X
THE ARIAN LEAGUE
The position of Theodoric in relation both
to his own subjects and to the Empire was seriously modified by one fact to
which hitherto I have only alluded casually, the fact that he, like the great
majority of the Teutonic invaders of the Empire, was an adherent of the Arian
form of Christianity. In order to estimate at its true value the bearing of
religion, or at least of religious profession, on politics, at the time of the
fall of the Roman State, we might well look at the condition of another
dominion, founded under the combined influence of martial spirit and religious
zeal, which is now going to pieces under our very eyes, I mean the Empire of
the Ottomans. In the lands which are still under the sway of the Sultan,
religion may not be a great spiritual force, but it is at any rate a great
political lever. When you have said that a man is a Moslem or a Druse, a member of the Orthodox or of the Catholic Church,
an Armenian or a Protestant, you have almost always said enough to define his
political position. Without the need of additional information you have already
got the elements of his civic equation, and can say whether he is a loyal
subject of the Porte, or whether he looks to Russia or Greece, to France,
Austria, or England as the sovereign of his future choice. In fact, as has been
often pointed out, in the East at this day "Religion is Nationality".
Very similar to this was the condition of
the ancient world at the time when the general movement of the Northern nations
began. The battle with heathenism was virtually over, Christianity being the
unquestioned conqueror; but the question, which of the many modifications of
Christianity devised by the subtle Hellenic and Oriental intellects should be
the victor, was a question still unsettled, and debated with the keenest interest
on all the shores of the Mediterranean. So keen indeed was the interest that it
sometimes seems almost to have blinded the disputants to the fact that the
Roman Empire, the greatest political work that the world has ever seen, was
falling in ruins around them. When we want information about the march of
armies and the fall of States, the chroniclers to whom we turn for guidance,
withholding that which we seek, deluge us with trivial talk about the squabbles
of monks and bishops, about Timothy the Weasel and Peter the Fuller, and a host
of other self-seeking ecclesiastics, to whose names, to whose characters, and
to whose often violent deaths we are profoundly and absolutely indifferent. But
though a feeling of utter weariness comes over the mind of most readers, while
watching the theological sword-play of the fourth and fifth centuries, the
historical student cannot afford to shut his eyes altogether to the battle of
the creeds, which produced results of such infinite importance to the crystallising process by which Mediæval Europe was formed out of the Roman Empire.
As I have just said, Theodoric the
Ostrogoth, like almost all the great Teutonic swarm-leaders, like Alaric the
Visigoth, like Gaiseric the Vandal, like Gundobad the Burgundian, was an Arian.
On the other hand, the Emperors, Zeno, for instance, and Anastasius,
and the great majority of the population of Italy and of the provinces of the
Empire, were Catholic. What was the amount of theological divergence which was
conveyed by these terms Arian and Catholic, or to speak more judicially (for
the Arians averred that they were the true Catholics and that their opponents
were heretics) Arian and Athanasian? As this is not the place for a
disquisition on disputed points of theology, it is sufficient to say that,
while the Athanasian held for truth the whole of the Nicene Creed, the
Arian--at least that type of Arian with whom we are here concerned--would, in
that part which relates to the Son of God, leave out the words "being of
one substance with the Father", and would substitute for them "being
like unto the Father in such manner as the Scriptures declare". He would
also have refused to repeat the words which assert the Godhead of the Holy
Spirit. These were important differences, but it will be seen at once that they
were not so broad as those which now generally separate "orthodox"
from "heterodox" theologians.
The reasons which led the barbarian invaders
of the Empire to accept the Arian form of Christianity are not yet fully
disclosed to us. The cause could not be an uncultured people's preference for a
simple faith, for the Arian champions were at least as subtle and technical in
their theology as the Athanasian, and often surpassed them in these qualities.
It is possible that some remembrances of the mythology handed down to them by
their fathers made them willing to accept a subordinate Christ, a spiritualized
"Balder the Beautiful", divine yet subject to death, standing as it
were upon the steps of his father's throne, rather than the dogma, too highly
spiritualized for their apprehension, of One God in Three Persons. But probably
the chief cause of the Arianism of the German
invaders was the fact that the Empire itself was to a great extent Arian when
they were in friendly relations with it, and were accepting both religion and
civilization at its hands, in the middle years of the fourth century.
