Visigothic Raids on the Roman Empire, Later
409 CE to 476 CE
Subject
Related Events
Showing 10 events out of 151 total
North of the Danube, various German tribes were already extending their territory by the first century CE.
By the latter half of the second century CE, they were making devastating incursions into Roman territories.
Nevertheless, Roman arms and diplomacy had maintained relative stability until the late fourth century, when other Germanic tribes, including the Ostrogoths, Visigoths, and Vandals, were able to establish settlements in Roman territory south of the Danube.
The Roman province of Noricum gradually becomes indefensible, and much of the Christian, Romanized population evacuates the region in 488.
The Ostrogoths invade Italy in 493, seize control of what remains of the western half of the Roman Empire, and bring the Roman era in the eastern Alps to an end.
The sons of Emperor Theodosius split the empire into eastern and western halves in 395.
The division, which becomes a permanent feature of the European cultural landscape, separates Greek Constantinople (as Byzantium was renamed in 330) from Latin Rome and eventually the Eastern Orthodox and Roman Catholic churches.
It likewise separates the lands in what is now Serbia and Croatia, exercising a critical influence on the future Serbs and Croats.
Economic and administrative breakdown soon softens the empire's defenses, especially in the western half, and barbarian tribes begin to attack.
In the fourth century, the Goths sack Roman fortresses along the Danube River, and in 448 the Huns ravage Sirmium (now Sremska Mitrovica northwest of present- day Belgrade), Singidunum (now Belgrade), and Emona (now Ljubljana).
The Ostrogoths have conquered Dalmatia and other provinces by 493.
Emperor Justinian will drive the invaders out in the sixth century, but the defenses of the empire will prove inadequate to maintain this gain.
The western Roman emperor, Honorius (r. 395-423), because large parts of Spain are outside his control, commissions his sister, Galla Placidia, and her husband Ataulf, the Visigoth king, to restore order in the Iberian Peninsula, and he gives them the rights to settle in and to govern the area in return for defending it.
The highly romanized Visigoths manage to subdue the Suevi and to compel the Vandals to sail for North Africa.
In 484 they establish Toledo as the capital of their Spanish monarchy.
The Visigothic occupation is in no sense a barbarian invasion, however.
Successive Visigothic kings rule Spain as patricians who hold imperial commissions to govern in the name of the Roman emperor.
There are no more than three hundred thousand Germanic people in Spain, which has a population of four million, and their overall influence on Spanish history is generally seen as minimal.
They are a privileged warrior elite, though many of them live as herders and farmers in the valley of the Tagus and on the central plateau.
Hispano-Romans continue to run the civil administration, and Latin continues to be the language of government and of commerce.
Two Germanic tribes, the Vandals and the Suevi, cross the Rhine in 405 and ravage Gaul until the Visigoths drive them into Spain.
The Suevi establish a kingdom in the remote northwestern corner of the Iberian Peninsula.
The hardier Vandals, never exceeding eighty thousand, occupy the region that bears their name—Andalusia (Spanish, Andalucia).
Bishops who have official civil, as well as ecclesiastical, status in the late empire continue to exercise their authority to maintain order when civil governments break down in Spain in the fifth century.
The Council of Bishops will become an important instrument of stability during the ascendancy of the Visigoths, a Germanic tribe.
The Visigoths, following their sack of Rome in 410, eventually coexist peacefully with the Romans, farming and trading agricultural products and enslaved people for luxury goods.
They adopt many elements of Roman culture, some becoming literate in Latin.
The Western Roman Empire wields negligible military, political, or financial power by the time that the barbarian general Odoacer deposes the Emperor Romulus in 476, and has no effective control over the scattered Western domains that still describe themselves as Roman.
The Western Empire's legitimacy will last for centuries and its cultural influence remains today, but it will never have the strength to rise again.
The Decline of the Roman Empire
By the late fourth and early fifth centuries, the Roman Empire stands in a state of terminal decline. The division of the empire into eastern and western halves in 395 CE—formalized upon the death of Theodosius I—has only deepened internal political strife, weakening Rome’s ability to resist barbarian incursions along the Danube and even into Italy itself.
The Strength of the East vs. the Weakness of the West
While Germanic tribes break through into the Balkans, they fail to establish permanent settlements there. The Eastern Roman emperors, prioritizing the defense of Constantinople, actively push these tribes westward, forcing them deeper into the Western Empire and exacerbating instability.
Despite political challenges, the Eastern Empire maintains relative stability and prosperity. Constantinople, benefiting from its Greek cultural heritage, emerges as the dominant symbol of civilization in the East. For much of its population—already accustomed to Greek language and traditions—the shift from a Latin Roman Empire to a more Hellenized Byzantine identity is seamless.
