READING HALLBIOGRAPHY UNIVERSAL LIBRARY |
ATTILA, KING OF THE HUNS, AND HIS PREDECESSORSCHAPTER IV.Sword of the War-God.
23.
Resistance of the Azimunthians.
Attila was not however contented with these severe exactions, but proceeded to summon the Azimunthians to surrender the captives they had taken from the Huns and their allies, and the Roman refugees whom they harbored, as well as those whom they had retaken from them. Azimus was a fortress of great strength, not for from the Illyrian frontier, but appertaining to Thrace. The inhabitants of this formidable post had not only resisted the attacks of the Huns within their walls, so that no hopes were entertained of reducing them, but had successfully sallied out against the invaders, and discomfited in many rencounters the numerous forces and most expert commanders of the barbarians. Their scouts traversed the country in every direction, and brought them sure intelligence of every movement of the enemy; and, whenever the Azimunthians received information that they were returning from an inroad laden with the plunder of the Romans, they concerted measures for intercepting their passage, and falling unexpectedly upon them, though few in number, by the most resolute and enterprising valor, aided by a perfect knowledge of the intricacies of the country, they were usually successful, and not only slaughtered many of the Huns, but rescued the Roman prisoners and gave shelter to the deserters from the pagans. Attila therefore declared that he would not withdraw his army, nor consider the conditions of the treaty fulfilled, until the Azimunthians should have dismissed all their captives, and delivered up to him the Romans who were in the fort, or paid the stipulated ransom. Neither Anatolius by negotiation, nor Theodulus by the array of
the army which was entrusted to him for the protection of Thrace, could
divert Attila from this determination, for he was enhardened by success,
and ready in a moment to recommence his operations, while they were dejected
and discouraged by the recent disaster.
Letters were therefore sent to Azimus, requiring them to liberate their captives, and to send back the Romans who had been rescued, or twelve pieces of gold in lieu of each of them. The Azimunthians replied that they had suffered the Romans, who had fled to their protection, to depart at their pleasure, but that all the Scythian captives had been slain; excepting two whom they retained, because the Huns, after having for a while besieged their fortress, had placed themselves in ambush, and carried off some children who were tending the flocks at a short distance from the walls, and that, unless those were restored, they would not give up the captives they had made in war. Enquiries were instituted concerning these
children, but they were not forthcoming, and, the Hunnish kings having made
oath that they had them not, the Azimunthians set free their captives, and
swore likewise that the Romans had departed from amongst them; but they swore
falsely, the Romans being still in the fortress, while they held themselves
absolved from the guilt of perjury by the countervailing merit of having saved
their countrymen. It appears from this account, which is detailed by Priscus,
that the Azimunthians were a hardy race in possession of an impregnable
mountain hold, where they rendered a very qualified allegiance to the emperor,
and probably closed their gates against his tax-gatherers.
24. Sword
of the War-God. Style and pretensions of Attila. Engaddi. Danes. Second Moses in
Crete. St. Patric
About this period, probably in the campaign of 442, Attila asserted that
he had possessed himself of the ancient iron sword, which from the earliest
recorded time had been the God of the Scythians. A herdsman, tracking the blood
of a heifer which had been wounded in the leg, was said to have discovered the
mysterious blade standing erect in the sod, as if h had been flung forth from
heaven, and carried it to Attila, who received it as a fresh revelation of the
sword of Ares or Areimanius which had been worshipped by the ancient Scythian
kings, but had long disappeared from earth. He accepted it as a sacred badge
and evidence that the power of the spirit of war was committed to him, and a
certain presage of the approaching universality of his dominion.
The prevailing expectation of the advent of the Messiah, mankind being
greatly ignorant of the true character of Him who was to come, had encouraged
Octavius Caesar to assume the title of Augustus, and pretend to divine honors;
and it was perhaps not merely the flattery of his courtiers, but the real
opinion of those who expected a divine revelation at that period, that represented
him as a present God.
