READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
THE CHRISTIAN ROMAN EMPIRE AND THE FOUNDATION OF THE TEUTONIC KINGDOMS 300-500
CHAPTER XII. THE HUNS
(A)
THE ASIATIC
BACKGROUND
THE Asiatic background has its
basis in the immense zone of steppes and deserts which stretches from the
Caspian Sea to the Khin-gan Mountains, and
is divided into two regions by the Pamir and the Thian Shan
ranges. The western region, like the whole lowland district of West Asia, even
to the extreme north, is a deserted sea-bed; the eastern (Tarim basin
and Gobi) seems formerly to have been covered with great fresh-water lakes. The
water-basins began to evaporate and to shrink to inland seas, while the intervening
country became a desert. The largest remains of former enormous water-basins
are the salt Caspian Sea and the sweet-water Aral Sea. In both regions all the
moisture that falls evaporates, so that no rivers reach the open sea; most of
them ooze away in the sand, and only the greatest, such as the Syr, Amu, Hi, Chu, Tarim,
flow into large inland seas. The fact that the evaporation is greater than the
fall of moisture, and that the latter takes place chiefly in the cold season,
has important consequences, which account for the desert nature of the land.
All the salt which is released by the weathering and decomposition of the soil
remains in the ground, and only in the higher regions with greater falls of
moisture, and by the banks of rivers is the soil sufficiently lixiviated to be
fit for cultivation. Everywhere else is steppe and desert absolutely
uncultivable. The surface of the land can be divided into six categories:
sand-deserts, grave deserts, salt-steppes, loam-steppes, loess-land, and rocky mountains.
Of these the sand-deserts form
by far the greatest part. They consist of fine drift-sand, which the driving
storm wind forms into sickle-shaped shifting dunes (barkhans). The loose drift-sand is waterless, and
for the most part without vegetation; the barkhans,
however, here and there display a few poor saxaul and other shrubs; human life
is impossible. The gravel-deserts, also very extensive, which form the
transition between the sand deserts and the steppes, have a sparse vegetation
and serve the nomads as grazing-grounds in their wanderings to and from winter
quarters and summer pastures. The adjoining salt-steppes, consisting of loam
and sand, are so impregnated with salt that the latter settles down on the
surface like rime. In spring they bear a scanty vegetation, which, on account
of its saline nature, affords excellent pasture for numerous flocks of sheep.
During the rain of autumn and spring the loam-steppes, consisting of loess-soil
mixed with much sand, are covered with luxuriant verdure and myriads of wild
flowers, especially tulips, and, on the drier ground, with camel-thorn (Alhagi camelorum),
without which the camel could not exist for any length of time. These steppes
form the real pastures of the nomads. In the loess-land agriculture and
gardening are only possible where the soil has been sufficiently softened by
rainfall and artificial canals, and is constantly irrigated. It forms the
sub-soil of all cultivable oases. Without irrigation the soil becomes in summer
as hard as concrete, and its vegetation dies completely. The oases comprise
only two per cent, of the total area of Turkestan. As a rule the rocky
mountains are quite bare; they consist of black gleaming stone cracked by frost
and heat, and are waterless.
Roughly speaking these
differences of vegetation follow one another from south to north, viz. the
salt-, the sand-, and the grass-steppes. A little below 50 N. latitude the
landscape of West Asia changes in consequence of a greater fall of moisture.
The undrained lakes become less frequent, the rivers reach the sea (Ishim,
Tobol, etc.) and trees-appear. Here begins, as a transition to the compact
forest-land, the tree-steppe on the very fertile "black earth." On
the Yenisei are park-like districts with splendid grass plains, and luxuriant
trees. Northward come endless pine-forests, and beyond them, towards the Arctic
Sea, is the moss-steppe or tundra.
The climate is typically
continental, with icy cold winters, hot summers, cold nights, and hot days with
enormous fluctuations of temperature. The warmth increases quickly from winter
to spring and decreases just as quickly from summer to autumn. In West
Turkestan, the summer is almost cloudless and rainless, and at this time the
steppes become deserts. On account of the dryness little snow falls; as a rule
it remains loose and is whirled aloft by the north-east storm wind (buran).
These storm burans are just as terrible as the summer storms
of salt-dust in Trans-Caspia at a temperature of
104 to 113 Fahr. Considering that in summer the
temperature sometimes reaches 118 in the shade, exceeding body-heat by 20, and
that in winter it sinks below 31, and further that the heat, especially in the
sand-deserts, reaches a degree at which the white of egg coagulates, the
climate, even if not deadly, should be very injurious to man; Hindustan, which
is far less hot, enervates the European on account of the greater moisture, and
has changed the Aryan, once so energetic, to the weak and cowardly Hindu.
Nevertheless the contrary is the case. The climate of Turkestan is wholesome,
and its people are long-lived and healthy, and that especially in the hot
summer, on account of the unparalleled dryness of the air. Once acclimatised,
one bears the heat very well, and likewise the extreme cold of winter. The
climate of Central Asia furthers a rapid bodily and mental development and
premature ageing, as well as corpulence, especially among the Altaians. Obesity
is even regarded as a distinction, and it became so native to the mounted
nomads that it accompanied them to Europe; it is characteristic of all the
nomads who have invaded Europe; and Hippocrates mentions it expressly as a
characteristic of the Scythians. The climate of Turkestan also influences the
character, leading to an apathy which creates indifference to the heaviest
blows of fate, and even accompanies the condemned to the scaffold.
The entire West Asiatic region
from the salt-steppes to the compact forest-land forms one economic whole. The
well-watered northern part, which remains green throughout the summer, feeds
countless herds in the warm season, but affords no pasturage in winter owing to
the deep snow. On the other hand, the southern part, which is poor in water the
grass-, sand-, and salt-steppes is uninhabitable in summer. Thus the northern
part provides summer pastures, the southern the Aral-Caspian basin winter
pastures to one and the same nomad people.
The nomad then is the son and
product of the peculiar and variable constitution which nevertheless is an
indivisible economic whole of the Asiatic background. Any agriculture, worthy
of the name, is impossible, in the steppes and deserts the few oases excepted
on account of the dryness of the summer, when animals also find no food. Life
on the steppes and deserts is only possible in connection either with the
Siberian grass-region or with the mountains. This life is necessarily extremely
hard and restless for man and beast and it creates a condition of nomadism,
which must at the same time be a mounted nomadism, seeing that a wagon would be
an impossibility in the long trackless wanderings over mountain and valley,
river and swamp, and that goods and chattels, together with the disjoinable dwellings, can only be carried on the
backs of beasts of burden.
Setting aside the Glacial
Period and the small Bruckner cycle of 35 years or so, the climatic changes of
Central Asia, according to Huntington, fall into cycles of several hundred
years' duration within which the aridity rises and sinks considerably. All
Central Asia has undergone a series of climatic pulsations during historic
times. There seems to be strong evidence that at the time of Christ or earlier
the climate was much moister and more propitious than it now is. Then during
the first few centuries of the Christian era there appears to have been an
epoch of increasing aridity. It culminated about AD 500, at
which time the climate appears to have been drier than at present. Next came an
epoch of more propitious climate which reached its acme about AD 900.
There is a little evidence of a second epoch of aridity which was especially
marked in the twelfth century. Finally, in the later Middle Ages, a rise in the
level of the Caspian Sea and the condition of certain ruins render it probable
that climatic conditions once again became somewhat favourable, only to give
place ere long to the present aridity.
But Central Asia has not been,
since the beginning of historic records, in a state of desiccation. The process
of geological desiccation was already ended in prehistoric times, and even the
oldest historic accounts testify to the same climatic conditions as those of
today. The earliest Babylonian kings maintained irrigation works, and Hammurabi
had canals made through the land, one of which bore his name. Thus, as at
present, without artificial irrigation agriculture was not possible there 4200
years ago. Palestine's climate too has not changed in the least since Biblical
times: its present waste condition is the result of Turkish mismanagement,
and Biot has proved from the cultivated
plants grown in the earliest times that the temperature of China has remained
the same for 3300 years. Curtius Rufus and
Arrian give similar accounts of Bactria.
Amid the enormous wastes there
are countless sand-buried ruins of populous cities, monasteries, and villages
and choked-up canals standing on ground won from the waste by systematic
canalisation; where the system of irrigation was destroyed, the earlier natural
state, the desert, returned. The causes of such destruction are manifold.
1. Earthquake.
2. Violent rain-spouts after
which the river does not find its former bed, and the canals receive no more
water from it.
3. On the highest edge of the
steppe, at the foot of the glacier, lie enormous flat heaps of débris, and here the canalisation begins. If one side of
this heap rises higher than the other, the direction of the current is shifted,
and the oases nurtured by the now forsaken stream become derelict. But the
habitable ground simply migrates with the river. If, for example, a river
altered its course four times in historic times, three series of ruins remain
behind; but it is erroneous simply to add these ruins together, and to conclude
from them that the whole once formed a flourishing land which has become waste,
when in reality the three series of settlements did not flourish side by side
but consecutively. This fallacy vitiates all accounts which assume a progressive
or periodic desiccation as the chief cause of the abandonment of oases.
4. Continuous drought in
consequence of which the rivers become so waterless that they cannot feed the
canals of the lower river-basin, and thus the oases affected must become
parched, and are not always re-settled in more favourable years.
5. Neglect of the extreme care
demanded in the administration of the canal system. If irrigation is extended
in the district next the mountain from which the water comes, just so much water
is taken from the lower oases. But in this case too nothing is lost which
cannot be replaced in another direction: vice versa if an oasis on the upper
course of the river disappears through losing its canal system, the lower river
course thus becomes well-watered and makes possible the formation of
a new oasis.
6. The most terrible mischief
is the work of enemies. In order to make the whole oasis liable to tribute they
need only seize the main canal; and the nomads often blindly plundered and
destroyed everything. A single raid was enough to transform hundreds of oases
into ashes and desert. The nomads moreover not only ruined countless cities and
villages of Central Asia, but they also denuded the steppe itself, and promoted
drift-sand by senseless uprooting of trees and bushes for the sake of firewood.
But for them, according to Berg, there would be little drifts and in Central
Asia, for, in his opinion, all sand-formations must in time become firm. All
the sand-deserts which he observed on the Aral Sea and in Semiryechensk were originally firm, and even now most
of them are still kept firm by the vegetation.
With the varied dangers of
irrigation systems it is impossible to decide in the case of each group of
ruins what causes have produced them; it is therefore doubtful whether we can
place in the foreground the secular changes of climate. It is not even true
that the cultivation of the oases throve better in the damper and cooler
periods than in the arid and hot ones. Thus the oases of Turfan in Chinese Turkestan,
which is so extremely arid and so unendurably hot in summer, are exceptionally
fertile. We may therefore conclude that the cultivation of the oases was
considerably more extended in the damper and cooler periods, but considerably
less productive than in the arid and hot ones of today.
Changes in the volume of water
of single rivers and lakes are clearly apparent within short periods, and these
lead to frequent local migrations of the peasant population and to new
constructions as well as to the abandonment of irrigation canals. Thus there is
here a continual local fluctuation in the settlements, but history knows
nothing of regular migrations of agriculturists. Still less is an unfavourable
climatic change the cause of the nomad invasions of Europe. The nomad does not
remain at all during the summer in the parched steppe and desert; and in the
periods of increasing aridity and summer heat South Siberia was warmer and the
mountain glaciers retreated, and hence the pastures in both these directions
were extended. The only consequence of this was that the distance between
summer and winter pastures increased and the nomad had to wander further and
quicker. The computation is correct in itself, that the number of animals that
can be reared to the square mile depends on and varies with the annual
rainfall; but the nomad is not hampered by square miles; the poorer or richer
the growth of grass the shorter or longer time he remains, and he is accustomed
from year to year to fluctuations in the abundance of his flocks. Moreover a
shifting of the winter pastures is not impossible, for their autumn and spring
vegetation is not destroyed by a progressive aridity, and if the water current
changes its bed, the nomad simply follows it. Further, the effect of a secular
progressive aridity is spread over so many generations that it is not
catastrophic for any one of them.
The nomad invasions of China
and Europe must therefore have had other causes; and we know something about
the invasions of several nomad hordes of the Avars, Turks (Osmans), and Cumans, for example.
Since the second half of the
fifth century AD that is, the time to which Huntington assigns
the greatest aridity there had existed in the Oxus basin the powerful empire of
the Ephthalite horde, on the ruins of which the empire of the West
Turks was founded in the middle of the sixth century. Had Central Asia been at
that time so arid and therefore poor in pasture, the then victorious horde
would have driven out the other hordes in order to secure for themselves more
pasture land. Yet exactly the opposite took place; the Turks enslaved the other
hordes, and when the Avars fled to Europe, the Turkish Khagan claimed
them back at the Byzantine Court. In like manner the Turks (Osmans)
fled from the sword of the Mongols in 1225 from Khorasan to Armenia, and in
1235 the Cumans fled to Hungary. The violence of the Mongols is strikingly
described by Gibbon: “from the Caspian to the Indus they ruined a tract of many
hundred miles which was adorned with the habitations and labours of mankind,
and five centuries have not been sufficient to repair the ravages of four
years”. Therefore the main cause of the nomad invasions of Europe is not
increasing aridity but political changes.
There remains the question:
How did the nomads originate? On the theory of a progressive desiccation it is
assumed that the Aryan peasantry of Turkestan were compelled to take to a nomad
life through the degeneration of their fields to steppes and wastes. But the
peasant bound to the soil is incapable of a mode of life so unsettled, and
requiring of him much new experience. Robbed of his corn-fields and reduced to
beggary, could he be at the same time so rich as to procure himself the herds
of cattle necessary to his existence, and so gifted with divination as suddenly
to wander with them in search of pasture over immeasurable distances? A decrease
of cultivable soil would bring about only a continual decrease in the number of
inhabitants. The peasant as such disappeared, emigrated, or perished, and his
home became a desert, and was occupied by another people who knew from
experience how to make use of it in its changed state, i.e. as
winter grazing-ground. This new people must have been already nomadic, and have
made their way from the pastures of the North and therefore they must have
belonged to the Altaian race.
The delta oases have been the
home of man from early prehistoric time, throughout Turkestan and northern
Persia. The two oldest culture strata of Anau prove
that the settlers of the first Culture cultivated wheat and barley, had
rectangular houses of air-dried bricks, but only wild animals at first, out of
which were locally domesticated the long horned ox, the pig, and horse, and
successively two breeds of sheep. The second Culture had the domestic ox, both
long- and short-horned, the pig, and the horse. The domestic goat, camel, and
dog appear, and a new hornless breed of sheep. The cultivation of cereals was
discovered in Asia long before BC 8000. The domestication of
cattle, pigs, and sheep, and probably of the horse, was accomplished at Anau between BC 8000 and 6800.
Consequently, the agricultural stage preceded the nomadic shepherd stage in
Asia. It follows, therefore, that before domestication of animals was
accomplished, mankind in Central Asia was divided sharply into two classes
settled agriculturists on the one hand, and hunters who wandered within a
limited range on the other hand. When the nomadic hunters became shepherds,
they necessarily wandered between ever-widening limits as the seasons and
pasturage required for increasing herds. The establishment of the first domestic
breeds of pigs, long-horned cattle, large sheep and horses, was followed by a
deteriorating climate which may have as Pumpelly,
though questionably, assumes changed these to smaller breeds. Dr Duerst identifies the second breed of sheep with the
turbary sheep (Torfschaf), and the pig with
the turbary pig (Torfschwein), which appear as
already domesticated in the neolithic stations of Europe. They must
therefore have been descendants of those domesticated on the oases of the Anau district.
They make their appearance in
European neolithic stations apparently contemporaneously with an
immigration of a people of a round-headed Asiatic type which seems to have
infiltrated gradually among the prevailing long-headed Europeans. The
presumption is, therefore, that these animals were brought from Asia by this
round-headed people, and that we have in this immigration perhaps the earliest
post-glacial factor in the problem of Asiatic influence in European racial as
well as cultural origins, for they brought with them both the art of
cattle-breeding and some knowledge of agriculture.
The skulls of the first and
second cultures in Anau are all
dolichocephalic or mesocephalic, without a trace of the round-headed element.
We are therefore justified in assuming that the domestication and the forming
of the several breeds of domestic animals were effected by a long-headed
people. And since the people of the two successive cultures were settled
oasis-agriculturists and breeders, we may assume as probable that agriculture
and settled life in towns on the oases originated among people of a
dolichocephalic type. Since Dr Duerst identifies
the second breed of sheep established during the first culture of Anau, with the turbary sheep in Europe, contemporaneously
with skulls of the round-headed Galcha type,
it should follow that the domestic animals of the European neolithic stations
were brought thither, together with wheat and barley, by round-headed
immigrants (of an Asiatic type)
Since the original
agriculturists and breeders were long-headed, it seems probable that the
immigrants were broad-headed nomads who, having acquired from the oasis people
domestic animals and rudimentary agriculture of the kind still practised by the
shepherd nomads of Central Asia, infiltrated among the neolithic settlements
of Eastern and Central Europe, and adopted the stone-implement culture of the
hunting and fishing peoples among whom they came. In this connection it is not
without significance that throughout the whole historical period, the combination
of settled town life and agriculture has been the fundamental characteristic of
the Aryan-speaking Galchas, and of the Iranians
inhabiting Western Central Asia and the Persian plateau, while the peoples of
pure Asiatic mongoloid type have been essentially shepherd nomads, who, as
already shewn, could have become shepherds only after the settled
agriculturists of the oases had established domesticated breeds of cattle.
The origin of the taming of
wild into domestic animals is one of the most difficult problems of economic
history. What was its aim? The use that we make of domestic animals? Certainly
not, for adaptability thereto could only gradually be imparted to the animals
and could not be foreseen; it could not be anticipated that the cow and the goat
would ever give more milk than their young needed, and that beyond the time of
lactation; nor could it be anticipated that sheep not woolly by nature would
develop a fleece. Even for us it would be too uneconomical to breed such a
powerful animal and such a large consumer of fodder as the ox merely for a
supply of meat; and besides beef is not readily eaten in Central Asia. Moreover
the wild ox is entirely unsuitable for draught, for it is one of the shyest as
well as strongest and most dangerous of animals. And it should be specially
emphasised that a long step lies between taming individual animals and
domesticating them, for as a rule wild animals, however well tamed, do not
breed in captivity. Consequently the domestication was not produced simply by taming
or for economic ends. It is the great service of Eduard Hahn to have laid down
the theory that the domestication involuntary and unforeseen was the result of
forcing for religious purposes certain favourite animals of certain divinities
into reservations where they remained reproductive, and at the same time
gradually lost their original wildness through peaceful contact with man. The
beasts of sacrifice were taken from these enclosures. Thus originated the
castrated ox which quietly let itself be yoked before the sacred car; and by
systematic milking for sacrificial purposes the milk-secretion of the cow and
the goat was gradually increased. Lastly, when man perceived what he had gained
from the animals, he turned to his own use the peculiarities thus produced by
enclosure and gradual domestication.
In general, cattle-rearing is
unknown to the severest kind of nomadism. The ox soon dies of thirst, and it
has not sufficient endurance or speed for the enormous wanderings; its flesh
has little value in the steppe. The animals actually employed for rearing and
food are consequently the sheep (to a less extent the goat as leader of the
sheep flocks), the horse, and here and there the ass; also, in a smaller
number, the two-humped camel (in Turan the
one-humped dromedary as well) as a beast of burden. Where the district admits
of it, and long wanderings are not necessary (e.g. in Mongolia, in the Pamir,
in the Amu-delta, in South Russia, etc.), the Altaian has engaged in
cattle-breeding from the remotest times.
A wealthy Mongolian possesses
as many as 20,000 horses and still more sheep. Rich Kirghiz sometimes have
hundreds of camels, thousands of horses, tens of thousands of sheep. The
minimum for a Kirghiz family of five is 5 oxen, 28 sheep, and 15 horses. Some
have fewer sheep, but the number of horses cannot sink below 15, for a stud of
mares, with their foals, is indispensable for the production of kumiz.
The Turkoman is poorest in
horses. However, the Turkoman horse is the noblest in the whole of Central
Asia, and surpasses all other breeds in speed, endurance, intelligence,
faithfulness, and a marvellous sense of locality; it serves for riding and
milk-giving only, and is not a beast of burden, as are the camel, the
dromedary, or the ox. The Turkoman horse is tall, with long narrow body, long
thin legs and neck, and a small head; it is nothing but skin, bones, muscles,
and sinews, and even with the best attention it does not fatten. The mane is
represented by short bristly hairs. On their predatory expeditions the
Turkomans often cover 650 miles in the waterless desert in five days, and that
with their heavy booty of goods and men. Their horses attain their greatest
speed when they have galloped from 7 to 14 miles, and races over such a
distance as that from London to Bristol are not too much for them. Of course
they owe their powers to the training of thousands of years in the endless
steppes and deserts, and to the continual plundering raids, which demanded the
utmost endurance and privation of which horse and rider were capable. The least
attractive to look at in Turkestan is the Kirghiz horse, which is small,
powerful, and strong-maned. During snow-storm or frost it often does without
food for a long time. It is never sheltered under a roof, and bears 40 Fahr. in the open air, and the extremest summer
heat, during which it can do without water for from three to four days. It can
easily cover 80 miles a day, and never tastes barley or oats in its life.
The Altaian rides with a very
short stirrup, and thus trotting would be too exhausting both for man and
horse, so as a rule he goes at a walk or a gallop. Instead of the trot there is
another more comfortable movement in which the horse's centre of gravity moves
steadily forward in a horizontal line, and shaking and jolting is avoided. The
horse advances the two left feet one after the other, and then the two right
feet (keeping the time of four threshers); in this way it can cover ten miles
per hour. The most prized horses are the "amblers," which always move
the two feet on one side simultaneously, and are sometimes so swift that other
horses can scarcely keep up with them at a gallop. Spurs are unknown to the
Altaian, and in the steppe horseshoes are not needed. The nomad spends the
greater part of his life in the saddle; when he is not lying inactive in the
tent he is invariably on horseback. At the markets everybody is mounted. In the
saddle all bargains are struck, meetings are held, kumiz is
drunk, and even sleep is taken. The seller too has his wares felt, furs,
carpets, sheep, goats, calves before, behind, and beneath him on his horse. The
riding-horse must answer promptly to the bridle, and must not betray his master
by neighing during a raid. Therefore the young stallion for mares are not
ridden is taken from the herd with a lasso, and castrated.
The nomads of the Asiatic
background all belong to the Altaian branch of the Ural-Altaian race. The
Altaian primitive type displays the following characteristics : body compact,
strong-boned, small to medium-sized; trunk long; hands and feet often
exceptionally small; feet thin and short, and, in consequence of the peculiar
method of riding (with short stirrup), bent outwards, whence the gait is very
waddling; calves very little developed; head large and brachycephalic; face
broad; cheek-bones prominent; mouth large and broad; jaw mesognathic; teeth strong and snow-white; chin broad; nose
broad and flat; forehead low and little arched; ears large; eyes considerably
wide apart, deep-sunken, and dark-brown to piercing black; eye-opening narrow,
and slit obliquely, with an almost perpendicular fold of skin over the inner
corner (Mongol-fold), and with elevated outer corner; skin wheat-colour,
light-buff (Mongols) to bronze-colour (Turks); hair coarse, stiff as a horse’s
mane, coal-black; beard scanty and bristly, often entirely wanting, generally
only a moustache; bodily strength considerable; sensitiveness to climatic
influences and wounds slight; sight and hearing incredibly keen; memory
extraordinary.
The Ural-Altaian languages
branch off as follows :
Uralish : Samo-yeddish, Finno-Ungrian
Altaic: Turkish, Mongolish, Manchu-Tungusish
Finno-Ugrian: Finnish, Permish, Ugrian
Finnish: Lappish Finnish and
Lappish Esthonian,Tcheremiss. Mordvinish
Permish: Zyryanish, Votyakish
Ugrian: Magyarish, Vogulish, Ostyakish
Turkish: Yakutish, Bashkirish, Kirghizigh, Uigurish, Tartarish, Osmanish (Turkish
in the narrower sense)
Mongolish: Buryatish, Kalmuckish, Mongolish (in
the narrower sense)
(B)
SOCIAL
ORGANIZATION
Six to ten blood-related tents
(Mongol, yúrta)—on the average, families
of five to six heads— form a camp (Turk, aul, Mongol, khoton, khotum, Roumanian catun)
which wanders together; even the best grazing-ground would not admit of a
greater number together. The leader of the camp is the eldest member of that
family which possesses most animals. Several camps make a clan (Turk, tire,
Mongol, aïmak). Hence there are the
general interests of the Clan and also the individual interests of the camps,
which latter frequently conflict. For the settlement of disputes an authority
is necessary, a personality who through wealth, mental capacity, uprightness,
bravery, and wide relationships is able to protect the clan. As an election of
A chief is unknown to nomads, and they could not agree if it were known, the chieftainship
is usually gained by a violent usurpation, and is seldom recognised generally.
Thus the judgment of the chieftain is mostly a decision to which the parties
submit themselves more or less voluntarily.
Several clans form a tribe (uruk), several tribes a folk (Turks il,
Mongol, uluss). Conflicts within the
tribes and the folks are settled by a union of the separate clan chieftains in
an arbitration procedure in which each chieftain defends the claims of his
clan, but very often the collective decision is obeyed by none of the parties.
In times of unrest great hordes have formed themselves out of the folks, and at
the head of these stood a Khagan or a Khan. The hordes, like the folks and
tribes, form a separate whole only in so far as they are opposed to other
hordes, folks, and tribes. The horde protects its parts from the remaining
hordes, just as does the folk and the tribe. Thus all three are in a real sense
insurance societies for the protection of common interests.
The organization based on genealogy
is much dislocated by political occurrences, for in the steppe the peoples,
like the drift-sand, are in constant motion. One people displaces or breaks
through another, and so we find the same tribal name among peoples widely
separated from one another. Moreover from the names of great war-heroes arose
tribal names for those often quite motely conglomerations of peoples who were
united for a considerable time under the conqueror’s lead and then remained
together, for example the Seljuks, Uzbegs, Chagatais, Osmans, and many others. This easy new formation, exchange,
and loss of the tribal name has operated from the earliest times, and the
numerous swarms of nomads who forced their way into Europe under the most
various names are really only different offshoots of the same few nations.
The organization of the nomads
rests on a double principle. The greater unions caused by political
circumstances, having no direct connection with the life and needs of the
people in the desert, often cease soon after the death of their creator; on the
other hand the camps, the clans, and in part the tribes also, retain an organic
life, and take deep root in the life of the people. Not merely the
consciousness of their blood-relationship but the knowledge of the degree of relationship
is thoroughly alive, and every Kirghiz boy knows his jeti-atalar,
that is, the names of his seven forefathers. What is outside this is regarded
as the remoter relationship. Hence a homogeneous political organization of
large masses is unfrequent and transitory,
and today among the Turks it is only the Kara-Kirghiz people of Bast
Turkestan—who are rich in herds—that live under a central government—that of an
hereditary Aga-Manap, beneath whom
the Manaps, also hereditary, of the separate
tribes, with a council of the “gray-beards” (aksakals) of the separate clans, rule and govern the
people rather despotically. What among the Turks is the exception, was from the
earliest times known to history the rule among the Mongols, who were
despotically governed by their princes. The Khan wielded unlimited authority
over all. No one dared to settle in any place to which he had not been
assigned. The Khan directed the princes, they the “thousand-men”, the
“thousand-men”, the “hundred-men”, and they the “ten-men”. Whatever was ordered
them was promptly carried out; even certain death was faced without a murmur.
But towards foreigners they were just as barbarous as the Turks. The origin of
despotism among the Altaians is to be traced to a subjugation by another nomad
horde, which among the Turkish Kazak-Kirghiz and the Mongol Kalmucks of the
Volga developed into a nobility (“white bones”, the female sex “white flesh”)
in contrast with the common people (“black bones”, “black flesh”).
The transitoriness of the
wider unions on the one hand, and the indestructibility of the clans and camps
on the other, explain why extensive separations, especially among the Turko-Tartars, were of constant occurrence. The desert
rears to independence and freedom from restraint small patriarchally-directed
family alliances with “gray-beards” (aksakals) from families of aristocratic strain at
their head. These families boast of their direct descent from some Sultan, Beg,
or famous Batyr (“hero”, recte robber, cattle-thief). But the “gray-beards” mostly exercise the mere shadow of dominion.
The Turkomans say: “We are a people without a head, and we won’t have one
either; among us each is Padishah”; as an appendage to this, “Sahara is full of
Sheikhs”.
The wanderings of the nomads
are incorrectly designated when they are called roaming wanderings, for not
even the hunter "roams". He has his definite hunting-grounds, and
always returns to his accustomed places. Still more regular are the wanderings
of the nomads, however far they extend. The longest are those of the Kirghiz
who winter by the Aral Sea and have their summer pastures ten degrees of
latitude further north in the steppes of Troitsk and
Omsk. The distance, allowing for the zig-zag course, comes to more than 1000
miles, so that each year the nomad must cover 2OOO miles with all his herds and
other goods.
During the winter the nomad in
the desert is, so to speak, a prisoner in his tent, practical, neat, and
comfortable as this is. It is a rotunda 15 feet high, and often over 30 feet
broad. Its framework consists of a wooden lattice in six to ten separable
divisions, which can be widened out, or pushed together for packing. Above this
comes the roof-frame of light rafters which come together in a ring above. This
is the opening for air, light, and smoke, and is only covered at night and
during severe cold. Inside a matting of steppe-grass runs round the framework,
and outside is a felt covering bound round with ropes of camel’s hair.
Tent-pegs and ropes protect the tent from being over- turned by the violent
north-east orkan, during which the
hearth-fire must be put out. As the felt absorbs and emits very little heat,
the tent is warm in winter, and cool in summer. Inside the tent the sacks of
victuals hang on the points of the wall-lattice; on the rafters above are the
weapons, harness, saddles, and, among the heathen tribes, the idols. Behind the
hearth, the seat of honour for guests and old men is spread with the best felt
and carpets; in front of the hearth is the place for drinking-vessels and
sometimes for fuel, the latter consisting of camel- and cattle-dung, since
firewood is found only in a few places in the steppes and deserts. The
nomad-life admits of only the most necessary and least breakable utensils : for
preparing food for all in the tent there is a large cast-iron caldron, acquired
in Chinese or Russian traffic, with tripod and tongs; a trunk-like kumiz-vat of four smoked horse-hides thickened with
fat; kumiz-bottles, and water-bottles of
leather; wooden chests, tubs and cans hollowed out of pieces of wood, or
gourds; wooden dishes, drinking-bowls, and spoons; among the slave-hunting
Turkomans short and long chains, manacles, fetters, and iron collars also hung
in the tent to the right of the entrance.
The accommodation provided by
the tent, and the economising of space is astonishing; from long past times
everything has had its assigned place; there is room for forty men by day, and
twenty by night, notwithstanding the many objects hanging and lying about. The
master of the household, with the men, occupies the place of honour; left and
right of the hearth are the sleeping-places (felt, which is rolled up in the
daytime); left of the entrance the wife and the women and children, to the right
the male slaves, do their work. For anyone to leave his wonted place
unnecessarily, or without the order of the master, would be an unheard-of
proceeding. In three-quarters of an hour a large tent can be put up and
furnished, and it can be taken to pieces and packed just as quickly; even with
movables and stores it is so light that two camels suffice to carry it. The
Nogai-Tartars carry their basket-like felt tents, which are only 8 to 10 feet
in diameter, on two-wheeled carts drawn at a trot by small-sized oxen. In the
thirteenth century, under Chinghiz and his
followers, the Mongols also made use of such cart-tents, drawn by one camel, as
store-holders, but only in the Volga-district and not in their own country in
Mongolia. They also put their great tents—as much as thirty feet in diameter—on
carts drawn by twenty-four oxen twelve in a line. The nature of the ground
admitted of this procedure and consequently the tent had not to be taken to
pieces at each stopping-place (as must be done in the steppes and deserts), but
only where a considerable halt was made. In South Russia such wagon-tents date
from the oldest times, and were already in use among the Scythians.
Among a continually wandering
pastoral people the interests of neighbours often collide, as we know from the
Bible-story of Abraham and Lot. Thus a definite partition of the land comes
about. A folk, or a section of a folk—a tribe—regards a certain stretch of land
as its special property, and tolerates no trespass from any neighbour
whatsoever. The tribe, again, consists of clans and the latter of camps, which,
in their turn, regard parts of the whole tribal district as their own. This
produces a very confused medley of districts, over which the individual camps
wander. In spring and autumn the nomad can find abundant fodder almost
everywhere, in consequence of the greater moisture and luxuriant grass crop.
The winter and summer abodes demand definite conditions for the prosperity of
the herds. The winter settlement must not have too severe a climate, the summer
grazing-ground must be as exempt as possible from the terrific plague of
insects. Since many more conditions must be satisfied for the winter than for
the summer pastures, it is the winter quarters which determine the density of
the nomad population. Thus the wealth of a people accords with the abundance of
their winter quarters, and all internal encounters and campaigns of former
centuries are to be regarded as a constant struggle for the best winter
settlements.
In winter, whenever possible,
the same places as have been used for long times past are occupied; in the
deep-lying valley of a once-existing river, not over-exposed to the wind, with
good water, and grazing-places where the snow settles as little as possible,
and the last year’s dung makes the ground warmer and, at the same time,
provides fuel. Here at the end of October the tent, made warmer by another
covering, is pitched, protecting the nomad from the raging winter buran and
the numbing cold. The herds, however, remain in the open air without a
sheltering roof, and must scrape for themselves the withered shrubs, stalks,
and roots from the snow. They get terribly thin; indeed sheep, camels, and oxen
perish when the snow falls deep, and the horses in scraping for fodder trample
down the plants and make them uneatable, or when ice forms and shuts out
sustenance entirely. But in early spring the situation improves, especially for
the sheep, which, from mere skeletons, revive and get fat on the salt-steppes
where a cursory inspection reveals no vegetation on the glittering crust of
salt. The salt-pastures are incomparably more nourishing than the richest
Alpine meadows, and without salt there would be no sheep-rearing nomads in
Central Asia. To freshen the spring-pasturage the steppe is burnt off as soon
as the snow has melted, as the dry last year's steppe-grass gets matted under
the snow, and would retard the sprouting of the new grass; the ground manured
by the ashes then gets luxuriantly green after a few days.
In the middle or at the end of
April, during the lambing of the sheep, and the foaling of the mares,
preparations for striking the winter tent are made. At this time the animals
yield most milk, and a stock of hard cheese (kurut)
is made. At the beginning of May the steppe begins to dry up, and the
intolerable insects appear. Now the goods which are superfluous for the summer
are secretly buried, the tent is struck, and loaded with all necessary goods
and chattels on the decorated camels. It is the day of greatest rejoicing for
the nomad, who leaves his inhospitable winter quarters in festal attire.
The winter quarters are
regarded as the fixed property of the individual tent owners, but the summer
pastures are the common property of the clan. Here each member of the clan,
rich or poor, has in theory the right to settle where he likes. But the wealthy
and illustrious always know how to secure the best places. To effect this each
camp keeps the time of departure to the summer pastures and the direction to be
taken as secret as possible; at the same time it makes an arrangement with the
nearest-related camps, in conformity with which they suddenly depart in order
to reach their goal as quickly as possible. If the place chosen is already
occupied, the next which is still free is taken. At the beginning of spring,
when the grass is still scanty, the camps can remain only a very short
time—often one day or even only half a day—in one place; later on in their more
distant wandering—from well to well—they can stay for weeks in the same place.
At midsummer movement is more rapid, and in autumn, with an increasing
abundance of water, it is again slower. In the sand-desert the nomad finds the
wells covered by drift-sand, and he must dig down to them afresh, if necessary
daily. The regulation of these wanderings is undertaken by the aksakals, not always according to justice.
The cattle can easily be taken
off by a hostile neighbour, for the steppe is free and open. Therefore the
nomads of the steppes, unlike the nomads of the mountains, do not split themselves
into single families. They constantly need a small war-band to recover the
stolen booty from the enemy. On the other hand, the instinct of
self-preservation often drives a whole people to violate their neighbours’
rights of property. When there is dearth of fodder the cattle are ruined, and
the enterprise and energy of the owner cannot avert calamity. The impoverished
nomad infallibly goes to the wall as a solitary individual, and only seldom is
he, as a former wanderer (tshorva) capable of
becoming a despised settler (tshomru). For he
feels it to be the greatest misfortune and humiliation when he must take to the
plough, somewhere by a watercourse on the edge of the desert; and so long as
the loss of all his herds has not hopelessly crushed him, he does not resign
himself to that terrible fate which Mahomet has proscribed with the words:
'”wherever this implement has penetrated, it has always brought with it
servitude and shame”.
In spring, when severe frost
suddenly sets in after the first thaw, and the thin layer of snow is covered in
a single night with a crust of ice an inch thick, the cattle cannot scrape food
out of the snow, and the owner cannot possibly supply a substitute. When the
frost continues hundreds of thousands of beasts perish, and whole districts
previously rich in herds become suddenly poor. So as soon as ice appears the
people affected leave their winter quarters, and penetrate far into their
neighbours' territory until they find food for their herds. If they are
successful a part at least of their cattle is saved, and when the weather
changes they return home. But if all their cattle perish entirely, they must
starve if they are unwilling to rob their wealthy neighbour of a part of his
herds. Bloody feuds occur too in autumn on the return from the summer pastures,
when the horses have become fat and powerful and the longer nights favour and
cover long rides. The nomad now carries out the raids of robbery and revenge
resolved upon and skilfully planned in the summer, and then he goes to his
winter quarters.
But how can these barbarous
robbers live together without exterminating each other? They are bridled by an
old and tyrannical king, invisible to themselves, the deb (custom,
wont). This prohibits robbery and murder, immorality and injustice towards
associates in times of peace; but the strange neighbour is outlawed; to rob,
enslave, or kill him is an heroic deed. The nomads' ideas of justice are
remarkably similar to those of our ancestors. Every offence is regarded as an
injury to the interests of a fellow-man, and is expiated by indemnification of
the loser. Among the Kazak-Kirghiz anyone who has killed a man of the plebs (a
"black bone"), whether wilfully or accidentally makes no difference,
must compensate the relations with a kun (i.e. 1000
sheep or 100 horses or 50 camels). The slaughter of a "white bone"
costs a sevenfold kun. Murder of their
own wives, children, and slaves goes unpunished, since they themselves are the
losers. If a Kirghiz steals an animal, he must restore it together with two of
the same value. If a wrong-doer is unable to pay the fine, his nearest
relations, and failing them the whole camp, must provide it.
The principal food consists of
milk-products—not of the fresh milk itself, which is only taken by children and
the sick. A special Turko-Tartar food is yogurt,
prepared with leaven from curdled milk. The Mongols also eat butter—the more
rancid the more palatable—dripping with dirt, and carried without wrapping in
their hairy greasy coat-pockets. From mare's milk, which yields no cream, kumiz (Kirghiz), tshegan (Mongolish) is fermented, an extremely nutritious drink
which is good for consumption, and from which by itself life can be sustained.
However, it keeps only a few hours, after which it becomes too sour and
effervescent, and so the whole supply must be drunk at once. In summer, with an
abundance of mares, there is such a superfluity of kumiz that
hospitality is unlimited, and half Altai is always drunk. The Turkomans and
Kara-Kalpaks, who possess few horses and no studs, drink kumiz seldom. The much-drunk airan from fermented unskimmed camel, cow, and
sheep milk quenches thirst for hours, just as does the kefir of
the Tartars from cow's milk. The airan,
after being condensed by boiling, and dried hard as stone into little balls in
the sun, is made into kurt, kurut, which can be kept for months and is the only
means of making bitter salt-water drinkable. According to Marco Polo it formed
the provision of the Mongol armies, and if the horsemen could not quench his
thirst in any other way, he opened one of his horse's veins and drank the
blood. From kumiz and also from
millet a strong spirit (Kirghiz boza) is distilled, which produces
dead-drunkenness followed by a pleasant Nirvana-sensation.
A comparison of Rubruquis’ account with that of Radloff shows
that the dairying among the Altaians has remained the same from the earliest
times. A late acquisition from China, and only available for the wealthier, is
the "brick-tea", which is also a currency, and a substitute for
money.
Little meat is eaten,
notwithstanding the abundance of the herds; it is only customary on festive
occasions or as a consequence of a visit of special honour. In order not to
lessen the stock of cattle, the people content themselves with the cattle that
are sick beyond recovery, or dead and even decaying. The meat is eaten boiled,
and the broth drunk afterwards. Only the Volga-Kalmucks and the Kara-Kirghiz,
who are very rich in flocks, live principally on sheep and horse meat. That the
Huns and Tartars ate raw meat softened by being carried under the saddle, is a
mistake of the chroniclers. At the present time the mounted nomads are
accustomed to put thin strips of salted raw meat on their horses' sores, before
saddling them, to bring about a speedy healing. But this meat, impregnated with
the sweat of the horse and reeking intolerably, is absolutely uneatable.
From the earliest times, on
account of the enormous abundance of game, hunting has been eagerly practised
for the sake of food and skins, or as sport, either with trap and snare, or on
horseback with falcon and eagle. From Persia came the long-haired greyhound in
addition. Fishing cannot be pursued by long-wandering nomads, and they make no
use even of the best-stocked rivers. But by the lakes and the rivers which do
not dry up, fishing is an important source of food among short-wandering
nomads.
For grain the seeds of
wild-growing cereals are gathered; here and there millet is grown without
difficulty, even on poor soil. A bag of millet-meal suffices the horseman for
days; a handful of it with a drink of water appeases him well enough. Thus
bread is a luxury for the nomad herdsman, and the necessary grain can only be
procured in barter for the products of cattle-rearing and house-industry. But
the Kirghiz of Ferghana in their short but high wanderings on the Pamir and
Alai high above the last agricultural settlements, which only extend to 4600
feet, carry on an extensive agriculture (summer-wheat, millet, barley) by means
of slaves and laborers at a height of 8500 feet, while they themselves climb
with their herds to a height of 15,800 feet, and partly winter in the valleys
which are free from snow in winter. The nomads eat vegetables seldom, as only
carrots and onions grow in the steppes. The half-settled agricultural
half-nomads of today can be left out of consideration. According to Plano Carpini the Mongols had neither bread nor vegetables
nor leguminous food, nor anything else except meat, of which they ate so little
that other peoples could scarcely have lived on it. However, in summer they
consumed an enormous quantity of milk, and that failing in winter, one or two
bowls of thin millet boiled in water in the morning, and nothing more except a
little meat in the evening.
We see that from the earliest
times the Altaian nomad has lived by animal-rearing, and in a subsidiary degree
by hunting, and fishing, and here and there by a very scanty agriculture. As
among some hordes, especially the old Magyars, fishing and hunting are made
much of, many believe that they were originally a hunting and fishing folk, and
took to cattle-rearing later. This is an impossibility. The Magyars, just as
were the others, were pure nomads even during winter, otherwise their herds
would have perished. Hunting and fishing they pursued only as stop-gaps when
milk failed. A fishing and hunting people cannot so easily become mounted
nomads, and least of all organised in such a terribly warlike way as were the
Magyars.
The innate voracity of
the Turko-Tartars is the consequence of the
climate. The Bedouin in the latitude of 20º to 32º, at a mean temperature of
86º F, can easily be more abstinent and moderate with his single meal a day
(meat, dates, truffles) than the Altaian in the freezing cold, between the
latitudes of 38º and 58º, with his three copious meals. The variable climate
and its consequences —hunger in winter, superfluity in summer—have so hardened
the Altaian that he can without difficulty hold out for days without water, and
for weeks (in a known case forty-two days) in a snowstorm without any food; but
he can also consume a six-months’ old whether at one sitting, and is ready to
repeat the dose straight off!
