Aetius' campaign in the Alps | |||||||
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Part of the Fall of the Roman Empire and Roman–Germanic Wars | |||||||
Italia Annoaria | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
Western Roman Empire | Juthungi Nori | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Flavius Aetius Avitus Merobaudes | Unknown |
Aetius' campaign in the Alps was a military campaign of the Roman army in the northern Alpine region, where the dioceses Raetia and Noricum were situated. The campaign was directed against the Juthungi and the rebellious population of Noricum (the Nori). The command of the campaign was in the hands of magister militium Aëtius and it began in the spring of 430 CE. In May, the campaign was interrupted to continued the following year.
The Roman Empire had ended up in a difficult situation by the end of the fourth century when the East Roman army suffered a heavy defeat at Adrianople against the Goths in 378. After that, a series of civil wars broke out that aggravated the situation. In 395 the empire was divided in two and Raetia and Noricum belonged to the western empire.
At the end of the fourth century, living conditions for the civilian population north of the Alps were still bearable. Stilicho's campaign against Alarik in the Gothic War in 403 and the passage of Radagaisus army in 405 had been spared them. Nevertheless, the population increasingly experienced the adverse consequences of the exhausting wars that the army waged to maintain the Roman Empire. To keep the army up to date, units were constantly withdrawn from the border and supplemented with barbaric foederati. [1] In addition, the military was a huge cost item for the empire. As a result of the internal conflicts and defensive battles against barbarians, the population experienced an increasing tax burden. Historians see these deteriorating economic conditions as the main cause of the dissatisfaction that led to the Nori uprising in the years around 430/431. Heather suggests that the uprising was the same as that of the Bagaudae in Brittany and Spain. According to him, it had been nothing more than a decision by the population to organize themselves after the empire had left them to their own devices for more than two decades. [2]
Hydatius calls the invasion of the Juthungen and the revolt of the Nori in a sentence, which may indicate that the raid and revolt took place simultaneously. The Juthungen were a Germanic tribe living north of the Danube that had made themselves heard before in history. The last time had been during a raid in 383 under the rule of Emperor Valentinian II.
In late 429 or early 430, the Juthungi crossed the Danube and invaded the province of Reaetia Segunda. [3] As on other occasions in the history of the Roman Empire, the reduction of troops at the border and the invasion of the Vandals in Africa was the most plausible reason for the Juthungi to invade the empire. [3] Aetius, appointed magister equitum praesentalis since 429 [4] and thus in rank equal to Felix, ended his campaign against the Goths at Arles and put his army into position. The army he led consisted of his own Hunse bucellari and parts of the imperial army the praesentalis from Italy. The later emperor Avitus, [5] and the poet Merobaudes [6] were also part of this army.
As soon as the Alpine passes were passable, the army headed for Raetia in the north and fought the attackers. In all likelihood, fights took place naar the city of Augusta Vindelicorum (present-day Augsburg). An inscription has been found in this city that is associated with the campaign of Aetius in Raetia. [6] The campaign ended with a quick and complete victory of the Romans. According to another inscription, Merobaudes distinguished himself in battle. [6] He was honored with a statue at the Forum of Trajan.
It is assumed that Aetius did not chase the retreating Juthungi across the Danube River. Reports about the bad campaign against the Vandals in Africa forced him to interrupt his campaign. [7] [3] He returned with his army to Ravenna for consultation. However, the consultation with his colleague magister militum praesentalis Felix, about the following strategy led to a crisis. According to Wijendaele, the rivalry between Aetius and Felix was the basis for this. This one erupted because Aëtius had to give up part of his force before the war against the Vandals. [8] There broke out mutiny at this army unit that committed an attack on Felix. He was murdered along with his wife. Prosper points to Aëtius as if he had had a hand in this. [9]
In 431 Aetius resumed his campaign in the northern Alps, this time he deployed his army against the rebellious inhabitants of the province of Noricum. The Nori revolt was violently defeated. According to Wijendaele, he burned the province and returned to Italy loaded with loot. The games held in Rome in 432 in his honor were financed with this.
After the fall of Felix, Aëtius has become the most powerful soldier of the Western Roman Empire. Aetius' performance put evil blood on the imperial authority in Ravenna. The tension between the quirky general and Galla Placidia led her to put all her pawns on Bonifatius and she dropped Aetius. When Aëtius left Italy in 432 to participate in the war against the Franks, she lets Bonifatius return from Africa and appoints him as her new commander in chief. [10] Aëtius's reaction is not long in coming and a Roman civil war breaks out between him and Bonifatius.
