among the Eoman patriciate; and it is in this society that we first encounter the celebrated names which shed so bright a lustre upon the court of his successor — Symmachus, Boethius, the Anician family, and Basilius, son of Sidonius's fi-iend, and the still more illustrious Cassiodorus, the future chancellor of Theodoric. A singular incident occurred at this time, in which Basilius, as representative of Odoacer, played a prominent part. Upon the death of Pope Sim- plicius, an attempt was made to elect a new pope without the concurrence of the Patrician's authority. Basilius appeared in the midst of the ceremonial, as representative of his master, annulled the election, and compelled the clergy to proceed to a new one ; he even obliged them to adopt a decree, which reserved for the future the rights of the civil 278 ITALY. governor in all similar cases. It is true that, some twenty years afterwards, the Church was strong enough to rescind it ; but it is startling to discover so early an instance A.D. 483. ^j ^j^g triumph of Erastianism in the stronghold of sacerdotal authority ; nor is it perhaps generally known, that so soon as the fifth century, a civil ruler was found to advance and maintain the sturdy pretensions of the house of Tudor. It was not long, unfortunately, before the unceasing evils of barbarian warfare interrupted the progress of returning prosperity, and overclouded, though perhaps in a manner but little anticipated, the dawning promise of Odoacer's reign. His own kinsmen of Eugiland had never honoured the prophet sprung from their own country ; more especially the royal family, in their barbarian pride, were kindled into jealousy by the honours of the soldier of fortune, who had left his home in a tunic of sheepskin, to seek adventure in the South. They indulged at once their malignity and their avarice, by plundering the Christians, particularly the flock of Severinus, the holy hermit who prophesied the future greatness of the young giant whose shadow had darkened his cell. Severinus was one of the most remarkable, certainly one of the most useful and influential men of the age. His name and his good works were known in every household in Christendom, and the " King of the Nations" might well consider it an honour, as well as a duty, to avenge his wrongs. He crossed the Alps at the head of a formidable host, penetrated into Noricum, and almost exterminated his guilty compatriots. The remnant of the persecuted Christians he transported into Italy. These exploits were deemed by himself and his flatterers well worthy of a triumph, and Rome saw for the last time that august ceremonial, which had ever concluded and commemorated the most brilliant glories of the Republic and the Empire. Odoacer, amid the acclamations of an ODOACEE INVADES EUGILAND. 279 immense multitude, and at the head of a long train of armed Boldiers laden with the spoils of var, wound his Way through the streets in a car richly inlaid with gold and blazing with precious stones. Around him floated the captured banners of the barbarians, conspicuously embroidered with dragons and the forms of savage animals. Nor were there wanting the other more melancholy accessories of an ancient triumph, -^-in a Roman's eye, its crowning glory. Beside his car walked Fava, the captive king, with other mem- bers of the royal race, and, according to time- honoured precedent, upon the arrival of the procession at the Capitol, the unfortunate prisoner suffered decapitation. All, however, was not over in Eugiland yet. Frederic, the son of Fava, who proved himself perhaps the most barbarous and brutal prince of that barbarous age, renewed the struggle at the head of a few outlaws and brigands gathered from their hiding-places in the vast forests of the country. Odoacer was infuriated, and sending his brother at the head of a competent force, this time made a clean sweep of all his enemies, save Frederic himself, who took i-efuge with the king of the Ostrogoths. The success of the king of the Heruli was complete, yet it was fraught with evil conse- quences. It strengthened a rival by the adherence of a malignant and implacable enemy; it caused profound irritation and alarm among aU the royal races in Germany, who were most unwilling to see Italian standards once more victoriously displayed on their side of the Alps, and who were profoundly indignant with the low-born mercenary who had brought degradation and death on a prince of the old heroic blood, and a member of the sacred fraternity of Teuton sovereigns : lastly, it wrought a most unfavourable change in the character of Odoacer himself, reviving all his early barbarian instincts of wrath and cruelty, and inflaming his mind with that arrogance which, in the words of the wise man, " goeth before a fall." 280 ITALY, But in ' order to understand how these circumstances brought about the ruin of Odoacer, we must recur for a moment to the fortunes of the man who finally accom- plished it, Theodoric the Amal, king of the Ostrogoths. We left him at Constantinople, equally feared and favoured by the emperor, who suspected his ambitious designs but was unable to dispense with his support. Zeno, in the hope of cementing the friendship existing between them, bestowed upon him the consular oiEce and the highest dignities of state which had hitherto been borne by his rival Theodoric, the son of Triar. What was of still greater importance, he transferred the annual pension formerly paid to the troops of the latter, the Goths of Thrace, to the Amal's own followers, the Goths of Macedonia, The son of Triar, or the " Squinter," as he was sometimes called, one of the best captains of the age, was not the man to bear tamely the loss of influence and gold.- He openly raised the standard of revolt, and his proximity was such as to alarm the citizens of Constantinople. Among the other dignities heaped upon the Amal by Zeno, was that of " Son in Arms," a form of adoption conceived in something of the spirit of mediseval knighthood, and conferred with much the same ceremonial. The emperor called upon his dutiful son to rescue his people from their peril. The Amal obeyed, and, nothing loath, led his warriors against his rival. But now occurred an event which caused, or which served as a pretext for, all the un- fortunate relations which afterwards grew up between the "father and son in arms." The supplies and reinforce- ments promised by the emperor never reached Theodoric upon his march ; it is even said that the guides supplied to him purposely conducted the army by almost inaccessible routes into a most dangerous position. Whether these things occurred from accident or design, is one of those important questions which history must for ever leave un- solved. Certain it is that the Amal found himself face tff THE TWO THEODOEICS. 281 face with his rival, -who occupied a strong position upon a mountain in his front. The army of Theodoric were discon- tented and mutinous; they saw little to be gained by fighting to the death against their own brethren for a treacherous Greek who had betrayed them ; and their fidelity was further tampered with by "the Squinter" him- self, who, from a lofty rock upon the opposite side of the little river which ran between the two armies, harangued his enemies with the voice of a Stentor, and persuaded them that both parties had been brought there to destroy one another for the benefit of the Greeks. Theodoric's Goths forced him to abandon all idea of fighting, and to make peace with his rival; and then both generals despatched envoys and a menacing message to the emperor. The Amal made most monstrous claims, and justified them by the charge of treachery. Was the charge justifiable? If Theodoric had him- self believed it, prior to the interview with his rival, would he have led his warriors so far on the road to destruction ? Would he not have found means to communicate his dis- appointment and anger to Constantinople ? Would not indignation have induced him personally to originate the counsels which he only adopted when forced upon him by his own troops ? On the other hand, it is difficult to see what Zeno had to gain by treachery. Among the thousand perils which threatened him from treason within and enemies without the walls of his capital, the sincere friend- ship of the Amal was more valuable to him than any advantage which could have resulted from a conflict between the two Gothic armies. Be this as it may, Zeno vehemently denied all intention of playing false, and reproached his " son " with bitterness for his violence and unreasonable dg'- mands. He nevertheless concluded his speech by the promise of gold in immense sums, and_jthe- offer o f a royal bride. Theodoric was to receive the hand of a princess " bom upon the purple," an unprecedented honour for a barbarian, and one 282 ITALY. ■which would have placed him on a level with the legitimate Csesars. The offer must have been acceptable to his ambi- tion, but he distrusted its sincerity ; or perhaps he may have doubted his own influence over his discontented countrymen. He organized a combined movement with his rival, the son of Triar, but very soon abandoned the programme, and ravaged Macedonia and the banks of the ^gean with a merciless rapacity never surpassed by any barbarian inroad. Strange spectacle ! An officer of the Empire, the emperor's adopted " son at arms," ravaging the emperor's country with fire and sword, and slaying the emperor's subjects. Zeno, re- duced to despair by the bitter complaints of his people, and his own embarrassments, made peace with the other Theo- doric, the son of Triar, a man ever ready to sacrifice any- thing or anybody to his interest. The Amal was as furious as though he himself had still possessed a claim upon his adopted father. Turning westward, he swept the whole open country of Thessaly and Macedonia, putting not only the garrisons but the unoffending inhabitants to the sword. Drawn towards Italy by the secret aspiration which slum- bered, but was never extinguished in his heart, he deter- mined to winter in Epirus, and make himself master of the town of Dyrrachium, the ancient Epidamnus, which com- ' manded the passage of the Adriatic. The town was placed in his hands by the treachery of a wealthy Goth high in the service of the Empire. The emperor made a last effort to arrest or control the movements of his ambitious son. He despatched an envoy to Dyrrachium, who of course effected nothing! but the conference held between the two parties is remarkable for the renewed offer of Theodoric to place Nepos on the throne. In the mean time, the Greek garri- sons in Thessaly and Epirus plucked up courage, and attacked the rear of the great Gothic hofde in its passage through the defiles to join Theodoric at Dyrrachium. They slew his brother, and nearly captured his mother and sister. THE AMAL VICTOEIOUS. 283 This brought on a mountain warfare, which continued for some years, in which the Greeks, under the guidance of Sabinianus, a soldier of the old school, fairly held their own. These conflicts extended up to the commencement of the year. But then, as we have said, the murder of Nepos changed the entire aspect of aflfai:fs. Two- other deaths made the effects of this change entirely favour- able to Theodoric. In the following year, the brave Sabi- nianus breathed his last, and a restive horse brought the savage career of the son of Triar to a close, by flinging him against the point of a javelin suspended over his own tent. And now the great Amal unites under his banner all the warriors of his race : he begins to perceive that the time for carrying out his most ambitious dreams has at last arrived, and instinct points to the Greek emperor as the most efficacious instrument for the purpose. We see him next at Constantinople, as if nothing had ever happened to disturb the afiectionate intercourse of father and son at |irms.. He is welcomed with delight, made consul and minister of war ; his influence daily increases, but is brought to the highest point by one of those strange seditions which seem to have been necessities of the Greek em- pire. A sort of pagan reaction had arisen in the East, under the auspices of an Egyptian charla;tan and thaumaturgist, one Pamprepius. Encouraged by the restless intrigues of the old empress Verina, the movement assumed formidable proportions. Leontius, the candidate for the throne selected by the Heathenizers, or Hellenizers, for the names have the same import, was crowned at the church of St. Peter, at Tarsus, under the auspices of the empress Verina Augusta. Theodoric -and his Goths soon disposed of the pretender; but unfortunately, one John the Scythian, had been associated with him in the military command. This gave offence^-or • pretext for pretending offence— to the haughty AmaL 284 ITALY. He suddenly abandoned tte campaign, or rather, the siege of the mountain fort, in which the army was engaged, and returned to Constantinople, more arrogant and exacting in his demands than ever. Zeno was in despair, as weU he might be. The Goth was insatiate, but he was playing for a great stake, ancj concealing a mighty ambition behind his assumed wrath. An interruption, however, now occurred, which threatened to extinguish the Empire and his own projects at the same time. The Bulgarians broke in from the north in such overwhelming force, that consterna- tion came iipon the whole Empire ; not merely the out- lying provinces, but Constantinople itself. The moment was propitious for Theodoric. At the head of a united army, consisting of Greeks and Goths, he encoun- tered the invading horde in a pitched battle. It was by his personal bravery, conspicuous in all his battles, that the victory was won : he is even said to have slain the Bulgarian monarch with his own hand. At any rate, the barbarians fled back dismayed to their deserts, a*nd Theo- doric returned to Constantinople to reap the fruits of his exploits in an extraordinary increase of honour and influ- ence. The second man in the Empire, — practically, indeed the first, — he plunged for a time into the indulgences which so splendid a position enabled him to enjoy. But the transalpine campaign of the king of Italy, which we have already recorded as occurring in the years 487 and 488, startled him from the voluptuous garden of Armida, in which his martial energy had been lulled to sleep. All the German princes were fiercely moved with indignation at Odoacer's raid over the Alps, and his treat- ment of the royal family of the EugL Frederic himself came to lay his wrongs before the champion of the Teuton races. His own Goths murmured against the son of the Amal, as sunk in the sensual pleasures of the Eastern capital, while they were starving in their settlements upon THEODOEIC ATTACKS CONSTANTINOPLE. 285 the lower Danube. " King," said they, " while thou art fattening on the feasts of the Greeks, thy people are dying of famine. For their interests and thine own, arise and return among us ; for, if left to destruction, we will ourselves go forth and seek new lands."* Eoused by these reproaches, Theodoric, abandoning his banquets and his paramours, turned his face finally towards the "West. His ambitious dream of wresting Italy from Odoacer again took possession of his mind, and he was convinced that at last the hour had come. He rejoined his people, and at the sight of the Gothic waggons, at the sound of the Gothic trumpet, he resumed the instincts of his race. Twice before he had offered to reconquer the throne of the West for the Eastern empire ; twice he had been deluded by the hesitation or deceit of its emperor ; the third time, he vowed there should be no feilure ; he would have recourse to the last argument of kings ; his sword should win the consent which had been denied to his generous zeal. Fired by these sentiments, without cause or -pretext for war, he and his warriors set forth for Constantinople, burning and slaying all before them. The citizens were aghast ; and well indeed they might be ; for where could they look for deliverance ? The sword which had protected them against Leontius and the Bulgarians, was now no longer drawn in their behalf ; it was suspended over their heads. Theodoric paused at Melantias, a short distance from the capital ; — ^because he pitied the city, says the chronicler. It is impossible to. judge of men's motives with accuracy ; but if his subsequent conduct be any guide to the discovery of his policy, his reason for stopping where he did, when the city of the Eastern Csesars was almost within his grasp, may be assumed to have arisen from his long-cherished, never- abandoned idea of succeeding in place of Odoacer to the * Hist. Miscell. xv. 10 ; quoted Eeoits de I'Histoire Eomaine, p. 429. 286 ITALY. throne of tlie Csesars of the "West. He had now an oppor- tunity of wringing from Zeno his consent, and fortifying himself by such authority as an imperial commission could give. He proposed a conference ; the emperor had no alternative but to accept. Jornandes has left us a brief account of this meeting ; and as he probably derived it from Cassiodorus, an eye-witness, there is no reason to distrust his narrative in the main, after making due allowance for a few flourishes, such as he frequently introduces in honour of hisiyCountrymen. " Never," says Theodoric, " have I been failing in dutiful service to you, O emperor. May it please your majesty to hear graciously the desire of my heart {desiderium mei cordis). Why is that Italy, so long ruled by your ancestors or predecessors, — why is that city, the very head and mistress of the world {urhs ilia caput orbis et domino), storm-tossed by the tyranny of a chief of Eugi and Turcilingians 1 Send me there with my people, and at the same time set yourself free from the burden of the expense (expensarimi pondere) in which we involve you."* The proposal was made under other circumstances than those in which Zeno had heard it heretofore. He was probably only too glad to consent ; indeed, the Greek writers, desirous of repudiating the disgrace which an admission of Theodoric's irresistible pressure implied, have made the proposal emanate from Zeno himself, and their account has been generally accepted without question, by modern historians ; but the whole past life of the ambi- tious Amal, and his future course, confirm the version of the afiair which undoubtedly comes from his chancellor Cassi- odorus. It was a solemn occasion, and the emperor deemed it worthy of a solemn document, or " Pragmatic," as it was called, — a term which is preserved in the chan- ceries of the German Caesars. With this deliberate sanction, debated in the privy council, voted by the senate, and * Jornandes, Reb. Get. § 57. INVESTED AS PATRICIAJT. 287 confirmed by the emperor, Theodorio set forth, to take possession of his new inheritance, in the character of " Patrician by the emperor's appointment." That Zeno ever contemplated an entire and unconditional cession, or that Theodoric ever meant it should be anything else, is not to be imagined. Before his departure, the ceremony of inves- titure was performed, in presence of the Byzantine public; It consisted in the emperor's placing upon the head of the Goth the " sacrum vdamen" or sacred veU, a square piece of purple cloth or stuff, the symbol of imperial authority. And now "the desire of the Amal's heart" was accomplished : he gathered together the fighting men, the women, the cliildren, the cattle, the waggons and rude implements of husbandry, — in short, the whole force, and the whole property of his people, and prepared for a migration as complete and final as that in which the children of Israel went forth from the delta of the Ifile to conquer the Phoenician seaboard. He did more : he summoned to his standard every Goth in distant lands, who revered the heroic blood of Amal, or had been taught to seek in the far south the mystic towers of Asgard. With the warriors of his own race, came every barbarian adventurer who was eager to sell his sword for a share in the spoils of Italy. These reinforcements, however, did not join him until a later time. For the moment, his tribe was located near the mouths of the Danube. Prom this spot, two paths to Italy presented themselves for his choice. It was possible for him to follow the valley of the Danube, passing onward towards its source, until he reached the valley of the Save, and then striking along this, finally to descend upon Italy by the passes of the l^oric Alps or the modern Tyrol ; or it was possible, again, to turn southward, and traversing Thrace, Macedonia, and Epirus, to reach Italy by the usual communication across the Adriatic Gulf. The latter route offered the advantage of turning the strong military position 288 ITALY. which it was to be presumed Odoacer would take up, upon the eastern Alps, and so bringing the Goths nearer to Ravenna and to Kome. For the means of transit, Theodorio trusted to his previous preparations at Dyrraohium. He accordingly left the mouths of the Danube with his whole nation, numbering, it is said, more than two hundred thousand souls, and directed his march upon the latter city. There a grievous disappointment awaited him. The transports and vessels upon which he had calculated were, for some reason or other, not to be found. Not an hour was to be lost ; for every hour gave strength to Odoacer and diminished his own. If he fell back, destruction stared him in the face ; for an early winter was setting in, and the combined action of frost and the sword of his enemies among the Epirote and Macedonian hills would waste the strength of his army slowly away. If he remained where he was, famine would no less certainly produce the same result. Under these circumstances, he adopted the desperate expedient of plunging among the mountains of the modern Albania, and continuing his course along the wild country which forms the eastern side of the Adriatic Gulf, until he was enabled to turn the head of the gulf itself, and enter Italy in the neighbourhood of Aquileia. The sufferings of the great Ostrogoth migration upon this memorable "march are described to have been, and, indeed, must have been, terrible. But the difficulties which nature and winter opposed to their progress were not so grievous as those which they encountered from their Teuton kinsmen. When nearly exhausted by cold and hunger, they came suddenly upon an army of Gepidaj, com- manded by the successor of Ardaric,* and strongly posted on the banks of one of the tributaries of the Save, swollen at that period by winter rains. It was in vain to think of accommodation ; for the Gepidse were convinced that * See Lecture IV. p. 211, MIGRATION TO ITALY. 289 the Goths had come to rob them of their lands ; and as they were surrounded on all sides by morasses, they felt confident that the half-starved bands' before them would never be able to force their position. But the Goths fought with ^11 the ferocity of despair ; Theodoric, as ever, great in personal heroism, made himself the star of battle, and causing the royal standard to be unfurled over his h^ad, called, liko Henry of Navarre, upon his bravest warriors to follow where they saw it flying above the thickest of the fight.* A fright- ful struggle ensued; the combatants were up to their knees in mud and water, and grappled for hours as only men of the stout Teuton stock are known to do. The little river was choked with dead bodies, the morass was discoloured with blood ; but at last the Goth prevailed. Theodoric gathered together his shattered bands, led them across the Julian Alps, and finally halted the whole nation, in order to recruit the strength of men and animals, in the green and beautiful meadows which girdle the course of the Isonzo. He was now at the gates of Italy, in a land of battles, and in a dis- trict where more than once the fate of the whole peninsula has been decided. But he had been long in coming, and Odoacer was prepared for his arrival, for he had employed the interval in collecting all the barbarians whom friendship or the hope of profit could attract to" his banner. Eugi, Turcilingians, and Italians, with many bands of roaming adventurers, composed his heterogeneous host. Mutual jealousy and distrust, the want of common discipline and training, even the want of common language, sowed, as might have naturally been expected, the seeds of disunion and weakness, among the army which was to defend Odoacer and Italy. The Goths ^^'' owed their victory to the same causes which had ena- * " Press where ye see my white plume shine, amid the ranks of war. And be your Oriflamme to day the helmet of Nararre I " Macaulat. L 290 - ITALY. bled them to defeat the Gepidse — their own despair and the determined valour of their king. Odoacer fell back upon Verona, doomed, it seems, to be a refuge and a place (Parmea from the day of Bedriacum to the day of Solferino. There he reunited his army, which had been dispersed rather than defeated, and once more descended into the lists to combat for the great stake of life and. empire. Theodoric had been compelled to delay for a month by the . Isonzo ; but once more he was ready to meet his adversary ; and this time it was hoped that the conflict would be decisive. The enemy were strongly posted on the Adige, and having become fully conscious of the importance of the struggle, they had remedied many of the evils which disunion and the incongruous com- position of their army had previously produced among them. The Goths were no less' alive to the necessities of the occasion, and no less resolute. The great Amal, if we believe the account of the panegyrists, was armed for the combat, like a hero of mediseval days, by the hands of his mother and sister, for whom, throughout his life, he entertained a profound affection. Never, before, had his personal character so largely contributed to the success of his comrades, never did he exhibit such prodigious daring and address. Breaking through the centre of the opposing army, after almost in- credible efforts, he turned, with irresistible effect, upon their • right wing, and pushed it into the Adige. Odoacer had done all that was in man's power to do, but in vain. In the long roll of battles which it has been our lot to record, few, perhaps, were more obstinately contested than this. The slain are said to have been piled in heaps all over the field of battle, and fifteen years afterwards the plain of Verona ■was still white with their bones ; for Theodoric, with a touch of his native barbarism, had forbidden the rites of burial to his enemies. Odoacer fled for refuge to Eavenna, which his rival was in no condition to besiege, and for the third time attempted to collect an army capable of taking the field. CONTEST BETWEEN ODOACER AND THEODOElC. 