READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
THE CHRISTIAN ROMAN EMPIRE AND THE FOUNDATION OF THE TEUTONIC KINGDOMS 300-500
CHAPTER X.
THE
TEUTONIC KINGDOMS
(A)
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).
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.
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.
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 Thorismund 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, Thorismund, 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 Thorismund 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).
Thorismund 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 Thorismund 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 favourable 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).
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 favour 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 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 endeavoured 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 favours 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.
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 endeavour 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
favoured in the partition above the ordinary freemen. The landed property of
the monarch’s favourites 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 favourite 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. Thorismund 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 neighbourhood, 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 notariorum or referendarius.
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 favourable 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.
(B)
THE
FRANKS BEFORE CLOVIS
Tacitus, in the
de Moribus Germanorum,
tells us that the Germans claimed to be descended from a common ancestor, Mannus, son of the earth-born god Tuisco. Mannus, according to the legend, had three sons, from
whom sprang three groups of tribes: the Istaevones,
who dwelt along the banks of the Rhine; the Ingaevones,
whose seat was on the shores of the two seas, the Oceanus Germanicus (North Sea) and the Mare Suevicum (the
Baltic), and in the Cimbric peninsula between; and,
lastly, more to the east and south, on the banks of the Elbe and the Danube,
the Herminones. After indicating this general
division, Tacitus, in the latter part of his work, enumerates about forty
tribes, whose customs presented, no doubt, a strong general resemblance, but
whose institutions and organization showed differences of a sufficiently marked
character.
When we pass
from the first century to the fifth, we find that the names of the Germanic
peoples given by Tacitus have completely disappeared. Not only is there no
mention of Istaevones, Ingaevones,
and Herminones, but there is no trace of individual
tribes such as the Chatti, Chauci,
and Cherusci; their names are wholly unknown to the
writers of the fourth and fifth centuries. In their place we find these writers
using other designations: they speak of Franks, Saxons, Alemans.
The writers of the Merovingian period not unnaturally supposed that these were
the names of new peoples, who had invaded Germany and made good their footing
there in the interval. This hypothesis found favour especially with regard to
the Franks. As early as Gregory of Tours, we find mention of a tradition
according to which the Franks had come from Pannonia, had first established
themselves on the right bank of the Rhine, and had subsequently crossed the
river. In the chronicler known under the name of Fredegar the Franks are represented as descended from the Trojans. “Their first king was
Priam; afterwards they had a king named Friga; later,
they divided into two parts, one of which migrated into Macedonia and received
the name of Macedonians. Those who remained were driven out of Phrygia and
wandered about, with their wives and children, for many years. They chose for
themselves a king named Francion, and from him took
the name of Franks. Francion made war upon many
peoples, and after devastating Asia finally passed over into Europe, and
established himself between the Rhine, the Danube and the sea”. The writer of
the Liber Historiae combines the statements of
Gregory of Tours and of the pseudo-Fredegar, and,
with a fine disregard of chronology, relates that, after the fall of Troy, one
part of the Trojan people, under Priam and Antenor, came by way of the Black
Sea to the mouth of the Danube, sailed up the river to Pannonia, and founded a
city called Sicambria. The Trojans, so this anonymous
writer continues, were defeated by the Emperor Valentinian, who laid them under
tribute and named them Franks, that is wild men (feros), because of their boldness
and hardness of heart. After a time the Franks slew the Roman officials whose
duty it was to demand the tribute from them, and, on the death of Priam, they
quitted Sicambria, and came to the neighborhood of the Rhine. There they chose themselves a
king named Pharamond, son of Marcomir.
This naïf legend, half-popular, half-learned, was accepted as fact throughout
the Middle Ages. From it alone comes the name of Pharamond,
which in most histories heads the list of the kings of France. In reality,
there is nothing to prove that the Franks, any more than the Saxons or the Alemans, were races who came in from without, driven into
Germany by an invasion of their own territory.
