…Alaric besieges Rome, which, despite the papal…
September 408 CE
…Alaric besieges Rome, which, despite the papal presence, remains a distinctly conservative and pagan city dominated by proud senatorial families.
Now with no capable general like Stilicho as a defender, the Senate and the prefect propose pagan sacrifices to ward off the enemy, and even the pope would have allowed them to be performed in secret.
No blood is shed this time; Alaric relies on hunger as his most powerful weapon.
When the ambassadors of the Senate, entreating for peace, try to intimidate him with hints of what the despairing citizens might accomplish, he laughs and gives his celebrated answer: "The thicker the hay, the easier mowed!"
After much bargaining, the famine-stricken citizens agree to pay him a ransom of five thousand pounds of gold, thirty thousand pounds of silver, fur thousand silken tunics, three thousand hides dyed scarlet, and three thousand pounds of pepper.
The spice is valued for alleged medicinal virtues and for disguising spoilage in meat that is past its prime.
Along comes forty thousand freed Gothic slaves.
Thus ends Alaric's first siege of Rome.
He withdraws to Tuscany and recruits more slaves.
Honorius remains intransigent, however.