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| THE VISIGOTHS IN GAUL.
       412-507
         
         KING ATAULF had no intention of establishing a permanent dominion in
        
        Italy. As an occupation of Africa seemed hopeless he turned towards Gaul in the
        
        year 412, probably making use of the military road which crossed Mt Genèvre via Turin to the Rhone. Here he at first joined the
        
        anti-emperor Jovinus (set up in the summer of 411) who had a sure footing,
        
        especially in Auvergne, but was little pleased by the arrival of the Visigoths,
        
        which interfered with his plans of governing the whole of Gaul. Hence the two rulers
        
        soon came to open strife, especially as Jovinus had not named the Gothic king
        
        co-ruler, as he had hoped, but his own brother Sebastian. Ataulf went over to
        
        the side of the Emperor Honorius and promised, in return for the assurance of
        
        supplies of grain (and assignments of land), to deliver up the heads of both
        
        usurpers and to set free Placidia, the Emperor's sister, who was held as a
        
        prisoner by the Goths. He certainly succeeded without much trouble in getting
        
        rid of the usurpers. As, however, Honorius kept back the supply of grain and
        
        Ataulf, exasperated by this, did not give up Placidia, hostilities once more
        
        began between the Goths and the Romans. After an unsuccessful attempt to
        
        surprise Marseilles, Ataulf captured the towns of Narbonne, Toulouse, and
        
        Bordeaux by force of arms (413). But a complete alteration took place in the
        
        king's intentions, obviously through the influence of Placidia, whom he took as
        
        his (second) wife in January (414). As he himself repeatedly declared, he now
        
        finally gave up his original cherished plan of converting the Roman Empire into
        
        a Gothic one, and rather strove to identify his people wholly with the Roman
        
        State. His political programme was therefore just the same as that of the
        
        Ostrogoth king Theodoric, later on, when he accomplished the founding of the
        
        Italian kingdom. In spite of these assurances the Emperor refused him every
        
        concession; influenced by the general Constantius, who himself desired the
        
        hand of the beautiful princess, Honorius looked upon the marriage of his sister
        
        with the Barbarian as a grievous disgrace to his house. In consequence Ataulf
        
        was again compelled to turn his arms against the Empire. He first appointed an
        
        anti-emperor in the person of Attalus, without however achieving any success by
        
        this move, since Attains had not the slightest support in Gaul. When
        
        Constantius then blockaded the Gallic ports with his fleet and cut off
        
        supplies, the position of the Goths there became quite untenable, so that
        
        Ataulf decided to seek a place of retreat in Spain. He evacuated Gaul, after
        
        terrible devastation, and took possession of the Spanish province of Tarraconensis (in the beginning of 415), but without quite
        
        giving up the thought of a future understanding with the imperial power. In
        
        Barcelona, Placidia bore him a son, who received the name of Theodosius at his
        
        baptism, but he soon died. And not long afterwards death overtook the king from
        
        a wound which one of his followers inflicted out of revenge (in the summer of
        
        415).
         Wallia. 415-418
         After Ataulf's death the anti-Romanizing tendencies among the Visigoths,
        
        never quite suppressed, became active again. Many Pretenders contended for the
        
        throne, but all, as it seems, were animated by the thought of governing
        
        independently of Rome and not in subjection to it. At length Sigerich, brother
        
        of the Visigoth prince Sarus, murdered by Ataulf, succeeded in getting
        
        possession of the throne. Sigerich at once had the children of Ataulf’s first
        
        marriage slaughtered, and Placidia suffered the most shameful treatment from
        
        him. However, after reigning for one week only he was murdered certainly by the
        
        instigation of Wallia, who now became head of the
        
        Goths (autumn 415). 
         Wallia, although no less an
        
        enemy to Rome than his predecessor, at once granted the imperial princess a more
        
        humane treatment, and first tried to develop further the dominion already
        
        founded in Spain. But as the imperial fleet again cut off all supplies, and
        
        famine broke out, he determined to take possession of the Roman granary in
        
        Africa. But the undertaking miscarried because of the foundering in the Straits
        
        of Gibraltar of a detachment sent on in advance, which was looked upon as a bad
        
        omen (416). The king, obliged by necessity, concluded a treaty with Constantius
        
        in consequence of which the Goths pledged themselves, in return for a supply of
        
        600,000 measures of grain from the Emperor, to deliver up Placidia, to free
        
        Spain from the Vandals, Alans, and Sueves, and to give hostages. After fierce
        
        protracted fighting the Gothic army overcame first the Silingian Vandals and then the Alans (416-418). But when Wallia also wanted to advance against the Asdingian Vandals
        
        and the Sueves in Galicia he was suddenly called back by Constantius, who did
        
        not wish the Goths to become too powerful, and land for his people to settle
        
        upon was assigned to him in the province of Aquitanica Secunda and in some adjoining districts by the terms
        
        of a treaty of alliance (end of 418). Shortly after Wallia died, and was succeeded on the Visigoth throne by Theodoric I, chosen by the
        
        people.
         Theodoric
        
        and Aetius. 421-451
         Historical tradition is silent over the first years of Theodoric's
        
        reign; they were taken up with the difficulties of devising and executing the
        
        partition of the land with the settled Roman population. The Goths kept their national
        