Some modern
scholars have thought that the origin of the Franks, and of other races who
make their appearance between the third century and the fifth, might be traced
to a curious custom of the Germanic tribes. The nobles, whom Tacitus calls principes, attached to themselves a certain number
of comrades, comites, whom they bound to
fealty by a solemn oath. At the head of these followers they made pillaging
expeditions, and levied war upon the neighbouring peoples, without however
involving the community to which they belonged. The comes was ready to
die for his chief; to desert him would have been an infamy. The chief, on his
part, protected his follower, and gave him a war-horse, spear, etc. as the
reward of his loyalty. Thus there were formed, outside the regular State, bands
of warriors united together by the closest ties. These bands, so it is said,
soon formed, in the interior of Germany, what were virtually new States, and
the former princeps simply took the title of king. Such, according to
the theory, was the origin of the Franks, the Alemans,
and the Saxons. But this theory, however ingenious, cannot be accepted. The
bands were formed exclusively of young men of an age to bear arms; among the
Franks we find from the first old men, women, and children. The bands were
organized solely for war; whereas the most ancient laws of the Franks have much
to say about the ownership of land, and about crimes against property; they
represent the Franks as an organized nation with regular institutions.
The Franks,
then, did not come into Germany from without; and it would be rash to seek
their origin in the custom of forming bands. That being so, only one hypothesis
remains open. From the second century to the fourth the Germans lived in a
continual state of unrest. The different communities ceaselessly made war on
one another and destroyed one another. Civil war also devastated many of them.
The ancient communities were thus broken up, and from their remains were formed
new communities which received new names. Thus is to be explained why it is
that the nomenclature of the Germanic peoples in the fifth century differs so
markedly from that which Tacitus has recorded. But neighbouring tribes
presented, despite their constant antagonisms, considerable resemblances. They
had a common dialect and similar habits and customs. They sometimes made
temporary alliances, though holding themselves free to quarrel again before
long and make war on one another with the utmost ferocity. In time, groups of
these tribes came to be called by generic names, and this is doubtless the
character of the names Franks, Alemans, and Saxons.
These names were not applied, in the fourth and fifth centuries, to a single
tribe, but to a group of neighbouring tribes who presented, along with real
differences, certain common characteristics.
It appears that
the peoples who lived along the right bank of the Rhine, to the north of the
Main, received the name of Franks; those who had established themselves between
the Ems and the Elbe, that of Saxons (Ptolemy mentions the Saxones as inhabitants of the Cimbric peninsula, and perhaps
the name of this petty tribe had passed to the whole group); while those whose
territory lay to the south of the Main and who at some time or other had
overflowed into the agri decumates (the present Baden) were called Alemans. It is possible that, after all, we should see in
these three peoples, as Waitz has suggested, the Istaevones, Ingaevones, and Herminones of Tacitus.
But it must be
understood that between the numerous tribes known under each of the general
names of Franks, Saxons, and Alemans there was no
common bond. They did not constitute a single State but groups of States without
federal connection or common organization. Sometimes two, three, even a
considerable number of tribes, might join together to prosecute a war in
common, but when the war was over the link snapped and the tribes fell asunder
again.
Documentary
evidence enables us to trace how the generic name Franci came to be given to certain tribes between the Main and the North Sea, for we
find these tribes designated now by the ancient name which was known to Tacitus
and again by the later name. In Peutinger’s chart we
find Chamavi qui et Pranci and there is no doubt that we should read qui et Franci.
The Chamavi inhabited the country between the Yssel and the Ems; later on, we find them a little further
south, on the banks of the Rhine in Hamaland, and
their laws were collected in the ninth century in the document known as the Lex
Francorum Chamavorum. Along with the Chamavi we may reckon among the Franks the Attuarii or Chattuarii. We read
in Ammianus Marcellinus (xx. 10) Rheno transmisso, regionem pervasit (Julian in AD 360) Francorum quos Atthuarios vocant. Later, the pagus Attuariorum will correspond to the country of Emmerich, of Cleves, and of Xanten. We may
note that in the Middle Ages there was to be found in Burgundy, in the
neighbourhood of Dijon, a pagus Attuariorum, and it is very probable that a portion of
this tribe settled at this spot in the course of the fifth century. The Bructeri, the Ampsivarii, and the Chatti were, like the Chamavi,
reckoned as Franks. They are mentioned as such in a well-known passage of Sulpicius Alexander which is cited by Gregory of Tours (Historia
Francorum, II. 9). Arbogast, a barbarian general in the service of Rome,
desires to take vengeance on the Franks and their chiefs—subreguli—Sunno and Marcomir. It is this Marcomir, chief of the Ampsivarii and Chatti, whom the author of the Liber Historiae makes the father of Pharamond, though he has nothing whatever to do with the
Salian Franks.