291 Then ensued, between these two Teuton kings, a war of paper, proclamations, missives, recriminations, and appeals to the people, upon whom they equally intended to impose an alien yoke. In this contest, the Roman senate assumed a revived importance ; for where the strength of both parties was so nearly balanced, even the feeble weight of their authority might suffice to turn the scale. But the senate, inspired with the feeling of Mercutio, was only inclined to exclaim, " A plague on both your houses." Ever since the deadly struggle in her streets between Eicimer and Anthemius, Rome had viewed, with well-grounded horror and alarm, any prospect of the repetition of that scene of blood. For this reason, she shut her gates successively upon both Nepos and Glycerins, and she was determined to shut them alike on Odoacer and Theodoric. A policy of neutrality had become her object, and a wise candidate for the Empire would have accepted such a policy at her hands. Odoacer did not. Having been refused admittance, he turned round in a spirit of in- dignation and vengeance, and ravaged all the surrounding country. Hitherto, of the two rivals, Italy in general had leaned to the side of the King of the Nations. In part, this may have been owing to the dislike of Greek interference and dictation, but in part also it probably arose from the feeling that it w,as better to endure the evils to which they were habituated, than " to fly to others which they knew not of." Ever since the days of the Athenian demagogues, it has been a sign of political wisdom to tolerate the presence of the leeches who are already saturated with the blood of the state, rather than to invite the suction of those who are still unfilled and ravenous. The Italians were fully alive to this difference between the barbarians who had so long been preying upon their vitals and the hungry Ostrogoths who as yet had scarcely tasted of confiscation and the advantages of a southern settlement. They were, then, as has been said, inclined, for this reason, to acquiesce in the continued domi- 2S2 ITALY. nation of the king of Italy, and to regard with alarm the triumph of the warrior who had led these new hordes over the Alps in the offensive character of an Eastern legate and a nominee of the Byzantine court. Bat Odoacer, by his passion and precipitancy, spoiled all, and turned the chances which had befriended him into chances for his rival. Amid the profound disgust of his former friends, he bent his steps to- wards the north, and took refuge behind the morasses which encompass Eavenna. Theodoric then issued from Yerona, and appeared to carry all before him. By the treachery of Tufa, a chief of the Heruli, who was guarding Milan itt- the interest of Odoacer, that great and already famous city threw open its gates to receive him. He now believed himself master of the whole peninsula, and listened to the bravados of Tufa, who promised, with no other help than his Heruli, to bring Odoacer in chains to his feet. Intrusted with the duty which he had solicited, Tufa turned double traitor, and went over, with all his troops, to his former master. Theodoric broke out into a terrible demonstration of his native fury, and ordered every man of the whole tribe of Heruli, wherever one could be found, to be slain upon the spot, without hesi- tation or mercy. Another defection increased his anger and uneasiness. Frederic, son of Fava, the Kugian, deserted from the man who appeared in Italy as the champion of the wrongs of his race, and from some inexplicable reason adopted the party of the man who had dragged his father in chains beside his chariot-wheels, and beheaded him on the Capitol. These things were a serious check to Theodoric : he felt so i insecure {it Milan, that he resolved to occupy the stronger ) military position of Pavia, and repaired thither with the whole horde of the Ostrogoths, who filled the churches, the houses, the streets and ground in the neighbourhood of the walls, with an immense number of women, children, and fighting men. It seemed a marvellous visitation to the worthy bishop Epiphanius, who was nearly reduced to SIEGE OF MILAN. 293 despair, as well he may have been, -when all the thorough- fares, and every approach to his town had been rendered impassable by the waggons, cattle, ' ' ~ ' and tents of the new comers. During the winter, Theodoric looked about him for aid, and saw that if it were to come at all, it must come from the German nations who had quar- tered themselves in Gaul. These were at this time the Tisigoths and Burgundians. The Visigoths listened to his overtures, for it was their policy to have a co-terminous kin- dred power on the opposite side of the Alps. But the reasons which attracted them had the exactly opposite effect upon the Burgundians. They had no desire to be crushed between two kingdoms of Gothic origin close upon their frontier ; they therefore Lavaded Italy professedly in the interest of the opposite party, but contented themselves with plundering simply in their own. Six thousand captives were carried off into Burgundian Gaul, who were ransomed for large sums during the first years of Theodoric's reign. In the rapid vicissitudes of this singular warfare, the next event presented to our eyes is the siege of Milan, imme- diately after its evacuation by the Goths. The army of Odoacer indulged in excesses quite as cruel and licentious as if they had not considered and called themselves the Italian party. In their character of Arians, they despoiled or destroyed tlie churches, and vented their fury upon the few miserable Catholics who remained in the deserted town. Their triumph was of short duration, for they next attempted Pavia ; but the defences were strong, the season was tem- pestuous, and the Ostrogoth king himself was there. Ke- pulsed from the walls of the future capital of Gothic Italy, the " Italians" betook themselves to their usual employment of ravaging the open country. But by this time the Visi- goths from Gaul had effected a junction with their brethren, close beside the intrenchments of Pavia; and Theodoric issued from its gates, once more the proud and confident 294 ITALY. leader of a -well-appointed army. On the 11th of August, these two indomitable foes found themselves once A.D. 49 . jjjpj,g fj^gg ^Q f^(.g_ jt ^as this time the Adda — a river famous as the Adige in the annals of European war— •which was to run red with the blood of these unwearied combatants. " Whole nations fell on either side," says a contemporary quoted by M. Thierry. Once more the Gothic swordsmen, led on by their king, cleft down all opposition. Odoacer lost the bulk of his troops, and, what was worse, the leading men of the Italian party. Ravenna was now the only refuge left ; and to Eavenna he betook himself. But Theodoric followed, like avenging Fate, and camped in the famous pine-wood where Odoacer himself had halted to beleaguer Augustulus. It was " in the solitude Of the pine-forest, and the silent shore Which bounds Eavenna's immemorial wood,"* that the splendid prize of Italian empire more than once was lost and won. The sanguinary battle of Easter-day, 1512, when fell De Eoix, duke of Nemours, and twenty thousand men, dwells perhaps most deeply in local tradition and the general memory ; but we at least cannot forget that there was determined the fate of the last of the Roman Cassars ; and there also was decided the deadly duel between his two successors of barbarian blood, with the clamour of which the world so long had rung. Odoacer made a last and. gallant effort, but without success. It was an attempt to penetrate the beleaguering lines, and carry. off Theodoric himself from the royal tent. That goal was nearly reached ; but a night attack, when once disorganized, is generally fatal to the attacking party; and the usual difficulties in ^ •this case were aggravated by the peculiar nature of the ground. The retreat of the assailants along the causeways which led across the morass was skilfully cut off. Every- * Don Juan, canto iii. § 105, BLOCKADE OP BAVENNA. 295 thing was oonfasion and dismay : as many were stifled in the mud and water as fell by the edge of the sword ; and only a miserable remnant regained the walls. The last chance of Odoacer was gone ; he was hopelessly blockaded in a spot from which egress was impossible ; all communication with friends and partisans in central Italy was cut off; his influence at Rome had necessarily been reduced to nothing ; his troops suffered severely from starvation, and murmured loudly and without ceasing. On the other hand, the Ostro- goths, encamped in a pestilential situation, worn out with marching, hard fighting, and scanty food, and bitterly dis- appointed in the brilliant hopes which had lured them across the Alps, were scarcely less discontented, 1 \ , , •' , ,, . 1 J 2rth Feb., A.D. 493. or less troublesome to their leader. Under these circumstances, it is not surprising that the bishop of Eavenna, John the "Seer of Angels," should have induced both kings to accept a conference, or that the conference should have terminated in a suspension of hostilities, and a compromise between the belligerents. It was agreed that both should inhabit Eavenna upon terms of equality, and for the future make a partition of Italy between them. No one could seriously have believed in the stability of such an arrangement, though Procopius gravely records its provisions.* On the 5th of March, Theodoric made his entry into the city with great pomp. Then ensued an event which, amid all the wickedness and blood-guiltiness of that dark time, stands out in sombre colours as a monstrous in- stance of crime and of treachery to all the nobler instincts * An hypothesia has been started by M. Thierry which deserves attention, and probably contains the truth. He supposes that the old form of consular government was to have been revived, and that the two kings were to govern "la p^ninsule indivise, chacun h, tourde r61e, it la fajon dea anciens consuls de la r^publique." In this case the senate would probably have recovered much of its position and in- fluence ; and we may perhaps trace the plan to the inspiration of, the great men Basilius, Symmachus, and Boethius, who had formed the "entourage" of Odoacer in his previous government. a»6 ITALY. and duties of liumanity. Theodoric invited his brothel monarch to a festal banquet in honour of the occasion. The tables were spread in his private garden, beneath the shade of a laurel-grove. No sooner had the guests begun to drink deeply, than each Goth, arising, plunged a dagger into his neighbour's breast. Theodoric is said to have stabbed Odoacer vrtth his own hands, and, what is worse, to have slain Odoacer's son, whose character as a hostage should have rendered him sacred even among the most barbarous times and people. Of course the Gothic historians plead the ex- cuse of a counter- plot. But was there time for it ? Could not Theodoric, at the head of his victorious warriors, have easily defied, it 1 Was there ever a similar deed of treachery which did not shelter itself under a similar pretext 1 These, and some other incidents in the career of the great Ostrogoth already recounted, must, I think, induce us to qualify the unmeasured eulogy of Gibbon. Theodoric is throughout with him " a hero alike excellent in the arts of war and government, who restored an age of peace and prosperity, and whose name still excites and deserves the attention of mankind."* With all possible admiration for the ability and success of his administration when seated upon the throne, it is not easy to forget the " by-ways and crooked practices" by which he reached it. The violence and treasons of his youth, culminating in thLs audacious crime, were indeed na longer seen when, surrounded by the great men who had guided his predecessor, he carried out in the West a policy which had been already commenced, and was enabled to expand it by the subtle power of his intellect and the natural energy of his character. But in his old age the barbarian reappeared, and he died swimming in the blood of the best and wisest of the last great men of Eome. What Napoleon said of the Eussian of his own time, is applicable to this man, though one of the most highly-praised and * Decline and Fall, c. 35, ad finem. EULE OP THEODOEIC. 297 tigMy-popiilar monarchs of history. "His civilization was skin-deep : scratch him, and you came upon the Tartar beneath." * We have no-w brought to a close our account of that unique and critical period, the last quarter of the fifth century, which saw the old-world system die out in the "West, and new ones arise ; which consigned Rome to the grave of buried empires, where slept Egyptian, Assyrian, Persian, Phoenician, and Macedonian dynasties ; and which saw the birth of what she idly entitled " barbarian" nationalities. We shall avail ourselves of the eloquent words of M. Thierry to state the exact situation of Theodoric, Italy, and the Goths, and for the future pass lightly over the order of events, as the necessities of our plan require. "Theodoric had now no longer either colleague or enemy. Without troubling him- self as to the terms of the ' Pragmatic/ or the irresolution of the Eastern emperor, ho- at once quitted the national costume, assumed the mantle of purple, and caused himself to be proclaimed 'king of the Romans and the Goths,' a title which was subsequently interpreted as ' king of Italy.' The fiction of the ' Roman patriciate,' under which Odoacer had governed for nearly seventeen years, vanished with the * I had long felt dissatisfied with the hero-worship of Gibbon, so blindly repeated by others. It was, therefore, with no small pleasure that I perused the words of M. Thierry prefixed as a motto to this lecture. I cannot deny myself the satisfaction of appending his ex- pansion of the same idea in another place : — "L'age avait ddvelopp^ dans Theodoric devenu homme, les qualitds seduisantes, et les vices redoutables, que Z^non entrevoyait en germe dans I'enfant. C'etait toujours le m^me enthousiasme pour la civilisation, ent^ sur ud fond de nature sauvage et r^tive qui la repousaait, en d^pit de Theodoric lui- m^me. C'etait toujours aussi cette vive intelligence des choses morales, et ces inspirations flev^es, h^roiques, mSl^es aux instincts les plus violents, h Tastuoe, 2b la cruaut^ h I'^goisme impitoyable. Deux fitres coexistaient r^ellement dans Theodoric, et formaient ce compost bizarre sur lequel les jugements de I'histoire sont rest^s ind^cis : un Bomain d'aspiration et un Barbare d'instinct, qui reparaissait par intervalles et ^tonffait I'alltre. Attila eut plus d'entrailles que le Thfedoric barbare ; tandis que le Theodoric civilis^ ddpassa en conceptions g^n^reuses la plupart des Romains de son temps." — Recits de I'Histoire Bomaine, p. 362, L 2 298 ITALY. sovereignty of the Eastern emperors, on the last ruins of the 'Western empire. Not only had Eome and Italy a king, but they ceased to belong to themselves. A stranger race, subjects of the new sovereign, held them under the yoke by the right of conquest. A new era commenced in their history."* At first, Theodoric carried himself with great severity against the party who had opposed him. Every member of it he sternly doomed to disfranchisement or exile. Eor a long time he was proof against all prayers for mercy, and all political considerations which recommended it. But at last he yielded to the representations of the bishops and other distinguished men, such as Cassiodorus, Symmachus, Boe- thius, Liberius, and the leaders of the Italian party, who had faithfully served Odoacer as long as such service was pos- sible, but now had transferred their allegiance to the new dynasty, and with it the weight of their authority and tne wisdom of their counsels. The result upon Theodoric's part was a great, and for the time being, a complete success. All Italy, from the spurs of her great mountain-rampart to the Calabrian headlands, obeyed the Ostrogoth for her lord. The secret of this triumph, so far as Theodoric was con- cerned, consisted in the fact that he succeeded in a policy which Orestes and Odoacer had attempted, but in which, for different reasons, both Ore?tes and, Odoacer had failed. To the Romans he opposed his barbarian aspect, with all its energy and power, with the vigour of a new and fresher life, unknown to the effete offspring of the decrepit empire ; to the Barbarians he represented himself as a Edman, heir to all the traditions of imperial splendour, and the inde- scribable prestige which any civilization, even though it be corrupt, exercises over the imagination of the uncivilized man. He did not, however, neglect the ordinary precau- tions of newly-established monarchs, and proceeded to * E&its de I'Histoire Eomaine, p. 600. HIS EXTENSIVE EMPIEB. 299 strengthen himself on all sides by forming or consolidating connections with royal houses. His wife was a sister of Clovis, king of the Franks. His two daughters he married respectively to Alario, king of the Visigoths, and Sigismond, king of the Burgundians ; his sister became the spouse of the Vandal, his niece that of the Thuringian king. In Italy itself he formed his followers into a people, — all previous adventurers had brought with them little more than a band of brigands, or at the best an army of occupation j — and he adjusted the relations of this people with the original occu- pants of the soil both skilfully and well. " For the Eoman. the arts of peace, for the Goth the cares of war," was his favourite motto; and the policy which it represented worked with such success, that it maintained a great and powerful empire for seventy years. Relying upon the moral and military strength of his position, he assumed a sort of paternal authority over the contemporary and neighbouring potentates, to which they not ungraciously submitted. His own dominions he increased by the acquisition of Illyricum, Pannonia, Noricum, and Ehaetia. The Bavari and other Teuton tribes became his tributaries, and the victorious combat of Aries gained for him from the Franks the remaining portion of Provence, the other part of which he had wrested from the Burgundians as a penalty for their animosity rather than their actual opposition in the late war. In feet, he anticipated Charlemagne, not only in the extent of his dominion, but in his ability as a governor. The genius of the Ostrogoth appears to have possessed at least as great a capacity for assimilation to civilized influences as that of any other of the barbarous races who broke up the Koman empire. The monarch himself was a signal instance of the fact ; for it cannot be said that he disgraced the education which he had received at Constantinople. His territorial provisions exhibited no less wisdom than politic considera- tion for the vanquished. Ope third of the land, with all the 800 ITALY. military posts ia Italy, he assigned to his countrymen. In no other respect was any favouritism shown, for they paid the imposts upon land equally with the Italian occupants. Rural industry was studiously encouraged ; the Pontine marshes were drained ; iron and gold mines opened in Dal- matia and the Abruzzi ; an active police by sea and land maintained the security of trade and property ; and the cities acquired, says Gibbon, the " useful and splendid deco- rations of baths, churches, porticos, and palaces." Though an Arian, he showed no violence to the orthodox party, and established friendly relations with the popes. His tolera- tion, remarkable in any age, would deserve to be considered marvellous in his own, could we venture to believe that it rested rather upon religious principle than indifference. Any of his subjects, Goth or Italian, were permitted to adopt either form of faith ; the clergy of botli communions had equal privileges ; even the Jews were recognized as citizens, and received protection for their property. The men of cultivated intellect who possessed the accomplish- ments of the old civilization, were admitted into favour and employment. Among them, as we have already said, was the senator Cassiodorus, whose history, epitomized by Jor- nandes, bishop of Eavenna, furnishes the best record of this eventful age. Theodoric commissioned him on one occasion as ambassador to the Burgundian king, with these somewhat uncomplimentary credentials : " "We send you this man as an envoy, that you may no longer pretend to be our equal, when you see what manner of men we have with us." Another still more famous Roman adorned his court — Boethius, last of the long roll of illustrious names who upheld the philo- sophic tenets first taught beneath the plane-tree groves of Academus. For many years he enjoyed the monarch's favour; but at last, conspiracy, or the suspicion of conspiracy, confined him to a dungeon, and gave to the world, in his " Consolations," the last, and by no means the least, success- OSTROGOTH LEGISLATION. SOl iul effort of human philosophy to explain and to assuage the ills of life. But it is mainly by its laws that. the character of any civil society is determined, and by its laws, there- fore, in the main, it should be judged. The new Ostrogoth code, as promulgated in the " Edictum Theodorici," exhi- bited as near an approach as was possible to the unmatched models of Latin jurisprudence, and by abandoning some of the most cherished customs of barbaric life, created no little jealousy and offence among the members of the conquering race. The abolition of the Wehr-geld, or pe- cuniary compensation for personal injury, a principle almost of universal acceptance among the German tribes, was peculiarly unpleasing to the Goth conservatives, who re- membered with regret the ancient glories of the empire of Ermanaric. Yet it cannot be doubted that it is one of the first steps towards a civilized and , rightly-reasoned code of criminal law. The results, then, of Theodoric's administra- tion were a gradual amalgamation of race an4 interest between the conquerors and the conquered, the general security and rapid increase of property throughout the peninsula, and the appearance of all those outward adorn- ments which arise from and distinguish a period of national prosperity. " Having been the first who put a stop to so many evils," says the great mediaeval statesman,* " Theodoric deserves the highest praise ; for, during the thirty-eight years he reigned in Italy, he brought the country to such a state of greatness, that her previous sufferings were no longer recognizable." What wonder, then, if men began to believe in the genesis of a new life for Italy and the world 1 Nor were they altogether deceived. It is to this era that we owe the origin or revival of many among the renowned cities of mediaeval times. Then rose Venice, Ferrara, Aquileia, Chiusa, and Sienna ; then also * Maohiavelli, Hist, of Florence, book i. ch. 2. 302 ITALY. Florence, Pisa, Genoa, Bologna, and Milan, first gathered within their #valls the means of wealth and the treasures of beauty which wUl render them illustrious through all gene- rations of men. Then, too, the little sea-side watering-place of Parthenope began its growth to the most powerful, the most populous, and the most beautiful city of Italy. " Ai this time also," says Machiavelli, "not only were the names of provinces changed, but also of lakes, rivers, seas, and men ; for France, Spain, and Italy are full of fresh names, wholly different from the ancient." Then, in fact, an entirely new language was developing itself among the mixed population of the peninsula, as the tongue of Virgil and Cicero melted into the melodious accents of Dante and Boccacio. What then prevented this man, with so great a genius for government, and so splendid an opportunity for its exercise, from organizing a Germanic empire, equal in extent and power to that which obeyed the sceptre of the old Roman Csesars ? or why did he fail, when Charlemagne, with a greater complication of interests to deal with, for a time at least succeeded ? The causes were mainly these ; causes which we may, perhaps, suspect to be of a very permanent character and very similar, at all times, in their operation. In the first place, Theodoric was an Arian, and there was a power antagonistic to Arianism growing up already on the banks of the Tiber, stronger than the statesman's policy or the soldier's sword — the spiritual power of the Church of Rome. Elsewhere we shall endeavour to say upon this topic what our limited space will admit. At pre- sent it is enough to see that such a power was necessarily altogether incompatible with the existence of an Arian empire. And it proved mightier than its rival ; for it was aided by other powers and influences, adverse to Ostrogoth domination. First among these may be reckoned the jealousy of the Byzantine CiBsars. They had precipitated the Barbarian ITALY AND THE FOREIGNER. 303 upon Italy, and encouraged him to its conquest, not from any affection towards the Barbarian, but from fear for them- selves ; and when the Barbarian had established himself in part of their ancient patrimony, and had lengthened the cords ajid strengthened the stakes of his rising empire, they began to perceive that his position was more formidable than ever, and they unceasingly intrigued with his personal enemies and their own Roman rival for his destruction. It was, forinstance, the Greek emperor Maurice who first prominently introduced Frank chieftains into Italian politics, and Frank armies into the fields of Lombardy.