Originally the Altaian clothed
himself in skins, leather, and felt, and not till later in vegetable-stuffs
acquired by barter, tribute, or plunder. Today the outer-coat of the
Kazak-Kirghiz is still made of the shining skin of a foal with the tail left on
for ornament. The Tsaidan-Mongols wear next
their bare skin a felt gown, with the addition of a skin in winter only, and
leather breeches. All Central Asiatics wear
the high spherical sheep-skin cap (also used as a pillow), the tshapan (similar to a dressing-gown and
consisting of fur or felt in winter), leather boots, or felt stockings bound
round with rags. Among many tribes the hair of the men is worn long or shaved
off entirely (Herodotus tells of a snub-nosed, shaven-headed people in the
lower Ural), and the Magyars, Cumans, and others were shorn bare, but for two
pigtails.
The wife occupies a very
dependent position. On her shoulders falls the entire work of the household,
the very manifold needs of which are to be satisfied almost entirely by home
industry. She must take down the tent, pack it up, load it on camels, and pitch
it; she must prepare leather, felt, leather-bottles, cords, waterproof
material, and colours from various plants; she must spin and weave wool and
hair; she must make clothes, collect camel- and cattle-dung, knead it with dust
into tough paste, and form and dry it into cakes; she must saddle and bridle
horses and camels, milk the sheep, prepare kumiz, kurut, and airan,
and graze the herds of sheep in the night—for the husband does this only by
day, and in addition only milks the mares; his remaining occupation is almost
entirely war and plundering. To share the domestic work would be for an
Altaian pater-familias an unheard-of
humiliation.
Originally the choice of a
wife was as unrestricted among all the Altaians as among the Mongols, who,
according to Plano Carpini and Marco Polo,
might marry any relative and non-relative except their own mothers and
daughters, and sisters by their own mothers. But today several nomad peoples
are strictly exogamic. The bride was chosen by the father, when still in her
childhood; her price (kalym) was twenty-seven
to a hundred mares, and her dowry had roughly the same value. Polygamy was
consequently only possible among tribes rich in herds, but it was a necessity,
as one wife alone could not accomplish the many duties. Virgin purity and
conjugal fidelity are among the Turko-Tartars,
and especially among the Kirghiz, somewhat rare virtues; on the other hand,
Marco Polo agrees with Radloff in praising
the absolute fidelity of the Mongol women.
The upbringing of the children
entails the extreme of hardening. During its first six weeks the new-born child
is bathed daily, summer and winter alike, in the open air; thenceforward the
nomad never washes, his whole life long. The Kalmuck in particular is
absolutely shy of water. Almost to puberty the children go naked summer and
winter; only on the march do they wear a light khalat and
fur-cap. They are suckled at the breast to their fifth year. At three or four
they already sit free with their mother on horseback, and a six-year-old girl rides
like a sportsman. The education of the boys is limited to riding; at the most
falconry in addition. On the other hand, the girls are put to most exhausting
work from their tenderest years, and the value of a bride is decided by the
work she can discharge. Among nearly all Altaian peoples the son thinks little
of his mother, but towards his father he is submissive.
Hereditary right is purely
agnatic. As soon as the married son is able to look after himself, he is no
longer under the authority of his father, and if he likes he can demand as
inheritance a part of the herds adequate to establishing a separate household.
Then however he is entirely settled with, and he cannot inherit further on the
death of his father when there are younger sons—his brothers—still unportioned.
If impoverished the father has the right to take back from his apportioned sons
every fifth animal from the herds (Kalmucks). The daughters are never entitled
to inherit, and on marrying receive merely a suitable dowry from their brothers,
who then receive the kalym. If only
daughters survive, the inheritance goes to the father's brothers or cousins,
who in that case receive the kalym as
well.
Speedy as the Altaian is on
horseback, on foot he is helpless and unwieldy; and so the dance is unknown to
him. All games full of dash and excitement are played on horseback. His
hospitality is marvellous; for weeks at a time he treats the new arrival to the
best he has, even when it is the despised and hated Shtitish Persian.
He possesses many sagas and songs—mostly in the minor key, and monotonous as
the steppes—which are accompanied on a two-stringed guitar. Tenor and
mezzo-soprano predominate, and the gait of the horse and the stride of the
camel mark the rhythm.
The surplus of the female
house-industry and of the herds is, as a rule, exchanged in barter for weapons
and armours, metal and wooden articles, clothing material, brick-tea, and
grain. Instead of our gold and silver coinage they have a sheep coinage, in
which all valuations are made. Of course they were acquainted with foreign
coins from the earliest times, and obtained countless millions of pounds from
tribute, plunder, and ransom of prisoners, and they used coins, now and then,
in external trading, but among themselves they still barter, and conclude all
their business in sheep, cattle, horses, and camels. Rubruquis says
of the Mongols in 1353: "We found nothing purchasable for gold and silver,
only for fabrics, of which we had none. When our servant showed them a Hyperpyron (Byzantine gold coin), they rubbed it with
their fingers and smelt it to see if it were copper." They have no
hand-workers except a few smiths.
The Altaian, and especially
the Turko-Tartar barbarian, considered only the
advantage of the moment; the unlimited plundering was hostile to any
transit-trade. But when and so long as a strong hand controlled the universal
plundering spirit, a caravan trade between north and south, and especially
between east and west was possible, and, with high duties, formed a considerable
source of income for the Central-Asiatic despots.
(C)
Religion. Samanism
The religious conceptions of a
group of primitive people inhabiting such an enormous district were of course
never uniform. Today the greatest part of the Altaians is Buddhist, or Islamic,
and only a few Siberian Turkish tribes remain true to the old-Altaian
Shamanism.
The characteristic feature of
Shamanism is the belief in the close union of the living with their long dead
ancestors; thus it is an uninterrupted ancestor worship. This faculty however
is possessed only by a few families, those of the Shamans , who pass on their
power from father to son, or sometimes daughter—with the visible symbol of the
Shaman drum by means of which he can call up the spirits through the power of
his ancestors, and compel them to active assistance, and can separate his own
soul from his body and send it into the kingdoms of light and of darkness. He
prepares the sacrifice, conjures up the spirits, leads prayers of petition and
thanksgiving, and in short is doctor, soothsayer, and weather prophet. In
consequence he is held in high regard, but is less loved than feared, as his
ceremonies are uncanny, and he himself dangerous if evil inclined. The chosen
of his ancestors attains to his Shaman power not by instruction but by sudden
inspiration; he falls into a frenzy, utters inarticulate cries, rolls his eyes,
turns himself round in a circle as if possessed, until, covered with
perspiration, he wallows on the ground in epileptic convulsions; his body becomes
insensible to impressions; according to accounts he swallows automatically, and
without subsequent injury, red-hot iron, knives, and needles, and brings them
up again dry. These passions get stronger and stronger, till the individual
seizes the Shaman drum and begins “shamaneering”. Not
before this does his nature compose itself, the power of his ancestors has
passed into him, and he must thenceforth “shamaneer”.
He is moreover dressed in a fantastic garb hung with rattling iron trinkets.
The Shaman drum is a wooden hoop with a skin, painted with gay figures,
stretched over both sides, and all kinds of clattering bells and little sticks
of iron upon it. In “shamaneering” the drum is
vigorously struck with one drum-stick, and the ancestors thus invoked
interrogated about the cause of the evil which is to be banished, and the
sacrifice which is to be made to the divinity in order to avert it. The beast
of sacrifice is then slaughtered and eaten, the skin together with all the
bones is set aside as the sacrificial offering. Then follows the
conjuration-in-chief, with the most frantic hocus-pocus, by means of which the
Shaman strives to penetrate with his soul into the highest possible region of
heaven in order to undertake an interrogation of the god of heaven himself.
From the great confusion of
local creeds some such Shaman system as the following can be constructed;
though the people themselves have only very vague conceptions of it.
The universe consists of a
number of layers separated one from another by a certain something. The
seventeen upper layers form the kingdom of light, seven or nine the underworld
of darkness. In between lies the surface of man's earth, constantly influenced
by both powers. The good divinities and spirits of heaven protect men, but the
bad endeavour to destroy them. Originally there was only water and neither
earth nor heaven nor sun nor moon. Then Tengere Kaira Khan (the
kind heaven) created first a being like himself, Kishi,
man. Both soared in bliss over the water, but Kishi wished
to exalt himself above the creator, and losing through his transgression the
power to fly, fell headlong into the bottomless water. In his mercy Kaira Khan
caused a star to rise out of the flood, upon which the drowning Kishi could sit; but as he could no longer fly Kaira Khan
caused him to dive deep down and bring up earth, which he strewed upon the
surface of the water. But Kishi kept a
piece of it in his mouth in order to create a special country out of it for
himself. This swelled in his mouth and would have suffocated him had he not
spat it out so that morasses formed on Kaira Khan's hitherto smooth
earth. In consequence Kaira Khan named Kishi Erlik, banished him from the kingdom of light, and caused a
nine-branched tree to grow out of the earth, and under each branch created a
man as first father of each of the nine peoples of the present time.
In vain Erlik besought Kaira Khan to entrust to him
the nine fair and good men; but he found out how to pervert them to evil.
Angered thereat Kaira Khan left foolish man to himself, and
condemned Erlik to the third layer of
darkness. But for himself he created the seventeen layers of heaven and set up
his dwelling in the highest. As the protector and teacher of the now deserted
race of man he left behind Mai-Tärä (the
Sublime). Erlik too with the permission of
the Kaira Khan built himself a heaven and peopled it with his own
subjects, the bad spirits, men corrupted by him. And behold, they lived more
comfortably that the sons of the earth created by Kaira Khan. And
so Kaira Khan caused Erlik’s heaven
to be shattered into small pieces, which falling on the earth formed huge
mountains and gorges.
But Erlik was
doomed until the end of the world to everlasting darkness. And now from the
seven-teenth layer of heaven Kaira Khan
controls the destiny of the universe. By emanation from him the three highest
divinities came into being : Bai Ulgon (the
Great) in the sixteenth, Kysagan Tengere (the Mighty) in the ninth, and Mergen Tengere (the
All-wise) in the seventh layer of heaven, where "Mother Sun" dwells
also. In the sixth is enthroned "Father Moon," in the fifth Kudai Yayutshi (the
highest Creator). Ulgon’s two sons Yayik and Mai-Tara, the protecting
patrons of mankind, dwell in the third on the milk-white sea Sut-ak-kol, the source of all life;
near it is the mountain Suro, the
dwelling of the seven Kudau with
their subjects the Yayutshi, the
guardian angels of mankind. Here is also the paradise of the blessed and
righteous ancestors of living men, who mediate between the divinities of heaven
and their own descendants, and can help them in their need. The earth is
personified in a community of spirits (Yer-su)
beneficent to man, the seventeen high Khans (princes) of the seventeen spring
districts, whose abodes lie on the seventeen snow peaks of the highest
mountains, by the sources of the seventeen streams which water the land.
In the seven layers of the
dark underworld prevails the dismal light of the underworld sun peculiar to
them. This is the dwelling of all the evil spirits who waylay men at every
turn: misshapen goblins, witches, Kormos,
and others ruled by Erlik-Khan the dreadful
prince on the black throne. Still deeper lies the horrible hell, Kasyrgan, where the sinners and criminals of mankind
suffer just punishment.
All evil comes from Erlik, cattle-disease, poverty, illness, and death. Thus
there is no more important duty for man than to hold him steadfastly in honour,
to call him “father Erlik”, and to appease him
with rich sacrifices. If a man is to be born, Ulgon,
at the request of the former's ancestors, orders his son Yayik to give a Yayutshi charge
of the birth, with the life-force from the milk-white sea. This Yayutshi then watches over the newly-born during the
whole of his life on earth. But at the same time Erlik sends
forth a Kormos to prevent the birth
or at least to hamper it, and to injure and misguide the newly-born his whole
life long. And if Erlik is successful in
annihilating the life-forces of a man, Kormos drags
the soul before Erlik’s judgment-seat. If
the man was more good than bad, Erlik has
no power over him, Kormos stands aside, and
the Yayutshi brings the soul up to
paradise. But the soul of the wicked is abandoned by its Yayutshi, dragged by its Kormos to
hell in the deepest layer of the underworld, and flung into a gigantic caldron
of scalding tar. The worst sinners remain for ever beneath the surface of the
tar, the rest rise gradually above the bubbling tar until at last the crown of
the head with the pigtail comes to view. So even the sinner's good works are
not in vain. The blessed in heaven reflect on the kindnesses once done by him,
and they and his ancestors send his former Yayutshi to
hell, who grasps him by the pigtail, pulls him out of the tar, and bears the
soul up to heaven. For this reason the Kalmucks let their pigtails grow, as did
many of the nomad peoples of history.
However, there is no absolute
justice. The gods of light, like the spirits of darkness, allow themselves to
be won over by sacrificial viands, and, if rich offerings are forthcoming, they
willingly wink at transgression; they are envious of man’s wealth and demand
gifts from all, and so it is advisable to stand well with both powers, and that
can only be done through the medium of the Shamans. So long as Erlik is banished in the darkness, a uniform ordering
of the universe exists till the last day when everything created comes to an
end, and the world ceases to be.
With Shamanism fire-worship
was closely associated. Fire purifies everything, wards off evil, and makes
every enchantment ineffective. Hence the sick man, and the strange arrival, and
everything which he brings with him must pass between two fires. Probably
fire-worship was originally common to all the Altaians, and the Magyars also of
the ninth century were described by the Arabian geographer as fire-worshippers.
In consequence of the healthy
climate, the milk diet, and the Spartan hardening, the Altaian enjoys excellent
health, hence the saying “Healthy as a Kirghiz”. There are not a few old men of
eighty, and some of a hundred years. Infectious diseases are almost unknown,
chiefly because the constant smoke in the tent acts as a disinfectant, though
combined with the ghastly filthiness it promotes the very frequent
eye-complaints, itch, and eruptions of the skin. In consequence of the constant
wandering on camel-back, and through the Shaman hocus-pocus, illness and death
at home are vexatious, and sudden death on the field of battle is preferred. In
order not to be forgotten, the Turko-Tartar—in
contrast to the Mongol—likes to be buried in a conspicuous place, and, as such
places do not exist on the steppes, after a year there is heaped over the
buried corpse an artificial mound which, according to the wealth of the dead
man, rises to a hill-like tumulus. At the same time an ostentatious funeral
festival lasting seven days is held, with races, prize combats, and other games
on horseback. Hundreds of horses, camels, and sheep are then consumed.
(D)
Weapons. Predatory Life
The nomad loves his horses and
weapons as himself. The principal weapon is the lance, and in European warfare
the Uhlans and Cossacks survive from the armies of the steppes. The
nomad-peoples who invaded Europe were all wonderfully sure bowmen. The value of
the bow lies in the treacherous noiselessness of the arrow, which is the best
weapon for hunting and ambush, and is therefore still in use today together
with the rifle. In addition there have always been long-handled iron hatchets
and pick-shaped battle-axes for striking and hurling, and the bent sabre.
The warrior’s body was often
protected by a shirt of Armour made of small polished steel plates, or by a
harness of ox-leather plates, the head by a helmet; all mostly Persian or
Caucasian work.
The hard-restless life of the
mounted nomad is easily disturbed by pressure from his like, by the death of
his cattle from hunger and disease, and by the prospect of plunder, which makes
him a professional robber. Of this the Turkoman was long a type. The leading
features in the life of a Turkoman are the alaman (predatory
expedition) or the tchapao (the
surprise). The invitation to any enterprise likely to be attended with profit
finds him ever ready to arm himself and to spring to his saddle. The design
itself is always kept a profound secret even from the nearest relative; and as
soon as the serdar (chief elect) has
had bestowed upon him by some mollah or
other the fatiha (benediction),
every man betakes himself, at the commencement of the evening, by different
ways, to a certain place indicated before as the rendezvous. The attack is
always made either at midnight, when an inhabited settlement, or at sunrise,
when a caravan or any hostile troop is its object. This attack of the
Turkomans, like that of the Huns and Tartars, is rather to be styled a
surprise. They separate themselves into several divisions, and make two, hardly
ever three, assaults upon their unsuspecting prey; for, according to a Turkoman
proverb, “Try twice, turn back the third time”. The party assailed must possess
great resolution and firmness to be able to withstand a surprise of this
nature; the Persians seldom do so. Very often a Turkoman will not hesitate to
attack five or even more Persians, and will succeed in his enterprise. Often
the Persians, struck with a panic, throw away their arms, demand the cords, and
bind each other mutually; the Turkomans have no occasion to dismount except for
the purpose of fastening the last of them. He who resists is cut down; the
coward who surrenders has his hands bound, and the horseman either takes him up
on his saddle (in which case his feet are bound under the horse’s belly), or
drives him before him : whenever from any cause this is not possible, the
wretched man is attached to the tail of the animal In the ninth century the
Magyars and their nomadic predecessors in South Russia, according to Ibn Rusta’s Arabian source, behaved exactly as the
Turkomans in Persia; they provided for the slave-markets on the Pontus so many
Slav captives that the name slave finally became the designation in the West of
the worst servitude.
With man-stealing was
associated cattle-stealing (baranta), which
finally made any attempt at cattle-rearing impossible for the systematically
plundered victim, and drove him to vegetarianism without milk nourishment. And
what a vegetarianism, when agriculture had to suffer from the ever-recurring
raids, and from bad harvests! And where the predatory herdsman settled for the
winter in the midst of an agricultural population and in his own interests
allowed them a bare existence as his serfs, there came about a remarkable
connection of two strata of people different in race and, for a time, in speech
also.
A typical land in this respect
is Ferghana, the former Khanate of Khokand, on the southern border of the
Great Kirghiz horde. The indigenous inhabitants of this country, the entirely
vegetarian Tadjiks and Sarts, from immemorial times passed from the hands of one
nomad people to another in the most frightful servitude. In the sweat of their
brows they dug canals for irrigation, cultivated fields, and put into practice
a hundred arts, only to pay the lion's share to their oppressors who, in the
full consciousness of their boundless power, indulged the most bestial
appetites. But the majority of the dominant horde could not turn from their
innate and uncontrollable impulse to wander; in the spring they were drawn
irresistibly to the free air of the high-lying steppes, and only a part of them
returned to winter among the enslaved peasantry.
This hopeless state of affairs
continued to the Russian conquest in 1876, for the directly adjoining deserts
always poured forth wild hordes afresh, who nipped in the bud any humaner intercourse of herdsmen and peasants. For
rapine and slavery were inevitable wherever the nomads of the vast steppes and
deserts made their abode in the immediate neighbourhood of more civilized
lands. What their own niggardly soil denied them, they took by force from the
fruitful lands of their neighbours. And because the plundered husbandman could
not pursue the fleet mounted nomad into the trackless desert, he remained
unprotected.
The fertile districts on the
edge of the Sahara and the Arabian desert were also in this frightful position,
and Iran felt this calamity all the harder, because the adjoining deserts
of Turan are the most extensive and
terrible, and their inhabitants the wildest of all the nomads of the world. No
better fared the peoples inhabiting East Europe, on the western boundaries of
the steppe-zone.
As early as the fourth century
B. C. Ephorus stated that the customs, according to the individual peoples, of
the Scythians and the Sarmatians (both names covered the most medley
conglomerations of nomads and peasants) were very dissimilar. Some even ate
human beings (as the Massagetae ate their sick or aged parents), others
abstained from all animals. A thousand years later Pseudo-Caesarius of
Nazianzus tells of a double people, that of the Sklavenes (Slavs)
and Phisonites on the lower Danube, of whom
the Sklavenes abstained from meat eating.
And Constantine Porphyrogenitus in the year 952 stated that the Russians (North
Germanic Varangians, who coming from Scandinavia held sway over the Slavs of
Russia) bought horses, cattle, and sheep from their terrible nomadic neighbours
the Patzinaks, because they had none of these
animals themselves (i.e. in the Slav lands which they dominated). In certain
districts of East Europe therefore vegetarianism was permanent among the
peasant folk, who for more than two thousand years had been visited by the
Altaians with rapine and murder; this can be proved from original sources to
have been the case from the fourth century BC to the tenth century AD. that is,
for 1400 years! It is exactly the same state of things as in Ferghana in modern
times.
As long as a nomad horde finds
sufficient room in the steppe it does not think of emigration, and always
returns home from its raids richly laden with the plunder. But if the
steppe-zone is thrown into a ferment by struggles for the winter pastures or by
other causes, the relatively weakest horde gets pushed out of the steppe, and
must conquer a new home outside the zone. For it is only weak against the
remaining nomad hordes, but against any other State upon which it falls it is
irresistible. All the nomads of history who broke into Europe, the Scythians,
Sarmatians, Huns, Bulgarians, Avars, Magyars, Cumans, were the weakest in
the steppes and had to take to flight, whence they became assailants of the
world, before whom the strongest States tottered. With an energetic Khan at
their head, who organised them on military lines, such a horde transformed
itself into an incomparable army, compelled by the instinct of self-preservation
to hold fast together in the midst of the hostile population which they
subjugated; for however superfluous a central government may be in the steppe,
it is of vital importance to a conquering nomad horde outside it. Consequently,
while that part of the people which remained in the steppe was split up into
loose clan associations, the other part, which emigrated, possessed itself of
immense territories, exterminated the greater part of entire nations and
enslaved the rest, scattered them as far as they pleased, and founded a
despotically governed State with a ridiculously small band of horsemen.
The high figures in the
chronicles are fictions exaggerated by terror and imagination, seeing that
large troops of horsemen, who recklessly destroyed everything around them,
would not have found in a narrow space even the necessary pasture for their
many horses. Each Mongol under Chinghiz Khan,
for example, was obliged to take with him 18 horses and mares, so as always to
have a fresh steed and sufficient mare’s milk and horse’s blood for food and
drink. Two corps under the command of Sabutai and Chebe sufficed this great conqueror for the overthrow
of West Asia. In four years they devastated and in great part depopulated
Khorasan, North Persia, Azerbaidjan, Georgia,
Armenia, Caucasia, the Crimea, and the Volga territories, took hundreds of
towns, and utterly defeated in bloody engagements the large armies of the
Georgians, Lesghians, Circassians, and Cumans,
and the united forces of the Russian princes. But they spared themselves as
much as possible, by driving those of the subjugated people who were capable of
bearing arms into the fight before them (as the Huns and Avars did
previously), and cutting them down at once when they hesitated.
But what the Altaian armies
lacked in numbers was made up for by their skill in surprises, their fury,
their cunning, mobility, and elusiveness, and the panic which preceded them and
froze the blood of all peoples. On their marvellously fleet horses they could
traverse immense distances, and their scouts provided them with accurate local
information as to the remotest lands and their weakness. Add to this the
enormous advantage that among them even the most insignificant news spread like
wildfire from aul to aul by means of voluntary couriers surpassing any
intelligence department, however well organised. The tactics of the Mongols are
described by Marco Polo in agreement with Piano Carpini and
all the other writers as follows: “They never let themselves come to close
quarters, but keep perpetually riding round and shooting into the enemy. And as
they do not count it any shame to run away in battle, they will sometimes
pretend to do so, and in running away they turn in the saddle and shoot hard
and strong at the foe, and in this way make great havoc. Their horses are
trained so perfectly that they will double hither and thither, just like a dog,
in a way that is quite astonishing. Thus they fight to as good purpose in
running away as if they stood and faced the enemy, because of the vast volleys
of arrows that they shoot in this way, turning round upon their pursuers, who
are fancying that they have won the battle. But when the Tartars see that they
have killed and wounded a good many horses and men, they wheel round bodily and
return to the charge in perfect order and with loud cries; and in a very short
time the enemy are routed. In truth they are stout and valiant soldiers and
inured to war. And you perceive that it is just when the enemy sees them run,
and imagines that he has gained the battle, that he has in reality lost it; for
the Tartars wheel round in a moment when they judge the right time has come.
And after this fashion they have won many a fight”. The chronicler, Peter
of Zittau, in the year 1315, described the
tactics of the Magyars in exactly the same way.
When a vigorous conqueror like
Attila or Chinghiz arose among the mounted
nomads and combined several hordes for a cyclonic advance, they swept all
before them on the march, like a veritable avalanche of peoples. The news of
the onward rolling flood scared the bravest people, and compelled them to fly
from their homes; thus their neighbours, too, were set in tumultuous motion,
and so it went on until some more powerful State took defensive measures and
stemmed the tide of peoples. Now the fugitives had to face the assailant. A
battle of nations was fought, the flower of famous peoples strewed the field,
and powerful nations were wiped out. The deserted or devastated territories
were occupied by peoples hitherto often quite unknown, or settled by nations
forcibly brought there by the conqueror; States, generally without duration and
kept together only by the one powerful hand, were founded. The giant State,
having no cohesion from within, fell to pieces at the death of the conqueror or
shortly after; but the sediment of peoples, together with a stratum of their
nomad oppressors which remained from the flood, could not be pushed back again,
and immense areas of a continent received once again an entirely new
ethnography the work of one single furious conqueror.
Oftener and longer than in
Europe successive Altaian empires held together in Asia, where the original
population had long become worn out by eternal servitude and the central zone
of the steppes supplied a near and secure base for plundering hordes. That some
of these Asiatic empires attained to a high degree of prosperity is not due to
the conquerors, who indeed quickly demongolised themselves
by marriage with aliens, but was the consequence of the geographical position,
the productivity of the soil, and the resigned tractableness and adaptability
of the subjugated who, in spite of all the splendour of their masters, were
forced to languish in helpless servitude. Out of Central Asia from time
immemorial one nomad horde after another broke into the steppes of South Russia
and of Hungary, and after exterminating or pushing out their predecessors and
occupying their territories, used this new base to harry and enslave the
surrounding peoples far and wide, forcibly transforming their whole being, as
in Ferghana.
But the bestial fury of the
nomads not only laid bare the country, recklessly depopulated enormous tracts,
dragged off entire peoples and forcibly transplanted and enslaved them, but
where their sway was of any duration they brought their subjects down to the
level of brutes, and extirpated every trace of nobler feeling from their souls.
Central Asia of today, as Vambery states
from personal observation, is a sink of all vices. And Franz von Schwarz draws
the following cheerless picture of the Turkestan Sarts,
among whom he lived for fifteen years: With respect to character they are sunk
as low as man possibly can be. But this is not at all to be wondered at, as for
thousands of years they were oppressed and enslaved by all possible peoples,
against whom they could only maintain themselves by servility, cunning, and
deceit. The Sart is cowardly, fawning,
cringing, reticent, suspicious, deceitful, revengeful, cruel, and boastful. At
the same time he shows in his appearance and manner a dignity and bearing that
would compel the uninitiated to regard him as the ideal of a man of honour. In
the former native States, as in Bokhara and Khiva today, the entire system of
government and administration was based exclusively on lying, deceit, and
bribery, and it was quite impossible for a poor man to get justice
The opposite of the Sart is his oppressor the Kirghiz, who is shy, morose,
and violent, but also honourable, upright, good-hearted, and brave. The
terrible slave-hunting Turkoman is distinguished from all other Central Asiatics by his bold and piercing glance and proud
bearing. In wild bravery no other race on earth can match itself with him, and
as a horseman he is unsurpassed. He has an unruly disposition and recognises no
authority, but his word can be absolutely relied upon.
What a tragic fate for an
enslaved people. Although its lowest degradation is already behind it, how long
yet will it be the object of universal and not unnatural contempt, while its
former oppressor, void of all humane feeling, a professional murderer and
cattle-thief, remains as a hero and ideal super-man?
So long as the dominant nomad
horde remains true to its wandering life, it lives in the midst of the
subjugated only in winter, and proceeds in spring to the summer pastures. But
it is wise enough to leave behind overseers and guards, to prevent revolts. The
individual nomad has no need to keep many slaves; besides, he would have no
occupation and no food for them, and so an entire horde enslaves entire
peoples, who must provide food for themselves. In so far as he does not winter
directly among them, the nomad only comes to plunder them regularly, leaving
them nothing but what is absolutely indispensable.
The peasantry had to supply
the nomads and their herds who wintered among them with all that was demanded.
For this purpose they stored up grain and fodder during the summer, for in
Central and East Europe the snow falls too deep for the herds to be left to
scrape out fodder alone. During the winter the wives and daughters of the
enslaved became a prey to the lusts of the yellow-skins, by whom they were incessantly
violated, and thus every conjugal and family tie and as a further consequence
the entire social organization was seriously loosened. The ancient Indo-
European patriarchal principle, which has exclusively prevailed among the
Altaians also from the earliest times, languished among the enslaved just
because of the violation and loosening of the conjugal bond, which often
continued for hundreds of years.
The matriarchal principle came
into prominence, for the Altaian adulterer repudiated bastards, and still more
did the husband where there was one, so the children followed the mother. Where
therefore matriarchal phenomena occur among Indo-Europeans, usually among the
lower strata of population, they are not survivals of pre-patriarchal times,
but probably arose later from the corruption of married life by systematic
adultery. Thus the subjugated Indo-Europeans became here more, there less mongolised by the mixture of races, and in places the
two superimposed races became fused into a uniform mixed people.
Indo-European usage and law
died out, and the savage wilfulness of the Altaians had exclusive sway.
Revolutions among the people driven to despair followed, but they were quelled
in blood, and the oppression exercised still more heavily. Even if here and
there the yoke was successfully shaken off, the emancipated, long paralysed and
robbed of all capability of self-organization, were unable to remain
independent. Commonly they fell into anarchy and then voluntarily gave
themselves up to another milder-seeming servitude, or became once more the prey
of an if possible rougher conqueror.
In consequence of the
everlasting man-hunting and especially the carrying off of women in foreign
civilised districts there ensued a strong mixing of blood, and the Altaian
race-characteristics grew fainter, especially to the south and west. The Greeks
by the time of Alexander the Great were no longer struck by the Mongol type
already much obliterated of the nomads pasturing in the district between the
Oxus and the Jaxartes. This led to the supposition that these nomads had
belonged to the Indo-European race and had originally been settled peasants,
and that they had been compelled to limit themselves to animal rearing and to
become nomads only after the conversion of their fields to deserts through the
evaporation of the water-basins. This supposition is false, as we have seen
before
The steppes and deserts of
Central Asia are an impassable barrier for the South Asiatics,
the Aryans, but not for the North Asiatic, the Altaian; for him they are an
open country providing him with the indispensable winter pastures. On the other
hand, for the South Asiatic Aryan these deserts are an object of terror, and
besides he is not impelled towards them, as he has winter pastures near at hand.
It is this difference in the distance of summer and winter pastures that makes
the North Asiatic Altaian an ever-wandering herdsman, and the grazing part of
the Indo-European race cattle-rearers settled in
limited districts. Thus, while the native Iranian must halt before the
trackless region of steppes and deserts and cannot follow the well-mounted
robber nomad thither, Iran itself is the object of greatest longing to the
nomadic Altaian. Here he can plunder and enslave to his heart's delight, and if
he succeeds in maintaining himself for a considerable time among the Aryans, he
learns the language of the subjugated people, and by mingling with them loses
his Mongol characteristics more and more. If the Iranian is now fortunate
enough to shake off the yoke, the dispossessed iranised Altaian
intruder inflicts himself upon other lands. So it was with the Scythians.
Leaving their families behind
in the South Russian steppes, the Scythians invaded Media c. BC 630
and advanced into Mesopotamia and Syria as far as Egypt. In Media they took
Median wives and learned the Median language. After being driven out by Cyaxares, on their return some twenty-eight years later,
they met with a new generation, the offspring of the wives and daughters whom
they had left behind, and slaves of an alien race. A thorough mixture of race
within a single generation is hardly conceivable. A hundred and fifty years
later Hippocrates found them still so foreign, so Mongolian, that he could say
that they were “very different from the rest of mankind, and only like
themselves, as are also the Egyptians”. He remarked their yellowish-red
complexion, corpulence, smooth skins, and their consequent eunuch-like
appearance all typically Mongol characteristics. Hippocrates was the most
celebrated physician and natural philosopher of the ancient world. His evidence
is unshakable, and cannot be invalidated by the Aryan speech of the Scythians.
Their Mongol type was innate in them, whereas their Iranian speech was acquired
and is no refutation of Hippocrates' testimony. On the later Greek vases from
South Russian excavations they already appear strongly demongolised and
the Altaian is only suggested by their hair, which is as stiff as a horse’s
mane the characteristic that survives longest among all Ural-Altaian hybrid
peoples.
If a nomad army is obliged to
take foreign non-nomadic wives, there occurs at once a dualism, corresponding
to the two sexes, in the language and way of living of each individual
household. The new wives cannot live in the saddle, they do not know how to
take down the tent, load it on the beasts of burden, and set it up again, and
yet they must share the restless life of the herdsman. Consequently, where the
ground admits of it, as in South Russia, the tent is put on wheels and drawn by
animals.
Thus the Scythian women
were hamaxobiotic (wagon inhabiting), the
men however remained true to their horse-riding life and taught their boys too,
as soon as they could keep themselves in the saddle. But the dualism in
language could not maintain itself; the children held to the language of the
mother, the more easily because even the fathers understood Medish, and so the Altaian Scythian people, with their
language finally iranised, became Iranian. But
their mode of life remained unchanged : the consumption of horse-flesh, soured
horse's milk (kumiz) and cheese of the same, the hemp
vapour bath for men (the women bathed differently), singeing of the fleshy
parts of the body as a cure for rheumatism, poisoning of the arrow-tips,
wholesale human offerings, and slaughter of favourite wives at the burials of
princes, the placing on horseback of the stuffed bodies of murdered warriors
round the grave, etc., all such customs as are found so well defined among the
Mongols of the Middle Ages
The modern Tartars of the
Crimea, whose classical beauty sometimes rivals that of the Greeks and Romans,
underwent, in the same land, the same change to the Aryan type.
The same is the case with the
Magyars whose mounted nomadic mode of life and fury, and consequently their
origin, was Turkish, but their language was a mixture of Ugrian and Turkish on
an Ugrian basis. Evidently a Magyar army, Turkish in blood, formerly advanced
far to the north where it subdued an Ugrian people and took Ugrian wives; the
children then blended the Ugrian speech of their mothers with the Turkish
speech of their fathers. But they must also once have dominated Indo-European
peoples and mixed themselves very strongly with them, for Gardezi’s original
source from the middle of the ninth century describes them as “handsome,
stately men”. At that time they were leading the nomad existence in the Pontic
Steppe the old Scythia whence they engaged in terrible slave-hunting among the neighbouring
Slavs; and as they were notorious women-hunters, they must have assimilated
much Slav, Alan, and Circassian blood, and thus became “handsome, stately men”.
However the change did not end there. At the end of the ninth century their
army, on its return from a predatory expedition, found their kindred at home
totally exterminated by their deadly enemies, the Patzinaks,
a related stock. Consequently the whole body had again to take foreign wives,
and they occupied the steppes of Hungary. Before this catastrophe the Magyars
are said to have mustered 20,000 horsemen, an oriental exaggeration, for this
would assume a nomad people of 200,000 souls. Consequently only a few thousand
horsemen could have fled to Hungary. There they mixed themselves further with
the medley race-conglomeration settled there, which had formed itself centuries
before, and assimilated stragglers from the related Patzinak stock.
By this absorption the Altaian type asserted itself so predominantly that the
Frankish writers were never tired of depicting their ugliness and loathsomeness
in the most horrifying colours. Their fury was so irresistible that in
sixty-three years they were able with impunity to make thirty-two great
predatory expeditions as far as the North Sea, and to France, Spain, Italy, and
Byzantium. Thus the modern Magyars are one of the most varied race-mixtures on
the face of the earth, and one of the two chief Magyar types of today traced to
the Arpad era by tomb-findings is dolichocephalic with a narrow visage. There
we have before us Altaian origin, Ugrian speech, and Indo-European type
combined.
Such metamorphoses are typical
for all nomads who, leaving their families at home, attack foreign peoples and
at the same time make war on one another. In the furious tumult in which the
Central Asiatic mounted hordes constantly swarmed, and fought one another for
the spoils, it is to be presumed that nearly all such people, like the
Scythians and Magyars, at least once sustained the loss of their wives and
children. The mounted nomads could, therefore, remain a pure race only where
they constantly opposed their own kin, whereas to the south and west they were
merged so imperceptibly in the Semitic and Indo-European stock, that no
race-boundary is perceivable.
The most diversified was the
destiny of those mounted nomads who became romanised in
the Balkan peninsula (Roumanians or Vlakhs), but, surprising as it may be outside the steppe
region, remain true to this day to their life as horse and sheep nomads
wherever this is still at all possible. During the summer they grazed on most
of the mountains of the Balkan peninsula, and took up their winter quarters on
the sea-coasts among a peasant population speaking a different language. Thence
they gradually spread, unnoticed by the chroniclers, along all the mountain
ranges, over all the Carpathians of Transylvania, North Hungary, and South
Galicia to Moravia; towards the north-west from Montenegro onwards over
Herzegovina, Bosnia, Istria, as far as South Styria; towards the south over
Albania far into Greece. In the entire Balkan peninsula there is scarcely a
span of earth which they have not grazed. And like the peasantry among which
they wintered (and winter) long enough, they became (and become) after a
transitory bilingualism, Greeks, Albanians, Servians,
Bulgarians, Ruthenians, Poles, Slovaks, Chekhs,
Slovenes, Croatians, seeing that they appeared there not as a compact body, but
as a mobile nomad stratum among a strange-tongued and more numerous peasant
element, and not till later did they gradually take to agriculture and
themselves become settled. In Istria they are still bilingual. On the other
hand they maintain themselves in Roumania, East Hungary, Bukovina,
Bessarabia for the following reasons: the central portion of this region, the
Transylvanian mountain belt, sustained with its rich summer pastures such a
number of grazing-camps, that the nomads in the favourable winter quarters of
the Roumanian plain were finally able to
absorb the Slav peasantry, already almost wiped out by the everlasting passage
through them of other wild nomad peoples. In Macedonia, too, a remainder of
them still exists. Were they not denationalised, the Roumanians today
would be by far the most numerous but also the most scattered people of South
Europe, not less than twenty million souls.
The Roumanians were
not descendants of Roman colonists of Dacia left behind in East Hungary and
Transylvania. Their nomadic life is a confutation of this, for the Emperor
Trajan (after AD 107) transplanted settled colonists from the
entire Roman Empire. And after the removal and withdrawal of the Roman
colonists (c. AD 271) Dacia, for untold centuries, was the
arena of the wildest international struggles known to history, and these could
not have been outlived by any nomad people remaining there. To be sure, some
express the opinion that the Roumanian nomad
herdsmen fled into the Transylvanian mountains at each new invasion (by the
Huns, Bulgarians, Avars, Magyars, Patzinaks,
Cumans successively) and subsequently always returned. But the nomad can
support himself in the mountains only during the summer, and he must descend to
pass the winter. On the other hand, each of these new invading nomad hordes
needed these mountains for summer grazing for their own herds. Thus the Roumanians could not have escaped, and their alleged
game of hide-and-seek would have been in vain. But south of the Danube also the
origin of the Roumanians must not be sought
in Roman times, but much later, because nomads are never quickly denationalised.
For in the summer they are quite alone on the otherwise uninhabited mountains,
having intercourse with one another in their own language, and only in their
winter quarters among the foreign-speaking peasantry are they compelled in
their dealings with them to resort to the foreign tongue. Thus they remain for
centuries bilingual before they are quite denationalised, and this can be
proved from original sources precisely in the case of the Roumanians (Vlakhs) in the
old kingdom of Servia. Accordingly the romanising of
the Roumanians presupposes a Romance
peasant population already existing there for a long time and of different
race, through the influence of which they first became bilingual and then very
gradually, after some centuries, forgot their own language. In what district
could this have taken place? For nomads outside the salt-steppe the seacoast
offers precisely on account of the salt, and the mild winter the most suitable
winter quarters, and, as a matter of fact, from the earliest times certain
shores of the Adriatic, the Ionian, Aegean, and Marmora, were crowded
with Vlakhian catuns,
and are partly so at the present time. Among all these sea-districts, however,
only Dalmatia had remained so long Romanic as to be able entirely to romanise a nomad people. From this district the
expansion of the Roumanians had its
beginning, so that the name Daco-Roumanians is
nothing but a fiction.
The Spanish and Italian nomad
shepherds too can have had no other origin. Alans took part in Radagaisus'
invasion of Italy in 405, and, having advanced to Gaul, founded in 411 a
kingdom in Lusitania which was destroyed by the Visigoths. The remainder
advanced into Africa with the Vandals in 429. Traces of the Alans remained for
a long time in Gaul. Sarmatian and Bulgarian hordes accompanied Alboin to Italy
in 568, and twelve places in northern Italy are still called Bolgaro, Bolgheri, etc. A
horde of Altaian Bulgars fled to Italy later, and received from the
Lombard Grimoald (662-672) extensive and
hitherto barren settlements in the mountains of Abruzzi and their
neighbourhood. In the time of Paulus Diaconus (797)
they also spoke Latin, but their mother tongue was still intact, for only on
their winter pastures in Apulia and Campania, in contact with Latin peasants in
whose fields they encamped, were they compelled to speak Latin. The old Roman
sheep-rearing pursued by slaves has no connection with nomadism.
Therefore neither the
non-Mongol appearance, nor the Semitic, Indo-European, or Finno-Ugrian language
of any historical mounted nomad people can be held as a serious argument for
their Semitic, Indo-European, or Finno-Ugrian origin. Everything speaks for one
single place of origin for the mounted nomads, and that is in the Turanian-Mongol
steppes and deserts. These alone, by their enormous extent, their unparalleled
severity of climate, their uselessness in summer, their salt vegetation
nourishing countless herds, and above all by their indivisible economic
connection with the distant grass-abounding north these alone give rise to a
people with the ineradicable habits of mounted nomads. The Indo-European
vocabulary reveals no trace of a former mounted nomadism; there is no ground
for speaking of Indo-European, Semitic, Finno-Ugrian nomads, but only of nomads
who have remained Altaic or of indo-europeanised, semiticised, ugrianised nomads.
The Scythians became Iranian, the Magyars Ugrian, the Avars and
Bulgarians Slavic, and so on.
The identical origin of all
the mounted nomads of historic and modern times is also demonstrated by the
identity of their entire mode of life, even in its details and most trivial
particulars, their customs, and their habits. One nomad people is the
counterfeit of the other, and after more than two thousand years no change, no
differentiation, no progress is to be observed among them. Accordingly we can
always supplement our not always precise information about individual
historical hordes, and the consequences of their appearance, by comparisons
with the better known hordes. We are best informed about the Mongols of the
thirteenth century, and that by Rogerius Canon
of Varad, Thomas Archdeacon of Spalato, Plano Carpini, Rubruquis, Marco Polo and others, whose accounts are
therefore indispensable for a correct estimation of all earlier nomadic invaders
of Europe.
This is the role of nomadism
in the history of the world: countries too distant from its basis it could only
ravage transitorily, with robbery, murder, fire, and slavery, but the stamp
which it left upon the peoples which it directly dominated or adjoined
remains uneffaceable. The Orient, the cradle and
chief nursery of civilization, it delivered over to barbarism; it completely
paralysed the greater part of Europe, and it transformed and radically
corrupted the race, spirit, and character of countless millions for
incalculable ages to come. That which is called the inferiority of the East
European is its work, and had Germany or France possessed steppes like Hungary,
where the nomads could also have maintained themselves and thence completed their
work of destruction, in all probability the light of West European civilization
would long ago have been extinguished, the entire Old World would have been
barbarized, and at the head of civilization today would be stagnant China.