Thus it is
evident that the name Franks was given to a group of tribes, not to a single tribe.
The earliest historical mention of the name may be that in Peutinger’s chart, supposing, at least, that the words et Pranci are not a later interpolation. The earliest mention in a literary source is in
the Vita Aureliani of Vopiscus,
cap. 7. In the year 240, Aurelian, who was then only a military tribune,
immediately after defeating the Franks in the neighbourhood of Mainz, was
marching against the Persians, and his soldiers as they marched chanted this
refrain:
Mille Sarmatas, mille Francos semel et semel occidimus;
Mille Persas quaerimus.
It would be in
any case impossible to follow the history of all these Frankish tribes for want
of evidence, but even if their history was known it would be of quite secondary
interest, for it would have only a remote connection with the history of
France. Offshoots from these various tribes no doubt established themselves
sporadically here and there in ancient Gaul, as in the case of the Attuarii. It was not however by the Franks as a whole, but
by a single tribe, the Salian Franks, that Gaul was to be conquered; it was
their king who was destined to be the ruler of this noble territory. It is
therefore to the Salian Franks that we must devote our attention.
The Salian
Franks are mentioned for the first time in AD 358. In that year Julian,
as yet only a Caesar, marched against them. What is the origin of the name? It
was long customary to derive it from the river Yssel (Isala), or from Saalland to the south of the Zuiderzee; but it seems much more probable that the name
comes from sal (the salt sea). The Salian
Franks at first lived by the shores of the North Sea, and were known by this
name in contradistinction to the Ripuarian Franks, who lived on the banks of
the Rhine. All their oldest legends speak of the sea, and the name of one of
their earliest kings, Merovech, signifies sea-born.
From the shores
of the North Sea the Salian Franks had advanced little by little towards the
south, and at the period when Ammianus Marcellinus mentions them they occupied Toxandria, that is to say the region to the south of the
Meuse, between that river and the Scheldt. Julian completely defeated the
Salian Franks, but he left them in possession of their territory of Toxandria. Only, instead of occupying it as conquerors,
they held it as foederati, agreeing to defend it against all other
invaders. They furnished also to the armies of Rome soldiers whom we hear of as
serving in far distant regions. In the Notitia Dignitatum,
in which we find a sort of Army List of the Empire drawn up about the beginning
of the fifth century, there is mention of Salii seniores and Salii juniores, and we also find Salii figuring in the auxilia palatina.
At the end of
the fourth and beginning of the fifth century the Salian Franks established in Toxandria ceased to recognize the authority of Rome, and
began to assert their independence. It was at this period that the Roman
civilization disappeared from these regions. The Latin language ceased to be
spoken and the Germanic tongue was alone employed. Even at the present day the
inhabitants of these districts speak Flemish, a Germanic dialect. The
place-names were altered and took on a Germanic form, with the terminations hem, ghem, seele, and zele, indicating a dwelling-place, loo wood, dal valley. The Christian religion retreated along with the Roman civilization, and
those regions reverted to paganism. For a long time, it would seem, these
Salian Franks were held in check by the great Roman road which led, by way of
Arras, Cambrai, and Bavay, to Cologne, and which was
protected by numerous forts.
The Salians
were subdivided into a number of tribes each holding a pagus.
Each of these divisions had a king who was chosen from the most noble family,
and who was distinguished from his fellow-Franks by his long hair—criniti reges. The first of these kings to
whom we have a distinct reference bore the name of Clogio or Clojo (Clodion). He had his seat at Dispargum, the exact position of which has not been
determined—it may have been Diest in Brabant.