The era of Attila was marked by a very general expectation of the revelation of Antichrist. It has been already mentioned that it was prophesied to Aetius in his youth that he was to be some great one; by which expression is meant a divine incarnation. Symmachus in
his panegyric of Gratian amongst his orations discovered and edited by Maius,
stated about sixty-five years before that he heard the prophets of the Gentiles
were whispering, that the man was already born, to whom it was necessary that
the whole world should submit; that he believed the presage, and acknowledged
the oracles of the enemy.
There seems to have been a strong opinion entertained in Italy that the fortunes of Rome could only be upheld by making her the head of the barbarous nations and of all paganism, and in this spirit Symmachus had pleaded before Valentinian in 384 against Christianity, and, as his oration is styled, on behalf of his sacred country. The great object of this party in Rome was to give a Roman ruler to the Gentiles, instead of receiving an emperor from them. With this view the traitor Stilicho, a nominal Christian, educated his son in paganism and the most bitter animosity against the Christians. When Radagais invaded
Italy, the people looked to Stilicho for salvation, and it was carried by
acclamation in Rome, that the neglected rites of their ancient Deities must be
immediately renewed. After Honorius had cut short the traitor, dispersed his
barbarian satellites, and driven into banishment his panegyrist the poet
Claudian, who was a decided pagan, and probably died at the court of some
heathen king, Aetius became the head of this party, with like views and deeper
villainy. To him it had been prophesied that he was the great one whom the
nations were expecting. His son Carpileo was sent to be educated amongst the
heathens; he had, by long residence both at the Gothic court of Alaric and amongst
the Huns of Attila, familiarized himself with all the leading characters of
Europe.
The pious and eloquent Prudentius was too remote from these odious
machinations to have suspected the sincerity of Stilicho, and saw in him only
the savior of the empire and defender of Christianity; and it is probable that
with like hypocrisy Aetius, whose wife was certainly a Christian, imposed on
the credulity of Leo, who appears to have highly regarded him; which is the
least creditable circumstance known concerning that pontiff. Exerting his great
military talents no further than suited his hidden views, and balancing all the
powers of Europe with the nicest artifice, that no one might obtain the
universal dominion which he expected ultimately to snatch from them all, he
proceeded steadily in his object, till Valentinian cut him short at the moment
when the death of Attila had probably determined him to declare himself.
The minds of all men both in the Roman empire, and amongst the heathen
nations of Europe, being thus strongly tinctured with the expectation of the
revelation of a predestined and distinguished person, who was to establish a
new and prevailing theocracy, the importance of assuming that character to
himself could not escape the penetration of Attila; and it is not impossible,
that, educated as he was in the cradle of superstition, he may have believed
that the great destinies to which he pretended were really awaiting him. We
learn from Jornandes, who quotes the authority of Priscus, that he acquired
very great influence by the acquisition and production of the venerated sword.
The title which he assumed is said to have been, Attila, grandson or rather
descendant of the great Nembroth or Nimrod, nurtured in Engaddi, by the grace
of God king of Huns, Goths, Danes, and Medes, the dread of the world. He is
represented on an old medallion with teraphim or a head on his breast
We know from the Hamartagenia of Prudentius that Nimrod with a snaky-haired head was the object of adoration of the heretical followers of Marcion, and the same head was the palladium set up by Antiochus Epiphanes over the gates of Antioch, though it has been called the visage of Charon. The memory of Nimrod was certainly regarded with mystic veneration by many, and by asserting himself to be the heir of that mighty hunter before the Lord, he vindicated to himself at least the whole Babylonian kingdom. The singular assertion in his style that he was nurtured in Engaddi, where he certainly never had been, will be more easily understood on reference to the twelfth chapter of Revelation concerning the woman clothed with the sun, who was to bring forth in the wilderness, “where she hath a place prepared of God”, a man-child, who was to contend with the dragon having seven heads and ten horns, and rule all nations with a rod of iron. This prophecy was at that time understood universally by the sincere Christians to refer to the birth of Constantine who was to overthrow the paganism of the city on the seven hills, and it is still so explained: but it is evident that the heathens must have looked upon it in a different light, and have regarded it as a foretelling of the birth of that great one, who should master the temporal power of Rome. The assertion therefore that he was nurtured in Engaddi, is a claim to be looked upon as that man-child who was to be brought forth in a place prepared of God in the wilderness. Engaddi means a place of palms and vines in the desert; it was hard by Zoar, the city of refuge, which was saved in the vale of