By contrast, the Western Empire is crumbling. Repeated barbarian invasions, coupled with rural depopulation, have crippled its economy and defenses. By 400 CE, many tenant farmers have been reduced to a serf-like status, bound to the land by economic necessity and social rigidity. Meanwhile, the Eastern Empire, benefiting from lucrative trade in spices, silk, and luxury goods, remains wealthy and resilient.
The Germanization of Rome
The progressive Germanization of the empire, particularly within the Roman army, is nearly complete. The Goths, like most Germanic tribes—with the notable exception of the Franks and Lombards—have converted to Arian Christianity, a doctrine the Catholic (Orthodox) Romans regard as dangerous heresy.
However, the Roman senatorial aristocracy, largely pacifist and still clinging to its classical traditions, views the warlike Germanic customs with suspicion and hostility. This growing resentment against Germanic leaders in high office fuels political instability in both the Eastern and Western Empires, leading to factionalism and periodic violence.
Yet, despite the tensions, Rome relies on Germanic tribes to defend its imperial frontiers. The Franks, for instance, are settled in Toxandria (modern Brabant) and tasked with guarding the empire’s northern borders—a foreshadowing of their future role as rulers of post-Roman Gaul.
The Weakness of the Western Emperor
The reigning Western Roman emperor, an inexperienced and feeble ruler, has inherited the throne from his father but lacks military expertise. His shortsighted political interventions and inability to command armies only deepen the empire’s crises, as generals struggle to hold the frontiers against an unrelenting tide of barbarian invasions.
Fearing a direct assault on Rome, he relocates the imperial court from Rome to Ravenna, a more defensible stronghold surrounded by marshlands and the sea. From his new capital, he watches as loyal generals suppress usurpers and internal revolts, rather than leading the defense himself.
Meanwhile, the Rhine frontier deteriorates, and the administrative center of Gaul is moved from Trier to Arelate(modern Arles), leaving the northern provinces increasingly vulnerable to Germanic incursions. The combination of military neglect, civil war, and external invasions accelerates the collapse of the Western Roman Empire, setting the stage for the fall of Rome itself in 476 CE.
The Sack of Rome and the Fall of an Empire
For fifteen years, an uneasy peace holds between the Visigoths and the Roman Empire, though tensions remain high. Clashes occasionally erupt between Alaric, the ambitious Visigothic leader, and the Germanic generals who wield real power in the Eastern and Western Roman armies.
The fragile balance collapses in 408 CE, when Honorius, the ineffective Western Roman emperor, orders the execution of Stilicho, his most capable general. In the aftermath, the Roman legions massacre the families of 30,000 barbarian soldiers serving in the imperial army, igniting Visigothic fury. This act of betrayal compels Alaric to declare full-scale war against Rome.
The Road to the Sack of Rome
Alaric initially suffers two defeats in Northern Italy, but he remains undeterred. He marches south and besieges Rome, forcing the city’s desperate leaders to negotiate a payoff to lift the siege. However, after being cheated by another faction within the Roman court, Alaric abandons diplomacy and shifts to a decisive military strategy.
Recognizing Rome’s strategic vulnerability, he captures Portus, the city's vital harbor on the Tiber, cutting off its food supply and forcing its gates open. On August 24, 410, Visigothic troops enter Rome through the Salarian Gate, unleashing a devastating three-day sack of the city.
The Shock of Rome’s Fall
Though Rome is no longer the official capital of the Western Roman Empire—the imperial court had relocated to Ravenna for its defensibility—its fall shakes the empire to its core. The city, long considered the eternal heart of Roman civilization, has not been breached by a foreign enemy in nearly 800 years. Its sack marks a symbolic rupture, signaling to contemporaries that the empire is no longer invulnerable.
The impact reverberates across the Mediterranean world. In the Eastern Empire, Saint Jerome laments: "The city that had conquered the world has itself been conquered." Meanwhile, pagans blame Christianity for Rome’s downfall, prompting Augustine of Hippo to pen The City of God, defending the Christian faith against accusations that abandoning the old gods had led to Rome’s ruin.
Though Alaric dies later in 410, his sack of Rome accelerates the decline of the Western Roman Empire, demonstrating that its military and political structures are collapsing under the weight of internal decay and external pressure.
The Great Invasion of 406 and the Collapse of Roman Defenses
By the early fifth century, the Huns' relentless expansion across Eastern Europe sets off a chain reaction, forcing Germanic and Iranian tribes westward into Roman territory. Among them, the Asdingi and Silingi Vandals, led by King Godigisel, seize the moment as Italy reels from the Visigothic threat, pushing into Roman lands.