        constitution and were pledged to give military assistance to the Empire. Their
        
        king was under the supreme command of the Emperor; he only possessed a real
        
        power over his own people, while he had no legal authority over the Roman
        
        provincials. Such an indeterminate situation, after the endeavors so long
        
        directed towards the attainment of political independence, could not last long.
         In 421 or 422 Theodoric fulfilled his agreement by sending a contingent
        
        to the Roman army which was marching against the Vandals; but in the decisive
        
        battle these troops fell upon the Romans from behind and so helped the Vandals
        
        to a brilliant victory. In spite of this base breach of faith the Goths came
        
        off unpunished, and even dared to advance southwards to the Mediterranean
        
        coast. In the year 425 a Gothic corps was before the important fortress of
        
        Arles, the coveted key of the Rhone valley; but it was forced to retreat by the
        
        rapid approach of an army under Aetius. After further fighting, about which
        
        unfortunately nothing detailed is known to us, peace was made and the Goths
        
        were granted full sovereignty over the provinces which had originally been
        
        assigned to them for occupation only—Aquitanica Secunda and the north-west corner of Narbonensis Prima—while they restored all their conquests (c. 426).
         This peace continued for a considerable period and was only interrupted
        
        by the unsuccessful attempt of the Goths to surprise Arles (430). But when in
        
        435 fresh disturbances broke out in Gaul, Theodoric took up once more his plans
        
        for the conquest of the whole of Narbonensian Gaul.
        
        In 436 he appeared with a strong force before the town of Narbonne, which
        
        however after a long siege was relieved by Roman troops (437). The Goths went
        
        on fighting, but without success, and were at last driven back as far as
        
        Toulouse. But in the decisive battle which was fought before the walls of this
        
        town (439) the Romans suffered a severe defeat, and only the heavy loss of life
        
        which the Goths themselves sustained could decide the king to agree to the
        
        provisional restoration of the status quo.
         Theodoric was certainly not disposed to be satisfied with the narrow
        
        territory surrendered to him. Therefore (c. 442) we find him again on the side
        
        of Rome's enemies. First he entered into close relations with Gaiseric, the
        
        dreaded king of the Vandals; but this coalition, which would have been so
        
        dangerous for the Roman Empire, was broken up by the ingenious diplomacy of
        
        Aetius. He next tried to attach himself to the powerful and rising kingdom of
        
        the Sueves by giving King Rechiar one of his
        
        daughters in marriage, and by furnishing troops to assist his advance into
        
        Spain (449). It was only when danger threatened the whole of the civilized West
        
        by the rise of the power of the Huns under Attila, that the Goths again allied
        
        themselves with the Romans.
         Invasion
        
        of Attila. 451
         In the beginning of the year 451 Attila's mighty army, estimated at half
        
        a million, set out from Hungary, crossed the Rhine at Easter-time, and invaded
        
        Belgica. It was only now that Aetius, who had been deceived by the false
        
        representations of the king of the Huns, thought of offering resistance; but
        
        the standing army at his command was absolutely insufficient to hold the field
        
        against such a formidable opponent. He found himself, therefore, obliged to beg
        
        for help from the king of the Visigoths, who although he had at first intended
        
        to keep himself neutral and await the development of events in his territory,
        
        thought, after long hesitation, that it would be to his own interest to obey
        
        the call. Theodoric joined the Romans with a fine army which he himself led,
        
        accompanied by his sons Thorismud and Theodoric.
        
        Attila had in the meantime advanced as far as Orleans, which Sangiban, the king of the Alans who were settled there,
        
        promised to betray to him. The proposed treachery, however, was frustrated, for
        
        the allies were already on the spot before the arrival of the Huns, and had
        
        encamped in strength before the city. Attila thought he could not venture an
        
        attack on the strong fortifications with his troops, which principally
        
        consisted of cavalry, so he retreated to Troyes and took up a position five
        
        miles before that town on an extensive plain near the place called Mauriacus, there to await a decisive battle with the Gotho-Roman army which was following him. Attila occupied
        
        the centre of the Hun array with the picked troops of his people, while both
        
        the wings were composed of troops from the subjected German tribes. His
        
        opponents were so arranged that Theodoric with the bulk of the Visigoths
        
        occupied the right wing, Aetius with the Romans, and a part of the Goths under Thorismud formed the left wing of the army, while the
        
        untrustworthy Alans stood in the centre. Attila first tried to get possession
        
        of a height commanding the battlefield, but Aetius and Thorismud were beforehand and successfully repulsed all the attacks of the Huns on their
        
        position. The king of the Huns now hurled himself with great force on the Visigothic main body commanded by Theodoric. After a long
        
        struggle the Goths succeeded in driving the Huns back to their camp; great
        
        losses occurred on both sides; the aged king of the Goths was among the slain,
        
        as was also a kinsman of Attila's.
         The battle however remained drawn, for both sides kept the field. The
        
