READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM | 
        
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      THE CHRISTIAN ROMAN EMPIRE AND THE FOUNDATION OF THE TEUTONIC KINGDOMS 300-500
           CHAPTER VII.
             EXPANSION OF THE TEUTONS
             
             THE race which played the leading part in history
            after the break-up of the Roman Empire was the race known as the Teutons. Their
            early history is shrouded in obscurity, an obscurity which only begins to be
            lightened about the end of the second century of our era. Such information as
            we have we owe to Greeks and Romans; and what they give us is almost
            exclusively contemporary history, and the few fragmentary statements referring
            to earlier conditions, invaluable as they are to us, do not go far behind their
            own time. Archaeology alone enables us to penetrate further back. Without its
            aid it would be vain to think of attempting to answer the question of the
            origin and original distribution of the Germanic race.
             The earliest home of the Teutons was in the countries
            surrounding the western extremity of the Baltic Sea, comprising what is now the
            south of Sweden, Jutland with Schleswig-Holstein, the German Baltic coast to
            about the Oder, and the islands with which the sea is studded as far as Gothland. This, not Asia, is the region which, with a
            certain extension south, as far, say, as the great mountain chain of central
            Germany, may be described as the cradle of the Indo-Germanic race. According to
            all appearance, this was the centre from which it impelled its successive waves
            of population towards the west, south, and south-east, to take possession, in
            the end, of all Europe and even of a part of Asia. A portion of the
            Indo-Germanic race, however, remained behind in the north, to emerge after the
            lapse of two thousand years into the light of history as a new people of
            wonderful homogeneity and remarkable uniformity of physical type, the people
            which we know as the Teutons. The expansion of the Indo-Germanic race and its
            division into various nations and groups of nations had in the main been
            completed during the Neolithic Period, so that in the Bronze Age—roughly, for
            the northern races, 1500-500 BC—the territories which we have indicated above
            belonged exclusively to the Teutons who formed a distinct race with its own
            special characteristics and language.
             The distinctive feature of the civilization of these
            prehistoric Teutons is the working of bronze. It is well known that in the
            North a region where the Bronze Age was of long duration—a remarkable degree of
            skill was attained in this art. The Northern Teutonic Bronze Age forms
            therefore in every respect a striking phenomenon in the general history of
            human progress. On the other hand, the advance in culture which followed the
            introduction of the use of iron was not at first shared by the Northern
            peoples. It was only about 500 BC, that is to say quite five hundred years
            later than in Greece and Italy, in the South of France and the upper part of
            the Danube basin, that the use of iron was introduced among the Teutons. The
            period of civilization usually known as the Hallstatt period, of which the
            latter portion (from about 600 BC onwards) was not less brilliant than the
            Later Bronze Age, remained practically unknown to the Teutons.
             The nearest neighbours of the Teutons in this earliest
            period were, to the south the Celts, to the east the Baltic peoples (Letts,
            Lithuanians, Prussians) and the Slavs, in the extreme north the Finns. How far
            the Teutonic territories extended northward, it is difficult to say. The southern
            extremity of Scandinavia, that is to say the present Sweden up to about the
            lakes, certainly always belonged to them. This is put beyond doubt by
            archaeological discoveries. The Teutons therefore have as good a claim to be
            considered the original inhabitants of Scandinavia as their northern neighbours
            the great Finnish people. It is certain that even in the earliest times they
            were expanding in a northerly direction, and that they settled in the Swedish
            lake district, as far north as the Dal Elf, and the southern part of Norway,
            long before we have any historical information about these countries. Whether
            they found them unoccupied, or whether they drove the Finns steadily backward,
            cannot be certainly decided, although the latter is the more probable. The Sitones whom Tacitus mentions along with the Suiones as the nations dwelling
            furthest to the north were certainly Finns.
             On the east, the Teutonic territory, which as we saw
            did not originally extend beyond the Oder, touched on that of the Baltic peoples
            who were later known collectively, by a name which is doubtless of Teutonic
            derivation, as Aists (Aestii in Tacitus, Germ. 45). To the south and east of these lay the numerous Slavonic
            tribes (called Venedi or Veneti by ancient writers).
            The land between the Oder and the Vistula was therefore in the earliest times
            inhabited, in the north by peoples of the Letto-Lithuanian
            linguistic group, and southward by Slavs. On this side also the Teutons in
            quite early times forced their way beyond the boundaries of their original
            territory. In the sixth century B.C., as can be determined with considerable
            certainty from archaeological discoveries, the settlement of these territories
            by the Teutons was to a large extent accomplished, the Baltic peoples being
            forced to retire eastward, beyond the Vistula, and the Slavs towards the
            south-east. It is likely that the conquerors came from the north, from
            Scandinavia; that they sought a new home on the south coast of the Baltic and
            towards the east and south-east. To this points also the fact (otherwise hard
            to explain) that the tribes which in historic times are settled in these
            districts, Goths, Gepidae, Rugii, Lemovii, Burgundii, Charini, Varini and Vandals, form a separate group, substantially
            distinguished in customs and speech from the Western Teutons, but showing
            numerous points of affinity, especially in language and legal usage, to the
            Northern Teutons. When, further, a series of Eastern Teutonic names of peoples
            appear again in Scandinavia, those for instance of the Goths: Gauthigoth (Gautar, Gothland); Greutungi: Greotingi; Rugians: Rugi (Rygir, Rogaland); Burgundiones: Borgundarholmr; and
            when we find in Jordanes the legend of the Gothic migration asserting that this
            people came from Scandinavia (Scandza insula) as the officina gentium aut certe velut vagina nationum the evidence in favour of a gradual settlement
            of eastern Germany by immigrants from the north seems irresistible.
             By the year 400 BC, at latest, the Teutons must have
            reached the northern base of the Sudetes. It was only a step further to the
            settlement of the upper Vistula; and if the Bastarnae, the first Germanic tribe
            which comes into the light of history, had their seat here about 300 BC, the
            settlement of the whole basin of the upper Vistula, right up to the
            Carpathians, must have been carried out by the Teutons in the course of the
            fourth century BC.
             It was with Celts that the Teutons came in contact
            towards the sources of the Oder in the mountains which form the boundary of
            Bohemia. Now there is no race to which the Teutons owe so much as to the Celts.
            The whole development of their civilization was most strongly influenced by the
            latter—so much so that in the centuries next before the Christian era the whole
            Teutonic race shared a common civilization with the Celts, to whom they stood
            in a relation of intellectual dependence; in every aspect of public and private
            life Celtic influence was reflected. How came it then that a people whose
            civilization shows such marked characteristics as that of the Teutons of the
            Later Bronze Age could lose these with such surprising rapidity—perhaps in the
            course of a single century?
             The earliest habitat of the Teutons extended, as we
            have seen, on the south as far as the Elbe. This river also marks the northern
            boundary of the Celts. All Germany west of the Elbe from the North Sea to the
            Alps was in the possession of the Celts, at the time when the Teutons occupied
            the western shores of the Baltic basin. The vigorous power of expansion which
            this race displayed in the last thousand years of the prehistoric age has left
            its traces throughout Europe, and even in Asia; and that is what gives it such
            importance in the history of the world. The whole of Western Europe—France with
            Belgium and Holland, the British Isles and the greater part of the Pyrenean
            peninsula, in the south the region of the Alps and the plains of the Po—has
            been at one time or another subject to their rule. Eastward, migratory swarms
            of Celts pushed their way down the Danube to the Black Sea and even into Asia
            Minor.
             The starting-point of this movement was probably in
            what is now north-western Germany and the Netherlands, and this region is
            therefore to be regarded as the original home of the Celtic race. Place-names
            and river-names, the study of which is a most valuable means of elucidating
            prehistoric conditions, enable us to prove the existence in many districts of
            this original Celtic population. They are scattered over the whole of western
            Germany and as far as Brabant and Flanders, but occur with especial frequency
            between the Rhine and the Weser. In the north the Wörpe-Bach
            (north-east of Bremen) marks the limits of their distribution, in the east the
            course of the Leine, down to Rosoppe;
            in the south they extend as far as the Main where the Aschaff (anciently Ascapha) at Aschaffenburg forms the last
            outpost of their territory. They are not found on the strip of coast along the
            North Sea, occupied later by the Chauci and Frisians, nor on the western side
            of the Elbe. From this we may safely conclude that these districts were
            abandoned by their original Celtic population earlier, indeed considerably
            earlier, than those to the west of the Weser, and also that the expansion of
            the Teutons westwards proceeded along two distinct lines, though doubtless
            almost contemporaneously one westward along the North Sea and one in a more
            southerly direction up the Elbe along both its banks.
             With this view the results of prehistoric archaeology
            are in complete agreement. We have determined the area of distribution of the
            Northern Bronze Age—which we saw to be specifically Teutonic—as consisting, in
            the earlier period (up to c. 1000 BC), of Scandinavia and the Danish islands,
            and also Schleswig-Holstein, Mecklenburg and West Pomerania, and therefore
            bounded on the south-west by the Elbe. But in the Later Bronze Age (c. 1000-600
            BC) this territory is enlarged in all directions. On the south and west
            especially, to judge from the evidence of excavations, it extends from the
            point at which the Wartha flows into the Oder, in a
            south-westerly direction through the Spreewald and Fläming districts to the Elbe; then further west to the
            Harz, and from there northwards along the Oker and
            Aller to about the estuary of the Weser, and finally along the coast-line as
            far as Holland. In Thuringia the Celtic peoples maintained their hold somewhat
            longer. The northern part of it—above the Unstrut—may
            have received a Teutonic population in the course of the fifth century BC; the
            southern in the course of the fourth. On the other hand, the whole region
            westward from the Weser and the Thuringian Forest as far as the Rhine was still
            in the possession of the Celts about the year 300 BC, and was only conquered by
            the Teutons in the course of the following century. It may be taken as the
            assured result of all the linguistic and archaeological data, that only about
            the year 200 BC the whole of north-western Germany was held by the Teutons, who
            had now reached the frontier-lines formed by the Rhine and the Main.
             About the close of the fifth century BC, a new
            civilization appears in the Celtic domain, a civilization which, from the fine
            taste and technical perfection of its productions, deserves in more than one
            respect to rank with that of the classical nations. This is the so-called La
            Tène Civilization, which takes its name from a place on the north side of the
            Lake of Neuchatel where especially numerous and varied remains of it have come
            to light. Where its centre is to be located we do not know—somewhere, we may
            conjecture, in the South of France or in Switzerland. Starting from this point
            it spread through all the parts of Europe, which were not under the sway of the
            Greek and Roman civilization. Following the course of the Rhone, of the Rhine,
            and of the Danube, it rapidly conquered all the countries in which Gallic
            tongues were spoken and maintained its supremacy until the Graeco-Roman
            civilization deposed it from its primacy.
