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THE
Story of the Goths
FROM THE EARLIEST TIMES TO THE END OF THE GOTHIC DOMINION
IN SPAIN
XVIII.
THEODERIC AND HIS FOREIGN NEIGHBOURS.
The more Italy prospered under Theoderic’s wise and kindly rule, the
more she became a tempting prize to the ambition of foreign kings. Theoderic
knew this well; and he knew besides that the military strength of his kingdom
was after all only small. The Ostrogothic army was far inferior in numbers to
that of the Franks alone; and if it should happen that the kings of Europe
should discover his weakness, and should band themselves together for an united
attack upon the kingdom, there was little hope that he would be able to resist
them by force of arms. It would have been of no avail for him to labor for the
well-being of his subjects, if a foreign conqueror were to overrun the land,
and bring to ruin the fabric of order and prosperity which he had raised. And
if even if he could have been sure of vanquishing every foe that came against
him in the field, he knew that the success of his noble plans was only
possible so long as he could ensure the continuance of peace. Famous warrior
though he had been in earlier days, no visions of military glory blinded his
perception of what was his kingdom's one overwhelming need.
The great aim of Theoderic’s foreign policy was therefore to
attach all the Teutonic kings to himself by ties of friendship, and to make
them look up to him as a superior, with whom it was unwise to quarrel. He
connected his family by marriage with nearly every royal house in Europe. His
sister was given in marriage to Thrasamund, king of
the Vandals, and his niece to the Thuringian king, Ermanfrid. One of his daughters became the wife of Alaric
of Toulouse, and another was married to Sigismund, the heir, and afterwards the
successor of Gundobad, king of the Burgunds. The
mother of these princesses, who does not seem to have been regarded as
Theoderic’s lawful wife, was dead, and he married Audafleda,
the sister of Clovis.
It may be mentioned here that Audafleda had
only one child, a daughter named Amalaswintha. The
idea of hereditary succession to the throne was now beginning to be much more
fully recognized among the Teutonic peoples than it had been anciently, and Amalaswintha was therefore regarded as heiress of the
kingdom. When Amalaswintha grew up to womanhood, the
question who should be her husband was a very important one, for it practically
involved the succession to the kingdom. If her father had bestowed her on a
prince of any other royal house, the Ostrogoths would have felt that they were
sold into the hands of a foreign nation; and if he had chosen one of his own
generals, or some Roman noble, he would have excited jealousies that would very
likely have proved dangerous. However, Theoderic found a way out of the
difficulty that seems to have satisfied every one. At the court of the Visigoth
king there was an Amaling prince named Eutharic, the great-grandson of that King Thorismund, after whose death the throne of the Ostrogoth
had remained vacant for forty years, until their Hunnish masters allowed them
to choose a king once more. Now according to the new-fashioned principle of
inheritance, this Eutharic had a better right to be
king than Theoderic himself, and when the latter died there would very likely
be a party ready to support his claim. So Theoderic prudently invited this
prince into Italy, and by marrying him to Amalaswintha united the two branches of the Amaling stock. Eutharic was entrusted with important offices in the
kingdom, and he seems to have been a man of some vigor and capacity for government.
His liberality and magnificence won him many friends among the Romans, though
the Catholic writers say he was a bigoted Arian, and not at all disposed to
follow his father-in-law’s policy of toleration. However, Eutharic died a few years before Theoderic, leaving a son named Athalaric, who while yet
an infant was proclaimed king of Italy.
THEODERIC AND HIS FOREIGN NEIGHBOURS.
It was Theoderic’s wish that the Teutonic peoples of Europe should form
a sort of league, bound together by the brotherhood of race, and by the family
connections of their kings. The Ostrogoths of course were to be at the head of
the league, and enlightened by the traditions of Roman statesmanship which they
inherited as possessors of the Western empire, were to lead the kindred peoples
along the path of civilization. Like all Theoderic’s schemes, this magnificent
plan could only be worked by a man of genius. But while the man of genius lived
it was wonderfully successful. The kings of
the other Teutonic peoples—Franks, Visigoths, Vandals, and the
rest—looked up with respect to the sovereign of Rome; they sought his mediation
in their quarrels, and allowed him to write to them in the tone of a superior.
If they did not always follow the counsels which he gave, they at least received
them with abundant professions of deference and gratitude.
But notwithstanding Theoderic’s love of peace, the annals of his reign
include two great foreign wars— one with Constantinople, the other with the
Franks—which together occupied about five years.
The war with the Eastern empire began in this way. Theoderic had been endeavoring
to secure his northeastern frontier, which, as he knew from the success of
his own invasion, was the weakest point of his
kingdom. In order to make himself safe against any possible designs on the
part of the emperor, he cultivated the friendship of the petty chiefs who ruled
in the neighborhood of the old dividing line between
the two empires. Amongst these was a certain Mundo the Hun, a descendant, it was said, of Attila.
He was a sort of brigand captain, who had assumed the title of king somewhere
in the district now known as Servia. The Gepids, who were still inhabiting the neighborhood of the
river Save, refused Theoderic's offers of alliance, and made an attack upon his
territories. In the year 504 Theoderic sent an army against the Gepids, under a commander named Pitzia,
who soon captured their chief fortress of Sirmium, and compelled their
king Thrasaric to acknowledge himself Theoderic’s
vassal. Just at the same time, the emperor Anastasius, having
heard that Mundo had been committing
depredations on the neighboring lands of the empire, sent against him his
general Sabinianus. The imperial troops, assisted by the Bulgars—this
famous nation is now for the first time mentioned in history—had almost
succeeded in compelling Mundo to surrender, when Pitzia appeared in defence of his master’s ally, and
inflicted on the emperor’s general a crushing defeat. Amongst the Goths who
specially distinguished themselves in this campaign was a young officer named Thulwin, who afterwards became one of Theoderic’s closest
friends.
