<h2><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P233"></SPAN></span><SPAN name="chapXL"></SPAN>XL<br/> THE HUNS AND THE END OF THE WESTERN EMPIRE</h2>
<p>This appearance of a conquering Mongolian people in Europe may be taken to mark
a new stage in human history. Until the last century or so before the Christian
era, the Mongol and the Nordic peoples had not been in close touch. Far away in
the frozen lands beyond the northern forests the Lapps, a Mongolian people, had
drifted westward as far as Lapland, but they played no part in the main current
of history. For thousands of years the western world carried on the dramatic
interplay of the Aryan, Semitic and fundamental brunette peoples with very
little interference (except for an Ethiopian invasion of Egypt or so) either
from the black peoples to the south or from the Mongolian world in the far
East.</p>
<p>It is probable that there were two chief causes for the new
westward drift of the nomadic Mongolians. One was the
consolidation of the great empire of China, its extension
northward and the increase of its population during the
prosperous period of the Han dynasty. The other was some
process of climatic change; a lesser rainfall that abolished
swamps and forests perhaps, or a greater rainfall that
extended grazing over desert steppes, or even perhaps both
these processes going on in different regions but which
anyhow facilitated a westward migration. A third
contributary cause was the economic wretchedness, internal
decay and falling population of the Roman Empire. The rich
men of the later Roman Republic, and then the tax-gatherers
of the military emperors had utterly consumed its vitality.
So we have the factors of thrust, means and opportunity.
There was pressure from the east, rot in the west and an open
road.</p>
<p>The Hun had reached the eastern boundaries of European Russia
by the first century <small>A.D.</small>, but it was
not until the fourth and <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P234"></SPAN></span>fifth centuries
<small>A.D.</small> that these horsemen rose to predominance upon
the steppes. The fifth century was the Hun’s century.
The first Huns to come into Italy were mercenary bands in the
pay of Stilicho the Vandal, the master of Honorius.
Presently they were in possession of Pannonia, the empty nest
of the Vandals.</p>
<p>By the second quarter of the fifth century a great war chief
had arisen among the Huns, Attila. We have only vague and
tantalizing glimpses of his power. He ruled not only over
the Huns but over a conglomerate of tributary Germanic
tribes; his empire extended from the Rhine cross the plains
into Central Asia. He exchanged ambassadors with China. His
head camp was in the plain of Hungary east of the Danube.
There he was visited by an envoy from Constantinople,
Priscus, who has left us an account of his state. The way of
living of these Mongols was very like the way of living of
the primitive Aryans they had replaced. The common folk were
in huts and tents; the chiefs lived in great stockaded timber
halls. There were feasts and drinking and singing by the
bards. The Homeric heroes and even the Macedonian companions
of Alexander would probably have felt more at home in the
camp-capital of Attila than they would have done in the
cultivated and decadent court of Theodosius II, the son of
Arcadius, who was then reigning in Constantinople.</p>
<p>For a time it seemed as though the nomads under the
leadership of the Huns and Attila would play the same part
towards the Græco-Roman civilization of the
Mediterranean countries that the barbaric Greeks had played
long ago to the Ægean civilization. It looked like
history repeating itself upon a larger stage. But the Huns
were much more wedded to the nomadic life than the early
Greeks, who were rather migratory cattle farmers than true
nomads. The Huns raided and plundered but did not settle.</p>
<p>For some years Attila bullied Theodosius as he chose. His
armies devastated and looted right down to the walls of
Constantinople, Gibbon says that he totally destroyed no less
than seventy cities in the Balkan peninsula, and Theodosius
bought him off by payments of tribute and tried to get rid of
him for good by sending secret agents to assassinate him. In
451 Attila turned his attention to the remains of the Latin-
speaking half of the empire and invaded <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P235"></SPAN></span>Gaul. Nearly
every town in northern Gaul was sacked. Franks, Visigoths
and the imperial forces united against him and he was
defeated at Troyes in a vast dispersed battle in which a
multitude of men, variously estimated as between 150,000 and
300,000, were killed. This checked him in Gaul, but it did
not exhaust his enormous military resources. Next year he
came into Italy by way of Venetia, burnt Aquileia and Padua
and looted Milan.</p>
<div class="fig"> <SPAN name="img-235"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/img-235.jpg" alt="HEAD OF BARBARIAN CHIEF" width-obs="450" height-obs="600" /> <p class="caption">