Desiring to extend the borders of the Salian Franks he advanced southwards in
the direction of the great Roman road. Before reaching it, however, he was
surprised, near the town of Helena (Hélesmes-Nord),
when engaged in celebrating the betrothal of one of his warriors to a
fair-haired maiden, by Aetius, who exercised in the name of Rome the military
command in Gaul. He sustained a crushing defeat; the victor carried off his
chariots and took prisoner even the trembling bride. This was about the year
431. But Clodion was not long in recovering from this defeat. He sent spies
into the neighbourhood of Cambrai, defeated the Romans, and captured the town.
He had thus gained command of the great Roman road. Then, without encountering
opposition, he advanced as far as the Somme, which marked the limit of Frankish
territory. About this period Tournai on the Scheldt seems to have become the
capital of the Salian Franks.
Clodion was
succeeded in the kingship of the Franks by Merovech.
All our histories of France assert that he was the son of Clodion; but Gregory
of Tours simply says that he belonged to the family of that king, and he does
not give even this statement as certain; it is maintained, he says, by certain
persons. We should perhaps refer to Merovech certain
statements of the Greek historian Priscus, who lived about the middle of the
fifth century. On the death of a king of the Franks, he says, his two sons
disputed the succession. The elder betook himself to Attila to seek his
support; the younger preferred to claim the protection of the Emperor, and
journeyed to Rome. “I saw him there”, he says; “he was still quite young. His
fair hair, thick and very long, fell over his shoulders”. Aetius, who was at
this time in Rome, received him graciously, loaded him with presents, and sent
him back as a friend and ally. Certainly, in the sequel the Salian Franks
responded to the appeal of Aetius and mustered to oppose the great invasion of
Attila, fighting in the ranks of the Roman army at the battle of the Mauriac
Plain (AD 451). The Vita Lupi, in which some
confidence may be placed, names King Merovech among
the combatants.
Various legends
have gathered round the figure of Merovech. The
pseudo-Fredegar narrates that as the mother of this
prince was sitting by the sea-shore a monster sprang from the waves and
overpowered her; and from this union was born Merovech.
Evidently the legend owes its origin to an attempt to explain the etymology of
the name Merovech, son of the sea. In consequence of
this legend some historians have maintained that Merovech was a wholly mythical personage and they have sought out some remarkable
etymologies to explain the name Merovingian, which is given to the kings of the
first dynasty; but in our opinion the existence of this prince is sufficiently
proved, and we interpret the term Merovingian as meaning descendants of Merovech.
Merovech had a son named
Childeric. The relationship is attested in precise terms by Gregory of Tours
who says cujus filius fuit Childericus. In
addition to the legendary narratives about Childeric which Gregory gathered
from oral tradition, we have also some very precise details which the
celebrated historian borrowed from annals now no longer extant. The legendary
tale is as follows. Childeric, who was extremely licentious, dishonoured the
daughters of many of the Franks. His subjects therefore rose in their wrath,
drove him from the throne, and even threatened to kill him. He fled to
Thuringia—it is uncertain whether this was Thuringia beyond the Rhine, or
whether there was a Thuringia on the left bank of the river—but he left behind
him a faithful friend whom he charged to win back the allegiance of the Franks.
Childeric and his friend broke a gold coin in two and each took a part. “When I
send you my part”, said the friend, "and the pieces fit together to form
one whole you may safely return to your country”. The Franks unanimously chose
for their king Aegidius, who had succeeded Aetius in
Gaul as magister militum. At the end of eight
years the faithful friend, having succeeded in gaining over the Franks, sent to
Childeric the token agreed upon, and the prince, on his return, was restored to
the throne. The queen of the Thuringians, Basina by name, left her husband Basinus to follow Childeric. "I know thy worth",
said she, "and thy great courage; therefore I have come to live with thee.
If I had known, even beyond the sea, a man more worthy than thou art, I would
have gone to him". Childeric, well pleased, married her forthwith, and
from their union was born Clovis. This legend, on which it would be rash to
base any historical conclusion, was amplified later, and the further
developments of it have been preserved by the pseudo-Fredegar and the author of the Liber Historiae.
But alongside
of this legendary story we have some definite information regarding Childeric.