             It was with this highly developed civilization—so far
            superior, especially in its highly advanced knowledge of the working of iron,
            to the Northern, which still only made use of bronze—that the Teutons came in
            contact in their advance towards the south-west. It is quite intelligible that
            the Teutons in the course of their two hundred years of struggle with the Celts
            for the possession of north-western Germany, should have eagerly adopted the
            higher civilization of the Celts.
             Vague reminiscences of the former supremacy of the
            Keltic race survived into historic times. Ac fuit antea tempus cum Germanos Galli virtute superarent, ultro bella inferrent,
              propter hominum multitudinem agrigue inopiam trans Rhenum colonias mitterent, writes Caesar—a piece of information which
            he must have derived from Gaulish sources. Here belongs also the Gallic
            tradition reported by Timagenes according to which a
            part of the nation was said ab insulis extimis confluxisse et tractibus Transrhenanis crebritate bellorum et adluvione fervidi maris sedibus suis expulsos. Caesar himself mentions a Celtic tribe, the
            Menapii, on the right bank of the lower Rhine.
             It is impossible to avoid the conclusion that the
            Celtic Teuriscans of northern Hungary were originally
            settled in south-central Germany between the Erzgebirge and the Harz, but later
            (about 400 BC) were forced out of this district by the pressure of the
            advancing Germans, and retired in two sections towards the south and
            south-east.
             About the year 200 BC the Teuton occupation of
            north-west Germany was, as we have seen, completed, having reached the Rhine on
            the west and the Main on the south. But the great forward movement towards the
            south-west was not to be stayed by these rivers. Vast waves of population kept
            pressing downward from the north, and giving fresh impetus to the movement. The
            whole Germanic world must at that time have been in constant ferment and
            unrest. Nations were born and perished. Everywhere there was pressure and
            counter-pressure. Any people that had not the strength to maintain itself
            against its neighbours, or to strike out a new path for itself, was swept away.
            The tension thus set up first found relief on the Rhenish frontier. About the
            middle of the second century BC. Teutonic hordes swept across the river and
            occupied the whole country westward of the lower Rhine as far as the Ardennes
            and the Eifel. These hordes were the ancestors of the later tribes and clans
            which meet us here in the first dawn of history, the Eburones, Condrusi, Caeroesi, Paemani, Segni, Nervii, Grudii, and also of the Texuandri, Sunuci, Baetusii, Caraces, who appear later, as well as of the Tungri, who after the annihilation of the Eburones by
            Caesar succeeded to their territory and position of influence. The Treveri, on the other hand, who had their seat further to
            the south beyond the Eifel, were doubtless Celts.
             The Teutonic invasion of Gaul must have taken place
            mainly in the second half of the second century BC, but it was still in
            progress in Caesar’s time. It may suffice briefly to recall in this connection
            the successful campaign of Ariovistus; the incursion immediately before Caesar
            entered upon his province, of 24,000 Harudi into the
            country of the Sequani; the invasion of the Suebi under Nasua and Cimberius in the year 58; and of the Usipetes and Tencteri at the beginning of the year BC 55. That
            there were even later immigrations of Teutonic hosts into north-eastern Gaul
            may be conjectured from the absence of any mention by Caesar of several of the
            tribes which were settled here in the time by the Empire, and this conjecture
            is raised almost to a certainty by the known instance of the Tungri.
             It was only later, in the time of the migrations of
            the Cimbri, and doubtless in connection therewith, that the frontier formed by
            the Main was crossed. It was—to the best of our information—a portion of the
            Suebi, previously settled on the northern bank of this river, who were the
            first to push across it, and after driving out the Helveti, established
            themselves firmly to the south of the river, and were here known under the name
            of Marcomanni (Men of the Marches)—the name first meets us in Caesar, in the
            enumeration of the peoples led by Ariovistus. Their country, the Marca,
            extended south to the Danube. That the Tulingi (mentioned by Caesar as finetini of the
            Helveti) were of Germanic origin is put beyond doubt by their name, which is
            good German and forms a pendant to that of the Thuringi.
            But it will doubtless be near the truth to see in them not the whole nation of
            the Marcomanni, but only a tribe or local division of it, and doubtless its
            advance guard towards the south. In any case it is evident from Caesar's
            account that numbering as they did a round 36,000, of whom about 8000 were
            warriors, they formed a united whole with a definite territory and were not
            merely a migratory body of Marcomanni gathered together ad hoc.
             A remnant of the old Marcomanni of South Germany, who
            in the year 9 BC migrated to Bohemia, is doubtless to be found in the Suebi Nicretes whom we meet with in the time of the Empire on the
            lower Neckar. Further to the north, on the southern bank of the Main, near Mittenberg, we find the name of the Toutoni in an inscription which came to light in the year 1878. Hereupon certain
            scholars have arrived at the conviction that this locality was the
            original home of the Teutones whom we hear of in association with the Cimbri,
            and so that they were not of Germanic but of Celtic origin, being of Helvetic
            race and identified with the Helvetic local clan of the Touyev of Strabo. This hypothesis must be absolutely rejected. There must have been
            some connection between those Toutoni and the Teutoni of history. But to conclude without more ado
            that the Teutoni were Helveti, South-German Celts, is
            to do direct violence to the whole body of ancient tradition, which
            consistently represents the Teutoni as a people whose
            original home was in the North. The simplest solution of the difficulty is that
            the Mittenberg Teutoni were
            a fragment which split off from the Teutonic peoples during their migration
            southward, and settled in this district, just as in north-eastern Gaul a
            portion of the Cimbri and Teutones maintained itself as the tribe of the Aduatuci.
             The whole process of the expulsion of the Celts from
            South Germany must have been accomplished between 100 BC and 70 BC, for Caesar
            knows of no Gauls on the right bank of the upper Rhine, and the Helveti had
            been living for a considerable time to the south of the head-waters of the
            river which, as Caesar tells us, divides Helvetic from German territory.
             The first collision between the Teutons and the
            Graeco-Roman world took place far to the east of Gaul. It resulted from a great
            migration of the eastern Teutonic tribes in the neighbourhood of the Vistula,
            which had carried some of them as far as the shore of the Black Sea. The chief
            of these tribes was that of the Bastarnae. Settled, it would seem, before their
            exodus near the head-waters of the Vistula they appear, as early as the
            beginning of the second century BC, near the estuary of the Danube. The whole
            region north of the Pruth, from the Black Sea to the
            northern slope of the Carpathians, was in their possession and remained so
            during all the time that they are known to history. Another Germanic tribe,
            doubtless dependent upon them, meets us in the same district, namely the Sciri
            from the lower Vistula. The well-known and much discussed ‘psephisma’
            of the town of Olbia in honour of Protogenes mentions
            them as allied with the Galatai, and there has been
            much debate as to what nation is to be understood by these Galatai,
            and they have sometimes been conjectured to be Illyrian Kelts (Scordisci), sometimes Thracian, sometimes the—also
            Celtic—Britolages, or the Teutonic Bastarnae, or even
            the Goths. The majority of scholars has however decided that these
            "Galatians" are the Bastarnae, whose presence in the neighbourhood of
            Olbia in the year 182 BC is attested by Polybius. There is, indeed, much in favour
            of this hypothesis and nothing against it. The inscription then, which is
            proved by the character of the writing to be one of the oldest found in this
            locality, would have been written about the time of the arrival of the
            Bastarnae at the estuary of the Danube, that is to say, about 200–180 BC, and
            would therefore be the earliest documentary evidence for the entrance of the
            Germanic tribes on the field of general history.
             As early as the year 182 BC we find the Bastarnae in
            negotiations with Philip of Macedon. Philip’s plan was to get rid of the
            Dardanians, and after settling his allies on the territory thus vacated to use
            it as a base for an expedition against Italy. After long negotiations, the
            Bastarnae in 179 abandoned their lately-won territory, crossed the Danube and
            advanced into Thrace. At this point King Philip died, and after an unsuccessful
            battle with the Thracians the Bastarnae began a retreat to the settlement which
            they had abandoned; but a detachment of some 30,000 men under Clondicus pressed on into Dardania.
            With the aid of the Thracians and Scordiscans and
            with the connivance of Philip's successor, Perseus, he pressed the Dardanians
            hard for a time, but at last in the winter of 175 he also decided to retire. In
            Rome the intrigues of the Macedonian kings had been watched with growing
            mistrust and displeasure, which found expression in the dispatch of a
            commission to investigate the situation in Macedonia and especially on the
            Dardanian border. This, therefore, is the first occasion on which the Roman
            State had to concern itself with Teutonic affairs. At that time, it is true,
            the racial difference between Celts and Teutons was not yet recognized and the
            Bastarnae were therefore supposed to be Gauls. Before very long (168), we find
            the Bastarnae again in relations with the King of Macedon. Twenty thousand men,
            again under the command of Clondicus, were to join
            him in his struggle with the Romans in Paeonia. But Perseus was blinded by
            avarice, and failed to keep his promises. Clondicus therefore, who had already reached the country of the Maedi,
            promptly turned to the right-about and marched home through Thrace. From this
            point they disappear from history for a time, only to reappear in the Mithradatic wars as allies of that King, and they
            consequently appear also in the list of the nations over whom Pompey triumphed
            in the year 61.