Siddim or demons, when the rest were destroyed by fire and brimstone from the Lord in heaven, and might therefore be especially called a place prepared of God in the wilderness, like the garden of Amalthea, in which Bacchus was fabled to have been brought up. That such a title was either actually assumed by Attila, or given to him by those who favored his pretensions, may be established by the total ignorance of the historians who have recorded it of its meaning, and the extraordinary fact being stated by them without any comment Engaddi was also the seat of the Essenian cenobites, that remnant of the inhabitants of Sodom, who before the advent of our Savior had set the example of the most profligate abominations under the mask of holiness and austerity; and a fitter cradle could hardly have been devised for an Anti-christian adventurer. He was certainly not king over the Medes, but the title was probably assumed when he had been on the point of undertaking an expedition to reduce them, which Priscus ascertained to have been his intention, and would probably have been carried into execution, if his life had been prolonged. Notwithstanding the vague accounts of early Danish history, which have been put together from Scandinavian legends, the name of Danes appears to have been scarcely known before this period. Servius, whose commentary on Virgil had perhaps been then written a little more than twenty years, probably makes the first mention of the name, saying that the Dahae, a people of Scythia adjoining to Persia on the north, were called also Dani. Picrius writes concerning the same passage, that the Dahae and Dacians were the same people. Jornandes a century after the time of Attila, first names the Danes in Denmark, stating them to be a distinguished race of superior stature amongst the Codani, with whose name that of the south of the Baltic, called Sinus Codanus, is identical. Procopius gives an account of the migration of the Herulians from the vicinity of the Danube through the tribes of the Danes into Thule, the modern Thylemark. Nicolas Olaus says that he found it stated in an old Hungarian chronicle that the Danes formerly inhabited the region of Hungarian Dacia, and betook themselves to the maritime parts of the north of Europe through fear of the Huns. If the Dacians who had migrated northwards bore at that time the name of Danes on the coast of the Baltic, they were not of sufficient importance in themselves to have merited such a particular mention in the title of the great monarch, unless because he actually occupied Dacia. It is however exceedingly probable that the particular mention of Danes, had reference to the prevailing opinion that Antichrist was to be of the tribe of Dan, founded upon the prophecy of Jacob in the 49th chapter of Genesis, “Dan shall be a serpent by the way, an adder in the path, that bites the horse’s heels, so that his rider shall fall backward. I have waited for thy salvation, O Lord”, which last words seem to imply that the posterity of Dan would not await it, as Jacob had done, and from the circumstance of the tribe of Dan not being sealed in Revelation. We are informed by several writers that in the reign of Attila, a certain mysterious person, who is called a second Moses in Crete, that is coming in the spirit of Moses, deceived the Jews in that island, pledging himself to lead them back through the sea with dry feet to the land of promise. Those who linked themselves together by the hair, and sprang off a cliff into the sea at his suggestion, all perished; a few were converted to Christianity and escaped. The Rabbis and rabbinists assure us that there cannot be a second Moses, coming in the power of Dan, unless his soul be an emanation of Cain the fratricide. Postel states that the Moses in Crete was such an one as Antichrist. Werner Rolewink in his fasciculus temporum makes the second Moses synchronize with Patric’s voyage to Ireland. Father Colgan, in his Trias thaumaturge, says that the magic wand, which was transmitted by Adam and Nimrod to Moses, passed into the hands of Jesus Christ, and from him was transmitted to Patric; who spent forty days and forty nights in a mountain, fasting and conversing with God, saw God in a burning bush, and died at the same age as Moses, (viz. 120) and his eye was not dim, nor his natural strength abated; and from these and other coincidences, he is called the second Moses. St. Patric is also said
to have summoned all the serpents and venomous creatures to the top of a
mountain over the sea and bade them jump down, and they were all drowned. It
cannot be overlooked on reading the several passages relating to the second
Moses, that the story appears to have a more intimate connection with the
affairs of Attila, than is stated on the face of any one of the extracts; for
the writers proceed immediately from the narration of Attila’s acts to this
strange account, and again from it to Attila’s invasion of
Gaul. Whether such a man as Patric actually existed, and was
sent on a secret mission by Attila to prepare the way for himself as
Antichrist, as we read in the Scandinavian sagas that Attila sent Herburt on a
mission to king Arthur in Great Britain, or whether Patric was merely a
fictitious name used by those in Ireland, who looked to the coming of Attila as
Antichrist, to represent his power and his kingdom, it may be difficult to
determine; but the Cretan tale seems to be connected with the legend of St.