By way of revenge for this discomfiture, Anastasius caused his fleet to
ravage the south of Italy. Theoderic was at first unprepared to defend himself
against this attack, but he soon succeeded in forming a naval force which compelled
Anastasius to leave him unmolested. After the year 508 the peace between
Anastasius and Theoderic was not again broken, and under the succeeding
emperor, Justin, the relations between Constantinople and Ravenna were still
more friendly.
Before Theoderic had done with this quarrel, he found himself drawn into
another, the consequences of which were of much greater importance. This time
his adversary was the king of the Franks.
CLOVIS.
The rapidly growing power of Clovis, and his evident unscrupulousness
and ambition, had long been regarded by Theoderic with well-founded alarm. In
the year 496 Clovis had gained a decisive victory over the Alamans,
the German nation from whom in modern French all Germans have received the name
of Allemands. Theoderic sent a letter to the
conqueror, offering him his congratulations, but earnestly entreating him to
deal mercifully with the vanquished. Although Clovis might make a show of
receiving these exhortations respectfully, he paid little attention to them in
practice, and Theoderic granted to the persecuted Alamans a new home in the northern part of his own dominions—in Rhaetia, or what is now
known as Southern Bavaria. Clovis pursued his career of conquest; in a few
years he had subdued the Burgunds, and was
threatening to bring the combined armies of Franks and Burgunds to the subjugation of the Visigoths.
Theoderic labored earnestly to prevent the outbreak of war between
Clovis and Alaric. To the former he wrote “as a father and as a friend” exhorting
him not to engage in a fratricidal conflict the result of which was uncertain,
and which could bring him no true glory; and he added that if Clovis declared
war he should consider the act as an insult to himself. To Alaric, on the other
hand, he laid stress on the danger of rushing unprepared into the struggle, and
urged him to make every honorable concession, and not to draw the sword until
the efforts which he himself was making to bring Clovis to reason should have
proved unavailing.
But it was all in vain that Theoderic exerted his powers of persuasion.
The Frankish king was bent on war. Alaric, indeed, was only too willing to
yield, but he soon saw that no concession would save him. We have already
related the sad story of the war of the year 507—how the Visigothic king was
compelled by his generals to risk a battle without waiting for Theoderic's
promised aid, and how the result was the death of Alaric and the conquest of
his Gaulish dominions by the Franks.
It was the war with Anastasius that prevented Theoderic from intervening
in time to save Alaric from ruin. As soon as peace was concluded with the
emperor, in June, 508, an Ostrogothic army, led by the Count Ibba, Theoderic’s principal general, entered Southern Gaul.
Before very long Ibba had gained a decisive victory
over the Franks and Burgunds, and in the following
year Clovis was glad to make a treaty of peace, in which he acknowledged the
infant Amalaric (the son of Alaric) as sovereign, not
only of Spain, but of a considerable tract of country in the south-east of
Gaul, including the great cities of Arles and Narbonne. The greater part of
Provence, east of the Rhone, was added by Theoderic to his own dominions.
Theoderic now assumed the government of the Visigothic kingdom, as the
guardian of his infant grandson. An illegitimate half-brother of Amalaric endeavored to make himself king, but after a
struggle of about a year he was defeated and put to death. Theoderic committed
the management of the Spanish dominions to one of his generals, named Theudis, who however collected a native army, and became so
powerful that his master was reluctantly obliged to allow him practically to
assume the position of a tributary king. Still, this extension of his empire
carried with it an increase of respect amongst foreign sovereigns, and his
nominal lordship over Spain was maintained without cost.
In the year 523 Theoderic made another addition to the territory of his
kingdom. It was a military conquest, and yet it was won without striking a
blow. This apparently contradictory statement is easily explained. Sigismund,
king of the Burgunds, prompted by the malice of his
second wife, had murdered his own son, the grandson of Theoderic. Thulwin, the general of Theoderic, marched to Lyons with an
Ostrogothic army, to inflict punishment on the guilty king. When he arrived,
however, Sigismund had already been captured by the sons of Clovis and put to
death; and the new king, Godemar, who was carrying on
the war with the Franks, eagerly offered to resign to Theoderic the southern
half of his kingdom as the price of peace. Thulwin therefore returned in triumph, having secured all the substantial fruits of a
victory without the cost of a single life.
The vessel which conveyed Thulwin home was
wrecked by a fearful storm in full view of the port where Theoderic was waiting
to welcome his friend. Thulwin, taking his only child
in his arms, sprang into a boat, and rowed for the shore. The spectators of his
struggles thought it almost impossible that the boat could live, and the old
king’s anguish was so great that he could with difficulty be restrained from
plunging into the sea in a hopeless attempt at rescue. The crew of the ship all
perished in their efforts to reach the land. But Thulwin’s strength and skill enabled him to gain the shore in safety, and Theoderic ran
to embrace him, shedding tears of joy for his escape. It was perhaps the last
happy moment that the old king enjoyed in his life.
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