             In the East, on the frontiers of Europe and Asia, the
            Germanic race attracted little notice; but in the West, about the close of the
            second century BC, it shook the edifice of the Roman State to its foundations
            and spread the terror of its name over the whole of Western Europe. It was the
            Cimbri, along with their allies the Teutones and Ambrones, who for half a score
            of years kept the world in suspense. All three peoples were doubtless of
            Germanic stock. We may take it as established that the original home of the
            Cimbri was on the Jutish peninsula, that of the Teutones somewhere between the
            Ems and the Weser, and that of the Ambrones in the same neighbourhood, also on
            the North Sea coast. The cause of their migration was the constant encroachment
            of the sea upon their coasts, the occasion being an inundation which devastated
            their territory, great stretches of it being engulfed by the sea. This is the
            account given by ancient writers and we have no reason to doubt its
            truth. The exodus of all three peoples took place about the same time, and
            obviously in such a way that from the first they went forward in close touch
            with one another. First they turned southwards, probably following the line of
            the Elbe, crossed the Erzgebirge and pressed on into Bohemia, the land of the
            Boii. Driven back by the latter, they seem to have made their way along the
            valley of the March, southwards to the Danube, and then through Pannonia into
            the country of the Scordisci. Here, too, they
            encountered (in the year 114) such vigorous opposition that they preferred to
            turn westwards. That brought them into contact with the Taurisci who had just (115 BC) formed a close alliance with the Romans. In the Carnic
            Alps was stationed a Roman army under the command of the Consul Cn. Papirius
            Carbo, which immediately advanced into Noricum. Carbo's attempt by means of a treacherous
            attack to annihilate the Teutons ended in a severe defeat. The way into Italy
            now lay open to the victors. But so great was the awe in which they still held
            the Roman name, that they promptly turned away towards the north. Their route
            led them to the territory of the Helveti, which then extended from the Lake of
            Constance as far as the Main. The Helveti do not seem to have offered any
            resistance; indeed a considerable section of the Helveti—the Tigurini and Toygeni—attached
            themselves to the Teutonic migrants. The Germanic hosts then crossed the Rhine
            and pressed on southwards, plundering as they went.
             In 109 BC they halted in the valley of the Rhone, on
            the frontier of the Roman province of Transalpine Gaul, for the protection of
            which a strong army under the Consul M. Junius Silanus had taken the field. The Romans attacked, but were defeated for the second
            time. Again the Germans shrank from invading Roman territory and preferred to
            plunder and ravage the Gallic districts, which they completely laid waste.
            Finally, in the year 105 they appeared once more on the frontier of ‘the
            Province’, this time resolved to attack the Romans. Of the three armies which
            opposed them that of the Legate M. Aurelius Scaurus was first defeated in the territory of the Allobroges. On 6 October followed
            the bloody battle of Arausio in which the other two
            armies, under the Consul Cn. Mallius Maximus and the
            Proconsul Q. Servilius Caepio,
            in all some 60,000 troops, were completely annihilated. But instead of marching
            into Italy, the barbarians once again let the favourable moment slip, and thus
            lost the fruits of their victory. They divided their forces. The Cimbri marched
            away westwards, first into the country of the Volcae,
            then on over the Pyrenees into Spain where they carried on a desultory and
            indecisive struggle with the Celtiberi; the Teutons
            and Helveti turned northwards to continue the work of plundering Gaul. In 103
            the Cimbrian hosts made their way back to Gaul and
            reunited, in the territory of South-Belgic Veliocasses,
            with their comrades who had remained behind.
             Now at last they prepared a march upon Italy. In the
            spring of 102 the main mass of the united hordes began to move southwards. Only
            one section, of about 6000 men—the nucleus of the later tribe of the Aduatuci—remained behind in Belgica to guard the spoils. Doubtless with a view to the difficulties of the passage
            of the Alps, especially in the matter of supply, the invading host was before
            long divided into three columns. The plan was that the Teutones and Ambrones
            should make their way into the plain of the Po from the western side, crossing
            the Maritime Alps, while the Cimbri and the Tigurini should make a wide flanking movement and enter from the north, the former by
            way of the Tridentine, the latter by way of the Noric Alps. But the attempt was planned on too vast a scale, and was wrecked by the
            military skill of Marius. The Ambrones and Teutones were annihilated in the
            double battle near Aquae Sextiae (summer 102), while
            the fate of the Cimbri overtook them in the following year. They had already
            reached the soil of Italy, into which they had forced their way after a
            victorious encounter with Quintus Lutatius Catulus on the Adige, when (30 July 101), on the plains of Vercellae, the so-called Campi Raudii, they were utterly routed by the united forces of
            Marius and Catulus. The Tigurini,
            who were to form the third invading force, received the news of the defeat of
            the Cimbri when they were still on the Noric Alps,
            and immediately turned round and retired to their own country. Thus the great
            invasion of the northern barbarians was defeated, and Western Europe could once
            more breathe freely.
             We saw above that about 100 BC, doubtless in
            connection with the appearance of the Cimbri and Teutones in South Germany, the
            line of the Main was crossed by the Germanic peoples, and the settlement of the
            territory between that and the Danube began. Less than a generation later there
            was another attempt to extend the Germanic sphere of influence westward over
            Gaul. About the year 71 BC on the invitation of the powerful tribe of the
            Sequani, Ariovistus chief of the Suebi crossed the Rhine with 15,000 warriors
            to serve as mercenaries to the Sequani against their neighbours the Aedui. But
            after the victory was won, the strangers did not return to their own land but
            remained on the western side of the Rhine and established themselves in the
            territory of their employers, taking possession of about a third of it,
            presumably at its northern extremity. Strengthened by large accessions from the
            homeland this Germanic settlement on Gaulish territory—it consisted of the Vangiones, Nemetes and Tribocci, and finally extended over the whole of the left
            side of the Rhine valley, eastward of the Vosges—soon became a menace to all
            the surrounding tribes. A united attempt, in which the Aedui took a leading
            part, to expel the intruders by force of arms ended after months of indecisive
            fighting in a crushing defeat of the Gauls (at Admagetobrgia),
            apparently in the year 61 BC Gaul lay defenceless at the feet of the victors,
            and they did not fail to make the most of their success. The Aedui and all
            their adherents were forced to give hostages and to pay a yearly tribute. None
            dared to oppose the conquerors, who already regarded the whole of Gaul as their
            prey. They pursued their work deliberately and systematically, constantly
            bringing in new swarms of their compatriots, chiefly Suebi and Marcomanni, and
            assigning them lands in the territories which they had subjugated. Settlers
            came even from Jutland, Endusi and Harudes 24,000
            strong, and on their arrival the Sequani were forced to give up another third
            of their territory to the new-comers. Thus the power of Ariovistus became very
            formidable. The establishment of a great Germanic Empire over the whole of Gaul
            seemed not far distant.
             At other points also the Teutons were preparing to
            cross the Rhine. It seemed as if the example set by Ariovistus would lead to a
            general invasion of Gaul, flood the whole country with Germans, and overwhelm
            the Gaulish race. The movement began on the upper Rhine, on the Helvetic
            border. The Helveti had been obliged, as we have already seen, to retire
            further and further before the pressure of the Germans, until finally all the
            country north of the Lake of Constance was lost to them, and the Rhine became their
            northern frontier. Even here they were not allowed to rest. A short time after
            the appearance of Ariovistus the Teutons had again endeavoured to enlarge their
            border towards the south, and there ensued a long struggle upon the Rhine
            frontier. It was only by their utmost efforts that the Helveti were able to
            beat off the attacks of their opponents. Weary of the constant struggle, they
            at last resolved to leave their territory. This, as we have seen, they did
            three years later, when some smaller tribes, among them the Germanic Tulingi., threw in their lot with them. The Jura region,
            the entrance to southern Gaul, thus lay open to the Teutons. In the same year
            there appeared on the middle Rhine, probably in the Taunus region, a powerful Suebian army—a hundred ‘gau's’
            under the leadership of two brothers named Nasua (perhaps Masua)
            and Cimberius—and threatened to invade from this
            point the territory of the Treveri on the opposite
            bank. Finally, there was great restlessness also on the lower Rhine, among the
            tribes inhabiting the right bank, especially among the Usipetes and Tencteri, in consequence especially of the
            repeated aggressions of the warlike Suebi.
             This was the condition of affairs when Caesar (58 BC)
            took up his command in Gaul. He was well aware of the danger to the Roman
            occupation which lay in these wholesale immigrations of Germanic hordes into
            Gaulish territory, and it was consequently his first care to take prompt
            measures to meet the Teutonic peril. It is well known how he performed this task,
            how he removed the haunting dread of a general irruption of the Germanic
            peoples into Celtic territory, and at the same time established security and
            order upon the Rhine frontier. The restoration of the conquered Helveti to
            their abandoned territory in order that they might continue to serve, but now
            in the Roman interest, as a buffer-state, secured Gaul, and especially the
            valley of the Rhone, against incursions from the direction of the upper Rhine.
            His victory over Ariovistus destroyed the latter's vast levies and with them
            his ascendancy, but not—and herein we see again the far-sighted policy of the
            conqueror—the work of colonization begun by the Germanic ruler. The tribes of
            the Vangiones, Nemetes and Tribocci which he had settled in Gaul were allowed to
            remain where they were, and, like the Helveti, were placed under the Roman
            suzerainty while retaining their racial independence. But while Caesar allowed
            these settlements to remain, he repressed with all the greater energy all
            further efforts of expansion on the part of the dwellers on the upper Rhine.
            True, the Suebian bands which in 58 had mustered on
            the right bank of the river, had retired on receiving news of the defeat of
            Ariovistus, so that there was no fighting with them, but the attempt of Usipetes and Tencteri, in the
            following year, to find a new home for themselves in Gaul led to a battle, in
            which a large portion of them perished, and the rest were flung back across the
            Rhine.
             Augustus assumed the offensive against the Teutons.
            Even though the extension of the Roman dominion as far as the Elbe effected by
            the brilliant military successes of the two step-sons of the Emperor was of
            short duration—the year 9 AD witnessed the loss of the territory won by the
            expenditure of so much blood, of which it had been proposed to make a new
            province of Germania Magna—yet the Rhine frontier was secured for a
            considerable time to come by a belt of fortresses garrisoned by an army of
            nearly 80,000 men. This frontier was not seriously threatened for two hundred
            years thereafter. Throughout that period, except for a few insignificant raids,
            Gaul’s eastern neighbour remained quiescent. It was only in the third century
            that unrest showed itself again, thereafter steadily increasing as time went
            on. And the cause of this was the appearance of two powerful confederacies
            which thenceforward dominated the history of the Rhineland—the Alemans and the
            Franks.