(E)
ATTILA
If the extraordinary
individual, who styled himself not unjustly the scourge of God and terror of
the world, had never existed, the history of the Huns would have been very
little more interesting to us at the present epoch, than that of the Gepidae,
or Alans, or any of the chief nations that were assembled under his banner; but
the immensity of the exploits, and the still greater pretensions of that
memorable warrior, render it a matter of interest to know the origins of his
power, and the very beginnings from which his countrymen had arisen, to
threaten the subjugation of the civilized world, and the extirpation of the
Christian religion. There has probably existed, before or since the time of
Attila, but one other potentate, who, in his brief career, passed like a meteor
over Europe, building up an empire, that was maintained by his personal
qualities, and crumbled to atoms the moment he was withdrawn from it, leaving,
however, consequences of which it is difficult to calculate the extent or
termination.
One of the greatest losses
that the history of Europe has sustained, is that of the eight books of the
life of Attila, written in Greek by Priscus, who was his cotemporary and
personally acquainted with him, and who, by the fragments that have been preserved
to us, appears to have been most particular, candid, and entertaining, in his
details. The loss is the more to be regretted, as it is certain that they did
exist entire in the library of the Vatican after the restoration of literature,
though it appears to have been ascertained by anxious research, that they are
no longer to be found there; and there seems reason to suspect, that they may
have been purposely destroyed through the jealousy of the Church of Rome, lest
their publication should bring to light any facts or circumstances, that might
militate against its policy or doctrines; when we consider the conspicuous part
which was acted by the bishop of Rome, at the close of the Italian campaign of
Attila, a period not long antecedent to the claim advanced by his successors to
religious and political supremacy.
As we are thus deprived of the
great fountain of information, our materials relating to the events of some of
the most important portions of his life, and especially the particulars of its
termination, are lamentably deficient. Under these circumstances it will be
necessary to compare the brief and conflicting notices which have descended to
us, with the copious and varied details of the most rude and ancient romances
of Europe, which, however involved in confusion, and discredited by fiction and
anachronism, can scarcely be supposed to have been built upon no foundation.
The little we know concerning the origin and early habits of the Huns, is
chiefly derived from Chinese writers who were consulted by Des Guignes, which may be compared with the statements of
ancient chroniclers, and, as far as relates to the general manners of the Huns
and other tribes that emerged from Asia, is most strikingly confirmed by Latin
authority.
Two different accounts have
been given by the old chroniclers of the origin of the Huns. The one, that they
were descended from Magog the son of Japhet, brought forth by his wife Enech in Havilah, fifty-eight years after the deluge;
the other, that the two branches of the Huns and Magyars were derived
from Hunor and Magor,
elder sons of Nimrod, who settled in the land of
Havilah (meaning thereby Persia), and, having followed a deer to the banks of
the Maeotis, obtained permission from Nimrod to
settle there. By the agreement of all writers, the Huns were Scythians, and if
the Scythian tribes were descended and named from Cush, son of Ham, the Huns
could not have been of the blood of Japhet. A singular fabulous origin has been
attributed to them.
Filimer king of the Goths, and
son of Gundaric the great, having issued
from Scandinavia and occupied the Scythian territory, found certain witches
amongst his people, who were called in their language Aliorumnae or Alirunes, and he drove them far from his army into the
desert, where they led a wandering life, and, uniting themselves with the
unclean spirits of the wilderness, produced a most ferocious offspring, which
lurked at first amongst the marshes, a swarthy and slender race, of small
stature, and scarcely endowed with the articulate voice of a human being. It
rarely, if ever, happens that a very old tradition is entirely without meaning
or foundation, and it may perhaps be drawn from this absurd fable, that the
Huns were of mixed descent between the Goths and Tartars.
Great and formidable to all
Europe as the Huns were in the reign of Attila, it is a matter of doubt what
language they spoke. Eccard is quoted by
Pray as arguing that they were Slavs, and used the Slavonic tongue, because
Priscus only mentions two barbarian languages, as having been spoken in the
camp of Attila, which were the Gothic and Hunnish; and he observes, that
if the Slavonic and Hunnish had not been identical he would have
mentioned the former also.
Pray, anxious, as are all the
Hungarian writers, to identify the ancient. Huns with the Avares of a later period, with the Magyars, and their
own countrymen, argues against this, asserting that the Slavs did not enter
Dalmatia and Illyria, till the time when the Avars were in Hungary,
about a century after the days of Attila, and that the Tartars, to whom he
refers the Hunnish origin, are not Slavonians.
There were, however, certainly
Sarmatian nations under Attila, of which the Quadi may be particularly
mentioned, and the words of Ovid distinguish the Sarmatian from the Gothic, as
much as those of Priscus do the Hunnish language. But in truth
Priscus does not say that only two languages were spoken, though he names the
Gothic and Hunnish as prevalent, and perhaps as being only dialects
of one tongue, for he nowhere asserts them to be radically distinct; and a
brief examination of ancient evidence will perhaps lead us rather to consider
it as a Teutonic dialect, than allied to the modern Hungarian. Priscus
invariably uses the word Scythian, to include the Gothic nations with the Huns,
and, if they were radically different in language as well as appearance, it is
very difficult to understand how they should have been so classed under one
denomination. He speaks also of their singing Scythian songs, which would
convey no distinct meaning if the Scythians had two languages as widely
different as the Gothic and Hungarian. In three other passages he mentions the
language of the Huns. He says that on the embassy, with which he was himself
associated, Maximin took with him Rusticius, “who was skilled in the
tongue of the barbarians, and accompanied us into Scythia”. Whenever he speaks
of the Huns specially, he calls them Huns. He says of Zercon the
buffoon, that, “mixing the tongue of the Huns and that of the Goths with that
of the Italians, he kept the whole court, except Attila, in incessant
laughter”; concerning which it may be observed, that, if the Hunnish and
Gothic were not merely dialects of one language, the jests of Zercon could have been intelligible to very few
of Attila’s soldiers, and could scarcely have kept the whole court in a roar of
laughter. In the other passage he says, “The Scythians, being a mixed
people, adhere to their own barbarous tongue, either that of the Huns, or that
of the Goths, or even those who have intercourse with the Romans, that of the
Italians, but they do not readily speak Greek, except the captives from Thrace
and the maritime part of Illyria”. This is the sum of the information
transmitted to us concerning their language, which seems to point rather to
kindred tongues, like those of the Danes and Swedes which are easily understood
by either nation, than to two languages radically different.
In the account given by
Priscus of his progress through the north of Hungary with the embassy, he
states that they were furnished instead of wine, with what was called by the
natives meed, writing the word in
Greek medos; and as those natives were
the very Huns of Attila, near his principal residence, it
affords a strong reason for attributing to them a Teutonic dialect, though the
word kamos which he mentions for a
sort of beer is not so easily traced. The name of Alirunes or Alrunae given
to the mothers of the Huns, and stated by Jordanes in the first century after
the death of Attila to have been the name used by the people amongst whom they
originated, is decidedly a Teutonic word, which may be found in the Scandinavian
Edda, written aulrunar. Jordanes tells us
that the Huns called their fortified seat in Pannonia Hunniwar,
which is indubitably Teutonic, the last syllable being the word which,
according to the dialect, is called ware, ward, or guard, from which last form
of the word our court is derived. The king, who led the Huns into Europe, is
named by Jordanes, Balamber or Balamer, which is actually the same name as that of Walamir king of the Goths under Attila, whom Malchus calls Balamir.
We know from the history of Menander that the river Volga was called Attila, or
as the Greeks write it Atteelas, in
German Ethel, in which form the name is connected with the Teutonic edel, noble; and the name of king Attila in the
oldest German is Etzel, in which form it is possibly connected with
the Teutonic steel, alluding to the sword-god, which with a similar
deduction from the Greek chalybos, has
been called chalybdicos, chalib, and excalibur.
The documents, which could clear up the point, are probably lost beyond all
chance of recovery, but it seems questionable whether the nationality of modern
Hungarians has not induced them to claim a connection of blood with the Huns of
Attila, to which they are perhaps not entitled.
Desericius in his voluminous work
has exerted himself to demonstrate that the Huns had no affinity with the
Alans, Goths, Gepids, Vandals, and Lombards, and they were certainly
a race differing in stature and colour from the Alans, which proves
them to have been long distinct, though they may have branched out at a period
later than the dispersion of mankind in the time of Peleg; but they dwelt near
to each other, and their habits and worship were precisely the same. The
question above proposed is whether their language was a dialect of the general
Teutonic tongue spoken by those nations, (perhaps even an admixture of that
with some other language) or radically and entirely distinct like the modern
Hungarian. The oldest account we have of the Scythians is given in detail by
Herodotus, about 450 years before the birth of Christ; 380 years after Christ
Ammianus Marcellinus described the Alans who were of the Gothic family, with
manners exactly similar to those of the Huns, and the same sword-worship which
had been described as used amongst the Scythians by the father of profane
history; and in the following century we find Attila the Hun, obtaining great
reverence by means of a like sanctified sword, and making the very Scythian
sacrifices described by Herodotus, and the Huns and Goths still called
promiscuously Scythians by the Greek writers. The Teutonic nations and the Huns
had therefore during at least 900 years before the death of Attila been known
under one common denomination, and entertained the same habits and a similar
religion; and it will not easily be proved that their languages had no
affinity, by those who wish to establish the identity of the Huns and
Hungarians.
The Hunnish nation,
says Ammianus Marcellinus in the fourth century, little known by ancient
records, and dwelling nigh the frozen ocean beyond the Meotian marshes,
exceeds every known degree of savageness. From their very infancy their cheeks
are gashed so deeply with steel, that the growth of the beard is impeded by
scars; they grow up, like eunuchs, without beards or manly beauty. The whole race
have compact and firm limbs, and thick necks, a prodigiously square stature,
like two-legged beasts or stumps coarsely shaped into human figures.
They are so hardy, that they
require neither fire, nor seasoned victuals, but live on the roots of wild plants,
and the half-raw flesh of any sort of cattle, which they quickly warm by
placing it under them on the backs of their horses.
They never frequent any sort
of buildings, which they look upon as set apart for the sepulchres of
the dead, and, except in case of urgent necessity, they will not go under the
shelter of a roof, and they think themselves insecure there, not having even a
thatched cottage amongst them; but, wandering in the woods from their very
cradle, they are accustomed to endure frost, hunger, and thirst.
They are clothed with
coverings made of linen and the skins of wood mice stitched together, nor have
they any change of garment, or ever put off that which they wear till it is
reduced to rags and drops off.
They cover their heads with
curved fur caps; their hairy legs are defended by goat skins, and their shoes
are so ill fitted as to prevent their stepping freely, on which account they
are not well qualified for infantry; but, almost growing to the backs of their
horses which are hardy and ill-shaped, and often sitting upon them after the
fashion of a woman, they perform any thing they have to do on horseback. There
they sit night and day, buy and sell, eat and drink, and leaning on the neck of
the animal take their slumber, and even their deepest repose.
They hold their councils on
horseback. Without submitting to any strict royal authority, they follow the
tumultuous guidance of their principal individuals, and act usually by a sudden
impulse. When attacked they will sometimes stand to fight, but enter into
battle drawn up in the figure of wedges, with a variety of frightful
vociferations. Extremely light and sudden in their movements, they disperse
purposely to take breath, and careering without any formed line they make vast
slaughter of their enemies; but, owing to the rapidity of their manoeuvres,
they seldom stop to attack a rampart, or hostile camp.
At a distance they fight with
missile weapons, most skilfully pointed with sharp bones. Near at
hand they engage with the sword, without any regard for their own persons, and
while the enemy is employed in parrying the attack, they entangle his limbs
with a noose in such a manner as to deprive him of the power of riding or
resisting. None of them plough, or touch any agricultural instrument.
They all ramble about like
fugitives without any fixed place of abode with the wagons in which they live,
in which their wives weave their dark clothing, cohabit with them, bring forth
their children, and in which they rear the boys to the age of puberty.
Faithless in truces, inconstant, animated by every new suggestion of hope, they
give way to every furious incitement.
They are as ignorant, as
irrational animals, of the distinction between honesty and dishonesty,
versatile and obscure in speech, influenced by no religious or superstitious
fear, insatiably covetous of gold, so fluctuating arid irritably that they
often fall off from their companions without any sufficient cause, and
reconcile themselves again, without any steps having been taken to pacify them.
Such were the Huns when they burst into Europe about the year 374 after Christ,
and such they had been from the earliest period of history.
After the confusion of tongues
in Sennaar (2247 BC) the Huns
are said to have migrated into the mountains of Armenia and Georgia. Thence,
emerging into the plain between the Tanais and
Volga, they divided, part to the east, and part to the west. What became of
those who travelled west does not appear, if the Huns are to be considered as
distinct both from the Teutonic and Slavonian races. We read in some writers of
dark and white Huns; the former being undoubtedly the Huns proper, and the
latter some of the yellow haired tribes like the Alans, who dwelt in their
vicinity with habits very similar. The Huns who travelled eastward led a
pastoral life, enclosed amongst the mountains, and had no intercourse with
other nations, but perpetual warfare with the Chinese, from whom the only
information concerning them is derived.
The Chinese make mention of
the Huns 2207 BC dwelling to the NE, of China, feeding on the
flesh of their flocks and dressed in skins. In their dealings with other people
their affirmation held the place of an oath. They punished murder and theft,
that is amongst themselves, with certain death. They accustomed their children
to hunt and use arms. In their earliest years they shot birds and mice with
arrows; growing bigger they pursued hares and foxes. No one amongst them could be
deemed a man, till he had slain an enemy, or was bold and skilful enough
to do so. It was their custom to attack their enemies unexpectedly, and to fly
as rapidly when it was expedient. The great speed of their horses facilitated
this mode of warfare, and the Chinese, who were accustomed to standing fight,
could not pursue and vanquish them: and the Huns, if defeated, retired unto
desert places, where the enemy would find it very grievous to follow them.
They were quite illiterate;
their weapons were bows and arrows, and swords. They had more or fewer wives
according to their means, and it was not unusual for a son to marry his
stepmother, or a brother the widow of his brother. The Hun who could rescue the
body of a slain comrade from the enemy became heir to all his
property. They were anxious to make captives, whom they employed in
tending their flocks. Thieves amongst other nations, they were faithful to each
other.
They lived in tents placed
upon wagons. The ancient Huns adorned their coffins with precious things, gold,
silver, and jewels, according to the rank of the deceased, but they erected no
tombs. Many servants and concubines followed the body at the funeral, and
served it as if living; troops of righting men accompanied it, and at the full
moon they began combats which lasted till the change. Then they cut off the
heads of many prisoners, and each of the fighting men was rewarded with a
measure of wine made from sour milk.
Teuman, who reigned after the death
of Chi-Hoam-tio, 210 years
before Christ, over the Huns between the Irtish on
the west, and the Amur, which rises in the mountains to the east of lake
Baikal, and flows into the sea opposite Kamtchatka,
pressed the Chinese on his southern confines, which appears to be the earliest
specific action of the Huns upon record. He was killed by his son Meté, who took the title of Tanjoo or Tanju, meaning son of heaven. Whatever be the etymology of
the name Tanju, coming to us through the Chinese
historians, we cannot rely upon it as being a Hunnish title expressed
in the Hunnish language. Some of the names they give of the
ancient Hunnish potentates are so decidedly and radically different
from the names borne by Hunnish princes in Europe, that they must be
looked upon as Chinese or Tartar versions of the names, rather than as the very
appellations by which those persons were distinguished amongst their
countrymen, unless their language underwent a complete change in the course of
a few centuries after this period.
It is certainly possible that
the Huns, if they had originally some affinity to the Tartars, as their
personal appearance seems to indicate, having after centuries of connection
with other Tartar races, been expelled by them from their seats, and having in
their turn subdued their Gothic neighbours, may have gradually renounced
much of the language of their invaders and adopted in great part the speech of
the more humanized people who by conquest had become associated with them. The
abode of the Tanjoos was in the mountains
of Tartary.
On the first moon of the year
the grandees of the empire or principal officers, each of whom commanded ten
thousand men, assembled to hold a general council at the court of the Tanjoo, which ended with a solemn sacrifice.
At the fifth moon they met in
another place, and sacrificed to Heaven, and Earth, and the Manes of their
ancestors. In the autumn they assembled at a third place to number the people
and cattle. The Tanjoo every day proceeded
into the open plain to worship the sun, and every evening in like manner adored
the moon. The title used by the Tanjoo, when he
wrote to the emperor of China, was, the great Tanjoo of
the Huns, engendered by Heaven and Earth, established by the sun and moon. The
tent of the Tanjoo was on the left hand, as
the most honourable place amongst the Huns, and it faced to the west.
We know from Priscus that, when he visited the court of Attila, the seats on
his right hand were considered the most honourable, and those on his left
of secondary consideration; by which it appears that even in their highest
ceremonials the Huns of his time had departed from their ancient custom, and
adopted that which prevailed amongst the Goths. Mete was a successful prince,
and extended the limits of his kingdom.
In the year 162 BC the
Huns vanquished the people called Yue-chi, settled along the Gihon, who were
afterwards called Jeta or Yetan, and were identical with the Getae. These adored
Buddha, and carried the worship of Woden, who is
the same Deity, into Europe; and, being of the Gothic race, they perhaps in
some measure engrafted their habits and language on those of their ferocious
conquerors. The empire of the Tanjoos having
gradually increased, and having been maintained by frequent contests with
various success against the Chinese, began to decline about the time of the
birth of Christ, and in AD 93 it was entirely overthrown,
the Tanjoo being defeated in battle, taken,
and beheaded.
The Sien-pi
Tartars occupied their territory, and many of the Huns mingling with them took
the name of Sien-pi. The rest migrated westward
into the country of the Baschkirs. This empire
of the Huns, who are not mentioned by the Chinese as being a Tartar race, is
said to have subsisted, from 1230 years before, till 93 years after the birth
of our Saviour, but the succession of Tanjoos is
only known since 210 BC.
In 109 the Huns occupied Bucharia, and the country between the Gihon or Oxus, and
the Irtish. In 120 they defeated the Iguri to the south, and killed the Chinese general who
led them. In 134 they were themselves defeated by the Iguri,
and in 151 they were driven further west by the Sien-pis.
In 310 we are told that, Lieou-toung king of the Huns having fallen in love
with the widow of his father, she answered his passion, but was so bitterly
reproached by her own son, that she died of vexation. This circumstance,
transmitted to us amongst the scanty records of Hunnish transactions,
militates directly against the accusation made against them by some modern
writers of utter indifference concerning all incestuous connections.
It seems that the queen,
mother of the heir to the throne, being dead, the king had taken to his throne
another wife who had thereupon the rights of queen, and was not inheritable
like the numerous wives of secondary condition who replenished the harem. Her
submitting to the passion of her stepson was therefore probably regarded not
only as an improper connection, but as a degradation from the rank and station
she occupied as widow of the king. It is not improbable that the first wife
enjoyed the rights of queen, on whose death the lady next espoused might
succeed to her privileges; but we have no certainty that the wife, who was to
have especial rights, and whose issue were to inherit, may not have been
selected by the choice of her husband from the multitude of his wives.
In 316 Lieou-yao king of the Huns took prisoner a general of
the Tsin Tartars, and invited him to a
feast. On receiving the royal invitation, the captive warrior answered that he
was so grieved by the disasters of his country, that he would rather die than
survive them. Thereupon he was immediately accommodated with a sword and
destroyed himself. Having failed in his first gracious intentions towards his
prisoner, the monarch next turned his attention to the widow of the Tartar, who
had also fallen into his hands, and was very beautiful, and he proposed to
marry her: but the lady rejected his kindness with the same Spartan repugnance
as her husband, whom she declared herself unwilling to outlive. The Hunnish monarch
was equally scrupulous of thwarting her inclinations, and he was reduced to the
gratification of burying them both in the most pompous manner.
In 318 the Topa Tartars gained possession of the country east of
the Irtish. At this period the Tanjoo had his principal abode in the land of
the Baschkirs, but his territory extended east
to the Hi, and stretched westward to the Caspian. The Sien-pis confined
them on the east, and the Topas driving
the Sien-pis on the Huns, forced the latter
further westward. On the south and south-west they were stopped by the
Persians. From about the birth of Christ to the time of Valentinian the first (AD 364)
the Alans had inhabited the lands between the Volga and the Tanais.
Ammianus Marcellinus, who died
soon after the Huns entered Europe, states that the Alans occupied in his time
the immeasurable and uncultivated wastes of the Scythians beyond the Tanais, taking their name from that of a mountain.
The Neuri inhabited the midland parts near
some abrupt hills, which were exposed to the north wind and severe frost. Next
to them dwelt, the Budini, and the Geloni, a warlike people who flayed their slain enemies and
made coverings of the human skins for themselves and their horses.
The Agathyrsi bordered
on them, who dyed both their bodies and their hair with blue spots; the lower
classes with few and small marks, the nobles with thicker spots more deeply
stained.
The Melanchaenae and
Anthropophagi were said to wander on the skirts of these nations, devouring
their captives, and a large tract reaching to the northeast towards the
Chinese was understood to be left unoccupied by the withdrawal of various
tribes from the vicinity of those ferocious marauders.
The Alans had spread themselves
very widely towards the east, where they had many populous tribes, who reached
even to the banks of the Ganges. Like the Huns they had neither plough, nor
cottage; they lived on flesh and milk, in wagons with curved coverings of bark.
When they arrived at a grassy district, they arranged their wagons in a circle,
and as soon as the grass was consumed, they shifted their quarters. The plains
which they frequented were very productive of grass, and interspersed with
tracts that bore apples or other fruit, which they consumed when occasion
required. Their tender years were passed in the wagons, but they were early
habituated to ride, and esteemed it disgraceful to walk, and were all by
instruction skilful and expert warriors.
They were universally tall and
well made, with yellowish hair, and remarkable by their eyes, in which ferocity
was tempered with a more pleasing expression; swift in their movements, lightly
armed, and much like the Huns in everything, but more polished in their dress
and mode of living, making inroads both to hunt and plunder, as far as the
Cimmerian Bosporus, and into Armenia and Media. Perils and warfare were their
delight; the slaughter of a man their highest boast; and they reviled with
bitterness those who lived to old age or died by accidents, esteeming it
blessed to fall in battle. They fastened the hairy scalps of their enemies to
their horses for trappings and ornament. They erected no temples, but planted a
naked sword with barbarous rites in the ground and worshipped it as the
protector of the district round which they had arranged their wagons. They had
a singular mode of divining by collecting together a number of straight twigs,
and after a time separating them again with some sort of incantation. Slavery
was unknown amongst them; and the whole nation was considered to be of noble
blood. Their judges were chosen on account of the prowess they had shown in
warfare.
Upon these nations the Huns
were driven by the inroads of the Tartars, who continued to force them towards
the west. In the interval between the years 318 and 374, advancing northward of
the Caspian, they subdued the Alans, associating numbers of them with
themselves, and forcing the rest to take refuge in Europe.
In 374 they crossed the Maeotian swamp, or at least the river Tanais, into Europe. They had long considered the marshes
to be an impenetrable girdle, till one of their nation, named Baudetes, having adventured more than usual in pursuit of a
stag, succeeded in penetrating through them, and on his return communicated the
important intelligence to his countrymen. Bishop Jordanes says that the stag
led on the hunters by occasionally stopping to entice them, till it had
conducted them into European Scythia, which he verily believes the foul spirits
from whom they were descended devised out of enmity to its inhabitants.
The Huns profited immediately
by the discovery of this passage, which opened to them a new world, and,
whether they really crossed the Maeotis stagnant and choked with
reeds or the Tanais higher up, they soon
pushed their victorious arms to the banks of the Danube. They immediately
attacked and reduced the Alipzuri and
several other tribes, not omitting to sacrifice a due proportion of the first
captives they made, according to the Scythian custom, to the Sword-God whom
they worshipped. The hideous appearance of their swarthy and cicatrized faces,
their short, stout, and erect figures, the swiftness of their steeds, and the
skill of their archers, spread dismay on all sides, and they came like a hurricane
upon the several nations who were peaceably depasturing the
European banks of the Tanais.
The Alcidzuri, Itamari, Tuncassi, and Boisci, were subdued on the first inroad; and the following
season was fatal to the liberty of the European Alans, excepting such as
preferred to migrate westward, and seek the protection or extort the toleration
of the Romans. Every conflict was a source of increased power to the Huns, who
compelled the nations they subdued to join with them in further invasions, and
with the sword of the Alans, united to their own, they now attacked the Goths.
Ermanric was at that time
sovereign of the Goths, a man of very advanced years, who was then lingering
under the effects of a wound received from Sarus and Animius,
brothers of Sanielh or Sanilda, whom he had caused to be torn asunder by wild
horses, to avenge himself on her husband, a chieftain of the Roxolani, who had
revolted from him. The conjuncture was favourable to the invaders,
and their king Balamer attacked the broad
and fertile lands of Ermanric, who after vainly
attempting to defend them, put an end to his own life. The Ostrogoths were
subdued, having been previously weakened by the secession of the Visigoths, who
had applied to the Roman emperor Valens to give them a part of Thrace or
Moesia, south of the Danube, preferring a nominal dependance on
the Romans, to the heavier yoke of the Hunnish invaders. The request
was granted, and they were baptized into the creed of Valens, who was an
Arian. Ermanric having perished, the
Ostrogoths remained subject to the Huns, under the administration of Winithar or Withimir of
the family of the Amali, who retained the
insignia of royalty.
The Gepidae were
reduced under subjection to the Huns at the same period, and so rapid was their
progress, that, within two years after crossing the Moeotis,
they wrested the Pannonias from the Romans,
either by force of arms, or by negotiation. In 378 Fritigern, king of
those Goths, who had inundated Thrace, being irritated by Lupicinus and Maximus, and pressed by famine, made war
upon the Romans. He was assisted by the Huns and Alans whom he subsidized, and
many actions took place with various success. Valens, alarmed at their
progress, made a hasty peace with the Persians, and returned suddenly from
Antioch to Constantinople. Gratian advanced with a considerable force to form a
junction with the army of Valens, but the latter, confident of victory, and
fearful of losing, or of sharing with Gratian, the luster of
that success which he anticipated, rashly attacked the Goths and their allies
at the twelfth milestone from Adrianople near Perinthus.
The Armenian cavalry were
routed by the first charge of the Goths, and left the infantry completely
exposed to the enemy. The attack of the horse was supported by a shower of
arrows, in the use of which the Huns were particularly skilful, and the
Roman infantry was completely routed and cut to pieces by the swords and
billhooks of the barbarians.
Valens took refuge in a house,
where he was burnt alive by his pursuers, a practice not uncommon amongst the
Scandinavian nations.
Gratian, receiving
intelligence of this disaster, immediately recalled from Spain Theodosius, who
in the following year repaired the falling fortunes of Rome, and, both by
successful conflicts and by conciliatory offers and presents, put an end to the
war. The pacification was however of short duration, and in 380 Gratian, being
molested by the Huns, obtained the assistance of the Goths whom he took into
his service.
It was probably at this time,
that Balamer king of the Huns violated the
treaties be had made with the Romans, and laid waste many towns and much of
their territory with his armies, stating that his subjects were in want of the
necessaries of life. The Romans sent an embassy to him, and promised to pay him
nineteen pounds weight of gold annually, on condition of his abstaining from a
renewal of such incursions. Whether the Ostrogoths had taken part with the
Romans or not in 380, Winithar soon after
attempted to throw off the Hunnish yoke, and his efforts were
eminently successful. In the first encounter he captured a Hunnish king
called Box, together with his sons, and seventy men of distinction, all of whom
he crucified, to terrify the rest of their countrymen. Nothing else is known
concerning this Hunnish prince, but it seems that from the time of
the invasion of Europe in 374 till the murder of Bleda by his brother Attila,
the Huns were never governed by a sole king.
For a short time Winithar the Goth reigned independent; Balamer, with the assistance of Sigismund the son of Hunnimund the Ostrogoth, who continued faithful to the
Huns, attacked him, but was discomfited in two successive engagements. In the
third battle on the banks of the river Erac, Balamer killed him, having wounded him surreptitiously
in the head with an arrow, as they were approaching to each other. The defeat
of his partisans was complete. Balamer married
his granddaughter Waladamarea, and possessed
the whole empire, a Gothic prince however ruling over the Ostrogoths under the
authority of the Huns.
Hunnimund the son of Ermanric succeeded to Winithar,
and fought successfully against the Suevi. His son Thorismond reigned
after him, and in the second year after his accession gained a great victory
over the Gepidae, but was killed by the fall of his horse. The Goths
greatly lamented him, and remained forty years after his death without a
king, Berismund his son having followed the
Visigoths into the west to avoid the Hunnish ascendancy. Balamer died in 386, soon after his marriage, probably
leaving no children, and it is not known who immediately succeeded him.
The first king mentioned by
the Roman writers after this period is Huldin,
but nothing is detailed concerning him before the year 400.
It seems probable that the
three kings Bela, Cheve, and Cadica, named by the Hungarians as having reigned
simultaneously, belong to the reign of Balamer,
and perhaps Bela was the real name of the king who was styled by the
Romans Balamerus. Under them was said to have
been fought a great battle at a place called Potentiana,
which from its circumstances seems referable to the period when the Huns first
occupied Pannonia, seven or eight years before the death of Balamer.
Bela, Cheve,
and Cadica, pitched their camp upon the Teiss. Maternus, being at
that time praefect of Pannonia, administered the affairs of Dalmatia, Mysia,
Achaea, Thrace, and Macedonia. He solicited the aid of Detricus (Dietric or Theodoric), who then ruled over a part of
Germany, and having collected a great miscellaneous force to resist the common
enemy, they encamped at Zaazhalon in
Pannonia, not far from the southern bank of the Danube, and remained posted
near Potentiana and Thethis.
The Huns crossed the Danube
below the site of Buda, surprised the allied army in the night, and routed them
with great slaughter, and encamped in the vale of Tharnok. There the Huns were attacked in their turn, when
the allies had rallied their scattered forces, and after a severe contest the
Huns were compelled in the evening to recross the Danube and return to their
former position, but the victorious army was too much weakened to pursue them,
and, fearful of a fresh attack, retired to Tulna,
a town of Austria in the neighborhood of
Vienna.
It seems extremely improbable
that a narrative so circumstantial and apparently impartial, though discredited
by some modern writers, should be entirely fabulous, and the persons mentioned
in it fictitious. It is evident, that it must be referred to the period when
the Goths and Romans were acting together, that is the year 380, when,
according to the Latin writers, the Goths asked the assistance of Gratian
against the Huns, and when, according to Priscus, Balamer violated
the treaties and laid waste much of the Roman territory; Balamer (perhaps identical with Bela) being the chief
sovereign, Box, Cheve, and Cadica, inferior kings over portions of the Huns.
To Balamer probably
succeeded immediately Mundiuc, the father of
Attila, but nothing is known of the particular actions of his life, and he is
never named as concerned either with or against the Romans, in any military
operations. In 388 the Huns were employed by Gratian against the Juthungi in
Bavaria, and destined to act against Maximus in Gaul. In 394 they sent
auxiliaries to Theodosius mixed with Alans and Goths under Gaines, Sanies,
and Bacurius. In 397 it seems that Theotimus, bishop of Tomi or Tomiswar in
Bulgaria, converted some Huns to Christianity, and it is not improbable that
these converts were the persons whom Rhuas and Attila demanded and crucified.
From about the year 400 till 411 Huldin commanded
the Huns in immediate contact with the empire, but we have no reason for
supposing him to have been sole monarch of the Hunnish nation.
In 400 he killed Gaines, and
sent his head to Arcadius. In conjunction with Sarus who was king over a
portion of the Goths, Huldin and his Huns
afforded assistance to Rome in 406, when Radagais had
invaded Italy. Radagais is said to have
been the most savage of all the barbarian monarchs. So strangely were the
various nations blended, who were set in motion by the irruption of the Huns,
and the pressure of the Asiatic Alans and other tribes upon the pastoral
nations of Europe, that it is not known of what people this mighty commander
was originally the ruler. Probably he was king of the Obotritae,
or some other nation in the neighbourhood of Mecklenberg,
where he was worshipped as a God after his death.
He has been styled by most
writers king of the Goths, because a great part of his force was Gothic, but
there is no reason to suppose he was a Visigoth, and he certainly was not an
Ostrogoth. Orosius calls him a pagan and Scythian, which conveys no
distinct information, and it is even not unlikely that he may have been a
Slavonian. Whatever was his own nation, he had been a most successful
adventurer, swelling his army with the fighting men of the tribes which he
successively overthrew, and drawing others to his camp by the renown of his
name, till he had collected an immense confederated army of Vandals, Sueves,
Burgundians, Alans, and Goths. With this force he entered Italy, and laying waste
the whole country north of the Po, he prepared to besiege Florence at the head
of 200,000 soldiers; threatening that he would raze the fortifications of Rome,
and burn her palaces; that he would sacrifice the most distinguished patricians
to his Gods, and compel the rest to adopt the mastruca,
or garment of skin dressed with the hair on, that was worn by some of the
barbarous nations.
The approach of this
formidable enemy filled the Roman capital with dismay: the pagans thought that
under the protection and with the assistance of the Gods, whom he was said to
conciliate by daily immolations of human victims, it was impossible for him to
be overcome, because the Romans neither offered to the Gods any such
sacrifices, nor permitted them to be offered by any one. There was a
concourse of heathens in the town, all believing that they were visited with
this scourge, because the sacred rites of the great Gods had been neglected.
Loud complaints were made, and it was proposed to resume immediately the
celebration of the ancient worship, and throughout the whole city the name of
Christ was loaded with blasphemies; but the degenerate Romans were more
disposed to curse and offer up sacrifice, than to fight in defence of the
empire. A very small force was collected under Stilicho, and the defence of
Italy was entrusted to Huldin with a Hunnish,
Sarus with a Gothic, and Goar with an Alan,
force of hired auxiliaries.
The prudent measures of
Stilicho ensured their success. The invading army was camped on the arid ridge above Faesulae, ill furnished with water and provisions. Stilicho
conducted his approaches with such skill, that he blocked up all the avenues,
and rendered it impossible for the enemy to draw out his army in line against
him. Without the uncertainty of a hazardous conflict, without any loss to
be compensated by victory, the army defending Rome ate, drank, and were merry,
while the invaders hungered, and thirsted, and pined away without hope of
extricating themselves from their calamitous situation. Radagais despairing abandoned his army, fled, and was
intercepted.
The conqueror has been accused
of sullying the glory of this achievement, by the deliberate murder or
execution of his prisoner. A third part of the army surrendered, and the
captives were so numerous, that herds of them were sold for single pieces of
gold, and such was their misery, that the greater part of them perished after
having been purchased. The entire credit of the discomfiture of the invaders,
is given by the writers of that age to the troops of Huldin and
Sarus, and the Roman forces are not mentioned.
There were twelve thousand
noble Goths whom the Latins called optimati in
the army of Radagais, and with these, after the
disaster of their leader, Stilicho entered into confederacy. It appears by the
chronicle of Prosper, that the army of Radagais was
separated in three divisions under distinct chiefs; one division only perished
at Faesulae; the other two were untouched, and
his remaining Goths were afterwards diverted by Stilicho into Gaul. It seems
that there must have been treachery in the invading army, which was not
unlikely to occur, seeing that it consisted principally of Goths, and that he
was besieged by Goths under Sarus.
Supposing the two other
divisions of the army of Radagais to have
been faithful to him, it could scarcely be doubted that, when he quitted the
troops who were surrounded at Faesulae, he
was attempting to rejoin them, for the
purpose of leading them on to raise the blockade, and was intercepted in that
undertaking: but a due consideration of the subject will lead us to suspect
that the account given by Aventinus is correct, that Huldin and Sarus had entered Italy in concert
with Radagais, but were seduced from his
authority by Stilicho. Their force must have been part of the two divisions
which remained uncaptured, and the Goths of Sarus a portion of the very troops
which Stilicho afterwards persuaded to remove their quarters into Gaul; for it
is impossible otherwise to explain how a sufficient power of Huns and Goths
could be at hand to oppose an army of 200,000 men, which had already overrun
and laid waste all the north of Italy, and had placed itself between Stilicho
and the dominions of the Huns. The probability is therefore strong, that
Stilicho discomfited Radagais by means of
his own auxiliaries, having by negotiation drawn off from him two-thirds of his
army, and surrounded the remainder, which might have consisted of sixty or
seventy thousand men nominally, but probably was already reduced by the rude
invasion of a hostile country.
From this period during some
years the Huns do not appear to have manifested any decided hostility to the
Romans. In 409 a small force of Hunnish auxiliaries assisted them to
defeat Ataulfus, and in 410 Honorius appears to
have hired a body of Huns to oppose the progress of Alaric, which is not
surprising, as the Huns were certainly not united under any sole monarch, and
both they and the Goths seem at that time to have been ready to assist the
highest bidder. The peaceable demeanour of the Huns towards the
empire is probably the reason that so little has reached us concerning their
kings at this period.
No mention of Huldin occurs after the campaign against Radagais, and, although we are told that the Hunnish satellites
or auxiliaries of Stilicho were destroyed when he himself was killed, we hear
of no Hunnish king, till the brief mention which is made by Photius, in detailing the contents of the work of Olympiodorus,
of Charato, chief of the Hunnish petty
kings. The circumstances mentioned by him are certainly referable to the period
between the usurpation of Jovinus in 411 and his death in 413.
Olympiodorus was sent on
an embassy from Constantinople to Donatus and the Hunnish princes,
whose marvellous skill in archery struck him with astonishment. Who Donatus was
is not known, but he must have been either a Hunnish king, or a
chieftain of some nation closely connected with them. Donatus was ensnared by
an oath, probably of safe conduct, and unlawfully and treacherously put to
death by the Romans. Charato the chief of
the Hunnish kings was greatly exasperated, but the Romans contrived
to appease his resentment by presents. Nothing further is known of Charato; he may have been the chief ruler of the Huns, or
which is more probable, only the first of the petty kings under Mundiuc.
From the year 413 no true
historical competitor appears to contest the occupation of the Hunnish throne
with Mundiuc, though a false king has been
conjured up by Pray in his Hungarian annals, in the person of Rugas or Rhoilus. At
this period the celebrated Roman Aetius was a hostage in the Hunnish court,
having been previously three years a hostage to Alaric the Goth. It is most
probable that he was given as surety to the Huns for the safe return of the
auxiliary force which they sent in 410 against Alaric. He was the son of Gaudentius, by birth a Scythian or Goth, who had risen from
the condition of a menial to the highest rank in the cavalry.
His mother was a noble and
wealthy Italian, and at the time of his birth his father was a man of
praetorian dignity. Aetius, having passed his youth as a hostage at the courts
of Alaric and the Hunnish king, married the daughter of Carpileo, was made a count, and had the superintendence of
the domestics and palace of Joannes. He was a man of middle size, of manly
habits, well made, neither slight nor heavy, active in mind and limbs, a good
horseman, a good archer and poleman, of consummate military skill, and equally
adroit in the conduct of civil affairs; neither avaricious, nor covetous,
endowed with great mental accomplishments, and never swerving from his purpose
at the instigation of bad advisers; very patient of injuries, desirous at all
times of laborious occupation, regardless of danger, bearing without
inconvenience hunger, thirst, and watchfulness; to whom it is known to have
been foretold in his early youth that he was destined to rise to great
authority.
Such is the character given of
him by a contemporary writer; to all which might have been added, that he was a
consummate villain, a treacherous subject, a fake Christian, and a double
dealer in every action of his life. In 423 his patron Joannes, known by
the name of John the tyrant, (which title only implies that he possessed
himself of unlawful authority) seized the opportunity of the death of Honorius
to assume the sovereign power, and sent ambassadors to Theodosius, who threw
them into prison. In order to strengthen himself against the attack which he
had reason to expect, he dispatched Aetius, who was then superintendent of
his palace, with a great weight of gold to the Huns, with many of whom he had
become united by close ties of personal friendship, while he was a hostage at
their court.
In 425 the Huns entered Italy
under the guidance of Aetius. Their number has been estimated at 60,000. It is
not known by whom they were commanded, though it has been asserted that Attila
was then twenty-five years old and headed the expedition. At this critical
moment Joannes was killed, and the subtle Aetius immediately made his
peace with Valentinian, who was glad to receive the traitor into favor, on condition of his removing the formidable army of
invaders from Italy. Having advanced in compliance with the request of Aetius,
and already received the gold of Joannes, they were easily prevailed upon
to withdraw by him who had conducted them, and they appear to have returned
home without committing any outrages, which marks the great influence that
Aetius had acquired over their leaders.
It seems however most probable
that they were commanded by Rhuas, who in the succeeding year threatened that
he would destroy Constantinople, and probably made an incursion into the
territory of the Eastern emperor, though the marvellous account which
is given of the expedition by contemporary writers is a gross and palpable
falsehood, which must be detailed only to be confuted.
Theodoret, who lived at the time when
this event is said to have taken place, after speaking of the destruction of
pagan temples and the general superintendence of Providence, says, “for indeed
when Rhoilus the leader of
the Nomad Scythians both crossed the Danube with an army of the
greatest magnitude, and laid waste and plundered Thrace, and threatened that he
would besiege the imperial city, and take it by main force, and utterly destroy
it, God having struck him with lightning and bolts of fire from
above, both destroyed him by fire, and extinguished the whole of
his army”.
Socrates, also cotemporaneous,
writes to the following effect: “After the slaughter of John the tyrant,
the barbarians, whom he had called to his assistance against the Romans, were
prepared to overrun the Roman possessions. The emperor Theodosius, having
heard this, according to his custom, left the care of these things to the Almighty;
and, applying himself to prayer, not long after obtained the things which he
desired; for what straightway befell the barbarians, it is good to hear. Their
leader, whose name was Rugas, dies, having been
struck by lightning, and a pestilence supervening consumed the greater part of
the men who were with him; and this struck the barbarians with the greatest
terror, not so much because they had dared to take up arms against the noble
nation of the Romans, as because they found it assisted by the power of God”.
Well indeed might the Huns
have trembled, and all Europe have quaked even to the present day at the
recollection of such a manifest and terrible interposition of the Almighty, if
the Hunnish king with an immense army had been so annihilated, and,
as Socrates proceeds to say, in pursuance of an express prophecy: but it is
easy to demonstrate the falsehood of the narrative.
Theodoret immediately subjoins to
the passage cited from him, that the Lord did something of the same kind in the
Persian war, when the Persians, having broken the existing treaty and attacked
the Roman provinces, were overpowered by rain and hail; that in a former war, Gororanus having attacked a certain town, the
archbishop alone broke his lofty towers and engines to pieces and saved the
city; that on another occasion a city being beleaguered by a barbarian force,
the bishop of the place put with his own hands an enormous stone on a balista or engine called the apostle Thomas,
and firing it off in the name of the Lord knocked off the head of the king of
the barbarians, and thereby raised the siege. The fellowship of such tales
takes away all faith from that which concerns the Huns. But according to
Socrates, the event was prophesied by Ezekiel, and the prophecy applied
previously by the bishop of Constantinople; and here we arrive at the clue to
explain how such a marvellous relation came to be credited.
“Archbishop Proclus (continues
Socrates) preached on the prophecy of Ezekiel, and the prophecy was in these
words—And thou, son of man, prophesy against Gog the ruler, Rosh Misoch, and Thobel; for I
will judge him with death and blood, and overflowing rain and hailstones; for I
will rain fire and brimstone upon him and all those with him, and on the many
nations with him; and I will be magnified and glorified, and I will be known in
the presence of many nations and they shall know that I am the Lord”. This
prophecy is put together from the second verse of the 38th ch. of Ezekiel. “Son of man, set thy face against
Gog, the land of Magog, the chief prince of Meshech and
Tubal, and prophesy against him”, and the 22d and 23d verses, “I will plead
against him…” The word Rhos upon
which the application of this prophecy to the Hunnish Rhuas rested,
occurs in the Septuagint, though it is not in the Vulgate, the word having been
rendered by St. Jerome head, and applied to the following word,
signifying the head or chief prince of Meshech.