Leaving their Upper Danube settlements, they are soon joined by the Alans and some Suebi, forming a vast migratory force. On December 31, 406, this coalition crosses the frozen Rhine at Mainz, launching a massive invasion of Gaul—an event that will permanently alter the fate of the Western Roman Empire.
The Devastation of Gaul and Hispania
The Vandals, Alans, and Suebi, soon followed by Burgundians and bands of Alemanni, sweep across Gaul, overwhelming the federated Franks and Alemanni stationed along the frontiers. The Roman defenses along the Rhine—already strained and undermanned—collapse under the weight of this onslaught.
After devastating northern and central Gaul, the invaders press southward into Hispania, tearing through Roman provinces that have long been integral to the empire’s economic and military stability. The collapse of Roman control in these regions marks a decisive turning point in the decline of the Western Empire.
The Empire’s Mortal Blow
By this time, the empire’s imperial defenses have deteriorated so severely that the Western emperor is forced to abandon Britain, informing its cities that they can no longer rely on Rome for military reinforcements. The Roman army withdraws, leaving the island vulnerable to Saxon, Pictish, and Irish incursions—an event that will eventually lead to the fragmentation of Roman Britain into isolated, competing kingdoms.
For the Western Roman Empire, the Great Invasion of 406 is a mortal wound from which it will never recover. Roman authorities prove incapable of repelling or destroying the invading forces, most of whom will eventually settle in Hispania and North Africa. At the same time, Rome fails to contain the movements of the Franks, Burgundians, and Visigoths in Gaul, further eroding imperial control.
The Role of Internal Disunity
A critical factor in Rome’s inability to resist these invasions is internal fragmentation. In the past, a unified empire, backed by a loyal population willing to make sacrifices, had successfully secured Rome’s borders. However, by the early fifth century, political divisions, power struggles, and economic decay have shattered Rome’s ability to muster the cohesion needed for effective defense.
As the empire weakens from within, its once-powerful legions—stretched thin, riddled with internal conflicts, and increasingly reliant on untrustworthy Germanic federates—prove incapable of withstanding the pressure of continuous invasions. With each successive incursion, the Western Empire’s grasp on its provinces weakens, leading inexorably toward its final dissolution.
Mediterranean Southwest Europe (400–411 CE): Barbarian Invasions and Imperial Decline
The era 400–411 CE in Mediterranean Southwest Europe is marked by escalating barbarian incursions, profound imperial decline, and significant shifts in political and social structures, particularly within the Western Roman Empire.
Barbarian Incursions and Alaric’s Visigoths
At the start of the fifth century, increased pressure from Germanic tribes profoundly destabilizes the region. In 401 CE, the Visigothic king Alaric invades Italy, demonstrating Rome’s growing vulnerability. His repeated campaigns culminate dramatically with the sack of Rome itself in 410 CE, a symbolic event underscoring the empire’s diminished military capabilities and political cohesion.
Imperial Weakness under Honorius
Emperor Honorius, ruling from Ravenna, struggles to respond effectively to external threats and internal rebellions. His reign is characterized by political weakness, marked indecisiveness, and an overreliance on military commanders such as Stilicho, whose execution in 408 CE further exacerbates imperial vulnerability.
Economic Disruption and Urban Decline
These invasions severely disrupt regional economies. Agricultural production declines, trade routes fragment, and urban centers experience contraction and impoverishment. The sack of Rome significantly undermines confidence, further accelerating economic and urban decline across Mediterranean Southwest Europe.
Religious Shifts and Christian Resilience
Despite political and economic upheavals, Christianity continues to flourish, solidifying its role as a dominant cultural and spiritual force. Notably, Augustine of Hippo, an influential theologian active during this period, shapes Christian thought profoundly through works like Confessions and The City of God, written partially in response to Rome's sack in 410.
Provincial Autonomy and Local Governance
As centralized imperial authority deteriorates, regional and local authorities increasingly assert autonomy. Provincial governors and military commanders often act independently to defend their territories, reflecting a broader trend toward decentralized governance and localized responsibility.
Cultural Transition and Continuity
Cultural life remains resilient, despite the significant disruptions caused by barbarian invasions. Roman traditions, integrated with robust Christian influences, persist in art, literature, and philosophy, illustrating the adaptive capacity of Roman culture even amidst profound political instability.
Legacy of the Era
The era 400–411 CE signifies a critical juncture marked by significant invasions, imperial weaknesses, and economic disruption. The sack of Rome by Alaric symbolizes a pivotal moment of imperial decline, accelerating the transition toward decentralized governance and reshaping cultural and religious identities throughout Mediterranean Southwest Europe.