             While the expansion of the Teutons towards the west
            was thus barred by the Romans, it proceeded the more vigorously in a southward
            and south-eastward direction. It is true that but little certain information
            has come down to us. The movements of population, implied by the appearance of
            the Marcomanni in Bohemia, of the Quadi in Moravia, of the Naristi between the Böhmer-Wald and the Danube, of the Bun, Lacringi, Victovali in the north
            of the Hungarian lowlands, are all more or less shrouded in obscurity, and it
            is but rarely possible to find a clue to their relations. About 60 BC the Boii
            had been forced by the advance of the Germanic races from the north to abandon
            their ancestral possessions. A portion of them found a dwelling-place in
            Pannonia, another portion, on its way from Noricum, joined the Helvetic
            migration. The north of the country thus left unoccupied was immediately taken
            up by Hermunduric, Semnonic,
            and Vandalic bands, offshoots of the three great tribes which flanked Bohemia
            on the north. From them were doubtless sprung the peoples who at a later time
            are met with here at the southern base of the Sudetes, the Sudini, Bativi, and Corconti. They
            were followed by the Marcomanni, who, doubtless in consequence of the military
            successes of Drusus in Germany, made their way, under the lead of their chief Marbod, to the further side of the Böhmer-Wald
            and occupied the main portion of the former country of the Boii.
             The powerful kingdom which this Germanic prince
            established by bringing in further masses of settlers and by subjugating the
            surrounding tribes—even the powerful Semnones, the Langobards, the Goths, and
            the Lugi (Vandals) are said to have acknowledged his
            suzerainty—had no rival in northern Europe, and with its trained army of 70,000
            footmen and 4000 horse soon became a menace to the Roman Empire. The importance
            which was attached to it, and to the commanding personality of its ruler by the
            Romans themselves, is evident from the extraordinary military preparations
            which Tiberius set on foot (6 AD). As is well known, the intervention of the
            Roman arms was not in the end called for. But what even they might not have
            been able to accomplish was effected by inner dissension. In the struggle for
            the supremacy of Germany against Arminius at the head of the Cherusci, and of all the other peoples who flocked to the
            standard of the liberator Germaniae, Marbod was defeated, and the fate of his kingdom was
            thereby decided. First the Semnones and Langobards ranged themselves on the
            side of his adversaries, then one tribe after another, so that he found his
            dominions in the end reduced to their original extent, the country of the
            Marcomanni. With the ruin of his Empire his own fate overtook him. Treachery in
            his own camp forced him to seek the protection of the Romans. The fall of its
            founder did not, however, affect the stability of the Bohemian kingdom of the Suebi.
            Although the Marcomanni were never afterwards able to regain their ascendancy,
            they held their own far on into the decline of the ancient world, in the
            country which they had occupied under Marbod’s leadership. Indeed after a time their power was so far revived that, in
            alliance with the Quadi, they were able to dominate the upper Danube frontier
            for fully a century.
             The earliest mention of the Quadi occurs in the
            geographer Strabo. He names them among the Suebian tribes who settled within the Hercynian Forest, the mountains which form the
            frontier of Bohemia. The country which they inhabited is nearly the present
            Moravia. Its eastern frontier was formed by the March, the ancient Marus. That they were of Suebian origin is clear from the express testimony of Strabo, as well as on linguistic
            grounds. The only point which remains doubtful is whether even before their
            coming into Moravia they had formed a political unit, or whether they were a
            migratory band sent out by one of the great Suebian peoples, perhaps the Semnones, which only developed into a united and
            independent national community after settling in Moravia. The former, however,
            is the more probable.
             Like their western neighbours the Marcomanni, the
            Quadi were the successors of a Celtic people. As the Boii had been settled in
            Bohemia, so in Moravia, from a remote period and down to Caesar's day had been
            settled the Volcae Tectosages.
            Seeing that about 60 BC, the advance of the Teutons from the north over the
            Erzgebirge and Sudetes caused the Boii to leave their territory, it is probable
            that at the same time, or a little later, the peoples further to the east
            became involved in a struggle with the invaders. But whereas the Boii by their
            prompt retirement escaped the danger, the Tectosages,
            it would appear, were utterly destroyed. We find the Quadi soon after in
            possession of their territory; and since we get no hint of the fate of the
            Moravian Tectosages, the Romans cannot yet have been
            in possession of the neighbouring country of Noricum. Their destruction must
            therefore have fallen before 15 BC, when Noricum passed under the dominion of
            Rome. If this hypothesis is correct the irruption of the Quadi into Moravia
            took place shortly after the Boii had left Bohemia; in any case a considerable
            time before the occupation of that country by the Marcomanni.
             To the west of the Marcomanni, between the Böhmer-Wald and the Danube as far up as the river Naab, were settled the Naristi.
            It is equally uncertain whence they came and when they appeared in this region.
            It is possible, though that is the most that can be said, that like their
            eastern neighbours they belonged to the Suebian confederacy—Tacitus certainly counts them as members of it—and that they are to
            be numbered among those peoples which, according to Strabo, Marbod had settled in the region of the Hercynia Sylva.
             Guarding the flanks, as it were, of the southern
            territories of the Teutons lay two settlements planted by the Romans; in the
            west the Hermunduri between the upper Main and the Danube, and in the east the Vannianic kingdom of the Suebi. The former came into being
            62 BC, the Roman general, L. Domitius Ahenobarbus, having assigned to a band of
            Hermunduri the eastern part of the territory left free by the migration of the
            Marcomanni into Bohemia; the latter was created by the settlement of bands of Suebian warriors belonging to the following of the fallen Suebian leaders, Marbod and Casvalda.
             The Marus is of course the
            March, the Cusus, as this Suebian settlement cannot have been very extensive, was probably the Waag, though it may have been the Gran, which lies further
            to the east. The Batizot of Ptolemy are probably
            identical with these Suebians of northern Hungary,
            who come into notice several times in the course of the first century. As they
            disappear later, they were probably absorbed by the Quadi. Further towards the
            north-east, in the Hungarian Erzgebirge, and beyond in the upper region of the
            Vistula, we find in the first century of our era the Buri and Sidones. The former, who are mentioned as early as Strabo,
            were probably of Bastarnian, and the latter of Lugian origin; further still, abutting on the eastern flank
            of the Sidones, were the Burgiones,
            Ambrones, and Frugundiones, doubtless also Bastarnian.
             If we now review the ethnographic situation in ancient
            Germany about the close of the first century AD, we find on its western
            frontier, in the eastern basin of the lower Rhine, the Chamavi,
            the Bructeri, the Usipii,
            the Tencteri, the Chattuarii and Tubantes; further in the interior, on both sides of the Weser, the great
            tribes of the Chatti and Cherusci;
            further to the north, the Angrivarii; and, on the
            North Sea coast, the Chauci and Frisians. In the heart of the country three
            powerful Suebian populations have their seat: on the
            western bank of the middle Elbe, extending as far south as the Rhaetian
            frontier, the Hermunduri; north of them, on the western bank of the lower Elbe,
            the Langobards, and beyond that river, in the basins of the Havel and the
            Spree, the Semnones, who were held to be the primitive stock of the Suebi. The
            eastern part of the country was mainly occupied by the Lugii.
            The tribes too which appear later, in the wars of the Marcomanni (the Victovali, Asdingi, and Lacringi), were doubtless also Vandalic. Northward in the
            region of the Wartha and Netze,
            dwelt the Burgundiones or Burgundi;
            further north still, on the Pomeranian Baltic coast, the Rugii and Lemovi, next to whom on the western side came
            (with some other smaller tribes) the Saxons. North of these again, on the
            Jutish peninsula, lay the Anglii and Varini. Turning back to the Vistula again, we find on its
            eastern bank the Goths, who, apparently by the beginning of our era, had spread
            from the shores of its estuary to its upper waters. In the south, the portion
            of the Hermunduri which had its seat between the Main and the Danube formed the
            first link in a long chain consisting of Naristi,
            Marcomanni, Quadi, Buri, and finally, beyond the confinium Germanorum, the numerous branches of the
            Bastarnae.
             It was therefore a vast territory which the Germanic
            races claimed for their own, and yet, as was soon to appear, it was too narrow
            for the energies of these young and vigorous nations. On their north foamed the
            sea, to the east yawned the desert steppes of southern Russia: thus any further
            expansion could only take a westward or southward direction. But on the one
            side as on the other lay the unbroken line of the Roman frontier. Any attempt
            at expansion in either of these directions must inevitably lead to an immediate
            collision with the Roman Empire.
             The storm which lowered upon the Bohemian mountains
            was soon to burst. Mighty forces were doubtless at work in the interior of
            Germany which shortly after the accession of Marcus Aurelius stirred up the
            whole mass of nations from the Böhmer-Wald to the Carpathians,
            and let loose a tempest such as the Roman Empire had never before encountered
            on its frontiers. In the summer of 167 hosts of barbarians mustered along the
            line of the Danube, ready to make an inroad into Roman territory. The
            Praetorian Praefect, Furius Victorinus, was defeated,
            and slain with most of his troops; and the invading flood poured forward over
            the unprotected provinces. Not until the two Emperors reached the seat of war
            (spring 168) was the plundering and ravaging stopped. The barbarians then
            withdrew to the further side of the Danube and declared their readiness to
            enter into negotiations. There, in the winter of 168-9 the plague broke out
            with fearful violence in the Roman camp, and at once the complexion of events
            changed for the worse. In the spring, in the absence of the Emperors, who on
            the outbreak of the epidemic had returned to the capital, the army, weakened
            and disorganized by disease, suffered another severe defeat, and the Praetorian
            Praefect, Macrinius Vindex,
            met his death. Following up their victory, the Teutons assumed the offensive
            all along the line. A surging mass of peoples—Hermunduri, Naristi,
            Marcomanni, Quadi, Lacringi, Buri, Victovali, Asdingi and other
            tribes Germanic and Iazygic—swept over the provinces
            of Rhaetia, Noricum, Pannonia, and Daeid. Some
            detached bands even pushed their way into North Italy, laid siege to Aquileia,
            and destroyed Opitergium, further to the west.
             But the danger passed as quickly as it had arisen.
            Effective measures were instantly taken. The flood of invasion was stemmed, and
            as it receded the Romans, led by the Emperor in person, took the aggressive.
            All the Teutons and Iazyges who remained on the south
            bank were forced back across the river. So successful were the Roman arms that
            by the year 171 the Quadi sued for peace. In the following year the Roman army
            crossed the Danube, and laid waste the country of the Marcomanni. Thus the two
            most dangerous adversaries had been subdued and the war seemed over. But by the
            year 174 the Emperor again found himself obliged to return to Germany. Scarcely
            had he entered the country of the Quadi, when the army was placed in a highly
            dangerous position by an enveloping movement of the enemy, and by want of
            water. Suddenly a torrent of rain descended, and legionaries saw in the
            “miracle” a proof of the favour of the gods, and were inspired to fight with
            splendid valour, and gained a complete victory. This broke the resistance of
            the Quadi, and the Marcomanni also were forced to make peace. In 176 the Emperor
            returned to Rome, and there celebrated, along with his son Commodus, a
            well-deserved triumph. In 177 Marcus re-joined his army with the purpose of
            completing the work of conquest. Two new provinces, Marcomania and Sarmatia, were to be added to his Empire and were to round off his northern
            boundary. The war began (apparently before the end of 177) with an attack upon
            the Quadi, after which the Marcomanni were to be dealt with. In the course of
            the three-years' war both peoples were so thoroughly exhausted that when the
            Emperor suddenly died (17 March 180) their military strength was already
            broken.