The archbishop was wonderfully praised for this adaptation of the prophecy,
and, according to Socrates, it was the universal topic of conversation in
Constantinople; and doubtless this adaptation gave birth to the marvellous history.
Rhuas had threatened to
destroy Constantinople; while the people were expecting his attack, the
archbishop assures them that God had expressly denounced by his prophet that he
would destroy Rhuas and his people with fire and brimstone from heaven. Rhuas
never came near Constantinople; the archbishop’s prediction was confirmed in
the important part that concerned the safety of its inhabitants, and the story
became current that it had been entirely fulfilled, and that Rhuas and his army
had perished accordingly. The story is confined to the Greek divines; not one
of the Latin chronicles of that age mentions any expedition of the Huns under
Rhuas against the Eastern empire. Bishops Idatius,
Prosper, and Jordanes are silent; Cassiodorus and Marcellinus are silent; but
if such a manifestation of the Almighty had occurred, or anything that could
give colour to such a belief had really taken place, Europe would
have rung with the rumour of it to its very furthest extremities.
Procopius relates the
death of John the tyrant, but nothing concerning Rhuas. To complete the
refutation of the tale we learn from Priscus, who was sent on an embassy to the
Huns from Constantinople, only twenty-two years after the date of the supposed
catastrophe, that Rhuas was alive after the consulship of Dionysius which took
place in 429, that is three years after the time when the divine vengeance is
said to have overtaken him; and the chronicle of Prosper Tyro says that Rhuas
died in 434. The Hungarian annalist, Pray, carrying absurdity to the highest pitch,
and aware that Rhuas was alive in 429, asserts that there must have been two
kings, one Rugas killed by fire from
heaven, and another by name Rhuas his successor; and he accuses all foregoing
writers of having confounded them, though there is not the slightest reason for
imagining that there were two such kings, except the inconvenient circumstance
of his being found alive long after the time when he should have been
exterminated, to fulfil the prediction of the Byzantine prelate.
It is known from Jornandes (Jordanes) that Rhuas and Octar were brothers of Mundiuc and
kings of the Huns before the reign of Attila, but that they had not the
sovereign authority over all the Huns. The date of their accession is no more
known than that of Mundiuc.
Pray, who is always expert in
distorting the truth to support his own theory, assumes inaccurately from Jornandes that, on the death of Mundiuc, Attila his son was a minor, and that Octar and Rhuas his uncles had been appointed by his
father to be his guardians. There is no authority for the supposition,
excepting that Calanus says Mundiuc commended
his sons with their portion of the kingdom to his brother Subthar.
Octar, otherwise called Subthar, and Rhuas were probably kings in conjunction with
their brother. We do not know that Attila was not also a king during their
life-time, which the expression of Calanus seems to imply, and even during his
father’s reign, for his own son had regal authority during his life-time. Octar and Rhuas did not reign over all the Huns, yet
after their death and the murder of his brother Bleda, Attila was sole monarch,
which seems to imply that Attila and Bleda were the kings who had reigned over
those not subject to their uncles. The very circumstance of the joint reign of
Attila and Bleda, till the latter was removed by murder, shows that brothers
had a concurrent right of sovereignty amongst the Huns, and would lead us to
conclude that Octar and Rhuas were associated
with Mundiuc, and Calanus expressly says
that Subthar (otherwise called Octar) did reign in conjunction with Mundiuc. Pray argues that if they held the throne in their
own right, and not as guardians, Obarses, who is
mentioned by Priscus as another son of Mundiuc,
should have been a king also, which he does not appear to have been; but this
is quite erroneous, for Obarses is not said
to have been by the same mother; and it is clear, that although the Hunnish kings
were allowed to indulge in polygamy, there was one queen with superior rights,
whose children alone were entitled to succeed. Attila had a legion of wives and
a host of children, but Priscus only mentions by name three sons, who were
children of Creca whom he calls especially
his wife and not one of his wives, and they alone succeeded to his dignities,
though the other sons wished the kingdom to foe equally divided amongst them.
In the obscure period of Mundiuc’s reign, the first collision of the Huns with
the Burgundians must have taken place, which led to events celebrated in the
romantic legends of almost the whole of Europe north of the Danube, of which it
is however very difficult to unravel the real history. The Burgundiones (supposed to be the Frugundiones of Ptolemy) had their earliest recorded
kingdom near the Vistula, on the borders of Germany and Sarmatia. At that
time Born-holm or Burgundar-holm in
the Baltic seems to have been their sacred place of deposit for the dead, an
island perhaps consecrated like Mona or Iona.
From the Vistula they appear
to have advanced to the Oder, and having approached the Rhine in 359, as early
as 413 they established themselves, 80,000 in number, on the Gallic side of
that river. Athanaric is the earliest of
their chiefs who is recorded to have reigned near the Rhine, marrying Blysinda daughter of Marcomir,
who was the sire of Pharamond. His eldest
son Gondegesil succeeded him, and dying,
left the crown to his brother Gundioc or Gondaker, who had three sons, Gondegesil, Gondemar, otherwise called Gunnar or Gunther, and Gondebod.
The royal family of the
Burgundians were called Nibelungian or Nifflungian, and were supposed to have brought with them a
great treasure of gold which was probably removed from Born-holm. During the
reign of Mundiuc the Huns made successful
incursions into the territory of the Burgundians, plundered their towns, and
reduced them to a state of dependence: The Arian priests took advantage of
their miserable and depressed state to inculcate their doctrines amongst them,
representing idolatry to be the cause of their reverses; whereupon the
Burgundians embraced a qualified sort of Christianity, and were baptized into
the Arian faith. Octar, after the death of his
brother, proceeded in the year 430 with a large army of Huns into Burgundy to
chastise their apostate and rebellious vassals; but he was defeated with great
slaughter, and perished in the expedition, though probably not in battle.
Elated by this success, the Burgundian king seems to have thought himself
strong enough to fight single-handed against all opponents, and, instead of
courting the alliance of any one of the great powers, disposed himself to make
head against them all.
When the unexpected death of
John the tyrant had rendered abortive the invasion of Italy by the Huns under
the guidance of Aetius, that skilful negotiator made his terms with
Valentinian and Placidia, and the chief command of the army in Gaul was
the reward which he immediately received for the dismissal of the Huns. In the
very next year he delivered Arles from the Visigoths, and in 428 he recovered
from Clodion, king of the Francs, the parts of Gaul near the Rhine which had
been occupied by him, and in the following year he overpowered the Juthungi in
Bavaria.
Having brought to an end
the Vindelician or Bavarian war, in the
autumn or the following spring he defeated the Burgundians who were pressing
sorely on the Belgians, and on that occasion the Huns, Herulians,
Francs, Sauromatians, Salians, and Gelons fought against him. This conflict must have
taken place immediately before the disaster of Octar’s army,
when the Huns and their auxiliaries were probably invading some part of the
Belgic territory, and the check they received on that occasion may have
encouraged the Burgundians to revolt and overpower them.
In the year 432 Bonifacius his
rival, who had been urged to acts of treason, and betrayed by the perfidy of
Aetius, returned from Africa to Rome, and obtained the dignity of Master of the
forces. A personal conflict took place between them, in which Aetius was
worsted, but his antagonist died a few days after from the effects of a wound
which he had then received. Aetius retired to his villa, but an attempt having
been there made upon his life by the partisans of Bonifacius, he fled into
Dalmatia, and from thence he proceeded to the court of Rhuas king of the Huns
in Pannonia. The great influence, which he had obtained amongst them, had
suffered no diminution, and at the head of a Hunnish army he once
more threatened the throne of Valentinian. The Romans called the Visigoths to
their assistance, but no engagement took place on this occasion; Placidia and
her son submitted to the demands of Aetius, and he returned again with
accumulated honours to command the army in Gaul. His antagonists were
now the Burgundians, who must have provoked the Romans by making inroads or
attempting to establish themselves on the territory of the empire; and in 435
he completely routed them with exceeding great slaughter, and forced their king
to throw himself upon his mercy.
In the meantime immediately
after the restoration of Aetius to favour, his protector Rhuas had died,
and Attila had succeeded to the throne in Pannonia. His brother Bleda reigned
over a portion of the Huns, apparently nearer to the confines of Asia. It is
not known with certainty which was the eldest, the fact not being stated by any
author of decisive authority; but as Priscus, whenever he mentions them in
conjunction, places the name of Attila first, and Jordanes states that he
succeeded to the throne with his brother Bleda, the presumption is very strong
that Attila was the eldest.
The Hungarian writers who have
attributed to Attila the extraordinary age of 124, state also that he was born
and died on the same days of the year as Julius Caesar, and that he was
seventy-two years old when he was made king, considering that he acceded to the
throne in 402, and that he was an efficient commander of the troops, when the
Huns entered Europe in 374. This monstrous absurdity is only surpassed by
the assertion, that, after his death, a son, said to have been borne to him by
the Roman princess Honoria, fled to the father of Attila, who was still living
in extreme old age and debility.
The words of Priscus, who was
personally acquainted with Attila, afford a decisive refutation to those who
attribute to him extraordinary longevity and a protracted reign. He states on the
authority of Romulus the father-in-law of Orestes, the favourite of
Attila, with whom he conversed in the presence of Constantius who had been
secretary to Attila, and of Constantiolus a
native of Paeonia which was subject to him, that no king, either of the
Scythians or of any other country, had done such great things in so short a
time. The date of Attila’s accession to the supreme power, at least over
that portion of the Huns, which was in contact with the Romans, is fixed with
great precision by comparing the words of two contemporary writers.
Priscus says that Rhuas, being
king over the Huns, had determined to wage war against the Amilsuri, Itamari, Tonosures, Boisci, and other
nations bordering on the Danube, who had entered into confederation with the
Romans. Thereupon he sent Eslas, who had been accustomed to negotiate
between him and the Romans, to threaten that he would put an end to the
subsisting peace, unless the Roman would deliver up to him all those who had
fled from the Huns to their, protection. The Romans, desirous of sending an
embassy to Rhuas, fixed upon Plinthas of Scythian, and Dionysius of
Thracian, extraction, both generals and men of consular dignity. It was however
not thought expedient to dispatch the ambassadors before the return of Eslas to
the court of his sovereign, and Plinthas sent with him Sengilachus, one of his dependants to persuade Rhuas to
treat with no other Roman than himself. “But (continues Priscus) Rhuas having
come to his end, and the kingdom of the Huns passed unto Attila, it seemed
fitting to the Roman Senate, that Plinthas should proceed upon the
embassy to them”. Dionysius was not consul till 429, and the chronicle of
Prosper Tyro fixes the death of Rhuas in 434. In that year therefore it appears
that Attila succeeded to the throne of his uncle in conjunction with his
brother Bleda, who ruled over a considerable distinct force of Huns, but may
perhaps have resided near Attila in Pannonia.
The manner of the death of
Rhuas is not recorded, the relation of his destruction by fire from heaven
before Constantinople being disproved; but the language of Jordanes throws a
strong suspicion upon Attila of having removed him by murder, for after
mentioning his succession to his uncles, and relating that he slew his brother,
to obtain an augmentation of power, he adds that he had proceeded by the
slaughter of all his relatives. We have no reason to believe that any other
relative stood between him and the supreme authority, and it is not credible
that Jordanes should represent a single act of fratricide as the murder of all
his family. It is barely possible, that, although Rhuas did not die by
lightning before Constantinople, as alleged by the Greek ecclesiastics, it may
have been given out by his murderers in 434, that he was struck by lightning,
and that he may even have been destroyed by some explosion of chemical fire, as
was probably the case with the emperor Carus,
who is universally said by old historical writers to have been struck by
lightning while lying sick in his tent; though it cannot be reasonably doubted,
on reading the letter of his secretary, that he was murdered by his
chamberlains.
The age of Attila at the time
of his accession cannot be ascertained. Rejecting as absurd the accounts of his
great age, we cannot assent to such an abridgement of his life as Pray has
made, in order to accommodate his notion of an undivided and hereditary
monarchy. Assuming that he must have been a minor when his father died, and
forgetting that, if his uncles had occupied the sovereign authority merely as
guardians, they would have been bound to resign it when Attila arrived at
manhood, and that he was not of a character to live until twenty-six years of
age, if unjustly excluded, without making any attempt to possess himself of his
hereditary rights, he assigns twenty years to him, as the maximum of his age in
428, when his father died, and twenty-six when he succeeded Rhuas in 434. But
he has entirely overlooked a circumstance which shows the inconsistency of this
calculation; which is, that, if Attila by the Hunnish laws could not
have reigned under the age of twenty-one, his son could not have done so; yet
in 448 Priscus, having been at the court of Attila, relates the elevation of
the eldest son of Attila and Creca by his
father’s directions to the throne of the Acatzires and
other nations near the Euxine. If barely twenty-one in 448 he must have been
born in 427, and Attila must have been married to Creca at
least as early as 426, two years before the death of Mundiuc,
at which period according to Pray’s calculation
he could have been but eighteen years old; and it would not be easy to show
that the Hunnish monarch was likely to establish his son by marriage
to that woman who amongst his numerous wives was to give heirs to the throne,
while it was still deemed necessary to hold him in tutelage.
That Attila must have been
married to Creca before the year 427 is all
that we can ascertain; if barely twenty-one at that time, he must have been
born as early as 406, and would have been twenty-eight when he succeeded Rhuas,
but it is most likely that he was older. Creca was
perhaps his first wife, and her children on that account heirs to the throne,
and it is most likely that he was raised to the rank of a petty king during the
life of his father. The old Scandinavian legends, concerning which more will be
said hereafter, speak much of his residence at the court of Gundioc or Giuka king
of Burgundy, (calling Attila by the name of Sigurd) and of his intimacy
with Gundaker or Gunnar the Burgundian
prince. In all these accounts he is described as the greatest warrior of his
age. It is very probable that Attila was employed in the first subjugation of
the Burgundians, and, while they remained in vassalage under the Huns, the
young prince of Burgundy must, in the natural course of things, have served
under Attila in his campaigns against the petty chieftains of the neighbouring
countries.
In consequence of the death of
Rhuas, by a decree of the senate which was approved by the emperor
Theodosius, Plinthas was dispatched to the court of Attila without
Dionysius, and at his special request it was decreed, that Epigenes, who had served the office of quaestor, a man much
considered on account of his learning, should accompany him. They proceeded
to Margus a town of Moesian Illyria
near the Danube, opposite the fortress Constantia which was on the northern
bank, whither the two Hunnish kings had resorted. Attila and Bleda
advanced without the walls on horseback, not choosing to receive the Roman
embassy on foot.
The Roman ambassadors,
consulting their dignity, mounted their horses also, that they might be on
equal terms with the Huns; but, notwithstanding their momentary exaltation,
they proceeded immediately to sign a most disgraceful treaty, which was
ratified by the oaths of either party, according to the customary ceremonials
of their respective countries.
The Romans bound themselves to
send back to the Huns all those who, at however distant a period, had fled from
their dominion and taken refuge under Roman protection, and also all Roman
prisoners who had escaped from captivity without paying ransom, and in default
of the restoration of any such prisoner, eight pieces of gold were to be given
for each head to their former captors. They further promised to give no
assistance to any barbarian nation, that should wage war against the Huns. It
was agreed that trade should be carried on between the two powers on equal
terms, and that peace should continue between them so long as the Romans failed
not to pay seven hundred pounds weight of gold annually to the Huns, the
tribute exacted until that time having been no more than three hundred and
fifty pounds. Thereupon the fugitives were actually given up, amongst whom were
two youths of the blood royal, Mama and Atakam,
who were immediately crucified in Carsus a
fortress of Thrace, as a punishment for their flight.
In this year the Roman
princess Honoria, having disgraced herself by an illicit connection with her
chamberlain Eugenius, and her pregnancy having been detected, was expelled from
the palace at Ravenna, and sent by her mother Placidia to Theodosius
at Constantinople, where she was placed under the superintendence of his
sister Pulcheria, who lived under a religious vow of celibacy, to which
she adhered even when, after the death of her brother, she espoused Marcian as
a support to the throne, but excluded him from conjugal rights. The princess,
not less ambitious than devoted to pleasure, secretly excited Attila against
the Western empire by the tender of her hand. He does not appear to have accepted
the proposal at the time, and the offer was perhaps repeated at a later period,
when it suited his plans to demand her in marriage. Having concluded peace on
such advantageous terms with the Romans, Attila with his brother Bleda marched
against some tribes of Scythians, who had either not yet submitted to the
authority or had presumed to shake off the yoke of the Huns, and they
immediately attacked the Sorosgi in the
east of Europe. This expedition was undoubtedly attended with the success that
usually crowned the arms of Attila, but the particulars of it have perished
with the lost work of Priscus. Having reduced his Scythian adversaries, he
turned his thoughts to avenge the overthrow of his uncle by the Burgundians,
and in 436 he vanquished them with great slaughter and the loss of their
sovereign.
In the year 437 the Romans,
undoubtedly through the influence of Aetius, obtained the assistance of a body
of Hunnish auxiliaries, who were conducted by the Roman general Litorius against the Visigoths then laying siege to
Narbonne. The two armies were drawn up in line against each other, and showed
the most determined countenance, and it seemed as if the fortunes of Theodoric
must depend upon the issue of that day, but the collision of these formidable
armies was suspended by negotiation, the Goths and the Huns shook hands upon
the field of battle, and Attila was appeased by the concessions of the
Visigoths. What advantages he obtained by this bloodless victory and the
dereliction of the Roman interests, we are not informed by Jornandes who relates the circumstance, but he styles
Attila at this period the sole ruler of almost the whole Scythian nation
throughout the world, and of marvellous celebrity amongst all nations, a
statement which very ill accords with the suggestions of Pray, who makes him a
novice just emerged from the tutelage of his uncles.
Two years after however Litorius appeared again in the field against Theodoric
at the head of an army of Huns, who seem to have been subsidized by the Romans.
The Huns fought with their usual valour, and the victory was for a while
doubtful, but the unparalleled rashness and imprudence of Litorius rendered the exertions of his troops
unavailing. He was taken by the Goths, and led ignominiously through the
streets of Narbonne; the Hunnish auxiliaries were completely routed,
and we do not hear of their ever again having acted in concert with the Romans.
From this time we have no account of any proceedings of the Huns in Gaul, till
the year of the great battle of Châlons, and the attention of Attila appears to
have been principally directed against the Eastern empire.
It is exceedingly difficult to
adjust the dates and particulars of the several events that are mentioned by
different writers. The capture of Margus and Viminacium, which
seems to have been the first act of hostility against Theodosius, has been
referred by Belius to the year 434,
immediately after the reduction of the Sorosgi,
but it is not credible that Margus should have been captured by the
Huns, immediately after the peace concluded there. On the contrary, the account
of Priscus makes it evident that those events directly preceded a more
important attack on the dominions of Theodosius, and they are clearly referable
to the year 439, following immediately the disaster of Litorius in
Gaul. During the security of a great annual fair in the neighbourhood of the
Danube, the Hunnish army fell unexpectedly on the Roman, seized on
the fortress which protected them, and slew a great number of their people.
Remonstrances were made concerning this flagrant breach of faith, but the Huns
replied, that they were by no means the aggressors, because the bishop of Margus had
entered their territory, and pillaged the royal domain; and that, unless he was
immediately delivered into their hands, together with all the fugitives whom
the Romans were bound by treaty to give up, they would prosecute the war with
greater severity. The Romans denied the truth of their complaint, but the Huns,
confident in their assertion, declined entering into proofs of their
accusation, and, having crossed the Danube, carried war and devastation into
the forts and cities of their enemies, and, amongst others of less importance,
they captured Viminacium, a Mysian city
in Illyria. So fallen was the spirit and vigour of the Roman empire, that,
notwithstanding the alleged innocence of the bishop of Margus, it began to
be pretty loudly suggested that he ought rather to be delivered up to the
vengeance of the barbarians, than the whole territory of the empire exposed to
their atrocities. The bishop, aware of his perilous situation, secretly passed
over to the enemy, and offered to deliver up the town, if the Scythian princes
would enter into terms with him. They promised him every possible advantage, if
he would make good his proposal, pledging their hands and confirming the
agreement by oaths; whereupon the bishop returned into the Roman territory with
a great force of Huns, and having placed them opposite the bank of the river in
ambush, in the night time he arose at the appointed signal, and delivered up
the town to its enemies. Margus having been thus taken and sacked by
the Huns, they became daily more formidable, and waxed in strength and
insolence.
In the following year (441)
Attila collected an army consisting specially of his own Huns, and wrote to the
emperor Theodosius concerning the fugitives in the Roman territory and the
tribute which had been withheld from him on occasion of the war, demanding that
they should be instantly delivered up, and ambassadors sent to arrange with him
concerning the payments to be made in future; and he added that if they made
any delay or warlike preparations, he should not be able to restrain the
impetuosity of his people. Theodosius showed no disposition to submit; he
peremptorily refused to yield up the refugees, and answered that he would abide
the event of warfare, but that he would nevertheless send ambassadors to
reconcile their differences, if possible. Thereupon Senator, a man of consular
dignity, was sent by the emperor to treat with Attila; he did not however
venture to traverse the territory of the Huns even under the protection of the
character of an ambassador, but sailed across the Euxine to Odessus, the modern Odessa, situated near Oczakow on its northern extremity, where the
general Theodulus, who had been dispatched on a
like mission, was at that time abiding, without having succeeded in obtaining
an audience. In what quarter Attila was then stationed, is not recorded, but he
had probably advanced with his army, before the negotiator reached his
destination; for on the receipt of the answer of Theodosius, being greatly
incensed, he made an immediate and sanguinary irruption into the Roman
dependencies, and, having taken several fortresses, he overwhelmed Ratiaria, a city of great magnitude and very populous,
which stood near the site of Artzar, a little
below Vidin on the Danube. He was accompanied by his brother on this inroad,
and they laid waste a great part of Illyria, demolishing Naissus, (Nissa) Singidunum,
(Belgrade) and other flourishing towns. Seven years after, the sophist Priscus
on his embassy to the court of Attila, passed by the desolated site of Naissus,
and saw the ruins of that exterminated town, and the country strewed with the
bones of its inhabitants.
The succeeding campaign was
ushered in by the appearance of a comet of great magnitude, which added to the
terror of the Hunnish arms, and a fatal pestilence raged throughout
Europe. The brothers renewed the ravage of Illyria, and stretched their
victorious course to the extreme shores of Thrace. In this expedition only we
hear of Persians serving under Attila together with Saracens and Isaurians,
but it is certain that no part of Persia was reduced under his dominion, though
the Bactrian king of the Caucasean Paropamisus is said to have been amongst his military
vassals.
Arnegisclus was entrusted by
Theodosius with a great army to stop the progress of the invader, but he was
completely routed on the shore of the Chersonese; the enemy approached within
twenty miles of Constantinople, and almost all the cities of Thrace, except
Adrianople and Heraclea, submitted to the conqueror. The army, which was
quartered in Sicily for the protection of the eastern provinces, was hastily
recalled for the defence of Constantinople, and Aspar and Anatolius,
masters of the forces, were sent to negotiate with the invaders, whose progress
they had small hope of arresting in the field of battle. A treaty or
rather a truce for a year was concluded with the Huns by Anatolius,
according to which the Romans consented to give up the fugitives, to pay 6000
pounds weight of gold for the arrears of tribute, and the future tribute was
assessed at 2100 pounds of gold; twelve pieces of gold were to be the ransom of
every Roman prisoner who had escaped from his chains, and on default of payment
he was to be sent back to captivity. The Romans were also compelled to
pledge themselves to admit no refugees from the dominions of the Huns
within the limits of the empire.
The ambassadors of Theodosius,
too haughty to acknowledge the grievous necessity to which they were reduced,
of accepting whatever terms the conqueror might think fit to impose, pretended
to make all these concessions willingly; but, through excessive dread of
their adversaries, peace upon any conditions was their paramount
object, and it was needful to submit to the imposition of such a heavy tribute,
though the wealth not only of individuals, but of the public treasury, had been
dissipated in unseasonable shows, in reprehensible canvassing for dignities, in
luxurious and immoderate expenditure, which would not only have been
misbecoming a prudent government in the most prosperous affluence, but was
especially unfitting for those degenerate Romans, who, having
neglected the discipline of war, had been tributary not only to the Huns, but
to every barbarian that pressed upon the several frontiers of the empire.
The emperor levied with the
greatest rigor the taxes and assessments which were necessary to furnish the
stipulated tribute to the Huns, and those even whose lands, on account of the
destructive inroads of the barbarians, had been for a while discharged from the
payment of taxes, either by a judicial decision, or by imperial indulgence,
were compelled to contribute. The senators paid into the treasury the gold
which was required from them beyond their means, and their eminent situation was
the cause of ruin to many of them; for those, who were appointed by the emperor
to levy the rate, exacted it with insolence, so that many persons, who had been
in affluent circumstances, were forced to sell their furniture and the trinkets
and apparel of the women. So grievous was the calamity of this peace to the
Romans, that many hanged themselves in despair, or perished by voluntary
starvation. The treasury being immediately emptied, the gold and the fugitives
were sent to the Huns, Scottas having arrived at Constantinople from
the court of Attila to receive them. Many however of the fugitives, who would
not surrender to be delivered up to their inexorable countrymen, from whose
hands they would have suffered a cruel and lingering death, were slain by the
Romans to propitiate the enemy; and amongst those were some of the blood royal
of Scythia, who, refusing to serve under Attila, had fled to the Romans.
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 harboured, 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 reencounters 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 valour,
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.
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 he 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 honours; 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 saviour 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 Jordanes, 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 favoured 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 Saviour 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.
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.
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 levelled 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. Jordanes 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.
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 dispatched 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 favourites 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.
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 splendour 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 honoured, 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 honours 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.
On the succeeding day they
continued their journey from the mountains of Naissus towards the
Danube, passing through some woody and circuitous defiles, so that those who
were unacquainted with the country and imagined they were travelling westward,
were astonished in the morning at seeing the sunrise opposite to them, and
fancied it was a prodigy portending the subversion of all established order,
till it was explained to them that on account of natural impediments, that part
of the road was necessarily turned towards the east.
From the mountainous passes
they issued into a level and woody district, where barbarian ferrymen received
the whole party into canoes which they had themselves scooped out of solid
stems, and conveyed them across the Danube. It seems that they had travelled
night and day, excepting when they halted at Sardica,
at Naissus, and after the interview with Agintheus. The boats had not
been prepared for the ambassadors, but to ferry over the river a multitude of
Attila’s people, whom they met on the way, for Attila had made a pretence of
desiring to hunt in the territories wrested from the Romans, though in fact it was
a preparation for war, which he meditated under the pretext that all the
refugees had not been delivered up to him.
Having crossed the Danube, and
proceeded about 70 stadia or a little more than eight English miles, they were
made to halt on a plain, while the attendants of Edécon carried the news of
their arrival to Attila. In the evening, while they were at supper, two
Scythians arrived at their quarters, and ordered them to proceed to Attila, but
having been requested to alight from their horses, they partook of the meal,
and on the following morning served as their conductors. About the ninth hour
of the day they reached the numerous tents of Attila, and being about to pitch
their own on a knoll, the barbarians forbad it, because those of Attila were on
the level ground.
The Romans having therefore
established themselves where they were directed, Edécon, Orestes, Scottas,
and others of the principal men, intruded themselves, and began to make
enquiries into the objects of the embassy. At first the Romans looked at each
other with surprise and gave no answer to the unbecoming questions, but the
barbarians were troublesome and urgent in the enquiries, whereupon they were
told that the message of the emperor was unto Attila, and no other
person. Scottas answered angrily that they were sent by their leader
to make this enquiry, and had not come to gratify their own curiosity. The
Romans represented that it was nowhere customary for ambassadors without
entering into the presence of the person to whom they had been sent to be
called upon to declare the objects of their mission through the intervention of
other persons; that the Scythians who had been on missions to the emperor well
knew this, and that, unless admitted into the presence, as the ambassadors of Attila
had always been, they would not communicate their instructions.
The messengers of Attila
returned to him, and soon after coming back without Edécon, declared to the
Romans all the particulars concerning which they were sent to treat by the
emperor, and ordered them, if they had nothing further to communicate, to take
their departure as speedily as possible.
The Romans were amazed, and,
being unable to conjecture through what channel the secrets of the emperor had
been divulged, thought it prudent to decline giving any answer, unless admitted
to the royal presence; whereupon they were ordered to depart instantly. While
they were preparing for the journey, Bigilas blamed them for the
answer they had given, saying that it would be better to be detected in a
falsehood, than to return without accomplishing their purpose; and asserted
that if he could have come to the sight of Attila, he should easily have
persuaded him to recede from his dispute with the Romans, having become well
acquainted with him, when he had accompanied the mission of Anatolius;
whence Edécon was also well disposed towards him; so that, under pretext of the
embassy, by speaking truth or falsehood, as occasion might require, they might
complete the arrangements touching the conspiracy against Attila, and the
transmission of the gold which Edécon had stated to be necessary, that it might
be divided amongst the satellites: but he little suspected, that he had been
betrayed, for Edécon, whether his promises, as is most probable, had been deceitful
from the first, or he had taken alarm, lest Orestes, indignant at what had
passed at Sardica, should report to Attila that
he had had separate and private conferences with the emperor and Chrysaphius,
had divulged the whole conspiracy to the Hun, both the quota of gold that had
been required, and the points concerning which the Romans had been instructed
to negotiate.
The orders of Attila had been
peremptory, and although it was night, the ambassadors, hungry and cold, were
under the necessity of making ready for their departure, when a second message
from the great king enjoined them to tarry till a more seasonable hour; and at
the same time he sent them an ox and some river fish, on which they supped and
retired to rest, hoping that he might be more favourably disposed on the
morrow; but in the morning the same messengers returned, ordering them to
depart, if they had nothing else to communicate.
They prepared therefore once
more for the journey, notwithstanding the earnest suggestion of Bigilas,
that they should answer that they had other things to set forth. The historian
Priscus, through friendship to Maximin, who appeared very much dejected at the
disgraceful issue of his mission, taking with him Rusticius, who
understood the Hunnish language, for an interpreter, went to Scottas,
and promised him ample presents from Maximin, if he would obtain for him an
interview with Attila; assuring him that the subject matter of the embassy was
not only important to the two nations, but personally to his brother Onegesius
who was then absent from the court; and he adroitly added, that he understood
he had great weight with Attila, but that he should better know how to estimate
his importance, if he could prevail in this point. Scottas replied,
that he had quite as much influence as Onegesius, and would prove it; and he
mounted his horse immediately, and rode to the tent of the monarch. Priscus
returning to Maximin found him and Bigilas lying on the grass, and,
having declared what he had done, and recommended to Maximin to look out the
gifts for Scottas and consider what he should say to Attila, was much
applauded, and those amongst the retinue, who were actually starting, were
called back, and their departure was suspended till the result of the
application of Scottas should be known. While they were thus
employed, they were summoned by Scottas to the presence of Attila.
Entering they beheld the
monarch seated on a wooden throne, and guarded by a numerous circle of
barbarians. Maximin alone approaching saluted him, while the rest of the Romans
stood aloof; and, having delivered the letter of Theodosius, he said that the
emperor prayed for the health and prosperity of him and his people. Attila
answered, “May it be to the Romans, as they wish to me”, and immediately turning
his discourse to Bigilas, he called him a shameless beast, and asked how
he presumed to come before him, knowing what terms of peace had been concluded
between himself and Anatolius, and that no ambassadors should have been
sent to him before all the refugees had been delivered up. Bigilas having
replied, that there was no refugee of Scythian blood remaining in the empire,
for that all had been given up, he waxed more angry, and exclaimed with
loudness and violence, that he would crucify him, and give him for food to the
birds, if he were not scrupulous of infringing the laws concerning ambassadors
by awarding to him the just punishment of his impudence, and the rashness of
his speech; for that many refugees were still amongst the Romans, whose names he
ordered the secretaries to read from a tablet. After that had been
performed, he commanded him to depart immediately, and Eslas to
accompany him and bear a message to the Romans, that every fugitive, since the
time when Carpileo the son of Aetius had been
sent to Attila as a hostage from the Western empire, must be forthwith
delivered up; inasmuch as he would not suffer his own servants to bear arms
against him, however little they could avail for the protection of the Romans:
“for”, he added, using nearly the language of Sennacherib, “which of all the
cities or fortresses that I have thought fit to capture, has been successfully
defended against me?” He further directed them after having delivered his
message concerning the fugitives, to return and inform him whether the Romans
chose to surrender them, or to await the war which he should wage against them;
but he commanded Maximin to stay for his answer to the letter of Theodosius,
and enquired for the presents of the emperor, which were given to him. The
ambassadors retired to their tents, where Bigilas expressed his
surprise at the violent demeanour of Attila towards him, who had been formerly
received with so much gentleness. The Romans imagined that the conversation
at Sardica, in which Bigilas had called
him a mortal and Theodosius a divinity, must have been related to him by some
of the guests, who were present at that banquet; but Bigilas, who had
intimate acquaintance with the Hunnish court, would not credit the
suggestion, saying that no one excepting Edécon would dare to enter into
discourse with him on such matters, and that he would undoubtedly be silent,
not merely on account of his oath, but through fear that he might be condemned
to death for having been present at, and lent himself to, secret counsels
against the life of his sovereign.
While these matters were under
discussion, Edécon returned, and, drawing Bigilas aside, renewed the
subject of the gold which he required for distribution, and, after giving
directions concerning its payment, he withdrew. Priscus, the friend of Maximin,
who was kept in ignorance of the atrocious conspiracy, having enquired into the
subject of that conversation, Bigilas who was himself deceived by
Edécon, eluded the enquiry by saying that Edécon had complained that he was
brought into trouble on account of the detention of the fugitives, and that all
of them should have been delivered up, or ambassadors of the highest dignity
sent for the purpose of pacifying Attila.
A further command was
presently issued by the monarch, that neither Bigilas nor any of the
Romans should buy any Roman captive or barbarian slave, or any horse or other
article except necessary provender, until the differences should be adjusted;
and this he did with subtlety, that Bigilas might have no excuse for
bringing the gold which was promised to Edécon; and, under pretence of writing
an answer to Theodosius, he required the Romans to await the return home of
Onegesius, that they might deliver to him the presents sent by the emperor.
Onegesius was at that time
absent, having been sent to establish the eldest son of Attila and Creca on the throne of the Acatares,
whose reduction has been already mentioned. Bigilas was therefore
dispatched alone with Eslas to bring back the answer concerning the
refugees, but in truth to afford him an opportunity of fetching the gold, and
the rest were detained in their tents, but after one day’s interval they were
made to proceed together with Attila towards the north of Hungary.
The ambassadors had not
travelled far in the suite of the Hunnish monarch, when their
conductors directed them to follow a different road, for Attila thought fit to
tarry in a certain hamlet, where he had determined to add his daughter Eskam to the number of his wives. We are informed by
Priscus that this marriage was conformable to the law of the Scythians. His
expression is somewhat remarkable, and literally rendered is, “where he
purposed to marry his daughter Eskam, having
indeed many wives, but espousing this one also according to Scythian law”. Some
writers have taken occasion from this passage to assert that there was no
prohibition amongst the Huns to any marriage, however repugnant to propriety on
account of relationship, and St. Jerome has made a similar declaration,
probably with no better foundation, concerning the Persians, amongst whom
incest was no more generally permitted, than polygamy was amongst the Jews. The
instances of two wives recorded in the case of Lamech, and of Jacob, and Elkanah, are evidently particular cases departing from the
established practice, and the permission given to the kings of the Jews to
possess many wives and concubines, was the consequence of the Lord’s having
conceded to the Jews, as a punishment for their perverse entreaties, “a king
over them, that they might be like all the nations”; a king therefore having
all the privileges enjoyed by the adjoining potentates, namely that they could
do no wrong and might take any number of wives, however nearly related to them
in blood, notwithstanding the prohibition that had been given prospectively
concerning them, that they should not multiply their wives, a prohibition which
was certainly respected by the generality of the Jews.
The words of Priscus do not
imply that either polygamy or incest were lawful to all the Huns, but that it
was lawful to Attila, as it had been to Cambyses, on account of his
prerogative. The Hungarian writers, indignant at the reproaches cast on the
morals of their supposed ancestors on this occasion, have attempted to make it
appear that the lady espoused by Attila was not his child, but the daughter of
a man named Eskam, considering the undeclined
name Eskam to be a genitive case, and
rendering the preceding word the daughter of instead of his
daughter. On a careful consideration of the construction of sentences in the
Greek written by Priscus and others of that period, it will be apparent that
the words cannot mean to marry the daughter of Eskam.
While Attila was revelling
with his new bride, the ambassadors were conducted onward across a level
country, and traversed several rivers in canoes or boats used by the people who
lived on their banks, similar to those in which they had crossed the Danube.
The next in size to that river were stated to have been the Drecon, the Ugas, and Tiphesas, which last is the Teiss,
but it has not been found practicable to identify the two others. The lesser
streams were passed in boats that were carried on wagons by the barbarians
through the country which was liable to be flooded.
Millet was brought to the
Romans for food from the villages instead of wheat, and mead instead of wine,
together with a sort of beer made from barley which was called by the
natives cam. After a long and weary journey, they pitched their
tents at evening near a lake of clear water which the inhabitants of a
neighbouring hamlet were in the habit of fetching for drink.
A violent storm of wind and
rain with exceedingly vivid lightning came on immediately after they had
encamped, and not only overset their tents and laid all flat, but washed away
their provisions and furniture into the lake. The Romans were so terrified,
that they fled in various directions, floundering through the tempest in the
dark night, to avoid the same fate as their chattels, till they fortunately met
again in the village hard by, where they were very clamorous to be supplied
with everything they wanted. The Scythian cottagers ran out of their hovels and
inquired into the cause of their vociferations, and being informed by the
barbarians who were in company that they had been put to confusion by the
storm, they invited them in, and kindled speedily a cheerful blaze with dry
reeds.
The mistress of the hamlet was
a lady, who had been one of the wives of Bleda, and hearing of the misadventure
of the Romans, she sent to them a present of victuals, and also paid
them the singular compliment, which however was a
usual practice of honourable hospitality amongst the Huns, of sending them some
beautiful Scythian women, who were enjoined to comply with all their wishes;
but the ambassadors were either too decorous or too disheartened to be desirous
of availing themselves of the offer, and declined the favours which were
destined for them. The ladies were regaled with a portion of the supper
and dismissed, and the ambassadors, having taken their repose in the cottages
of the natives, proceeded at daybreak in search of their equipments, part of which they found on the spot where they
had encamped, part on the banks of the lake, and part in the water; but the
whole of their goods was recovered, and they tarried all day in the hamlet to
dry them in the sun, which shone out brilliantly after that stormy
night. When due attention had been paid to the beasts of burden, they
proceeded to visit the queen, and, having saluted her, they returned thanks for
her hospitality, and presented her with three silver vessels, some crimson
fleeces, Indian pepper, dates, and other articles for desert, which not being
found amongst the barbarians were valuable to them.
Having thus returned her
compliment, they took their leave and proceeded on their journey for seven
days, till the Scythian conductors made them halt in a village on their way,
because Attila was coming in that direction, and it was not allowable for them
to travel before him. At this place they fell in with ambassadors from
the Western empire, Count Romulus, Primutus praefect of
Noricum, and Romanus general of a division. Constantius was with them, whom
Aetius had sent as a secretary to Attila, and Tatullus the
father of Orestes who was with Edécon, not being members of the legation, but
having undertaken the journey through private motives, the former on account of
his previous intimacy with them in Italy, the latter from relationship, his son
Orestes having married the daughter of Romulus from the city Patavion in Noricum. Their object was to pacify
Attila, who required that Silvanus, a Roman silversmith, should be delivered up
to him, because he had received some golden vessels from another Constantius, a
native of Western Gaul, who had also been sent as a secretary by Aetius to
Attila and Bleda. When the Huns were laying siege to Sirmium in
Paeonia, those vessels had been delivered to Constantius by the bishop of the
place for his own ransom in case he should survive the capture of the city, and
to redeem others amongst the captives if he should have fallen; but Constantius
after the taking of Sirmium was faithless to his trust, and pawned
the vessels for money to Silvanus, to be redeemed within a given time, or the
sale of them to stand good.
Attila and Bleda, having
suspected this Constantius of treason, crucified him, and Attila, hearing what
had been done concerning the golden vessels, demanded Silvanus to be given up,
as a robber of his property. The object of the embassy was therefore to
persuade Attila that Silvanus was no thief, but that having taken the goods in
pawn from Constantius, he had sold them as unredeemed pledges to the first
priests who wished for them, because it was not lawful to sell them for the use
of laymen, as they had been consecrated. The ambassadors were directed to try
to prevail upon Attila to give up his claim to the vessels for this reason,
and, if he persevered, to offer him gold in their stead, but on no account to
give up the innocent silversmith to be crucified. The two parties of Eastern
and Western Romans followed the route of Attila, and, after crossing some more
rivers, they arrived at a large village, where Attila had a fixed residence.
It is not possible to gather,
from the statement of the journey of the ambassadors, the exact situation of
this place, but the number of days they had travelled makes it evident that it
must have been in the north of Hungary. They had not however arrived at the
Carpathian mountains. Tokay has been mentioned by Buat as the most probable
site. It has been also conjectured that the tents of Attila, which were first
visited by the legation, were pitched opposite Viddin,
and that Jasberin was the site of the royal
village; but other writers have been of opinion that it was in that part of
Moldavia which produces neither stone nor wood, for Priscus states that there
was none in the neighbourhood, and that the stone, with which the baths of Onegesius
were built, was brought out of the land of the Paeonians. That they did not
cross the Danube near Viddin is however
evident, because it lies north-east of Nissa,
and Priscus says their general course was westward of that place; and it seems
that they must have crossed a little below Belgrade, and passed the Themes, the
Bega, and the Theiss in the first instance, and afterwards the large
tributary rivers which fall into the Theiss from the westward, and
shaped their course towards Tokay. Jornandes calls
the three rivers named by Priscus, the Tysia, Tibiscia, and Dricca. Tibiscus is the known name of the Theiss,
and Tysia is probably a river falling into
the Theiss which may have given to it the modern name. Nothing is
known concerning the Dricca. To have reached
Moldavia they must have traversed the rivers of Wallachia, shaping their course
eastward after visiting the tents of Attila; but the only certain fact is that
they did cross the Theiss, which lay in the contrary direction, and having
done so they could only have reached Moldavia by recrossing that river, and
threading one of the three passes through the mountains that separate it from
Transylvania, neither of which suppositions is consistent with the narrative of
Priscus. In another passage that writer states that the land of the Paeonians
was by the river Saus, and it is certain from
two passages in Menander, that Saus was
the Saave, which falls into the Danube from the
opposite side a little below the Theiss, and the land in question was
evidently the modern Sirmia near Belgrade,
whence the stone might easily be carried up the river Theiss to Tokay
in boats, but could not with any degree of probability have been conveyed to
Moldavia. The facility of water-carriage probably induced Onegesius to procure
the stone from Sirmia, for although there might
be stone nearer in the mountains to the north, the conveyance of it would have
been more difficult, and the Huns were probably from their habits impatient of
labour in the quarries.