* To these considerations must be added the innate and implacable impatience with which the Italian regards a foreign domination. Unable to tolerate the rule of a stranger, unable to shake it off ; alternately calling for and cursing the presence of foreign dynasties; submitting to yet detesting the houses of Anj ou, of Aragon, of Hohenstaufen, — the Hapsburg, the Bourbon, and the Buona- parte, — ^yet all the while incapable of substituting any native- bom and national power, which might grow, and gather strength, and finally develop into a rival, perhaps a victor state, — from the fall of Aiigustulusto thefield of Kovara, the Italians have struggled against the chains they wore, have substituted for them other chains, have murmured, have wept, have conspired, have assassinated, have fought, have dono anything but cordially and manfully unite against a coinmon enemy. The politics of the present hour are fceside o^jj purpose, but tiey throw a living light upor j^s<5ei£l causes which disappointed the earii^t^^^j^^gg"^ aK iaUan empire, and have hap^fc .. rdfarcGd, while they permitted, for so many centuries, -^he triumph of German absolutism beyond ttsAlpsTT" * See Paulua Diac. de Gestis Langob. lii. 17, 21, 22. •|" I have left these words as they were written long ago, if for no other reason, at least to show the uncertainty of all judgments con- cerning Italy and the Italians. The new and splendid future which 304 ITALY. The last days of Theodoric were haunted by fche appre- hension of conspiracy, and were passed in persecution. The Greek emperor Justin I. had proscribed Arianism in his dominions. Theodoric was not a bigoted Arian, but he felt this proscription as an indignity, and attempted to deprecate its severity by negotiation. Meeting with little success, he unhappily retaliated by a series of exe- cutions, in which fell the heads of the patriarch of Eome, of Symmachus, father-in-law of Boethius, and of the great Boethius himself. In the midst of still further prepa- rations for the suppression of treason and orthodoxy, he was cut off by dysentery in his seventy-third year. After his death, his kingdom became involved in anarchy; and fell for a short, — and for Italy a disastrous period, into the hands of Justinian, emperor of the East, the latter part of whose reign was visited by one of those transitory gleams of splen- dour which occasionally flash across the destiny of falling empires. As the traveller, gazing on the long summit of some Alpine chain, while yet visible by the light of declining day, is sometimes startled by the exceeding glory of purple, rose, and gold which clothes the tinted peaks, but ere he looks again, finds that the glory is departed, and the snow-clad line of crags has resumed its spectral, death-like grey; so the labours of Justinian and the Jurists, the great exploits of . Belisarius and Narses, shed a bright but evanescent splendour on the long, dull range of Byzantine annals ; a splendour which p2gf,i relapses into a dreary and moii('i;oi.ious r,ale of effete in- bLitutio'"'.- .■■• is""iS***S^''®^' corrupt courtier;-:, and wrangling sects. The liistory of th^/effeikig^^%«7<^- u-om the work of the Byzantine Procopius,fSeeiet:iry ot'"ii*=-iisafi' :'■ It will amply repay .perusal ; for it abounds in interct. ■i'; ' .rtails, in striking incidents, and records of great but alniosf '.r.-gotton niif tnr- tlie_who le Peninsula , must develop THE GEEEK INVASION. 805 men. Gibbon has largely availed himself of the " Bellum Gothicum," and, indeed, has done little more than abridge its minutely-written narrative. We can only mention the principal incidents in their order of . occurrence, that we may so be enabled to understand what follows. The operation of the causes which we have described as tending to the overthrow of the Ostrogoth kingdom were naturally more effective in a female reign. The accession of Amalasontha, daughter of the great Theodoric, and niece of the Merovingian Clovis, awakened a host of rivalries and ambitious aims amongst the Ostro- goth nobles. The court of Constantinople, by its emis- saries, sedulously fanned them into flame. Doubtless, also, the same object was pursued from Eorae ; at any rate, a frightful anarchy ensued, in which rapine and assassina- tion were rife. In the mean time, victory had dawned once more upon the imperial eagles. Belisarius, the general of Justinian, in a brilliant campaign, had just concluded the conquest of the African Vandals.* Amalasontha had jjerished by assassination ; a weak and timid monarch occupied the Gothic throne ; so that the time seemed ripe for the recovery of Italy, and the glorious mission was intrusted to a man worthy to have commanded the legions of Scipio or of Csesar. The prestige of his name enabled Belisarius to achieve his object with little serious opposition the disorganized Ostrogoths, and to enter .^kh^* ^ in triumph. But the unconquei^dHfpflwraW' '4^ '^^ Barbarian seemed to gqii||i«r, inflnp^.' ^SiiT cif'i i 'Jiices wbieb Blight Lave i»«* J 1 II? 28th June, A.D. 573. his own chamber. Kosamond herseli unbarred the door, the assassins rushed in with their weapons drawn ; but the redoubted hero of so many victorious fights sprang to his feet, and seized his sword. The traitress had glued it to the sheath. With nothing but a footstool, the undaunted victim made a desperate resistance ; but he was cut down at last, and Kosamond gazed with triumph at the bleeding corse. It was not given to Ler to exult long in the joys of vengeance. The Lombards seemed to submit, but were in reality ready to rise against the adultress at the first opportunity. She speedily became alarmed. Accompanied by her trusty Gepid guards, who had followed her from her father's halls, and loaded with the plundered treasures of the palace, she fled in company with her paramour to Ravenna. There, her beauty, or reputed wealth, attracted the Greek exarch. He made a proposal for her hand, to which she readily assented ; but Himilchis formed an insuperable obstacle, 314 ITALY. and of Himilchis, accordingly, they determined to ^t rid. False to her loveiv-as to lier husband, Eosamond jp-epared a potent poison, which she presented to him upon quitting the bath. The unfortunate man, before he had finished the draught, detected a flavour in the liquid, or an expression in the Queen's eyes, which experience perhaps had taught him to connect with deeds of treachery and blood. At the point of the dagger he forced her to finbh the potion, and both expired within a few hours. How n^uch of Italian history is foreshadowed in this dark tale of the poniard and the bowl ! How often has the fate of Alboin and Rosamond been reproduced in that land of passion and intrigue ! It was probably owing to the internal weakness and an- archy which these dire events foreboded or introduced, that the kingdom of the Lombards, despite their acknowledged valour, and the very considerable genius for legislation which their laws display, never attained to the same external development as that of Theodoric. It never, for instaijce, comprised Sicily within its limits, or, with perhaps one exception, the transalpine provinces ; nor could it lay claim to more than two-thirds of Italy. The extremity of the peninsula was indeed ruled by Lombard dukes ; but they asserted at a very early period their independence of the Court of Pavia. Gibbon includes within the circle of Lombard dominion the terra jwma of what was once the Venetian republic, the Tyrol, the Milanese, Piedmont, the coast of Genoa, Mantua, Parma, and Modena, and a large portion of the States of the Church. There were not, however, wanting external causes which assisted the action of domes- tic anarchy in checking the expansion of this formidable power. The Byzantines still retained ,the exarchate, and several cities on the coast. The little republic of Venice was safe among the Adriatic w:aves, and offered an excellent •pied h ierre for an aggressive force. The Frank battalions were incessantly surging over the Alps, and menacing the LOMBARD ANARCHY. 315 gafety of the capital itself. The ecclesiastical governor of Eome opposed the Lombard, whom he hated as an emis- sary of Satan, by intriguing with his enemies, and the exercise of that religious awe with which he so well knew how to impress barbarian minda. A haughty Lombard sovereign had spurred his steed into the sea which rolls between Europe and the opposite continent, and smiting with the renowned Lombard spear a pillar erected for the purpose amid its waves, had cried, " Behold the limits of Lombard power." But though the Calabfian coast was ruled by Lombard dukes, they soon discovered that the interverltion of the Roman territory placed them beyond the reach of a king who governed from a town of Northern Italy, and those turbulent vassals became the most trouble- some antagonists of their I&rds. Among the long array of " treasons, stratagems, and spoils " which Lombard annals display, there is little to delay us until we arrive at the fatal period when their confused and hostile relations with the Papal power, occasioned by the ambitious designs of the rival potentates upon the exarchate, brought the Franks over the Alps, and imposed the yoke of a master upon both parties in the person of a new emperor of the West. Alboin was succeeded by Clepho, or Clef, a man of fero- cious spirit, who ruled his subjects with a rod of iron. He soon became intolerable to a proud nobility, who deemed themselves the equals of their monarch in the field of battle, and not inferior in birth, or scarcely in social station at other times. His assassination was followed by a period of anarchy, in which six-and-thirty dukes did what was right in their own eyes, solely with a view to their several interests, and the people suffered frightfully in the feuds which occurred between them. But it soon became manifest, even to the rude political perceptions of Lombard dukes, quickened as they were by the dread of Byzantine intrigue and Frank intervention, that disunion was social death. After an SI 6 ITALY. ' i interval of ten terrible years, they admitted the claims of Autharjs, son of Clepho, who had been a minor at his father's death. In engaging to follow his banner to the war, they agreed to a surrender of half their existing revenue, for the purpose of furnishing a body of troops who should be at the king's disposal. In return for this impor- tant concession, their duchies were made independent and hereditary, subject to forfeiture only for felony, and reverti- ble to the crown when no male successor of full age should assert his glaim. Thus, about the year 584, was A.B. 584 . ti J inaugurated the feudal system in Southern Eu- rope, and historians point to this convention of Lombard chieftains as its origin and earliest type. But it should be remembered that the convention, itself was little else than a necessai'y_ consequence of ,the act of Alboin, when he effected the partition of Italy among his followers. And Alboin, in all probability, imitated the policy pursued by Longinus the Exarch, who, it may be remembered, had replaced Narses at Eavenna. To the destruction of that system of centralization which had hitherto given its great- ness to the metropolitan city, this man appointed governors for the several divisions of territory which appeared to him of sufficient importance to demand the presence of such an officer. In this arrangement no special favour was conferred upon the capital, and thus Eome, — ^which had already been politically eclipsed by Eavenna, — as soon as'the Lombard esta- blished his court at Pavia, was compelled to accept the third place among the cities of the Italian peninsula. But be 'this as it may, during the two hundred years of Lombard domina- tion in Italy, the most prominent features of feudalism were strikingly displayed. Few sovereigns escaped a violent death ; the powers of the crown were altogether incom- petent to curb the nobility, and the nobles, possessiag almost uncontrolled power in the " Placita Eegni," or great councils of the realm, first made the laws themselves, and then seve- ORIGIN OF FEUDALISM: AUTHAEIS. S17 tally administered them among their neighbours and de- pendents. No check, therefore, could be placed upon cruelty and exaction, upon their mutual internecine feuds, and their open resistance to the supreme authority. The greatest evil was the presence of the Franks, who had been provoked to retaliate the perpetual inroads made by the Lombard dukes upon Gaul. Alarmed by the danger their violence and anarchy had created, they sought its remedy in " the union, secrecy, and vigour-" of regal govern- ment.* Autharis may be excused for not foreseeing all the difficulties of his position ; he may be excused, if at the moment when, in all a monarch's pride, he saw so many stout Lombard spears around his throne, and heard the shout of allegiance from their warrior lords, he indulged in high dreams of the destiny of that race which Alboin had so often led to victory. That he did entertain some such hope, may perhaps be inferred from the fact, that he assumed the gentile name of the royal race of Oonstari- tine, as if, under the title of Flavius, he expected to rival the r6le of Theodoric, or revive the glories of the ancient empire. Nor was he personally unworthy of these exalted aims. He enlarged the dominions which he had received ; he baffled his Byzantine enemies ; he three several times rolled back the tide of Frank invasipn ; and maintained some degree of domestic order in the duchies. But his principal exploits were in the territory of the Church, which he swept withVfire and svrord, awakening that passionate hatred towards his race which finds vent in the language of Gregory the Great. In Septem- ber, A.D. 590, he died, after a brief but brilliant reign. The occasion was critical, for the Franks were in the land ; and, had not the invading army been consumed by pestilence, they would have proved on this occasion strong enough to remain there. Theodolinda, the youthful * Gibbon. 31S ITALY. widow of tlie deceased monarcL, was eminently beloved hy Lombard chiefs. Tbey agreed to accept as their king the man upon whom she should bestow her hand. Her choice fell upon a kinsman, Agilulf, duke of Turin. Freed from all apprehension on the part of the Franks, he turned upon the exarch, who had been audacious enough to become the assailant, and for the purpose of self-protection, had with- drawn the garrison from Home, over which he still exer- cised a semblance of authority in the name of the Greek emperor. This determined the direction of Agilulf's move- ments : he was soon at the gates of Eome. Then occurred one of the strangest events of this strange age. The Lom- bards were, as we have before said, Arians. Theodolinda:, a Bavarian by birth, had been brought up in the orthodox faith, and it had ever retained a strong hold upon her affections. Of this fact Gregory took advantage. He ad- dressed to the Lombard queen a series of letters, still preserved, which doubtless were well calculated to influence and overawe the barbarian mind, but which it requires a very large charity and a most favourable consideration of the circumstances to redeem from the charge of the wildest extravagance. They, however, had their effect upon Theo- dolinda, and perhaps aided her in converting her husband from the Arian heresy. Certain it is, that Agilulf soon professed himself a faithful son of the Church, restored the treasures which he had plundered, and reinstated the bishops whom he had deposed. The gratitude of Gregory was manifested in the gift of the far-famed iron crown, so called from an inserted circlet of the metal, fabricated, as it was said, from j;he nails of the true cross. After all the strange vicissitiides of its fortune, Austria still clings, as though with the tenacity of a dying grasp, to this memorable relic, the sign and symbol of Italian sovereignty. The stranger is surprised to see, that, like other crowns, it consists of gold and gems, and deems, perhaps, that the THE LOMBARD CODE. S19 traditional name reflects the iron domination ■wlucli is tile doom of that passionate and restless race. Despite of this gift, the language of Gregory towards the Lombards does not improve, nor do the relations bet-ween the two parties become more amicable and undisturbed. To him they are still " the most wicked of men ;" for them he is a hopeless obstacle to their ambition, a stumbliiig-block, and rock of political offence, Agilulf died, after regu- lating the affairs of his kingdom upon an orthodox model. It was also an orthodox king, Eotharis, who at a later period gave to the Lombards their first writteii code : his example was followed by many of his successors, who both modified and increased his laws. They deserve our most careful study, for, without acquaintance with them, it is impossible to form any just idea of the national character of the people, or the social condition of the age. What is true of the Lombards is, of course, true of the Goths, Bur- gundians, Franks, and all the Teuton races who overthrew the old world, and built up another in its place. But, except by the professed student of history, such a task cannot easily be performed. In a summary of this sort it cannot even be attempted ; but the reader may be benefited even by the information, that Dean Milman's great work upon Latin Christianity contains an admirable chapter upon the subject, well calculated to satisfy any ordinary require- ments. Arianism was finally extinguished by Grinwald, duke of Benevento, a bold and vigor- ous usurper, who drove the Franks back behind the Alps, and crushed the feeble efforts of the Greek emperor Con- Btans II. to regain his Italian patrimony. Stormy times fol- lowed : quarrels with the emperors; quarrels with the kings of the Franks J quarrels with the popes, and intestine quarrels, •worse than all the rest. In June, 712, commenced a reign remaricable for the character and ability of " ' the monarch, but still more remarkable for the series of S20 ITALY. events, " tlie beginning of the end," to wtich it gave birth. Luitprand, of Bavarian descent, ascended the throne, aspir- ing to the character of both legislator and conqueror. He fulfilled them both ; but his legislation came too late, and his conquests led to the dissolution of his kingdom. Still, he is highly extolled by Paul. Diaconus as " wise in council, a fearer of God, and friend of peace ;" merciful, chaste, temperate, brave ; no philosopher,- but the father of his people, and reformer of the laws."* To understand ,however, the true character of the trans- actions which, followed, it will be necessary to turn for a moment to the condition of the Christian Church in its temporal relations with the State. However great may have been the growth of its power and influence under Byzantine and Ostro goth ru le in Italy, it was not u ntil j'he establish- ment of a Lombard king dom^ from which it became dis- tinguished by strong lines of demarcation, that we ■ ■ ' can discern, in the oc cupants of the Roman see. the exercise, or perhaps the idea, of a really i ndependen t authority. This, however, very"Kipidly developed under the conduct of the able man vjho occupied the chair o f St. Pete r some thirty years after the establishment of the Lombard kingdom. Gregory, surnamed by a grateful posterity " the Great," was one of those men who stamp the impress of their character upon their own generation, and leave a trace of their actions through all time. He was one of those men so admirably described by Milman, who, " if not great in relation to the true intellectual, moral, and spiritual dignity of man, are yet great in relation to the state and necessi- ties of their age, engrossed by the powerful and dominant principles of their time, and bringing to the advancement of those principles surpassing energies of character, inflexible resolution, the full conviction of the wisdom, justice, and holiness of their cause, and in religious afiairs, of the direct * De Gestls Langobar. vi. 58, GREGORY THE GREAT. 321 and undeniable sanction of God." * This is an admirable portraiture of Gregory, of what he was, of his motives for what he did, and of the means by which he did it. Ascetic and fanatical, from his monkish antecedents, he swayed the imaginations of men, who, in those troubled times, were more than ever disposed to regard superior sanctity with awe ; lavish, even to profusion, in his self-denying charity, he conciliated their affections by the personal sacrifices which alleviated their wants ; able, eloquent, and politic, he do- minated over their intelligence by his superior genius for affairs. Never yielding a point, never abandoning a purpose, he subdued their wills by his iron resolution, and the on- ward, unswerving course of his ambition. Discerning the favourable conditions by which he was surrounded, he availed himself of them to the uttermost. To some extent he was aided in his dealing with foreign potentates by the prestige which surrounded the holy office since the days when Leo went forth in his pontifical robes to meet the barbarian invader. All the world, and especially all the Christian world, looked with wonder and reverence upon that unarmed hero before whose fearless front the terrible Alaric, and still more terrible Attila and Genseric, had re- coiled. Little marvel if, in that rude age, the imaginations of men succumbed before a power which had proved itself mightier than the sword, even when wielded by such awful hands. Gregory found occasion to imitate the example ot his predecessor ; but he united to the moral influence so ac- quired a more subtle and successful dominion over the princes whom he rebuked. The vague elements of a power which yfa.s of necessity unstable and ili-detined, beca use reposmg upoiT a moral rather than a material basis, he converted into a solid and consistenf"whoIeJ"u"poh whicii~Ee~impr essed a palpa Ele form. In his hands, truly says Hallam, all imperfect or disputed claims first assumed a positive shape. He took * Vol. i. p. 401. M 822 ITALY. care that tliey sliould never lose it in liis own lifetime ; nor have they lost it since. T he Papacy, as we know it, un - doubtedly springs from Gregory the- Grea t. Such was the man who inaugurated a policy whic h enabled the bishops of Rome to dispute with the Lombard kings the question of Italian supremftcyT But TelOTethisquestion could be settled, there was another which demanded solution. • Pew points of common interest existed between these rivals. The Lombard king chafed at the impediment offered by the Roman territory to the progress of his arms towards the South, and the chastisement of his rebel vassals at Spoleto and Beneventum. He showed his irritatioil j perhaps at- tempted to carry out his ambitious and aggressive designs, by frequent ravages' oftEeopen country and exjjeditions'to the very gates of Rome. The smoke of burning towns and villages, seen by priests and citizens from leaguered walls, inspired them with a bitter hatred of the Lombard name, which they did not hesitate to express with a vehemence" of language which sometimes startles the reader's calmness. In the correspondence and other ecclesiastical documents of the day, the Lombards are always " the children of perdit ion" and " t he most abominably wicked of human beings ;" yet there was one "existing fact" which affected the prospects and the feelings of both parties very much in the same way-^ the exarchate of Rav enna. So long as they could point to the presence of a third power in Italy , claiming a traditional . authority over both, they were equally anxious for its expul- sion. The Greek exarchs formed-a^standing obstacle to either the temporal or the spiritual domination of any other potentate in Italy, not merely from the ' fact tEaT'they maintained a court at Ravenna, but much more from the associations which such a viceroyalty contributed to keep alive. While the Byzantine Csesar retained a representative in the peninsula, the shadow of the Empire still projected itself into the West ; in an unreal and distorted shape it is true ; buf ICONOCLASM. 323 Buch shadows often affect the imagination more powerfully than a closer view of the substance itself. And therefore » stronger motive than the lust of territorial acquisition, although this motive was, doubtless, very powerfully called into action, induced Lombard sovereigns and Roman pon- tiffs to seize the first lavourable opportunity for shaking off th e incubus of imperial traditions and for eign rule. Yet it may be doubted whether the Eoman world would ever ha.ve endured to seethe Barbarian in possession of what the Greek had lost, or to have taken any steps which might lead to such a result, had not a revolution arisen in Constantinople, which for ever alienated the affections of the Western Church from- its sister of the East, and ultimately led to hopeless rupture between them. "* A man of barbarian birth, an Isaurian adventurer, had been raised to the imperial purple in one of those tumultuous revolutions which had now become so common in the disorganized empire of Constantino. Leo 'was a soldier, a tried and brave one, but he chose to become a theologian also, and, like most theologians reared in camps, he entertained strong notions on the subject of discipline and the necessity of implicit obedience to the commander-in- chief. The decoration of the Christian churches by paintings and images, originating in the uneradicated influences of heathen taste, and greatly promoted by the example of Helena, the mother of the first Christian emperor, had by this time been exaggerated into an abuse easily capable of producing most serjous evils. Leo was determined to crush - these evils before they acquired invincible strength. His^ motives it is not now easy to ascertain. Perhaps the growth of such a cult interfered with his political projects or some details- of his military system. Yet why, after all, may we not ascribe his conduct to its most obvious cause, a conscientious conviction, originating in the early asso- ciations of a faith which had been nurtured among rude 824 ITALY. regions and in a life of hardships, remote from the pomp and splendour of the metropolitan worship 1 But what- ever may have been the purity of his motives, his measures cannot escape the charge of injudicious haste. He A.D. 726. g,,j,jressed himself to the task with the prompti- tude of his profession. No allowance was made for existing interests ; no tenderness shown for tastes which, if mistaken, still could not have been the offspring of vice or malignity ; no account was taken of the hold possessed by a practice emi- nently adapted to human weakness, upon the affections of an impressible and fiery race. And, indeed, it would be incorrect to describe the attachment of the Italians to image-worship as a mere blind or sentimental devotion to a picturesque prac- tice, ratified by authority, and hallowed by increas^ length of time. It was much more than this ; for it had entered into the very heart of their religion, and had become the real exciting cause of perhaps the greater part of their religious emotions and acts. Sanctity attached to the actual material representation of the mother of God, an d to that of the saint or martyr whom the peasant, and persons much higher in social position than the peasant, adored in prayer ; and this sanc- tity in their fast-rooted instincts no philosophy might question, no symbolism dilute. With what feelings, then, must they have regarded the employment of physical force, the actual imposition of sacrilegious hands upon the holy thing ! Another circumstance added in no slight degree to the general horror : Islamism had by this time arisen in the East ; the Saracens were sweeping round and through the outlying provinces of the Byzantine empire ; their scaling-ladders were only hurled from the battlements of Constantinople by the skill and resolute valour 'of Leo himself, and showers of that formidable compound known to later ages as Greek fire. With the Saracen, therefore, in all men's minds, were associated ideas THE SARACENS. 