<h2><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P227"></SPAN></span><SPAN name="chapXXXIX"></SPAN>XXXIX<br/> THE BARBARIANS BREAK THE EMPIRE INTO EAST AND WEST</h2>
<p>Throughout the third century the Roman Empire, decaying socially and
disintegrating morally, faced the barbarians. The emperors of this period were
fighting military autocrats, and the capital of the empire shifted with the
necessities of their military policy. Now the imperial headquarters would be at
Milan in north Italy, now in what is now Serbia at Sirmium or Nish, now in
Nicomedia in Asia Minor. Rome halfway down Italy was too far from the centre of
interest to be a convenient imperial seat. It was a declining city. Over most
of the empire peace still prevailed and men went about without arms. The armies
continued to be the sole repositories of power; the emperors, dependent on
their legions, became more and more autocratic to the rest of the empire and
their state more and more like that of the Persian and other oriental monarchs.
Diocletian assumed a royal diadem and oriental robes.</p>
<p>All along the imperial frontier, which ran roughly along the
Rhine and Danube, enemies were now pressing. The Franks and
other German tribes had come up to the Rhine. In north
Hungary were the Vandals; in what was once Dacia and is now
Roumania, the Visigoths or West Goths. Behind these in south
Russia were the East Goths or Ostrogoths, and beyond these
again in the Volga region the Alans. But now Mongolian
peoples were forcing their way towards Europe. The Huns were
already exacting tribute from the Alans and Ostrogoths and
pushing them to the west.</p>
<p>In Asia the Roman frontiers were crumpling back under the
push of a renascent Persia. This new Persia, the Persia of
the Sassenid kings, was to be a vigorous and on the whole a
successful rival of the Roman Empire in Asia for the next
three centuries.</p>
<p>A glance at the map of Europe will show the reader the
peculiar weakness of the empire. The river Danube comes down
to within <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P228"></SPAN></span>a couple of hundred miles of the
Adriatic Sea in the region of what is now Bosnia and Serbia.
It makes a square re-entrant angle there. The Romans never
kept their sea communications in good order, and this two
hundred mile strip of land was their line of communication
between the western Latin-speaking part of the empire and the
eastern Greek-speaking portion. Against this square angle of
the Danube the barbarian pressure was greatest. When they
broke through there it was inevitable that the empire should
fall into two parts.</p>
<div class="fig"> <SPAN name="img-228"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/img-228.jpg" alt="Map: The Empire and the Barbarians" width-obs="600" height-obs="344" /></div>
<p>A more vigorous empire might have thrust forward and
reconquered Dacia, but the Roman Empire lacked any such
vigour. Constantine the Great was certainly a monarch of
great devotion and intelligence. He beat back a raid of the
Goths from just these vital Balkan regions, but he had no
force to carry the frontier across the Danube. He was too
pre-occupied with the internal weaknesses of the empire. He
brought the solidarity and moral force of Christianity to
revive the spirit of the declining empire, and he decided to
create a new permanent capital at Byzantium upon the
Hellespont. This new-made Byzantium, which was re-christened
Constantinople in his honour, was still building when he
died. Towards the end of his reign occurred a remarkable
transaction. The <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P229"></SPAN></span>Vandals, being pressed by the
Goths, asked to be received into the Roman Empire. They were
assigned lands in Pannonia, which is now that part of Hungary
west of the Danube, and their fighting men became nominally
legionaries. But these new legionaries remained under their
own chiefs. Rome failed to digest them.</p>
<p>Constantine died working to reorganize his great realm, and
soon the frontiers were ruptured again and the Visigoths came
almost to Constantinople. They defeated the Emperor Valens at
Adrianople and made a settlement in what is now Bulgaria,
similar to the settlement of the Vandals in Pannonia.
Nominally they were subjects of the emperor, practically they
were conquerors.</p>
<div class="fig"> <SPAN name="img-229"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/img-229.jpg" alt="CONSTANTINE’S PILLAR, CONSTANTINOPLE" width-obs="280" height-obs="667" /> <p class="caption">
CONSTANTINE’S PILLAR, CONSTANTINOPLE
<br/>
<small><i>Photo: Sebah & Foaillier</i>
</small></p>
</div>
<p>From 379 to 395 <small>A.D.</small> reigned the
Emperor Theodosius the Great, and while he reigned the empire
was still formally intact. Over the armies of Italy and
Pannonia presided Stilicho, a Vandal, over the armies in the
Balkan peninsula, Alaric, a Goth. When Theodosius died at
the close of the fourth century he left <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P230"></SPAN></span>two sons.