Patric, and that legend to have reference to the expectation that Attila would
establish an universal antichristian dominion. When we are told that a person
deceived the Jews with the expectation of leading them back to the land of
promise, coming as a second Moses, and such an one as Antichrist, that no
second Moses could come in the power of Dan, except an emanation from the soul
of Cain the fratricide; that Attila affected particularly the title of king of
the Danes, and that he did murder his brother like Cain, and attempt to
establish an antichristian universal empire, we have some reason to conclude
that Attila did pretend to come in the power of Dan, and in the spirit of Moses
as a lawgiver.
25.
Murder of Bleda. Predicted duration of the Roman empire.
Having thus arrayed himself with superhuman pretensions, as predestined to overthrow that empire, which, in compliance with the predictions of the Sibyl, Romulus was said to have consecrated with the blood of Remus, Attila proceeded soon after to murder his brother Bleda. The exact mode of his death is not known; he is said to have been slain and cast into the Danube; according to one account a dispute arose concerning the name to be given to the new town of Sicambria, which either brother wished to call after his own, and the modern Buda is said to be a version of the name Bleda. The tradition of the twelve birds seen by Romulus and the six seen by Remus, bears a strong appearance of having been founded on some true prophecy concerning the duration of the ever memorable Roman empire, and it is very remarkable that Attila murdered his brother Bleda, and may be supposed to have consecrated by his blood the new city of Sicambria, which he intended to make the seat of a new empire to supersede that of Rome, exactly twelve centuries after the alleged revelation of the twelve birds to Romulus; 755 being the years of Rome before Christ, and 445 after Christ, the date of the murder of Bleda, making exactly twelve centuries from his death to that of Remus. If we add six single years for the six birds of Remus, it brings us to the year 452 on which Attila, master of nearly all Italy, was expected to enter Rome; if instead of six single years we add six lustra or periods of five years by which the Romans were wont to number the lapse of time, it brings us precisely to the year 476 in which the Roman empire was finally extinguished by Odoacer. It is not easy to believe that such wonderful coincidences are accidental, especially when we recollect that this is not a subsequent interpretation of the augury, built upon the events that actually took place, but it had been thus explained in the oldest times; and, as the period drew near, the most learned men, both heathen and Christian, were looking for its accomplishment, and it is not unlikely that Attila used for his ensign a vulture bearing a golden crown with reference to the birds of Romulus. Varro, as cited by Censorinus, had written that he had heard Vettius a distinguished augur and a man of great genius and learning say, that if the facts related by historians concerning the foundation of the city by Romulus and the twelve vultures were true, the Roman state would endure twelve hundred years, since it had already survived the 120th year. The pagan poet Claudian who was contemporary with and involved in the ruin of Stilicho, had stated that the people dreading the invasion of the Goths counted the years numbered by the twelve vultures, and from the expiration of the twelfth century anticipated the overthrow of Rome. Sidonius Apollinaris bishop of Clermont, who wrote a few years after the death of Attila alluded in two passages to the fate prognosticated to Rome by the twelve vultures. It is therefore quite certain that Attila must have been aware of this prediction, and of the interpretation which was given to it by Christians and pagans at this period, and had been handed down from remote antiquity; and it is as certain that such a circumstance must have had great weight with a man attempting to establish an empire which was to supersede that of Rome, and to be built in like manner upon the worship of the sword-god Mars; and it can scarcely be doubted that this prediction and a consideration of the received history of Romulus had its share in exciting him to murder his brother Bleda. Aiming at the establishment of universal dominion by the
influence of superstition and religious awe, as well as by the force of arms,
he could no more have overlooked the fact, that the twelve centuries of Romulus
were actually expiring in the year when he followed his fratricidal example,
than it had escaped the flatterers of Augustus that in his time the seventy
weeks of Daniel were expiring amidst the intense expectation of the nations.