        moral effect, which told for the Romans and their allies, was, however, very
        
        important, inasmuch as the belief that the powerful king of the Huns was
        
        invincible had suffered a severe shock. At first it was decided to shut up the
        
        Huns in their barricade of wagons and starve them out. But when the body of
        
        Theodoric, who had been supposed up till then to be among the survivors, had
        
        been found and buried, Thorismud, who was recognized
        
        as king by the army, called upon his people to revenge and to take the enemy's
        
        position by storm. But Aetius, who did not wish to let the Goths become too
        
        powerful, succeeded in persuading Thorismud to
        
        relinquish his scheme, advising his return to Toulouse, to prevent any attempt
        
        on his brother's part to get possession of the crown by means of the royal
        
        hoard there. Thus were the Goths deprived of the well-earned fruits of their
        
        famous exploit; the Huns returned home unmolested (451).
         Theodoric
        
        II. 451-467
         Thorismud proved
        
        himself anxious to develop the national policy adopted by his father, and in
        
        the same spirit. After he had succeeded, for the time being, in keeping possession
        
        of the throne, he subdued the Alans who had settled near Orleans and thereby
        
        made preparations for extending the Gothic territory beyond the Loire. Then he
        
        tried to bring Arles under his power, but without having attained his object he
        
        returned once more to his country, where in the meanwhile his brothers.
        
        Theodoric (II) and Friedrich had stirred up a rebellion. After several armed
        
        encounters Thorismud was assassinated (453).
         Theodoric II succeeded him on the throne. The characteristic mark of his
        
        rule is the close though occasionally interrupted connection with Rome. The treaty
        
        broken under Theodoric I—which implied the supremacy of the Empire over the
        
        kingdom of Toulouse—was renewed immediately after his accession to the throne.
        
        For the rest, this connection was never taken seriously by Theodoric but was
        
        principally used by him as a means towards the attainment of that end which his
        
        predecessors had vainly striven for by direct means — the spread of the
        
        Visigoth dominion in Gaul and more especially in Spain. Already, in the year
        
        454, Theodoric found an opportunity for activity in the interest of the Roman
        
        Empire; a Gothic army under Friedrich marched into Spain and pacified the
        
        rebellious Bagaudae ex auctoritate Romana.
        
        After the murder of Valentinian III (March 455) Avitus went as magister militum to Gaul to win over the most
        
        influential powers of the country for the new Emperor, Petronius Maximus. In
        
        consequence of his personal influence — he had formerly initiated Theodoric
        
        into the knowledge of Roman literature - he succeeded in bringing the king of
        
        the Goths to recognize Maximus. When, however, soon after this, the news of the
        
        murder of the Emperor arrived (31 May), Theodoric requested him to take the imperium himself.
        
        On 9 July, Avitus, who had been proclaimed Emperor,
        
        accompanied by Gothic troops marched into Italy where he met with universal
        
        recognition. The close relations between the Empire and the Goths came again
        
        into operation against the Sueves. As the latter repeatedly made plundering
        
        expeditions into Roman territory, Theodoric, with a considerable force to which
        
        the Burgundians also added a contingent, marched over the Pyrenees in the
        
        summer of 456, decisively defeated them, and took possession of a large part of
        
        Spain, nominally for the Empire, but actually for himself.
         But the state of affairs changed at one stroke when Avitus,
        
        in the autumn of the year 456, abdicated the purple. Theodoric had now no
        
        longer any interest in adhering to the Empire. He had in fact required the promotion
        
        of Avitus because he enjoyed a great reputation in
        
        Gaul and possessed there a strong support among the resident nobility.
        
        Friendship with him could only be of use to the king of the Goths in respect to
        
        the Roman provincials living in Toulouse. But the elevation of the new Emperor Majorian, on 1 April 457, had occurred in direct opposition
        
        to the wishes of the Gallo-Roman nobility to place one of themselves upon the
        
        imperial throne. Taking advantage of the consequent discord in Gaul, Theodoric
        
        appeared as the open foe of the imperial power of Rome. He himself marched with
        
        an army into the Gallic province of Narbonne and once more began with the siege
        
        of Arles; he also sent troops to Spain which, however, only fought with varying
        
        success. But in the winter of 458 the Emperor appeared in Gaul with
        
        considerable forces, quieted the rebellious Burgundians, and obliged the
        
        Visigoths to raise the blockade of Arles and again conclude peace (spring 459).
         Although in the year 461 yet another change took place on the imperial
        
        throne, Theodoric thought it more advantageous for the time being to maintain,
        
        at least formally, the imperial alliance. On the other hand the chief general Aegidius, a faithful follower of Majorian,
        
        supported by a fine army, marched against the new imperial ruler. In the
        
        conflict which then ensued Theodoric found a favorable opportunity for resuming
        
        his policy of expansion in Gaul. At the call of Count Agrippinus,
        
        who was commanding in Narbonne and was hard pressed by Aegidius,
        
        he marched into the Roman territory and quartered upon that important town
        
        Gothic troops under the command of his brother Friedrich (462). Driven out of
        
        southern Gaul, Aegidius turned northwards whither a
        
        Gothic army led by Friedrich followed him. A great battle took place near
        
        Orleans in which the Goths suffered a severe defeat, chiefly through the
        
        bravery of the Salian Franks, who were opposed to them and lost their leader in
        
        the battle (463). Taking advantage of the victory, Aegidius now began to press victoriously into the Visigoth territory, but sudden death
        
        prevented him from carrying out his purposes (464).
         Euric. 467-484
         Theodoric, freed from his most dangerous enemy, did not delay making
        
        good the losses he had suffered; but he died in the year 466 at the hand of his
        
        brother Euric, who was a champion of the anti-Roman
        
        national party and now ascended the throne. Contemporaries agree in describing
        
        the new king as characterized by great energy and warlike ability. We may
        
        venture to add from historical facts that he was also a man of distinguished
        
        political talent. The leading idea in his policy—the entire rejection of even a
        
        formal suzerainty of the Roman Empire—came into operation on his accession to
        
        the throne. The embassy which he then sent off to the Emperor of Eastern Rome
        
        can only have had for its object a request for the recognition of the Visigoth
        
        sovereignty. As no agreement was arrived at he tried to bring about an alliance
        
        with the Vandals and the Sueves, but the negotiations came to nothing when a strong
        