826 of hatred and alarm ; for the Saracen proclaimed the mes- sage of his faith — the immateriality of the Godhead, not to be shadowed forth in symbol, sign, or image — with a most furious fanaticism, with devouring fire and steel. No relic of ancient art, or offering of later piety, escaped the devastating zeal of these sanguinary enthusiasts. The Koran forbids the imitation of any living thing by a material image. The gor- geous tracery of the Alhambra contains no pictured shape of beast or bird or fish, or " human face divine." We may easily, therefore, imagine the destruction wrought by their arms among the richly-decorated shrines of the Christian Church, and the repugnance excited by the half-naked zealots who traversed the world proclaiming the terrible alternative : " Believe or die — the Koran or the sword." When, then, the emissaries of Leo eiitered upon a not dissimilar course in the West, it is scarce surprising that the bitterest animo- sity should have been aroused, and their master assailed with the epithets of Atheist, Jew, Demon, and Mohammedan. An imperial edict had decreed the instant destruction of all pictures and images in Constantinople. The edict was angrily received, and blood was shed in the streets, in the churches, and beside the statues of the saints. Behind the spears of his barbarian body-guard, and among his degenerate Byzantine subjects, the emperor might safely venture on such a measure, but in Italy the popular mind was stirred to its profoundest depths. The exarch had received orders to carry out the edict by force in the Western provinces, and his emissaries addressed themselves to the task with the zeal of the soldiers of De Montfort Or the Ironsides of Cromwell. In every province, in every town, resistance was esteemed a sacred duty. Italy rose as a single man in defence of its beloved images : everywhere was tumult and insurrection. Even the children in the schools joined in the tumult, and, says Pope Gregory II., " mocked at the 326 .ITALY. heretic emperor, and would have thrown their slates at his head, had he ventured to appear within the doors."* The pope adroitly threw himself into the front of the battle, as champion of the national cause, and by his energetic op^ position contrived to satisfy at one and the same time the demands of orthodoxy, patriotism, spiritual ambition, and territorial aggrandisement. Lu itprand, w hen he ascended the Lombard throne, suc- ceeded to those relations with tlie .Koman p on- tiffs which^ despite the afleotionate interlude of the Iron Crown, never ripened into anything like political friendship. But now" that Rome was in open insurrection agains t the Iconoclast Leo, " tHe politic. Lombard deemed that he might calculate upon her non-interference with his ambitious designs upon the Exarchate. He accordingly advanced upon Eavenna. Kor was the Greek einperor in a condition to send any effectual assistance. The Bulgarians ■pressed him hard upon the northern frontier. These were the fiercest and most brutal of all the wild tribes who had poured from the Asiatic steppes across the boundaries of Europe, and for many years they afforded ample occu- pation to the imperial troops. But , east and south, in all the more distant provinces, seas, and islands, were gathering the legions of a still more formidable foe. The Saracens, as we have already said, had drawn a fiery girdle round their destined victims, the circumference of which was daily contracting, until it seemed that the strength of the Empire must collapse and wither in its embrace. It is not surprising, therefore, that fleets and armies were not forthcoming for the defence of a distant dependency, the fate of which could exercise no material influence upon that de- sperate battle for life or death in which the Byzantines were engaged. When Luitprand reached Eavenna, he found tile * Epist. Greg. II. ad Leonem, in Baroniug, vol. ix. LUITPRAND. 327 fcitizens prepared for defence. But no sooner had he pro- claimed himself champion of the images, than a large party- attached themselves to his cause, and he speedily became mas- ter of the town, and of the whole Pentapolis, or dis- trict of the "five cities." Gregory II. i s by some sup - posed to have encouraged the attempt. He seems at least to have viewed it for a time with complacency; but no sooner was i t-accomplished, than iie recurred to the t ra ditional distr nstof the Lombard name and policy. He looked abroad for aid, and discovered it in a quarter to which, from thenceforth for many centuries, the eyes of the world were directed. The dawn of Venetian glory emerges like a star from the dark- ness of the eighth century, when Orso, the first Doge or Duke, appears at the head of a fleet, as the powerful ally who recovered Ravenna for a Greek emperor and a Roman poutifE Yet the pmpernr aefima tn havfi shown but little gratitude for th& co-operation of Gregory , if thstt co-operation was sufficiently disinterested to deserve the name ; for we soon find the imperial and papal facti ons in internecin e feud t hroughout the .Fentapolis , and the politic Lombard professing profound reverence for, and united in allianc e with the pope. But fresh quarrels arise : the ally once more appears at the gates of the sacred city in the character- of a conqueror, and Gregory goes forth, like his predecessors, to appal a barbarian army by the awful presence of the Head of the Church. Lui tprand submitted, either fro m aw e or policy, prostrated himself before the pontiflTs ch air, and offered his crown at t he tomb of the ap ostle. Gregory IL died in ViJl. His successor bore the same name, and inherited the same policy. The com- plicated audunintelligb]£_rek|tw^ aaain renewed. But this time a new actor is introduced .ar. upon the scene, who speedily assumes the most important part in the great drama of Italian history. Affairs had .at last reached their crisis, the pope felt that Lombard do- 328 ITALY. mination no longer loomed in the distance ; it had beea retarded for a time, but was systematically advancing, even through, and by the very circumstances which had been devised to arrest its progress. Within a few years, a bar- barian kingdom would be once more established in Italy, as extensive as that of Theodoric, and far more fatal to the aspiration for temporal power and territorial dominion which had now assumed the character of a fixed idea in the mind of the spiritual head of the Church. If the Exarchate should be absorbed, and the rebel dukes of Southern Italy reduced to allegiance, it was seen that the court of Pavia would soon tower to the fuU proportions of Imperialism ; that the papacy would dwindle to the dimensions of a Lombard bishopric, and Rome itself be reduced to the position of a municipal town. The necessity, therefore, of succour from a foreign power had become imperative ; and there was but one arm in Europe which could wield the weapon of deliverance. A future lecture will be devoted to the gradual development of the Prankish power on the lower Ehine and in Gaul. We can only now refer to the fact, that just at this period its glories had culminated in the ever-memorable triumph • ' ' ■ won by Charles Ma rtel in the field of Tours, where he appeared as the champion of Christendom, against the Saracen invaders. All eyes were directed to the man who had saved society, and to his faithful Franks, who, unlike their barbarian brethren, had from the first adopted the orthodox belief. The pontiff believed that the hour had come, and with it the man — the victorious and formidable Prank. Th e Gallic Church, too, had attain ed a splendid prosperity, which even that of Italy could not rival. Its abbeys, monasteries, monuments, saints, martyrs, relics, bishops ; its sanctity, its enormous wealth, and the~Bril- liant abilities of its leadmg teachers, might well attract the eyes of the Romans in their struggle for the supremacy tOtE APPLIES TO CHARLES MARTEL. 326 of their own Church, and induce them to seek the a id of that sa me •warrior race be neath whose protection their Trans- ftlpine sister had learned to rest. It now seems agreed that some time before the dissolution o f the Byzantine power jn Ital y, in the days of Gregory II., secret negotiations had been begun for the sake of obtaining the aid of the Franks aga inst the Lombards ; but the policy, ~r tiie nece ssities, o f Gregory III, cast aside all concealment . With an " ex- ceeding bitter cry" he bemoans the desperate fortunes of^ the Churc h, and calls upon Charles Martel to c ross the Alps, and win for Christ's people another deliverance, as glorious and as needtul as the famous fight of Tourraine. Me probers to the l*'rank king the title of Roman Consul ; he tries to bribe him with filings from the chains^ of the apostle Peter and the keys of his tomb. The Barbarian hesitated. We may believe that he dimly descried in these magnificent offers the opening of that path by which his great descendant climbed to the height of more than Csesarean power. But the Lo mbards had crossed the Alps at h is call; had stood by his side and struck with him on the field of Tours, and elsewhere.* Something of gratitude was due for this. Nor was an internecine enmity with the strongest and most compact power of kindred race then existing in the European world to be lightly undertaken. He had a quarrel, too, on his hands with the Church of Gaul, arising from a somewhat arbitrary notion of his right to an ample sl^are in the property which his sword had saved ; and he was occupied with that spoliation which, , despite of his victory over the infi:del, and his vested rights in the keys of Peter's sepulchre and the filings of Peter's chains, has gained for him the curses of Catholic tradition, and exhibited him, in the immortal verse of the great Catholic poet, as writhing amid sulphurous flames in the * See Paulns Dlaoonus, de Gestis Langob. vi. BS, M 2 S30 ITALY. lowest abyss of hell.* Charles Martel, therefore, though very courteous and conciliatory, made no decided move- ment, marched no armies over the Alps in answer to this appeal. It is, however, certain that he accepted the title of " Patrician" from the Eoman governmen t ; and as this title had hitherto been borne by the officers of the Eastern emperor, it is not unreasonable to conjecture that there existed in his mind the germs of the policy which was so effectually developed by his successors. And now the moat prominent actors in this great drama pass away from the scene ; — Charlta Martel and Gregory both die in 741 ; three years after Luitpraud is no more; but Ihe relativfi pnaifinna nf tlifl A.D. 744. . . p arties remain the same. The Greek emperor, ever since the failure of his last attempt at invasion, and the destruction of his fleet by the Adriatic storms, has practically abandoned the Exarchate, and it lies in a defenceless state, ready to become the prey of the power which shall assume the first place in Italy. There is another Lombard monarch .on the throne, as eager for the prize as his predecessor, and far less capable of being restrained by spiritual terrors. There is another pope in Peter's chair, who calls as loudly as ever on the Franks ; and another Frank is leader of his race, who is bound to the pope by the strongest ties of gratitude for the extraordinary consecration which has constituted him a king, and dethroned the Merovingian family in favour of his own. Pepin le Bref has been raised by his rude warriors on the buckler at SoissonS, and, despite his treasonous deposition of the Merovingian line, has received the holy oil of anointing from * The story originated in the Visio S. Euoherii, auppoaed to be a forgery of Ahp. Hinomar, in which the saint beheld Charles Martel in the flames of hell. Unfortunately it has been proved that Eueherina died first. MEETING OF THE POPE AND PEPIN LE BEEF. 331 ■the hands of an arclibishop.* This mixed ceremony, half pagan, half Christian, is eminently characteristic of the era and the man. His brother and co-heir to the royal office, Carloman, eldest son of Charles Martel, is in the monastery of Monte Casino, -whither he has been followed by another discrowned king, — Eachis, the Lombard, whom Pope Zaoha- rias has persuaded to abandon the regal purple for the cowl. But he has done an evil thing for the interests of Rome. -The bold and ambitious Astolphus vaults into the vacant seat, and? Zacharias dies, leaving to his successor Stephen an adversary very different from the monarchs whom he himself had cajoled or overawed. Astol- phus is instantly on the way to Kavenna. He is in pos- session of it before an opposition can be organized ; and nothing now remains but the old expedient of embassies and entreaties, with mingled caresses and commands. They succeed for the moment ; but in four months' time, Astol- phus reappears as the exasperated and inexorable enemy of the pope : he menaces Rome with instant assault, if the citizens do not ransom their lives by a heavy poll-tax, levied on them man by man. But it was not for nothing that the Church had made the Carlovingians a race of kings, and compromised the sacred character of her authority by the solemn sanction of a usurper. Stephen took the bold resolution of passing the Alps, and appealing in person to Pepin le Bref. It affords a strange, but instructive picture of the times, -and of the sanctity which had gradually attached to the person of the Romish bishop, to find him traversing safely those very territories upon which he was about to let loose the most formidable army in Europe. The pope and Pepin met at Pontyon ; their conference was of the most edifying character. ±'renoh writers descpbe the prostrations and supplications of tl^e ecclesiastics clothed in sackcloth and sprinkled with ashes. The Italians are no * See Lecture VIII. 332 ITALY; less positive that the monarch kissed the ground before the pontiff's feet, and walked bareheaded beside his palfrey. But the result was satisfactory, however brought about, Pepin promised to cross the Alps, a nd instantly made l^reparations to do so. Astolphus attempted to avert the danger by a singular and, as it seems, a somewhat impolitic expedient. He induced Carloman to qxiit his monastic retreat at Monte Casino, an d sent him to plead the Lombard cause at the Frank court. The presence of one who had so lately shared, and might again rival his authority, was anything but pleasing to the proud and ambitious Pepin. The Lombard effected nothing- by his scheme j but his un- fortunate emissary was delivered over as an apostate monk ■ to the ecclesiastical authority, and was imprisoned in the cloister at Vienne, where he almost immediately died. M eanwhile Pepin and P ope Stephen collected and concen- tr ated their forces . The latter appears to have striven with some earnestness to avert a war which he believed would be of a most sanguinary character. More than once he tried the effect o f negotiation ; but Astolphus treated menaces and embassies with eq ual contempt. The event by no means justified his confidence. A change ^'^' appears to have com e over the Lombard character. Intes- tine sedition, and the enervating infiuence of a warmer climate, had deteriorated the rude energies of that race whom Tacitus distinguishes for valour and hardihood amid their Teutonic brethren, and who, two hundred years before, descended, under the banners of Alboin, like sons of the giants, upon the fair cities and fertile plains of Italy, de- termined to make them the booty of their bow and spear. But now they could offer no effectual resistance to men who brought with them from behind the mountains a fresher importation of the same old heroic blood. The Prankish battleaxe soon thundered at the gates o f Pavia. ani^ A atnU , JPk^s immediately gave way . He engaged, under solemn AUTOGRAPH LETTER OF ST. PETEE. S33 pledges, to restore to Rome all the places he had capt ured. The dr eaded Eranks retired as they had c ome ; but no sooner were they beyond the Alps, than the perfidious Lombard, calculating upon the difficulty of again re-organ- izmg among Barbarians an expedition which had just ter- minated without any splendid feat or prize of arms, be- lieving also that the impatient spirit of the Frank king woTild at last be wearied by the importunities of Stephen . an d trnating pe j -haps. in the main, to the chapter of acci- dents, refused to fulfil the conditions of the treaty, and, advancing to the very gates of Rome, threatened to take the town, by assault, if the sacred person .ofThe pontiff were not delivered i nto his hands. The consternation of Stephen may be imagined. The fear of personal indig- nity, if not of personal danger, q uickened his appre - hensi on for the fate of the patrimony of Peter, and in the most moving strain, not unmingled with spiritual menace, he implored by letter his beloved son, the k ing of t he Franks, to c ome with all all speed to the succour of the Chur ch, The zeal of the Frank was too cold or his movements too slow for so grave a crisis. It was necessary to quicken them, and the pope had recourse to a singular expedient, — nothing less than the old "Deus ex' machind" of heathen tragedy. An epistle from Petjr himself was despatched to the lingering Pepin. History does not say whether this notable letter was an autograph, or the work of an amanuensis; but those accustomed to the style of the Vatican would probably recognize the " fine Eoman hand" for which its missives are so remarkable. The Oarlovingian family owed too many obligations to the successors of i'eter, and Pepin was"to6^faithful and too politic a son of the Church, to neglect his apostolic correspondent. With immense rapidity, he appeared o nce more in Log ahardjzy. and, as on the former occasion, the Lombards showed them- selves utterly unab le to resist h jm, Astolphus w^s hot 334 ITALY. only compelled to suiTender his designs upon B orne, anj j to promise respect for the future to the Head of th e Christian Church, but he w^ s-ateo stripped of his recent acquisitions from the E m pire. These became the property of the Frank king by right of conquest. He did not hesitate as to their disposal. The Byzantine emperor put in a feeble claim for his undoubted rights by the mouth of an ambassador; but Pepin was a great deal too pious to listen to an earthly potentate wl ie5~Te"teF KimseirTiad "spoke ni For Peter's honour alone had he drawn the sword, and none but Peter should receive the spoil. Accordingly, he at once bestowed upon the pope, and the " Jloly Roman Rep ublic " — for so the docu ment r an — all the Pentapolis and the exarchate of Ravenna. The commissioners of the pope,ln the name of the republic, pas sed through the -whole territory, receiving th e allegiance of the inhabitants and the keys of the cities. To revive old traditions and to strengthen a new claim, it was deemed advisable to re-christen the district with the old imperial name. Henceforth it is known by the now worl d- fa mous nam e of Romag na. and this, with the March of An- cona, constituted the first real temporal sovereignty of th e Romanpontitt "s7^"ljater Eistonanyenlightenedby the course of events, have not failed to insist upon the immense impor- tance of the revolution effected by the celebrated " dotation of Pepin." Thus, says Milman,t "the successor as he was declared of the fisherman of the Galilean lake, the apostle of him whose kingdom is not of this world, became a tem;. poral sovereign." Ranke fixes definitively on the same period as the critical moment in the history of the papacy, and, con- * On the extent of the cession, see Gibbon, ch. xlv. He adds in a note : "The papal advocates may justly claim the valley or morasa of Commaohio as part of the exarchate ; but the ambition of including Modena, Eeggio, Parma, and Placpntia, has darkened a geographical question somewhat doubtful and obscure." t Vol. iv. p. 11. CESSION OF THE EXARCHATE : ITS EFFECTS. 335 sequently, as critical also in the history of all the countries with which it maintained relations ; or, in other words, in the early history of modern Europe.* " He causedjbhe keys of t he conqtiered towns to be placed on the altar.of St. Peter, nnil in t.hig nr-.h h e laid the found ati on of the whole tempor al p ower of the pop es." And Gibbon also, though perhaps^ this particular aspect of the question was not so immediately present to his mind, has clearly seen and stated, that the rp.niprnn al ohligji tions of th_e po pes and the dynasty of the Carlovingian kings, constitute the link between ancient and modern, between civil and ecclesias tical history. To iis who are enabled or compelled to contemplate the results of that spiritual imperialism inaugurated by G regory and completed by TTildebrand, this introduction of a p urely se cular element int o the constitution of the C hurch , appears an unqualified evil. The growth of mere worldly int erests, as implied in the exercise of a temporal dominion, in no respect distin-, guishable from the kingdoms of the world, might, a priori, _ have been judged incompatible with the chara cter ef_a , s ociety professing, as the kingdom of God, purely spiritual, interests . History has abundantly verified the truth of such a judgment, _and the change of Peter's patrimony from " farms and houses " into " cities and nro vinces." has natu- rally been regarded as the one great cause, humanly speak- ing, of all the corruptions in the doctrine and practice' of the Church of Eome, of the aiTogance and ambition exhibited by her soyereign pontiffs, and of her unwarrantable inter- ference in the political affairs of Europe. Even as we write, the matter assumes an importance which renders it perhaps the great question of the age, the question which involves the future religious relations of Christendom. Regarded by the light of subsequent experience, the dotation of the Ex- archate must be felt and described as an extraordinary evil, * Banke, Hist, of the Popes, ch. i, 2. '336 ITALY. a perennial fountain of future difficulties and woes ; yet we shall find those writers who have looked at the history of the Church from the most strictly Protestant stand-point, very generally ascribing to a providential arrangement the position and influence exercised by the see of Rome upon the western nations, as they were emerging from barbarism and gradually consolidating themselves into the existing types of civilized government. And there can be little doubt but that these authors are right. Th e Church not onlvr modifi ed the internal policy, but in a sreat measure directed * the external relations of these young national ities, partly by the influence of her teaching, and partly by offering a com- mon point of association, th rougE^wEiclTtbey miglit commu- nicate, and establish a sort of federative society. The dis- cordant elements of- barbarian life could never have been agglutinated into a common Christendom without the action of a central power, whose general interest coincided with the advancement of civilization and the preservation of peace. The profound genius of Leibnitz, it is well known, recog- nized the fact, and he went so far as to recommend that a sort of temporal jurisdiction over Christian princes should be accorded to the pope, for the purpose of securing these and similar objects. But it may well be doubted whether any such scheme as that sanctioned by the authority of Leibnitz, would have been suited to the era of Lombard domination and Carlovingian kings. A merely moral authority, resting upon no material support, would have been too shadowy and intangible a power to be respected, perhaps to be compre- hended, by a rude and violent age, living under the law of the sword. Had a power of the sort ever been bold enough to assert, it would assuredly never have been able to main- tain, such a supremacy as the occasion required. They, therefore, who admit the beneficial action of Eoman ecclesi- astical policy upon those troubled times, must also be pre- pared to admit that, without the dotation of Pepin, it could ACCESSION OF -CHARLEMAGNE. 