The most powerful factor in this change, the
man who more than all others was responsible for the conversion of the Germanic
races to Christianity, in its Arian form, was the Gothic Bishop, Ulfilas (311-381), whose construction of an Alphabet and
translation of the Scriptures into the language of his fellow-countrymen have
secured for him imperishable renown among all who are interested in the history
of human speech. Ulfilas, who has been well termed
"The Apostle of the Goths", seems to have embraced Christianity as a
young man when he was dwelling in Constantinople as a hostage (thus in some
measure anticipating the part which one hundred and thirty years later was to
be played by Theodoric), and having been ordained first Lector (Reader) and
afterwards (341) Bishop of Gothia, he spent the
remaining forty years of his life in missionary journeys among his countrymen
in Dacia, in collecting those of his converts who fled from the persecution of
their still heathen rulers, and settling them as colonists in Mœsia, and, most important of all, in his great work of the
translation of the Bible into Gothic. Of this work, as is well known, some
precious fragments still remain; most precious of all, the glorious Silver
Manuscript of the Gospels (Codex Argenteus), which is
supposed to have been written in the sixth century, and which, after many
wanderings and an eventful history, rests now in a Scandinavian land, in the
Library of the University of Upsala, It is well worth
while to make a pilgrimage to that friendly and hospitable Swedish city, if for
no other purpose than to see the letters (traced in silver on parchment of rich
purple dye) in which the skilful amanuensis laboriously transcribed the sayings
of Christ rendered by Bishop Ulfilas into the
language of Alaric. For that Codex Argenteus is
oldest of all extant monuments of Teutonic speech, the first fruit of that
mighty tree which now spreads its branches over half the civilised world.
With the theological bearings of the Arian
controversy we have no present concern; but it is impossible not to notice the
unfortunate political results of the difference of creed between the German
invaders and the great majority of the inhabitants of the Empire. The
cultivators of the soil and the dwellers in the cities had suffered much from
the misgovernment of their rulers during the last two centuries of Imperial
sway; they could, to some extent, appreciate the nobler moral qualities of the
barbarian settlers--their manliness, their truthfulness, their higher standard
of chastity; nor is it idle to suppose that if there had been perfect harmony
of religious faith between the new-comers and the old inhabitants they might
soon have settled down into vigorous and well-ordered communities, such as
Theodoric and Cassiodorus longed to behold, combining the Teutonic strength
with the Roman reverence for law. Religious discord made it impossible to
realize this ideal The orthodox clergy loathed and dreaded the invaders
"infected", as they said, "with the Arian pravity".
The barbarian kings, unaccustomed to have their will opposed by men who never
wielded a broadsword, were masterful and high-handed in their demand for
absolute obedience, even when their commands related to the things of God
rather than to the things of Cæsar; and the Arian bishops and priests who stood
beside their thrones, and who had sometimes long arrears of vengeance for past
insult or oppression to exact, often wrought up the monarch's mind to a perfect
frenzy of fanatical rage, and goaded him to cruel deeds which made
reconciliation between the warring creeds hopelessly impossible. In Africa, the
Vandal kings set on foot a persecution of their Catholic subjects which
rivaled, nay exceeded, the horrors of the persecution under Diocletian.
Churches were destroyed, bishops banished, and their flocks forbidden to elect
their successors: nay, sometimes, in the fierce quest after hidden treasure,
eminent ecclesiastics were stretched on the rack, their mouths were filled with
noisome dirt, or cords were twisted round their foreheads or their shins. In
Gaul, under the Visigothic King Euric, the
persecution was less savage, but it was stubborn and severe. Here, too, the
congregations were forbidden to elect successors to their exiled bishops; the
paths to the churches were stopped up with thorns and briers; cattle grazed on
the grass-grown altar steps, and the rain came through the shattered roofs into
the dismantled basilicas.
Thus all round the shores of the
Mediterranean there was strife and bitter heart-burning between the Roman
provincial and his Teutonic "guest", not so much because one was or
called himself a Roman, while the other called himself Goth, Burgundian, or
Vandal, but because one was Athanasian and the other Arian. With this strife of
creeds Theodoric, for the greater part of his reign, refused to concern
himself. He remained an Arian, as his fathers had been before him, but he
protected the Catholic Church in the privileges which she had acquired, and he
refused to exert his royal authority to either threaten or allure men into
adopting his creed. So evenly for many years did he hold the balance between
the rival faiths, that it was reported of him that he put to death a Catholic
priest who apostatized to Arianism in order to attain
the royal favor; and though this story does not perhaps rest on sufficient
authority, there can be no doubt that the general testimony of the marveling
Catholic subjects of Theodoric would have coincided with that already quoted
from the Bishop of Ravenna that "he attempted nothing against the Catholic
faith".
Still, though determined not to govern in
the interests of a sect, it was impossible that Theodoric's political relations
should not be, to a certain extent, modified by his religious affinities. Let
us glance at the position of the chief States with which a ruler of Italy at
the close of the fifth century necessarily came in contact.
First of all we have the Empire, practically
confined at this time to "the Balkan peninsula" south of the Danube,
Asia Minor, Syria, and Egypt, and presided over by the elderly, politic, but
unpopular Anastasius. This State is Catholic, though,
as we shall hereafter see, not in hearty alliance with the Church of Rome.
Westward from the Empire, along the southern
shore of the Mediterranean, stretches the great kingdom of the Vandals, with
Carthage for its capital. They have a powerful navy, but their kings, Gunthamund (484-496) and Thrasamund (496-523), do not seem
to be disposed to renew the buccaneering expeditions of their grandfather, the
great Vandal Gaiseric. They are decided Arians, and keep up a stern, steady
pressure on their Catholic subjects, who are spared, however, the ruthless
brutalities practised upon them by the earlier Vandal
kings. The relations of the Vandals with the Ostrogothic kingdom seem to have
been of a friendly character during almost the whole reign of Theodoric.