             One of the first acts of Commodus, an unworthy
            successor of his father, was to make peace which surrendered to the all but
            beaten enemy every advantage that had been wrested from them. The struggle for
            the lands to the north of the Danube was at an end. Meanwhile the Romans were
            confronted, about the close of the century, with a new and dangerous enemy in
            the west, in the angle between the Main and the frontier of upper Germany and
            Rhaetia —by the Alemans. As their name indicates, the Alemans were not a single
            tribe but a union of tribes—a confederacy. We hear (somewhat later) the names
            of several of the component tribes, the Juthungi, the Brisigavi,
            the Bucinobantes, and the Lentienses.
            Whence did they come? No doubt the nucleus of this confederacy was formed by
            the southern divisions of the Hermunduri. To these there may have attached
            themselves various fragments of peoples which had split off before and after
            the Marcomannic war, just as later, towards the middle of the third century,
            the Semnones, in the course of a migration southward, probably joined this
            confederacy and were absorbed by it.
             Before long—as early as 213 —the new nation came in
            contact with the Romans. So far as can be made out from the confused account
            which is given us of their first appearance they had invaded Rhaetia,
            whereupon the Emperor Caracalla took the field against them, flung them back
            across the frontier and advanced into their territory carrying all before him.
            Before twenty years had passed the Teutons—presumably the Alemans again
            —renewed the attack upon the Roman frontier defences. So threatening was the
            situation that the Emperor Severus Alexander felt himself obliged to break off
            his campaign against the Persians, and take over in person the direction of the
            operations on the Rhine. Negotiations had already begun before his
            assassination (March 235), but his successor, the rough and soldierly Maximin,
            brought new life into the campaign. Advancing by forced marches into the
            country of the Alemans he drove the barbarians before him without serious
            resistance, laid waste their fields and dwellings far and wide, and finally
            defeated them far in the interior of their territory.
             The result of this campaign, the last war of offence
            on a large scale which the Romans waged on the Rhine, was the restoration of
            security to the frontier for a period of twenty years. Under Gallienus—probably
            about the year 258—the storm broke. With irresistible force the armies of the
            Alemans broke through the great chain of frontier fortifications between the
            Main and the Danube, and after overpowering the scattered Roman garrisons,
            poured like a flood across the whole of the Agri Decumates,
            and established themselves permanently in the conquered territory. At the same
            time Rhaetia became a prey to them; nay more, a
            strong force even crossed the Alps and penetrated as far as Ravenna. The
            invaders were, it is true, defeated by Gallienus near Milan, and forced to
            retreat, but the country at the northern base of the Alps was lost, and its
            loss threw open to the Germanic hordes the gates of Italy.
             In addition to the Alemans of the upper Rhine, there
            now appeared, on the lower course of that river, another dangerous enemy,
            namely the Franks. The frontier had scarcely ever been seriously threatened at
            this point since the days of Augustus, but now under Gallienus the situation
            was altered. Here also there had quietly grown up a confederacy which, under
            the name of Franci, the Free, presumably comprised
            the tribes formerly met with in these regions, the Chamavi, Sugambri, and other smaller clans. Their name, first
            heard in the time of Gallienus, was soon to become even more terrible in the
            ears of the Romans than that of the Alemans. The first attack of the new league
            of peoples upon the Rhine frontier occurred in 253. The districts on the
            Gaulish bank of the Rhine soon fell into the hands of the enemy. With great
            difficulty Gallienus succeeded in forcing them back across the Rhine. But
            others followed them, and there ensued a series of desperate struggles which
            lasted till 258. On the whole the Romans had the best of it, even though their
            army was not large enough to prevent isolated bands of Franks from establishing
            themselves upon the left bank of the Rhine.
             In 258 Gallienus was called away to the lower Danube,
            which urgently demanded his presence. The confusion which was created in the
            Rhine district by the assassination in the following year of the Emperor’s son
            Valerian who had been left behind as Imperial Resident at Cologne, by the
            ambitious general Cassianus Postumus,
            gave the Franks a welcome opportunity to make a new inroad into Gaul. Their
            bands ranged almost unresisted through the whole country from the Rhine to the
            Pyrenees, devastating as they went. Then they pushed on, as the Cimbri had done
            before them, across the mountains into Spain, and made havoc of that country
            for several years, reducing to subjection even great cities like Tarraco, while, like the Vandals after them, they also made
            a foray into Africa. As at the time of the Cimbrian war, the terror of the Germans spread through all the countries of Western
            Europe. Only after a considerable time Postumus—a
            capable soldier and a well-intentioned administrator—was able to force the
            Germanic hordes out of Gaul and restore peace and security. But the Rhine
            became the frontier of the Empire and remained so as long as the Empire lasted.
             From this time onward begins a period of incessant
            fighting with the Teutons of the Rhine-country: with the Alemans in the south
            and the Franks in the north. The weakness and exhaustion of the Empire caused
            by inner dissensions becomes manifest. If Postumus succeeded in keeping the Roman possessions on the Gaulish bank of the Rhine
            essentially intact, his immediate successors were less successful. The country
            was left defenceless, and large portions of it were plundered and drained of
            their resources. Probus indeed, whose short reign (276-282) is a ray of light
            in these gloomy times, succeeded in clearing them out of Gaul, and even
            ventured to assume the offensive on the upper Rhine, in a brilliant campaign
            forcing the Alemans back to the further side of the Neckar. But such successes
            were but temporary. Only in the time of Diocletian does a durable improvement
            on the Rhine frontier set in, an improvement which was maintained for the next
            two or three generations. During this period a third set of invaders, in
            addition to the Franks and Alemans, appeared towards the close of the century
            in the Saxons, the terror of the British and Gaulish coasts. In the main,
            however, Gaul was suffered to enjoy peace; and with peace returned prosperity.
             Meanwhile on the shores of the Euxine, there emerges a
            people with whose name the world was to ring for centuries, the Goths. Their
            original home had been, it would appear, in Scandinavia, and after their
            migration to the German Baltic coast they had at first established themselves
            about the estuary of the Vistula, then in course of time they had moved further
            southward along the right bank of that river, so that at the beginning of our
            era they appear as far south as the neighbourhood of the Bohemian kingdom of
            the Marcomanni. How long they remained in this region we do not know, but it is
            not unlikely that their eastward migration falls about the time of the great
            Marcomannic war. We are equally ignorant of the time occupied by this migration
            and the details of its progress; the only thing certain is that it reached its
            close not later than c. 230-240.
             (The Gutones on the North
            Sea coast mentioned by Pytheas in the fourth century
            BC may have been a branch of this people which had wandered westward, and were
            absorbed probably by the Frisians.)
             The territory where the Goths at last took up their
            abode embraced the whole of the northern coast of the Black Sea. In the east it
            was separated by the Don from that of the Alani, in the west it bordered on the
            tract of country northward of the Danube Delta and the Dacian frontier which
            had been settled four hundred years earlier by the Bastarnae and the Sciri.
            Here the Goths divided into two sections soon after their immigration, that
            dwelling more to the west being known as the Tervingi,
            ‘the inhabitants of the forest region’, while the eastern division was known as
            the Greutungi, ‘the inhabitants of the Steppes’. For
            the former the name Visigoths (Vesegoti) came into
            use, at latest c. 350, for the latter the name Ostrogoths, designations however
            of which the meaning is not absolutely certain, although ‘the western Goths’
            and ‘the eastern Goths’ was an interpretation already known to Jordanes. The
            boundary between them was formed by the Dniester. Before long there appear
            alongside of them other Germanic peoples, the Gepidae, Taifali, Borani, Urugundi, and Heruli. The two first of these had some original link of
            connection with them. The Gepidae indeed appear in the Gothic legend of their
            migrations as an actual part of the Gothic nation. Whether they migrated to the
            Black Sea region at the same time as the Goths, or followed them later, must
            remain an open question.
             Towards the end of the reign of Severus Alexander
            (222-235) the first indications of the appearance on the northern shores of the
            Black Sea of a new and powerful barbarian race, of a most warlike temper, had
            already become manifest, when the Greek towns of Olbia and Tyras fell victims to the sudden descent of an unknown enemy from the North. A little
            later, under Gordian III (238-244), its name is found. In the spring of 238
            Gothic war-bands marched southwards, crossed the Danube with the connivance of
            the Dacian Carpi and broke into the province of Lower Moesia, where they
            captured and plundered the town of Istrus. The
            Procurator of the province, Tullius Menophilus (238-241), being unable to repel
            the invasion by force of arms, induced the Goths to retire by the promise of a
            yearly subsidy. But by 248 they had renewed their attacks on the Roman frontier
            in alliance with the Taifali, Asdingi,
            and Bastarnae. Under the leadership of Argaith and Gunterich their bands again broke into Lower Moesia,
            assailed without success the fortified town of Marcianople and plundered the unfortunate province again.
             But these first exploits of the Goths were completely
            thrown into the shade by the great invasion of Roman territory made at the
            beginning of 250 by the half-legendary King Kniwa at
            the head of a powerful army. While the Carpi flung themselves upon Dacia, the
            Gothic attack was directed as before upon Moesia. Thence a strong detachment
            pressed onward over the undefended passes of the Balkans into Thrace, laid
            siege to Philippopolis, and even dispatched a plundering party into Macedonia.
            One division of the Gothic army, after vainly assaulting Novae and Nicopolis, was defeated in the neighbourhood of the latter
            town by the Emperor Decius in person, but this success was immediately
            counterbalanced by a reverse. The Goths, while retiring southwards by way of Beroë (Augusta Traiana), the
            present Eski-Zaghra, on the southern slope of the
            Balkans, defeated the Roman troops who were pursuing them. After this battle
            the victorious Goths effected a junction with their countrymen who were
            investing Philippopolis, and that city fell into their hands. The Romans,
            however, were now making extensive preparations, in view of which the
            barbarians began their retreat. Decius, eager to wipe out the failure at Beroë, sought to bar their path, and, in the hope of
            inflicting a crushing defeat upon them, engaged them near Abrittus,
            about 30 miles south-east of Durostorum (Silistria) in June 251. The day, which began well for the
            Romans, ended in a fearful disaster, a great part of their army was destroyed,
            and the Emperor himself and one of his sons were among the slain. The country
            from which the barbarians had just retired now lay once more defenceless before
            them. They were finally bought off by the promise of a yearly subsidy.