26.
Attila overruns all Thrace. Arnegisclus slain in battle. Trace concluded. Attila
chastises the Acatzires. Curidach.
The same year that witnessed the elevation of Attila to the sole power amongst the Huns by the removal of his brother, brought a fresh attack upon the Eastern empire, though neither the causes which led to the renewal of hostilities, nor the events of the campaign have been handed down to posterity. After a pause of one year, probably obtained by fresh concessions from Theodosius, the war was renewed on a greater scale than ever in 447. The forces of the Western empire afforded no assistance to their Eastern brethren, and not less than seventy cities were taken and ravaged by the Huns. It was a fierce contest, and greater than the former wars of the Huns; the castles and towns of a large tract of Europe were leveled to the ground. Arnegisclus made a memorable stand against Attila and fought valiantly, but fell in the battle, and the total discomfiture of his army left the whole of Thrace at the mercy of the conqueror. In this campaign the celebrated Arderic king of the Gepidae distinguished himself under Attila, who was supported by the Ostrogoths and a portion of the Alans, and various other nations serving under their respective kings. The whole extent south of the Danube, from Illyria to the Black Sea, was ravaged by the Huns, whose army swept a breadth of five days journey as they advanced. Jornandes says that Arnegisclus fell at Marcianopolis, close to Varna near the shores of the Black sea. Marcellinus says the conflict took place on the banks of the Utus, which flows into the Danube a little to the east of Sophia, a place very far in the rear of Attila’s advanced position, which Marcellinus himself states to have been at Thermopolis, supposed to mean Thermopylae. The probability is therefore, that the battle was fought near Marcianopolis. If it was fought near the Utus, Attila must have pursued his uninterrupted course afterwards through Macedonia and Thessaly. Theodosius in this dilemma attempted to tamper with the kings under Attila, and excited against him the princes of the Acatzires on the northern side of the Euxine. Attila is said to have been alarmed at this intelligence, and to have been fearful that the territory which he had ravaged to the south of the river, would be unable to support his immense army, and was induced by prudential motives to listen to the negotiators of Theodosius. The immediate danger to the
empire was averted by the conclusion of a truce, and Attila now turned his arms
against the Acatzires, a Hunnish race dwelling on the borders of the Black sea,
who were governed by a number of petty kings. Theodosius had offered them
bribes, to induce them to withdraw from confederation with Attila. The
messenger however, who was charged with the imperial presents, did not
distribute them according to the estimated rank of the several princes, so that
Curidach who was the senior king, received only the second present. Incensed at
this, and considering himself to have been slighted and deprived of his due, he
called in the aid of Attila against the other princes of the Acatzires. Attila
without loss of time, sent a considerable force against them, slew some, and
reduced the rest to subjection. He then invited Curidach to partake in the
fruits of the victory, but he, suspecting some design against his person, and
adroitly adapting his flattery to the pretensions which Attila had lately
advanced, on the production of the divine sword, made answer, that it was a
formidable thing for a man to come into the presence of a God; for if no one
could steadfastly behold the face of the sun, how should he without injury look
upon the greatest of divinities. By these means, Curidach retained his
sovereignty, while the power of the rest was yielded up to the Hun.
27.
Embassies to Constantinople to redemand the refugees.