Thrasamund, the fourth king who reigned at Carthage, married Amalafrida, Theodoric's sister, who brought with her, as
dowry, possession of the strong fortress of Lilybæum (Marsala), in the west of Sicily, and who was
accompanied to her new home by a brilliant train of one thousand Gothic nobles
with five thousand mounted retainers.
In the north and west of Spain dwell the
nation of the Suevi, Teutonic and Arian, but
practically out of the sphere of European politics, and who, half a century
after the death of Theodoric, will be absorbed by their Visigothic neighbours.
This latter state, the kingdom of the
Visigoths, is apparently, at the end of the fifth century, by far the most
powerful of the new barbarian monarchies. All Spain, except its north-western
corner, and something like half of Gaul--namely, that region which is contained
between the Pyrenees and the Loire, owns the sway of the young king, whose
capital city is Toulouse, and who, though a stranger in blood, bears the name
of the great Visigoth who first battered a breach in the walls of Rome, the
mighty Alaric. This Alaric II. (485-507), the son of Euric,
who had been the most powerful sovereign of his dynasty, inherited neither his
father's force of character (485-507) nor the bitterness of his Arianism. The persecution of the Catholics was suspended,
or ceased altogether, and we may picture to ourselves the congregations again
wending their way by unblockaded paths to the house
of prayer, the churches once more roofed in and again made gorgeous by the
stately ceremonial of the Catholic rite. In other ways, too, Alaric showed
himself anxious to conciliate the favour of his Roman
subjects. He ordered an abstract of the Imperial Code to be prepared, and this
abstract, under the name of the Breviarium Alaricianum is to this day one of our most valuable sources
of information as to Roman Law. He is also said to have directed the
construction of the canal, which still bears his name (Canal d'Alaric), and which, connecting the Adour with the Aisne,
assists the irrigation of the meadows of Gascony. But all these attempts to
close the feud between the king and his orthodox subjects were vain. When the
day of trial came, it was seen, as it had long been suspected, that the
sympathies and the powerful influence of the bishops and clergy were thrown
entirely on the side of the Catholic invader.
Between the Visigothic and Ostrogothic
courts there was firm friendship and alliance, the remembrance of their common
origin and of many perils and hardships shared together on the shores of the
Euxine and in the passes of the Balkans being fortified by the knowledge of the
dangers to which their common profession of Arianism exposed them amidst the Catholic population of the Empire. The alliance, which
had served Theodoric in good stead when the Visigoths helped him in his
struggle with Odovacar, was yet further strengthened by kinship, the young king
of Toulouse having received in marriage a princess from Ravenna, whose name is
variously given as Arevagni or Ostrogotho.
A matrimonial alliance also connected
Theodoric with the king of the Burgundians. These invaders, who were destined
so strangely to disappear out of history themselves, while giving their name to
such wide and rich regions of mediæval Europe,
occupied at this time the valleys of the Saone and the Rhone, as well as the
country which we now call Switzerland. Their king, Gundobad, a man somewhat
older than Theodoric, had once interfered zealously in the politics of Italy,
making and unmaking Emperors and striking for Odovacar against his Ostrogothic
rival. Now, however, his whole energies were directed to extending his
dominions in Gaul, and to securing his somewhat precarious throne from the
machinations of the Catholic bishops, his subjects. For he, too, was by
profession an Arian, though of a tolerant type, and though he sometimes seemed
on the point of crossing the abyss and declaring himself a convert to the
Nicene faith. Theudegotho, sister of Arevagni, was given by her father, Theodoric in marriage to
Sigismund, the son and heir of Gundobad.
The event which intensified the fears of all
these Arian kings, and which left to each one little more than the hope that he
might be the last to be devoured, was the conversion to Catholicism of Clovis,
the heathen king of the Franks, that fortunate barbarian who, by a well-timed
baptism, won for his tribe of rude warriors the possession of the fairest land
in Europe and the glory of giving birth to one of the foremost nations in the
world.
As we are here come to one of the
common-places of history, I need but very briefly remind the reader of the chief
stages in the upward course of the young Frankish king. Born in 466, he
succeeded his father, Childeric, as one of the kings
of the Salian Franks in 481. The lands of the Salians occupied but the extreme northern corner of modern France, and a portion of
Flanders, and even here Clovis was but one of many kinglets allied by blood but
frequently engaged in petty and inglorious wars one with another.
For five years the young Salian chieftain
lived in peace with his neighbours. In the twentieth
year of his age (486) he sprang with one bound into fame and dominion by
attacking and overcoming the Roman Syagrius, who with
ill-defined prerogatives, and bearing the title not of Emperor or of Prefect,
but of King, had succeeded amidst the wreck of the Western Empire in preserving
some of the fairest districts of the north of Gaul from barbarian domination.