        East-Roman fleet appeared in African waters (467). Euric at first pursued a neutral course, but as the Roman expedition, set on foot
        
        with such considerable effort against the Vandal kingdom, resulted so
        
        lamentably (468), he did not hesitate to come forward as assailant, while he
        
        simultaneously pushed forward his troops into Gaul and Spain (469). He opened
        
        hostilities in Gaul with a sudden attack on the Bretons whom the Emperor had
        
        sent to the town of Bourges; at Déols, not far from
        
        Chateauroux, a battle took place in which the Bretons were overthrown. Yet the
        
        Goths did not succeed in pushing forward over the Loire to the north. Count
        
        Paulus, supported by Frankish auxiliaries, successfully opposed them here. Euric therefore concentrated his whole strength partly on
        
        the conquest of the province of Aquitanica Prima,
        
        partly on the annexation of the lower Rhone valley, especially the long-coveted
        
        Arles. The provinces of Novempopulana and (for the
        
        most part) Narbonensis Prima had been probably
        
        already occupied by the Goths under Theodoric II. An army which the West-Roman
        
        Emperor Anthemius sent to Gaul for the relief of Arles was defeated in the year
        
        470 or 471, and for the time being a large part of Provence was seized by the
        
        Goths. In Aquitanica Prima, also, town after town
        
        fell into the hands of Euric's general Victorius; only Clermont, the capital city of Auvergne,
        
        obstinately defied the repeated attacks of the barbarians for many years. The
        
        moving spirits in the resistance were the brave Ecdicius,
        
        a son of the former Emperor Avitus, and the poet Sidonius Apollinaris, who had
        
        been its bishop from about 470. The letters of the latter give us a clear
        
        picture of the struggle which was waged with the greatest animosity on both
        
        sides. Euric is said to have stated that he would
        
        rather give up the much more valuable Septimania than
        
        renounce the possession of that town. The wholly impotent Western Empire was
        
        unable to do anything for the besieged. In the year 475 peace was at last made
        
        between the Emperor Nepos and Euric by the
        
        intervention of Bishop Epiphanius of Ticinum (Pavia).
        
        Unfortunately the conditions are not more accurately known, but there can be no
        
        doubt that, besides the previously conquered territory in Spain, the district
        
        between the Loire, the Rhone, the Pyrenees, and the two seas was relinquished
        
        to Euric in sovereign possession. Thus Auvergne, so
        
        fiercely contended for, was surrendered to the Goths.
         But in spite of this important success the king of the Goths had by no
        
        means reached the goal of his desires; it may be seen from the line of policy
        
        he followed later that the present moment seemed to him fit, for carrying out
        
        that subjection of the whole of the West which had long since been the aim of
        
        Alaric I.
         For this reason peace only lasted for a year, which was spent in
        
        settling internal affairs. The most important event under Euric's government at this time is the publication of a Code of Law which was intended
        
        to settle the legal relations of the Goths, both amongst themselves and with
        
        the Romans who had come under the Gothic dominion. The deposition of the last
        
        West-Roman Emperor, Romulus, by the leader of the mercenaries, Odovacar (Sept.
        
        476), gave the king a welcome reason for renewing hostilities, as he looked
        
        upon the treaty made with the Empire as dissolved. A Gothic army crossed the
        
        Rhone and obtained final possession of the whole of southern Provence as far as
        
        the Maritime Alps, together with the cities of Arles and Marseilles, after a
        
        victorious battle against the Burgundians, who had ruled over this district
        
        under Roman suzerainty. But when Euric also marched a
        
        body of troops into Italy it suffered defeat from the officers of Odovacar.
        
        Consequently a treaty was concluded by the East-Roman Emperor Zeno and the king
        
        of the Burgundians whereby the newly conquered territory in Gaul (between the
        
        Rhone and the Alps south of the Durance) was surrendered by Odovacar to the
        
        Goths, while Euric evidently pledged himself to
        
        undertake no further hostilities against Italy (c. 477).
         Euric was incessantly harassed
        
        by the difficulties of defending this mighty conquest from foes without and
        
        within. In particular, very frequent cause for interference was given by the
        
        conduct of the Catholic clergy, who openly showed their disloyalty, and in the
        
        Vandal kingdom did not shrink from the most treacherous actions. Yet they seem
        
        only in rare instances to have been answered by violence and cruelty. The Saxon
        
        pirates who, according to old custom, infested the coast of Gaul were
        
        vigorously punished by a fleet sent out against them. In the same way it seems
        
        that an invasion of the Salian Franks was warded off successfully. It is not
        
        strange that, owing to the prestige of the Visigoth power, Euric's help was repeatedly requested by other peoples, as by the Heruli, Warni, and Tulingi who, settled
        