337 not have acquired sufficient consistency and force for tlie effectual discharge of its mission. It is not for us to say whether the difficulties of the situation have passed away ■with the age, or whether the expedient of Villa-Franca — " a federation of the Italian nationalities, under the -presi- dency of his Holiness the Pope" — is a more hopeful scheme in the nineteenth century than it would have been in the eighth. The Greek emperor appears to have occasioned very little trouble to the new lord of the Eomagna. Indeed, the method by which the old traditional allegiance to the court of Con- stantinople was repudiated or transferred to the ruler of the Franks, and the exact period when its claims were finally aban- doned, is one of the most obscure questions connected with these important transactions. Eome certainly continued to Pepin, as to Charles Martel, the title of Patrician, which had- previously been borne by the envoys of the Empire. Monejy was coined in his name in Italy, and an oath of fidelity taken to him by clergy and people. From the time of the dotation, moreover, the popes no longer dated their bulls by the reigns of the Eastern emperors, yet Hallam, speaking .of this period, has observed,* " A good deal of obscurity rests over the internal government of Rome for nearly fifty years, but there is some reason to believe tli it the nominal sove- reignty of the Greek emperors was not entirely abrogated." It is not necessary to dwell upon a matter of no practical importance. A few writers have considered that it adds to the imperial glory of Charlemagne to believe that he succeeded the Byzantine Csesars as emperor of the West, and have for this purpose imagined a formal cession by Constantine Y. The pretended document was, doubtless, a forgery ; but from the day when Stephen vainly appealed to Constantine Copronymus for aid against Astolphus, the * Hallam, vol. i. p. H, 338 ITALY, star of Empire began to "glitbe^in the west," and to the west all eyes were turned, never more to revert to the shores of the Bosphorns. Pe pin died in 768. He had divided his dominions b etween his two sons, Charles and Carlom an. T o the forme r.' ■*" ■ the consentient voice of ages has assigned the name of " Great," and he is known to history as Charlemagne. There seems, however, reasonable cause to doulst whether thi^ be !in adaptation from the Latin Gmrolus magnus, or from the Teutonic Karl-mann, " strong-man." We must leave to the rival critics of France and Germany, a question so gravely affecting their respective nationalities. In a succeeding lec- ture, we shall have to regard this great man in his character as emperor of Europe and reviver of civilization. At present we have merely to speak of his relations to Italy. At his accession, the Lombard rule in Italy, though greatly enfeebled, had not as yet expired. Desiderius, duke of Tuscany, had been elevated to the throne of Pavia the year after the dotation, and he appears to have deserved the elevation. While Charlemagne had the rivalry of his brother or his brother's children to contend with, he was sensible of the advantages afforded by such an alliance. Por this purpose, apparently, he united himself in marriage with Desiderata, daughter of the Lombard king. At Eome, the political horizon was dark with the shadow of these events. The unioii of her protector with her ancient and hereditary foe, seemed to menace destruction to her newly-acquired dig- nities and her independence. But ere the pope had time to organize the means of defence, bysupplication o r intnguePEne dark hour had passed, and all peril from the Lombard spear was about to be dissipated for ever. Charlemagne had been relieved of all possible rivalry from his brother's children, and proceeded to dispose of his Lombard wife. The unhappy princess was repudiated by the Frank with circumstances of great indignity, for the purpose of marrying a royal lady DOTATION OF CHAELEMAGNE. 339 of Suabian descent, and returned upon her father's hands. Whether this was a determination to pick a quarrel, an act of passion, policy, or caprice, it was fraught with grave con- sequences for the world. Desiderius, in his anger, welcomed to Pavia the widow and children of the deceased Carloman, for the purpose, we may naturally suppose, of fostering the seeds of rebellion against the usurpation of his son-in-law. He had the insanity at the same time to quarrel with Home. Some years before, he had visited that city to deliver the pope from the trammels of a domestic sedition, and was accordingly for a brief period in good odour at the Seat of Sanctity, But now another pope, Hadrian I., of Boman origin, was sitting in Peter's seat. Desiderius, blinded by hatred to his son-in-law, pressed upon him the duty of anointing the children of Carloman to a throne which their uncle had disgraced by his crimes. Hadrian was a great deal too far-sighted to hesitate in a choice between the Lombard and the Frank : he declared for the latter. Desiderius fell furiously upon his territory with an army, sacked his cities, and came, like his predecessors, to settle his quarrel at the gates of the capital. Hadrian was a sol- dier as well as a priest. He strengthened his defences, barricaded his gates, and sent forthwith for Charlemagne, whom the Lombard supposed to be involved inextricably in a Saxon war. But the Frankish monarch was prepared for a contingency which he doubtless foresaw, and in all probability desired. He dispatched his ambassadors before him, but followed close upon their steps. His army appeared in two divisions, at the foot of the passes of Mont Cenis and the Great St. Bernard. The Lombards, under their king, made a gallant, and for the moment, a successful defence in the Alpine defiles. But the population was in general adverse to the conquering race in occupation, and favoured the invader. Desiderius was speedily shut up in Pavia. The town was strong, and had to be approached 340 ITALY. in regular form. Charles availed himself of the delay; to visit Rome. Like his father, he had received the hon- ourable title of Patrician, and in this capacity he might claim to be the civil head of the Eoman republic. He was received with almost extravagant demonstrations of joy and loyalty ; the whole population came forth to meet him beyond the walls. All the ceremonies formerly observed in honour of a visit from the emperor's representatives, were scrupiilously repeated. The crosses were carried to the gates ; the pontiff stood upon the steps of St. Peter's to . welcome his approach. Charles behaved with edifying piety, and exhibited the most profound respect for the sacred shrine of Peter and the person of his representative. What was of still greater importance, he ratified the donation of Pepin, and gave a solemn significance to the act, by placing the legal document upon the altar of the apostle. The document has unfortunately been lost, and it is not easy to recover or conjecture its exact terms. " It is said," writes Dean Milman, " to have comprehended the' whole of Italy, the exarchate of Eavenna, from Istria to the frontiers of Naples, including the island of Corsica. The nature of the papal tenure and authority is still more diffi- cult to define. Was it the absolute alienation of the whol e toTTipnra.l pn-yrer to the pope ? In what Consisted the sove- reignty still claimed and exercised by Charlemagne over the . whole of Italy, even over Eome itself?"* What an im- mense increase of interest attaches to these questions, even since they were penned by the accomplished historian of Latin Christianity. Meantime the course of events proceeded rapidfy in. the ' north. The Ppanks were everywhere irresistible aud tri- umphant. Despite of its defences, Pavia fell. Desiderius' retired into a monastery ; for, in that age, the cowl was thg * Hist. Lat. Christ,, vol. ii. p. 148. IPBRMANENT INFLTJeNCE of the LOMBAEt). 341 Common covering for discrowned and dishonoured browB. Adelcliis, his gallant son, fled to Constantinople, and re- appeared fitfully upon the scene, as commander of a Greek fleet in the Italian waters, and the originator of a vain conspiracy against the overwhelming power of the Frank. Charles assumed the title of "King of Lombardy," and passed beyond the Alps, to mingle in stormier, but not in more eventful scenes ; and the old heroic dynasty of the Lango-bardi, the boldest of the Teuton stock, after a domina- tion of two hundred years, was extLcguished, never more to rise again. But not so the memory of their race and name. Those magnificent plains, which stretch from the Alpine spurs to the banks of the Po, commencing in mountain- terraces bright with the verdure of the vine, watered by noble rivers breaking from the blue bosom of lovely lakes, which yearly attract the pilgrimage of the world, and sweep- ing far away towards the south in fields rich with the olive, the mulberry, and cereals of every class, may become the spoil of the Austrian, the French, or the Sardinian sword, but they beai-, and probably will for ever bear, the Lombard name. The Lombard genius for art has stamped an enduring re- cord of itself in ecclesiastical architecture ; yet it is perhaps for capabilities of another class, that the nation has most conspicuously merited the eulogium of an ancient poet.* The shop of the patient worker, who, in troubled times, moulded the precious metals into fabrics of ornament or use, naturally became the depository of these metals themselves ; and thus the ingenious Lombard artificer in gold and silver developed by degrees into the mediseval banker. In the greatest city of the world, the " Street of the Lombard " debouches upon that magnificent edifice where the wealthiest * GninteruB, Beoretary to the emperor Frederic I., thus describes the Lombards : — " Gens astuta, sagax, prudens, industria, solera, Provida oonsilio, legum jurisque perita," 312 ITALY. people of modern times have enshrined their national trea- sure, and recalls by its name, by its sitnation, and by the splendid establishments which it contains, the Lombard genius for commerce, and our own obligation to it as the organizer of a system which alone has rendered possible those vast monetary operations that cover the whole globe with a network of human interests and obligations. But it is not only the wealthier son of traffic who preserves a remembrance of the Lombard. The poor man knows him too ; and the three balls of gold, the symbols of a useful, though abused institution, connect the memory of an heroic and victorious race, with the humble associations of the peasant and the artisan. But we must hasten on to the closing scene of the century, a scene which may well be described 'as closing also the first epoch of post-Christian history. On three different occasions, Charlemagne sub- sequently visited Italy. The first was for the baptism of his son, another Pepin, for whom he destined a title dear to the ambition of French rulers, — " the king of Italy." Again he was summoned to suppress a Lombard co nspiracy, hea ded by the powerful duke ot Jjenevento, and s upported by Byzantine intrigue ; and again the fa ithful s on of the Church unsheathe d his sword in her behalf. But it was unnecessary to strike. The Lombard, dared not encounter that terrible weapon, and was glad to obtain peace by an annual tribute of 7,000 pieces of gold. Upon his death, which almost imniediately followed, Charlemagne appointed Grimwald, his son, to succeed his father at Bene-. vento. It is a curious proof of the growth of . Prankish influence, and the gradually increasing'' prestige associated with the name, that we find Grimwald abandoning his national customs and costume, and adopting the usages of the Franks, Charlemagne was recalled from Italy by a revolt iu his German provinces, and by an invasion CORONATION OF CHARLEMAGNE. 313 •of the Huns. For more than ten years the Saxon and the Saracen found ample employment for his arms; but in the niean time Hadrian I., the great and ''^'^' ' able pontiff who had administered the destinies of Rome beneath Frank auspices, was called to his account. The next election fell upon Leo III. It was for him a perilous elevation ; for the nephews of the late pope, instigated by personal ambition, organized against him a plot, which they carried out with more than Italian ferocit y. The time of a solemn procession was chosen for e xecuting their schem e. Assailed by armed men, the head of the C hur ch of Christen - dom was hurled from his horse, cruelly beaten, mutilated, an.^_Bg arly deprived of sight. The occasion was worthy ot th e august interference of Charlem agne. He»appeared at Rome, not only to avenge, bu t to git in judgment upo n th e life and actions of th e pope. Leo, by a public decla - rat ion, which was so arranged as to assume a voluntary ' a ppeyance, established his own innocence, confounde d his accusers, and secured the favour of Charlemagne. And now an eventful moment was at hand. It was the festival of our Lord's Nativity, the Christmas-day of the eight hundredth year after the birth at Bethlehem. The pope, the dignitaries of thet Church and the Holy Eepublic, the populace of Eome, the great Frank himself, with his gorgeous court and glittering- array of " Paladins and peers," thronged the magnificent edifice which had arisen over the mortal remains of the Galilean fisherman. Th e grandeur of the occasion and the s olemnities of the mass had wrought up the audience to th e' highest pitch of religious exaltati on, when the p ope, amid . the profoundsilence of that vast assemblage, adyancei to Charlemagne, and placed upon his brow a crown of gold, hailing him, at the same time, as Csesar Aug ustus, Emperor of the W est ! " God grant life and yictory to the great and pacific, emperor." The thunder of a thousand voices ratified 344 ITALY. an act wliick announced to Europe th at a new era had arisen in her history ! The star of empire, which had long glittered in the western horizon, towered upward to its zenith, and a new Order of things was born into the world. The coronation of Charlemagne proclaimed, with unmi s- taka ble significance, that the old traditions of Cesarean empire and universal dominion were at last revived ,, but revived in a way which gave assurance to the world that in their ancient form they could never again return. It pro-. cl aimed that Rome had broken for ever with Byzantium , t hjit the city of Eomulus and Peter h ad shaken herself free fro m the city of Constantine. and that the pFantom oF empire, which, amid an entourage of women, eunuchs, and slaves, still dared to mutter the old magic words, once all- powerful over the minds of men, was now at last to leara that the spell was broken, the sceptre departed, and the kingdom divided among the heroic races" of the West. But it also proclaimed, that the seat of empire was henceforth not to be sought beside the Tiber, or within the charmed precincts of historic Italy ; but beyond the Alps, beyond the Ehine, among regions and uationalities which Home hM never known. And yet the ceremonial contained a presage which might have consoled the Eoman,-as he gazed upon the skirts of that departing glory. It shadowed forth the growth of a new power, impalpable and indefinite, yet for that very reason more mighty than its p redecessor, — a power which should one day set its foot upon the necks of Kaisers and of Kings, and gather once more the nations of the earth within the walls of Rome, as to the capital of the world. How much of all this was foreseen by the actors in that memora- ble pageant 1 how much of it designed, or even understood ? Di d Leo act from gratitude o r policy; with a dim prescience of the fature, or under a blind impulse, originating and ter- minating in the present 1 Was Charlemagne sincere when he declared that, had he known the pope's purpose, he voald WEEEITS RESULTS FORESEEN! 845 never have set foot witliin the church 1 or did he, with deep and far-seeing policy, desire the mysterious prestige~of con- secr ation bv Peter' s succe ssor in Peter's sea t 1 Had he any real idea of its possible influence upon the destiny of his successors, any prophetic vision of the gigantic claims which boundless ambition and boundless spiritual pride would one day justify by this eventful precedent 1 When he accepted the homage of the grateful and compliant Leo, could he have . imagined that, ere the dawning century had passed away, men would assume his functions and sit in his apostolic _ chair, whom the future historian might truly describe as " imperiously dictating to sovereigns, ruling, or attempting to rule, the higher clergy in foreign countries with a des- potic sway, mingling in the political revolutions of Europe,- awarding crowns and adjudging kingly inheritances " 1 Or , did Leo, on his part, anticipate the intimate relations be- tween the spiiitual rulers of Rome and the Csesars of bar- barian blood, to which this recognition of their great progenitor was hereafter to give rise ? Could he have believed that foreign princes from beyond the Alps, a Henry" or an Otho, would dominate in the sanctuary of Peter over the Vicar of Christ and the Head of the Christian ' Church t Nay, stranger still, could he have dreamed that ' " the aspiring blood of Italy would sink into the ground,'' and the great oflice of the Church itself woyld soar to its" most towering height, and assume its most colossal propor- tions in the hands of pontiffs of an alien name and race ?- Who can answer these questions 1 Who can arrange the/ historical phenomena - of that strangely agitated age in definite plans of policy, or draw them out into one con- sistent scheme, intelligible in its motives, its developments, and its results ? Or who can describe, with anything like accuracy and truth, the real character of the rapidly- alternating relations between the temporal and spiritual powers which followed upon this memorable meeting of 346 ITALY. Eoman pontiff and Teutonic king 1 It would be as easy to arrest the fantastic cloud-shapes in the summer sky, or the fleeting shadows on the mountain's side, and arrange them in the definite forms of geometrical science. At any rate, the attempt, if it be practicable, must be left to the professed historian. For a time, the history of Italy, as^ of nil otbpy European kingdoms, centres in Charlemagrj ie. We must turn, after a brief but necessary digression, to the for- tunes of the race, dynasty, and country with which he is more immediately connected. LECTURE TIL THE SLAVES-=^T^E VANDALS. Afetoa loquitur : — " Venio para tertia mnndi; Tnfelix felice uuo, famula satus olim, Hie prsedo et dominis extinotis, barbara dudum Soeptra tenet tellure meaj penitusque fngata Kobilitate furens, quod non estj non amat hospes. O, Latii Bopite vigor ! tua mcenia ridet Insidiis cessisse suis j non ooncutis bastam ? Non pro me vel capta doles ! tua nempe putantur Snrgere fata malis, et celsior esse ruina." SiDON. Apoll., Pan. Maj. v. 5i — 62. Synopsis. — The Slaves ; tbeir origin and connection with the Goths, Huns, and Avars. — ^Revolt under Samo. — Wars with the Franks ; their final di3tribution.---The Vandais : whether Slaves or Teutons ? — Their movements until settled in Pannonia; join the great invasion of Gaul, A.D. 406 ; pass over into Spain ; receive a grant of lands from Honorius : their prosperity. — The Goths are "sent by the emperor to eject them; they maintain their ground, and become nearly masters of Spain. — Their migration into Africa ; the reasons for it. — Genseric king ; his history and character. — War in the Roman province. — Genseric makes himself mas- ter of Oarthagg. — ^Account of the City ; its wealth, luxury, and crime. — ■Continued war with the Western empire. — Picture of a Vandal foray. — Capture of Rome by Genseric ; great moral effect of it. — Genseric defeats the invasion of Majorian ; supports Olybrius as a candidate for the Empire ; destroys the great Byzantine armada ; dies : provisions as to his successor. — Hunerie king. — Strife between Catholics and Arians. — Guhdamund and TrasE^mnnd. — Quarrel with the Ostrogoths of' Italy. — Hilderic, grandson of Genseric, king ; deposed by Gelimer. — Dispute with Justinian ; he determines to invadp Africa.' — Belisanus appointed to the command. — Skilfiil conduct of the expedition. — ^Carthage taken. — Gelimer in flight pursued by John the Armenian ; death of the latter. — Gelimer captured aiter a long siege ; brought in triumph to Constanti- nople. — Utter dispersion of the Vandals. Hitherto we have dwelt upon tlie fortunes of tlie Tura- nian and Teutonic tribes who dashed up against the Boman 348 The slaves. empire, and by the force of that impact precipitated its fall. To the Teutonic peoples we shall presently recur. This would, however, seem the proper place — ^if our plan is to be sym- metrically arranged — for saying what the subject requires concerning the third great primary family of the human race — the Slaves. Could we agree with those writers who believe that to this belong the two Vandal tribes, we should be enabled to flatter ourselves that, in these lectures, the just literary proportions between the different divisipns of the subject had been rigorously maintained, and the Slaves, like the Turanians, would have the advantage of a separate chapter devoted to themselves. For those who still retain this opinion, our work will possess the merit of superior symmetry. "We ourselves can only regard the once favourite hypothesis of the Slavonian origin of the Vandals, as indicating the place where the few and uninteresting remarks, which the ancestors of the former demand from us, may be most appropriately introduced. To the Slavic races, it is said, — perhaps in some quarters it is believed, — belongs the Future of the world. The historian who declines the prophetic office, can only venture to declare that they have not possessed its Past. During the period of which we write, — from the fall of the Osesars to the death of Charlemagne, — they neither established themselves per- manently in any part of the old Roman empire like the Van- dals, nor, like the Huns, created a rival empire of their own. It has not, therefore, been found necessary to treat of them in a distinct lecture. Their national characteristics, their rela- tions with the Avars and the Franks, the settlement of some of their tribes in the modern Servia and Croatia, have already been briefly mentioned. What, therefore, we are concerned to know of them may be very briefly recapitulated. Their first settlement in Europe is referred to the immemorial period when Central Asia poured the fathers of the human race upon the Western world. Apparently less vigorous, TiUiilK tHAnijX iSJlilTJUiMJiJNXS. 349 enterprising, and brave than the cognate races of Celt and Teuton, they everywhere gave way before the im- pact of these later comers, and closed again like a fluid after the passage of a solid body. The Goths — the strongest and most active of the great Teutonic family — first displaced them in their own passage to the South, and exercised dominion over such of their scattered tribes as came within reach of the wide-spread empire of Ermanaric. But the Goths, we have seen, were themselves displaced by the Huns, and forced for a time to submit to the horsemen of Attila. The Slaves easily accustomed themselves to new servitude under a Turanian instead of a Teutonic empire, and followed the banner of the Scourge of God almost to the walls of Rome, and the great battle of the nations at ChMons. When the battle of N^tad broke up the Hunnic empire and dissolved the dynasty of Attila, the Slaves, in the wild confusion which followed, regained such precarious independence as they had formerly enjoyed. But it was an independence which placed them at the mercy of the first comer with arms in his hands. Por nearly a hundred years, we hear very little of them. Then they are discovered in the train of the Bulgarians, one of the wildest and most brutal hordes that ever broke in upon the empire of the East. The particular inroad in which the Slaves participated was signalized by the last triumph of the veteran Belisarius, whose military glory shot upwards with a broader and a brighter flame as it was on the point of expiring for ever. In the graphic account which Gibbon has given of this remarkable combat, the fighting seems to have been nearly confined to the Bul- garians. The Slaves, however, shared in all the consequen- ces of the defeat, and relapsed into their original obscurity, until we hear of their submission to the Avars when the latter entered Europe, as detailed in the fourth lecture. 350 ■ THE SLAVES. Their miserable condition under Avar thraldom, and their successful revolt, headed by Samo the Fratjk, have teen described in the same place. The empire which he established was more coherent and powerful than its antecedents would have induced us to suppose. Feeling its way towards, the West, it came into collision with the Franks ; or, more probably, the Merovingian monarchs, in- spired by jealousy of its rising power, gladly availed them- selves of an opportunity to assail it. Some Frank merchants travelling for the sake of commerce in the Slavic territory, were robbed of their goods, and killed ;-r no unusual event, it may be imagined, in those wild countries and wild times. It was, however, enough to form the basis of a respectable quarrel, and Dagobert, king of the Franks, availed himself of it without delay. He dispatched an ambassador to Samo at once. SSmo, with a cunnina which he seems to have borrowed from his adopted peojple, long baffled the envoy's attempts to obtain an audience. But this man was as great a master of the strange state- craft of the times as Samo himself, and ultimately effected his purpose by a singular ruse. Having disguised himself and his attendants in the Slavic dress, he penetrated into the royal presence, and at once began to pour forth the tale of his wrongs, and his demands for redress. He went so far as to allege that Samo, and by- consequence his subjects, owed allegiance to tlie Frank monarch as their master. Samo answered calmly, that his territory should be considered as Dagobert's property, and his people subjects of the Frank .crown, if only Dagobert would remain at peace. This very humble answer had no effect upon the foregone conclusion. The ambassador was probably instructed to provoke war, at any cost. " There can be no alliance," he savagely said, " between a Christian people, the servants of the true God, and dogs like you." " If," replied Samo, " ye are the servants of God and we are "WAR UNDEK SAMO AGAINST THE FKANKS. 