In the same situation, or not
far distant, on the right of the Theiss, was the strong hold and palace of
the king of the Avar Huns, which was called the Hring and
was destroyed by the armies of Charlemagne in 796, and is said by the writers
of that period to have subsisted many centuries. These stupendous works are
mentioned by Jordanes, who says they were called Hunniwar by
the Huns, but he does not describe them; and it is observable that the name of
Ring by which they were known in the eighth century is also a Teutonic word,
which probably had descended from the Huns of Attila, to the Avars who
then occupied them. Priscus uses an expression equivalent to ring, when he
speaks of the enclosure, which surrounded the dwelling of Attila, by the Greek
word peribolos. In the reign of Charlemagne, we find the marvellous
fortifications of the Huns occupied by the Avars, who acquired the
ascendancy at a period subsequent to the death of Attila, by whom they had been
subdued, and afterwards were called Huns by the neighbouring nations.
These works are particularly
described by Notgerus Balbus,
commonly called the Monk of St. Gall in a passage of most difficult
construction. He states, that the land of the Huns was surrounded by nine
circles; and that when, imagining the circles to be common hedges, he
asked Aldabert, who had served under
Charlemagne, what was the wonder, he learned from him that one circle was as
wide, or comprehended in itself as much, as the distance from Constance to a
place called Castrum Turonicum, of which the site
in all probability cannot now be ascertained.
The abbot of Saint Gall was
under the jurisdiction of the bishop of Constance, and Castrum Turonicum must have been some place in that
neighbourhood not having a see. It does not mean Tours, which was Caesarodunum Turonum. He
goes on to state, that each circle was so constructed with stems of oak, beech,
and fir, that it was twenty feet wide and twenty high; that the whole cavity
was filled with hard stones, or tenacious chalk, perhaps meaning mortar. The
surface was covered with sods. Between, bushes were planted, which (according
to the probable meaning of the expression) were cut after the manner of clipped
hedges. Between these circles, hamlets and villages were so placed, that the
human voice could be heard from one to another. Opposite these buildings,
narrow doors were fabricated in the strong walls. “Also (he adds) from the
second circle, which was constructed in like manner as the first, there was an
extent of twenty Teutonic, which are forty Italian, miles unto the third. In
like manner even unto the ninth; although the circles themselves were much more
contracted one than another; and from circle to circle tenements and
habitations were so arranged in every direction, that by the sound of trumpets
the signification of everything could be comprehended at the distance between
each of them”.
From the very obscure passage
of which the above is a close translation, we learn first that the distance
between the two outer circles was equal to that of Constance from an unknown
town; that the distance between the second and third was forty Italian miles of
five thousand feet, equal to near thirty-eight English miles. The word
also might seem to imply that the distance between the first and second
circle, or between Constance and Castrum Turonicum,
was also about thirty-eight English miles, but that would give too great a
diameter. It is much more difficult to explain what follows; it may imply that
the spaces between the circles were invariably equal, adding the mere truism,
that the circumference of the inner concentric circles was necessarily smaller
than that of the outer; or it may imply that the walls were built in the same
manner throughout, but that the inner spaces were narrower. If the former
interpretation be adopted, which certainly appears more conformable to the
words, and the spaces between the several rings, and between the inner ring and
the centre be considered to have been similar, that is, thirty-eight English
miles, the diameter of the outer circle would be six hundred and eighty-four
miles, and would enclose a great deal more than the whole of Hungary, and is
inconsistent with what we have reason to believe, that the rings were situated
between the Danube and the Theiss.
A circle of about one hundred
and fifty miles diameter will enclose the greater part of Upper Hungary between
those two rivers, the Mora, and the Krapac mountains,
and such was probably the site and extent of those great works, supposing the
space between the two exterior belts to have been less than between the second
and third, perhaps sixteen miles, and the remaining twenty-one miles of the
radius, or forty-two of the diameter, to have been divided amongst the seven
interior. The inner portion would thus have consisted of seven concentric circles,
like the town of Ecbatana, as described by Herodotus, to which two wider belts
were superadded. The celebrated labyrinth of Crete was perhaps a structure
of the same kind.
Eginhart, notary of Charlemagne, in
his Annales, says that in 791 the emperor defeated the Huns upon
the Danube, drove them from their fortifications, and penetrated to the mouth
of the river Arrabon or Raab. That in 796 Eric duke of Friuli plundered the Ringus, and that later in the same year, Pepin having
driven the Huns across the Theiss, and utterly demolished their palace,
“which is Ringus, but is called by the Lombards Campus”,
sent their treasures to Charlemagne. In his Vita Caroli Magni, the notary says the wars with the Huns lasted
eight years, and were so bloody that all the dwellings in Pannonia were
destroyed, and not a vestige of a human habitation remained in the place where
the palace of the chagawn had been
situated.
The anonymous annals of
Charlemagne say that in 791 he took the defences of the Avars,
advanced to the Raab, and retired; and in 796 he
received a message in Saxony, which informed him that Pepin was lodged with his
army in the Ring. The unknown author of another Vita Caroli Magni, says that in 791 the Huns abandoned their works
near the Danube, and he marched to the river Raab.
In 796 Henry duke of Friuli (for Henry and Eric are different forms of the same
name) having sent a force into Pannonia, plundered the Ring of the Avars,
who were divided by civil war, the chagawn having
been murdered by his own people; and he sent their treasures, which had been
accumulated there during a long course of centuries, to Charlemagne. That in
the same year Thudun came over to him with
a great part of the Avars, and was baptized; and before the end of that
year (796) a message was received by Charlemagne, that Pepin had come to blows
with the new chagawn and his nobles,
and again a second message that Pepin was lodged in the Ring.
Another author who wrote about
the year 858, says that in 796 Pepin arrived at the celebrated place which is
called Rinch, where the Huns surrendered to him.
An ancient Saxon poet, who wrote in the reign of Arnolf, AD 888,
gives a similar account, and says that Pepin beat the Huns beyond the Theiss,
and leveled to the ground their royal
residence called Hring. It is quite clear that
the palace or royal residence in which the plunder of Europe had been then
stored up for three or four centuries was the central ring or circle of the
nine circumvallations which have been
described; and, as they had existed for centuries, there is no reason to doubt
that they were the identical fortifications which Jordanes states to have
existed in the time of Attila under the name of Hunniwar.
The central ring was perhaps in the neighbourhood of Gomor in
Upper Hungary. It is observable that Eusebius, speaking of the six concentric
walls to the Babylon of Nebuchadnezzar, calls them by the same word (periboloi)
which is used by Priscus in describing the residence of Attila.
A passage concerning the abode
of the Hunnish monarch in Saemund’s Edda,
which has been entirely misunderstood by the Latin translator, and which the
annotator calls one of the passages in the poem which cannot be solved, alludes
to the concentric circumvallations as
having existed in the time of Attila, and it was only difficult, because he
knew not the nature of the defences to which it refers. It may be translated
literally thus. “They saw the land of Attila and deep towers; the fierce men
stand in that high bourg, the hall around the people of the South, surrounded
with set-beams, with circles bound together, with white shields, the obstacle
of spearmen. There Attila was drinking wine in his divine hall. The
warders sat without.” The translator renders the word sess-meithom, seat-beams, and explains it thus, that
the hall had wooden seats round it, and that either a bundle of shields was
hung over head above the seats, or single shields tied together suspended
against the wall. On reference to the detailed account of the Hunnish fortifications,
it is evident that the set-beams are the stems (stipites) with which the circumvallations were constructed; that the circles
bound together are the concentric belts or rings; that the white shields are a
figurative illustration of the same, white, because as the Monk of St.
Gall says, they were made with chalk, and shields, as explained in the next
line, because they were obstacles opposed to the attack of an enemy.
The editors could not have
found this easy solution of the passage in Scandinavian literature, and they
looked no further. The conformity of these various and very ancient authorities
gives strong reason for assuming that Attila had (to use the remarkable
expression of Ammianus Marcellinus when speaking of the circular positions of
the Alans) circumcircated the
district of Upper Hungary, and that hither Priscus was conducted; not to the
inmost ring, but the village situated perhaps on the outside of its eastern
entrance near Tokay, as Sicambria the favourite abode of Attila near
Buda was perhaps at its southern entrance; but it is possible that the exterior
belts may not have been constructed till a later period. The dwelling of
Attila, and that of Onegesius, are both described by Priscus, as being
surrounded with a circular construction of wood, which he calls peribolos,
not for security, but for ornament, which shows the affection the Huns had for
the Ring in their architecture. The palace of Attila exceeded all the other
structures in size and conspicuous appearance. It was built with massive
timber, and beautifully polished planks, and adorned with towers. The dwelling
of Onegesius was the next in importance, but not ornamented with towers, though
in like manner environed by a wooden ring, formed of upright timber close set
in the ground. At a short distance were the baths which Onegesius, who had
great wealth and influence amongst the Huns, had caused to be constructed of
stone from the Sirmian quarries, by a
captive architect who was a native of Sirmium, and had vainly hoped that
his manumission would be the reward of his labours; but Onegesius, after the
building was completed, made the unfortunate architect superintendent of
the bath, and caused him to wait upon himself and his friends during their
ablutions.
As Attila made his entry into
this village, a number of damsels advanced to meet him, arranged in ranks
under, white veils of exceeding fineness, which were of great length, and so
extended and held aloft by the hands of the women, that under every one of them
walked seven or more damsels, singing Scythian airs, and the rows of young
women thus placed under the veils were very numerous.
The way to the royal residence
lay by the dwelling of Onegesius, and, as Attila was passing it, the wife of
Onegesius came out with a multitude of servants bearing dressed fish and wine,
which is the highest compliment amongst the Huns, and she saluted Attila
praying him to partake of her liberality. He, wishing to appear gracious to the
wife of his confidential friend, ate as he sat upon his horse, a table of
massive silver being lifted up to him by the attendants; and, having tasted of
the cup offered to him, he retired into his own palace, which was placed in a
more elevated situation than the other buildings, and overlooked them.
The ambassadors were invited
into the house of Onegesius, who had returned together with the son of Attila,
and they dined there, being received by the wife of Onegesius and the most
distinguished of his relatives; for he had not leisure to partake with them,
having been summoned to make a report of the transactions of his mission to
Attila, who had not before seen him since his return, and to detail die
particulars of the misadventure of Attila’s son, who had broken his right arm
by a fall. When they withdrew from the hospitable board of Onegesius, the
Romans pitched their tents in the neighbourhood of the palace of Attila, that
Maximin might be at hand to confer with him or his counsellors. Early the next
morning Priscus was sent by Maximin to Onegesius to present to him the gifts
which he brought on his own part and that of the emperor, and to learn whether
the favourite would grant him an interview, and at what time.
The Huns had not risen so
early as the Romans, and, the doors being all closed, the historian remained
with the menials who bore the presents, waiting without the ring of timber that
surrounded the buildings, until some person should happen to come out. While he
was walking up and down to beguile the time, he was surprised on being addressed
by a man habited as a Hun who bade him hail in the Greek language, which was
rarely spoken by any amongst them, except captives from Thrace or the coast of
Illyria, and those might be at once recognized by the miserable and squalid
condition of their garments and hair; but this man appeared to be a Scythian in
excellent plight, with his hair neatly cropped all round.
Having returned his
salutation, Priscus was informed that he was a Greek who had gone to attend the
fair at the Mysian city Viminacium on
the Danube, where he had married a rich wife and established himself; but, on
the capture of that town by the Huns, he and all his wealth had fallen to the
lot of Onegesius, in the division of the spoil amongst the principal followers
of Attila. Sometime after, having fought valiantly in company with the Huns
against the Romans and Acatzires, according to
the Scythian law he had regained his liberty by surrendering to his master all
the plunder he had made in the war; and, having a place at the table of Onegesius,
he was well satisfied with his present condition: for that the Huns, when the
labours of warfare were at an end, lived without any cares, enjoying their
possessions without any molestation, and in perfect security. On the other hand
he drew a melancholy picture of the state of the empire, of which the subjects
were easily taken or slain in war, because the jealousy of their masters
prevented their being entrusted with arms for their own defence, and that even
those, who carried arms on behalf of the Romans, suffered grievously from the
incapacity and inertness of their officers; but that in peace the case was even
worse than in war, through the weight of taxes and the extortion of evil men in
power, the laws not being equally administered to all, but transgressed with
impunity by the rich and powerful, while strictly carried into operation
against the indigent, if indeed they survived the period of a protracted and
ruinous lawsuit; and so deeply rooted was the corruption of justice, that no
man amongst them could hope for the protection of the laws, without
conciliating by money the favor of the
judge and his dependants.
The historian according to his
own account attempted to reply to the censures of the apostate Greek by a
feeble panegyric on the system of Roman jurisprudence, without contradicting
the facts that were alleged. This brought forth a brief observation, which
appears to have been unanswerable and uncontroverted, that the constitution of
Rome might be good, and her laws excellent, but that both were perverted by the
corruption of those who administered them.
The door haying been at length
opened accidentally, Priscus eagerly enquired for Onegesius, stating that he
came from Maximin the ambassador of the Romans; but this application did not procure
admission for him, and he was requested to wait till the Hun should come forth.
Onegesius having appeared soon after, accepted the gold and presents, which he
ordered his attendants to carry into the house; and he replied to the request
which Maximin made for an interview, that he would visit the Roman in his tent.
This he did soon after, and, having thanked him for the presents, enquired upon
what account he had requested an interview.
Maximin expressed an earnest
desire that Onegesius should personally proceed into the Roman territory, and
enquire into and adjust the points in dispute favourably to the emperor.
Onegesius rejected with indignation all tampering with his allegiance, asking
if they imagined that he did not esteem servitude under Attila to be more
honourable than independent wealth amongst the Romans; but added that he could
be more useful to them by remaining where he was and softening the frequent
irritation of his monarch, than by going amongst them and exposing himself to
blame, if he should act in any respect against the opinion of Attila.
Before he departed, Onegesius
consented to receive the future communications of the ambassador through the
intervention of Priscus, because the high dignity of Maximin would have
rendered frequent and protracted interviews with him unbecoming and probably liable
to suspicion. On the following day the historian penetrated the ring which
enclosed the mansions of Attila, being the bearer of presents to Kreka (or Creca) his
principal queen, who had borne him three sons, of whom the eldest had been
raised to the rank of king over the Acatzires and
other tribes bordering upon the Euxine. The various buildings within the
enclosure were of wood; some constructed with planks expertly fitted together
and beautified with pannels or carvings of
in sculpture; others of straight massive timber perfectly squared and planed,
and ornamented in relief with highly wrought beams or mouldings.
The visitors having been
admitted by the Huns, who were standing at the door, found the queen reclining
upon a soft counterpane, the floor of the room being delicately carpeted, and
opposite to her were sitting upon the carpet damsels employed in embroidering
veils or scarfs, which were worn by the Huns over their clothing for ornament.
Having saluted her and presented the gifts, Priscus withdrew, and, waiting for
Onegesius who was known to have entered the residence of Attila, he proceeded
towards some of the other buildings, in which he then resided, without any
interruption from the guards to whom he was known. Standing amidst the crowd of
people, he observed the multitude in motion, and a press and noise, as if the
monarch was coming forth; and presently he saw him, accompanied by Onegesius,
issue from his dwelling, bearing himself haughtily and casting his eyes round
on all sides.
Many, who had controversies,
came before him, and received in the open air his sentence on the points in
dispute; and, after the close of his judicial labours, he re-entered the
house and gave audience to the ambassadors of various barbarian nations.
Priscus continued to await the leisure of Onegesius in the palace court, where
he was accosted by the ambassadors from the Western empire, who inquired
whether Maximin had received his dismissal, or was under the necessity of
remaining.
Priscus replied that he was
waiting for Onegesius to ascertain that very point, and enquired into the
success of their mission, but was informed by them that Attila was quite
inexorable and denounced immediate war against Valentinian, unless either
Silvanus or the golden vessels were delivered up to him. Priscus, having
expressed his surprise at the arrogance of Attila, received some interesting
information from Romulus, whose sources of knowledge were undeniable, his
daughter being married to Orestes the follower of Edécon and scribe of Attila,
whose father Tatullus was even then in the
company.
This information is very
important, for we may rely upon it as the true statement of the power of Attila
at that time, and the extent of his empire. He asserted that no king, either of
Scythia or any other land had done such great things in so short a time;
inasmuch as his rule extended over the islands in the ocean, and in addition to
all Scythia, he had reduced the Romans to be tributary to him; and that, not
content with his European conquests, he was meditating even then the
subjugation of Persia.
The Danish historians, who are
determined to shut their eyes against the fact, that Attila was master of the
Danish islands and the south of Scandinavia which the Romans considered to be
an island called by them Thule, and that in truth they have no authentic
history previous to the time of Attila, who is mixed up under diverse names in
their ancient legends, have asserted that Russia was looked upon as insular by
the Romans, and was meant by the islands of the ocean upon this occasion.
But the statement of Priscus
is an unequivocal admission by an enemy to Attila, who had the means of knowing
and could not be mistaken, that he did rule over the islands of the ocean
generally, and whether part of Russia was supposed to be an island and included
under the denomination or not, that single portion could not by any
interpretation have been intended to the exclusion of the rest. On the other
hand the words may be interpreted to include Great Britain and Ireland, and it
may be a matter of doubt whether even that was not intended, and whether,
although Attila never set foot in Great Britain, the legends of St Patrick and
Arthur, which are contemporaneous with and have evident reference to him, do
not represent the influence and authority which he had acquired in the British
isles through his emissaries and the weight of his Antichristian pretensions;
but with respect to his dominion over the Danish and Scandinavian territory,
which was more particularly called the islands of the ocean, the assertion of
Romulus made in the presence of the father of Orestes would have been
irrefragable, even if it had not been confirmed, as it is, by the concurring
evidence of the Scandinavian sagas and Teutonic legends.
The Eastern Romans, having
enquired through what quarter he would be able to attack the Persians, were
further informed by him that the dominions of Attila extended to the
neighbourhood of the Medes, and that Bazic and Cursic, two Huns of the blood royal, who ruled over many
followers and afterwards went to Rome to negotiate an alliance, had actually
penetrated into Media, the Romans being prevented by other wars at that time
from interfering to prevent the inroad. The account given by those princes was
that they had crossed a desert tract and afterwards a lake, which Romulus
supposed to be the Maeotis, and after fifteen days’ journey
surmounted a ridge of hills and descended into Media, which they began to
ravage, but an immense host of Persian archers having come upon them, they were
forced to fall back carrying with them only a small portion of the booty.
Romulus therefore represented, that if Attila should determine to attack the
Medes and Persians and Parthians, and render them tributary, he would find
ready access to their territory, and had ample means to reduce them, against
which no nation could make head successfully.
The party of Priscus having
said that it was a consummation greatly to be desired, that Attila should be
pleased to attack the Persians, and leave the empire at peace, were judiciously
answered by Constantiolus that after the
reduction of the Medes, Persians, and Parthians, Attila would be found still
more formidable, and would no longer bear that the Roman empire should continue
distinct from his own, but would treat them openly as his slaves; whereas at
present he was contented with the payment of gold in consideration of the
dignity conferred upon him; for, as Priscus witnesses, the degenerate Romans
had bestowed upon their most dreaded antagonist the title of commander in chief
over the Roman forces; but the Hun, not contented with the title by which, at
the expense of national honour, they had hoped to sooth his vanity, demanded an
ample stipend in the character of commander in chief; and even at that time in
his angry moments he was wont to say, that his servants were the commanders of
armies, and equal in honour with the emperors of Rome. “And yet (he adds) his
power will erelong be greater, as the sword of Mars revealed by the God
testifies, which being reputed sacred and worshipped by the Scythian kings as
dedicated to the dispenser of battles, had disappeared in former times, but had
been again found through the means of a heifer”, which had been wounded by it,
and left a track of blood that led to its discovery.
Onegesius, having at length
come forth, delayed answering the enquiries of Priscus, till he had conversed
with some barbarians, after which he desired him to enquire from Maximin what
man of consular dignity the Romans intended to send to treat with Attila, a
question which must have been insolently intended, inasmuch as Maximin was of
high rank and appointed for that special purpose.
Priscus having made this
report and consulted with his principal, returned to answer the insult by a
compliment to Onegesius, saying that the Romans would prefer that he should
proceed to their court to adjust the points in controversy; but, if that could
not be obtained, they would send whatever person would be most acceptable to
Attila. Thereupon Onegesius desired Priscus to request the immediate presence
of Maximin, whom he conducted straightway to the monarch.
Attila demanded that
either Nomus or Anatolius or Senator should be sent to him,
refusing to receive any other person in the character of ambassador. Maximin
having represented to him, that by naming the persons with whom he chose to
confer he could not fail to alarm the suspicions of Theodosius, he replied that
unless they thought fit to do as he required, he would settle the controversy
by the sword.
On the return of the
ambassador and historian to the Roman tents, they were visited by the father of
Orestes, who brought them an invitation from Attila to a banquet at the ninth
hour of the day. At the appointed time the legates from the Eastern and Western
empire, having proceeded together according to the invitation, stood at the
threshold of the banqueting hall of Attila. After the fashion of the Hunnish court,
the cupbearers, who were stationed near the door, placed a goblet in their
hands, that they might drink a health to Attila before they took their places,
to which they advanced after having tasted the cup. The seats were all placed
against the wall on either side, but Attila sat on an elevated couch in the
centre, another couch being placed behind him, from whence there was an ascent
by means of steps to that on which he was seated.
The historian states that the
seats on the right hand of Attila were considered the most honourable, and
those on the left were secondary situations, which however were allotted to the
Roman ambassadors, Bench, a noble Scythian, being placed above them. Onegesius
sat upon a seat on the right beside the couch of Attila, and opposite to him on
another seat were two of the monarch’s sons. The eldest of the three, who were
all children of Kreka, sat on the very couch of
Attila, not beside him, but on the furthest edge, looking on the ground out of
respect to his father. When the whole company were arranged in the several
places destined for them, a cupbearer approaching Attila handed a goblet to
him. Each guest had a particular cupbearer, whose duty it was to place himself
in rank with the others, when the king’s cupbearer advanced.
Attila, having taken the
goblet, saluted the person who occupied the first place, and he who was thus
honoured arose, nor was it lawful for him to sit down till having either
emptied, or at least tasted, his own goblet, he had returned it to his
cupbearer. In this manner Attila drank successively to the health of each of
his convives, and, when he reseated himself, they returned the salutation,
tasting the liquor after having addressed him. When this ceremony was
ended, the cupbearers retired from the hall. Tables for three, four, or more
guests, were placed behind that of Attila, where each person might help himself
from the dish before him, but must not move from the place allotted to him.
Then stepped forth the first attendant of Attila, bearing a dish filled with
meat, and after him those who distributed bread and fish to the different
tables. For the Romans and all the other guests a most sumptuous repast was
furnished upon round silver plates, but the king himself ate nothing but flesh
and that upon a wooden trencher, and showed like moderation in everything else,
for the goblets of all his guests were of gold or of silver, but his own cup
was also of wood. His dress was equally simple, being remarkable only for its
perfect cleanness; and neither the formidable sword that hung beside him, nor
the ligaments of his sandals, nor the bit of his horse was ornamented with gold
and precious stones, like those of his followers. His personal appearance is
recorded by Jordanes, extracting the description undoubtedly from Priscus, whom
he cites immediately afterwards, but the original account is lost.
His stature was short, with a
wide chest, a head of unusual magnitude, and small eyes which he had a habit of
casting to the right and left with a haughty aspect; his beard was thin with an
intermixture of grey hairs, his nose flat, and his complexion very dark,
indicating his origin, as we are told by Jordanes, but whether he means simply
that he had the peculiarities of the Hunnish race, or alludes to the
diabolical extraction which he attributes to them, does not perfectly appear.
Having ate of the fish which
was served on the first dishes, the whole company stood up, and no one might
sit down again before he had quaffed to the bottom a cup full of wine, wishing
health and prosperity to Attila. Having rendered him this honour, each
person reseated himself, and proceeded to
attack the second dish, which contained some other dainty; but after each dish
had been finished, the same ceremony of standing up, and emptying a cup of wine
to the monarch’s health was repeated.
When the daylight began to
fail, torches were lighted, and two barbarians, standing opposite to him,
recited verses which they had composed, celebrating his victories, and the
virtues which adorn a warrior. The guests appeared to listen to them with
earnest attention, some delighted with the poetry, some excited by the
recollections of the battles that were described, and others melting even into
tears, their warlike spirit having been reduced by age to languish within a
body no longer apt for military exertions.
When the songs were ended, a
Scythian fool, uttering every sort of absurdity, made the whole court laugh.
After him Zercon the Moor entered. He had
come to the court, hoping by the good offices of Edécon to recover his wife,
who, when he was a favourite with Bleda, had been given to him amongst the
barbarians, but had been left by him in Scythia, when he was sent by Attila as
a present to Aetius. He was ill-grown, short, hump-backed, with crooked legs,
so excessively flat nosed, that there was scarcely any projection over his
nostrils, and he lisped ridiculously. He had been formerly given to Aspar the
son of Ardaburius, with whom he tarried some time in Libya;
but he was afterwards taken prisoner, when the Huns made an irruption into
Thrace, and brought to the Hunnish kings. Attila hated to look on
him, but Bleda took great delight in him, on account of the absurd things which
he said, and his whimsical manner of walking and moving his body; and he kept
him in his presence both at banquets and in warfare, and in his military
expeditions he made him wear armour as a laughing-stock.
The ugly dwarf however
contrived to make his escape with some other captives, but Bleda neglecting to
pursue the others, ordered the most active search to be made after Zercon, and, when he was retaken and brought before him, he
enquired why he preferred servitude under the Romans to his household;
whereupon the Moor confessed his error, but attributed his flight entirely to
the want of a wife. Bleda laughed exceedingly, and said that he should have
one; and in fact so absolute were the Hunnish kings, that he gave him
in marriage a woman of noble birth, who had been an attendant on the queen, but
on account of some unseasonable act was no longer permitted to approach her. He
continued thus with Bleda until his death, when he was sent by Attila as a
present to Aetius, who gave him back to Aspar. Having now returned to the court
of Attila, he was disappointed in the hope of recovering his wife, because
Attila was incensed at his having run away, when he had sent him as a present;
but at this moment of festivity, by his look, his dress, and voice, and by the
confusion of the words he used, blending in a ludicrous manner the language of
the Goths and Huns with that of the Latins, he excited all the party, except
Attila, to the most inextinguishable laughter; but Attila sat motionless,
without the least change of countenance, and neither by word or sign showed any
semblance of hilarity; excepting that he pinched the cheek of his youngest son
by Kreka, named Ernas or Irnach, as he stood by him, and looked upon him with
kindness. Priscus, having expressed his surprise, at his apparent preference
for this child and neglect of the others, to a Scythian who sat by him and
understood Latin, was told by him under promise of secrecy that it had been
prophesied to Attila, that his race, which must otherwise be extinguished,
would be upheld by this boy.
The carouse was prolonged far
into the night, but the Romans, finding the potations inconveniently liberal,
thought it advisable to withdraw; and on the following morning they visited
Onegesius for the purpose of asking to be dismissed, and not kept wasting their
time to no avail. They were informed by him that Attila desired their
departure, and having left them for a short time he consulted with the select
council concerning the wishes of Attila, and digested the letters which were to
be sent to Theodosius with the assistance of certain scribes, and of Rusticius,
who has been already mentioned, a native of Mysia who had been taken
prisoner, and on account of his fluency in composition was retained in the
epistolary department at the court of the Hun. The council being ended, the
ambassadors applied to Onegesius for the liberation of the wife and children
of Sylla, who had been captured in Ratiaria.
He was not averse to set them free, but required an enormous ransom; whereupon
they strove to move his compassion, by representing their former rank and
condition, and their present misery. After having seen Attila again, he
liberated the lady for 500 pieces of gold, and sent the children as a present
to the emperor.
In the meantime the
ambassadors had received an invitation from Rekan the
wife of Attila, to sup at the house of Adam the superintendent of her
household and affairs; and having proceeded together with some of the principal
Scythians, they were received with much courtesy, and fared sumptuously. Each
of the guests paid them the singular compliment after the Hunnish fashion
of standing up from the table and giving them a cup of wine, and, after they
had drunk, embracing them and kissing them before he received back the cup. The
supper was prolonged till it was time to retire to rest, and on the following
day they were again invited to feast with Attila. The same forms were observed
as on the former day, but instead of his elder son, Obarsius or Obars his uncle on the father’s side sat on his couch.
During the repast the monarch
spoke kindly to them, desiring them to request the emperor to send a wife, as
he had promised, for Constantius the secretary who had been given to him by
Aetius. This Constantius, having previously accompanied the ambassadors whom
Attila had sent to Theodosius, had promised that he would exert himself to make
the peace durable, if the emperor would bestow a rich wife upon him, which was
granted, and the daughter of Saturninus a rich and distinguished
Greek, was promised to him. But Saturninus was afterwards
assassinated by the empress Eudocia, and the emperor was prevented by
Zeno, a man of consular dignity, from fulfilling his promise. This man had led
a great force of Isaurians to the protection of Constantinople during
the war, and, having then the command of all the forces in the East, he had
withdrawn the damsel from the custody in which she had been placed, and had
betrothed her to Rufus, one of his own dependants.
Constantius complained to the
emperor of the insult and injustice done to him, and asked to have either the
lady who had been thus abducted, or another bride of equal rank and opulence;
on which account Attila enjoined to Maximin the care of the interests of his
secretary, who undertook to give him a portion of the dowry, if he should
succeed in obtaining one of the most wealthy Greek heiresses in marriage.
Three days after, the ambassadors
of Theodosius were dismissed with gifts, and with them Attila sent, on a
mission to the emperor, Berich, who has been
mentioned as having sat above them at the banquet. He was a member of the
select council, and lord over many Scythian villages, and had been on some
former occasion received by the Romans on an embassy.
During the journey, while they
were tarrying in a certain village, a Scythian was taken, who had been sent as
a spy by the Romans into the territory of Attila, who forthwith ordered him to
be crucified. On the next day, as they were passing through another village,
they saw two men who had formerly been taken prisoners in war, and were
conducted with their hands tied behind them, having been guilty of murdering
the masters to whom they had been allotted; and these were also crucified,
their heads having been fixed to two beams furnished with hooks.
At the passage of the
Danube, Berich, who had until then been
exceedingly familiar and friendly, became very hostile and exasperated in consequence
of some futile differences between the servants. He showed the first mark of
resentment by redemanding a horse which he had given to Maximin; for Attila had
ordered all the members of the select council to offer gifts to Maximin, and a
horse had been sent by every one of them; Maximin however, wishing to get
credit for moderation, had accepted only a few and sent back the remainder. Not
content with requiring back his gift, Berich would
no longer keep company with them on the road or eat with them; but having
passed through Philippopolis and reached Adrianople, they came to an
explanation with him, and a seeming reconciliation having taken place, they
invited him to supper. On their arrival however at Constantinople it appeared
that he still nourished the same resentment, alleging as a cause some offensive
depreciation of Areobindus and Aspar by
Maximin, detracting from their achievements in war, on account of the
insignificance of the barbarians to whom they had been opposed, which he looked
upon as an insult to himself and his countrymen.
On the way they had met Bigilas returning
from Constantinople, and had informed him of the result of their mission.
When Bigilas reached the quarter where Attila was then sojourning, he
was seized by persons who had received previous directions to that effect, and
the money which he was bringing for Edécon was taken from him. Being brought
before Attila, he was asked, for what purpose he had brought so much gold; to
which he replied, that he had brought it to supply himself and his companions
with horses and other necessaries on the road, and with a view to ransom
several captives, by whose relations he had been strenuously
entreated; but Attila addressing him said, “Nevertheless, O
malignant wild beast, you shall not by your sophistry escape judgment, nor will
any pretext be sufficient to screen you from the infliction of
punishment, for the money which thou hast in store is infinitely greater than
necessary for thy expenses, or the purchase of horses and beasts of burden, or
even for the ransom of captives, all which moreover I forbad you when thou
earnest with Maximin”. Having thus said, he ordered the son of Bigilas,
who had been then for the first time brought to the Hunnish court, to
be hewn down with the sword, unless he should forthwith declare unto whom and
for what purpose he was bringing so much gold. But, when Bigilas beheld
his son about to suffer death, he began to weep and lament, and cry out that
justice demanded that he should be smitten with the sword, and not his son who
was innocent of all offence; and without further delay he confessed all the
things that had been devised between himself and Edécon, the eunuch Chrysaphius and
the emperor, again imploring that he might be executed and not his son. Attila
knowing from the previous report of Edécon that Bigilas had
spoken the truth, directed him to be kept in chains, and threatened that he
would not set him free, until his son should have been sent to
Constantinople, and should have brought back other five hundred pieces of gold
for their ransom. He therefore remained in custody, and his son was sent
together with Orestes and Eslas to Constantinople.
The purse, in which the gold
had been brought by Bigilas, was delivered to Edécon, and he was ordered
by Attila to suspend it to his neck, and thus to enter the presence of the
emperor, and having shown it to ask Chrysaphius whether he recognized
it. Eslas was ordered to state that Theodosius was indeed the son of
a noble father, and that Attila was also of noble birth, and had well sustained
the nobility inherited from his father Mundiuc,
but that Theodosius had fallen from his dignified station by submitting to pay
tribute to him, and was become his slave; and that he therefore acted ill in
devising secret snares like a wicked domestic against his superior, whom
fortune had given him for his master. That Attila would not forgive the offence
committed by him, unless the eunuch Chrysaphius were delivered up to
undergo condign punishment. The storm, which was soon to burst on Chrysaphius,
threatened him from more than one quarter; on the one side Attila demanded his
life, on the other Zeno, incensed against the minister on account of the act of
his master, who had confiscated to the public treasury the property of the
daughter of Saturninus, whom Zeno had married to his dependant Theodosius
had ordered the confiscation, being stung by the report of Maximin, who had
stated that Attila had said that the emperor ought to fulfil his promise and
give the lady to Constantius, for that no one amongst his subjects could have
power to betroth her in contravention of his authority and engagements; that if
the man who had dared to do so had not already suffered punishment for his
temerity, the emperor was a slave to his own servants, and that he would
willingly afford him assistance to emancipate him from their dominion.
The party of Chrysaphius,
however, being prevalent at the court of Theodosius, it was determined to
dispatch to Attila Anatolius master of the royal guard, who had
proposed the terms of peace which had been concluded with the Huns, and Nomus having
the title of master of the forces; both numbered amongst the patricians who had
precedence over regular military rank. Nomus was sent with Anatolius,
because he was very friendly to Chrysaphius, and Attila well-disposed to
receive him, and because he was also a man of great wealth, and was never
sparing of money, when he had any object to accomplish. They were directed to
use every endeavour to mollify Attila, and persuade him to adhere to the treaty
which had been concluded; and to promise Constantius a wife in every respect as
desirable as the lady of whom he had been disappointed; assuring him that the
daughter of Saturninus had been averse to the alliance proposed, and
was lawfully wedded to another; and that the Roman law did not authorize the
betrothment of a woman to any man without her own consent.
Chrysaphius sent a
present of gold to pacify the offended monarch. The mission of Theodosius
having crossed the Danube proceeded through the territory of the Huns as far as
the Drencon or Drecon;
for Attila, through respect for Anatolius and Nomus whom he
esteemed, advanced towards them and met them on the banks of that river, to
save them a further journey. At first he spoke to them in the most overbearing
tone, but at length their gifts and conciliatory language prevailed over his
irritated temper, and he consented to keep the peace, and gave up to the Romans
all the land he claimed to the south of the Danube, and waived his demands for
the restoration of fugitives, on condition that the Romans should pledge
themselves to receive none in future. He also set free Bigilas, having
received the 500 pounds of gold which his son had brought with the embassy; and
he further, to show his kindness towards Nomus and Anatolius,
liberated several captives without any ransom; and he dismissed the ambassadors
with presents of horses and skins of wild beasts, such as were usually worn for
ornament by the Scythian kings.
Constantius was directed to
proceed with them on their return to Constantinople, that he might obtain
without further delay, the rich heiress promised to him by the emperor; nor was
the secretary unsuccessful in this expedition, but consummated his nuptials
with the widow of Armatius, the son of Plinthas, who had been a Roman
general and consul. The lady was both rich and noble, and espoused Constantius
at the request of the emperor. It is impossible to contemplate these transactions,
of which Priscus, who was engaged in them, has left such minute particulars,
without blushing at the perfidious villainy of the Christian court, and
admiring the noble magnanimity and moderation of the pagan on this occasion;
but it was perhaps the policy of Attila to represent his own life to be so
protected by the great destinies for which he pretended to have been
foredoomed, that such attempts against it were very unimportant and certain of
ending in discomfiture; and it might be more for his interest to treat them
with scorn, than to attract attention to them by a public execution.
In the whole career of his
life he was disposed to clemency when it did not militate against the success
of his undertakings, but inexorable and remorseless where it was his interest
to disarm opposition by the terror of his exterminating vengeance. The
indiscriminate slaughter of the inhabitants of a town captured after an
obstinate defence, might deter another from resisting, but he must have been
aware that those, who had entered into a direct conspiracy against his life,
must have done so with the certain expectation of crucifixion if they should
foil; and that the punishment, if inflicted, would add nothing to the motives
which necessarily existed to deter men from engaging in so desperate an
undertaking; and that treating it lightly, as a vain and impracticable scheme
which it was not worth his while to punish, might be the best mode of deterring
the superstitious from attempting it. It is most remarkable that his personal
respect and deference for Nomus and Anatolius should have
won from him in the plenitude of his strength and at the very moment when he
must have been most irritated by the treacherous and disgusting designs of
Theodosius, concessions which would in vain have been sought for by an appeal
to arms.
The empire, however, though
relieved from the immediate fear of Attila, was threatened with internal
dissensions, and Zeno became a formidable rival to his master. The sword of
Attila, though sheathed, was ever ready for fresh contests, and he appears to
have been in the following year (AD 450) excited to new threats of
invasion, in consequence of the non-payment of the stipulated tribute by the
emperor.
Apollonius, brother to Rufus
then defunct, to whom Zeno had given the daughter of Saturninus, friendly
to Zeno upon that account, and bearing the rank of general, was dispatched to
pacify Attila; but, having crossed the Danube, he was denied access to him: for
Attila was enraged at the retention of the tribute, which he said had been
arranged and agreed upon by men better and more worthy to reign than
Theodosius, and he therefore rejected the ambassador, to show his contempt for
the emperor; but, although he refused to admit his messenger, or to enter into
any negotiation, he nevertheless ordered the gifts of Theodosius to be sent to
him, and threatened Apollonius with death if he should deny them. The
ambassador however showed a spirit worthy of the ancient fortunes of Rome, and
replied, that it did not become the Scythians to ask for what they must take
either as gifts, or by plunder; signifying that he was ready to give them if
his embassy was received, but that the Huns must take them as booty if they
thought fit to assassinate him. Attila, however, though he frequently indulged
in such threats, appears in fact to have always respected the immunity
conferred on ambassadors by the common consent of nations; and the high-minded
Roman was dismissed without having been admitted into his presence.
Theodosius did not live to
feel the effects of the anger of Attila, from whom it is probable that he
withheld the promised tribute in consequence of the exhausted state of his
finances, rather than a determination to brave his animosity. A fall from his
horse terminated the life of this inglorious and degraded emperor. His
sister Pulcheria, was proclaimed empress without opposition, although
there had been no previous instance of a female succeeding to the throne; and
the first act of her reign was the execution of Chrysaphius without a
legal trial, before the gates of Constantinople. Fearful however of swaying the
sceptre of the East without the support of a stronger arm at so critical a
period, she immediately espoused the senator Marcian, a Thracian about
sixty years of age, who had served with credit under Aspar and Ardaburius;
but, though she invested him by this political union with the imperial purple,
she compelled him in wedlock to respect the religious vow which she had made of
perpetual virginity.
As soon as Attila heard of the
accession of Marcian to the throne, he sent to demand the stipulated
tribute, but Marcian adopted a higher tone than his predecessor, and
replied that he did not hold himself bound by the humiliating concessions of
Theodosius; that he would send presents to him, if he kept the peace, but, if
he threatened war, he would oppose to him arms and men by no means inferior to
his own forces.
At this period the intrigue of
Honoria with Attila had been discovered, and had brought down upon her the
indignation and vengeance of either empire. The extract, which is extant from
the history of Priscus, relating to this subject, refers to a previous relation
of the circumstances which had taken place, but, that being lost, their
particulars can only be imperfectly collected or surmised from subsequent
allusions. At the voluptuous court of Ravenna, that princess celebrated for her
beauty and her incontinence, while she continued still under the guardianship
of Placidia her mother and her brother Valentinian, in the very
spring of her youth, sixteen years before this period, had been found pregnant
by her chamberlain Eugenius, and had been disgracefully sent from thence to
Constantinople, to be immured in the secluded chambers of Pulcheria the
sister of Theodosius, who had made a vow of singleness, and dwelt in a sworn
society of holy virgins. Weary of the monotonous and hopeless mode of life in
which her youth was thus passing away, under the tutelage of her harsh and
sanctified relation, she had probably at a much earlier period, made a tender
to Attila of her hand and pretensions to the throne of Rome, and that offer, to
which on his first accession to the throne, he had paid little attention, had
been renewed a little before this period, when his matured designs against the
empire rendered such an alliance important, as a ground whereon to rest his
claims.
The message was carried to
Attila by an eunuch dispatched by the princess secretly from Constantinople
with a letter and a ring, which he was instructed to deliver, but the exact
date of the occurrence is not recorded. At the moment of the accession of Marcian to
the throne, the correspondence of Honoria with the Hun was by some accident
brought to light. The unfortunate and guilty princess was regarded with
abhorrence by the Christians, and previously to her being sent back to Italy
and placed in strict confinement at Ravenna, she was compelled to give her hand
in marriage to some person who was selected for that purpose, in order to
render her union with Attila unlawful and impracticable. The records are lost
which would have informed us who and what the bridegroom was, but it is pretty
evident that the ceremony only was performed, and that the marriage was not
consummated; and as it was certainly not intended that she should ever avail
herself of the privileges of a married woman, the husband selected for her was
probably an obscure and perhaps a blind old man, for the extinction of the eyes
was the usual mode of disqualifying a man to wear the imperial purple of
Constantinople.
In the passage of Priscus
which is preserved, and which evidently refers to a detailed account of the
transactions, he says that when the things which had been done concerning her
were reported to Attila, he immediately sent ambassadors to Valentinian emperor
of the West, to assert that Honoria had been guilty of no unbecoming conduct,
inasmuch as he had entered into an engagement to marry her, and that he would
take up arms in her cause, unless she were admitted to hold the sceptre of the
empire. The Romans answered that it was not possible for him to espouse
Honoria, who had been given to another man, and that she had no right to the
throne, for the Roman dynasty consisted of a succession of males, and not of
females: an answer which singularly contrasts with the contemporaneous and
undisputed elevation of Pulcheria to the sister throne of Byzantium,
occasioned perhaps by some intrigues for the downfall of Chrysaphius.
The rejection of the demands
of Attila by Marcian had been softened by presents, and probably the
refusal of Honoria’s hand was accompanied by like appeasement. According to the
Alexandrine or Paschal chronicle, and to John of Antioch, surnamed Malellas, Attila sent to either emperor a Gothic messenger,
saying, “My lord and yours commands you through me to make ready your palace
for his reception”. Malellas mentions
Theodosius, who was dead at this time; but the account is probably referable to
the simultaneous summons which he sent to Constantinople and Rome immediately
after the death of that emperor.