While the main centre of his kingdom continued to be in the neighbourhood of
Tournai, he fought along with the Roman generals in the valley of the Loire
against all the enemies who sought to wrest Gaul from the Empire. Unlike his
predecessor Clodion and his son Clovis, he faithfully fulfilled his duties as a foederatus. In the year 463 the Visigoths made an effort to extend their
dominions to the banks of the Loire. Aegidius marched
against them, and defeated them at Orleans, Friedrich, brother of King
Theodoric II, being slain in the battle.
Now we know for
certain that Childeric was present at this battle. A short time afterwards the
Saxons made a descent, by way of the North Sea, the Channel, and the Atlantic,
under the leadership of a chief named Odovacar, established themselves in some
islands at the mouth of the Loire, and threatened the town of Angers on the Mayenne. The situation was the more serious because Aegidius had lately died (October 464), leaving the command
to his son Syagrius. Childeric threw himself into
Angers and held it against the Saxons. He succeeded in beating off the
besiegers, assumed the offensive, and recaptured from the Saxons the islands
which they had seized. The defeated Odovacar placed himself, like Childeric, at
the service of Rome, and the two adversaries, now reconciled, barred the path
of a troop of Alemans who were returning from a
pillaging expedition into Italy. Thus Childeric policed Gaul on behalf of Rome
and endeavored to check the inroads and forays of the
other barbarians.
The death of
Childeric probably took place in the year 481, and he was buried at Tournai.
His tomb was discovered in the year 1653. In it was a ring bearing his name,
CHILDIRICI REGIS, with the image of the head and shoulders of a long-haired
warrior. Numerous objects of value, arms, jewels, remains of a purple robe
ornamented with golden bees, gold coins bearing the effigies of Leo I and Zeno,
Emperors of Constantinople, were found in the tomb. Such of these treasures as
could be preserved are now in the Bibliotheque Nationale at Paris. They serve as evidence that these
Merovingian kings were fond of luxury and possessed quantities of valuable
objects. In the ensuing volume it will be seen how Childeric's son Clovis broke
with his father's policy, threw off his allegiance to the Empire, and conquered
Gaul for his own hand. While Childeric was reigning at Tournai, another Salian
chief, Ragnachar, reigned at Cambrai, the town which
Clodion had taken; the residence of a third, named Chararic,
is unknown to us.
The Salian
Franks, as we have said above, were so called in contradistinction to the
Ripuarians. The latter doubtless included a certain number of tribes, such as
the Ampsivarii and the Bructeri.
Julian, in the year 360, checked the advance of these barbarians and forced
them to retire across the Rhine. In 389 Arbogast similarly checked their
inroads and conquered all their territory in 392, as we have already said. But
in the beginning of the fifth century, when Stilicho had withdrawn the Roman
garrisons from the banks of the Rhine, they were able to advance without
hindrance and establish themselves on the left bank of the river. Their
progress however was far from rapid. They only gained possession of Cologne at
a time when Salvian, born about 400, was a man in
middle life; and even then the town was retaken. It did not finally pass into
their hands until the year 463. The town of Treves was taken and burned by the
Franks four times before they made themselves masters of it. Towards 470 the
Ripuarians had founded a fairly compact kingdom, of which the principal cities
were Aix-la-Chapelle, Bonn, Juliers, and Zülpich. They had advanced southwards as far as Divodurum (Metz), the fortifications of which seem to have
defied all their efforts. The Roman civilization, the Latin language, and even
the Christian religion seem to have disappeared from the regions occupied by
the compact masses of these invaders. The present frontier of the French and
German languages, or a frontier drawn a little further to the south—for it
appears that in course of time French has gained ground a little—indicates the
limit of their dominions. In the course of their advance southwards, the
Ripuarians came into collision with the Alemans, who
had already made themselves masters of Alsace and were endeavoring to enlarge their borders in all directions. There were many battles between the
Ripuarians and Alemans, of one of which, fought at Zülpich (Tolbiacum), a record has
been preserved. Sigebert, king of the Ripuarians, was
there wounded in the knee and walked lame for the rest of his life; whence he
was known as Sigebertus Claudus.
It appears that at this time the Alemans had
penetrated far north into the kingdom of the Ripuarians. This kingdom was
destined to have but a transient existence; we shall see in the following
volume how it was destroyed by Clovis, and how all the Frankish tribes on the
left bank of the Rhine were brought under his authority.