351 his dogs, so long as ye act against his will, we have per- mission to rend you." In the war which followed, Dagobert, though aided by the Lombards and Alemanni, did not obtain any signal success. The Slaves maintained their independence for the time, and the divided state of his own kingdom compelled Dagobert to relinquish his angry or ambitious designs against them. But they were without the genius for go- vernment or empire. When Samo died, no native-born leader arose to consolidate their scattered tribes and give them a national life. We have already noticed the settle- ment of some of them, Croats and Serbs, in Moesia and Dalmatia, which occurred about this time. It was a success; but again they owed it to a fo- reigner, — Heraclius, the Greek emperor. Their own con- federation hung very loosely together, and seems to have accepted, without any important resistance, their ancient position of dependence upon their neighbours. Some of them fell under the dominion of the Lombard kings, who were anxious to strengthen themselves upon the Adriatic. The Czekhs of Bohemia, the most important offshoot of the race, eventually became tributaries of Charlemagne. Many Slavic tribes on the borders of the Baltic rose to some con- sideration, from their commerce and extensive marts at Arkona, in Eugen, Kiel, and Novgorod. They long con- tinued pagans. _ Indeed, the conversion of their southern brethren in Moravia, and Bohemia was the work of a later period than that of which we treat. It was not until fifty years after the death of Charlemagne, that the Greek emperor, Michael I., dispatched two men of piety, learning, and a thoroughly missionary spirit, — Cyril, whose real name was Constantino, and Methodius, — into these wild districts, for the purpose of reclaiming the inhabitants from heathen- ism. These men performed the same office for the Slavic language and literature which TJlphilas did for the Gothic 352 THE VANDALS. German. By a translation of the Scriptures, they formally constructed, if they did not altogether found, the ■*■■''■ ■ existing Slavonian dialect. These were, however, events of a period subsequent to that which we have fixed for our present goal. They find mention here only, lest it should appear that we had altogether forgotten the destinies of one among the three great barbaric races which came into collision with the Koman empire during its decline and fall. What may be their future destiny it is no part of our task to determine. Where they have risen to importance, strange to say, it has been under an alien dynasty. In Mecklenburg alone, a Slavic family has retained its place among the royal families of Europe. The descendants of Pribislas, who became a Christian in the twelfth century, were made dukes by Charles IV., in 1348 ; and though the duchy has been divided, their children's children are dukes even now. Having dismissed the Slaves, we turn to the history of a race once considered to have been the most remarkable scion of the Slavic stock — the Vandals. It has been found de- sirable to anticipate, to a certain extent, the course of events in relating the history of the Huns, for the sake of treating that subject consecutively as a whole. And in the case of the Huns this course was justifiable; because the empire, which they established, though vast in its extent, was brief in its duration, entirely independent of local ties, and unconnected with later local associations. The other bar- barian nationalities took root in European countries, which have been the birthplace of other dynasties,' more or less connected with their immigration. Thus the Ostrogoths and Lombards belong to Italy and the history of Italy ; the Angles and Saxons to Britain ; the Burgundians, the Visi- goths, and the Eranks, to Gaul ; the Sueves, the Alani, and the Visigoths to Spain. One other race, however, estab- lished themselves beyond the limits in which is comprised TEUTONS NOT SLAVES. 363 the States-system of modern Europe — the Vandali, or Vandals. Though they passed through Gaul, and settled for a brief time in Spain, we shall not be justified in re- garding them under any other aspect than the conquerors and occupants of Roman Africa. This was the scene of their extraordinary military successes, their short-lived do- minion, their sudden and disgraceful fall. It seems, there- fore, desirable, in their case, as well as in that of the Huns, to give a brief and independent account of what we are concerned to know regarding them, before we enter upon the special histories of France and Spain. Gibbon declares that a striking resemblance, in manners, complexion, religion, and language, indicates that the Goths and Vandals were originally one great people ; and he cites the testimony of Pliny and Procopius in support of this belief* According to this theory, therefore, the Vandals are of the Teutonic stock. Other learned men have en- deavoured to identify them with the Wendesj and the Wendes, as we have seen, according to the authority of Jornandes and others, were meiiibers of the Slavic race. The question has been examined, with great learning and ingenuity, by M. L. Marcus, Professor at the College of Dijon, in a work upon Vandal history. His conclusion, drawn from a comparison of what Tacitus, Pliny, Procopius, and Jornandes have left us upon the subject, is favourable to the hypothesis of Gibbon. Between the Wendes and the Vindili of Pliny, who were undoubtedly Vandals, ho considers that no nearer point of union can be found than that of the Asiatic origin common to all nations of Slavic and Teutonic blood.t He accounts for the fact that some confusion upon the subject subsists in ancient writers, by the supposition that the Slaves, after the great migration of Goths and Vandals to the South, occupied the locality they had abandoned on the coasts of the Baltic, and became inheritors * Hist. Nat iv. U ; Bell. Vand. i. 1. + See Lecture III. N 354 THE VANDALS. of the name, as well as of the land, of their predeces- sors. Hence they were commonly, though incorrectly, called Vindili, or Vandals. An etymology for the word Vandal, more ingenious than true, has found favour in the eyes of some modern writers. They pretend that the German verh wanddn, ' to wander,' was selected as the national appel- lative, from the nomad and erratic habits of the race ; and this hypothesis is confirmed, they declare, by the " wander- ings" of the Vandals in Gaul, Spain, and Africa. This is a somewhat ex post facto method of reasoning ; and we might well inquire, with the old Pythagorean poet, Ti'f iror' iivojiaaiv wi' iq to wav irriTvliuic * * * wpovoiaiUL rov Trtirpuiiikvov yXdaaav tv rv^c^ V£[ib}V ; . But the hypothesis is singularly at variance with the real facts of the case. Among all the German tribes, the Van- dals are precisely those who .earliest applied themselves to the pursuits of agriculture and commeree. We are told by Olympiodorus,* that the Goths were compelled to purchase wheat for subsistence from their Vandal brethren; and in the peace made with Aurelian, a.d, 271, they stipulated for the right of traffic with all the Danubian towns ; a pri- vilege very rai-ely accorded by the emperors to any barbarian people. Salvian, indeed^ who regarded the Vandals with much partiality, and has largely eulogized them at the ex- pense of the degenerate Eomaus, holds language which is inconsistent with the belief that they were naturally inclined or adapted for warlike pursuits.! The earliest locality of the tribe, so far as authentic history can trace them, seems to have been the district between the Vistula and the Elbe. Here they were found by the Lango- bardi in their migration towards the South. A conflict * Apud Pliotium. See MoiitesqUieu, De la Grandeur et D4e. deS I^omaiDS, ch. 19 — 21. t De Gubernatione Dei. „.„„„,.„.,„. 855 ensued between the two, which terminated in the triumph of the invaders, and their establishment on the banks of the Elbe, where they were in all probability found by the Ro- mans in their famous expedition under Tiberius. In the time of Pliny, we have that writer's testi- ^'°' mony to the fact that the Vandals were still to be found between the two rivers. But during the next two centuries their unwarlike habits must have tended ^'^' to diminish their importance among their fierce and active neighbours, of whom the Goths were the most formidable, and probably the most aggressive. Tacitus, at any rate, in his tractate upon the Germans, merely notices them by name, without devoting to them any of " " the attention which he has bestowed upon other eventually less-distinguished tribes. Another half-century finds them in a strong position among the mountains which form the northern frontier of Bohemia. It is certain that they took part in the great Marcomannic war. This war was occasioned by an event very similar to that which we have already recorded in the fourth lecture, as precipitating the Germanic tribes on the Empire. The passage of the Don by the Alani was a foretaste, on a smaller scale, of what happened when the same river was crossed by the Hunnish hordes ; and the war itself derives its importance from the fact, that it was, perhaps, the first example of those leagues or federations, among nations of barbarian blood,- which gradually gathered strength until they became ,more than a match even for the colossal mili- tary power of the Csesars. In the general movement of the German populations at this period, we find the Vandals in combination with the Marcomanni, the Sarmates, and the Quadi, all of whom were defeated by Marcus Aurelius in Pannonia. The defeat, though ^^' ' severe, was not decisive j for, eight years afterwards, they again united themselves with some Sarmatian tribes, as S66 tTHE VAltDALS. the iazyges, and others of Teutonic extraction, in at attack upon the Empire. They succeeded in conciliating the respect, if not the favour, of Rome ; for in the treaty made by Commodus, the son of Marcus Aurelius, with the Marcomanni, the Vandals are one of the tribes secured from the hostility of those persevering enemies of the Roman empire. At this time, Ptolemy in- forms us that the Vandals occupied the districts lying around tlie sources of the Elbe ; and all other investiga- tion confirms the statement. They were the neighbours of the Marcomanni ; and their relations, notwithstanding the former feud, became so intimate as to occasion alarm at Eome, which had by this time begun to understand the serious peril involved in these barbaric leagues. It was not, however, till the reign of Aurelian that the danger was developed. Then a general, systematic, and violent attack was made by all the tribes who dwelt along the Danube against the great power which held its southern bank. The Alemanni, the Mar- comanni, and the Vandals, menaced Noricum and Ehsetia. The Goths were prepared to precipitate themselves upon Pannonia. Aurelian was successful enough to impose a peace upon his adversaries ; and in the account given of this peace, we find that the two Vandal monarchs visited the Roman camp with the intention of depositing their children as hostages. The fact deserves notice ; because it shows us that the twofold form of the Vandal monarchy was of early date, and that the subsequent partition of the tribe in the Spanish peninsula into Vandals proper and Vandali Silingi, was a natural result of the national institutions, and analogous to the division of their great rivals and contem- poraries into Eastern and Western Goths, a division asserted by Jornandes to be as ancient as the existence of the people themselves.* Not more than seven years elapsed before we * De Eeb. Get. § 14. Oi!il-lljJilV4.JiJ.Ni' im rAiM>UJNlA. 367 find the Vandals again engaged with Probus, the successor of Aurelian. The Eoman enticed the choleric barbarians across the Danube, and, taking them at a disadvantage, slew- many in the field : the remainder he made prisoners ; and the deportation of at least a portion of these captives into the most distant locality of his empire — the neigh- bourhood of the modern town of Cambridge — . ' ' '* afibrded to the splenetic Byron the opportunity of a small sneer against his own university : — - " Learning's boast and its disgrace. The dark asylum of a Vandal race," It is the opinion of those who have traced with care the scattered notices to be found of the Vandal movements, that by this time they had quitted the Eiesen-gebirge, and were posted near the banks of the Danube; a supposition which seems to be supported by the provisions made in their treaties with Home for the privilege of trading with the towns situated upon that river. It is unimportant to deter- mine the exact period when they established themselves in the districts lying between the Theiss, the Maroxh, and the Danube j all that we know for certain is, that, after a san- guinary and stubborn contest with the Goths, they were ejected from their seats, and compelled to take refuge in Pannonia. This was, however, the closing scene of a war, or rather, of a series of wars, concerning which a contemporary Roman rhetorician wrote, in language well worthy of being recorded, because it shows how thoroughly alive, by this time, the Empire had become with respect to the peril to be apprehended from the barbarians, and how thoroughly it understood, even though it only imperfectly practised, the policy of producing dissension among them. " How prosperous is thy reign, O Maximiau ! Everywhere the barbarians are rending each other ; they furiously cut each other's throats on the field of battle ; they double the eifect of their defeats by the snares in which they involve one 358 THE VANDALS. another. One might suppose it was their intention to exhibit to the world a repetition of thy expeditions into Sarmatia, Rhsetia, and the country beyond the Rhine, so terribly do they rage against each other in their wrath i Praise be to Jupiter ! Praise be to propitious Hercules i. You have at last succeeded in carrying civil war into the borders of these nations ; you have banished it from the territories of this empire into those of vour ene- A.D. 292. .,,„„, . '■ . ;. mies. '" Had we m our possession a history of these centuries composed by German annalists, we should find that this destructive war changed in many important respects the relations of the German tribes, and materially affected their destiny. It fixed the Burgundians in Fran- conia and on the banks of the Main, the Gepidse in Silesia, and the Vandals in the district which we have described, until, that is to say, the period of their expulsion by the Goths. We have in a previous lecture recorded briefly the scries of events by which the Gothic nation, foiled in its unsuccessful wars with ."Rome and the Sarmatian tribes, was induced to direct its restless ambition and formidable military strength against i.ie Vandals. In accordance with a custom which indicates something of the chivalric spirit, the growth among the same races of later days, both parties, as the Gimbri and Teutones proposed to Marius, determined a time and place in which to combat for victory and dominion. The Goths slew Vicimer, tlie Vandal king, and routed his countrymen. Humbled and despairing, the defeated Vandals ' applied to Home for admission within her frontiers, and Constantino, counting on their animosity towards the Goths, and expecting to find in the suppliants a useful auxiliary against such a formidable enemy, per- mitted them to settle in Pannonia. Thev re- A D 337 . mained there for seventy years, exhibiting the greatest aptitude for commerce and the arts of peace. * Mamertinus, Paneg. ii. 16.- -* UUiN ViSKlJliU -iU UilKiiSTlAJNirY. 369 During this period, the nation furnished several of the most able men, who distinguished themselves in the service of the Empire. It is only necessary to mention Sfcilicho, who, in 395 A.D., espoused Serena, niece of the emperor Theodo- . sius the Great. To his valour as a soldier, and extraordi- nary skiU as a leader, Home, as we have seen, more than once owed her existence. It was he who beat and bafiBed Alaric and his Goths, thereby justifying the policy which had united the Vandals to the standard of the Empire. In Pannonia, too, the Vandals were converted to Christianity. The earliest converts, most probably, as in the similar case of the Goths, were attached to the orthodox faith. But the process of Christianizing a whole nation of Pagans had not, it is most likely, proceeded far when Constantino died, in the spring of 337 a.d. The personal example of the occu- pants of the throne, and the entire influence of the imperial government, were then thrown into the opposite scale ; and it is therefore but little surprising that Arianism should have prospered and taken deep root among races of unoontrover- sial warriors, such as were the Vandals and the Goths. How far the teaching and example of Ulphilas, the Gothic bishop, may have contributed to the result among a cognate people, speaking the same language as his own, it is now impossible to decide, or even to conjecture. But it is certain that when, in the year 406 a.d., the Vandals passed from Panno- nia into Gaul, they all professed the Arian form of Christianity. On the last day of this year, the Vandals, in combination with the Alani, and perhaps the Sueves, crossed the Rhine, on that memorable expedition into Gaul, to which reference has already more than once been made. St. Jerome associates with these three peoples the Quadi, Sarmatians, Heruli, Gepidse, and Saxons. Very probably many members of these warlike tribes accompanied the standard of the confederates. It seems to have been a well-understood and well-organized adventure, a "Hourra" of 360 THE \rANDALS. barbarism upon the undefended riches of the Gallic province; and, as stich, it attracted bold spirits wherever they were to be found. Eadagasius, Alaric, Alboin, all can5e with a similar following, in search of a similar prize. The Vandals passed the river between Mayence and Cologne. Bat already had the Franks marked oUt Gaul as a possession for themselves. They would not, therefore, deliver it up to the invaders without a struggle, and fought a bloody battle in its defence, wherein, says Gregory of Tours, they would have annihilated the Vandals, had not the Alani come opportunely to the rescue. No mention is made of the Suevi in this passage ; and there is other authority for believing that they entered Gaul much further to the south, by the passes of the Alps. It is impossible here to enter upon all the other considerations which render it probable that Gibbon is mistaken in his positive assertion concerning the combined movement of these three Germanic nations, and in the belief which has generally been accepted, on his authority, that they formed part of the army with which Eadagasius intended to make himself master of Italy. It is very improbable that, at a time when barbarian leaders of great military skill were to be found on all sides, these numerous nations should have put themselves beneath the guidance of an Incapable like Eadagasius ; it is very improbable that three hundred thousand men could have been collected by any single chief for a single military expedition ; it is, once more, very im- probable that, had they been so combined, any force to be found in Italy could have resisted them. And it is some- what strange that an hypothesis of the kind should have been thought necessary to account for a movement which occurred at a time when the tribes upon the boundaries of the Empire were perpetually casting themselves upon her territory, and combining against her power. Perhaps the story may have had some connection with the absurd calumny against Stilicho, that, namely, these Alani, Sueves, and Van- PASS THE EHINE INTO GAtJL. 861 dais, were induced, by his treachery, to enter Gaul, while he was meditating the transference of the imperial purple to his own son. Whether this he the case or not, Procopius,* in asserting .that the Vandals and Alani were expelled from Pannonia by famine, most probably gives us a hint of the true causes which prompted their migration. Ever since the advent of the Huns, the Gothic and Eoman armies had been traversing the country and exhausting its resources. The unfcfftnnate inhabitants doubtless adopted the resolution of abandoning, as soon as a fit opportunity should occur, a locality which it was useless, perhaps impossible, to retain. This opportunity was furnished by the onslaught of Eada- gasius upon Italy, and the withdralWal of the Gaulish gar- risons for its defence. Gaul, therefore, became defenceless. The gallant attempt of the Franks to stay the progress of the invaders was made in vain. Sooner or later, the triple federation became a fact ; the Germans united their arms, and poured across the fronti^r.^ Orosius, though adhering to the story about Stilicho, briefly and accurately describes the result : — " In the mean time, the tribes of the Alani, Suevi/ and Yandals, arid many others with them, called into action by Stilicho, trample down the Franks, effect the passage of the Rhine, invade the Gallic provinces, and ad- vance in an unbroken course to the foot of the Pyrenees. Repulsed for the moment by this great barrier, they scatter themselves among the surrounding provinces." + Perhaps no greater period of suffering has ever visited any country, than that which the Celtic inheritors of Roman wealth, luxury, and refinement, were now called upon to endure. In after- time, every church and monastery in the land, by its com- memorative services, long perpetuated the memory of those who were slaughtered and tortured by these fierce Teutons, either in the search for concealed treasures, or under the inspiration of a relentless proselytism in favour of Arian * Bel). Vand. i. 3. t Oros. vii. 38. N 2 , 362 THE VANDALS. doctrines or pagan rites. St. Jerome has left us a picture of their progress. " Mayence," says he, " that once famous town, -was taken by assault and pillaged. Several thousand persons were massacred in the church. Worms, after a long siege, was captured and destroyed. Rheims, that powerful city, Amiens, Arras, St. Omer, Tournay, Spires, and Stras- burg, became German towns. In Aquitaine, in the Lyon- naise, in the province of Narbonne, everything was ravaged except some places still assailed by the sword of the enemy from without and by famine from within."* Salviau, too, has given us, in the work to which we have already referred, a similar account. " They spread themselves first of all over Germania Prima, that is to say, through the territories of Mayence, Worms, Spires, and Strasburg. When these countries were reduced to ruin, the conflagration extended to Belgium, or the districts lying between the Rhine, the Maine, the Seine, and the ocean ; next, it reached opulent Aquitaine, and finally, the whole of Gaul."t The devasta- tion was cruel and complete. Whole populations were exterminated or led into captivity. Neither sex, nor age, nor holy office, were spared the degrading torments in- flicted upon the vilest of the rabble. Cities and churches were giVen to the flames, while the wretched inhabitants, laden with their own property as booty for their victors, were pricked on with lances, in order that they might keep pace with the war-horses and waggons of the invading host. "Not the ocean itself," bitterly complains the Christian poet, "when it has burst in upon us with an inundation, is wont to. ieave so terrible a ruin. They have borne away our flocks, our fruits, our corn ; they have cut down our olives and our vines ; they have destroyed our country dwellings by fire or water : the little which remains to us is a desert and a desolation." if * Epist. ad Ageruchiam, de Monogamia. t De Guber, Dei, lib. viii t Hymnus de Provid., ascribed to St, Prosper of Aquitaine. PASS THE PYRENEES INTO SPAIN. 363 It is the main difficulty of a complicated subject like that with -which these lectures deal, to avoid unprofitable repe- titions. The evil cannot be entirely avoided, and even partial success can only be acquired by a coup d'ceil of the whole topic, which implies an exactness of knowledge not very easily attainable. We can merely attempt what seems the most intelligible arrangement of the facts, and in pursuance of this object, will leave to the lecture upon Spanish History the involved relations, imperial and provincial, the confused struggles between Constantino, Constantius, Astolphus, Gerontius, Honorius, and others, during which the Vandals obtained a footing in the Peninsula. The Marcomanni, to whom, as auxiliary troops of Constantino, the passes of the Pyrenees had been confided, are generally believed to have invited their countrymen into Spain, in disgust at their weary and unprofitable watch on those inhospitable peaks. The Teutons, in a triple league, Sueves, Alani, and Vandals, plunsred into those dangerous defiles, on the 29th i: <= ° ' ■ A.D. 409. of October, a.d. 409, and emerged on the southern side, bent upon renewing the rapine which had devastated Gaul. How well they succeeded will be told elsewhere. The portion of Spain which, in its general partition, fell to the share of the two Vandal tribes, will be described in the same place. In the year 411 or 412 a.d., the emperor Honorius ratified this -partition, and the Vandals seemed to hold a large part of Spain under the sanction of the Empire. That the concession, however, was wrung only from the emperor's weakness, was made mani- fest by the treacherous reservation which accompanied it. According to Eoman law, a prescription of thirty years constituted a full right to possession. Honorius published an edict, expressly providing that no such' prescription should apply to the tenure of the Spanish provinces by the Vandals and other German invaders.* It was obviously • Procop., Bell, Vand. i, 3, , 864 THE VANDALS, t his intention to resume one day, by force, what he had lost by feebleness. So far as Rome -was concerned, that day never arrived. Por the moment, prosperity produced an excellent effect upon the Vandal character. They resumed the pastoral and agricultural life which they had begun in Pannonia, and with increased energy and success; for the bright skies of Andalusia were a welcome exchange from the cold and mist which then distinguished the German climate. Abundant harvests covered the plains ; the hilla were once more white with those flocks, whose breed had long produced a wool famous throughout the ancient world. The inhabitants shared largely in the general amelioration. From the great senatorial proprietors of land, the Vandals practically took little more than the numerous districts which had long been lying uncultivated from want of an arm to guide the plough. The luckless municipal Decurions were allowed to live in peace, and no longer hunted over sea and land, if they , absconded, from utter inability to make up the defalcations in the enormous imposts levied by the imperial treasury. The land wore a universal aspect of prosperity, the people one of content. " They treat the Romans who remain there so kindly," said Orosius, "that there are found those who prefer freedom with poverty among the barbarians, to a life i-endered wretched by taxation (tributariam solicitudinem) among their own countrymen."