The views of Attila extended
to the subjugation of the Medes and Persians, the Eastern and Western empires,
and the Gothic and Franc kingdoms in France and Spain, which would have left
him without a rival between the boundaries of China, or at least of the
Tartars, and the Atlantic ocean : but he was awhile doubtful against which of
those powers he should first turn his arms. Genseric the formidable king
of the Vandals, who had wrested from Rome her African possessions, excited him
to attack Theodoric king of the Visigoths, whose capital was Tolosa, the modern Toulouse. The daughter of Theodoric
had been married to Hunneric the son of
the Vandal monarch, who was so savage in his disposition, and inhuman even
towards his own offspring, that on a bare suspicion that she had mixed poison
for him, he cut off her nostrils and sent her back mutilated to her
father. Fearing therefore the vengeance of Theodoric, he exerted himself
by negotiation and ample presents to draw upon his antagonist the overwhelming
armies of the Hun. The subsidy offered by Genseric probably
determined Attila to commence his operations by the subjugation of Gaul, where
he would have to attack the Francs of Meroveus, the Alans under Sangiban, the Gallic empire of Theodoric extending from
his capital Tolosa into Spain, and the
Roman province which was defended by the flower of the Roman
army under the celebrated Aetius. The pretext for this invasion was
the restitution of Alberon, the son and rightful
heir of Clodion lately deceased, to the throne of his father in the north of
France, from whence he had been expelled by the arts of the bastard Meroveus.
Previous to his undertaking this memorable expedition, Attila held a plenary
court or comitia in Thuringia at Erfurt, (for Eisenach, which has been named as
the place where they were held, is perhaps a town of later origin) probably for
the especial purpose of hearing the plaint of Basina the widow of Clodion, who
had fled with her sons to the court of her brother Basinus in
Thuringia.
Eudoxius, a physician, had been drawn
into a faction of rebels in Gaul, who, being pushed to extremities by the
extortions of the nobles and clergy, had first revolted in the reign of
Diocletian under the denomination of Bagauds,
and had since made head under the guidance of Tibato against
the Roman authority. They were everywhere defeated and severely handled,
and Eudoxius was the only man of importance
amongst the movers of that sedition who escaped, and he took refuge at
the Hunnish court. He is described as a bad, but able, man; and from
him it is supposed that Attila received much information concerning the actual
state of Gaul, and encouragement to attempt its invasion. It is observable,
that the organization of the faction called Bagauds seems
to have been the only popular attempt to vindicate civil rights under the
domination of the Western emperors.
Meroveus, against whom the
arms of Attila were now directed, was the illegitimate son of Clodion, and his
master of the horse. The dynasty of the Marcomirians ended
with Clodion the son of Pharamond and
grandson of Marcomir; and Meroveus, a traitor,
an usurper, and alien to the blood royal, being illegitimate, founded a new
dynasty. Fredegarius, writing in 641, says that the mother of Meroveus was
bathing on the coast and was attacked by a sea-monster, who became the father
of Meroveus. This fable has evident relation to his illegitimacy. The writer
who there cites Fredegarius from Gregory of Tours considers
the Marobudos or Maroboduus who
lived in the time of Augustus and Tiberius to have been an earlier Meroveus,
the former name being the Augustan, the latter the recent Gallo-Latin version
of the Teutonic name Maerwu or Merwu. He also shows that the Merovingian kings called
themselves by that title, (which makes it appear that they affected to be a new
dynasty, and not inheritors from Clodion) by authorities dating AD 641
as above, AD 645 and 720, the last being thirty years before
the restoration of the rightful heirs by the elevation of Pepin.
Mezeray states that Clodion left
three sons (the eldest having died) Alberon, Regnault, and Rangcaire, who
were too young to reign, and therefore the states elected Meroveus his bastard
son. He boasts of his exploits in the Catalaunian victory,
of which he attributes the principal honour to him, but entirely suppresses the
cause of that war, which was to re-establish the rightful king whom he had
expelled: and he adds incorrectly that, when firmly fixed in Gaul, he went to
succour the sons of Clodion and establish them in Hainault, Brabant, and Namur;
saying that on his return from that expedition he died in the tenth year of his
reign in 458.
The historian Priscus, who was
at the court of Attila on an embassy in 448, when Clodion was alive or on the
point of death, never saw Alberon the
rightful heir, who had not at that time had recourse to the Huns. At some
antecedent period not ascertained, he had however seen Meroveus on an embassy
at Rome, a beardless youth with long yellow hair falling over his shoulders,
and he says that Aetius, having adopted him as his son and loaded him with
gifts, despatched him to the emperor to acquire his friendship and enjoy his
society in martial exercises. There is some obscurity however in the
passage, for the word presbenúmenos, acting
the part of a legate, must apply to a mission from the Francs, and could
not refer to his visit at the court of Valentinian under the
recommendation of the Roman general Aetius.
It seems that Priscus
meant that Meroveus was at Rome as an ambassador when he saw him, and was at
some subsequent period sent by Aetius to carouse with Valentinian, probably
at Ravenna.
Looking to the subtle
character and constant double dealing of Aetius, it can scarcely be doubted,
that when he adopted Meroveus and sent him to Valentinian, he had intended to
sow future dissensions in the family of Clodion, and to make use of Meroveus
for the furtherance of his own schemes, whether against the inheritance of the
Franc king or against the throne of Valentinian, or, as is most probable,
against both: and, in directing him to be presented to the emperor as the son
of Clodion, with a view to the acquisition of his society and friendship, it is
not likely that either Aetius or Meroveus should have put forward his
illegitimacy; nor was it probable that Priscus, a Greek sophist of
Constantinople, accidentally seeing this beardless young Franc at Rome, should
have been informed at the time of his spurious birth. When Meroveus seized the
throne and expelled Alberon who fled to the
Huns, it was a matter of notoriety to all Europe that Alberon was
the rightful heir and eldest son of Clodion, and if Priscus was not aware of
the illegitimacy of Meroveus, he must have concluded that he was younger than
him to whom the inheritance appertained. His silence as to the name of the
banished king is proof that he had not very ample information concerning the
transaction, and perhaps only knew the little which he states; and, living at
Constantinople far from the scene of action, he may have fallen very naturally
into an error on the point of seniority. If Meroveus had succeeded to the
throne of his lawful father, though to the prejudice of an elder brother, his
accession would not have been that of a new dynasty, and, instead of being
called Merovingian kings, he and his descendants would from the first have been
named after Pharamond the sire or Marcomir the grandsire of Clodion.
The brief expression therefore
of Priscus, that the elder son of Clodion sought the assistance of the Huns,
the younger that of Aetius, is insufficient to outweigh the far greater
probability of the fact as related by other writers, that Meroveus was in fact
the oldest, though not the legitimate, son of Clodion. The lineal genealogy
runs thus:— 1. Marcomir.—2. Pharamond.—3. Clodion who died 448.—4. Alberon, d.491.—5. Wambert,
d. 529—6. Ambert, d. 570. (collateral Wambert 2.)—7. Arnold, d. 601.—8. St. Arnulf, d.
641.—9. Ansegisus, d. 685.— 10. Pepin, d.
714.—11. Charles Martell, d. 741.—12. Pepin, d. 768.—13. Charlemagne, and so
on, till the occupation of the throne by Hugh Capet in 987, when the Marcomirian line became extinct.
John Bertels abbot
of Epternach collected all the traditions
and chronicles he could find in the convents of Luxemberg and
Ardennes. He states that Clodion Capillatus married
Basina daughter of Widelph duke of the
Thuringians, probably sister to Basinus who
was duke when Attila was in Thuringia. She bore him four sons, Phrison, Alberon or
Auberon, Reginald, and Rauchas. Phrison died very young of an arrow-shot, and the
grief of that loss hastened the death of his father. Clodion by his will
appointed his bastard son Meroveus, who was his master of the horse, to be
regent and guardian of his sons.
For some years he acted with
fidelity, but when the Roman arms were pressing on the Francs, he tendered his
resignation, declining the responsibility of administering the affairs of
another person in such a crisis, and knowing that his authority and skill were
necessary at the moment. The result was conformable to his expectations. The
Francs proclaimed him king, and he took the crown, whereupon queen Basina sent
her three sons for safety to Thuringia. Some years afterwards Alberon took counsel how he should recover his rights
and destroy Meroveus and his progeny; Meroveus at the same time meditating the
like against him and his kindred.
With these views Alberon married Argotta daughter
of Theodemir king of the Goths, formed a strict alliance with the
Goths, Vandals, Bohems, and Ostrogoths, and by
their aid recovered possession of Arduenna,
Lower Alsatia, Brabantia, Cameracum, and Turnacum, and
obtained the title of Rex Cameracensis. His
chief residence however was in the Nemus Carbonarium, a part of the forest of Ardennes, where he
sacrificed to idols and fortified Mons Hannoniae (Mons
in Hainault), as an asylum against the malice of Meroveus. Argotta bore him Wambert,
who married a daughter of the emperor Zeno.
A lieutenant under Clovis
conquered Brabant and Flanders about the year 492, and took king Alberon and his two brothers prisoners, whom the
French king barbarously slew with his own hand, as soon as they were brought
into his presence. He afterwards affected remorse, and endeavoured to
allure Wambert into his power, in order to
cut off the last remnant of Clodion’s legitimate heirs. Wambert was however too wary, and placed his
sons Wambert and Anselbert (or Ambert), under the safeguard of Theodoric king of Italy and
the emperor Zeno who made them senators of the Eastern empire.
About AD 520 Wambert recovered Ardennes and Hainault, to which
possessions the senator Wambert the second
succeeded on his death in 528, by favour of Childebert king of Paris,
who also gave Anselbert the marquisate of
Moselle and Scheld, of which the seat of
government was on the latter river. The senator Wambert,
who espoused St. Clotilda daughter of Almeric king
of Italy, was succeeded by a third Wambert his
son.
Such is the statement of Bertels. The only inaccuracy, which appears on the face of
it, is that the events, which took place between the death of Clodion in 448,
and the flight of Alberon to the Huns
previous to Attila’s invasion of Gaul in 451, a space of only three years,
appear to be extended over a longer, though indefinite, period. With this
limitation, that Meroveus could not have continued faithful above two years,
and that Alberon immediately sought
assistance to recover his rights, there is no reason to doubt that the account
of Bertels is substantially
correct. He was unacquainted with the writings of Priscus, and appears to
have known nothing about Attila and his Huns; yet, except what relates to the
inferior age of Meroveus, he affords collateral evidence from quite different
sources, which is confirmed by the account of the Greek sophist; for it is
evident that the Goths, with whom Bertels states Alberon to have made alliance, were the great
confederacy of nations headed by Attila and brought by him on the occasion of
the disputed succession of Clodion into the celebrated field of Châlons.
The Thuringian writers of the
middle ages make mention of the movements of Attila, and state that he was in
Thuringia and at Eisenach. The Danish writer, professor Suhm, referring to the Thuringian authors, states his
disbelief of the existence of Eisenach in the days of Attila, and thinks that
Erfurt, anciently called Bicurgium, was the
place intended. Sidonius Apollinaris mentions Toringus (the Thuringian) amongst the people who
invaded Belgium under the command of Attila. German histories unknown to Bertelius and only seen in MS. by Lazius, affirm that Attila held a diet of his kings and
dukes in Thuringia before he set out to invade Gaul. Putting these concurrent
accounts together, it seems that Attila held a diet in Thuringia, where he
heard the plaint of queen Basina and her sons, and proceeded to act thereupon.
Henning in his Universal Genealogy gives the following statement: Clodio crinitus had,
by …, Meroveus, who married Verica daughter of Guntraum king
of Sweden, and died AD 458, and by Basina daughter of Widelph king of Thuringia Albero or Alberic from whom the Carolingians are
descended, Rauches or Roches lord of Cambray, and Reginald king of the Eburi who
married Wamberga daughter of Alaric the
first king of the Visigoths in Spain. Albero warred
under Attila, hoping to recover the sceptre of his father, of which his brother
Meroveus had taken forcible possession. Being defeated he retreated to his own
people, (meaning his Belgic or Cameracan subjects)
being careful not to fall into the hands of Meroveus, and died about 491.
Brother James of Guise relates
that Clodion king of the Francs had by his wife, daughter of the king of Austrien (Austracia)
and Toringien, four sons. He made a certain
Meroveus his master of the horse. Soon after, besieging Soissons, he lost his
eldest son, and, being much afflicted, died also. Previously he assembled his
nobles, and assigned to his wife and each of his three remaining sons their
portions, and gave them into the keeping of Meroveus. Meroveus enlarged the
kingdom by conquest; afterwards, some enemies invading it, he said to the
people, “I am not your king, and I will no longer be the guardian, for I have
already incurred more cost than I can pay; therefore provide for the country as
you will”. Consequently the Francs raised him to the throne. He straightway
summoned all the soldiers that were on furlough, and drove out the enemy. The
widow of Clodion, with two of her sons, fled to Thuringia and Austrasia.
When big enough, they redemanded the kingdom, and had some combats with
Meroveus. By the assistance of the Huns, Goths, Ostrogoths, Armoricans,
Saxons, and many others, they won back from Meroveus the lands their father had
assigned them, beginning from Austrasia to the Alsatic mountains, and from the south of Burgundy to
the Rhine, and westward to Rheims, Laon, Cambray, and Tournay, and on the north to the ocean, which kingdom
was molested by Meroveus and many others. From Clodion’s three sons, Aubron, Regnauld, and Rauchaure, the rulers of Hainault, Loraine, Brabant, and
Namur, took their origin. Clodion was buried at Cambray in 448 according to the rites of the “Sarrazins”. He
adds that many opinions existed touching Meroveus.
According to Sigebert he
was the son of Clodion; Andreas Marcianensis styled
him his kinsman (son afin, meaning affinis); l’histoire des
Francois states that he was not his son, but nevertheless descended
from the Trojans, and that he was a useful king, from whom were derived the
Francs called Merovingians, who held the kingdom against the heirs of
Clodion. Almericus states that after Bleda’s death, the widow of Clodion made alliance with
the Huns and Ostrogoths, gave them a part of her land, and waged war against
Meroveus. Brother James continues to say that in 453 (he should have said 451)
Attila, accompanied by Walamir king of the
Ostrogoths, and Arderic king of the Gepidae,
and many of their dependants from the quarter of the wind aquilon, left Pannonia and invaded Gaul. Alberic or Aubron,
second son of Clodion, was a man of such subtlety, knowledge, activity, and
prowess, that he often worsted the Merovingians, who usurped and held his
country.
He commonly sojourned in the
woods, and sacrificed to Gods and Goddesses, and re-established the pagan worship
in his territories, for he thought the Gods in whom he trusted would give him
back his kingdom; because Mars and Jove had once appeared to him, and declared
that to himself, or to his lineage, all the dominions of his father should be
restored. Thereupon he began assiduously to rebuild the decayed cities and
castles, Strasburg which was dismantled of walls, Thulle,
Espinal, Mereasse, and the leaden baths at
Espinal; in the forest of Dogieuse a castle
and temples; near the Alsatic mountains and
forests the same; in the centre of his kingdom in Ardenne,
the altar, temple, and castle of Namur; the temple of Mercury, now
chateau Sanson, and other impregnable forts; in
the forêt Carboniere many,
such as Chateaulieu, where on the mount he built
a square tower, and called it from himself Aubron.
On the same mount, near the
town, he dug a well which is still there. He built a temple of Minerva on a
hill, now mount St. Audebert, but then mount
Auberon, but which the Christians now call La Houppe Auberon;
in the forest of Dicongue a temple of the
idol, and called it by his own name. By the aid of the Saxons he beat the
Merovingians in the forêt Carbonière near Chateaulieu,
now called Monts en Haynau, and he named the spot Merowinge,
and the inhabitants now call it Meuwin. He beat
them again at a place called Mirewault, and the
Merovingians said the Gods of the forest gave him victory, and thereupon
remained a long time at peace with him. They styled him enchanteur of feu. He had several
children; the eldest Waubert, who was king of
the Austrasians, and inherited all his father’s
lands and defended them valiantly. Aubron died
old, and was buried with Sarrazin rites in
the mount called La Houppe Auberon, upon
which great trees are now planted.
Clovis invaded the lands of
the king of Cambray called Rauchaire,
brother of Auberon, and at last he and his brothers Richier and Regnault, were betrayed into his power, and slain by his
own hand; and he persecuted their connections. Here is an evident blunder, in
the calling Rauchaire instead of Auberon,
king of Cambray, and then to make up the number,
repeating the name Rauchaire with a
difference of orthography, as Richier, and thus
making five sons of Basina, instead of four, the eldest having been killed at
the siege of Soissons in the life-time of Clodion.
The history thus given
contains ample confirmation to the relation of Bertels,
with a similar protraction of the period between the death of Clodion, and the
attempt of Alberon to recover his throne,
which is in some degree accounted for by placing in 453 the Hunnish invasion,
which actually took place in 451. That Meroveus did not pretend to be the
legitimate son of Clodion, is evident from the expression of Gregory Tours, who
flourished in the next century, and might even hate conversed with persons who
had seen Meroveus, and merely says that he was “as some assert, of the stock of
Clodion”.
No reliance can be placed on
the relation of any French writer of later times, for, without citing any
satisfactory authorities, they all avoid the true point, and falsify the
history, so strangely does nationality and a desire to make out the dynasty of
their kings to have been legitimate appear to have warped and prejudiced their
understandings; in the same manner that we find the Danish historians when they
meet with the name of Attila king of the Huns, in their most ancient legends of
events, which they themselves refer to the exact period of his Gallic invasion,
shutting their eyes against the true history, and saying that this Attila was a
petty king over some Huns in Groningen, because they will not acknowledge that
which Priscus, who was personally acquainted with Attila, asserts, that his
dominion extended to the Baltic or islands of the ocean, and consequently that
he was, as appears also from the title he assumed, king of the Danes.
That Meroveus was received at
Rome as the son of Clodion, is clear by the testimony of Priscus; that he was
illegitimate and older than the rightful heir, is established by the local
chronicles and the greater probability of the fact. Whether Alberon was put to death as well as his brothers by
Clovis, or fell in the previous battle, and was buried in the Houppe d’ Aubron,
appears to be a matter of some doubt, which perhaps might be solved at this
day, by opening the supposed place of his interment; but it is not improbable
that his name affixed to that mount, as a monumental cenotaph, may have given
birth to the notion that he was buried there, and occasioned the omission of
his name in some of the accounts of the atrocious act of Clovis, especially as
there is no other tradition of the manner of his death, though so many
particulars of his life are recorded.
When Attila had determined to
march his army into Gaul, he exerted himself to sow disunion between the
Visigoths and Romans. He sent ambassadors to Valentinian to assure him in a
letter full of blandishment that he had no hostile intentions against the Roman
power in that country, but was marching against Theodoric, and requested that
the Romans would not take part against him. To Theodoric he wrote at the same
time, exhorting him to detach himself from his alliance with the Romans, and to
remember the wars which they had lately stirred up against him. Thereupon the
emperor wrote to Theodoric urging him to act in union with him against the
common enemy, “who wished to reduce the whole world to slavery; who sought no
pretext for invasion, but held whatever his arm could execute to be just and
right; who grasped at everything within his compass, and satiated his
licentiousness with excess of pride”. He represented to the Visigoth that he
ruled over a limb of the Roman empire, and exhorted him for his own security to
unite with the Romans in defending their common interests.
Theodoric replied, “Ye have
your wish; ye have made Attila and me enemies. We will encounter him,
whithersoever he shall call us, and, although he may be inflated by diverse
victories over proud nations, haughty as he is, the Goths will know how to
contend with him. I call no warfare grievous, except that which its cause
renders weak, for he, on whom majesty has smiled, has no reverse to fear”.
The chiefs of the Gothic court
applauded this spirited answer, of which however the last words do not convey
any very definite meaning. The people shouted and followed him, and the
Visigoths were animated by an ardent desire to measure their strength with the
conqueror of so many nations.
In the spring of 451 Attila
put his immense army in motion to effect the invasion of Gaul. Many of the
nations that marched under him are enumerated by Sidonius; the Neuri, who are stated by Ammianus Marcellinus to have dwelt
amongst the Alans in their former situations; the Hoedi,
whom Valesius asserts to have been a tribe
of Huns; the Gepides, Ostrogoths, Alans, Bastarnae, Turcilingi, Scirri, Heruli, Rugi, Bellonoti, Sarmatae, Geloni, Scevi, Burgundiones,
Quadi, Marcomanni, Savienses or Suavi, Toringi, (Thuringians)
the Franks who bordered on the river Vierus, and
the Bructeri, who were considered to be allied
to the Francs in blood. Aventhius mentions
also the Boii, Suevi, and Alemanni under king Gibuld.
In Henning’s Genealogies it is said that a hundred nations marched under
Attila. This immense army pursued its course south of the Danube, and
passed through Noricum and the northern part of Rhaetia, that is to say the
southern parts of Bavaria and Swabia. His northern vassals the Rugians, Quadi, Marcomanni, Thuringians, and other tribes
followed, it seems, a more northerly course, having directions to form a
junction with him on the Rhine.
Near the lake of Constance he
was probably opposed by and routed a portion of the Burgundians, who were in
the interest of Aetius, and attempted to prevent him from passing the
Rhine. Aventinus says that he slew on that occasion their kings Gundaric and Sigismund, which does not appear to be
correct, at least with respect to Gundaric.
The forests of Germany, almost
indiscriminately called Hercynian, furnished him with timber to construct
vessels or rafts, on which the immense multitude, which constituted his army,
was transported across the Rhine. Strasburg probably first felt the effects of
his fury, and was levelled to the ground. At a later period, a figure of Attila
is said to have been placed over the gate of that town. Some writers have
asserted, that Metz (Divodurum Mediomatricorum) was the first place that he destroyed;
thither he certainly proceeded and burnt the town, butchering its inhabitants,
and the very priests at the altars. His march was directed towards the Belgian
territory, and, having sacked Treves on his route, he overwhelmed the north of
France, destroying whatever resisted him. Whether Tongres and
Maastricht were destroyed before or after the battle of Chalons, is not certain. No effectual resistance could be
offered to him by the Francs under Meroveus, and Alberon was
speedily reinstated in the greater part of the kingdom of Clodion.
At this time Aetius, having
expected that Theodoric would have made head against Attila, and probably
wishing that they might weaken each other by the collision, his own forces
remaining untouched, while Attila was overrunning all Belgium, had scarcely
crossed the Alps, leading with him a small and very inefficient force. But
intelligence was brought to him of the unexampled successes of Attila, and that
the Visigoths, appearing to despise the Huns, whom they had formerly beaten
when subsidized by Litorius, were awaiting in
their own territory the attack of the invader, if he should think fit to bear
down upon them.
The active mind of Aetius was
equal to the arduous position in which he stood. He immediately
dispatched Avitus to urge Theodoric to draw out his force without delay
and form a junction with him. His exertions were great and rapid to collect a
force sufficient to make head against the conqueror, who was already preparing
to fall upon the south of France. Theodoric, accompanied by his two eldest
sons Torismond and Theodoric, took the
field, having ordered his four younger sons to remain at Tolosa, to which he himself was not destined to return. The
wonderful genius and activity of Aetius, when it suited his views to bestir
himself, was never more conspicuous than on this occasion, when he speedily
brought together a force equal to that of the Hun. In the allied army the
Visigoths of Theodoric, the Alans of king Sangiban,
the Francs of Meroveus, Sarmatians, Armoricans, Burgundians, Saxons, Litiarii, Riparioli, and
several other German and Celtic nations were united with the Romans. Although
the affairs of Attila are conspicuous in the Northern legends, it is observable
that, in the vast concourse of tribes pouring into France from every quarter of
Europe, no mention is made by any writer of Danes, for this simple reason that
there was in truth no such nation at that period, other than the Dacians from
the Danube, notwithstanding the assertions of Danish historians.
The attack of Paris did not
fall within the line of Attila’s operations, and the Christians subsequently
attributed the salvation of that city to the merits of St. Genevieve; but Paris
was not then a great metropolis. The late king Clodion had had his principal
seat at Dispargum, supposed by some to have been
Louvain, but probably Duysberg on the right
bank of the Rhine. It was apparently one of the effects of Attila’s invasion,
by detaching Cambray, Hainault, and the rest of the
Belgic provinces from the kingdom of Meroveus, to make Paris become the seat of
his government. Tolosa, the flourishing capital
of Theodoric the Visigoth, was an object of superior importance to Attila. He
had already, in pursuance of his intentions, reduced again under the
authority of Alberon the greater part
of the Belgic portion of the kingdom of the Francs; and his promises to make a
powerful diversion in favour of Genseric king of the Vandals in
Africa, and his own ambitious views, pointed to the south of France. His
main force was therefore directed against Orleans; from whence, if he had
been successful, he would have undoubtedly continued f his victorious course
towards the Gothic metropolis, or Arelas the
principal city of the Roman province.
We know not to whom the
military defence of Orleans was entrusted. Sangiban,
king of the Alans, who occupied the neighbourhood of the Loire, was at that
time in Orleans, but he does not appear to have had the command of the
garrison. In the history of these times, whether relating to the Gallic war, or
the invasion of Italy, we hear more of the bishop of the place, who seems
generally to have taken upon himself the chief conduct of affairs, than of any
military prefect; partly, perhaps, because the details which have reached us
have been chiefly transmitted through ecclesiastics. To the bishop, therefore,
has been generally attributed both the vigour that defended, and the treason
that surrendered to the pagan, the fortresses of the Roman empire; the traitors
and the martyrs seem to have found a place equally in the calendar of saints. Anianus, since called St. Aignan,
held the see of Orleans, when the immense force of Attila proceeded to invest
it. He made every disposition for a stout defence, encouraged the people and
the garrison to put their confidence in God, without relaxing their efforts,
and despatched a trusty messenger to Aetius, urging him to advance immediately
to his relief.
The operations of the Hun were
perhaps impeded for a few days by unseasonable weather, but his engines
battered the town with irresistible force, and it seemed as if nothing but the
direct interposition of Providence could save the town and its inhabitants from
the terrible chastisement, which Attila never failed to inflict upon those who
presumed to defend themselves. Bishop Anian prayed,
and prayed, and prayed; but the walls were shaken by the force of the battering
rams, the garrison were driven from the battlements by the Hunnish archery, and
the battlements themselves crumbled under the repeated shocks of the blocks of
stone that were hurled by the machines of the besiegers. He sent his attendant
to look out and report whether he saw anything in the distance. The answer was,
no. Again he sent him, and nothing was distinguishable.
A third time, and he reported,
like the messenger of Elijah, that a little cloud was rising on the plain. The
bishop shouted to the people, that it was the aid of God, and throughout the
whole town there was a cry of the aid of God, mingled with the shrieks of
women; for at that very instant the Huns were scaling the breach and actually
in the town, and in a few moments the city would have been a blazing and bloody
example of barbarian vengeance. But Attila had seen the little cloud that was
advancing in the distance, and recognized the dust that was raised by the rapid
advance of the Gothic cavalry, which formed the van of the army of Aetius.
Instantly he saw the danger of exposing his troops to the attack of a powerful
enemy under that consummate general, amidst the disorganization which must
accompany the sack of a populous city, which was on the point of being
delivered up to plunder; and at the very instant when Orleans was taken, and
the work of violation and massacre was on the point of commencing, the
successful assailants were astonished by the signal for a retreat.
The deliverance was attributed
by the Christians to the direct interposition of Providence, obtained by the
faith and supplications of their priest.
Attila did not think it
expedient to await the attack of Aetius before the walls of a hostile town,
and, having learned the strength of the allied army, he retreated to the great
plains of Champagne which took their name from Catalaunum,
the modern Châlons upon Marne, and by that movement he probably fell back upon
his own resources and concentrated his forces, for it is not likely that the
whole of his enormous army should have been in the lines before Orleans. He
knew that he had to contend with a general of great skill, a king of approved
valour, and an army equal to his own in numbers and warlike habits.
Upon the plain of Châlons was
then to be decided the fate of Europe; the combatants there assembled had been
drawn together from the immense tract of country which reaches from the straits
of Gibraltar to the Caspian sea. It is impossible in our days to approach the
consideration of this contest without bringing to mind that nearly fourteen
centuries after this great event, the armies of the same immeasurable line of
territory were to be again assembled on the same plain, and under circumstances
very similar, for the overthrow of the only individual who has arisen since
that day, resembling Attila in his character, in his success, in his mode of
acting and his views of universal dominion; that both were defeated, and both
came forth again to be the terror of Europe in one more final campaign.
On his retrograde march
towards Châlons, a circumstance is said to have occurred, which, if it was not,
as may be suspected, a politic contrivance of his own, was at least adroitly
put forward by Attila, for the purpose of increasing the terror of his name, an
object of peculiar importance at the moment of a retreat.
A Christian hermit
was brought to him, who had been urgent for admittance to his presence,
and addressed him at length, assuring him that God, on account of the iniquities
of his people, which he fully detailed, placed the sword in his hand, which,
when they should have returned to a sound state, he would resume and give to
another. He said to him “You are the scourge of God, for the chastisement of
the Christians”, and added that he would be unsuccessful in the battle he was
about to fight, but that the kingdom would not pass out of his hands.
From this moment Attila
appears to have assumed the title of Scourge of God, which accorded with his
views of oversetting the Christian religion, and establishing his own right to
universal dominion upon the grounds of a heavenly delegation. He had long
pretended to be the holder of that sword, which was regarded either as the God
itself, or the symbol of the principal God which the Scythian nations
worshipped.
The title which he now
assumed, appears to have furnished a pretext to insincere Christians, under the
specious garb of humility and resignation to the chastisement of the Almighty,
to betray into his hands the places which they should have defended; and, in an
age so prone to superstition, it is not unlikely that it may have influenced
many devout Christians to yield to him without offering any resistance. Attila,
having heard the prediction of the hermit, consulted his own soothsayers, of
whom there was always a multitude with his army.
According to their custom,
they inspected the entrails of cattle, and certain veins which were
distinguished upon the bones after they had been scraped, and after due
deliberation they announced to him an unfavourable issue of the battle, but
consoled him by the assurance that the principal leader of his enemies would
perish in the engagement.
Attila is said to have
understood that the prediction pointed to Aetius, whose loss would have been
irreparable to the Romans. He therefore determined to give battle to the allies
at a late hour of the day, that he might reap the advantage awarded to him by
the prophecy with as little loss as possible, and that the approach of night
might screen his army from the reverse which he had reason to expect. He is
said to have proposed a truce which was refused by Aetius. It is not improbable
that the predictions of his soothsayers may have caused him to hesitate, and
he was perhaps desirous of a few more days to collect the forces which he might
have left in Belgium.
In the night preceding the
great battle, an important collision took place between 90,000 of the Francs on
the side of the Romans, and of the Gepidae who formed an important
part of the Hunnish army, and many on both sides had
fallen. Whatever hesitation Attila might have felt in the first instance,
he acted with his usual decision when the hour arrived, which was to decide the
fate of Western Europe. The hostile armies lay close to each other on an
extensive plain, which stretched 150,000 paces in length, and above
100,000 in breadth.
The forces of Attila were on
the left, the Romans on the right of a sloping hill, which either army was
desirous of occupying on account of the advantage of the position. Aetius
commanded the left wing of the allies, with the troops that were in the service
of the emperor. Theodoric with his Goths formed the right, and Sangiban with his Alans was placed in the centre, so
surrounded as to prevent his withdrawing himself, since he was regarded with
suspicion, and known to be fearful of incurring the vengeance of Attila, and he
was probably supported by the Francs.
Attila with his Huns,
surrounded by a bodyguard of chosen troops, commanded in the centre of his
army. His wings were composed of various subject nations, led by their
several kings, amongst whom the Ostrogothic brothers Walamir, Theodemir,
and Widimir, were conspicuous, distinguished not
only by their valour, but by the nobility of their descent, being joint-heirs
of the illustrious race of the Amali.
But the most renowned amongst
them was Arderic, who led into the field an
innumerable force of Gepidae, and commanded the right wing. Attila placed
the greatest confidence in his fidelity, and relied much upon his advice. He
shared the favour of the Hun with Walamir, who
was the eldest and principal king of the Ostrogoths, and highly valued for his
sagacity. Walamir commanded the left wing
which was opposed to Theodoric. But Attila was the soul of his army; the
numberless kings, who served under his orders, attended like satellites to his
nod, observed the least motion of his eye, and were ever prompt to execute his
commands.
The battle commenced with a
struggle for the possession of the higher ground, which was as yet unoccupied.
Attila directed his troops to advance to its summit, but Aetius had anticipated
his movement, and, having gained possession of it, by the advantage of the
ground easily routed the Huns who were advancing, and drove them down the hill.
Attila quickly rallied the Huns, and encouraged them by a harangue, in which he
said that he should think it a vain thing to inspirit them by words, as if they
were ignorant of their duty, and novices in war, after having vanquished so
many nations, and actually subdued the world, if they did not suffer what they
had won to be wrested from them. A new leader might resort to, and an
inexperienced army might require, such exhortations; but it neither became them
to hear, nor him to address to them, words of trite and common encouragement;
for to what had they been habituated, if not to warfare? what could be sweeter
to brave men than vengeance, the greatest of the gifts of nature?
“Let us therefore”, he said,
“attack the enemy briskly. The assailants are always the stoutest-hearted.
Despise the junction of separate nations; to seek alliances betrays
weakness. See even now, before the attack, the enemy are panic-stricken;
they seek the elevated places, they take possession of the mounds, and,
repenting of their hardihood, they are already desirous of finding
fortifications in the open plain. The lightness of the Roman arms is known
to you; I will not say that they are overpowered by the first wounds, but by
the very dust. While they are assembling in line and locking their shields, do
you fight after your own manner with excellent spirit, and despising their
array, attack the Alans, overwhelm the Visigoths. We must win the repose of victory
by destroying the sinews of war; the limbs drop, when the nerves are cut
through, and a body cannot stand when the bones are taken from it. Huns,
let your spirits rise; put forth all your skill and all your prowess. Let
him, who is wounded, demand of his comrade the death of his
antagonist; let him, who is untouched, satiate himself with the
slaughter of enemies. No weapons will harm those who are doomed to
conquer; those who are to die would be overtaken even in repose by their destiny. Why
should fortune have made the Huns victorious over so many
nations, unless the glory of this contest had been reserved for them?
Who opened the passage of the Maeotian swamp
to our ancestors, so many centuries shut up and secret? Who enabled them, when
as yet unarmed, to defeat their armed adversaries? An allied assemblage
will not be able to resist the countenance of the Huns. I am not deceived;
this is the field which so many successes have promised to us. I myself
will throw the first darts at the enemy, and if any one of you can endure
repose while Attila is fighting, he wants the energy of life”.
By such exhortations the
wonted spirit of his soldiers was renewed, and well may it be seen, by the
tenor of his language, how absolute was his control over the various kings, of
whose subjects his army was composed, when he could thus publicly contrast the
unity of his own force, with the weakness of an allied confederacy. They rushed
impetuously onward, and, though the posture of affairs under the disadvantage
of ground was formidable, the presence of Attila prevented any hesitation; they
engaged hand to hand with the enemy. The contest was fierce, complicated,
immense, and obstinate, to which, according to the assertion of Jordanes, the
records of antiquity presented nothing similar. That historian, who wrote about
a century after, says that he heard from old men, that a rivulet which
traversed the plain was swollen by blood into the appearance of a torrent, and
that those, who were tormented by thirst and the fever of their wounds, drank
blood from its channel for their refreshment. In the heat of the battle
Theodoric riding along the ranks and animating his Visigoths, was knocked off
his horse, as it was reported, by the dart of Andages an
Ostrogoth in the army of Attila. In the confusion his own cavalry charged over
him, and he was trampled to death. It appears that the Ostrogoths, who formed
the left wing of the Huns, were overpowered by this charge and gave way, and
that the Visigoths advancing beyond the Alans, who were opposed to Attila in
the centre, had turned the position of the Huns, and threatened their flank and
rear; but, seeing the danger with which he was menaced, Attila immediately fell
back upon his camp, which was fenced round by his baggage wagons, behind which
the Hunnish archers presented an insurmountable obstacle to the
impetuosity of the Gothic cavalry. But the whole army did not retire behind
the defenses, and the Huns stood firm until it
was dark; for Torismond, the eldest son of
Theodoric, who was not by his father’s side in the battle, but had been
stationed by the wary Aetius near his own person, probably as a surety for the
fidelity of Theodoric, and had at the first driven the Huns down the hill in
concert with the Romans, being separated from them afterwards, and mistaking in
the darkness the Hunnish troops for the main body of the Visigoths,
came unawares near the wagons, and fighting valiantly was wounded on the head
and knocked off his horse, and being rescued by his soldiers discontinued the
attack.
The superstition of the
combatants increased the horrors of a nocturnal conflict, and a supernatural
voice was supposed to have been heard by either army, which terminated the
conflict. While this advantage had been gained at night-fall by the right wing
of the allies, which had broken the left and forced the centre of Attila’s army
to fall back, the left wing under Aetius had been roughly handled by Arderic, and separated from the main body of his forces.
Aetius, ignorant of the
success of his right and cut off from all communication with the rest of his
army, was in the greatest peril, and fearful that the Visigoths had been
overpowered. With difficulty he retreated to his camp, and passed the night
under arms, expecting his entrenchments to be attacked by a victorious enemy. A
most qualified victory it was, but certainly a victory, for the Visigoths did
carry the battle to the very camp of Attila, whose right wing, though
successful, did not pursue Aetius to his; but the singular result of this engagement
was, that each of the chief commanders passed the night under momentary
expectation of an assault from his antagonist. Attila, with the desperate
resolution of a pagan, made a vast pyre within the limits of his encampment,
which was piled up with harness, and such of the accoutrements of his cavalry,
as were not in immediate use, on which he had determined to burn himself with
his women and riches, in case his defences should be stormed, that he
might not fall alive into the hands of his enemies, nor any one of them boast
of having slain him; but he presented a determined front to the allies, and
placed a strong force of armed men and archers in front of the cars, keeping up
at the same time an incessant din of warlike instruments to animate his own
troops, and alarm those of Aetius by the expectation of an attack.
The dawn discovered to both
armies a plain absolutely loaded with the bodies of the slain, and Aetius,
perceiving that Attila stood on the defensive, and showed no intention of
advancing, became sensible of the successes of the former evening; and, after
he had communicated with the Visigoths, it was determined to attempt to reduce
Attila by a blockade, as the army of Stilicho had reduced the great host
of Radagais near Florence; for the fire of
the Hunnish archers was so hot, that they dared not attack him in his
position.
But the victorious Theodoric
was missing, and no one amongst his troops could account for his
disappearance. Torismond and his brother
instituted a search for his body, and it was discovered amongst the thickest
heaps of the slain. It was borne in sight of the Huns with funereal songs to
the camp of the Visigoths, where his obsequies were celebrated with pompous
ceremony and loud vociferations, which seemed discordant to the ears of the
polished Romans; and Torismond was raised
to the estate of a king upon the shield of his forefathers. Having offered to
his departed father all the honours, which the customs of his countrymen
required, he was ardently desirous of revenging himself on Attila, and would
gladly have bearded the lion in his den, but he was not so rash as to attempt
an attack with his Visigoths alone; and it was necessary to consult with
Aetius. That crafty politician, who appears at every moment of his life to have
played a double game, did not consider it for his own advantage to renew the
attack. The Huns had sustained such a severe loss of men, that it was not
probable that Attila would then renew his attempt either to penetrate into the
Roman province, or to conquer the kingdom of the Visigoths. On the other hand,
if he should succeed in utterly overpowering the Hun, he dreaded to find a
second Alaric in his grandson, who might prove not less formidable to the
empire.
His own views were fixed upon
the imperial purple, and the report, that he entered into secret negotiations
with Attila, after the battle of Châlons, with a view to his own advancement,
is probably correct. Being consulted by his young ally, he advised him to
forbear from renewing the attack, and to retire with his forces to his own
dominions, lest his younger brothers should take advantage of his absence to
possess themselves of his throne. With like craftiness, he persuaded Meroveus
rather to content himself with what remained to him of the kingdom of Clodion,
than to risk the consequence of another engagement, in the hope of recovering
the Belgian territory.
The loss of human life in the
battle is estimated at about 160,000 souls, and whether we look to the numbers
and prowess of the combatants, the immensity of the carnage, or its
consequences to the whole of Europe, it was undoubtedly one of the most
important battles that were ever fought.
When the retreat of the
Visigoths was first announced to Attila, he imagined that it was a crafty
device of the enemy to lure him into some rash undertaking, and he remained for
some time close in his camp; but when the utter and continued silence of their
late position convinced him that they had really withdrawn, his mind was
greatly elevated, and all his hopes of obtaining universal dominion were
instantly renewed. He was very boastful in his language, and is said
to have cried out, as soon as the departure of Torismond was
confirmed, “A star is falling before me and the earth trembling. Lo, I am
the hammer of the world”.
In that singular expression
will be recognized an allusion to the hammer of the God Thor, of which the form
is known to have been a cross, and in fact nearly identical with that of the
mysterious sword which Attila wore, reversing it so that the hilt becomes the
mallet and the blade the handle. He met with no further opposition from
any part of the allied army, from which it may be pretty surely concluded that
Aetius did enter into a secret arrangement with him, which, though suspected,
never became public, as Aetius did not communicate it to the Romans. If we
may judge from the result, the terms must have been that Attila should not
attack the Roman province or kingdom of Tolosa,
but should retain his Belgian conquests which were raised into the kingdom
of Cameracura for Alberon,
and should not be molested by the allies; to which we may suppose that Aetius
added private terms to promote his own elevation. It is probable that
when, after the decease of Attila, Valentinian caused Aetius to be put to
death, he was apprised of his treasonable plans, which were perhaps on the eve
of being carried into execution.
In order to remove the
impression of a defeat, Attila, having surveyed the field of battle, of which
he was ultimately left the master by the retreat of those who had defeated him
in a qualified manner, ordered a great sacrifice to be made according to the
practice of his nation, to the God Mars, that is to the sword which he wore,
and which was the visible personification of the war-god. The fashion of
that sacrifice was after this manner. They raised a lofty square structure
of faggots, measuring 375 paces on each of its sides, three of which were
perpendicular, but the fourth graduated, so that it was easily ascended. In
their regular stations such structures were renovated every year by an
accumulation of 150 wagon loads of brush-wood. On the summit the ancient
iron sword, which was symbolical of the war-god, was planted. To that idol
sheep and horses were sacrificed.
The sacrificator first
made fast a rope round the feet of the animal, and, standing behind it, by
pulling the rope threw it down, and thereupon invoking the God, he cast a
halter round its neck, and strangled it by twisting the rope with a stick; and
without either burning, or cutting, or sprinkling it, he immediately proceeded
to skin and cook it. In ancient times, when their state was very rude, and they
dwelt in extensive plains where fuel was very rare, they used the bones of the
animals for fuel, as the South Americans do at this day, and even the paunch of
the animal for a kettle. As soon as the beast was cooked, the sacrificator taking the first share of the
flesh and entrails, threw the rest before him. Of their captives they
sacrificed one chosen out of each hundred, not in the same manner as the
beasts, but having first poured wine on his head, they cut his throat, and
received the blood in a vessel, which they afterwards carried up to the summit
of the pile, and they emptied the blood upon the sword. They cut off the right
shoulder of each man that was thus slaughtered, together with the arm and hand,
and cast it into the air; and after the completion of their ceremonies they
departed, leaving the limb to lie wherever it happened to have fallen, and the
body apart from it Such was the mode in which the ancient Scythians had
sacrificed nine hundred years before; such were the rites by which the Huns had
celebrated their first successes in Europe, and by which Attila now returned
thanksgiving on the plain of Châlons for the retreat of the Christians.