HEAD OF BARBARIAN CHIEF
<br/>
<small><i>(In the British Museum)</i>
</small></p>
</div>
<p>Numbers of fugitives from these north Italian towns and
particularly from Padua fled to islands in the lagoons at the
head of the Adriatic and laid there the foundations of the
city state of Venice, which was to become one of the greatest
or the trading centres in the middle ages.</p>
<p>In 453 Attila died suddenly after a great feast to celebrate
his marriage to a young woman, and at his death this plunder
confederation of his fell to pieces. The actual Huns
disappear from history, mixed into the surrounding more
numerous Aryan-speaking populations. <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P236"></SPAN></span>But these
great Hun raids practically consummated the end of the Latin
Roman Empire. After his death ten different emperors ruled
in Rome in twenty years, set up by Vandal and other mercenary
troops. The Vandals from Carthage took and sacked Rome in
455. Finally in 476 Odoacer, the chief of the barbarian
troops, suppressed a Pannonian who was figuring as emperor
under the impressive name of Romulus Augustulus, and informed
the Court of Constantinople that there was no longer an
emperor in the west. So ingloriously the Latin Roman Empire
came to an end. In 493 Theodoric the Goth became King of
Rome.</p>
<p>All over western and central Europe now barbarian chiefs were
reigning as kings, dukes and the like, practically
independent but for the most part professing some sort of
shadowy allegiance to the emperor. There were hundreds and
perhaps thousands of such practically independent brigand
rulers. In Gaul, Spain and Italy and in Dacia the Latin
speech still prevailed in locally distorted forms, but in
Britain and east of the Rhine languages of the German group
(or in Bohemia a Slavonic language, Czech) were the common
speech. The superior clergy and a small remnant of other
educated men read and wrote Latin. Everywhere life was
insecure and property was held by the strong arm. Castles
multiplied and roads fell into decay. The dawn of the sixth
century was an age of division and of intellectual darkness
throughout the western world. Had it not been for the monks
and Christian missionaries Latin learning might have perished
altogether.</p>
<p>Why had the Roman Empire grown and why had it so completely
decayed? It grew because at first the idea of citizenship
held it together. Throughout the days of the expanding
republic, and even into the days of the early empire there
remained a great number of men conscious of Roman
citizenship, feeling it a privilege and an obligation to be a
Roman citizen, confident of their rights under the Roman law
and willing to make sacrifices in the name of Rome. The
prestige of Rome as of something just and great and law-
upholding spread far beyond the Roman boundaries. But even
as early as the Punic wars the sense of citizenship was being
undermined by the growth of wealth and slavery. Citizenship
spread indeed but not the idea of citizenship.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P237"></SPAN></span>The
Roman Empire was after all a very primitive organization; it
did not educate, did not explain itself to its increasing
multitudes of citizens, did not invite their co-operation in
its decisions. There was no network of schools to ensure a
common understanding, no distribution of news to sustain
collective activity. The adventurers who struggled for power
from the days of Marius and Sulla onward had no idea of
creating and calling in public opinion upon the imperial
affairs. The spirit of citizenship died of starvation and no
one observed it die. All empires, all states, all
organizations of human society are, in the ultimate, things
of understanding and will. There remained no will for the
Roman Empire in the World and so it came to an end.</p>
<p>But though the Latin-speaking Roman Empire died in the fifth
century, something else had been born within it that was to
avail itself enormously of its prestige and tradition, and
that was the Latin-speaking half of the Catholic Church.
This lived while the empire died because it appealed to the
minds and wills of men, because it had books and a great
system of teachers and missionaries to hold it together,
things stronger than any law or legions. Throughout the
fourth and fifth centuries <small>A.D.</small> while
the empire was decaying, Christianity was spreading to a
universal dominion in Europe. It conquered its conquerors,
the barbarians. When Attila seemed disposed to march on
Rome, the patriarch of Rome intercepted him and did what no
armies could do, turning him back by sheer moral force.</p>
<p>The Patriarch or Pope of Rome claimed to be the head of the
entire Christian church. Now that there were no more
emperors, he began to annex imperial titles and claims. He
took the title of <i>pontifex maximus</i>, head sacrificial
priest of the Roman dominion, the most ancient of all the
titles that the emperors had enjoyed.</p>
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