* And Salvian, with an affectation of epigrammatic point, declares, "They prefer, to live as free men under the guise of captivity, rather than as captives under the guise of freedom." t The imperial court could not tolerate good government within the possible cognizance of its subjects. It determined to destroy the Vandal dominion in Spain, and, unfortunately, it succeeded. It brought the Goths, the ancient rivals of the Vandal race, over the Pyrenees, expecting b^ this master-stroke of policy • * Orosius, vii. il. f De Gub. Dei, v. THE STEU6GLB WITH THE GOTHS. S65 to reap the benefit of their mutual hostility. The Goths were to annihilate their enemy ; but it was calculated, that in the struggle their own strength would waste away. "We shall hereafter, in treating of the Visigoth settlement in Spain, find it necessary to recur to this subject. At present, we are merely concerned with the fact, that in the war prosecuted by Wallia, king of the Goths, against the confederation which possessed the ^'^' ^^^~"*^8' peninsula, he entirely annihilated, it is said, the "Silingi Vandals," and so roughly handled the Alani, that hence- forth we find them incorporated with the " Vandals proper," whose leader bore the name of King of the two Nations. So far the intrigue concocted upon the Palatine had succeeded. But the progress of events opened the eyes of the Gothic king; he perceived how little it would further his own ambitious projects to subdue Spain for an imperial master, and his proximity to the coasts of the Mediterranean re- vived in his mind a project which, since the time of Alaric's unsuccessful attempt upon Sicily, had probably never been entirely absent from the thoughts of his countrymen. He de- termined to pass over into Africa, the richest province of the Koman empire, and the one which ofiered the best oppor- tunities for the establishment of an independent kingdom. His fleet, like that of Alaric, was unfortunate : it perished before his eyes in the Straits of Gibraltar. Probably, he would have renewed the attempt ; but the court of Rome had now caught the alarm. Africa was the granary of the capital ; fatal indeed would be the result, if it fell into the hands of the Goths. The emperor hastened to buy ofi' Wallia by a grant of land in Gaul, which was, as we shall see in a future lecture, the real foundation of the Visigoth kingdom on both sides of the Pyrenees. The whole of Spain was now left in the hands of the three original tribes, or rather, the remains of these tribes enfeebled by 366 THE VANDALS. ■warfare and demoralized by the cruel policy of Rome. The hand of the Goth had fallen most heavily upon the Alani and the Silingi Vandals ; how far the Yandals proper were involved in the war, or whether they took part in it at all, has not been recorded, and cannot now be known. It is certain that they emerged from those evil days more scath- less than their brethren, and, consequently, henceforward assumed the leading place. United to the Alani and the wreck of the Silingi, — for it is unreasonable to suppose that the latter were utterly destroyed, — they now became a com- paratively powerful body. None were left, save the Sueves, to dispute with them the sovereignty of Spain. But the Sueves, upon crossing the Pyrenees, had established them- selves in the north and north-western part of the penin- sula. Their position was strong, and they seem to have disputed with the Vandals the possession of the whole peninsula. According to Gregory of Tours, the two armies met, and were preparing for conflict, when the Suevic king proposed to decide the question by the chivalric expedient of a single combat. The proposal was accepted ; the Vandal champion was successful, and all Gallicia submitted to Vandal rule. According to another account, the ■ ' ' battle was prevented by the appearance of a Ro- man force sent to succour the Sueves, which excited the suspicion of both the belligerents. Each story may be true. Rome, at any rate, made one great and final effort for the recovery of her favourite province., Gaul and Italy were exhausted to produce an armament which should recall the earlier magnificence and vigour of the imperial rule. Cas- tinus was placed at its head. He passed the Pyrenees, and apparently carried all before him. The Vandals were driven into Andalusia, and inclosed within a narrow space, where they were unable to provision their army. Surrender was talked of ; we may imagine with the intent of produciF.g a UOMIJNAJNT IN SPAIN. 367 delusive security in the assailants; for suddenly the Vandals turned upon the Romans, and inflicted upon them a signal and bloody defeat. Twenty thousand men were left dead upon the field of battle, and Castinus never ceased his flight until he reached the gates of Tarra- gona. The Roman writers ascribe their misfortune to the defection of some Gothic auxiliaries. That these Goths did eventually unite with the Vandals is certain, for they joined them in Africa. But is it probable that they should have chosen for the time of their defection the moment when the fortunes which they sought to share were in so desperate a condition ? And now it might seem that Spain was entirely delivered into the hands of the Vandal. For a time, indeed, it was so. He traversed the whole country, burning, pillaging, destroying, and, above all, persecuting the clergy and people, who would not accept the Arian form of faith. It seems as if the abominable policy pursued by Rome had entirely changed the nature of the race, or rather, revived and exaggerated its more odious features. For the two years which followed the defeat of Castinus, " Vandalism," in all senses of the word, was dominant throughout the whole of Spain, on the opposite Mauritanian coasts, in the Balearic Isles, in Corsica itself. That this state of things passed away ; that the devouring torrent changed its course, and ceased to menace the kingdoms of Europe and the interests of Catholic Christianity, is to be ascribed to the genius and policy, though not to the goodwill, of one man — Genseric, king of the Vandals, the worthy rival of Alaric and Attila in that sanguinary renown which so nearly approaches to infamy. We have the man's portrait, it is true, from the writers of the party whom he humbled and cruelly ill-used ; but, after all allowance for exaggerated colouring, the picture - is dark indeed. He was, we hear, a more frightful barbarian S68 THE VANDAlS. than any who had as yet arisen among the foes of E,ome. Lame and hideous in aspect, of slow speech, but of iron will, inconceivable duplicity, and boundless ambition, he had ifever been known to listen to the voice of justice or of mercy ; he had never recoiled from any act of perfidy or blood which he believed his interests to demand. He is admitted to have been temperate in his personal habits, but utterly incapable of controlling himself when roused to anger. His perspicacity saw to the bottom of everything ; he never missed an opportunity ; he carried out a project in less time than others spent in meditating upon it j — of all men who ever lived, he was the most adroit in sowing the seeds of animosity and dissension among others.* Such was the leader who now directed the destinv of A.D. 428. , . , ■^ his people. It was not until the year 428 A.D., that Genserie actually succeeded his elder brother Gunderic on the throne, of whom it is confidently asserted that he rid himself by foul play.t But there is every reason to suppose that, for many years previous, Genserie was the real governor of the nation. It was he who, according to Jornandes, struck the severest blows against the Eoman power in Spain, long before he passed into Africa. J " Of the two sons of Godigisehus, Gunderic," says Procopius, " the legitimate son, was inca- pable ; but Genserie, the bastard, was trained up in arms, in the use of which he surpassed all men upon the earth."§ To him, therefore, we may safely ascribe the conquest^ rapine, and persecution which followed the defeat of Castinui But when he had overrun Spain, he was perspicacious enough to perceive the difficulty of retaining it. He could not count upon the allegiance of the inhabitants of the province, who had never forgotten the old imperial traditions, and were more than haH-romanized in their feelings and habits ■ * Jornandeg, de Reb. Get. c. 33. t Procopius, Bell. Vand. i. 3. J Ibid. § Ibid. GENSEEIC KING. 869 he could not count upon a continuance of the treachery of the Goths, by which he had so largely profited during or after the defeat of Castinus ; but he could count upon the certain rivalry and opposition of the "Visigoth power, now rising up beyond the Pyrenees, backed by all the aid which the Roman court might be able to furnish in the way of secret treachery or open force. On the other hand, across the narrow straits lay wealthy and fertile Africa, — more rich as a prize, more defensible as a military position, more favourable in respect of its social state for his ambitious enterprise. Undeterred, therefore, by the failures of Alaric and Wallia, to Africa he turned his eyes. Africa was un- approachable, save by sea ; but the Empire of the Decadence was especially weak in its marine. To these inducements Professor Marcus, in his excellent work before alluded to, adds two others, which must have had a powerful effect, — " the hostility of the Moors to the Eoman power, and that of the sectaries and religious refugees to the Catholic Church. The Moors had never accepted the domination of the Romans in Africa. A race of rude herdsmen, igno- rant of the use of letters, of unknown origin,* and habi- tuated to the freedom of the desert, they felt profound iri-itation at the neighbourhood of a power which brought the constrainls of civilization and settled government into contact with their nomad life. This irritation had been increased by the recent destruction of the temple of the goddess Cselestis ; " under whose invoca- tion," says M. Marcus, "-the Moors, two centuries later, thrice chased from Africa the nation which had just destroyed the Persian empire, and wrested from the Greeks the most beautiful provinces of Asia." Again : the sands of the desert and the caverns of the Atlas were now filled with men as bitter enemies to the religion of Rome, as were the Mauritanians to her rule. Africa had been converted into * GibboD, ch. xli. 370 THE VANDALS. an asylum for sectaries of every sort ; Circumcellions, Donatists, Priscillians, Pelagians, Manicliseans, and a hun- dred other heretical bodies, expelled from the great centres of Christian action and authority, dreamed throughout their monotonous exile of no other object than vengeance against the dominant dogmas of Constantinople and of Rome. No other country, therefore, in the Empire proffered to the astute monarch of the Yandals so fitting a field either for proselytism or feats of arms. And, finally, there was a personal motive which induced Genseric to prefer a new empire beyond the sea to the hereditary seat of Vandal dominion in Europe : — he was an illegitimate son ; the 'widow and the ten sons of Gunderic were still living, and might at any moment assert their right. This right it would be easy for the conqueror of. Africa, and the founder of a new dynasty, to resist in a distant land, where the partisans of the deposed family would naturally exercise less weight. These reasons are, I think, sufficient to solve that somewhat interesting historical problem why Genseric, at the hour of his triumph, and in the plenitude of his power, abandoned the' country which had witnessed this triumph, and where this power seemed on the point of con- solidation, to risk his fortunes in another land. The asser- tion of the Goth Jornandes, that it was the sword of his countrymen which drove the Vandals across the strait,* though in his usual style of national self-exaltation, is in contradiction to ascertained facts, and, unworthy of the slightest credit. As Genseric stood on the coast of the Mediterranean, with his eyes fixe4 upon its southern shore, meditating, no doubt, the means of effecting a more successful transit than his Gothic predecessor, one of those wonderful coincidences which men call Chance, placed in his hands the exact object of his desires. Owing to an intrigue, in the imperial court, * Jornandes, de Eeb. Get. §§ 32, 33. v^xw^oo V V xjxv ±x^ ±\j iirxtujii, 371 which has been recorded in its proper place,* Boniface, count of Africa, who had been invested with this important office by Honorius, invited the aid of the Yandal king, and pro- mised him vessels for the transport of his troops. He promised, it is said, a third of Africa to each of the Vandal princes, intending to retain the remaining third for him- self.t In the early spring of 429 a.d., the whole Vandal nation — warriors, women, children, and serfs — were gathered to the Strait of Gibraltar. After sub- tracting the women, the whole number is said to have reached 80,000. But this is probably an exaggeration, or the fighting-men were disproportionately few ; for during their subsequent exploits, the Vandal army does not seem to have exceeded 30,000 combatants. We cannot suppose that the whole population at once attached themselves to Genseric ; indeed, there is evidence to show that many re- mained for a time in Spain ; nor, again, is there any doubt but that warriors of various other Teutonic tribes were attracted to the Vandal standard by the reputation of the leader and the magnitude of the prize which he proposed to their cupidity. Partly in the vessels of Boniface, and partly in those which the inhabitants of the country were only too glad to furnish, this mixed multitude crossed the strait. Genseric returned for a moment to cut to pieces a Suevio army which was ravaging the country in his rear, but immediately rejoined his fleet. The storm burst at last upon this Africa which had so long enjoyed an immunity from the evils that were afflicting Europe. Of all the Teutonic tribes, the Vandals had won for themselves the most terrible name. Their coming was the signal for utter consternation and headlong flight. The distant oases of the desert, the gorges and caverns of the Atlas, were crowded with fugitives forced from the luxurious homes of a civilized * Lecture V. p. 249. f The account of Procopius, Bell Vand. i. 3. 372 THE VANDALS. and prosperous people. The Vandals more ttan justified their ill-omened reputation : they burnt the vUlages before them; put men, women, and children to the sword; destroyed the growing crops and agricultural implements, and even cut down the trees. To their native ferocity was added vengeance for their wrongs in Spain, and a furious fana- ticism, fanned into still fiercer flames by the Donatist sec- taries and other unrelenting enemies of the Catholic party. The Moors, too, exultingly seized the occasion to indulge their unquenchable -hatred against civilization and Eome. They swelled the ranks of the invaders, or secured a path- way for their advance by that renowned cavalry which still swoops like the eagle upon its prey, and, like the eagle, dis- appears in a moment from the sight. In the mean time, Boniface had been undeceived : he found that the empress Placidia was still his affectionate and confiding mistress, and that his new ally was a formidable and unscrupulous foe. In vain did he attempt negotiation. The Vandal listened for a moment, then suddenly assailed him in the field. He was speedily besieged in Hippona, a Kumidian town. The German barbarians, Uke all others, were little skilled in siege operations, and are said to have borrowed a horrible expedient from the Moors for reducing the place. All the prisoners, and all the cattle upon which they could lay hands, were slaughtered, and cast into the moat before the walls, in order that their corrupting carcasses might taint the air, and compel, by pestilence, that submission which they could not obtain by arms. The town, however, held out till the autumn of the following year ; and in the mean time succours arrived both from Rome and Constantinople, and with them Aspar, the ablest officer of the Eastern empire. The result was a pitched battle, in which the Vandals were victorious. Aspar returned to the Byzantine court ; Boniface was re- called by his mistress to oppose the rising influence of MAKE PEACE WITH VALENTINIAN. 373 Aetius, and to perish," though victorious, in the disastrous combat of Eavenna. Before quitting Africa, he made peace with Genserio, who, now, as ever, — calm, subtle, and treacherous, — saw in this suspension of hostilities, not only the opportunity to consolidate his conquests and recruit his strength, but also the prospect of an ^'^' internecine conflict in Italy between the two most powerful and skilful soldiers of the "West. By the terms of this peace, Genseric obtained the three Mauritani and istricts, a part of the old Eoman province, much less fertile than Eastern Africa. The relations of the two parties must have been in a very unsettled state ; probably, Genseric was encroaching upon the richer and more valuable territory j for in the year 435 a fresh peace, or ratification of the previous one, was contracted between the Vandal king and the Count Trigetius, envoy of the Eoman court. We know little of the events which imme- diately followed. Valentinian had made peace, and assigned certain territories to the Vandals ; but Valentinian, like Ho- norius, had also taken care to inform his Eoman subjects that the usual thirty years' prescription was not applicable to this grant,* — a .measure which can only have been meant to keep alive the hope of deliverance from a barbarous master and a foreign yoke. Genseric probably became aware of the reservation, and understood it. There is not the slightest reason for supposing that he meant to observe his own pro- mises, or that he ever intended to stop short of the plunder of Carthage, and perhaps of Eome. But the duplicity of his enemies deprives their outcry against barbarian faithlessness of its force. The wrath of the Vandal king first broke forth against the Catholic clergy. He attempted to enforce Arian- ism upon all, and expelled those who refused obe- dience from their benefices and sees. Some writers ascribe this violent access of Arian zeal to the injudicious * Cod. Theodos. Nov. Valent. ; quoted by Marcus, iii. 2, notes. 374 THE VANDALS. attempts at proselytism made by the orthodox, and the bitter controversial language with which their writings were at this period filled. To a certain extent it may be so; but it is beyond doubt that, ever since the attempt of Castinus in Spain, a revengefal hostility to the Catholics, and a fixed resolve to substitute the Arian faith for the Confession of Nice, had taken possession of the Vandal mind. These per- secutions were, or should have been, a warning to Eome and Catholic Christendom ; — a sombre presage of the storm about to burst with such fatal fury upon their coasts. Yet they seem to have been lulled into an inconceivable apathy; for on the 19th of October, 439, the world was thunderstruck by the ominous tidings that Genseric, without warning, without any declaration of hostilities, had made himself master of the magnificent city of Carthage, the rival of Rome and the queen of Africa. Since the days when Marius sat among her grass-grown ruins, an immense revolution had taken place in her appearance and her fortunes. When Constantinople became the seat of the Eastern empire, Carthage supplied Rome with the means of subsistence. She had outgrown even Alexandria in wealth, external splendour, and population, and became the seat of ar power of sufficient prestige and material resources to threaten the capital itself. Here, in the year 413, a governor of Africa had fitted out a fleet of seven hundred ships of war, for the purpose of de- throning Honorius ;* 'and here, after the sack of Eome by Alaric, had gone many of the most powerful families of the Roman patriciate to enjoy that luxury which the Alps and the Adriatic had been unable to protect. But let us hear the language of a contemporary. "Where," says Salvian, "can we find treasures which surpass those of the Africans 1 Where shall we see commerce more flourishing, or store- houses more full 1 The prophet Ezekiel said to Tyre, 'Thou * It is this expedition which is connected with the plot of Professor Kingaley's novel of Hypatia. GENSEI^IC SEIZES ON CARTHAGE. 375 art filled with silver and gold because of thy merchandise;' and I say, that her commerce so enriched Africa, that not only were her treasure-houses filled themselves, but they were capable of filling those of all the world. Carthage, once the rival of Rome in power and military renown, was now her rival in majesty and splendour. Carthage, the Rome of Africa, was the central seat of the imperial govern- ment : there were her magistrates ; there her oflacers of state ; there the schools of the liberal arts ; the professional chairs of philosophy, language, and jurisprudence. There, too, was a military Commandant and a numerous garrison ; a governor with the title of proconsul, but who really exer- cised a consul's power."* Such was the city which, in a single hour, at the height of her prosperity, and in the midst of her luxurious and efieminate life, fell into the hands of a bloody, faithless, and perfidious race, the most dreadful, as the most dreaded, among all the men of barbarian descent who tram- pled out the dying glories of the Empire. But with the exceeding bitter cry which went up from the suffering city, there was heard also the voice of the people of God, pro- claiming that this terrible visitation was a most just judg- ment, a retribution for unexampled sin.f It is from no desire to dwell upon so revolting a topic, that we repeat the words of the preacher who proclaimed to an unheeding generation, "the burthen of Carthage," as Ezekiel proclaimed that of her Phoe- nician ancestress. But, once for all, and as in crucial instance, we maysee in the fall of this great metropolitan city, the crfmes of the age, and the curse they engendered, the type of that old-world corruption which it was needful to purify as by fire, ere a new world could be born from its ashes. Africa, according to Salvian, was " the home and household of all * De Gubemafcione Dei. f TLaaa ISsa avji^opciQ is the strong expression of Prooopius. " Calamity of every conceivable kind encompassed the Africans."— Bdl. Valid, i. 5. 376 THE VANDALS. the vices;" " the seething caldron of iniquity ;" " the bloody city, the pot whose scum is therein," described by the pro- phet.* " They have all the vices," he exclaims, " that the Komans have ; but their avarice, their drunkenness, and their perjury, are immeasurable. Every vice of all the - world is found among them, unredeemed by the national ' virtues which palliate the crimes of other men. The Goths are perfidious but chaste ; the Alani unchaste, but less re- markable for perfidy ; the Franks are liars, but hospitable ; the Saxons are men of brutal cruelty, but marvellous con- tinence. All nations, in short, have their peculiar defects. In the whole African race, or nearly the whole of it, every evil that I know of may be found. It is an jSItna blazing with the fires of impurity and lust. Impure and African are synonymous in signification, and inseparable in fact." He then goes on to describe the wealth, splendour, and public institutions of the great city ; its universal and frightful debauchery, where every class was drunk with wine and lust ; the miserable condition of the poor, ground down with such relentless oppression that they called upon God, in their misery, for the coming of the barbarian, and did not call in vain ; above all, the pervading prostitution, which he depicts in language too plain and emphatic to be repeated here. Yet worse remained behind. The fires of Heaven consumed the cities of the plain, yet their guilt was not as the guilt of Carthage; for with Carthage, though the crime was as universal, the opportunities of knowledge were very diflFerent. And then is disclosed the secret of the Vandal visitation. "Who could have marvelled," asks Salvian, "if the barbarian Vandals, in the heat of their triumph, and revelling in the luxuries which their sword had won, had given way to such iniquities." But no; they refused to pollute themselves with Roman vice; they would not wallow in this great defilement. " Who," says he elsewhere, " after * Ezekiel, xxiv. 6. BALiVlAN ON THE AFRICANS. 377 this "— r-the account just given of Boman society — " could refuse the tribute of his admiration to the Vandal tribes, who, though they entered cities of most lavish wealth, where all these things were done before their eyes, yet rejected the licentiousness of these corrupted men, as pollution to their morals, and sought that which was good to possess, avoiding the stain of evil. This were enough to say in their praise ; but I have more to add. They treated as an abomination the peculiar crime of the conquered ; nay, they treated as abomination all the incentives to female prostitution, har- lotry, and sin."* Who can wonder, after these things, at the fall of Eoman society ? " What hope," truly says Salvian, " can there be for Rome and the Romans, when barbarians are more pure and chaste than they V When the fountain of family life in Southern Europe and Africa was so utterly polluted at its source, was it not needful that the stream should be cleansed by the cold clear waters which came rushing down from Scandinavian snows ? The temperament of the Teutonic tribes, fiery only in the Tieat of battle, was pure in the relations of domestic life. The reverence for woman ; — the sanctity of home, which had their birth in the German forests, coming into contact with, and catching the spirit of Christianity, breathed the breath of a regenerate life into a society which had already been laid within the tomb, and was exhaling the odour of the charnel-house. The sentiment of Teutonic chivalry, the spirit of Christianity, were the guardian Genii which sat beside the cradle of modem national life, and first' gave the modern world assurance of a "Nation." But we must resume our narrative. Carthage fell, a defenceless and opulent city, into the hands of an armed and rapacious barbarian. The historian, like the poet, finds the power of language too feeble for * Salv, de Gub. Dei, vii, 261, 252. 878 THE VANDALS. great sufferings and great crimes. He is compelled to take refuge in silence. " Sorrow it were, and shame to tell, The butcher-work that there.befell." Tlie terrible cry of agony -which rose from the perishing city, echoed across the Mediterranean, and told Rome that her own hour was at hand. She looked around her on all sides for assistance ; but the crafty Vandal had chosen well his time. In Gaul, Theodoric, king of the Yisigoths, whose daughter was espoused to the son of Genseric, had just out to pieces a Eoman army, and was giving full employment to the legions of Aetius. In Spain, the Sueves were daily gaining ground. Attila once more menaced the Eastern empire with a new invasion of Greece.. Nevertheless, by superhuman efforts, the imperial court made such prepara- tions for resistance, that Genseric did not deem it wise as yet to strike at the heart of his enemy. He descended upon Sicily and Calabria, knowing that, since the loss of Carthage, Rome depended upon these provinces for her subsistence. He counted, also, on finding a population favourably disposed to himself; for, as we have explained in a previous lecture, all the public domains of the state were cultivated by slaves, whom cruel treatment and a life of degradation had rendered bitter enemies to their masters. "We have already had the picture of a combat between the German barbarians and a Roman army, described by a contemporary j* as a pendant, we will extract from another contemporary the picture of a scene scarcely less common and characteristic of the age — a Vandal descent upon the coast of Italy. "At their ease the enemy were roaming over the open sea, when, by the common consent of all orders of the state, the people, the senate, the soldiery, and by thy colleague himself, the Empire was conferred upon thee" [Sidonius is addressing the neW * Lecture III. p. 139. A VANDAL FORAY. 