Such was the man, before whom
the Christians trembled, and with whom the Arians and some other sectarians are
said to have been plotting for the destruction of the Catholics. Ammianus
Marcellinus had already testified, that in his time no wild beasts were so
blood-thirsty as the various denominations of Christians against each
other. Probably more with a view to wipe out the impression of his
retreat, and of the check which he had received, than of prosecuting the invasion,
he now moved forward again with his whole force, not in the direct line to
Orleans, but in a direction which appeared to threaten Orleans, and he advanced
against Troyes on the 29th of July. Lupus the bishop of that place, and
soon after sanctified, delivered up the town to Attila, and prevailed upon him
to spare the place and its inhabitants. He is said to have gone out
bareheaded, attended by his clergy and many of the citizens to meet Attila, and
to have asked him, who he was that subdued kings, overturned nations, destroyed
towns, and reduced everything under his subjection.
Attila replied, “I am the king
of the Huns and the scourge of God”. To which Lupus answered saying, “Who
shall resist the scourge of God, which may rage against whomsoever he will!
Come therefore, scourge of my God, proceed whithersoever you will; all things
shall obey you, as the minister of the Almighty, without impediment from me”.
Attila marched through the
town without injuring it, and the Christian legends say that the Huns were
smitten with blindness, so that they passed on without seeing anything, a
miracle attributed to the sanctity of Lupus. That hypocritical villain
received, as the minister of his God, the barbarian whose sword was reeking
with the recent immolation of his Christian captives, and he proceeded with
Attila to the Rhine, and did not return to his diocese. His panegyrists assert
that Attila for the good of his own soul compelled Lupus to accompany him. It
is not unlikely that Attila may have thought that such a mock Christian in high
dignity might be useful to him, by inducing others to submit, and the bishop
probably thought that, after the part he had acted, he was safest under
Attila’s protection; not having anticipated, when he received the Hun with such
honours, that he would immediately afterwards retire from France.
He is eulogized by Sidonius Apollinaris,
soon after bishop of Clermont, whose praise is perhaps not very valuable, and
whose writings, very different from those of Prudentius,
as well as his name, bear the stamp rather of paganism than of genuine
Christianity. Attila thence changed the direction of his march and returned to
Pannonia. He certainly, however, left an organized force behind to defend the
Belgian kingdom of Cameracum against
Meroveus, for Alberon and his two brothers
continued in possession of it, till they were defeated by the army of Clovis
(Louis), and subsequently massacred by him.
Having passed through Troyes,
Attila, seeing the people flying to the woods, had compassion on them, and
ordered them to return home without fear. A woman with one little girl tied
round her neck, two others on a pack-horse, and seven elder daughters
accompanying her on foot, cast herself at his feet and supplicated his
protection. It was the policy of Attila to treat with general clemency those
who threw themselves on his mercy, while he exterminated those who defied him,
and he was naturally good-natured, when his ambitious views were not thwarted.
He raised up the suppliant lady benignly, and dismissed her with assurances of
his favour, and ample gifts to enable her to educate and give marriage
portions to her daughters.
The Huns who were left to
defend and complete the reduction of Belgium are said to have been
commanded by Giulas, who commenced his career by
the sack of Rheims, of which the inhabitants had given great offence by
harassing the Hunnish army before the battle of Châlons. The citizens
in extreme distress crowded round their bishop Nicasius,
imploring his advice in the fatal alternative of hopeless resistance, or
surrender to the certain vengeance of the barbarians. Nicasius admonished
them that the success of Attila was permitted on account of their sins; but
that they were destined to brief torments in the hands of the tyrant to obtain
salvation and heavenly life. He exhorted them to follow and imitate his
example.
His sister Eutropia, a pious virgin of exceeding beauty, seconded his
exhortations; and many of the citizens animated by their enthusiastic piety
accompanied them to the church of the Virgin Mary, singing hymns and psalms, in
the midst of which Nicasius was butchered
by the Huns. The beauty of Eutropia excited
the desires of the conqueror who had slain her brother, but she is said to have
torn out both his eyes, and was slain with all the Christians who had taken
refuge in the church. Rheims was demolished, but Attila was not present.
Diogenes, bishop of Arras, was also killed by the Huns and the town
destroyed. Tongres underwent the same fate,
notwithstanding the sanctity and prayers of St. Servatius. Maastricht suffered
either before or after the battle of Châlons.
After the destruction of Tongres, the Huns are said to have undertaken the siege of
Cologne, which has been rendered famous by the alleged martyrdom of St. Ursula
and 11,010 virgins, an absurd fable, which it will be however proper to notice,
as the lady has obtained a place in the calendar. If the eyes of the Hunnish general
had been extinguished, he could scarcely have commanded in the subsequent
operations; supposing them to have been lacerated by Eutropia,
it is not improbable that he may have acted very ferociously and butchered many
young women at Cologne, but the story of Ursula is utterly absurd, and the
name Giulas seems like a corruption of
Julius borrowed from an older tale, and was probably not the real name of
a Hunnish commander.
Sigebertus, who flourished at the end of
the eleventh century, is probably the first writer extant who detailed the
story as relating to Ursula. The tale is given with some variation by different
authors.
The account of Nicolas Olaus is as follows: Ursula was the only daughter of
the king of Britannia; she was courted by Ethereus son
of the king of the Angli, who requested her
father to betroth her to him, on condition that she should be permitted to
travel for three years according to her vow, requiring from Ethereus ten virgins of undoubted chastity for her
companions, to each of whom as well as to herself a thousand maidens should be
attached. The 11,011 virgins entered the mouth of the Rhine on board eleven
large ships, and proceeded to Cologne and Basle, whence they journeyed on foot
to Rome, and, having visited all the shrines in that quarter, according to her
vow, they returned with Cyriac pope of Rome
to Basle and Cologne, where the whole party were intercepted and massacred by
the Huns under Giulas.
Gobelin Persona (born AD 1358),
in Cosmodrom, fully exposes the absurdity of the
story, and shows that there never was such a pope or bishop of Rome, and that
such visitations to Rome were unknown at that period. He says the tale was
derived from a recluse of Shonaugia about
the year 1156; and Pray, trusting to G. Persona, says that Elizabetha Shonaugiensis, in
her revelations in the 12th century, first added its present form to the story
of the virgins, which is untrue, for she did not even place the event in the
age of Attila. It is certain that Ursula’s name was in the calendar of saints
before the time of Elizabeth, and that she did not invent the tale, because she
mentions having seen what she relates in a vision on the day of the feast of
the 11,000 holy virgins.
Cardinal Desericius found at Rome an old and imperfect MS.
which refers the event to the year 237, saying that Alexander Severus sent
Maximin the Thracian from Illyria to repress the Germans near the Rhine. The
former being killed, Maximin proclaimed himself emperor. He employed Julius
prefect of the Rhine to besiege Cologne, and, through hatred to the Romans,
caused the virgins returning from Rome to be massacred by Julius. It states
another account to be that when Maximin moved to the siege of Aquileia, where
he perished, Julius collected a band of Suni (a people of Germany mentioned by
Pliny, Tacitus, and Cluverius), and slew the
virgins, and that Suni was afterwards confounded with Hunni,
who were called according to the Latin orthography Chuni.
The MS. quotes Lampridius and Julius Capitolinus falsely. Another account in Baronius refers
the tale to the year 381. He says that Gratian having conciliated the Huns,
wished that part of them should attack Great Britain with a fleet, and part
enter Gaul in concert with the Alans; that Conan, a petty king in Great
Britain, accompanied Maximus from thence to Gaul, and persuaded him to locate
the British troops in the territory evacuated by the Armoricans, and to send
over to Dinoc king of Cornwall for Ursula
who was betrothed to Conan, and 11,000 virgins for wives to the soldiers who
were to form the new colony; that Gaunus a Hunnish,
and Melga a Pictish,
pirate intercepted them, and, as they preferred death to the loss of virginity,
slew them all. Baronius probably derived the account from Geoffrey of
Monmouth, and it originated in the Brut or Chronicle of the kings of Britain,
which says that Maximus and Cynan having
killed Hymblat king of the Gauls,
Maximus gave Armorica to Cynan, who sent to the
earl of Cornwall for 11,000 daughters of noble Britons, 60 daughters of
foreigners, and servant maids. Their ships were dispersed and some sank. Two
were seized by Gwnass and Melwas, the former commander of the Huns, the latter of the
Picts, who were at sea with crews in support of Gratian. Another manuscript of
the Brut says that Cynan was enamoured of
the daughter of Dunawd king of Cornwall,
and sent for her with a large number of British women.
There appears no reason to
doubt the veracity of this narrative, which accounts for the subsequent
connection between Britany and Cornwall; and it appears by a letter of St
Ambrose to Maximus that the Huns were employed at that time by the Roman
emperor; and from another it is evident that the Huns had been desired to enter
Gaul, but were diverted by Valentinian. Sigebertus in
his chronicle says that in 389 Gnamus and Melga were leaders of the Huns and Britons employed by
Gratian against Maximus, and laid waste Great Britain, but were driven into
Ireland by a detachment sent by Maximus.
The Huns as a nation had
certainly no navy or maritime habits, but it is not improbable that, when they
overran the North, some of them may have adventured as sea-rovers after the
example of the Northmen. Vegnier, Vertot, Dubos, Turner, &c deny the migration of Britons
into Armorica in the time of Maximin, and maintain that the first Briton who
settled there was one Rhivallon who fled
from the encroachments of the Saxons in 513. The Loire is the southern boundary
of Britany, and the words of Sidonius Apollinaris who wrote in the
5th century, and says that Euric king of Thoulouse was
advised to invade and conquer the Britons situated above the Loire, is decisive
as to the error of their assertion. Their king appears to have been Riothamus, to whom a letter addressed by Sidonius is
extant, and he is mentioned by Jordanes as Riothimus king
of the Britons amongst the Bituriges in
France. The upshot of the whole appears to be that when Maximus founded a
British colony in Britany in the 4th century, some of the wives or intended
brides of the colonists were intercepted by a Hunnish and Pictish pirate in the service of Gratian; that in the
following century the general of Attila, having had his eyes lacerated by Eutropia, perhaps butchered some women at Cologne, called
Colonia Ubiorum; that Ursula the bride of the
prince of the British colony, having been killed by the pirates, had been
sanctified as a martyr; and that in the 11th or 12th centuries the stories were
confounded, the women who were slain having in both instances belonged to a
colony, (Colon ia) and suffered for resisting the
incontinency of the Huns.
That such is the real history
of this fable appears further from this, that Floras, Ado, and Wandelbert, writers of the 8th and 9th centuries on
martyrology, state the murder of the virgins at Cologne, but nothing about
Great Britain, Ursula, Ethereus, or any names of
virgins or anything concerning a pilgrimage to Rome. That Cologne (Agrippina
Colonia Ubiorum) was destroyed by the Huns is
affirmed by Sigonius, Herm. Fleinius in vit. SS. ad 21 Oct and Harseus ap. Vales. and others besides the Hungarian
writers.
From Troyes Attila probably
returned directly to Pannonia, through either Strasbourg or Basle, continuing
his course along the Danube. He passed the ensuing winter at his capital Sicambria,
which was perhaps the ancient Buda. It is fabulously stated to have been
founded by Antenor the Trojan.
When Attila either built or
enlarged Sicambria, he is said to have wished to bestow his own name upon
it, and the fatal quarrel between him and his brother is stated to have arisen
from a dispute whether it should be called Attila or Budawar.
Bleda is by some writers named Buda, and in Scandinavian sagas Buddla is given as the name of the father of Attila,
and perhaps it may be considered as having some reference to the name Buddha,
the oriental title of Woden or Odin, who
seems to have been on some occasions identified with Attila himself in ancient
Scandinavian legends. The winter was employed in recruiting his forces,
and at the opening of the spring of 453, Attila had under his command a more
powerful army, than that with which he had entered Gaul. Early in the season he
set this mighty host in motion for the overthrow of Rome. As he mounted on his
horse to take the command of this momentous expedition, a crow is said to have
perched on his right shoulder, and immediately afterwards to have risen so high
into the air, that it could no longer be discerned.
The augury was accepted with
joy, and the soldiers anticipated nothing less than the subjugation and plunder
of Italy. It will be remembered that the God Odin is fabled to have had two
crows or ravens which flew every day round the world to do his missions, and returned
at evening to his heavenly mansion; nor were these messengers unknown to the
Greek and Roman mythology. Plutarch relates that two crows were sent out by
Jupiter, one to the east, the other to the west, and, having flown round the
world, met at Delphi. Livy writes that when Valerius,
hence called Corvinus, was engaged in contest with a powerful Gaul, a crow
lighted on his helmet, and gave him the victory by assailing the eyes of his
antagonist; and we know from Prudentius that
this was one of the Delphic crows, sacred to Apollo.
It is stated by Strabo that
when Alexander the Great was in danger of perishing amidst the sands of the
desert, on his way from Parsetonium to the
temple of Jupiter Ammon, he was delivered by the guidance of two crows; nor
will it be forgotten that ravens brought food to Elijah. With these
recollections it seems not improbable that Attila may have practised some
imposture in the sight of his army, or at least that such a tale was purposely
circulated amongst his followers, to promote the superstitious belief of a
communication having been made to him by the Deity. There is much discrepancy
in the various accounts of the route by which he entered Italy, but from the
enormous bulk of his army it is probable that they may all be founded in truth,
and that his army advanced in several columns which were to reunite after
having passed the Alps.
The Byzantine emperor Marcian,
who had the administration of the provinces on the north-west of the Adriatic,
had left their numerous towns ungarrisoned. Attila crossed the Drave and the
Save, and the whole of Styria, Carinthia, Illyria, and Dalmatia, was overrun by
his forces without any serious opposition. Aetius, who commanded the
armies of Rome, whether from treasonable views, or because Valentinian
kept the main forces of the empire for the immediate defence of Rome,
whither he had withdrawn from Ravenna upon the alarm of an approaching
invasion, certainly made no attempt to oppose the progress of the great
antagonist whom he had so lately discomfited on the plain of Châlons; but the
whole tenor of his life seems to mark that he must have been consulting his own
personal aggrandizement, and utterly disregarding the interests of his country.
We may figure to ourselves the
reminiscences of that great and dissembling commander, while, stretching his
hopes to the acquisition of power exceeding that of the mightiest emperors, he
lay in purposed inactivity before Rome, awaiting the effects of intemperance
and disorganization on the force of Attila, and distraction and imbecility on
the imperial counsels. We may fancy him bringing to mind the early instructions
of his Scythian father, and of his mother who was descended from one of the
most illustrious families of Latium; the youthful energy which had led him to
excel in every exercise of the field or forest; his first and early military
achievements; his sojourn as a hostage in the court of Alaric, and afterwards
of Rhuas the Hunnish monarch; the hypocrisy with which he had
pretended to embrace Christianity, while his heart was imbued with the leaven
of paganism; his initiation of his son Carpileo into
all the orgies of idolatry in the capital of Attila; his abode in the palace of
John the usurper; his advance at the head of a Hunnish army towards
Ravenna, the consternation with which he heard of the sudden destruction of
John, and the art with which he made his peace with Valentinian; the military
titles which were the reward of his treason, extorted from his imbecile rulers;
his command in Gaul, where in three campaigns he rescued Aries from the
Visigoths, the Rhine from Clodion, and overwhelmed the Juthungians of
Bavaria; the treachery by which he had compromised Boniface, and the ruin he
brought thereby on the Roman authority in Africa; his personal conflict with
Boniface, and mortification at the only defeat he suffered in his life, and the
malignant joy with which he heard of the subsequent death of his rival; his
flight from the arm of justice to Ms pagan ally, and the authority which he
again obtained through the influence of the enemies of his country; his further
successes in Gaul and Burgundy; the art with which he reconciled Theodoric to
the Roman arms; the energy with which he inspired his allies; the mighty
conflict of Châlons; the skill with which he diverted Torismond from
avenging his father, and persuaded Meroveus to remain content with the Parisian
kingdom; his secret negotiations with Attila, and all the vast and daring
projects which had been since fermenting in his mind. If we place this picture
before us, we shall probably have filled up the outline of historical truth
with no unreal imaginations.
The heart sickens, when we
bring to mind the praises lavished by Gibbon upon this evil man, the
outbreaking of whose treachery was probably anticipated by the jealousy of his
roaster, and his sudden destruction. The existence of a coin bearing the
superscription Flavius Aetius imperator, gives reason to suspect that he had
even committed an overt act of treason before he was cut short by Valentinian.
The defence of the Julian
Alps, through which the Huns were preparing to enter Italy, was entrusted to a
small number of Visigothic auxiliaries under Alaric and Antal or Athal. Emona a
flourishing town at the foot of the Alps was evacuated by its inhabitants on
the approach of the invaders, by whom it was so completely destroyed, that no
author recognizes its existence after that period. The Roman auxiliaries
delayed the advance of Attila a little through the Goritian forest;
but, after many conflicts, they were forced to abandon the mountain passes, and
multitudes of barbarians poured through them with overwhelming impetuosity on
the delightful district of Forum Julii. On the
first alarm of an intended invasion, Valentinian had taken measures to put the
important city of Aquileia in a state to resist the advance of the enemy. About
the year 190 before the birth of Christ, the Gauls, having entered Carnia from Germany, had founded a city near the site
of Aquileia, which was soon destroyed by the Romans. The Istri invaded the province four years after, whereupon
the senate determined to build a town for the defence of the neighbouring
territory, and in the year 181 before Christ Aquileia was founded by a colony
from Rome. Augustus Caesar adorned Aquileia with temples and theatres,
fortified the harbour, and paved the roads. He increased its circuit to twelve
miles, or, as some say, to fifteen.
The remains of a double wall
were to be seen in tolerable preservation in the 17th century, running directly
east, eleven miles in length, like two parallel lines, composed of stones piled
up, but not cemented by any kind of mortar. Aquileia stood on the banks and at
the mouth of the river Natissa, which washed a
large part of its wall. Sabellicus supposes
that the name of the Sontius was lost after
its junction with the Natissa, (whereas on the
contrary the modern name of the Natisone is
lost in the Isonzo) or else that the Natissa did
not in ancient times fall into the Sontius, or
that a stream flowed by a subterraneous channel out of the Natissa into the sea, because both Pliny and Strabo
mention the mouth of the Natissa.
He adds that in his time only
a church of the Virgin Mary, and the huts of a few peasants and fishermen remained
on the site of Aquileia; but that many monuments, public ways,
magnificent and sumptuous paved roads, aqueducts, sepulchres, and pavements,
were still extant, by which the great size and distinguished appearance of the
ancient town might be easily ascertained. The territory of Aquileia was called
Forum Julii and also Carnia. The Carnians were
a people inhabiting the mountains, where they led a pastoral life, their
country being too rugged for tillage. In the year of our Lord 167 the physician
Galen followed M. Aurelius and L. Commodus to Aquileia, and wrote his
commentaries there.
In 361 in the reign of Julian
his general Immon besieged Aquileia, and
finding that the citizens derived great advantage from the river as a defence
and means of obtaining provisions, he discontinued the siege, and employed his
army by an immense exertion to excavate a new bed for the river, and conduct it
to the sea at a considerable distance from the town. The inhabitants were
however supplied by plenty of cisterns and wells, and did not suffer from the
loss of water. Aquileia underwent another siege subsequently, when Maximin was
discomfited before its walls and put to death by his own troops.
Herodian, who gives an account
of this siege, states that Aquileia was a city of the first magnitude, with an
abundant population, being situated on the seashore in front of all the
Illyrian nations, as the emporium of Italy, delivering to navigators the
produce of the continent brought down by land or by the rivers, and furnishing
seaborne necessaries, especially wine, to the upper countries, which were less
fertile than the southern provinces from severity of climate.
Immediately after crossing the
Alps, Attila routed and utterly annihilated the Roman force which was opposed
to him in the neighbourhood of Tergeste, the
modern Trieste, especially the cavalry under Forestus the
distinguished ruler of Atestia, the modern Este,
and other Italian troops which had been placed there by Menapus the governor of Aquileia to oppose his
progress. The Huns then crossed the Sontius, and
directed their whole might against Aquileia, which was at that time one of the
fairest and most flourishing cities in the world, but was destined to be
trampled under the relentless foot of Attila, and to become a desolation and a
thing obliterated from the earth. Belenus, Felenus, or Belis had
been the tutelary God of Aquileia, and, although the population was now at
least nominally Christian, he was still held in great veneration as a guardian
saint, if not an actual Deity. Herodian states that, when Maximin was engaged
in the fruitless siege of Aquileia, before which he lost his life by the hands
of his own soldiers, the besieged were encouraged by the oracles of their
peculiar or provincial God Belin, or, if the word be inflected, Belis, whom they worshipped most religiously, and
considered to be Apollo. The soldiers of Maximin affirmed that they beheld the
likeness of the God in the air, fighting for the town, either superstitiously
fancying that they saw something unusual, or making use of the fable to cover
their own unwillingness.
Julius Capitolinus says that the discomfiture of Maximin
was foretold by the augurs of the God Belenus,
who is mentioned also by Ausonius. G. F. Palladio says that, when Maxentius was
patriarch, about the year 841, a church and monastery of Benedictine monks was
built out of the ruins of the temple of the false God of the province
named Bellenus, not far from Aquileia, and was
named L'Abbatia della Belligna, but was afterwards abandoned on account of
malaria. The name given to the monastery and derived from that of the pagan
God, out of the ruins of whose temple it was constructed, is very deserving of
notice.
In the same manner the temple
of Flora at Brescia became the chapel of St Floranus.
These are amongst the numerous instances of the manner in which the Christians
compounded with the pagans, not really converting them, but permitting the
worship of their favourite idol under the licensed character of a saint. This
baneful practice became a main source of the corruption of the church of Rome.
The Christianity of the Aquileians must have continued in a very unsettled
state, for Stephen the patriarch in 517 was an Arian, and the epitaph of Elias
the patriarch, who removed the see of Aquileia to Grado, states him to have
been a Manichaean. Palladius gives eight
inscriptions in which Belenus is named. The
last is Apollini Beleno C. Aquileien. felix ....
He adds that the church of St Felix the martyr stands where the temple of Belenus was; that the natives do not call it Felix,
but Felus (non Felicem sed Felum) with an evident
allusion, as he observes, to the ancient name of the God. He adds that there is
another more certain reminiscence of Belenus,
because there still exists a noble abbey of which the tutelary saint is called
St. Martin, (and be it recollected that in Latin these saints were actually
called Divi) but is universally called Belenus for
no other reason than the recollection of the idol, which after so many
centuries could not be extinguished by any rites of true religion. In fact it
was the corrupt impropriety of those rites, which, by attributing divinity to
the saint, nourished and appeared to justify the reminiscence of the
idol. Palladius adds that in the first age
of Christianity the Aquileians did not
desist from worshipping Belenus with magnificent
sacrifices, and were so prone to that superstition, that those who were
initiated in it were a great obstacle to the spread of Christianity.
Sir John Reresby, who travelled in the time of Cromwell, speaking of
Venice says: “The palace of the patriarchs is one of the first, where we saw
some ancient statues of the Roman Gods, as of Bacchus, Mercury, Pallas, Venus,
and others; as also some little couches or beds on which the Romans used to lie
when they made feasts in honour of their Gods. Upon these are engraved certain
characters, signifying vows made to the God Bellinus,
formerly in great repute amongst the Aquileians,
from whom these were taken with many other antiquities, at the razing of one of
their chief cities and a Roman colony by Attila king of the Huns”.
This is a curious confirmation
of the account given by Sabellicus and H.
Palladium that Menapus governor of Aquileia
removed the valuables and furniture of the town to the Venetian isle of Gradus
before he evacuated it, written by a person who does not appear to have known
that Aquileia itself had been sacked by Attila. Joannes Candidas, a lawyer of Venice, whose work was published in
1521, seven years after that of Sabellicus,
discredits the accounts of Menapus and Oricus, but without any reason assigned, probably from
indiscriminate disgust at the Atestine forgeries.
H. Palladius gives a remarkable inscription
found at Aquileia, and dated a few years before its destruction. Januarius who
thus forewarned the inhabitants of the city of its approaching destruction by
the scourge of God was patriarch before Nicetas,
and died in 452 before the accomplishment of the visitation he foresaw.
On the approach of the
enemy Menapus ordered a simultaneous sally
from two gates of the town, and slew many of the Huns who had advanced
incautiously, and put their van to flight. The conflict was continued for many
hours, when he was at last forced to give way before the increasing numbers of
the enemy, and retreated safely into the town.
Attila fortified his encampment,
and on the following day accompanied by a few followers is said to have
reconnoitred the town. He had almost reached the river, when Menapus suddenly attacked him from the
rear. Attila with difficulty escaped, wounded, and baring lost the
ornament of his helmet, and the greater part, if not the whole, of his
attendants. After this hazardous encounter he became more cautious, acted more
through the agency of his generals, and exposed himself less to personal
danger.
According to another account,
he had been in the habit of going his rounds alone and disguised, to observe
the most assailable points of the city, and having been induced by the apparent
silence and loneliness of the wall to approach nearer than usual, he was
surprised by a body of armed men, who, having observed him, had sallied through
a sewer under the walls, not knowing him to be the great king, but desirous of
extorting from a hostile spy the plans of the enemy, and learning what hopes
they entertained of capturing the town.
They surrounded him,
therefore, wishing to take him alive. He placed his back against a steep bank,
so that he could only be assailed in front, and defended himself; but finding
the Aquileians, who were not desirous of killing
him, remiss in the attack, he suddenly sprang forward with a loud shout and
slew two of them, and immediately vaulting over the wall of some buildings near
the town, he escaped to his own troops. Those, who bad surrounded him, reported
that, while he was looking round and collecting his strength for the assault,
the appearance of his eyes was in a manner celestial, and sparks of fire
glanced from them, like the energy attributed by heathen writers to the eyes of
their Gods. The same anecdote is related by another historian, who states that
he was on horseback, and that the circumstance took place near the end of the
siege, the day before he observed the departure of the stork. He also speaks of
the sparks emitted from his eyes, and says that when two of the assailants had
been slain by him, the rest were daunted and suffered him to depart.
Menapus was a man of great
activity and valour; he did not permit the Huns to enjoy a moment of rest by
day or night, sometimes attacking them by surprise, sometimes openly,
intercepting their foragers, capturing their stragglers, and carrying slaughter
and tumult into their quarters by night Attila at the commencement of the siege
had no instruments for taking towns with him except ladders, either because his
people were not skilful in the construction of engines, or because he
preferred, through excess of pride, to rely on their personal exertions. A
desperate attack was however made by the Huns with ladders, which was repelled
by the garrison, who threw stones, fire, and boiling water, on the assailants; Menapus everywhere exerting himself, exhorting and
exciting his troops, rewarding valour and punishing remissness. After a great
loss of men, Attila was forced to discontinue the assault, but it was renewed
day after day with no better success, till at last the Huns found it necessary
to make regular and scientific approaches, throwing up a bank and
constructing vineo, which at that time
were the usual protection of besiegers. At this period of the siege it is
probable that Attila undertook the great work at Udine, which was at first
called Hunnium, and afterwards Utinum, as a place of safety for his sick and wounded, and
a strong depot, whenever he might advance into Italy. The conical hill which he
raised and fortified, remains to this day an imperishable monument of the
immensity of his resources.
All writers concerning it
agree that it was fortified by Attila during the siege, having been perhaps
originally strengthened by Julius Caesar. H. Palladium gives an ample account
of it to the following effect Attila raised it up and fortified it as a safe
post during the siege, and a point of support for his future operations. During
the beleaguerment of Aquileia, the concourse to Hunnium had
been so great, that many had built themselves houses of wood and stone along
the way to Aquileia. Attila feared that a sally from thence might overpower
these defenceless houses, and he abstained from pressing the siege
for a few days, while he marked out the site of a town, and surrounded it with
a strong rampart and gates protected by towers. After the capture of Aquileia
he built a wall on the new rampart, and raised the mound of the Julian
fortress, not only the slaves and captives, but all the soldiers, bringing
earth in the cavity of their shields, till it was sufficiently increased.
H. Palladius had an opportunity of
verifying this account, the earth having been excavated to make a tank, when
the artificial nature of one side of the mound was evident, from the admixture
of worked stones and fragments of tiles with the earth, and also by the discovery
of an old helmet; whereas the other side of the mound consisted of dry rock.
Having thus raised a secure
defence for his own troops against the destructive sallies of the garrison,
Attila pressed the siege with vigour. At the northern angle of the tower stood
a tower of great antiquity, which, being occupied by a strong force, very much
molested Attila. Menapus had strengthened
its fortifications, and made a wall and ditch in front of it. It was a great
object to Attila to gain possession of this outwork, because it commanded the
whole town He therefore approached his works to it, and filled the ditch with
earth and stones, and tried by his archery to drive the Aquileians from the walls, while he sent light troops
across the ditch to break down the wall with hatchets. Having succeeded in
clearing the walls by incessant vollies of
arrows, they overleaped the fosse, singing barbarian omens of victory. Menapus came immediately to the relief of the tower,
and hot iron, molten lead, and blazing pitch, were thrown upon the Huns. Attila
goaded on fresh troops to the attack, compelling them not only by words of
command, but by the sword, to advance to certain death. But at length they
gained a footing on the inner side of the fosse, and began to destroy the wall,
where the mortar of the new works was not perfectly hardened, and a narrow
breach was made.
Menapus singly resisted in the
breach, and sallied through it, followed by a great power of Aquileians, and they forced their way even to
Attila himself through the flying enemy, throwing
torches and firebrands amongst them. Oricus brother
of the governor sallied at the same time through the nearest gate with the
Roman cavalry, and made great havoc amongst the enemy, killing all stragglers,
and increasing the disorder of the discomfited Huns. Attila immediately ordered
his own cavalry to advance, and charged at their head. After a severe conflict
near the villa of Mencetius, Oricus was either killed or mortally wounded, and his
followers nearly all cut off.
Menapus, wounded, returned through
the breach in the outer wall, and some of the Huns forced their way in, but
their comrades were beat off by the engines of the garrison, and he got safe
into the town. Night succeeded, and the Huns continued to sap the foundations
of the tower, but, being only protected by their shields, they were at last
forced to fall back with great loss of men. The Aquileians however
had sacrificed their whole cavalry and its leader, a loss which outweighed all
the previous slaughter of the enemy, and the town was become ruinous and almost
untenable. Forestus and many other valiant
men had fallen in its defence.
Menapus, therefore, despairing of
successful resistance, as the army of Aetius remained inactive behind the Po,
and no hopes of relief were held out to him, sent by night the children and
women, and the wounded men to the nearest island, Gradus, with the
patriarch Nicetas and the church utensils,
being confident that the barbarians, who were unskilled in navigation, would
not pursue their enemies by sea. He then attempted to repair the fortifications
of the town and the wall in front of it.
The third month was now far
spent, since Attila had commenced operations against Aquileia, and yet there
was no certain prospect of taking the town. His troops murmured, and began to
talk of raising the siege, when he observed a stork remove its young from the
long contested tower. Thereupon he turned to his soldiers, and, auguring its
speedy fell from that circumstance, he exhorted them to make a most vigorous
attack upon it. Having been undermined and shaken before, it was at last beat
out of the perpendicular by the immense stones thrown by the engines which he
had caused to be constructed. It fell in the night time with a tremendous
crash, which made the whole population start out of their beds; and, if Attila
had immediately attacked the city, he might have taken it in the first moment
of confusion.
The obscurity of the night and
the ignorance of the Huns as to the actual state of the defences gave
the besieged a short respite, and Menapus quickly
constructed an inner fortification with mud and stones, but he was aware that
such a defence could not hold out long. At day break, Attila, having seen
the state of things, made a bloody attack, and gained possession of the ruins
of the tower; and, having driven the Aquileians behind
the old wall, he began to strengthen the post, intending to use it for
offensive operations against the town. Menapus now
despaired of making good the defence of Aquileia; provisions were beginning to
fail, and Valentinian had abandoned the outfit of a fleet which he had ordered to
be equipped at Ravenna at the commencement of the siege. The governor therefore
removed the greater part of his people to Gradus during the night, and placed
statues or figures on the walls to look like sentinels, and prevent the enemy
from noticing the evacuation of the city by the garrison.
When the day broke, the Huns
at first wondered at the unusual silence, but at length observing birds alight
on some of the figures, they perceived that the fortifications were abandoned.
They immediately forced their way through the new wall, and killed all the men,
children, and aged women, who were still remaining in the town; the younger
women found in it were reserved for the embraces of the conquerors. Two matrons
of high rank, and distinguished for beauty and chastity, having lost their
husbands during the siege, had continued day and night mourning over their
tombs, and refused to leave them, when the town was evacuated. Their names were
Digna and Honoria. When the defences were stormed, to escape the incontinency
of the Huns, Digna ascended an adjoining tower, which stood beside the river,
and, having veiled her head, she threw herself into it and perished. Honoria,
having thrown her arms round the stone sepulchre in which the remains of her
husband were interred, clung to it with such perseverance, that she could not
be dragged from it, till slain by the swords of the enemy. Thus fell Aquileia,
633 years after its foundation, perhaps the greatest town in the West after
Rome.
Almost all the writers, who
mention its overthrow, say that it was completely burnt and demolished, so that
the barbarians seemed desirous of obliterating every vestige of its existence,
but many circumstances contradict that assertion, which has been hastily
adopted by modern historians. Aquileia is frequently mentioned as existing
after the departure of Attila, and it is certain that the patriarchs continued
to dwell there till the time of the invasion of the Lombards, from whom
the last calamity of the town proceeded. Justinian, long after the time of
Attila, calls Aquileia the greatest of all the cities of the West, as if it
were still existing. Many particulars indeed are known concerning Aquileia,
down to the period of the removal of the see. Nicetas,
the patriarch, returned from Gradus, after the retreat of Attila, and exerted
himself to restore the church and the town.
The fugitives began to
reassemble from different quarters, and many of them, having been supposed to
have died in the war, found their wives provided with other husbands. This led
to a correspondence between Nicetas and
Pope Leo, the patriarch complaining that many of the women had remarried,
knowing that their husbands were in captivity, and not expecting them to
return. Leo exculpated the women who really believed their husbands to be dead,
and condemned the others as guilty of adultery, but he ordered all to return to
their first husbands under pain of excommunication. He directed those who had
been baptized by heretics, not having been before baptized, to be confirmed by
imposition of hands as having taken the form of baptism without the
sanctification, but he forbad rebaptism. The heretics alluded to were the Sabellians and
Arians, of whom there were many in the army of Attila, and who appear to have
made common cause with the pagans. The whole letter of Leo is extant, and
proves that Nicetas did not fall, as has
been asserted, in the siege. He died about the year 463, and his statue and
epitaph were placed in the patriarchal hall at Udine.
During the siege detachments from
the army of Attila carried devastation far and wide in the adjoining territory,
and treason was at work to betray into his hands several of the cities of
Italy. Treviso, then Tarvisium, is said to have
been yielded to the Huns through the means of its bishop Helinundus, who was probably inclined to the Arians, and
of Araicus Tempestas,
and Verona to have been given up by Diatheric or
Theodoric, who has been celebrated in various Scandinavian and German romances
under the name of Thidrek of Bern, meaning
Verona, and has been much confounded with Theodoric the great, afterwards king
of Italy, who was not then born. After the demolition of Aquileia, Attila
marched immediately against Concordia, a flourishing town, of which the ruler
Janus (who has become the hero of an Italian, perhaps originally a Provencal,
romance) had probably molested him during the siege. Janus, with his wife
Ariadne, fled to the nearest islands, and the conqueror entered and annihilated
the deserted city. One church, that of St Stephen, and a few cottages were the
only remains of Concordia at the end of the 15th century.
Attila next exterminated Altinum. Patavium (Padua),
Cremona, Vincentia (Vicenza), Mediolanum (Milan), Brixia (Brescia),
and Bergomum (Bergamo), were successively
captured. The fugitives from Aquileia had established themselves in the isle
of Gradua, the Concordians fled
to Crapulse, afterwards Caorli,
the Altinates to Torcellum, Maiorbium, and Amorianum,
and the Paduans to Rivus altus, which is
now nearly the centre of Venice, and is recognized in the modern name of the
Rialto.
The foundations of the bright
city of the waters was then laid, upon the sedgy islands that fringed the
Adriatic, by the refugees from the various towns of Italy that were dismantled
by the barbarian. Valentinian had fled from his palace at Ravenna to the
protection of the eternal city, and Attila, while besieging Padua, or at a
later period of his progress, is said to have received John the Arian bishop of
Ravenna, who came with his clergy in white robes to solicit his mercy for their
town and its population, and perhaps to offer him the assistance of the Arians
to subjugate all Italy without a conflict, if he would adopt their faith. He is
said to have answered that he would spare the town, but would throw down their
gates and trample them under the feet of his cavalry, that the inhabitants
might not in their vanity imagine their own strength to have been the cause of
their preservation.
On his march to Concordia, Attila
is said to have met some mountebanks, who, in the hope of obtaining money,
jumped with singular skill and agility amongst some swords which were artfully
arranged. Thinking the employment despicable for men who had evidently
sufficient bodily power and activity to use the sword efficiently in warfare,
he ordered them to be covered with armour and to imitate him in vaulting on
horseback with the weight of metal on them, which they proved unable to
perform; neither could they bend the bow properly, nor fix the arrow in the
string. He therefore ordered their well-fed bodies to be reduced by spare diet
and exercise, and enrolled them amongst his recruits.
After the capture of Padua, a
distinguished poet named Marullus the Calabrian, and who was probably the same
person whose poem detailing the latter part of the siege of Troy which had been
“left untold by the blind bard of Greece”, has descended to us under the name
of Quintus Calaber, recited a poem in his
praise, which gave him such offence, because it referred his origin to the gods
of Greece and Rome, that he ordered it to be burnt and the poet put to death,
but he remitted the latter part of the sentence. This anecdote, which was
probably extracted from the MS. of Priscus, has been misunderstood by those who
imagined from it that he repudiated divine honours, whereas the offence was the
connecting him with a worship he detested, and with Bacchus or some other deity
of the Pelasgians. Herodotus relates that Scylas,
king of the Scythians, was beheaded by his own subjects in Borysthenes,
and his palace, which was adorned with marble sphinxes and gryphons,
fulminated and burnt by the god of the Scythians, because he adopted the
Bacchic rites, which were held in abhorrence amongst them. That furnishes an
explanation to the indignation of Attila.
During the attack of Florence,
a statue of the god Mars, which notwithstanding the edict of Caesar still
occupied an elevated station in the town, having been, however, removed from
the temple which was dedicated to St. John, fell into the Arno, probably
knocked down by the engines of the besiegers. At Vincentia Attila met with a
stout resistance, and, finding his men hesitate, he leaped into the fosse, and
wading through the water, which was breast-deep, led them to the assault, and
was the first who scaled the rampart. But at Brixia he
met with more dangerous opposition, and received a wound in the hand, which
induced him to consign that city to more complete destruction than the rest of
the conquered places. Yet Brixia was a town
in which paganism appears to have lingered particularly. The temple of Flora
had been converted into a church dedicated to St Floranus,
to accommodate the heathens who adhered to their tutelary divinity, furnishing,
like the dedication of the temple of Belis,
or Felus, to St. Felix at Aquileia, one of the
many instances in which the Church of Rome compromised with the pagans, whom it
admitted within its pale without really converting them from idolatry, thus
laying the foundation of its own corruption; but, in the Triumpline valley hard by, the iron statue of the
god Tyllinus had escaped amidst the general
destruction of idols, and remained after the days of Attila. Milan submitted to
the conqueror, and a curious anecdote is related m a fragment of Priscus, for
the preservation of which we are indebted to his having used an uncommon word
for a bag, which caused it to be quoted by the lexicographer Suidas. Attila having observed in Milan a picture of the
Roman emperors seated upon a throne of gold, and Scythians prostrate before
them, ordered himself to be painted on a throne, and the Roman emperors bearing
sacks on their shoulders and pouring out gold from them at his feet. After
inflicting this lesson upon the pride of the Caesars he continued his
victorious career, plundering Ticinum (Pavia),
Mantua, Placentia, Parma, and Ferrara, and, as Jornandes asserts,
demolished almost all Italy, which gives some colour to the
improbable assertion of the Hungarian writers, that he despatched his
general Zowar to ravage Apulia, Calabria,
and the whole coast of the Adriatic, destroying a town named Catona, as having been founded by Cato. Geminianus, bishop of Mutina (Modena), afterwards
sanctified, is said to have played the same game as Lupus and John of Ravenna,
and by submission to have conciliated the favour of the invader and
saved the town. Attila is particularly stated to have laid waste Emilia (which
must mean the country traversed by the via Emilia, between Aquileia and Rimini,
Pisa and Tortona) and Marchia,
which has been explained to signify the territory of Bergamo, but was in truth
used to designate the March of Ancona. Ferrara is said to have been destroyed,
though, perhaps, at an earlier period of the campaign.
Thus far had Attila proceeded
without meeting any material obstacle after the reduction of Aquileia, but
Aetius had probably a considerable force under his command for the protection
of Rome, and, since the Huns had crossed the Po, he had not ceased to hang upon
their flanks, and to take every opportunity of cutting off their stragglers. A
course of desultory victories and continual plunder had probably contributed to
relax the discipline and diminish the numbers of the army of Attila. He
deliberated whether or not to proceed against Rome, and such deliberations
generally end by the adoption of the weaker counsel.
Evil forebodings had become
prevalent amongst his vassal kings, who represented to him that Alaric had not
long survived the invasion and plunder of the Romulean capital,
and the mind of Attila appears at that time to have been influenced by a vague
superstitious apprehension. He halted, as the later authorities assert near the
confluence of the Mincio and the Po, but it has been presumed from
the relation of Jordanes who names the place Acroventus Mambuleius, where the Mincio is forded by travellers,
that it must have been where the great Roman road crossed the river at Ardelica, the modern Peschiera,
near the point where it issues from the Benacus or
Lago di Garda, close to the farm of Virgil, and the Sirmian peninsula
of Catullus. It is however by no means improbable that the river might have
been forded at some place to the south of Mantua, though the opinion of Maffei
has led to the supposition that the place designated was close to Peschiera. Governolo, near
the confluence of the Mincio and the Po, is a much more probable
situation for the halt of Attila, after having ravaged the southern banks of
the Po; for if he had actually fallen back as far as the Benacus before he received the embassy, he must have
previously abandoned the prosecution of his enterprise, which is not even
surmised by any writer on the subject.
While he was hesitating,
whether to advance and attempt the complete subjugation of Rome, or to give way
to the forebodings of his advisers, Zowar is
said to have returned with great plunder from the coast of the Adriatic, and at
the same moment an embassy from Valentinian, who had despatched Leo the pope or
bishop of Rome, Avienus a man of consular
dignity, and the praetorian prefect Trigetius,
arrived at the camp of Attila. Leo is stated by his biographer and some
other writers to have thrown himself at the feet of Attila, and to have
delivered a speech of the most abject and unconditional submission. He is made
to say, after the manner of Lupus, that evil men had felt his scourge, and to
pray that the suppliants who addressed him might feel his clemency.
That the senate and Roman
people, once conquerors of the world, but now defeated, humbly asked pardon and
safety from Attila the king of kings; that nothing amid the exuberant glory of
his great actions, could have befallen him more conducive to the present lustre
of his name or to its future celebrity, than that the people, before whose feet
all nations and kings had lain prostrate, should now be suppliant before his.
That he had subdued the whole world, since it had been granted to him to
overthrow the Romans, who had conquered all other nations. That they prayed him
who had subdued all things to subdue himself; that, as he had surpassed the
summit of human glory, nothing could render him more like to Almighty God, than
to will that security should be extended through his protection to the many
whom he had subdued.
The letters however of Leo,
which are extant, upon various subjects chiefly connected with church
discipline, seem to testify a right-judging and upright mind, and render it
very improbable that he should have debased himself and the government which he
then represented by such mean and contemptible adulation. Whether he addressed
the mighty Hun in the language of abject submission, or strove to conciliate
him by a more rational and dignified appeal, he was completely successful in
obtaining the object of his mission.