With the help of some of his brother chiefs, Clovis overthrew this "King
of Soissons". Syagrius took refuge at the court
of Toulouse, and the Frankish king now felt himself strong enough to send to
the young Alaric, who had ascended the throne only a year before, a peremptory
message, insisting, under the penalty of a declaration of war, on the surrender
of the Roman fugitive. The Visigoth was mean-spirited enough to purchase peace
by delivering up his guest, bound in fetters, to the ambassadors of Clovis, who
shortly after ordered him to be privily done to death. From that time, we may
well believe, Clovis felt confident that he should one day vanquish Alaric.
About seven years after this event (493)
came his memorable marriage with Clotilda, a
Burgundian princess, who, unlike her Arian uncle, Gundobad, was
enthusiastically devoted to the Catholic faith, and who ceased not by private
conversations and by inducing him to listen to the sermons of the eloquent
Bishop Remigius, to endeavour to win her husband from
the religion of his heathen forefathers to the creed of Rome and of the Empire.
Clovis, however, for some years wavered. Sprung himself, according to the traditions
of his people, from the sea-god Meroveus, he was not
in haste to renounce this fabulous glory, nor to acknowledge as Lord, One who
had been reared in a carpenter's shop at Nazareth. He allowed Clotilda to have her eldest son baptised,
but when the child soon after died, he took that as a sign of the power and
vengeance of the old gods. A second son was born, was baptised,
fell sick. Had that child died, Clovis would probably have remained an
obstinate heathen, but the little one recovered, given back, as was believed,
to the earnest prayers of his mother.
It was perhaps during these years of
indecision as to his future religious profession, that Clovis consented to a
matrimonial alliance between his house and that of the Arian Theodoric. The
great Ostrogoth married, probably about the year 495, the sister of Clovis, Augofleda, who, as we may reasonably conjecture, renounced
the worship of the gods of her people, and was baptised by an Arian bishop on becoming "Queen of the Goths and Romans".
Unfortunately the meagre annals of the time give us
no hint of the character or history of the princess who was thus transferred
from the fens of Flanders to the marshes of Ravenna. Every indication shows
that she came from a far lower level of civilisation than that which her husband's people occupied. Did she soon learn to conform
herself to the stately ceremonial which Ravenna borrowed from Constantinople?
Did she too speak of civilitas and the necessity of
obeying the Roman laws, and did she share the "glorious colloquies"
which her husband held with the exuberant Cassiodorus? When war came between
the Ostrogoth and the Frank, did she openly show her sympathy with her brother
Clovis, or did she "forget her people and her father's house" and cleave
with all her soul to the fortunes of Theodoric? As to all these interesting
questions the "Various Letters", with all their diffuseness, give us
no more information than the most jejune of the annalists.
The only fact upon which we might found a conjecture is the love of literature
and of Roman civilisation displayed by her daughter, Amalasuentha, which inclines us to guess that the mother
may have thrown off her Frankish wildness when she came into the softening
atmosphere of Italy.
We return to the event so memorable in the
history of the world, Clovis' conversion to Christianity. In the year 486 he
went forth to fight his barbarian neighbours in the
south-east, the Alamanni, The battle was a stubborn and a bloody one, as well
it might be when two such thunder-clouds met, the savage Frank and the savage Alaman. Already the Frankish host seemed wavering, when
Clovis, lifting his eyes to heaven and shedding tears in the agony of his soul,
said: "O Jesus Christ! whom Clotilda declares to
be the son of the living God, who art said to give
help to the weary, and victory to them that trust in thee,
I humbly pray for thy glorious aid, and promise that if thou wilt indulge me
with the victory over these enemies, I will believe in thee and be baptised in thy name. For I have called on my
own gods and have found that they are of no power and do not help those who
call upon them". Scarcely had he spoken the words when the tide of battle
turned. The Franks recovered from their panic, the Alamanni turned to flight.
Their king was slain, and his people submitted to Clovis, who, returning, told
his queen how he had called upon her God in the day of battle and been
delivered.
Then followed, after a short consultation
with the leading men of his kingdom, which made the change of faith in some
degree a national act, the celebrated scene in the cathedral of Rheims, where
the king, having confessed his faith in the Holy Trinity, was baptised in the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy
Ghost, the poetical bishop uttering the well-known words:"Bow down thy
head in lowliness, O Sicambrian; adore what thou hast
burned and burn what thou hast adored". The streets of the city were hung
with bright banners, white curtains adorned the churches, and clouds of sweet
incense filled all the great basilica in which "the new Constantine"
stooped to the baptismal water. He entered the cathedral a mere "Sicambrian" chieftain, the descendant of the sea-god:
he emerged from it amid the acclamations of the joyous provincials, "the
eldest son of the Church".
The result of this ceremony was to change
the political relations of every state in Gaul. Though the Franks were among
the roughest and most uncivilised of the tribes that
had poured westwards across the Rhine, as Catholics they were now sure of a
welcome from the Catholic clergy of every city, and where the clergy led, the
"Roman" provincials, or in other words the Latin-speaking laity,
generally followed. Immediately after his baptism Clovis received a letter of
enthusiastic welcome Into the true fold, written by Avitus,
Bishop of Vienne, the most eminent ecclesiastic of the Burgundian kingdom.