379 emperor Majorian]. " Borne by the favouring southerii breeze, the foe invades the Campanian shore, and assails with his Moorish soldiery the unguarded husbandman. The sleek and lazy Vandal, seated upon the rowing-benches of his ship, awaits the prey which he had bid his captive capture and bring to him on board. But in an instant your bands precipitate themselves between both parties of the enemy, just where the level ground divides the sea from the heights, and a winding river forms by its mouth a port. At first the frightened crowd make for the hills, and, excluded from the banks which it had abandoned, becomes the booty of those of whom it would have made a booty. Then the whole pirate band, excited into wrath, unite for combat : some disembark their well-trained steeds from rudely-fashioned boats ; some clothe themselves in iron mail, of which the rusty hues resemble their own skin ; some string their pliant bows, and make ready the shafts which infuse into a wound the poison in which they have been dipped, and strike two victims, though but once discharged. And now the dragon- banner flies between the foes ; his throat swells with the inflating breeze : with gaping jaws the pictured image seems to ravin for his prey ; the winds stir into wrath his form upon the flag, as their breath contracts his twisting back, and his belly can no longer contain the blast. Soon the hoarse trumpet gives forth its crashing notes ; shrilly the clarions answer ; and valour kindles even in the coward's breast : on all sides falls the arrow-flight, but from ours only does it wound. One lies prostrate, pierced by the whirring javelin, which will scarce at a second death arrest its flight ; another is rolled over by a spear-thrust ; one pierced by a flying missile, another by a lance, tumbles from his steed; this one again falls by a winged shaft, the victim of a far- distant arm :* some with the sinews of their legs cut through, * "Absentem passus dextram : " one of the conceits of which several specimens are to be found in every page. The French editor, whose 380 THE VANDALS. linger on, denied the power to die. Here a warrior cleaves away part of the helmet, and with it the brain within : there the stout arm of a second hews piteonsly asunder the skull with his two-edged sword. Soon as the Vandal, turning from the field, betakes himself to flight, indiscriminate massacre succeeds to combat ; the plain is strewn with the corses of the slain : in the headlong rout the coward is forced to valorous deeds ; the horseman, pale with terror, pushes into the sea, and mingles with the fleet ; then, swimming in disgraceful flight, re-ascends his bark from amidst the waves."'"' Such were the exploits of Genseric abroad. In the mean time, it was necessary to place his power at home upon a safe basis, to gather together his resources, to prepare a fleet and to man it, to gain the supremacy of the sea. For this, peace was necessary ; and peace he easily obtained. By an understanding with Attila, at which we have already hinted, he precipitated the hordes of the Huns upon the empire of the East, and pledged himself, most probably, to aid the Hun in a "hourra" upon Rome.t Upon this, Theodosius felt himself compelled to put an end to the war with Genseric, lest Constantinople should be ■ ■ ' taken between two fires. Without the aid of Theodosius, Yalentinian could do nothing in the "West j and therefore Yalentinian also hastened to make peace. By this peace Genseric acquired time to mature his designs, and territorial resources to carry them out. Of all that Rome had held in Africa, the province of Tripolitana alone re- mained. All things seemed to favour the Vandal king; edition I possess, strangely interprets " pour avoir mal Ji propos &art^ son bouolier," forgetting that soldiers did not wear their shields on their right arms, or that, if they did, in the phrase "pati dextram," the ob- jective case must express that from which the action proceeds to whipli the previous verb refers. * Sidon. ApoUinaris, Pan. Majoriani, v. 384—422, t Jornandes, Reb, Get. § 35. GENSEEIC AUD ATTILA. 8S1 Wt his plans were interrujited by domestic treason. In the year 443, or in that which followed, a formidable A D 444 conspiracy broke out, which was only suppressed ' ' * by such a lavish effusion of the best blood of the nation, that the Yandals, we are told, suffered more from the axe of the executioner than they had done in any of their wars.* This, then, was apparently the cause which hindered the promised coalition between Genseric and Attila; and by reprieving the Western empire for a few short years, gave her destinies into nobler hands than those of either the Vandal or the Hun. Cassiodorus, grandfather of the historian whom Jomandes has abridged, claims the glory of driving the Vandals both from Italy and the mainland. But it is not likely that on this occasion Genseric meant to effect a per- manent occupation. He struck, and recoiled to strike again with more effect. To these and similar causes we must ascribe the fact that, though perpetually engaged in predatory expeditions, it was not until the year 455 that Genseric actually appeared in arms before the gates of Rome ; and the emperor, on his part, was too much engrossed with the Huns, who lost the great battle of ChS,lons in 451, to turn his thoughts to the perils which menaced him from Africa. We have already briefly men- tioned the miserable court intrigue and the treacherous vengeance of a woman, which^ brought the barbarian to the fruition of his long-cherished ambition, and to the summit of the Capitol. To the annals of Italy belongs the story of her ancient Queen ; how again and again she arose, after every fall, and wrapt around her faded form the imperial purple, though pierced in a hundred places by the barbarian dagger, rent by faction and trampled in the dust. No enemy more fierce, cruel, and rapaciotis than the Vandals had ever appeared beside the Tiber ; never had the great * Prosper., p. 196. 382 THE VANDALS. ^ metropolitan city been despoiled- of a larger portion, of that wealth and magnificence which she herself had gathered from every known country in the civilized or uncivilized world. But, after all, the Vandal was a less formidable enemy than the Ostrogoth and the Lombard ; for the latter' were ever at her doors, ever prepared to establish a kingdom of Italy ; while the home of the former was beyond llie seas. The real injury inflicted upon Rome by the successful raid of the Vandals, was the violation of her sanctity and the loss of her prestige. It is true that Alaric had stormed her gates and plundered her treasures half a century before ; but since that eventful day, Alaric had perished by a sudden reti'lbution, and Attila had recoiled before the shadow of the great Name ; and the Gothic sword had compensated for it? , irreverent violence, by triumphs, won in the name of Rome in Southern Gaul and beyond the Pyrenees ; and Aetius had once more wooed victory to the Roman eagles in the " battle of the nations" upon the plains of Champagne. Rome, therefore, though no longer a living power, by the terror of her memory, like the corpse of the Gid or the dead Douglas, might still have opened a pathway through her ene- mies on the battle-lield. " It was Genseric," to borrow an expression from a French writer, " who taught the nations to know, by a language expressed in acts most terrible and most intelligible, that the expiring lion has no longer claws, and that a giant in swaddling-clothes {un geant en mcdlloi) ia nothing more than an infant somewhat larger than the rest." A corse in its winding-sheet would have been a fitter image ; for the life and strength of Rome were gone, instead of being as yet to be developed. The nations were not slow to learn the lesson. The Visigoths seized upon Spain and Southern Gaul ; the Burgundians firmly planted them- selves in her western and cent»al districts ; the Franks began to make themselves masters of the North. In Italy, Riqimer, a barbarian, was for fifteen years master of the THE EXPEDITION OF MAJORIAN. 383 situatioiij imposing and deposing Roman emperors at his pleasure. These strange events have been recounted in their proper place, and do not require repetition here. Genseric, who paved the way for them all, upon his return made himself master, as might have been expected, of the re- mainder of Africa. He reigned as undisputed lord, from the i^traits of Gibraltar to the frontiers of Cyrenaica.iJ But it was mainly upon the Mediterranean that he now exerted his mili- tary force ; for here was at once the last remaining support of the Empire, and the best resource for carrying out his own future designs. The timber of the Atlas, and the cunning shipwrights of the African province, gave to the captors of Rome and Carthage an excellently equipped fleet, which rendered them masters of the midland waters, and struck terror into all the islands and cities on the coast which still retained allegiance to the name of Rome. Avitus, who had been seduced from peace and happiness in Auvergne to the misery and peril of the imperial purple, was not the man to organize resistance to such active enemies. It was in vain that Majorian, his successor, after a romantic visit in disguise to the capital of his enemy, attempted to descry the weak points in his political position.* Upon his return to tlie forces which he was amassing, he found that the deceit of Genseric had been more deep and successful than his own. It had tampered with his Gothic confederates ; and the treachery of these men cost him his fleet. Majorian him- self was but the puppet of Ricimer, as the Empire was the plaything of the barbarous races. He fell by the hand of an assassin, and at the command of Ricimer, near Tortona, A.D. 461. Genseric, there can be little doubt, ^subtle in policy as formidable in war, was more or less con- 'cerned with all the barbarian movements by which the 'domination of Rome was -finally cast ofi", and Italy subjected. to the Northern sword. He intrigued with Attila and his » Lecture V. p. 256. S8i She VAi^DALS. Huns, as We liave already seen ; he brought the Alani upoti Majorian while the latter was indulging in a vision of con- quering Africa, and engaged in listening to the premature congratulations of official flattery, which the pen of Sidonius was ever ready to pour forth j he pushed the Pannonian Ostrogoths upon the Greek empire in 459 and 462, and paralyzed thereby the political action of the Byzantine court upon the West ; he comforted and abetted, if he did not en- tirely instigate, Euric, the Visigoth king, in his final defalca- tion, which, in 473, stripped the Empire of all that remained to it in Spain and in Gaul, of Provence, Auvergne, and Nar- bonne. In the mean time, courted by Leo in the East, and by Eiicimer himself in the West, despite of several local disasters, the necessary results of wide-spread and adven- turous expeditions, he maintained the prestige of the Vandal name, and assumed, perhaps, for a time, the position of the most powerful potentate in the world. The peculiar genius of the leader and his people, less distinguished for military qualities than that of many among the new contemporaneous nationalities, were there not such strong evidence to the contrary, might almost ' tempt us to ascribe their origin to the Slavic rather than the Teutonic stock. The war, for instance, between the Pranks and Eomans upon the one part, who were eager to avenge the assassination of Majo- rian, and the Visigoths and Burgundians on the other, who stood forth as the defenders of Ricimer, was fostered by Vandal intrigue, and enabled Genseric to make himself master both of Corsica and Sardinia. It nearly, also, gave him Sicily, the necessary complement of his conquests, and the great object of his ambitious designs; for, now that Alexandria and Carthage had been alienated, Sicily alone could feed the Italian peninsula. The Italians them- selves, wearied with the revolutions in the palace, which were revived at the pleasure of one who was an Arian in religion and a barbarian in blood, threw themselves, as a last DEFEAT OF THE BYZANTINE EXPEDITION. 385 resource, upon the emperor of the East, and requested him to patronize and support an emperor who was connected ■with his own court — Anthemius, grandson of that An- themius who had administered affairs at Byzantium during the minority of Theodosius the Younger. Leo, therefore, the Eastern emperor, flattered by the application, supported the claims of Anthemius. Genserio naturally supported, or more probably suggested, the candidateship of Olybrius, not only because he could not tolerate any combination between the East and West, but because, also, Olybrius was the husband of Placidia, daughter of Valentinian, whose other daughter, Eudocia, had been married to Huneric, his own son. These matters, however, have been already narrated, with more minuteness, in a- former lecture.* The Vandal king commenced hostilities by his usual forays on the coast. But the court of Constantinople had not yet reached the military decrepitude of Rome. A menacing -embassy was sent to Carthage, which declared in express terms to Genseric, that, if he did not desist, the united forces of the two emperors would be directed against him. Genseric still continued his opposition. A formidable armament was collected, to vindicate th6 majesty of what was, for the last time, a combination of the forces, moral and material, which once obeyed the summons of Rome. A fleet of eleven hundred and thirteen galleys, an army of one hundred and thirteen thousand men, sailed from Con- stantinople to conquer Carthage, and expel the Vandals from Africa. The means were .assuredly more than suffi- cient for the purpose. Sardinia and Tripoli at once siic- cumbed. The army was close upon the capital. The Yalidal troops are described as demoralized in spirit and greatly reduced in number. The Byzantine historian, in the usual vainglorious style of his court, is certain that, had fasiliscus, the imperial general, advanced at once, the enemy * See Lecture V. 386 THE VANDALS. must have been swept from land and seaj but, by one o! those sudden, and singular revolutions of fortune which characterize the history of these times, in a few hours all is changed. Genseric obtains a truce for three days; he gets up a fleet of fireships, precipitates them upon the great Roman armament, and assails them fiercely under cover of the confusion. The immense armada, which had cost 130,000 lbs. of gold, is utterly scattered and destroyed, like its modern antitype, to which it has been frequently com- pared. The success of Genseric is, of course, ascribed to treason ; though, in this case, it is difScult to fix upon the traitor. Proeopius makes no scruple of directly accusing the commander, Basiliscus ; but no evidence is brought forward which justifies such a charge. Basiliscus gallantly clung to the wreck of his armament, and, after obtaining I'e- inforcements, reappeared in the Sicilian waters, and avenged himself by defeating a Vandal fleet. Idatius, the Spanish chronicler, with more plausibility, ascribes the victory of the Vandals to the treasonable complicity of Aspar and Arda- burus, Arian Goths of distinction and high command in the expedition. At this distance of time it is impossible to do more than vaguely speculate upon the amount of sympathy which identity in religion, and close communion in blood and political interest, may have produced among the bar- barians beneath the Eoman banners and the enemy against whom they were brought into the field. But whether with or without assistance in the hostile camp, the Vandal king evidently overreached his victorious foe, as he did once before, when on the point of perishing in Spain. It is not surprising, therefore, that ancient opinion should have ascribed the successes of the Vandals to policy, meaning thereby stratagem and deceit, rather than to valour in the open combat. Not only were the Vandals saved for the moment, but the- recoil of its long-meditated blow was nearly fatal to the Eastern court. Genseric united himself TEEATY WITH THE GEEEK EMPEEOE. SS3 with the Ostrogoth chieftains, ■who, by a sudden coup, nearly- made themselves masters of Constantinople. The capital, however, was saved from the Goths by the same Basil- iscus who has been accused of conspiring with them. But he and the emperor Leo were alto- gether incompetent to arrest the progress of the Vandal ravages elsewhere. In Italy, the long crumbling relics of the fabric of imperial power at last collapsed. On the 23rd of August, 476, Odoacer placed his foot upon the steps of the throne, and proclaimed to the world that the Empire of Rome had passed away. Leo died at Constan- tinople in hopeless depression : nothing was left for his successor Zeno b ut to make peace with the Vandals, who were ravaging the coasts of Epirus, and had sacked Nicopolis. The terms of the treaty remain. We will give them, because they explain the limits and power of the Vandal kingdom at what may be regarded the period of its highest prosperity. The Vandals were to remain masters of all Northern Africa, from the frontiers of Cyrenaica to the shores of the Atlantic Ocean : the Balearic isles, Sicily, Corsica, and Sardinia, were to be theirs : perpetual' peace was henceforth to subsist between the Eastern emperors and the Vandal king : an amicable arrangement between the courts of Constantinople and Carthage should determine all claims based upon the dowry of Eudocia, wife of Huneric, and all possible disputes arising out of the commercial relations of the two countries. A fair and strong dominion, a brilliant political prospect ! and yet, in a few years, not only the Vandal dominion, but the civilization of Korthern Africa, had passed away from the face of the earth.* The treaty was managed on the part of the Eastern emperor by Severus, a man whose virtues were worthy of the ancient days of Home. To the respect inspired by his personal character must be ascribed * Procopius, Bell. Vand.i. 7. 888 THE VANDALS, the favourable terms obtained fob the Catholic clergy from such an unpromising negotiator as the Vandal king. The churches were reopened ; the bishops recalled ; the captives permitted to return to Italy, upon payment of a stipulated ransom. Genserio pressed barbaric presents upon the noble- minded ambassador. " The only gift I can consistently with my duty accept," was the reply, " is the permission to redeem from slavery, at my own expense, my countrymen who have been made captive by the sword." Henceforward the brief annals of the "Vandal race are simply a tale of disaster and decay. The great, though savage and remorseless mind, which had given organization to the rude elements of barbaric strength existing in, his tribe, and breathed into that tribe the wonderful spirit, undefinable in words, which is a national life, was now about to pass away, and none other arose to supply its place. If individual genius could create nationality, the genius of Genseric might perhaps have achieved the task. Of the great Theban commander who fought at Leuctra and Mantinea, it has been said, that he made the glory of his country by his life, and destroyed it by his death ; that '' her warlike pride EoBe by his arm, and perish'd at his side." Of Genseric, king of the Vandals, the same assertion may be made, in a sense still more emphatic and complete. When he assumed the supremacy, the Vandals were sur- rounded by powerful enemies, enfeebled by their devotion to the pursuits of peace, in an age and in a country where war and the arts of war were everywhere para- mount ; nor could they adopt the ordinary expedient of barbarian tribes when hard pressed by famine or the sword. Migration was impossible. Europe had been already traversed ; no more unravaged lands lay before them ; the broad waters of the Mediterranean, as they 'DEATH OF GENSERIC. S8& washed up against the Spanish shores, interposed a barrier to their further progress, and denied them a refuge from the vengeance alike of their natural enemy and their hereditary rival, — the Roman and the Goth. But at the death of their daring and successful leader, the Vandals were lords of a dominion which promised to assume a posi- tion among the great powers of the world : they had beaten the Roman in Spain, and supplanted him in his favourite province of Africa; they had, for the moment, far outstripped the Goth in the race for political power and consolida- tion which had now arisen among the new barbarian nationalities ; they had set their foot upon the neck of the imperial mistress of the earth; they had sacked Rome, scared Byzantium, despite of her impregnable position ; scattered her armaments, and swept the Mediterranean. Yet, within a few years, these traditions were disgraced, the brilliant promise falsified, and this solid power shattered into fragments which were never again to unite. Genseric died January AD 477. 25th, 477. Like Augustus, he desired to secure the stability of the fabric of his own creation by the testamentary provisions of his wUl. With one only of these we are ac- quainted, and its wisdom, though intended to remedy an acknowledged evil, is perhaps open to dispute. As we shall see, in reviewing the history of the Merovingian and Carlo- vingian Franks, the common practice among the barbarians of dividing an inheritance between the existing male chil- dren of the deceased, was a fruitful source of rivalry, bloodshed, and political weakness. Genseric devised a some- iwhat singular remedy for the mischief produced by this practice. He determined, by his last testament, that the eldest male member of the royal family for the time being should alwag^s sit upon the Vandal throne.* Thus, if the brothers of Huneric, the elder son, were disappointed of * Procopiua, Bell. Vand. i, 7. 390 THE VANDALS. the usual share in the royal heritage upon their father's death, they were consoled by the reflection, that at the death , of Hunerio himself, they would supplant his sons by the right of seniority. , The consequences may be easily conjectured. Huneric contrived to make away with most of the heirs who would inherit on this principle, in favour of his own child Hilderic ; and so " thorough " were his measures, that Hilderic eventually succeeded to the throne without dis- pute, though entirely Greoized by education and long resi- dence in Constantinople, and more than suspected of a leaning to the dogma of Athanasius. The history of the Yandal decadence under the succes- sors of Genseric is not pleasant to contemplate or to relate. As the constitution of an individual distinguished for great physical strength, rapidly deteriorates when his previous exertions are relaxed, so it often is with the military strength of nations. The Vandals, perpetually fighting battles upon the Mediterranean waters, swooping upon the provinces of both empires, laying siege to cities, and defeating the armies sent to relieve them, resembled a victorious athlete in the full perfection of his training and his powers. But the same Vandals, sunk in the lap of Carthaginian luxury, amid the meretricious allurements of that civilization which they once had deemed it their special mission to destroy, debased by the passion for spectacle, by the soft and splendid clothing, the rich viands, the wines, and the courtesans of Eome, may be compared to the athlete who has quitted the arena for a life of profligate indulgence and debauchery.* Both illustrate the old maxim, " Corrup- * It is thus that Prooopius describes the new-bom luxury of the Vandals : — 'E5 orou At^vr/v ti!%ov, jSaKavdoig re ol trvfivavTis iwsxpSvTo ie ixoiaTTiv I'lfiipav, Kal rpaTTsZy uTaatv TrXriBoiay, haa Sij -yn T£ Kal BaXaaaa rjSiaTa T£ Kat apiara (pkptt. 'Expv<'oip6povv S'e (jg siri itXhittov lial fAi)SiRfiv laBiJTa fjv viv ^ripiKrjv KaXovciv dnirexoiisvot, iv Tt OmrpoiQ Kal 'nriroSpojiioiQ Kal ry dXXy einraBtiff THEODOEIC COMPARED WITH GENSEEIC. 391 tio optimi est pessima." The great military activity of the nation which, under Genseric, had battled for fifty years against Rome, sank suddenly into inaction, and none of its leaders had the wisdom to launch their warriors once more into a new sphere of activity. This is the more remarkable, because such a sphere might have been found at^heir very doors, and subsequently was found by the perspicacious genius of Justinian or his generals. The restless and turbulent tribes of the Moors had been a thorn in the side of the Roman empire, and they continued to be a thorn in the side of the Vandal kings. Tet the latter failed to see the immense advantage to be gained, moral as well as political, by the prosecution of sustained operations against them, and the erection of forts upon their frontier. There was yet another cause which materially contributed to the rapid decadence of the Vandal power. The frightfal disputes, or, indeed, the actual conflicts between the Arian and orthodox parties in the Church, rent the very vitals of the state, and brought about its dismemberment. It is natural to contrast the policy of Genseric in this respect with that of the great Italian Ostrogoth, Theodoric; nor can we contemplate the two without pronouncing a judgment in favour of the latter. Both were Arian princes, both had to deal with a strong Catholic element in their newly-organized empire. But Theodoric had the more difficult task, for he was involved in personal relations with the metropolis of Catholic Christendom, and had the all-powerful prestige of Rome for his antagonists Only ten years were left to the successors of Theodoric to carry out his policy and consoli- date their power, before they were assailed by the whole force of the Eastern empire; more than half a century Kdi travTwv iioKiara Kvviiytaioig, t&q Siarpifidg lirowvvTO, Ka2 fffitriv op-j^rjural Kai fiifiot aKOVff^ard ts gv^voc ical Otafidrtov oira fiovaiKa T( Kffi d^wB'eaTa iv dvOpuiTToig ^vji^aivu ilvai. — Bell, Vand. i. 6. • 892 TSE ■V'ANDALg. elapsed between tlie death, of Genseric and the appearaii