The king is said to have stood
silent and astonished, moved by veneration at the appearance, and affected by
the tears, of the pontiff; and, when he was afterwards questioned by his
vassals, why he had conceded so much to the entreaties of Leo, to have answered
that he did not reverence him, but had seen another man in sacerdotal raiment,
more august in form and venerable from his grey hairs, who held a drawn sword,
and threatened him with instant death, unless he granted everything that Leo
demanded. The vision was reputed to be that of St Peter, and according to
Nicolas Olaus he saw two figures, who were
reported to have been St. Paul and St Peter.
This celebrated anecdote, the
memory of which is said to have been made illustrious by the works of Raphael
and Algarve, is to be looked upon as an ecclesiastical fiction, but Attila
seems to have been alarmed by a superstitious dread of the fate which overtook
Alaric speedily after the subjugation of Rome. A joke is related as having been
prevalent against Attila amongst his followers, founded on the names of the two
bishops Lupus and Leo, that as in Gaul he had yielded to the wolf, he now gave
way before the lion. He had probably more weighty reasons for his retreat, than
the venerable aspect of the lion, the visions of the apostles, or the fate of
the Gothic conqueror. His army was enervated by the sack of the Italian towns,
and a grievous pestilence had thinned its ranks; the devastation of the country
had rendered it difficult to obtain subsistence, and his troops were suffering
from famine, as well as disease; the recollection of Radagais,
who had not long before in the plenitude of his power been starved into
unconditional surrender on the heights of Faesulae,
may have furnished him with rational grounds of apprehension, while the army of
Aetius, fresh and unbroken, was hanging upon his skirts, intercepting his
foragers, cutting off his stragglers, and watching opportunity to inflict some
more important injury.
An ample donation of gold,
according to the base practice of that period, was probably added to the causes
which induced Attila to forego for that season at least the attack of Rome; and
he consented to withdraw his forces, threatening however that he would return
in the ensuing spring to inflict the most determined vengeance on the Romans,
unless Honoria and her portion of the imperial inheritance were conceded to
him. Cassiodorus and Carpileo probably
transacted the details of the treaty after the first audience of the
ambassadors.
Theodoric king of Italy, in a
rescript to the Roman senate, announcing the elevation of M. A. Cassiodorus to
the patriciate, asserts that the conclusion of the peace was mainly
attributable to the skill and intrepidity of the elder Cassiodorus his
father. He speaks in high praise of him, saying that his mental qualities were
equal to those of Aetius, and that on account of his wisdom and glorious
exertions on behalf of the state he was associated with that distinguished
commander, and was therefore deputed with Carpileo son
of Aetius to “Attila the armipotent”. “Fearless (continues Theodoric) he beheld
the man who was dreaded by the empire; confiding in the truth he disregarded
his terrible and threatening countenance. He found the king haughty, but left
him appeased; and so completely overthrew his calumnious allegations by the
force of truth, that he disposed him to seek conciliation, whose interest was
not to be at peace with a state so wealthy. By his firmness he raised up the
timid party, nor could those be looked upon as faint-hearted, who were defended
by such fearless negotiators. He returned with a treaty, which the nation had
despaired of obtaining”. Theodoric bears no mean testimony to the magnanimity
of Attila, when he asserts, that the truth spoken by a foe could disarm him in
the full career of his hostility. Cassiodorus, to whom we are indebted for
the preservation of Theodoric’s account of his father’s distinguished ability
in conducting the negotiation, says in his chronicle that pope Leo made the
peace under the direction of Valentinian.
Whether or not Honoria was
afterwards delivered up to Attila is a point that admits of doubt, though no
mention of her having been given to him is made by the Roman writers; but the
Hungarians speak of a son Chaba borne to him by Honoria after his
death. Nothing is recorded concerning her after this period, and she most
probably died in prison, unless, having been sent to him, she finished her life
amongst the heathens.
She was not amongst the ladies
of the imperial family whom Genseric afterwards carried off from the sack of
Rome to Africa. The steps which had been taken on the discovery of the
correspondence of Honoria with Attila are buried in oblivion with the lost
work of Priscus, but the expression of Jordanes that Attila asserted
that Honoria had done (or, strictly, admitted) nothing which should disqualify
her from marrying him, induces me to believe that she was immediately compelled
to undergo a mock ceremony of marriage, probably never consummated, for the
purpose of preventing her union with him.
A medal has been preserved,
and engraved by Angeloni, in which she bears the
title of Augusta, which was perhaps struck at this time to appease and gratify
Attila, for at no other time was Valentinian likely to have permitted
it. After the pacification had been concluded between Attila and the Roman
legates, he fell back with his whole force towards Pannonia. At the
passage of the Lycus or Lech, a fanatical woman, perhaps one of the
prophetesses who are described as always accompanying the Hunnish armies,
is said to have suddenly crossed his path, and, seizing hold of the bridle of
his horse, to have three times cried out, “Back, Attila!”, but notwithstanding
that warning he continued his course to his Hungarian capital, from whence he was
never again to take the field against the Romans.
Having returned home, Attila
sent an embassy to Marcian to demand tribute, whereupon Apollonius
was dispatched across the Danube from Constantinople to appease his anger. It
does not appear whether he pacified him by gifts at that time, but money was
probably paid.
Jordanes states that Attila
proceeded afterwards by a different route from that which he had before
followed to re-enter Gaul, and again attempt the reduction of the Alans on the
Loire; but that Torismond king of the
Visigoths was prepared to assist them, and defeated him once more on the
same Catalaunian plain, forcing him to
return home ingloriously. Notwithstanding the assertion of that writer, who
lived in the century next after the events he related, the concurrent testimony
of the Roman Chronicles, and the date of Attila’s death make it certain that
the story was as false, as it is improbable. It must have originated in the
circumstance of king Torismond having
succeeded to the throne during the victory of Châlons, which might
therefore have been truly said to have been gained first by Theodoric, and
after his fall by Torismond; and an interval of
time being erroneously placed between the exploits of the father and the son,
the same events were supposed to have occurred again at a later period. Gregory
of Tours however relates that the Alans themselves were defeated by Torismond not long before his death, which took place
in this same year, but he makes no mention of any Huns in Gaul at that period.
If the life of the Hunnish conqueror
had been prolonged many years beyond this time, it appears as certain, as any
event that human foresight can anticipate by the consideration of existing
things and past experience, that the Roman empires of the West and East must
erelong have been reduced to unconditional surrender of their authority, and
that, without the intervention of some great and unexpected deliverance,
Christianity, which had so lately become the law of the empire, must have been
nearly stifled in Europe; but it pleased the Divine wisdom to cut short the
life of Attila at the very moment, when the predictions concerning the termination
of the Roman power, at the expiration of its 1200th year, seemed about to be
accomplished by his elevation to the thrones of both Caesars, and the
revelation of Antichrist was expected in his person; and with his life the
mighty fabric which he had consolidated was immediately dissolved.
The innumerable offspring of
his multifarious concubinage claimed participation in the inheritance of his
power. They did not however succeed in wresting it from the children of Creca, who were his lawful successors, but the great
warriors amongst his vassal kings were too valiant and preponderant to be long
constrained by influence less authoritative, than that of Attila. The Gothic
kings threw off the yoke; and Gepidian Arderic, who had been the faithful counsellor and companion
of Attila, and the bulwark of his authority, struck the fatal blow to that of
the young princes, whom he defeated in a great battle near the river Netad, which is not identified, and took possession of all
Dacia.
From that moment the ascendancy
of the Huns was utterly extinguished. Ellac, the
eldest of the princes fell in the battle, and Dengisich and Irnach fled to the shores of the Euxine. In the
following year (455) Dengisich having the
chief power amongst the Huns, in concert with Irnach,
attacked the Goths as refractory vassals, but they were utterly defeated
by Walamir, and a small remnant escaped to the
strong defenses called Hunniwar in Pannonia. Irnach fled
into Asia to a part of the Hunnish dominions called lesser Scythia,
and his subsequent career was too insignificant to have been recorded.
Odoacer, who was destined to
put an end to the Roman empire in the West a few years after, was a person of
no great distinction in the Hunnish court at the time of the death of
Attila; and Theodoric, soon afterwards king of Italy, was born from a concubine
of one of the Gothic kings two years after his death nearly on the day of the
victory gained over the Huns by Walamir. The
account of a contemporary writer preserved by Photius,
states that he was the son of Walamir, who had
prognosticated the future greatness of his son, by the emission of sparks from
his body, a phenomenon by which the horse of Tiberius and the ass of
Severus, (probably Libius Severus) are said
by him to have presignated the elevation of
their riders. Malchus and some other
writers call him the son of Theodemir. Gibbon has followed the latter, and
does not appear to have known the doubt which exists on the subject. A coin of
Theodoric having the head of Zeno on the reverse, appears to testify, that,
like Odoacer, he held the crown of Italy in nominal subordination at least to
the Eastern emperor.
The particulars of the death
of Attila are involved in considerable obscurity. The chronicler Marcellinus,
who wrote in the next century, asserts that he was murdered by a concubine,
suborned by the patrician Aetius, and indeed it is difficult to believe that
any great act of political villainy should have been committed at that time
without the privity of that unprincipled statesman. Jordanes cites from the
lost history of Priscus, that Attila, according to the custom of his nation,
(probably meaning only the privilege of its kings) having added to the
innumerable multitude of his wives a very beautiful girl called Hildico, which is merely another form of the name Hilda,
after indulging in great hilarity at the wedding, lay upon his back oppressed
with wine and sleep; that a redundancy of blood, which gushed from his nose,
having found a passage into his throat, put an end to his life by suffocation;
and that inebriety thus terminated all his glories. This story was doubtless
promulgated by his murderers, but is highly improbable, when we consider the
great abstemiousness of Attila, recorded by Priscus; and, as marriage was to
him a circumstance of very frequent occurrence, it is not likely that he should
have departed from his usual habits of sobriety on this occasion.
Sigonius and Callimachiis state the name of the lady to have
been Hildico, but Olaus, Thurocz, and Bonfinius, call
her Mycolth, daughter of the king of Bactria,
and Ritius varies that name to Muzoth, while Diaconus, the
Alexandrine Chronicle, and Johannes Malalas simply
call her a Hunnish prostitute, by which opprobrious term the
Christian writers would probably have styled any of his subsidiary wives.
Johannes Malalas also says that the girl
was suspected of having murdered him, but that others assert he was murdered by
his sword-bearer at the instigation of Aetius. He is said to have struck his
foot painfully, as he entered the bridal chamber, on which, addressing himself,
as it was supposed, to the angel of death, he exclaimed, “If it be time, I
come”; and on the night of his marriage his favourite horse died suddenly.
The most ancient legends of
Germany and Scandinavia are filled with the adventures of Attila, and of the
ever memorable Hilda (the Hildico of
Jordanes) in a variety of forms, and with much confusion of circumstances and
appellations. The celebrated old German lay of the Nibelungians treats
of this matter. A great part of the poetical Edda of the Scandinavians is
occupied with the detail of these transactions, and the old sagas called
Volsunga, Wilkma, and Nifflunga Saga,
are records of the same. A careful consideration of the old Scandinavian
documents, together with the undeniable evidence of Priscus, that Attila ruled
over the Northern islands, makes it pretty clear, that the Danes have no real
history previous to the occupation of their territory by Attila, and that most
of their ancient traditions are reminiscences of that mighty conqueror, (who
was in some respects the Odin of the North, as he was also the Arthur of Great
Britain) or at least blended with them.
In the Heltenbuch we read of the emperor Otnit, certainly meaning Attila, and attributing to him a
name almost identical with Odin. Odin or Woden having
been worshipped by the Scythian tribes in Asia, and probably being one with the
sword-God, of whose type Attila had possessed himself, the name would be
naturally bestowed upon Attila by those who acknowledged his divine title. An
ancient medallion represents Attila with teraphim or a head upon his breast,
and Odin was said to have preserved the head of Mimer cut off which gave
oracular responses.
Attila is named Sigurd in
several Scandinavian legends; Sigge is a
name for Odin, and Sigtun his place of
abode, all being connected with the word Sigr,
victory. Sigi the son of Odin acquired
dominion in France according to the prose Edda, and Volsunga saga says he was
king of the Huns. The Edda states also that Sigi’s brother Balldr, who fell by an act of fratricide, (meaning Bleda)
ruled in Westphalia. Those statements actually designate Attila, who was looked
upon as the son or incarnation of the sword-god, being the only Hun who ever
had power in France. It must be borne in mind that, while the oldest Northern
legends connect Odin with the Huns, the existence of that nation was unknown in
Europe till 78 years before the death of Attila.
The Edda of Snorro states that Hlidskialf was
the throne of Odin, and in Atla quida st. 14. the
same name is given to the tower or dwelling-place of Attila. That Valhall was the residence of Odin is universally
known; the abode of Attila bears that name in the Edda, Atla mal in Gr. st. 14.
In the same Edda, in Sigurd. quid. Fafh.
3. st 34, Hilda says that Attila
compelled her to marry against her will; and in Brynh.
quid, she says that Odin condemned her to involuntary wedlock. In Brynh. quid. 1. st. 14. and
in Volospa it is said that Odin conversed
with, and obtained responses from the head of Mimer cut off, but, in Wilkina saga c. 147, Sigurd, who is
unquestionably Attila, kills Mimer. That Odin and his followers were Asiatics, or Asians, as they are styled in the Edda,
perfectly accords with the origin of the Huns who had so lately entered Europe;
nor does there appear to be the slightest ground for the suggestion of the
Danish historian Suhm, that Odin was a person
driven out of Asia into the North of Europe by the conquests of Mithridates,
except the antiquity which, without proof, he was desirous of giving to the
events detailed in the Scandinavian records; whereas it is most probable that
no such individual bearing the name of Odin ever existed in the North of
Europe, though that opinion may not be palatable to the Danish antiquarians.
Attila is called in the Edda the son of Buddla,
a name which seems closely connected with Buddha, the Asiatic title of the
God Woden or Odin. Buddla is
stated in Fundinn Noregur to
have conquered Saxony and established himself there, but not to have been
himself a Saxon. The exclamation attributed to Attila, “Lo, I am the
hammer of the world”, has evident reference to the Scandinavian hammer of the
God Thor; and, as he is identified with the war-god, his sister and wife Hilda
is the war-goddess, of the Northern nations.
According to Olaus Magnus, Hother (the
same who according to the oldest mythology of the North killed Balder son of
Odin, from jealousy, on account of a woman), was set on the throne of Sweden by
his brother Attila; and Attila succeeded Hothinus,
that is Odin. This Hother, according to Vegtam’s quida (known
as the Descent of Odin), in the verse Edda, was brother to Balder, as he is
above stated to have been brother to Attila. Hother himself
according to Vegtam’s quida was
killed by Ali, (sometimes called Vali) who in the old Swedish version is Atle, that is Attila, and in the Latin Atlas, another form
of his name, son of Odin and Rinda; therefore
all the three were brothers.
I entertain no doubt that this
famous tale of fratricide refers to the known murder of Bleda by his brother
Attila, with a duplication of the act of fratricide, like that which occurs in
all the tales of the murder of Attila himself; the cause assigned for the first
act of fratricide being jealousy, for the second, revenge. Olaus Magnus states in his appendix, that Attila hated
the Danes so, that he set a dog to reign over them, (which has some reference
to the account in the Provencal romance that Attila was himself begotten by a
dog, and had canine features) and that he was betrayed by his wife, who robbed
him, and fled from him, and conspired with his son against him. In p. 827, we
find another Attila king of Sweden, who also conquers the Danes, and dies by
murder. Olaus compiled his work from
vernacular legends, and in these fables we cannot fail to recognize the
reminiscences of the mighty Hun, and his close connection with Odin, and the
earliest mythology and story of the north; and they are confirmatory of the
fact asserted by Priscus, that he did rule over the maritime countries of the
Baltic. But the Scandinavian mythology not only begins with Attila, either,
doing the same things that are averred concerning Odin, or called his son, but
it also ends with him; for the prose Edda concludes with stating that this
Ali, Atle, or Attila (who is stated in c 15. to
be the son of Odin, powerful in military valour, and in archery, which was the
special weapon of the Huns), is to survive with Vidar the God of silence, after
the destruction of all the other Gods, and reign as before upon Ida;
that is, that Attila was expected to come again in power, as appears by so many
accounts of him both under his own name and the romantic name of Arthur. He is
the son of Odin, taken as the sword-god or spirit of war and victory; he is
Odin himself, looking to his achievements upon earth. The strange tale of the
deception of the Jews in Crete in the reign of Attila, by a person pretending
to come in the power of Moses as he did, throws some light on the assertion
that Ali or Attila was ultimately to reign on Ida, the Cretan mountain, which
was a type of that in Asia.
In the Scandinavian legends
the catastrophe of Attila’s life is told and repeated under different names
with some variation. In the first place he appears as the son of Sigmund,
possessing a celebrated sword called Gram, and a wonderful grey horse Grana,
under the name Sigurd, a Hunnish king, superior to all his
contemporaries in martial prowess, the vanquisher of many kings in France,
sojourning for some time with the Burgundian monarch, betrothed to and lying
with Hilda, surnamed Bryn-hilda, the sister of king
Attila, fraudulently giving her up to Gunnar or Gunther, prince of Burgundy,
and espousing the daughter of Hilda surnamed Grim or Chrim-Hilda,
and murdered at the instigation of the revengeful woman he had forsaken by one
of the Burgundian (otherwise called Nibelungian)
princes, but not before he had slain one of his assailants, and after his death
she burns herself, together with much wealth and many of her slaves.
He next appears in the same
legends as Attila (Atli), son of Buddla, a king
victorious over the Saxons near the Rhine, espousing Hilda, surnamed Grim
or Chrim-Hilda, the widow of Sigurd, and having
not only the same wife, but the same sword Gram and horse Grana, and his wife
excites another Burgundian prince to murder him, having previously served up to
him at supper her own children by him, after which she attempts to destroy
herself. Then she is conveyed to the court of another king who had married
her daughter Hilda, called Svan-Hilda, where another catastrophe takes place, a
child of the same name as before, Erpur, is
killed, and she likewise orders a pile for the purpose of burning
herself. The first half of the old German Nibelungenlied relates the
adventures of the person called Sigurd by the Scandinavians, under the
name Sigfried, his marriage with Chrim-Hilda, and his murder by the revenge of Bryn-Hilda.
The second part relates the
marriage of the widow to Attila king of the Huns, her attempts to avenge the
death of Sigfried on the Burgundian
princes, and her destruction by Theodoric. It is strange that the Danish
historian Suhm, although in his chronology he
has made these events coincide exactly with the era of Attila, appears never to
have suspected, or did not choose to perceive, that the Attila mentioned in the
Sagas and Edda was the renowned king of the Huns; nor did it ever occur to him
that Sigurd king of the Huns could be no other person. On the contrary, he
supposes the Attila there mentioned to have been a petty king over some Huns
settled in Groningen. That Attila, brother of Brynhilda and
son of Buddla, was Attila king of the Huns is
certified by the Nibelungenlied and the copious detail of his adventures
in Wilkinga saga; and the Danish editors of
the late edition of the tragic Edda are satisfied of that simple fact, though
they see no further into the unravelling of their confused traditions
concerning him.
That Sigurd the Hunnish king
of the Edda and Sagas, the Sigfried of the
old German poem, was Attila, appears indisputably from the following
considerations:—He had the same wife, the same sword, and the same horse; he
was king of the Huns, and the greatest warrior of his age; he was engaged with
the Burgundians, partly in alliance and partly in warfare; he vanquished many
princes on the French side of the Rhine: all which applies to Attila. He was
exactly contemporary with Attila, according to the chronology of those who did
not suspect their identity. He was not only married to, but murdered by Hilda,
as well as Attila.
It is utterly impossible that
such another king should have existed at the same period, and been engaged on
the same theatre of action with similar success, and under like circumstances,
without coming into collision with him, and that no vestige of such a character
should appear in the authentic histories of the times, still less could there
have been such another Hunnish king at the same time. His identity
with Attila is proved by his renown and achievements, as well as by the
catastrophe of his life; and in a still more striking manner by the assertion
of Brynhilda in the Edda, that, if
Sigurd had lived a little longer, he would have obtained universal
dominion.
In Sinfiotla lok is found another form of the story of
Attila. Sinfiotl is the son of Sigmund
the Volsungian; he and Gunnar woo the same
person, on which account he slays Gunnar, and in his turn is murdered by
Borg-Hilda, said there to be sister to Gunnar.
In Oddrunar Gratr there is another version of the tale. Gunnar is
surprised in an intrigue with Oddruna, sister of
Attila, whereupon Attila puts him to death in a cellar filled with vipers, and
has the heart of his brother Hagen cut out. In Oddruna,
sister of Attila, intriguing with Gunnar, may be recognized, under another
name, Brynhilda, sister of Attila, fraudulently
married to him. In Atla mal and
Ada quida, Attila is said to have decoyed the
Burgundian princes to his court to avenge the death of their sister Brynhilda, who had burnt herself after they had killed
Sigurd, to have cut out the heart of Hagen, and thrown Gunnar amongst the
vipers, in consequence of which his wife, the sister of Gunnar, killed his
children and himself, and tried to commit suicide. In the Nibelungenlied,
instead of being decoyed by Attila, they go treacherously, at the instigation
of Hilda, to murder Attila, and are put to death as above stated.
Volsunga saga treats fully of
the history of Sigurd, and subsequently of Attila; and at the end thereof as
well as in Regner Lodbrok’s saga, the name
of Kraka is given to Aslauga, the daughter of Sigurd, which tallies with that
of Kreka, the principal wife of Attila, recorded
by Prisons. In Wilkina or Niflunga saga, Attila appears under the name of
Sigurd Swein, and the Burgundian father of
Gunnar is called Alldrian instead of Giuka. After the death of Sigurd Swein his
widow is married to Attila, who being disgusted with her atrocities, permits
Theodoric to kill her with the sword in his presence, to prevent her, as he
states, from murdering Attila; whereby Sigurd Swein is
distinctly identified with Sigurd Sigmundson,
and with Sigfried of the Nibelungenlied,
whose widow is killed in the same manner by Theodoric. Afterwards a younger
Burgundian prince, Alldrian, son of Hagen,
entices Attila into a cavern in a lonely mountain, where he discovers to him
the amassed wealth of the Nibelungians and
of Sigurd, and succeeds in blocking him up in the cavern, and tells him to
satiate himself with the riches he had desired. Alldrian then
returns to Bryn-Hilda the widow of Gunnar, who had caused the death of Sigurd
and receives him with high favor on account
of his having slain Attila. This account tallies with that of the enclosure of
king Arthur in Mount Etna, where he was supposed to be still living, and from
whence he was expected to return and rule once more upon earth. In the same
saga the affairs of king Arthur are mixed up with those of Attila, and in an
earlier chapter Attila sends a messenger to woo Herka (perhaps
the same name as the I Kreka of Priscus,
wife of Attila, and called Cerca (by his
Latin translators) under the feigned name of Sigurd.
In Saemund’s Edda,
Sigurd is called the Southron, agreeing with the appellation of halls of the
south given in another passage thereof to the residence of Attila. The legend
of Hedin is a confused inversion of the Attilane tragedy.
The same enchantress Hilda is the occasion of bloodshed; Hedin, a name nearly
identical with Odin, representing Attila, and Hagen, his antagonist, bearing
the same name as one of the Burgundian conspirators. The tale is an inversion
of the conflict between Attila and the Burgundian princes. That it belongs
to Hunnish history, and not merely to the Scandinavian population, is
clear, because Saxo Grammaticus says that Hedin fought a battle which lasted
three days with the king of the Huns.
The ancient chronology of the
Danes respecting the inhabitants of Scandinavia is in a great measure founded
upon Fundinn Noregur or
Norwegian origins, a genealogical work in the old Scandinavian tongue,
evidently written in the reign of Harald Harfager,
who first united all Norway under the dominion of an individual (in 888
according to Suhm), for the purpose of showing
that through his female ancestors he was descended from all the great families
of the North; from Odin, through one line, from Buddla,
the father of Attila and Brynhilda through
another, from Sigurd through another, from Norr, Gorr, &c. The Danish historians have shown much want of
discernment in believing this fabrication. The falsehood of these genealogies,
which were forgeries of great political importance to Harald, may be at once
demonstrated by the descent from Sigurd, whose death, if he be considered as
Attila, took place in 453, and, taken as he is by the Danish historians, is
placed a very few years earlier, that is just long enough before to give time
for the last events of his life to be acted over again under the name of
Attila. Yet the pedigree gives, 1. Sigurd; 2. Aslauga,
his daughter by Bryn-Hilda, married to Regner Lodbrok;
3. Sigurd the snake-eyed; 4. Aslauga, his
daughter; 5. Sigurd the hart; 6. Ragn-Hilda,
mother of Harald Harfager; allowing only five
generations for the space of 435 years
between the death of Sigurd, taken at the latest period,
and the monarchy of Harald, which makes each person in the pedigree 87 years
old at the time of the birth of the child that succeeds. Such an absurdity
throws complete discredit upon the whole tissue of genealogies, evidently a
clumsy fabrication to reconcile the North to the usurpations of Harald, and it
strikes at the root of the whole frame of ancient Danish story.
In a note to a short poem at
the end of Helga, I apologized for a supposed confusion in my Icelandic
translations between Aslauga, the daughter of
Sigurd Sigmundson, surnamed Fafnisbana, who lived in the fifth century, and Aslauga, wife of Regner Lodbrok,
daughter of Sigurd Swein, asserted to have lived
in the eighth. I now retract that apology, into which I was misled by the
disingenuous chronology of Suhm. The Fundinn Noregur distinctly
says that the wife of Regner was Aslauga, the child of Brynhilda daughter
of Buddla, and of Sigurd Fafnisbana, who lived, by the assent of all writers, in the
fifth century, and who was no other than Attila; and Nifflunga Saga,
relating his death and the vengeance of Bryn-Hilda, calls the same person by
the name of Sigurd Swein. The Danish historian,
finding himself thwarted by the gross anachronism in the false pedigree of
Harald, attempted to bolster it up by splitting the same individuals into
separate persons in different centuries, ringing the changes on the names
Sigurd and Aslauga; to such a degree could
nationality and a desire to uphold the truth and authenticity of Scandinavian
legends warp the understanding, and even apparently the candour, of an
antiquarian, whose disquisitions were too minute to allow a probability of his
not having suspected the imposture. The story of Regner Lodbrok
is a blending of the adventures of the grandfather of king Harald Harfager (a northern sea-rover, killed in the eighth
or ninth century by Ella in Northumberland), with some of the celebrated Attilane reminiscences concerning Hilda, Sigurd,
and Aslauga, who may have been the younger
Hilda; and consequently we read that the sons of Regner,
with a great army, proceeded in his lifetime to Luneberg in
Saxony, with the intention of marching against Rome, but abandoned the
expedition on further consideration, a passage from the life of Attila,
ridiculously misapplied to the offspring of a Northern pirate. The name Regner appears to have been Hunnish, for Agathias mentions that Regnar,
general of the Goths, who attempted to assassinate Narses, was not a Goth, but
of the tribe of Bittores, a Hunnish race. Regner Lodbrok himself is stated to be the son of
another Sigurd (Sigurd Ring) and another Hilda (Alf-Hilda), so incessantly are
the changes rung upon these feigned names of the sera of Attila. It appears
that the poetical Edda had been written long enough before the reign of
Harald Harfager for the particulars related
in it to have obtained credence, and before the names Dane and Denmark were
established in the north of Europe, probably at the close of the sixth century.
It will be observed that, in
all the various versions of the catastrophe which cut short the life of this
mighty potentate, a revengeful woman of the name of Hilda bears a conspicuous
part; that some false play, by which she was dishonoured, seems invariably to
be the cause of her virulence, and that the Burgundian family are always mixed
up in the transaction, with great confusion between an elder and a younger Hilda.
Both Cassiodorus and Prosper Aquitanicus testify
in their chronicles the fact that Gundicar or
Gunnar, the Burgundian, was slain by the Huns not long after his treaty with
Aetius, showing thereby that the later legends have some foundation in reality.
The result of these various relations, taking into consideration that Priscus
states Attila to have married his daughter Eskam,
seems to be, that he, as told of him under the name of Sigurd, had a daughter
by his sister Hilda, who is sometimes called Bryn-hilda,
sometimes Hilda i bryniu, or the mailed Hilda, described as a warlike
woman and enchantress; that he had betrothed himself to her, but not married
her, and that he afterwards compelled her against her will to marry the prince
of Burgundy; that he subsequently in 448 espoused the younger Hilda, (sometimes
called Chrim or Grim Hilda, sometimes Gudruna or divine enchantress, as the other Hilda is
also called Oddruna or enchantress of the
arrow head) his daughter by his sister, (Brynhilda,
sometimes also called Grimhilda) in consequence
of which she, the elder Hilda, excited the Burgundian princes to attempt to
slay him; but that he put them to death, and was afterwards murdered by a
younger prince of that nation at her instigation; that the catastrophe did not
take place on the night of his marriage with Hilda, but at a later period and
on the occasion of another wedding, though the previous union with Hilda was
the cause of his murder. Coupling these particulars with the account of
Priscus, that in 448 he wedded his own daughter Eskam,
of other historians that he died on the night of his wedding with Mycolth, and of others that Hilda was suspected of having
murdered him, it seems not improbable that Eskam was
the younger Hilda, his daughter by his sister whom he had compelled to marry the
Burgundian, and through whose revenge his murder was effected, with the aid of
one of the Burgundian princes, on the night of his marriage with Mycolth in 453; Gunnar, otherwise called Gunther
or Gundicar, having been previously excited
against him, and slain after an unsuccessful attempt upon his life. It is very
probable, that Aetius was privy to the conspiracy, as Marcellinus has
positively asserted.
The Wilkina saga
contains the detail of a variety of exploits by Attila, his victory over Osantrix king of Denmark, with his gigantic
champions Aspilian and his brothers,
his conquest of Russia from Waldemar, and the defeat of Hermanric by his arms, some of which events may
perhaps be founded in truth, but they are discredited by the anachronism of
introducing as his coadjutor, Theodoric of Verona, meaning Theodoric afterwards
king of Italy, who was not born till two years after the death of Attila; but,
in this and in various other relations be has been confounded with an earlier
Theodoric, or the actions of Theodemir the vassal of Attila have been
attributed to Theodoric, who was either his son or his nephew. Hermanric the Ostrogoth had been probably dead before
the birth of Attila, and the supposed victories over him, and the alleged
cooperation of Theodoric, were perhaps connected with the fabulous account of
Attila’s great longevity; but the age of 120 years attributed to him by the
Hungarian writers, being that of Moses, seems to have arisen out of the notion
that he came in the spirit of Moses, and was in fact alter Moses.
According to the statement of
Priscus, as related by Jordanes, the attendants of Attila abstained from
entering the bridal chamber for a considerable time, thinking that he was
pleased to lie late; but at length, after calling loudly in vain, having forced
the door they found him dead, and the girl, whom he had espoused, dejected and
weeping under the covering of her veil. Thereupon, according to the customary
manner of mourning the dead amongst his countrymen, they cicatrized their
faces, in order, as the historian says, that he might be bewailed by the blood
of men, and not by the tears of women. A silken tent was pitched in the open
plain, and there his body was borne and lay for some time in state; while the
most distinguished of the Hunnish cavalry careered around him, in the
manner customary at the games or tournaments of the Roman circus, in which the
horsemen used to be divided into four parties clothed with uniforms of
different colours, and they chanted during their evolutions his praise in
funereal accents, saying, “Attila, the chief king of the Huns, son of Mundiuc, lord of the bravest nations, endowed with an
extent of power unheard of before his time, having alone possessed all the
kingdoms of Scythia and Germany, and terrified both empires of the Roman city,
having captured or trampled on their towns and having consented to receive an
annual tribute, being appeased by entreaties to spare those which were not yet
sacked, when he had brought all those things to a prosperous conclusion, ended
his life, not by hostile violence or by the treachery of his own people, but in
the full enjoyment of the security of his nation, amidst festivities, and
without any sense of pain. Who would not esteem such a termination of his life
desirable!
After the equestrian exercises
had been performed, and the dirge, of which the above substance has been
preserved to us, had been chanted, they buried him secretly. He had three
several coffins or rather biers, the first decorated with gold, the second with
silver, the third with iron, signifying by those symbols that the three metals
appertained to so powerful a king; with evident reference to the prophetic monarchies
of Daniel, the gold representing the Babylonian, the silver that of the Medes,
to both of which he pretended in the title he had assumed, and the iron both
the Roman empire, and the deified sword by virtue of which he ruled. He was
interred at night, after which a vast heap of spoils was made over his tomb, or
rather over his body; and they buried with him arms of his enemies which had
been taken in battle, trappings studded with gems, and the banners of various
nations.
After this ceremony, the Huns
celebrated his funeral rites with profane feasting and wassail, and the supper
is said to have been served up in four courses, the first on plate of gold, the
second of silver, the third of brass, the fourth of iron, including the third
or brazen Macedonian kingdom with the three others which had been before
signified; and it is observable that the historians, who have recorded these
remarkable facts, do not seem to have had any notion of their apparent mystical
intention, and their ignorance of the secret meaning affords strong reason for
believing their report.
The slaves by whose labour the
grave of the Hunnish monarch was excavated, were put to death as a
sacrifice to his manes, and, as Jordanes states, to deter curiosity from prying
into and pilfering the wealth which was interred with him; but it is difficult
to understand how the place of his interment could be rendered secret, even by
murdering the workmen, if the tomb was covered with the spoils of nations, and
it is most probable that the spoils were all buried and laid over the site of
the body, and not over the tomb externally. With like view to secrecy and
security, the body of Alaric had been deposited under the bed of the
river Busentinus. The Hungarian writers say that
Attila was buried near Kaiazo or Cheveshusa (a Hunnish word of Teutonic
origin, meaning Cheve’s house) where
the Hunnish kings Cheve, Cadica, and Balamber, were
entombed.
The identity of Attila with
the Arthur of romance has been pointed out by the author of Nimrod. It is by no means improbable, that, when the arms
of Attila extended themselves successfully over the North of Europe, the Saxon
sea-kings, whom he, being unprovided with a maritime force, could not reduce
under his dominion, may have removed to England in some measure to avoid his
ascendancy; and, although we have no reason to believe that Attila ever sent
any military expedition into Great Britain, the Scandinavian legends say that
his companion Theodoric sent Herbert his nephew thither to king Arthur, who can
be demonstrated to be no other than Attila, to ask for the hand of his daughter
Hilda in marriage, but there is a story of fraud wherever the nuptials of Hilda
are mentioned, and Herbert in this account draws a frightful picture of
Theodoric to disgust her, and marries her himself. It may be surmised,
that, as it was natural for the Britons, who were sorely pressed by the Saxons,
to apply to the great conqueror of Europe, he may have sent them assurances of
his good-will and intention of succouring them hereafter, and have initiated
them in his Antichristian pretensions and claim to universal monarchy.
From such secret
communications the Druidical freemasonry may have originated; and Olaus Magnus, who styles Arthur king over
Britain, Ireland, Scandinavia, Denmark, and the rest of Europe to
the Palus Maeotis, which could not have
been predicated of any man except Attila, mentions that he instituted certain
families or societies of illustrious men, which seems actually to
designate lodges of illuminati.
The following extract from a
MS. by the author of Nimrod, which he has kindly
communicated, will preclude the necessity of my entering further into this part
of the subject. It seems to me clear that the Arthurian fable is a
Druidical location of Attila, as bead of the Antichristian power, in Great
Britain. “This topic may be handled to better satisfaction by showing to
what real man and actions the unreal Arthur of Britain had reference, and why
mortals so widely removed from the era of the lower Western empire, as those
who seem to revive in his person, have been raised up, like phantoms, to cross
our path in history.
The Arthur of romance was king
in AD 452, and the siege perileux in
the centre of the round table, bore an inscription that in that year the seat
ought to be filled, and the quest of the Saint Grail achieved; yet Arthur
failed of doing either. Bearing that date of romance in mind, we must observe that
Arthur was armed with a sword brought to him from heaven, in right of which he
was (like a second Orion) called Llaminawg, the
sword-bearer. The celestial sword was so interwoven with his life, that, until
it was flung into the water, he could not depart from this world for his
appointed sojourn in Damalis or Avallon.
It seems to have
contained the divine part of his nature. In Tyran le
Blanc we read of Arthur imprisoned in a silken cage, having life, but void of
knowledge and discernment, save that he could answer all questions by gazing
fixedly upon the naked blade of his sword Excalibur. When that was taken
from him, he no longer knew, perceived, or remembered anything.
That sword was his mind and
his memory. Ireland, the Hebrides, Iceland, Scandinavia, Denmark, Germany and
France, were conquered by Arthur, according to the accounts given in the Bruts and in Romance; he prevailed over the Roman
empire of the West, and (as Leslie bishop of Ross says) over that of the East
also. Attila king of the Huns claimed sovereignty over the Scythian and Sarmatic nations in right of the sword of Mars, not a
weapon used by that God, but an idol of him, immemorially revered in Scythia,
though seldom seen upon earth, of which he boasted himself to be the possessor.
Most of the Northern nations seem to have been obedient to his power, and both
sections of Constantine’s empire were humbled by his arms into the payment of
tribute. Arthur is stated to have passed into Gaul, and gained a great victory
in Champagne over the roman general Lucius Tiberius, and was marching on to
attack the Roman emperor himself in Italy, (whom Geoflrey ap
Arthur calls Leo) when the intrigues of Medrawd the
Pict, and Guenever recalled him home, and
shortly after destroyed him. The Hun fought a great battle in Champagne against
the general Flavius Aetius, and soon after marched against Italy, where he was
encountered by pope Leo, and by agreement with him,(but for what private
reasons I leave for historians to enquire) returned to his own country. This
was in AD 452, the very same year in which the Romantic Arthur
should have filled the siege perileux,
but did not. A few months completed the life of Attila, by means (as it has
been supposed) of an unfaithful wife and foreign or domestic treason. It may be
asked, is it possible, that two celestial sword-bearers should have been
thought, or even feigned, to spring up, conquer Europe, successfully assail the
Roman empire, return home, and perish under circumstances so minutely similar,
and a perfect correspondence of date? True it is that the Brutic Arthur bears date considerably later than the
Romantic, but it also true that the later date is only a cryptographic
expression or cypher to denote the earlier one. Arthur, say the Brute, withdrew
to Avallon in AD 542,
which three figures are merely an anagram of 452”.—“Of Arthur the sword-bearer
it is said that he disappeared mysteriously from the earth, to which he was one
day to return; Niebelungenlied speaks
of the disappearance of the Hun, as doubting whether he was swallowed up by the
earth, concealed in the mountains, or carried off by the Devil; and a Norse
saga describes him as being enclosed alive in a hollow mountain, amidst
accumulated treasures”.—“Alain Bouchard (Grand Chronique de
Bretagne, fol. 53) pretends that one Daniel Dremruz or
the Red-visaged, reigned in Little Britain from 689 to 730, carried his arms
into Germany, was elected king of the Germans, and proceeded to Pavia, where he
married the daughter of the emperor Leo, He returned to Armorica where he was
the most powerful monarch of all the West. His title is equivalent to
Florid-faced (Gwrid ap Gwrid Glau) an Arthurian title. He is said to have descended from
the Earls of Cornwall, Arthur’s native province. Like Arthur he had no real
existence; like Attila he ended his career of conquest by an Italian
expedition, but did not penetrate beyond the north of Italy, during the reign
of an emperor Leo who did not exist at the time mentioned. The circumstances
identify him with both Arthur and Attila”.—“In a great lake near Nantes is an
island called isle d’Un, meaning
Hun, in which is a great stone with a hole in it, under which a giant is said
to sleep, who contended against Christianity, represented in the person of St.
Martin of Tours; and it is traditional that a virgin is hereafter to put her
arm through the hole and raise the stone, and resuscitate the giant and convert
him. Martin died before the reign of Attila, but was uncle to St. Patric, his contemporary. The sleeping Hun is evidently
Attila, and the legend furnishes another proof of his anti-Christian character,
and of his identity with Arthur, abiding in, and expected to return from, the
island of Avallon”.
It is much to be regretted
that the particulars of the life of this conspicuous man have not been more
perfectly preserved, but if we assume from what has been premised, that which I
firmly believe, that the mythology and the early history of the North
originates in Attila, that the Arthurian legends have like reference to him,
and that the Antichristian expectations, which had centered in
him, continued to be cherished in the mysticism of romances, giving a tinge to
whatever literature did not spring from monastic sources, we cannot fail to
perceive how great was the depth and durability of his spiritual influence and
machinations, as well as his political power; and we may estimate what would
have been the grievous consequences, if his career had not been cut short
before he had had time to complete the subjugation of Europe and consolidate
his Antichristian empire.
His character may be easily
traced from his conduct and achievements. Simple and abstemious in his habits,
he gave no cause to the humblest of his followers to look with an evil eye on
his exaltation. He was hardy, strong, active, and distinguished in martial
exercises; silent and thoughtful in his hours of festivity; his determinations
were peremptory, their execution rapid and effectual.
Superstition and terror
extended his influence, but the happiness of his subjects, his kindness,
justice, and success, gave strength to his authority. He afforded safety to all
who were overshadowed by his power, while he threatened certain destruction to
all who resisted his dominion, and unrelenting persecution to all who fled from
it.
The lamentable state of
Europe, at the time of his accession, gives reason to conceive the delight,
with which the industrious portion of the nations under his government must
have hailed its protection; while the rapidity of his conquests, and the belief
that he acted under a divine delegation, ensured to him the enthusiastic
confidence of his soldiers. Partial and corrupt administration of the laws,
tyrannical and ruinous exactions, inroads of barbarous marauders, wavering and
imbecile policy, had annihilated the security of every individual within the
limits of the Roman empire; and incessant strife, between the various nations
who were pressing upon each other and upon the Romans for subsistence, had
spread havoc and starvation without its confines over a large portion of
Europe; but, wherever the ascendancy of Attila was established, the scene of
bloodshed was immediately removed beyond its boundaries; the wealth, which he
snatched by force of arms, or extorted by negotiation, from his opponents,
continued to flow into his territory, and its interior presented an unexampled
scene of contentment and security.
Attila was perhaps the
mightiest of those, who have distinguished themselves for a few brief years on
the theatre of earthly glory; and, if he had not been cut short in the
plenitude of his strength by an overruling Providence, we have every reason to
believe that he must erelong have obtained the undisputed possession of Europe,
and neither the Persians of Asia, nor the Vandals of Africa, could have offered
any serious opposition to the indefinite extension of his empire. But his
personal influence was the magic girdle which held together the immense league
that had been cemented under his authority, and the moment his commanding talents
were removed by a sudden and unexpected death, the power, which had been a
single-handed and resistless weapon in his grasp, appeared too mighty to be
wielded by any person of inferior qualifications.
The establishment of his
government over the habitable world was inconsistent with the spread of
Christianity, and the Almighty will, which had sent him as a scourge on the
population of the Roman empire, permitted him not to complete the overthrow of
true religion; but annihilated by his decease the great fabric he had
constructed, which was immediately dissolved by internal conflict in the
absence of his absolute and decisive authority. The mighty one was gathered to
his fathers; the power of the Huns, which had shed a baleful and meteorous gleam over the age in which he lived, was
speedily obscured; their generation was lost, and their name extinguished; and
the historian, after searching amongst the records of time for the imperfect
relation of his achievements, is left to conjecture the city of his abode, the
manner of his death, the place of his interment, and even the language that he
spoke, and in which his decrees had been promulgated from the confines of China
to the waters of the German ocean.
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