Alaric supported one of these, Arcadius, in Constantinople,
and Stilicho the other, Honorius, in Italy. In other words
Alaric and Stilicho fought for the empire with the princes as
puppets. In the course of their struggle Alaric marched into
Italy and after a short siege took Rome (410
<small>A.D.</small>).</p>
<p>The opening half of the fifth century saw the whole of the
Roman Empire in Europe the prey of robber armies of
barbarians. It is difficult to visualize the state of
affairs in the world at that time. Over France, Spain, Italy
and the Balkan peninsula, the great cities that had
flourished under the early empire still stood, impoverished,
partly depopulated and falling into decay. Life in them must
have been shallow, mean and full of uncertainty. Local
officials asserted their authority and went on with their
work with such conscience as they had, no doubt in the name
of a now remote and inaccessible emperor. The churches went
on, but usually with illiterate priests. There was little
reading and much superstition and fear. But everywhere
except where looters had destroyed them, books and pictures
and statuary and such-like works of art were still to be
found.</p>
<p>The life of the countryside had also degenerated. Everywhere
this Roman world was much more weedy and untidy than it had
been. In some regions war and pestilence had brought the
land down to the level of a waste. Roads and forests were
infested with robbers. Into such regions the barbarians
marched, with little or no opposition, and set up their
chiefs as rulers, often with Roman official titles. If they
were half civilized barbarians they would give the conquered
districts tolerable terms, they would take possession of the
towns, associate and intermarry, and acquire (with an accent)
the Latin speech; but the Jutes, the Angles and Saxons who
submerged the Roman province of Britain were agriculturalists
and had no use for towns, they seem to have swept south
Britain clear of the Romanized population and they replaced
the language by their own Teutonic dialects, which became at
last English.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P231"></SPAN></span></p>
<div class="fig"> <SPAN name="img-231"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/img-231.jpg" alt="BASE OF THE “OBELISK OF THEODOSIUS,” CONSTANTINOPLE" width-obs="600" height-obs="752" /> <p class="caption">
BASE OF THE “OBELISK OF THEODOSIUS,” CONSTANTINOPLE
<br/>
<small>The obelisk of Thothmes, taken from Egypt to Constantinople
by Theodosius and placed upon the pedestal her shown; an
interesting example of early Byzantine art. The complete obelisk
is seen on page 239.
<br/>
<i>Photo: Sebah & Foaillier</i>
</small></p>
</div>
<p>It is impossible in the space at our disposal to trace the
movements of all the various German and Slavonic tribes as
they went to and fro in the disorganized empire in search of
plunder and a pleasant home. But let the Vandals serve as an
example. They came into <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P232"></SPAN></span>history in east Germany. They
settled as we have told in Pannonia. Thence they moved
somewhen about 425 <small>A.D.</small> through the
intervening provinces to Spain. There they found Visigoths
from South Russia and other German tribes setting up dukes
and kings. From Spain the Vandals under Genseric sailed for
North Africa (429), captured Carthage (439), and built a
fleet. They secured the mastery of the sea and captured and
pillaged Rome (455), which had recovered very imperfectly
from her capture and looting by Alaric half a century
earlier. Then the Vandals made themselves masters of Sicily,
Corsica, Sardinia and most of the other islands of the
western Mediterranean. They made, in fact, a sea empire very
similar in its extent to the sea empire of Carthage seven
hundred odd years before. They were at the climax of their
power about 477. They were a mere handful of conquerors
holding all this country. In the next century almost all
their territory had been reconquered for the empire of
Constantinople during a transitory blaze of energy under
Justinian I.</p>
<p>The story of the Vandals is but one sample of a host of
similar adventures. But now there was coming into the
European world the least kindred and most redoubtable of all
these devastators, the Mongolian Huns or Tartars, a yellow
people active and able, such as the western world had never
before encountered.</p>
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