        in the Netherlands, found themselves threatened by the overwhelming might of
        
        the Franks and owed to the intervention of the Gothic king the maintenance of
        
        their political existence. The poet Sidonius Apollinaris has left behind a vivid description of the way
        
        in which, at that time, the representatives of the most diverse nations pressed
        
        round Euric at the Visigoth Court, even the Persians
        
        are said to have formed an alliance with him against the Eastern Empire. It
        
        seems that envoys from the Roman population of Italy also appeared at Toulouse
        
        to ask the king to expel Odovacar, whose rule was only reluctantly endured by
        
        the Italians.
         We do not know if Euric intended gratifying
        
        this last request, in any case he was prevented from executing any such designs
        
        through death, which overtook him in Arles in December 484. Under his son
        
        Alaric II the Visigoth power fell from its height. To be sure, the beginning of
        
        the decline originated at a time further back. Ataulf's political programme, as
        
        already observed, had originally contemplated the establishment of a national
        
        Gothic State in the place of the Roman Empire. Yet not one of the Visigoth
        
        rulers, in spite of honest purpose, could accomplish this task. It is to their
        
        credit that they succeeded at last, after severe fighting, in freeing
        
        themselves from the suzerainty of the Emperor and obtaining political autonomy,
        
        but the State which thus resulted resembled a Germanic National State no more
        
        than it did a Roman Imperium, and it could not
        
        contain the seeds of life because it was in a great measure dependent on
        
        foreign obsolescent institutions. The Goths had entered the world of Roman
        
        civilization too suddenly to be able either to resist or to absorb the foreign
        
        influences which pressed on them from all sides. It was fortunate for the
        
        progress of Romanization that the Goths, cut off from the rest of the German
        
        world, could not draw thence fresh strength to recuperate their nationality or
        
        to replace their losses, and moreover that through the immense extension of the
        
        kingdom under Euric the numerical proportion between
        
        the Roman and Gothic population had altered very much in favor of the former.
        
        So under the circumstances it was a certainty that the Gothic kingdom in Gaul
        
        must succumb to the rising and politically creative power of the Franks.
        
        Neither the personality of Alaric, who was little fitted for ruling, nor the
        
        antagonism between Catholicism and Arianism caused the downfall, they only
        
        hastened it.
         Alaric
        
        II. 484-502
         Alaric ascended the throne on 28 December 484. The king was of an
        
        indolent weak nature, altogether the opposite of his father, and without energy
        
        or warlike capacity, as immediately became evident. For example, he submitted
        
        to give up Syagrius, whom he had received into his kingdom after the battle of
        
        Soissons (486), when the victorious king of the Franks threatened him with war.
        
        The inevitable settlement by arms of the rivalry between the two principal
        
        powers in Gaul was of course only put off a little longer by this compliance. About
        
        494 the war began. It lasted for many years and was carried on with varying
        
        success on both sides. Hostilities were ended through the mediation of the
        
        Ostrogoth king Theodoric—who in the meanwhile had become Alaric's father-in-law
        
        —by the conclusion of a treaty of peace on the terms of Uti possidetis (c. 502), but this condition could not
        
        last long, for the antagonism was considerably aggravated by the conversion of
        
        Clovis to the Catholic Church in the year 496 (25 Dec.). Consequently the
        
        greatest part of Alaric's Roman subjects, with the clergy of course at their
        
        head, adhered to the Franks, and jealously endeavored to bring about the
        
        subjection of the Visigoth kingdom to their rule. Alaric was obliged to adopt
        
        severe measures in some instances against such treasonable desires, but usually
        
        he tried by gentleness and the granting of favors to win over the Romans to his
        
        support, an attempt which, in view of the prevalent and insurmountable
        
        antagonism, was of course quite ineffectual and even defeated its own ends,
        
        being regarded only as weakness. Thus he permitted the bishoprics kept vacant
        
        under Euric to be again filled, he moreover permitted
        
        the Gallic bishops to hold a Council at Agde in
        
        September 506, and—of the ambiguous attitude of the clergy—it was opened with a
        
        prayer for the prosperity of the Visigoth kingdom. The publication of the
        
        so-called Lex Romana Visigothorum, also named Breviarium Alaricianum, represented the most
        
        important act of conciliation. This Code of Law, which had been composed by a
        
        commission of lawyers together with prominent laymen and even clergy, and was
        
        drawn from extracts and explanations of Roman law, was sanctioned by the king
        
        at Toulouse, 2 Feb. 506, after having received the approval of an assembly of
        
        bishops and distinguished provincials, and was ordered to be used by the Roman
        
        population in the Gothic kingdom.
         Battle of Vouglé 506-507
         Why the explosion was delayed until the year 507 is unknown. That the
        
        king of the Franks was the aggressor is certain. He easily found a pretext for
        
        beginning the war as champion and protector of Catholic Christianity against
        
        the absolutely just measures which Alaric took against his treacherous orthodox
        
        clergy. Clovis had sufficiently appreciated the by no means despicable power of
        
        the Visigoth kingdom, and had summoned a very considerable army, one contingent
        
        of which was furnished by the Ripuarian Franks. His
        
        allies, the Burgundians, approached from the east in order to take the Goths in
        
        the flank. Among his allies Clovis probably also counted on the Byzantines, who
        
        placed their fleet at his disposal. On his part Alaric had not looked upon
        
        coming events idly, but his preparations were hampered by the bad state of the
        
        finances of his kingdom. In order to obtain the necessary funds he was obliged
        
        to coin gold pieces of inferior value, which were soon discredited everywhere.
        