Attila now sent ambassadors to Constantinople, to redemand the fugitives from his territory. He seems to have been at all times particularly irritable concerning those who withdrew themselves from subjection to his authority by flight to the Christians, and the certainty of their execution, if recaptured, rendered their protectors very unwilling to surrender them. On this occasion his legates were received with great courtesy, and loaded with presents, but they were dismissed with assurances that there were no refugees at Constantinople. Four successive embassies were despatched to Theodosius, and enriched by the liberality of the Romans; for Attila, aware of the gifts by which his ambassadors were conciliated through fear of an abrupt infringement of the truce, whenever he wished to confer a benefit upon any of his favorites or dependants, found some excuse for sending them on a mission to enrich themselves. The Romans obeyed him as their lord and master, and submitted to
all his demands, not only dreading the renewal of hostilities by the Huns, but
harassed by the warlike preparations of the Parthians, the maritime attacks of
the Vandals in the Mediterranean, the inroads of the Isauri, and the repeated
incursions of the Saracens who laid waste the eastern parts of the empire. They
humbled themselves therefore towards Attila, and temporized with him, while
they were preparing to make head against their other enemies, and levied
troops, and made choice of generals to oppose them.
28. Edécon
sent to Constantinople with Orestes. Chrysaphius. Maximin, Priscus, Bigilas. Agintheus.
In the following year (AD 448) Edécon, who is called a Scythian, a man highly distinguished by his military exploits, was sent to Constantinople by Attila, together with Orestes, who was of Roman extraction, dwelling in Paeonia near the Savus, which had been ceded to Attila by a treaty concluded with Aetius the commander of the forces of the Western empire. Edécon proceeded to the imperial palace, and delivered the
letters of Attila, in which he reiterated his complaints touching the
fugitives, and threatened that he would have recourse to arms again, unless
they were delivered up to him and the Romans desisted from ploughing the lands
which he had lately wrested from them, or at least overrun. The territory which
he claimed extended on the southern bank of the Danube, from Paeonia to the
Thracian Novae, with a breadth of five days journey for an active man; and he
forbad the Illyrian fair being held as heretofore on the banks of the Danube,
but in Naissus which he had utterly destroyed, and now appointed to be the
boundary between his states and the Romans. He demanded that the most
distinguished men of consular dignity should be sent to his court to arrange
all matters in dispute, and threatened, that if they should delay, he would
advance to Sardica.
The letter having been read, Edécon delivered the message of his
sovereign through the interpretation of Bigilas, and withdrew with him through
another quarter of the royal palace, to visit Chrysaphius the shield-bearer of
the emperor, who had then much influence. Edécon expressed great admiration at
the splendor of the imperial residence, and, when they reached the apartment of
Chrysaphius, Bigilas interpreted to him the words in which the Scythian had
stated that he admired the magnificence and envied the wealth of the Romans.
The eunuch seized this opportunity to tamper with the fidelity of the
barbarian, and told him that he should enjoy like opulence and dwell under
ceilings of gold, if he would exchange the party of the Scythians for that of
the Romans. Edécon replied that it was not lawful for the servant of another
master to do this without the permission of his lord; whereupon the insidious
eunuch asked him if he had free access to Attila, and influence in the Hunnish
court. Edécon replied that he was a confidential attendant, and took his turn
with other chosen and distinguished individuals to watch in arms over his safety
upon the days allotted to him. Thereupon Chrysaphius said, that if he would
pledge himself to the Romans, he would promise him great advantages; but that
leisure was necessary to make arrangements, for which purpose he proposed to
him to return to supper without Orestes and the rest of the embassy.
Edécon having undertaken to do so, and having returned according to agreement, Bigilas acting as interpreter between them, they pledged their right hands and swore, the one that he would speak of things the most advantageous to Edécon, the other that he would not reveal their discourse, whether he might assent to the proposals or not. The eunuch, satisfied with this promise, proceeded to assure the Scythian that if on his return he would murder Attila and make his escape to the Romans he should enjoy great wealth and luxury. Edécon assented, but stated that money would be necessary to distribute amongst the soldiers under him, that they might assist him without reluctance, for which purpose he required fifty pounds weight of gold. Chrysaphius would have disbursed the money immediately, but Edécon represented the necessity of his returning first to render an account of his embassy, and of his being accompanied by Bigilas who might bring Attila’s answer concerning the refugees, and at the same time a communication from himself to state when and how the gold might be remitted to him; for that Attila would question him closely according to his custom, what gifts and how much money he had obtained from the Romans; nor should he be able to conceal the truth easily, on account of the numbers who were with him. Chrysaphius assented to this, and when his guest had withdrawn, he proceeded to disclose the treacherous scheme to the emperor, who immediately sent for Martialius, the master or warden of the palace, to whom by virtue of his office all the counsels of the emperor were necessarily confided, as he had the superintendence of the letter-carriers, the interpreters, and the soldiers who kept guard in the palace. It seemed good to the emperor and these his advisers to send Maximin
with Bigilas under the existing circumstances, to the court of Attila: that
Bigilas in the character of interpreter should obey the instructions he might
receive from Edécon, but that Maximin should have charge to deliver the letter
of the emperor, remaining entirely ignorant of the infamous conspiracy which
was to be carried on under the cover of his mission. Theodosius wrote in the
credentials of the ambassadors that Bigilas was the interpreter, but that
Maximin was a man of much greater distinction and very much in his confidence.