"I regret", says Avitus, "that I could
not be present in the flesh at that most glorious solemnity. But as your most
sublime Humility had sent me a messenger to inform me of your intention, when
night fell I retired to rest already secure of your conversion. How often my
friends and I went over the scene in our imaginations! We saw the band of holy
prelates vying with one another in the ambition of lowly service, each one
wishing to comfort the royal limbs with the water of life. We saw that head, so
terrible to the nations, bowed low before the servants of God; the hair which
had grown long under the helmet now crowned with the diadem of the holy
anointing; the coat of mail laid aside and the white limbs wrapped in linen
robes as white and spotless as themselves.
"One thing only have I to ask of you,
that you will spread the light which you have yourself received to the nations around
you. Scatter the seeds of faith from out of the good treasure of your heart,
and be not ashamed, by embassies directed to this very end, to strengthen in
other States the cause of that God who has so greatly exalted your fortunes.
Shine on, for ever, upon those who are present, by lustre of your diadem, upon those who are absent, by the
glory of your name. We are touched by your happiness; as often as you fight in
those (heretical) lands, we conquer".
The use of language like this, showing such
earnest devotion to the cause of Clovis in the subject of a rival monarch, well
illustrates the tendency of the Frankish king's conversion to loosen the bonds
of loyalty in the neighbouring States, and to
facilitate the spread of his dominion over the whole of Gaul. In fact, the
Frankish kingdom, having become Catholic, was like the magnetic mountain of
Oriental fable, which drew to itself all the iron nails of the ships which
approached it, and so caused them to sink in hopeless dissolution. Seeing this
obvious result of the conversion of the Frank, some historians, especially in
the last century, were disposed to look upon that conversion as a mere
hypocritical pretence. Later critics have shown that this is not an accurate
account of the matter. Doubtless the motives which induced Clovis to accept
baptism and to profess faith in the Crucified One were of the meanest, poorest,
and most unspiritual kind. Few men have ever been further from that which
Christ called "the Kingdom of Heaven" than this grasping and brutal
Frankish chief, to whom robbery, falsehood, murder were, after his baptism, as
much as before it (perhaps even more than before it), the ordinary steps in the
ladder of his elevation. But the rough barbaric soul had in its dim fashion a
faith that the God of the Christians was the mightiest God, and that it would
go well with those who submitted to him. In his rude style he made imaginary
bargains with the Most High: "so much reverence to 'Clotilda's God,' so many offerings at the shrine of St. Martin, so much land to the church
of St. Genovefa, on condition that I shall beat down
my enemies before me and extend my dominions from the Seine to the
Pyrenees". This is the kind of calculation which the missionaries in our
own day are only too well accustomed to hear from the lips of barbarous
potentates like those of Uganda and Fiji. A conversion thus effected brings no honour to any church, and the utter selfishness and even
profanity of the transaction disgusts the devout souls of every communion.
Still the conversion of Clovis was not in its essence and origin a hypocritical
scheme for obtaining the support of the Catholic clergy in Gaul, how clearly so
ever the new convert may have soon perceived that from that support he would
"suck no small advantage".
The first of his Arian neighbours whom Clovis struck at was the Burgundian, Gundobad. In the year 500 he beseiged Dijon with a large army. Gundobad called on his
brother Godegisel, who reigned at Geneva, for help,
but that brother was secretly in league with Clovis, and at a critical moment
joined the invaders, who were for a time completely successful. Gundobad was
driven into exile and Godegisel accepting the
position of a tributary ally of his powerful Frankish friend, ruled over the
whole Burgundian kingdom. His rule however seems not to have been heartily
accepted by the Burgundian people. The exiled Gundobad returned with a few
followers, who daily increased in number; he found himself strong enough to
besiege Godegisel in Vienne; he at length entered the
city through the blow-hole of an aqueduct, slew his brother with his own hand,
and put his chief adherents to death "with exquisite torments". The
Frankish troops who garrisoned Vienne were taken prisoners, but honourably treated and sent to Toulouse to be guarded by
Alaric the Visigoth, who had probably assisted the enterprise of Gundobad.
The inactivity of Clovis during this
counter-revolution in Burgundy is not easily explained. Either there was some
great explosion of Burgundian national feeling against the Franks, which for
the time made further interference dangerous, or Gundobad, having added his
brother's dominions to his own, was now too strong for Clovis to meddle with,
or, which seems on the whole the most probable supposition, Gundobad himself,
secretly inclining towards the Catholic cause, had made peace with Clovis
through the mediation of the clergy, and came back to Vienne to rule
thenceforward as a dependent ally, though not an avowed tributary, of Clovis
and the Franks. We shall soon have occasion to observe that in the crisis of
its fortunes the confederacy of Arian states could not count on the
co-operation of Gundobad.