             The Gothic war of 250-251 had revealed in its full
            extent the danger which had lain hidden behind the mountains of Dacia. Later
            events did little to remove the terrible impression which the invasion of Kniwa had left behind. On the contrary, the history of the
            eastern half of the Empire in the reigns of Valerian and Gallienus, Claudius,
            Aurelian, and Probus is filled with incessant struggles against the Goths and
            their allies. For even Asia Minor was not exempt from their ravages; besides
            the bands which swept down by the Balkans and back again there were now others
            which came by sea from the Crimea and Lake Maeotis to ravage a constantly
            widening area of the coasts of Asia Minor and which even penetrated to the
            inland districts. Especially prominent in these piratical raids were the Borani and Heruli, two peoples
            who here appear in history for the first time side by side with the Goths. The
            first of these expeditions, made by the Borani in 256
            against the town of Pityus (on the eastern shore of
            the Black Sea), ended in failure, but by the following year these same Borani succeeded in capturing and sacking Pityus and Trapezus. Even more
            destructive was the expedition which (spring 258) was undertaken by the West
            Goths, starting by sea and land from the port of Tyras.
            The whole western coast of Bithynia with the cities of Chalcedon, Nicomedia,
            Nicaea, Apamea, and Prusa was ravaged. The years 263,
            264, and 265 also witnessed the devasting of the coast lands of Asia Minor by
            similar expeditions of the Pontic Teutons. Ilium, Ephesus with its renowned
            temple of Artemis, and Chalcedon were this time the victims of the barbarians.
             But all these exploits were far surpassed in
            importance by the great plundering expedition of the Heruli in the year 267. From Lake Maeotis a fleet, said to have been five hundred
            strong, sailed along the western shore of the Euxine, then through the
            Bosphorus, where they made a successful coup-de-main against Byzantium, through
            the Propontis, where Cyzicus was captured, and the
            Hellespont, and onward past Lemnos and Scyros across the Aegean to Greece. Here
            on the classic soil of Attica, Argolis, and Laconia the wild hosts of these barbarians
            made fearful havoc, and it was long enough before the bewildered provincial
            government ventured to oppose them. The defenders, in whose ranks the historian Dexippus of Athens played a leading part, gradually
            gained confidence, and when they had succeeded in destroying the ships, the
            invaders were obliged to retreat by the land route. Beaten by the Roman troops
            their hosts rolled northwards through Boeotia, Epirus, Macedonia, towards their
            home, which they succeeded in reaching although hard pressed by their pursuers
            and at the very last compelled by the Emperor Gallienus to fight a battle, in
            which they incurred heavy losses, at the river Nestus,
            on the boundary between Macedonia and Thrace.
             We have seen above how the Danube had been constantly
            threatened since the appearance of the Goths on the Black Sea, how invasion
            after invasion had descended on Dacia and Moesia. Soon after the accession of
            Gallienus (probably 256-7), Dacia with the exception of the narrow strip
            between the Temes and the Danube, which continued to
            be held down to the time of Aurelian, together with the portion of Lower Moesia
            which lay to the north of the Danube (the present Great Wallachia), became the
            prey of the barbarians. Some of the West Goths settled in Great Wallachia and
            the Taifali in the Banat; the northern districts,
            especially Transylvania, were occupied by the Victovali and Gepidae, who at this time make their appearance among the enemies of Rome.
            The consequence of the loss of Dacia and Trans-Danubian Moesia was that the Teutons now became on the lower Danube as well as elsewhere
            the immediate neighbours of the Empire, their territory being divided from it
            only by the river.
             Only once in this whole period of inward decay did the
            imperial power succeed in winning a decisive victory. That was the achievement
            of the Emperor Claudius, whom his grateful contemporaries and successors have
            rightly adorned with the honourable title of ‘Gothicus’.
            In the spring of 269 the Teutons made yet another attack upon the Empire,
            surpassing all former ones in violence. East Goths and West Goths, whom
            tradition here first distinguishes, Bastarnae (Peucini),
            Gepidae, and Heruli united their forces and advanced
            with a mighty army and fleet—estimated in the sources at 300,000 fighting-men
            and 2000 ships—against the Danubian frontier. Once
            more the province of Lower Moesia bore the brunt of their attack. The land army
            of the Teutons, in which lay their main strength, first made an unsuccessful
            attempt to take Tomi and Marcianople, then swept like
            a flood over the interior of the country, wasting and plundering as they went.
            Meanwhile the fleet, which was manned chiefly by Heruli,
            sailed past Byzantium and Cyzicus into the Aegean, and appeared before
            Thessalonica. Part of it remained there and blockaded the city; the remainder
            made a great plundering expedition which bears eloquent testimony to the
            seamanship and daring of these Teutons, along the coasts of Macedonia, Greece,
            and Asia Minor, extending even as far as Crete and Cyprus.
             This was the situation when the Emperor Claudius
            reached the scene of war. At his approach the besiegers of the hard-pressed
            Thessalonica had hastily drawn off northwards and effected a junction with
            their kinsmen in Upper Moesia. The hostile forces met near Naissus. In the
            desperate struggle which ensued the Teutons suffered a crushing defeat. What
            remained of their army was in part cut to pieces in the pursuit, in part driven
            into the inhospitable recesses of the Balkans, where the survivors surrendered.
            They were partly enrolled in the Roman army, partly, in pursuance of a policy
            initiated by the Emperor Marcus, settled as coloni in
            the devastated frontier districts.
             Thus the danger was averted from the Empire, and the
            desire of its restless neighbours beyond the Danube to make expeditions on the
            great scale was damped for nearly a hundred years. No doubt the inroads and
            piratical voyages of smaller Gothic war-bands continued; indeed, in the next
            fourteen years (270–284), there was fighting with bands of this kind under
            Quintillus, Aurelian, Tacitus, and Probus, but all these incursions were easily
            repelled by the imperial government, which gained strength under Aurelian and
            Probus. Just at this time, too, there broke out a severe internal struggle
            between the Teutons of the Euxine and those of the Danube. The first aid called
            in by the Goths against the Tervingi was that of the
            Bastarnae, but the outcome of the struggle was that the Bastarnae were defeated
            and compelled to abandon the territory which they had held so tenaciously for
            more than five hundred years. The expelled Bastarnae, said to have numbered
            100,000 men, were taken under his protection by the Emperor Probus and settled
            in Thrace. After that the Tervingi, supported by the Taifali, made war on the allied Gepidae and Vandals, while
            the East Goths fought with their eastern neighbours the Urugundi,
            who on their defeat were taken under the protection of the Alani. We can see
            that the whole of the eastern Germanic world was in a state of wild uproar.
             On the middle Danube there had been no fighting worth
            mention since the Marcomannic war. We hear indeed of an incursion of the
            Marcomanni in the reign of Valerian, but, broadly speaking, the name of this
            once so warlike nation may be said to disappear from history. Their old
            comrades the Quadi often appear in association with the Iazyges,
            from the time of Gallienus, when they made a descent upon Pannonia. There was
            further fighting with them in 283, as is proved by a coin of Numerian. However, they are in this period thrown into the
            shade by the other more dangerous assailants of the Empire; indeed, with the
            appearance of the Goths the main struggle between the Roman and Germanic powers
            had shifted from the middle to the lower Danube.
             Shortly after the death of Probus (Oct. 282), the
            Alemans on the upper Rhine, and the Franks and Saxons on the lower Rhine, had
            begun their forays again. The eastern districts of Gaul were again overrun,
            while the coasts of the Channel were harried by Saxon pirates. The Burgundians
            also had left their home between the Oder and the Vistula, and forced their way
            through the heart of Germany to the Main. When the government had been taken
            over by Diocletian, his colleague and (after April 286) co-Emperor Maximian
            entered Gaul in the beginning of that year; it was his first care, so soon as
            he had suppressed the insurrection of the Bagaudae,
            to put a stop to the piracy of the Saxons and Franks. He first cleared the left
            bank of the Rhine, drove the Heruli and Chaivones, two Baltic tribes who had invaded Gaul, right
            out of the country, and, basing himself on Mainz, conducted a successful
            defensive campaign against Alemans and Burgundians. The defense of the coasts was entrusted to a capable officer, Carausius the Menapian, with a strong command and extensive authority.
            But when Carausius set up for Emperor in Britain towards the end of 286 the
            Teutons found a fresh opportunity. The usurper even made common cause with the
            enemies of the Empire and openly helped them. Maximian, indeed, repeatedly (287
            and 291) gained successes against them, but the first decided improvement on
            the Rhine frontier was due to a new development of imperial organization by
            which Gaul and Britain became a distinct administrative department with a
            governor of their own in the person of the general Flavius Constantius (March
            293), who was at the same time appointed Caesar. The Franks were decisively
            defeated within their own borders (summer 293), Britain was reconquered for the
            Empire (spring 296)—Carausius himself had fallen a victim to a conspiracy in
            293—and finally by two great victories over the Alemans on the upper Rhine
            peace was at length restored (298-9), and the Rhine was made secure, especially
            as regards the upper part of its course, by the building of forts and the
            restoration of the defensive works which had been destroyed by the enemy or had
            fallen into decay. Following the example of Maximian, Constantius settled large
            numbers of prisoners of war, Franks, Frisians, and Chamavi,
            as laeti and coloni, in the
            wasted and depopulated districts of north-east Gaul. Here they were to
            cultivate the fields that had been lying fallow, to supply the labour that was
            sorely needed, and to aid in the defense of the
            frontier. The country rapidly recovered, trade and commerce began to flourish
            again, and the ancient prosperity returned.
             It was in this hopeful condition that the Western
            provinces came into the hands of Constantine when (25 July 306) he was called by
            the will of the army to take up the reins of government. During a reign of
            thirty-one years he thoroughly fulfilled the promise of his youth. From the
            first day of his rule he devoted all his efforts to the securing and wellbeing
            of the provinces. The Franks who were again on the move were energetically
            repressed; in the process two of their chiefs were taken prisoners, and given
            to the beasts. Similarly four years later a combined attack of the Bructeri, Chamavi, Cherusci, Lanciones, Alemans, and
            Tubantes was repulsed with heavy loss. These were the only occasions during
            Constantine's long reign on which the Germanic peoples of the Rhine-district
            made any expeditions on a large scale.