        Apparently the fighting strength of the Gothic army was inferior to the army of
        
        Clovis, but if the Ostrogoth troops, who had held out prospects of coming,
        
        should arrive at the right time Alaric could hope to oppose his foe
        
        successfully. The king of the Franks had to endeavor to bring about a decisive
        
        action before the arrival of these allies. In the spring of 507 he suddenly
        
        crossed the Loire and marched towards Poitiers, where he probably joined the
        
        Burgundians. On the Campus Vocladensis, ten miles
        
        from Poitiers, the Visigoths had taken up their position. Alaric put off
        
        beginning battle because he was waiting for the Ostrogoth troops, but as they
        
        were hindered by the appearance of a Byzantine fleet in Italian waters he
        
        determined to fight instead of beating a retreat, as it would have been wise to
        
        do. After a short engagement the Goths turned and fled. In the pursuit the king
        
        of the Goths was killed, it was said by Clovis' own hand (507). With this
        
        overthrow the rule of the Visigoths in Gaul was ended forever.
         The principal town of the Gothic kingdom was Toulouse, where the royal
        
        treasure was also kept; Euric from time to time also
        
        held court in Bordeaux, Alaric II in Narbonne. The Gothic rule originally
        
        stretched, as has been already mentioned, as far as the province of Aquitanica Secunda and some
        
        bordering municipalities, among which was the district of Toulouse, but later
        
        on it extended not only over the whole territory of the Gallic provinces, but
        
        in addition to several parts of the provinces Viennensis, Narbonensis Secunda, Alpes Maritimae, and Lugdunensis Tertia. The Gothic
        
        possessions included also the greater part of the Iberian peninsula, i.e. the
        
        provinces of Baetica, Lusitania, Tarraconensis,
        
        and Carthaginensis. The provinces named were in Roman
        
        times, in so far as it was a question of civil administration, governed by consulares or presides, and they were again divided into
        
        city-districts (civitates or municipia).
        
        Under the sovereignty of the Goths this constitution was maintained in its
        
        chief features.
         The inhabitants of the kingdom of Toulouse were composed of two races—the
        
        Goths and the Romans. The Goths were regarded by the Romans as foreigners so
        
        long as the federal connection remained in force, yet both peoples lived side
        
        by side, each under its own law and jurisdiction: intermarriage was forbidden.
        
        This rigid line of separation was adhered to even when the Goths had shaken off
        
        the imperial suzerainty and the Gothic king had become the sovereign of the
        
        native population of Gaul. Theoretically, the Romans had equal privileges in
        
        the State; thus they were not treated as a conquered people without rights, as
        
        the Vandals and Langobards (Lombards) dealt with the
        
        inhabitants of Africa and Italy. That the Goths were the real rulers was
        
        clearly enough made manifest to the Romans.
         The domestic condition of the Visigoths before the settlement in Gaul
        
        was undoubtedly on the same level as in their original home; private property
        
        in land was unknown, agriculture was comparatively primitive, and
        
        cattle-rearing provided the principal means of subsistence. A national change
        
        began with the settlement in Aquitaine. This was done on the principle of the
        
        Roman quartering of troops, so that the Roman landowners were obliged to give
        
        up to the Goths in free possession a portion of their total property together
        
        with the coloni,
        
        slaves, and cattle appertaining to it. According to the oldest Gothic codes of
        
        law the Goth received two-thirds of the tilled land and, it seems, one-half of
        
        the woods. The wood and the meadow land which was not partitioned belonged to
        
        the Goths and the Romans for use in common. The parcels of land subjected to
        
        partition were called sortes,
        
        the Roman share, generally, tertia, their occupants hospites or consortes. The Gothic sortes were
        
        exempt from taxation. As the invaders were very numerous compared with the
        
        extent of the province to be apportioned, there is no doubt that not only the
        
        large estates, but also the middle-sized and smaller properties were
        
        partitioned. Nevertheless it is evident that not every Goth can have shared
        
        with a Roman possessor, because there would certainly not have been estates
        
        enough; we must rather assume that in the share given up larger properties were
        
        split up among several families, as a rule among kinsmen. As the apportionment
        
        of the single lots undoubtedly took place through the decisive influence of the
        
        king, it is natural that the nobility (i.e. nobility by military service) was
        
        favored in the partition above the ordinary freemen. The landed property of the
        
        monarch's favorites must have gained considerably in extent, as elsewhere,
        
        through assignments from state property. The very considerable imperial
        
        possessions, both crown and private property, as a rule fell to the share of
        
        royalty.
         Land partition in the districts conquered later followed the same plan
        
        as in Aquitaine; seizures of entire Roman estates certainly occurred, but they
        
        were exceptions and happened under special circumstances. As a rule the Romans
        
        were protected by law in the possession of their tertiae, even if it were only for
        
        fiscal reasons. The considerably extended range of the Gothic kingdom offered
        
        the people ample space for colonization, so it was not necessary to encroach on
        
        the whole of the Roman territory as had been the case in Aquitaine. It is to be
        
        assumed that in the newly won territories only the superfluous element of the
        
        population had to be provided for; we are not to suppose a general desertion of
        
        the home-land.
         The social economy proceeded, on the whole, on the same lines as before,
        