To form such a confederacy and to league
together all the older Arian monarchies against this one aspiring Catholic
state, which threatened to absorb them all, was now the main purpose of
Theodoric. He seems, however, to have remained meanwhile on terms of courtesy
and apparent harmony with his powerful brother-in-law.
He congratulated him on a second victorious
campaign against the Alamanni (about 503 or 504), and he took some trouble to
comply with a request, which Clovis had made to him, to find out a skilful harper who might be sent to his court. The letter which
relates to this transaction is a curious specimen of Cassiodorus' style. It is
addressed to the young philosopher Boëthius, a man
whose varied accomplishments adorned the middle period of the reign of
Theodoric, and whose tragical death was to bring
sadness over its close. To this man, whose knowledge of the musical art was
pre-eminent in his generation, Cassiodorus addresses one of the longest letters
in his collection (it would occupy about six pages of an ordinary octavo), only
one or two sentences of which relate to the business in hand. The letter begins:
"Since the king of the Franks, attracted by the fame of our banquets, has
with earnest prayers besought us to send him a harper (citharœdus), our only hope of executing his
commission lies in you, whom we know to be accomplished in musical learning. For
it will be easy for you to choose a well-skilled man, having yourself been able
to attain to that high and abstruse study". Then follow a string of
reflections on the soothing power of music, a description of the five
"modes" (Dorian, Phrygian, Aeolian, Ionian, and Lydian) and of the
diapason; instances of the power of music drawn from the Scriptures and from
heathen mythology, a discussion on the harmony of the spheres, and a doubt
whether the enjoyment of this "astral music" be rightly placed among
the delights of heaven. At length the marvelous state-paper draws to a close,
"But since we have made this pleasing digression (because it is always
agreeable to talk about learning with learned men) let your Wisdom choose out
for us the best harper of the day, for the purpose
that we have mentioned. Herein will you accomplish a task somewhat like that of
Orpheus, when he with sweet sounds tamed the fierce hearts of savage creatures.
The thanks which we owe you will be expressed by liberal compensation, for you
obey our rule, and to the utmost of your power render it illustrious by your
attainments".
Evidently the court of Theodoric was
regarded as a centre of light and civilisation by his
Teutonic neighbours, the lords of the new kingdoms to
the north of him. King Gundobad desired to become the possessor of a clepsydra
or water-clock, such as had long been used in Athens and Rome, to regulate the
time allotted to the orators in public debates. He also wished to obtain an
accurately graduated sun-dial. For both he made request to Theodoric, and again
the universal genius Boëthius was applied to,
Cassiodorus writes him, in his master's name, a letter which gives us some
interesting information as to the past career of Boëthius,
and then proceeds to give a specification of the required machines, in language
so magnificent as to be, at any rate to modern mechanicians,
hopelessly unintelligible. Then a shorter letter, to accompany the clock and
dial, is written to King Gundobad. This letter, which is written in a slightly
condescending tone, says that the tie of affinity between the two kings makes
it right that Gundobad should receive benefits from Theodoric: "Let
Burgundy under your sway learn to examine the most curious objects, and to
praise the inventions of the ancients. Through you she is laying aside her old
barbarian tastes, and while she admires the prudence of her King she rightly
desires the works of wise men of old. Let her mark out the different intervals
of the day by her actions: let her in the most fitting manner assign the
occupation of each hour. This is to lead the true human life, as distinguished
from that of the brutes, who know the flight of time only by the cravings of
their appetites".
A time, however, was approaching when this
pleasant interchange of courtesies between the three sovereigns, Ostrogothic,
Frankish, and Burgundian, was to be succeeded by the din of wan Alaric the
Visigoth, alarmed at the victorious progress of the Frankish king, sent a
message to this effect: "If my brother is willing, let him consider my
proposal that, by the favour of God, we should have
an interview with one another". Clovis accepted the offer, and the two
kings met on an island in the Loire near Amboise. But either no alliance could
be formed, owing to religious differences, or the treaty so made was too weak
for the strain which it had to bear, and it became manifest before long that
war would soon break out between "Francia"
and "Gothia".
Theodoric exerted himself strenuously to
prevent the impending struggle, which, as he too surely foresaw, would bring
only disaster to his Visigothic allies. He caused his eloquent secretary to
write letters to Clovis, to Alaric, to Gundobad, to the neighbours of the Franks on their eastern border, the kings of the Heruli,
the Warni, and the Thuringians. To Clovis he dilated
on the horrors which war brings upon the inhabitants of the warring lands, who
have a right to expect that the kinship of their lords will keep them at peace.
A few paltry words were no sufficient cause of war between two such monarchs,
and it was the act of a passionate and hot-headed man to be mobilising his troops while he was sending his first embassy. To Alaric he sent an earnest
warning against engaging in war with Clovis: "You are surrounded by an innumerable
multitude of subjects, and you are proud of the remembrance of the defeat of
Attila, but war is a terribly dangerous game, and you know not how the long
peace may have softened the warlike fibre of your
people". He besought Gundobad to join with him in preserving peace between
the combatants, to each of whom he had offered his arbitration. "It behoves us old, men to moderate the wrath of the royal
youths, who should reverence our age, though they are still in the flower of
their hot youth". The kings of the barbarians were reminded of the
friendship which Alaric's father, Euric, had shown
them in old days, and invited to join in a "League of Peace", in
order to check the lawless aggressions of Clovis, which threatened danger to
all.
