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THE
Story of the Goths
FROM THE EARLIEST TIMES TO THE END OF THE GOTHIC DOMINION
IN SPAIN
IV.
HOW THE GOTHS FOUGHT WITH CONSTANTINE.
DURING the fifty years’ peace the history of the Goths is a blank. No
chronicler has preserved even the name of any of their kings, or a single
anecdote, true or fabulous, about their doings in that tranquil time. Probably
we have lost little by this silence of the historians; for the story of an
uncivilized people does not contain much that is worth telling, when there are
no battles or migrations to record. We should like to know, however, on what
sort of terms the Goths lived with the native Dacians,
for there is good evidence that the whole of that people did not avail
themselves of Aurelian’s invitation to emigrate into Moesia, but continued in
their ancient homes under Gothic rule. There is some reason for thinking that
they were not reduced to slavery, but that the Goths learned to respect the
superior civilization of their neighbors, and that the native inhabitants and
the new settlers gradually became united into one people. If this were so, we
can understand how it came to pass that, as we have already seen, the Gothic
historian of the sixth century could reckon the heroes and sages of ancient
Dacia among the ancestral glories of his own nation.
But we must not suppose that Dacia was the only country occupied at this
time by the Goths. Vast as were the numbers of the host that sailed from the
northern shores of the Black Sea in the year 269, a large Gothic population still
remained behind. Whether or not the Goths of Southern Russia were included in
the treaty which Aurelian made, they seem at any rate to have abstained from
any invasion of the Roman Empire throughout the fifty years of which we are
speaking. The Goths of Dacia and their eastern kinsmen were distinguished by
the old names of Visigoths and Ostrogoths. How far they were respectively the
descendants of those who had borne these names in earlier times we cannot tell.
The Ostrogoths seem to have formed a united nation, while the Visigoths were
independent of them, and were divided into separate tribes under different
chieftains, without any common head.
Quiet and uneventful as were these fifty years in the history of the
Gothic people, they were full of stirring incidents in the history of the Roman
Empire. In the course of this period the Roman world was ruled by several
emperors of uncommon ability, amongst whom was one man of surpassing genius,
named Diocletian, who introduced important changes into the government. But of
these it is not necessary here to speak, nor of the civil wars and the
struggles with the Franks and other nations, which the empire had to sustain.
THE LONG PEACE BROKEN.
When the Goths first broke their long peace with Rome, it was in the
reign of the emperor Constantine the Great. Two of the actions of this
emperor had a profound effect on all succeeding history. He established
Christianity as the state religion of the empire; and he removed the seat of
government from Rome to his new city of Constantinople. Henceforward we have to
remember that although the empire is still called Roman, the ancient capital of
the world from which that empire took its name is now only its second city.
The first conflict between the Goths and Constantine took place in the
year 322, one year before the defeat of his colleague and rival Licinius made
him undivided sovereign of the empire. The Visigoths and Ostrogoths, in one
united army, joined by Slavonic tribes from the far east, had made an attack,
under the command of a king named Aliquaca [Alhwakars] on the Roman provinces south of the Danube. The
emperor defeated them in three successive battles, and compelled them to
submit. But he thought it well to offer them honorable terms of surrender, and
the result showed that he was wise in so doing; for when in the following year
he fought his decisive battle against Licinius at Hadrianople, he was assisted
by the army of Aliquaca, consisting, we are told, of
forty thousand men.
Eight years after this, however, Constantine had again to meet the Goths
as enemies. It seems that the Vandals, or a part of them, were then living in
what is now Western Hungary, divided from the Gothic territory by the river Theiss. Quarrels broke out between the two neighboring
peoples, and the Goths invaded the Vandal territory in overwhelming
numbers. The Vandals appealed for help to the emperor,
who listened to the prayer, and marched in person to chastise the aggressors.
When the Goths heard of his approach, they crossed the Danube led by their two
kings Araric and Aoric, and
hastened to meet the Roman army. In the first battle Constantine underwent a
serious defeat—for the first time in his life. But in the succeeding battles of
the campaign the victory was all on the side of the Romans. The emperor was
helped by the descendants of the Greek colonists in the Crimea, who were no
doubt glad of the opportunity to revenge themselves on their old oppressors.
The Goths were thoroughly humbled, and were glad to beg for peace. It was
always Constantine’s policy—in dealing with barbarians at least—to try by
kindness to make friends of his vanquished enemies; and the Gothic kings and
nobles received handsome presents and special marks of honor. Once more a
treaty of alliance was made between the Goths and the Romans, and by way of
security for his faithfulness, King Araric had to
leave his eldest son as a hostage in the emperor's hands.
After this war was ended the Goths seem not to have troubled the Roman
Empire for more than thirty years; but in other directions they made important
conquests. When Araric died, the people chose a new
king, who was of another family. His name was Geberic,
and he was descended from a line of famous heroes. We know nothing about his
father Hilderic or about Ovida and Nidada, his
grandfather and great-grandfather, but from the way in which Jordanes mentions
them it is plain that their names and deeds must
in his time have been very familiarly known from the
old Gothic ballads. King Geberic determined to
accomplish the task, in which his predecessor had failed, of dislodging the
Vandals. Constantine did not say him nay, for the Vandals, ungrateful for the
help which the Romans had given them, had themselves been making plundering
raids into the Roman provinces. On the banks of the river Marosh a battle was fought, in which Wisumar, the Vandal
king, was killed, and his army was routed with great slaughter. The conquered
Vandals once more appealed to Constantine, and he gave them permission to
settle in Pannonia and other parts of the empire. The Goths took possession of the
deserted territory; and being thus freed from enemies on the west, they soon
began to engage in schemes of aggression against their eastern neighbors. But
of these we shall have to speak in the next chapter.
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