             As regards the actual defense of the frontier, the number of troops was increased, the flotilla on the Rhine
            was reorganized and raised to a considerable strength, and the belt of
            fortresses along the frontier was improved. In this connection took place the
            reoccupation and refortification of Divitia (Deutz),
            the old bridge-head of Cologne, which once more gave the Romans a firm foothold
            on the right bank of the Rhine on what had now become Frankish soil.
             The coast defense of Gaul
            and Britain likewise underwent further improvements. The establishment of a
            special military command in the latter country, mentioned in the Notitia Dignitatum under the title comes litoris Saxonici per Britanniam,
            most probably goes back to Constantine. When the Emperor towards the end of 316
            left Gaul for the last time, the land was in the enjoyment of complete peace,
            and this happy state of affairs continued so long as the internal peace of the
            Empire was preserved. The enemy on the further side of the Rhine was thoroughly
            overawed, and ventured on nothing more than small violations of the frontier.
             Nevertheless the peace did not endure. When
            Magnentius, a Frank by race, set himself up as Emperor (350), the security of
            the Rhine was immediately imperilled, since the eastern Emperor Constantius
            himself incited the Teutons to attack the usurper and so to invade the Empire.
            All that had been accomplished by Constantine was rapidly lost in the
            disastrous years of civil war between 351 and 353. The left bank of the Rhine
            was again overrun by the Teutons, the fortified positions, denuded of their garrisons,
            were almost all captured and destroyed and the open country far into the
            interior of the province was plundered till there was nothing left to plunder.
            Although Constantius, after the suppression of the pestifera tyrannis, himself made two campaigns against the Alemans, in the first
            (spring 354) against the kings Gundomad and Vadomar, in the second (summer 355) against the Lentienses, he effected practically nothing. It was only
            when the young Caesar Julian took up the command in Gaul that the situation
            began to improve. The whole year 356 was taken up in fighting against the
            Alemans, who were driven back on all sides. A great number of towns, including
            Cologne, which had been captured by the Franks, were won back again. A serious
            defeat incurred in 357 by the magister peditum Barbatio was retrieved by the brilliant victory of
            the Caesar over the united forces of Chnodomar, Serapio, Vestralp, and other kings—in all 35,000 men under
            seven ‘kings’ (reges) and ten ‘sub-kings’ (regales)—at Argentoratum (Strasburg). Two further campaigns against the Alemans, in 359 and 361, were
            equally successful. On the lower Rhine also Julian defeated the Franks, the
            Chauci, and the Chamavi (358-360); the tracts between
            the Scheldt and the Meuse were cleared of the enemy, seven towns, among them
            the old fortresses of Bingium, Antunnacum, Bonna, Novaesium, and Vetera (all on the Rhine) were retaken, and again put in a
            state of defense. Thus the young Caesar seemed in the
            way of bringing about a complete pacification of the Rhine country, when he was
            compelled to leave Gaul by the outbreak of the conflict with Constantius (361).
             Once again the country was left defenceless before the
            barbarians, who did not fail to profit by the situation. It was indeed high
            time when, after the death of Jovian (Feb. 364), the new Emperor Valentinian
            entered the threatened province in the late autumn of 365, and took up his
            headquarters at Paris. So much had the situation altered for the worse since
            the departure of Julian that the Alemans could venture in January 366 to cross
            the frozen Rhine, and penetrate to the neighbourhood of Chalons-sur-Marne.
            Here, indeed, they were defeated by the general Jovinus who had hastened from
            Paris to intercept them, and were compelled to beat a retreat. But the danger
            was not done with. The guerrilla warfare continued on the frontier, with its
            forays and surprises. Several years of vigorous action were needed before any
            change was apparent. Following the old and well-tried maxim that attack is the
            best defence, Valentinian in 368 himself crossed the Rhine at the head of a
            considerable army reinforced by contingents of Illyrian and Italian troops.
            Advancing into the country of the Alemans he came upon the enemy at Solicinium (Sulz on the upper
            Neckar?) and defeated them in a bloody battle. Two smaller expeditions beyond
            the Rhine followed in the years 371 and 374. The result of this successful
            assumption of the aggressive by the Romans was, broadly speaking, the recovery
            of the Rhine frontier, which remained for the present exempt from serious
            attack.
             During this time of military activity the defences
            along the whole line of the Rhine were strengthened. The existing castles and
            watchtowers were improved and many new ones were built; indeed a vigorous
            development of this old and well-tried system of frontier defence is the
            special merit of Valentinian. Taken generally, his reign marks a revival of the
            strength of the Empire, inward as well as outward, and the results of his work
            upon the Rhine could be felt for a generation after his death. Thus his son and
            successor, Gratian (375-383), found for the most part his ways made plain and a
            more peaceful situation obtaining on his arrival in Gaul than that which had
            confronted his father ten years earlier. Nevertheless he too had to draw the
            sword against the Alemans, who—mainly the tribe of the Lentienses—in
            the spring of 378 crossed the Rhine with a considerable force. A battle took
            place near Argentaria (Horburg near Colmar) in which
            the Romans gained a complete victory, destroying the greater part of the enemy.
            Thus, here on the Rhine frontier the year 378 brought the Romans once more a
            complete success—the same year which in the East witnessed the breakdown of
            the Roman military power and the disastrous fall of the Emperor Valens.
             In contrast to the Rhine countries, the Danubian provinces had, since the death of the Emperor
            Probus, enjoyed comparative peace. The power of the most dangerous neighbour of
            the Empire, the Goths, had been crippled for a long time, as we have seen, by
            Claudius and Aurelian, and more especially by the dissensions and struggles
            between the different tribes. The East Goths in particular had, since the close
            of the third century, been fully occupied with their own affairs, and
            completely disappear for nearly a century. In the fourth century it is always
            the western division, the Tervingi, of whom we hear;
            as is indeed natural, seeing that their conquest of Trans-Danubian Moesia under Gallienus had made them the immediate neighbours of the Empire.
             No events of any great importance on the Danubian frontier are recorded down to the time of
            Constantine. True, an inscription of Diocletian and his colleagues of a date
            shortly before 301, celebrates a victory over hostile tribes on the lower Danube,
            which doubtless means the Goths, but these battles can hardly have been of any
            considerable importance. On the other hand Constantine frequently had trouble
            with the Goths. After some inroads in 314 the frontier defences were
            strengthened by the building of the fortress Tropaeum Traiani (Adamelissi). The removal of troops from the
            frontier during preparations of Licinius for another civil war gave the signal
            at the beginning of 323 for a new incursion of the Goths. Thanks to the rapid
            advance of Constantine—which brought him into his colleague's territory—the
            invaders were intercepted before they had done any great damage, and after
            severe losses, including the death of their leader, Rausimod,
            were forced back across the Danube.
             After the end of the civil war Constantine strove with unwearying zeal to improve the defences of the
            frontier. The line was protected by castles, and although the number of the
            frontier troops to whom was especially assigned the duty of garrisoning them—the milites limitanei or riparienses—was considerably reduced, there
            was no diminution, but, on the contrary, a distinct increase of military
            security, gained by the creation at the same time of a mobile field force. So
            strong did the Roman Empire feel itself at this period that towards the close
            of the reign of Constantine it even ventured to interfere in events on the
            further side of the Danube where the Goths and Taifali were encroaching on the Sarmatians who occupied the tract between the Theiss and the Danube. In response to an appeal of the
            Sarmatians for help, the Emperor's eldest son Constantine crossed the river at
            the head of an army and, in conjunction with the Sarmatians, thoroughly routed
            the Teutons (20 April 332).
             Doubtless in consequence of this defeat, which clearly
            brought home to them the military superiority of the Empire, the warlike ardour
            of the Tervingi and Taifali was extinguished for a long time. Their impulse to expand, the driving force of
            all their undertakings, was exhausted for the present. The barbarians began to
            busy themselves with agriculture and cattle-raising. As regards their relation
            to the Empire, former conditions were reversed. By the treaty of peace
            concluded after their defeat they nominally surrendered their independence and
            recognized the suzerainty of the Roman government, being pledged as foederati,
            in return for yearly subsidies (annonae foederaticae),
            to share in the defence of the frontier, and in case of war to serve as
            auxiliary troops. The peace continued for more than thirty years. From time to
            time there may have been slight disturbances of the peace—of this, indeed,
            there is inscriptional evidence from the period of the joint rule of the three
            sons of Constantine (337-340), but on the whole both sides strictly observed
            their compact.
             During this long period of peace the West Goths
            underwent a revolution, primarily religious but one which in its consequences
            affected the whole mental, social, and political life of the people—the
            introduction of Christianity. As early as the second half of the third century
            Christian teaching had obtained an entrance among them through Cappadocian
            prisoners, taken in the sea-expeditions against Asia Minor. There is no reason
            to doubt this fact; and it is equally certain that a century later there were
            among the Goths representatives of the most various schools of belief,
            Catholics, Arians, and (since about 350) Audians.
            Accordingly, the beginnings of Christianity among the Goths of the Danube reach
            far back, and its diffusion among them took place under the most various and
            independent influences. Of a conversion of the nation there can be no question,
            at least as far down as the middle of the fourth century. Their conversion only
            begins with the appearance of Ulfila.
             Born of Christian parents about the year 310-11 in the
            country of the Goths, he grew up as a Goth among the Goths, although Greek
            blood flowed in his veins. One or other of his parents came of a Christian
            family from the neighbourhood of Parnasus in
            Cappadocia which had been carried into captivity by the Goths in the time of
            Gallienus (264?). First employed as a Reader, he was, at the age of about 30,
            that is to say about the year 341, consecrated as bishop of the Christian
            community in the land of the Goths, by Eusebius (of Nicomedia), the famous
            leader of the Arian party, at that time bishop of Constantinople. Equally
            efficient as missionary and as organizer, Ulfila gathered and united the scattered confessors of the Christian faith, and, by
            his enthusiastic preaching of the Gospel he won for it many new adherents. For
            seven years he worked with great success among his fellow-countrymen, and then
            he was suddenly obliged (c. 348) to interrupt his work. A “godless and impious
            prince”, probably Athanarich, inflicted cruel
            persecution on the Christians who dwelt within his dominion, by which the newly
            organized church was scattered and its bishop compelled to leave his home. Ulfila gathered together his adherents or as many of them
            as had escaped the persecution and fled with them across the Danube into Roman
            territory, where the Emperor Constantius gave him shelter. Here he lived and
            worked (in the neighbourhood of Nicopolis) as the
            priestly, and also as the political, head of the Goths who had accompanied him
            in his flight, until 380 or 381—in very truth the apostle of the Goths, and not
            least so in virtue of his great work of translating the Bible, by which he
            transmitted to his people the knowledge of the Holy Scriptures for all time;
            and although his missionary activity in his native land had early been brought
            to a close, yet the conversion of the whole Gothic race to Arian Christianity
            was nothing else than the harvest of that seed which he had sown in those first
            years of his work among them.