        i.e. through coloni and slaves, from whose toil the owners derived their principal support, at
        
        least in so far as it was a question of food. For the Goths, whose favorite
        
        occupations were warfare and the chase, had no inclination to devote themselves
        
        to arduous agricultural toil. They only wanted to control directly the rearing
        
        of cattle, as they did of old; animal food seems to have been provided
        
        principally by means of large herds of swine. The revolution which the
        
        partition of land brought about in the habits of the Goths was too powerful not
        
        to exert the deepest influence on all the conditions of life. The rich revenues
        
        led to the display of a wanton and indolent way of living; the close contact
        
        with the Romans, who were for the most part morally decadent, was bound to
        
        affect injuriously a people so famous in earlier times for its austere manners.
        
        The old national bonds of union, besides having been relaxed through the
        
        migration, now from the scattering of the mass in colonization lost more and
        
        more of their original importance, since kinsmen need no longer be companions
        
        on the farmstead in order to obtain a living. The adoption of the Roman
        
        conditions of land-holding obliged the Goths to accept numerous legal
        
        arrangements which were foreign to their national law and altered its principles
        
        considerably. Nevertheless the national consciousness was strong enough to
        
        prevent it from merging itself quickly and completely in the Roman system; in
        
        contrast to the Ostrogoths who did nothing but carefully conserve the Roman
        
        institutions which they found, the Visigoths are remarkable for an attitude in
        
        many respects independent towards the foreign organization.
         The entire power of government lay in the hands of the king, but the
        
        several rulers did not succeed in making their power absolute. Outwardly the
        
        Visigoth king was only slightly distinguished from the other freemen; like them
        
        he wore the national skin garment, and long curly hair. The raised seat as well
        
        as the sword appear as tokens of royal power, the insignia such as the purple
        
        mantle and the crown do not come till later. The succession to the throne
        
        follows the system peculiar to the old German constitution of combined election
        
        and inheritance. After the death of Alaric I his brother-in-law Ataulf was
        
        chosen king; thus a kindred connection played an important part in this choice.
        
        Ataulf's friendliness to Rome had placed him in opposition to the great mass of
        
        the people; therefore his successor was not his brother, as he had wished, but
        
        first Sigerich and then Wallia, who both belonged to
        
        other houses. The elevation of Theodoric I is also an instance of free
        
        election; the royal dignity remained in his house for over a century. Thorismud was appointed king by the army; the succession of
        
        Theodoric II, Euric, and Alaric II, on the other hand,
        
        was only confirmed by popular recognition.
         Just as the people regularly took a part in the choice of the successor
        
        to the throne, so their influence was often brought to bear on the sovereign's
        
        conduct of government. After the settlement in Gaul there could certainly no
        
        longer be any question of a national assembly in the old sense of the word,
        
        especially after the great expansion of territory under Euric.
        
        Meetings of all the freemen had become impossible on account of the expansion
        
        of the Gothic colonies. The circle of those who could obey the call to assemble
        
        became, therefore, smaller and smaller, while in carrying out the principal
        
        public functions, such as the coronation of the king, only those of the people
        
        who happened to be present at the place of election or who lived in the
        
        immediate neighborhood, could as a rule take part. The importance which the
        
        commonalty hereby lost was gained by the nobility, an aristocracy founded on
        
        personal service to the king. It was only in the army that the greater part of
        
        the people found opportunity of expressing its will. It is certain that among
        
        the Visigoths, as among the Franks, regular military assemblies were held,
        
        which at first served the purpose of reviews and were under the command of the
        
        king. In these assemblies important political questions were discussed but
        
        the decision of the people was not always for the welfare of the State.
         The kingdom was subdivided very nearly on the lines of the previous
        
        Roman divisions into provinciae,
        
        and these again into civitates (territoria).
        
        At the head of the province was the dux as magistrate for Goths and Romans. He
        
        was also, as his title implies, in the first place the commander of the militia
        
        in his district, and he provided also the final authority and appeal in matters
        
        of government, corresponding to the Praefectus Praetorio or vicarius of imperial times. The centre of gravity of the government lay in the
        
        municipalities whose rulers were comites civitatum. They took exactly the place of the Roman
        
        provincial governors, so that the city-districts also appear under the title
        
        of provinciae.
        
        Their authority extended even to the exercise of jurisdiction with the
        
        exception of such cases as were reserved to the civic magistrates, and included
        
        control of the police and the collection of taxes. The dux could at the same time
        
        becomes of a civitas in his district. At the head of the towns themselves were the curiales who, as
        
        hitherto, were bound by oath to fill their offices; and they were personally
        
        responsible for collecting the taxes. The most important official was the defensor, who was
        
        chosen from among the curiales by the citizens and
        
        only confirmed by the king. He exercised, in the first instance, jurisdiction
        
        in minor matters, but his activity extended over all the branches of municipal
        
        administration. Side by side with this Roman magistrature existed the national
        
        system which the Goths had brought with them. The Gothic people formed
        
        themselves into bodies of thousands, five hundreds, hundreds, and tens, which
        
        also remained as personal societies after the settlement. The millenarius, as
        
        of old, led the thousand in war and ruled over it jointly with the heads of the
        
        hundreds both in war and in peace. The comes civitatis and his vicar originally only possessed jurisdiction over the Romans of his
        