He exhorted Attila not to infringe the treaty, inasmuch as he then sent to him
seventeen refugees in addition to those who had been already delivered up, and
assured him that there were no more in his dominions. Maximin was instructed to
use his endeavours to persuade Attila not to require an ambassador of higher
rank, as it had been customary for his ancestors and the other kings of Scythia,
to receive any military or civil envoy; and suggest the expediency of his
sending Onegesius to arrange the matters which were under discussion; and
represent the impracticability of Attila’s conferring with a man of consular
dignity at Sardica which had been demolished by the Huns.
Maximin persuaded the sophist and historian Priscus to accompany him on
this expedition; and if the eight books which he afterwards wrote had not
unfortunately perished, those extracts only being preserved which relate to the
embassies, we should not have to lament the insufficiency of our materials for
some parts of the history of Attila.
They set forth therefore in company with the barbarians, and proceeded
to Sardica, thirteen days journey from Constantinople. Here they tarried, and
thought it advisable to invite Edécon and his companions to take their meal
with them. The natives furnished them with sheep and oxen, which they
slaughtered and prepared for their repast. During the banquet the barbarians
exalted the name of Attila, and the Greeks that of the emperor, whereupon
Bigilas said that it was not just to compare a God with a man, intimating
thereby that Theodosius was the divinity and Attila a human potentate. The
guests took great offence at the insinuation, and grew very warm on the
subject, but the ambassadors exerted themselves to change the subject and
pacify them, and after the supper Maximin presented Edécon and Orestes with
silken apparel and oriental jewels. Orestes outstand Edécon, and observed after
his departure to Maximin, that he acted well and wisely in not imitating the
conduct of those about the emperor; for some had invited to supper Edécon
alone, and had loaded him with gifts; but the ambassadors, not being aware of
the circumstance to which he alluded, asked him in what respect he had been
neglected and Edécon honored, to which he made no reply, but withdrew.
The subject being discussed in conversation the next day, Bigilas
observed that Orestes ought not to have expected to receive the same honors as Edécon,
inasmuch as Orestes was the follower and scribe of Attila, but Edécon was very
distinguished in warfare, and being of Hunnish blood was in higher estimation;
after which he addressed Edécon in his own language, and subsequently informed
the ambassadors, that he had told him what had been said by Orestes, and with
difficulty had allayed his anger on the subject, but the historian does not
rely implicitly on the veracity of the interpretation.
Arriving at Naissus five days journey from the Danube, they found it demolished by the Huns, but some sick persons were abiding in the ruins of the temples. The party sought for a clear place to unyoke their beasts of burden, for the whole bank of the river was strewn with the bones of those who had fallen in the war; an incident which furnishes a horrible picture of the desolating atrocity of Hunnish warfare, by which the whole population of a distinguished town had been exterminated, and as yet after the lapse of several years, there had been none to bury their remains. On the following day
they visited Agintheus who commanded the forces in Illyria, and had his
quarters not far from Naissus, that they might deliver to him the injunctions
of the emperor, and receive from his hands five refugees who were to make up
the complement of seventeen, concerning whom he had written to Attila, and who
were to be delivered up to his relentless indignation. Agintheus, as he was
ordered, surrendered the ill-fated fugitives, softening the harshness of the
act towards them by the expression of his unavailing regret.
CHAPTER VBanquet with Attila
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