While the
Salian and Ripuarian Franks were spreading along the left bank of the Rhine,
and founding flourishing kingdoms there, other Frankish tribes remained on the
right bank. They were firmly established, especially to the north of the Main,
and among them the ancient tribe of the Chatti, from
whom the Hessians are derived, took a leading place. Later this territory
formed one of the duchies into which Germany was divided, and took from its
Frankish inhabitants the name of Franconia.
If we desire to
make ourselves acquainted with the manners and customs of the Franks, we must
have recourse to the most ancient document which has come down from them—the
Salic Law. The oldest redaction of this Law, as will be shown in the next
volume, probably dates only from the last years of Clovis (507-511), but in it
are codified much more ancient usages. On the basis of this code we can
conjecture the condition of the Franks in the time of Clodion, of Merovech, and of Childeric. The family is still a very
closely united whole; there is solidarity among relatives even to a remote
degree. If a murderer could not pay the fine to which he had been sentenced, he
must bring before the mâl (court) twelve comprobators who made affirmation that he could not
pay it. That done, he returned to his dwelling, took up some earth from each of
the four corners of his room, and cast it with the left hand over his shoulder
towards his nearest relative; then, barefoot and clad only in his shirt, but
bearing a spear in his hand, he leaped over the hedge which surrounded his
dwelling. Once this ceremony had been performed, it devolved upon his relative,
to whom he had thereby ceded his house, to pay the fine in his place. He might
appeal in this way to a series of relatives one after another; and if, ultimately,
none of them was able to pay, he was brought before four successive mâls, and if no one took pity on him and paid his
debt, he was put to death. But if the family was thus a unit for the payment of
fines, it had the compensating advantage of sharing the fine paid for the
murder of one of its members. Since the solidarity of the family sometimes
entailed dangerous consequences, it was permissible for an individual to break
these family ties. The man who wished to do so presented himself at the mâl before the centenarius and broke into four pieces, above his head, three wands of alder. He then threw
the pieces into the four corners, declaring that he separated himself from his
relatives and renounced all rights of succession. The family included the
slaves and liti or freedmen. Slaves were the
chattels of their master; if they were wounded, maimed, or killed, the master
received the compensation; on the other hand, if the slave had committed any
crime the master was obliged to pay, unless he preferred to give him up to bear
the punishment. The Franks recognized private property, and severe penalties
were denounced against those who invaded the rights of ownership; there are
penalties for stealing from another's garden, meadow, corn-field, or flax-field,
and for ploughing another's land. At a man's death all his property was divided
among his sons; a daughter had no claim to any share of it. Later, she is
simply excluded from Salic ground, that is from her father's house and the land
that surrounds it.
We find also in
the Salic Law some information about the organization of the State. The royal
power appears strong. Any man who refuses to appear before the royal tribunal
is outlawed. All his goods are confiscated and anyone who chooses may slay him
with impunity; no one, not even his wife, may give him food, under penalty of a
very heavy fine. All those who are employed about the king's person are
protected by a special sanction. Their wergeld is three times as high as that of other Franks of the same social status. Over
each of the territorial divisions called pagi the king placed a representative of his authority known as the grafio, or, to give him his later title, the comes.
The grafio maintained order within his
jurisdiction, levied such fines as were due to the king, executed the sentences
of the courts, and seized the property of condemned persons who refused to pay
their fines. The pagus was in turn subdivided
into "hundreds" (centenae). Each
"hundred" had its court of judgment known as the mâl;
the place where it met was known as the mâlberg.
This tribunal was presided over by the centenarius or thunginus—these terms appear to us to be
synonymous. Historians have devoted much discussion to the question whether
this official was appointed by the king or elected by the freemen of the
"hundred". At the court of the "hundred" all the freemen
had a right to be present, but only a few of them took part in the
proceedings—some of them would be nominated for this duty on one occasion, some
on another. In their capacity as assistants to the centenarius at the mâl the freemen were designated rachineburgi. In order to make a sentence valid it
was required that seven rachineburgi should
pronounce judgment. A plaintiff had the right to summon seven of them to give
judgment upon his suit. If they refused, they had to pay a fine of three sols.