             Soon after the death of Constantius (361) the friendly
            relations between the West Goths and the Empire began to change. Scarcely had
            Valentinian and Valens ascended the throne when there was an open rupture.
            First, towards the end of 364, predatory bands of Goths devastated Thrace—at
            the same time there was an incursion of the Quadi and Sarmatians into
            Pannonia—then in the spring of 365 the whole Gothic nation prepared for a great
            expedition against the Roman territory. Once more the danger was averted;
            Valens, although he was on the march for Syria and had already reached
            Bithynia, at once took vigorous measures to cope with it. Two years later
            however came the long-expected collision. Valens himself advanced to the
            attack. He found a pretext in the ambiguous attitude of the Goths in recent
            years, especially in their having aided the usurper Procopius with a contingent
            of 3000 men (winter of 365-6). In the summer of 367 the Roman army crossed the
            Danube. Yet no events of decisive importance took place, either in this or the two
            following years—for the war lasted till 369. The Goths, who had chosen as their
            leader Athanarich, skilfully avoided a pitched
            battle, and they withdrew into the fastnesses of the Transylvanian highlands.
            In the end both sides were weary of the war and negotiations were set on foot,
            which resulted in a treaty of peace whereby the alliance with the Tervingi was formally annulled and the Danube was
            established as the boundary between the two powers.
             Immediately after the war, which had restored the status
            quo of the beginning of the century,—and therewith the complete liberty of the
            Goths,—the Romans set to work on a thorough restoration of the frontier defences.
            Numerous burgi (barrier-forts) were erected
            along the line of the Danube, as we learn in part from the evidence of
            inscriptions. Yet at first the frontier remained undisturbed. Internal
            dissensions and strife (chiefly due to a general persecution of the Christians
            stirred up by Athanarich about the year 370) withdrew
            his attention from external affairs. The Gothic prince showed the utmost
            ferocity against all Christians, without distinction of high or low, Arian,
            Catholic, or Audian, with the avowed intention of
            extirpating Christianity as dangerous to the State and deleterious to the
            strength and vigour of the nation.
             Probably in connection with this, there arose (c. 370)
            a violent conflict between the two most influential chiefs, Athanarich and Fritigern, which finally led to an open schism between two portions of the
            race. Fritigern was worsted, retired with his whole following into Roman
            territory, and placed himself under the protection of the Emperor, who readily
            accorded him all possible succour and support. This step had an important
            result for the cause of the persecuted Christians, inasmuch as Fritigern with
            all his followers went over to Christianity and adopted the Arian creed. This
            conversion of Fritigern to Christianity, and, moreover, to Arian Christianity,
            powerfully influenced the further development of events, since, on the one hand,
            it prepared the way for the wider extension and final victory of Christianity
            among the Goths, and on the other hand it became a serious danger to the
            political existence of the nation when Arianism had been suppressed among the
            Romans, for it had acquired a virtually national significance for the Goths.
             The sojourn of Fritigern in Roman territory was not of
            long duration. Confident in the support of the Roman government, he returned
            with his followers to his own country and succeeded in maintaining his position
            against Athanarich; there seems indeed to have been a
            reconciliation between the rivals. Alongside of them, though doubtless inferior
            to them in power and influence, a whole series of important chiefs are
            mentioned by name in this period, among them Alavio, Munderich, Eriwulf, and Fravitta. At the same time, however, Athanarich continued to exercise a certain primacy, although his position was not in any
            sense constitutionally defined—among the Romans he always bears the title of
            judex not rex.
             The East Goths, of whom we have so long lost sight,
            had in the meantime extended their dominions far and wide. A mighty empire
            extending from the Don to the Dniester, from the Black Sea to the marshes of
            the Pripet and the head-waters of the Dnieper and the Volga, had emerged from
            their continual wars of conquest against their neighbours, Germanic (such as
            the Heruli), Slavonic, and Finnish. The main portion
            of these conquests is doubtless to be ascribed to King Ermanarich,
            who had ruled over the Greutungi since the middle of
            the century. In contrast with the West Goths who, as we have seen, down to the
            end of their residence on the Danube, were ruled according to ancient Germanic
            custom by principes or local chiefs, the East
            Goths had early developed a monarchy embracing the whole nation. It is
            doubtless to the inner strength which belongs to a firm and undivided exercise
            of authority, that we are to attribute the rapid rise of the young Ostrogothic
            State under its kings from Ostrogotha to Ermanarich, a monarch under whose vigorous rule it enjoyed
            its period of greatest prosperity—and also met its fall.
             Such was the state of affairs when a nation of untamed
            savages, horrible in aspect and terrible from their countless numbers and
            ferocious courage, broke forth from the interior of Asia and threatened the
            whole of the West with destruction. These were the Huns. They were doubtless of
            Mongolian race, and were probably natives of the great expanse of steppes which
            lies to the north and east of the Caspian Sea. Soon after 370 they penetrated
            into Europe, and threw themselves with irresistible fury upon the peoples which
            came in their way. The Alani, who had to bear the first brunt of their attack,
            were soon overpowered, and compelled to join their conquerors, and the same
            fate befell the smaller peoples whose settlements lay further north, on the
            right bank of the Volga.
             The fate of the Ostrogothic Empire was now imminent.
            For a considerable time they succeeded in holding the enemy at the sword's
            point, but finally their strength broke down before the weight of the Asiatic
            hordes. Ermanarich himself died by his own hand
            rather than live to see the downfall of his kingdom; his successor, Withimir, after several bloody defeats, met his death on
            the field of battle. All resistance ceased, and the whole people surrendered
            itself to the Huns.
             The invading flood rolled westward to encounter the Tervingi (375). At the first tidings of the events in the
            neighbouring country, Athanarich called his people to
            arms and marched with a part of his forces to meet the Huns. The Gothic leader
            took his stand on the bank of the Dniester; but finding himself compelled to
            abandon this position by a crafty turning-movement of the enemy, Athanarich gave up thenceforward all thought of resistance
            in the field, and betook himself to the impenetrable ravines of the
            Transylvanian highlands. But only some of the Goths followed him thither. The
            mass of the people, weary of hardship and privation, separated themselves and
            resolved to abandon their country. Under the leadership of their local chiefs Alavio and Fritigern they mustered their forces in the
            spring of 376 on the north bank of the Danube and besought permission to enter
            the Roman Empire, in the hope of finding a dwelling-place in the rich plains of
            Thrace. The Emperor Valens graciously received their request and gave orders to
            the commanders on the frontier to take measures for the shelter and
            provisioning of this huge mass of people. The Goths passed the river. In boats,
            and rafts, and hollowed tree-trunks they made their way across and covered all
            the country round “like the rain of ashes from an eruption of Etna”. At first
            all went well. The new-comers maintained an exemplary attitude: not so the
            Roman officials—the chief of whom was the Thracian comes Lupicinus.
            They used the precarious position of the barbarians to their own profit, taking
            advantage of them in every possible way. It was not long before their shameless
            injustice aroused the deep resentment of the Goths, among whom famine had
            already set in.
             Things soon came to open rupture. In the immediate
            neighbourhood of Marcianople a bloody battle was
            fought between the infuriated Goths and the soldiers of Lupicinus.
            The Romans were almost annihilated, their leader took refuge behind the strong
            walls of the town, which was immediately invested by the main body of the Tervingian forces. Other divisions scattered over the
            plains, plundering as they went. All attempts of the barbarians failed to take
            the town by storm. So Fritigern “made his peace with stone walls”. A strong
            force remained before the place as an army of observation, while the main body
            turned, as detachments of it had done before, to the plundering of the
            adjoining districts of Moesia. Once more the country suffered fearfully, and to
            complete its misery other bands of plunderers now joined the Goths. Taifali, Alani, and even Huns were drawn across the Danube
            by the hope of plundering and ravaging these fertile provinces. This was in the
            summer of 377.
             Troops were hurried up from all sides for the defence
            of the threatened provinces; even Gratian sent aid from the West. Meanwhile the
            Goths had overrun all Moesia. Not only had the bloody battle fought at a place
            called Salices (late summer 377) been indecisive and
            cost the Romans heavy losses, but a strong detachment of Roman troops under the
            tribune Barzimeres, a Teuton by race, had been cut to
            pieces at Dibaltus. A success which the dux Frigeridus, likewise of Teutonic birth, gained over the Taifali and a company of the Greutungi under their chief Farnobius was not much to balance
            this and did not alter the fact that Thrace, which after the battle of Salices had been overrun by the Teutons, remained a prey to
            them.
             Finally (30 May 378) Valens arrived at Constantinople.
            As soon as Fritigern, who lay in the neighbourhood of Hadrianople, heard of the
            Emperor's arrival, he gave the order for the widely scattered Gothic forces to
            unite. From this point onward events followed in quick succession. At first the
            fortune of war seemed to smile upon the Romans. Making Hadrianople his base, Sebastianus, the commander of reinforcements sent by
            Gratian, succeeded in inflicting a reverse upon the Goths. Fritigern thereupon
            retired to the neighbourhood of Cabyle and there
            concentrated his forces. Thereupon Valens, on his part, advanced to
            Hadrianople, resolved to venture upon a decisive stroke. He had set his heart
            upon meeting his nephew Gratian, who was hastening up from the West, with the
            news of a great victory. And so (9 Aug. 378) battle was joined near
            Hadrianople. It resulted in a terrible defeat of the Romans, in which the
            Emperor himself was slain. More than two-thirds of his army, the flower of the
            military forces of the East, was left upon the field of battle.
             
              
           
 
           THE
          DYNASTY OF VALENTINIAN AND THEODOSIUS THE GREAT
                 
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