The diplomatic action of Theodoric was
powerless to avert the war; possibly even it may have stimulated Clovis to
strike rapidly before a hostile coalition could be formed against him.
At an assembly of his nation (perhaps the
"Camp of March") in the early part of 507, he impetuously declared:
"I take it grievously amiss that these Arians should hold so large a part
of Gaul. Let us go and overcome them with God's help, and bring the land into
subjection to us". The saying pleased the whole multitude, and the
collected army inarched southward to the Loire. On their way they passed
through the territory owned by the monastery of St. Martin of Tours, the
greatest saint of Gaul. Here the king commanded them to abstain religiously
from all depredations, taking only grass for their horses, and water from the
streams. One of the soldiers, finding a quantity of hay in the possession of a
peasant, took it from him, arguing that hay was grass, and so came within the
permitted exception. He was, however, at once cut down with a sword, the king
exclaiming. "What hope shall we have of victory if we offend the blessed
Martin?" Having first prayed for a sign, Clovis sent his messengers with
gifts to the great basilica of Tours, and behold! when these messengers set
foot in the sacred building, the choristers were singing an antiphon, taken
from the 18th Psalm: "Thou hast girded me with strength unto the battle,
thou hast subdued under me those that rose up against me".
Meanwhile, Alaric, taken at unawares, short
of men and short of money, was endeavouring to remedy
the latter deficiency by a depreciation of the currency. To swell his slender
battalions he evidently looked to his father-in-law, Theodoric, whose
peace-making letter had ended with these words: "We look upon your enemy
as the common enemy of all. Whoever strives against you will rightly have to
deal with me, as a foe". Yet notwithstanding this assurance, no
Ostrogothic troops came at this time to the help of the Visigoths. In the great
dearth of historical material, our account of these transactions has to be made
up from scattered and fragmentary notices, which do not enable us to explain
this strange inaction of so true-hearted an ally. It is not imputed to him as a
fault by any contemporary authority, and it seems reasonable to suppose that
not the will, but the power, to help his menaced son-in-law was wanting. One
alarming change in the situation had revealed itself since Theodoric ordered
his secretary to write the letters recommending an anti-Frankish confederacy of
kings. Gundobad the Burgundian was now the declared ally of Clovis, and
promised himself a share of the spoil. So powerful an enemy on the flank,
threatening the communications of the two Gothic states, may very probably have
been the reason why no timely succour was sent from
Ravenna to Toulouse.
Clovis and his Frankish host, hungering for
the spoil, pressed forwards, and succeeded, apparently without opposition, in
crossing the broad river Loire. Alaric had taken up a strong position at the
Campus Vogladensis (Vouillé: dep. Vienne), about ten
miles from Poitiers. Here he wished to remain on the defensive till the
expected succours from Theodoric could arrive, but
his soldiers, confident in their power to beat the Franks unassisted, began to
revile their king's over-caution and his father-in-law's delay, and forced
Alaric to fight. The Goths began hurling their missile weapons, but the daring
Franks rushed in upon them and commenced a hand-to-hand encounter, in which
they were completely victorious. The Goths turned to flee, and Clovis, riding
up to where Alaric was fighting, slew him with his own hand. He himself had
immediately afterwards a narrow escape from two of the enemy, who, coming
suddenly upon him, thrust their long spears at him, one on each side. The
strength of his coat of mail, however, and the speed of his horse saved him
from a disaster which might possibly even then have turned the tide of victory.
The result of this battle was the complete
overthrow of the Visigothic kingdom of Toulouse. In a certain sense it
survived, and for two centuries played a great part in Europe as the Spanish
kingdom of Toledo, but, as competitors for dominion in Gaul, the Visigoths
henceforward disappear from history. There seems to have been a certain want of
toughness in the Visigothic fibre, a tendency to
rashness combined with a tendency to panic, which made it possible for their
enemies to achieve a complete triumph over them in a single battle.
(376) Athanaric staked his all on one battle
with the Huns, and lost, by the rivers of Bessarabia.
(507) Alaric II, as we have seen, staked his
all on one battle with the Franks, and lost, on the Campus Vogladensis.
(701) Two centuries later Roderic staked his all upon one battle with the Moors, and
lost, at Xeres de la Frontera.
All through the year 507 the allied forces
of Franks and Burgundians seem to have poured over the south-west and south of
Gaul, annexing Angoulème, Saintonge,
Auvergne, and Gascony to the dominions of Clovis, and Provence to the dominions
of Gundobad. Only the strong city of Aries, and perhaps the fortress of
Carcassonne (that most interesting relic of the early Middle Ages, which still
shows the handiwork of Visigothic kings in its walls), still held out for the
son of Alaric.