If they persisted in their refusal, and did not undertake to pay the three sols
before sunset, they incurred a fine of fifteen sols.
Every man’s
life was rated at a certain value; this was his price, the wergeld.
The wergeld of a Salian Frank was 200 sols;
that of a Roman 100 sols. If a Salian Frank had killed another Salian, or a
Roman, without aggravating circumstances, the Court sentenced him to pay the
price of the victim, the 200 or 100 sols. The compositio in this case is exactly equivalent to the wergeld;
if, however, he had only wounded his victim he paid, according to the severity
of the injury, a lower sum proportionate to the wergeld.
If, however, the murder has taken place in particularly atrocious
circumstances, if the murderer has endeavoured to conceal the corpse, if he has
been accompanied by an armed band, or if the assassination has been unprovoked,
the compositio may be three times, six times,
nine times, the wergeld. Of this compositio, two thirds were paid to the relatives of
the victim; this was the faida and bought off
the right of private vengeance; the other third was paid to the State or to the
king: it was called fretus or fredum from the German word Friede peace, and was a compensation for the breach of the public peace of which the
king is the guardian. Thus a very lofty principle was embodied in this penalty.
The Salic Law
is mainly a tariff of the fines which must be paid for various crimes and offences.
The State thus endeavoured to substitute the judicial sentences of the courts
for private vengeance, part of the compensation being paid to the victim or his
family to induce them to renounce this right. But we may safely conjecture that
the triumph of law over inveterate custom was not immediate. It was long before
families were willing to leave to the judgment of the courts serious crimes
which had been committed against them, such as homicides and adulteries; they
flew to arms and made war upon the guilty person and his family. The forming in
this way of armed bands was very detrimental to public order.
The crimes
mentioned most frequently in the Salic Law give us some grounds on which to
form an idea of the manners and characteristics of the Franks. These Franks
would seem to have been much given to bad language, for the Law mentions a
great variety of terms of abuse. It is forbidden to call one’s adversary a fox
or a hare, or to reproach him with having flung away his shield; it is
forbidden to call a woman meretrix, or to say that she had joined the
witches at their revels. Warriors who are so easily enraged readily pass to
violence and murder. Every form of homicide is mentioned in the Salic Law. The
roads are not safe, and are often infested by armed bands. In addition to
murder, theft is very often mentioned by the code — theft of fruits, of hay, of
cattle-bells, of horse-clogs, of animals, of river-boats, of slaves, and even
of freemen. All these thefts are punished with severity and are held by all to
be base and shameful crimes. But there is a punishment of special severity for
robbing a corpse which has been buried. The guilty person is outlawed, and is
to be treated like a wild beast.
The
civilization of these Franks is primitive; they are, above all else, warriors.
As to their appearance, they brought their fair hair forward from the top of
the head, leaving the back of the neck bare. On their faces they generally wore
no hair but the moustache. They wore close-fitting garments, fastened with
brooches, and bound in at the waist by a leather belt which was covered with
bands of enamelled iron and clasped by an ornamental buckle. From this belt
hung the long sword, the hanger or scramasax, and various articles of
the toilet, such as scissors and combs made of bone. From it too was hung the
single-bladed axe, the favourite weapon of the Franks, known as the francisca, which they used both at close quarters
and by hurling it at their enemies from a distance. They were also armed with a
long lance or spear formed of an iron blade at the end of a long wooden shaft.
For defence they carried a large shield, made of wood or wattles covered with
skins, the centre of which was formed by a convex plate of metal, the boss,
fastened by iron rods to the body of the shield. They were fond of jewellery,
wearing gold finger-rings and armlets, and collars formed of beads of amber or
glass or paste inlaid with colour. They were buried with their arms and
ornaments, and many Frankish cemeteries have been explored in which the dead
were found fully armed, as if prepared for a great military review. The Franks
were universally distinguished for courage. As Sidonius Apollinaris wrote of them: “from their youth up war is their passion. If they
are crushed by weight of numbers, or through being taken at a disadvantage,
death may overwhelm them, but not fear”.
THE
SUEVES, ALANS, AND VANDALS IN SPAIN,
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