        own circuit, but in Euric's time that had so far
        
        changed that he now possessed authority to judge the Goths as well in civil
        
        suits in conjunction with the millenarius: thus the later condition was prepared in which
        
        the millenarius appears only as military official. On the other hand the defensor remained a judiciary
        
        solely for the Romans.
         We know but little about the officers of the central government. The
        
        first minister of Euric and of Alaric II was Leo of
        
        Narbonne, a distinguished man of varied talents. His duty comprised a
        
        combination of the functions of the quaestor sacri palatii and of
        
        the magister officiorum at the imperial Court; he drew up the king's orders, conducted business with
        
        the ambassadors, and arranged the applications for an audience. A higher
        
        minister of the royal chancery was Anianus, who
        
        attested the authenticity of the official copies of the Lex Romana Visigothorum and distributed them; he seems to have answered to the Roman primicerius notariorumor referendarius.
         The
        
        Church
         The organization of the Catholic Church was not disturbed by the
        
        Visigoth rule: rather it was strengthened. The ecclesiastical subdivision of
        
        the land as it had developed in the last years of the Roman sway corresponded
        
        on the whole with the political: the bishoprics, which coincided in extent with
        
        the town districts, were grouped under metropolitan sees, which corresponded
        
        with the provinces of the secular administration. Since the middle of the fifth
        
        century the authority of the Roman bishop over the Church had been generally
        
        recognized. Next to the Pope the bishop of Arles exercised over the Gallic
        
        clergy a theoretically almost unlimited disciplinary power. A bishop was chosen
        
        by the laity and the clergy of his see, and was ordained by the metropolitan
        
        bishop of the province together with other bishops. Although the boundaries of
        
        the Visigoth kingdom now in no way coincided with the old provincial and
        
        metropolitan boundaries, the hitherto existing metropolitan connection was
        
        nevertheless not set aside, nor were the relations of the bishops with the Pope
        
        interfered with. The Gothic government as a rule showed great indulgence and
        
        consideration to the Catholic Church, which only changed to a more severe
        
        treatment when the clergy were guilty of treasonable practices, as happened
        
        under Euric. No organized and general persecution of
        
        the Catholics from religious fanaticism ever took place. The Catholic Church
        
        enjoyed particularly favorable conditions under Alaric II, who in consideration
        
        of the threatening struggle with Clovis acknowledged the formal legal position
        
        of the Roman Church according to the hitherto existing rules.
         Hardly anything is known of the ecclesiastical organization of the
        
        Arians in the kingdom of Toulouse. Probably in all the larger towns there were
        
        Arian bishops as well as orthodox ones, and no doubt in earlier times they had
        
        been appointed by the king. Under the several bishops were the different
        
        classes of subordinate clergy; presbyters and deacons are mentioned as in the orthodox
        
        Church. The endowment of the Arian Church was probably as a rule allowed for
        
        out of the revenue; now and then confiscated Catholic churches as well as their
        
        endowments were also made over to it. The church service was of course held in
        
        the vernacular as it was in other German churches; the greater number of the
        
        clergy were therefore of Gothic nationality. The opposition between the two
        
        creeds was also certainly a very sharp one. Both sides carried on an active
        
        propaganda, which on the Arian side not unfrequently seems to have been urged by force, but such ebullitions scarcely had the
        
        support and approval of the Gothic government.
         Very scanty indeed is our knowledge of the civilization of the kingdom
        
        of Toulouse. That the Romance element was foremost in almost every department
        
        has already been observed. The Goths however held to their national dress until
        
        a later period; they wore the characteristic skin garment which covered the
        
        upper part of the body, and laced boots of horse-hide which reached up to the
        
        calf of the leg; the knee was left bare. There is no doubt that the Gothic
        
        tongue was spoken by the people in intercourse with each other; unhappily no
        
        vestiges remain of it except in proper names. It is certain however that a
        
        great part of the nobility, especially the higher officials, understood Latin
        
        well. Most of the Arian clergy undoubtedly were also masters of both languages.
        
        Latin was the language of diplomatic intercourse and of legislation. Theodoric
        
        II was trained in Roman literature by Avitus; Euric however understood so little of the foreign language
        
        that he was obliged to use an interpreter for diplomatic correspondence. Yet
        
        this king was in no way opposed to the knowledge and significance of classical
        
        culture. The Visigothic Court therefore formed a
        
        haven of frequent resort for the last representatives of Roman literature in
        
        Gaul. And the kings, from various motives, but especially from a fondness for
        
        Roman models, would employ the art of these men to celebrate their own deeds.
        
        Here may be named in the first place the poet Sidonius Apollinaris who for a long time lived, first in the
        
        Court of Theodoric II and then in that of Euric. Euric's minister Leo also is said to have distinguished
        
        himself as a poet, historian, and lawyer, but no more of his writings have been
        
        preserved than of the rhetorician Lampridius, who
        
        sang the fame of the Gothic royal house at the Court of Bordeaux. But the decay
        
        of literature and of culture in general, which had been for so long in progress
        
        in spite of the support of the still existent schools of rhetoricians, could
        
        assuredly not be stayed by the patronage of the Gothic kings.
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