In 508 the long delayed forces of Theodoric
appeared upon the scene under his brave general, Tulum,
and dealt some severe blows at the allied Frankish and Burgundian armies. In
509 another army, under Duke Mammo, crossed the
Cottian Alps near Briancon, laid waste part of Dauphiné, and probably compelled a large detachment of the
Burgundian army to return for the defence of their
homes. And lastly, in 510, Theodoric's general, Ibbas,
inflicted a crushing defeat on the allied armies, leaving, it is said, thirty
thousand Franks dead upon the field. The number is probably much exaggerated
(as these historical bulletins are apt to be), but there can be no doubt that a
great and important victory was won by the troops of Theodoric. The immediate
result of this victory was the raising of the siege of Aries, whose valiant
defenders had held out against storm and blockade, famine and treachery within,
Franks and Burgundians without, for the space of two years and a half.
Ultimately, and perhaps before many months had passed, the victory of Ibbas led to a cessation of hostilities, if not to a formal
treaty of peace, between the three powers which disputed the possession of
Gaul. The terms practically arranged were these. Clovis remained in possession
of far the largest part of Alaric's dominions, Aquitaine nearly up to the roots
of the Pyrenees, and so much of Languedoc (including Toulouse, the late capital
of the Visigoths) as lay west of the mountains of the Cevennes. Theodoric
obtained the rest of Languedoc and Provence, the first province being deemed to
be a part of the Visigothic, the second of the Ostrogothic, dominions, Gundobad
obtained nothing, but lost some towns on his southern frontier--a fitting
reward for his tortuous and shifty policy.
In the meantime something like civil war had
been waged on the other side of the Pyrenees for the Spanish portion of the
Visigothic inheritance. Alaric, slain on the field of Vouillé, had left two
sons, one Amalaric, his legitimate heir and the grandson of Theodoric, but
still a child, the other a young man, but of illegitimate birth, named Gesalic.
This latter was, on the death of his father, proclaimed king by some fraction
of the Visigothic people. Had Gesalic shown courage and skill in winning back
the lost inheritance of his father, Theodoric, whose own descent was not legitimate
according to strict church law, would not, perhaps, have interfered with his
claim to the succession. But the young man was as weak and cowardly as his
birth was base, and the strenuous efforts of Theodoric, seconded probably by
many of the Visigoths who had first acclaimed him as king, were directed to
getting rid of this futile pretender. Gesalic, defeated by Gundobad at Narbonne
(which, for a time, became the possession of the Burgundians), fled over the
Pyrenees to Barcelona, and from thence across the sea to Carthage. Thrasamund,
king of the Vandals, aided him with money and promised him support, being
probably deceived by the glozing tongue of Gesalic, and looking upon him simply
as a brave young Visigoth battling for his rightful inheritance with the
Franks. A correspondence followed between Ravenna and Carthage, in which
Theodoric bitterly complained of the protection given by his brother-in-law to
an intriguer and a rebel; and, on the receipt of Theodoric's letter, Thrasamund
at once disclaimed all further intention of helping the pretender and sent rich
presents to his offended kinsman, which Theodoric graciously returned. Gesalic
again appeared in Barcelona, still doubtless wearing the insignia of kingship,
but was defeated by the same Duke Ibbas who had
raised the siege of Aries, and, fleeing into Gaul, probably in order to claim
the protection of the enemy of his house, King Gundobad, he was overtaken by
the soldiers of Theodoric near the river Durance, and was put to death by his
captors. Thus there remained but one undisputed heir to what was left of the
great Visigothic kingdom, the little child Amalaric, Theodoric's grandson. He
was brought up in Spain, but, apparently with the full consent of the
Visigothic people, his grandsire assumed the reins of government, ruling in his
own name but with a tacit understanding that Amalaric and no other should
succeed him
(510-525) There was thus for fifteen years a
combination of states which Europe has not witnessed before or since, though
Charles V. and some of his descendants were not far from achieving it. All of
Italy and all of Spain (except the north-west corner, which was held by the Suevi) obeyed the rule of Theodoric, and the fair regions
of Provence and Languedoc, acknowledging the same master, were the ligament
that united them. Of the character of the government of Theodoric in Spain,
history tells us scarcely anything; but there is reason to think that it was as
wise and beneficent as his government of Italy, its chief fault being probably
the undue share of power which was grasped by the Ostrogothic minister Theudis, whom Theodoric had appointed as guardian to his
grandson, and who, having married a wealthy Spanish lady, assumed a semi-royal
state, and became at last so mighty that Theodoric himself did not dare to
insist upon the recall which he had veiled under the courteous semblance of an
invitation to his palace at Ravenna.
Thus then the policy of Theodoric towards
his kinsmen and co-religionists in Gaul had failed, but it had not been a
hopeless failure. He had missed, probably through no fault of his own, through
the rashness of Alaric and the treachery of Gundobad, the right moment for
saving the kingdom of Toulouse from shipwreck, but he had vindicated in
adversity the honor of the Gothic name, and he had succeeded in saving a
considerable part of the cargo which the stately vessel had carried.
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