A number of contemporary historians: Priscus, Prosper, Hydatius report on a campaign against the Juthungi and the Nori in 430 and 431 by Aëtius. Background information on the how and why of this campaign is largely lacking. Only Prosper lights up a tip of the veil by telling that there was a conspiracy against Aetius by Felix and Galla Placidia, and that Felix was murdered by Aetius. [11] In addition to the circumstances that Aetius kept away in the conflict between Felix and Bonifatius and did not contribute to the war against the Vandals see current historians accusing Prosper of an indication that the two main generals of the Western army did not cooperate, or that there was a high-escending conflict that To an eruption came. [8]
The order of the events do not match in the sources. In general, more importance is attached to that of Hydatius because he visited Aëtius as an envoy on a diplomatic mission. If one maintains the order of Hydatius' events, Aëtius first campaigned against a group of Goths near Arles in the early spring of 430, before targeting the Juthungen and Nori. [12] It was only after he had defeated the Goths did Aetius leave for the Alps. [13]
The 430s decade ran from January 1, 430, to December 31, 439.
Year 430 (CDXXX) was a common year starting on Wednesday of the Julian calendar. At the time, it was known as the Year of the Consulship of Theodosius and Valentinianus. The denomination 430 for this year has been used since the early medieval period, when the Anno Domini calendar era became the prevalent method in Europe for naming years.
Valentinian III was Roman emperor in the West from 425 to 455. Starting in childhood, his reign over the Roman Empire was one of the longest, but was dominated by civil wars among powerful generals and the invasions of late antiquity's Migration Period.
Flavius Aetius was a Roman general and statesman of the closing period of the Western Roman Empire. He was a military commander and the most influential man in the Empire for two decades (433–454). He managed policy in regard to the attacks of barbarian federates settled throughout the West. Notably, he mustered a large Roman and allied (foederati) army in the Battle of the Catalaunian Plains, ending a devastating invasion of Gaul by Attila in 451, though the Hun and his subjugated allies still managed to invade Italy the following year, an incursion best remembered for the ruthless Sack of Aquileia and the intercession of Pope Leo I.
Eparchius Avitus was Roman emperor of the Western Empire from July 455 to October 456. He was a senator of Gallic extraction and a high-ranking officer both in the civil and military administration, as well as Bishop of Piacenza.
Bonifatius was a Roman general and governor of the diocese of Africa. He campaigned against the Visigoths in Gaul and the Vandals in North Africa. An ally of Galla Placidia, mother and advisor of Valentinian III, Bonifacius engaged in Roman civil wars on her behalf against the generals Felix in 427-429 and Aetius in 432. Although he defeated the latter at the Battle of Rimini, Bonifacius suffered a fatal wound and was succeeded by his son-in-law Sebastianus as patricius of the Western Roman Empire.
The Battle of Rimini was fought in 432 between the two strong men of the Western Roman Empire, the very recently deposed Magister Utriusque Militiae Flavius Aetius and the newly appointed Magister Utriusque Militiae Bonifatius.
Uldin, also spelled Huldin is the first ruler of the Huns whose historicity is undisputed.
Flavius Felix, sometimes erroneously called Constantius Felix, was a general of the Western Roman Empire, who reached the prominent rank of patrician before being killed probably by order of Aetius. For his consulate in 428 he issued some consular diptychs, one of which has been preserved until modern times.
Theodoric I was the King of the Visigoths from 418 to 451. Theodoric is famous for his part in stopping Attila the Hun at the Battle of the Catalaunian Plains in 451, where he was killed.
The Battle of Calama was fought between the Western Roman Empire and the Vandals in the war known as the Vandal conquest of Roman Africa. The battle took place in May 430 near the city of Calama. The Roman army under command by comes Africae Bonifatius tried to stumble here the advance of the Vandals who crossed before the strait of Gibraltar under the leadership of King Geiseric.
The Gothic revolt of Theodoric I was an uprising of the Gothic Fouderati in Aquitaine during the regime of Emperor Valentinian III (425-455). That rebellion was led by Theodoric I, King of the Visigoths and took place in the South of France. The uprising took place between 425 and 426, in the period shortly after the death of usurpator John and was terminated by a military operation under the command of Aëtius.
The Burgundian Revolt of Gunther was a revolt of the Burgundian foederati in the Western Roman Empire during the reign of Emperor Valentinian III. The uprising took place in the Gallic province of Germania Prima and was led by the King of the Burgundian Gunther, his main opponent was General Aetius.
The Gothic War (436–439) was a military conflict between the Gothic foederati and the Western Roman Empire under Emperor Valentinian III. It occurred primarily in the Gallic provinces from 436 to 439. The key figures involved were the Gothic leader Theodoric I and the Roman army's commander-in-chief, Aetius. Contemporary sources characterize this conflict as a war. Additionally, there were uprisings of the Burgundians and the Bagaudae during the same period.
The Gothic War of 457–458 was a military conflict between the Visigoths of Theoderic II against the Western Roman Empire of Emperor Majorian. The war began in 457 with a revolt of the Goths in Aquitania that pushed aside Roman authority, followed by an aggressive conquest in the adjacent Septimania aimed at area expansion. The war ended with a Roman victory over the Goths in the Battle of Arles in 458.
The Vandal War (439-442) was a military conflict between the Western Roman Empire and the Vandals that was fought in the western Mediterranean Sea region. The main protagonists in this conflict were the Vandal king Geiseric and the commander-in-chief of the Roman army Aetius.
The Roman Civil War (432) was a military conflict between the Roman generals Aëtius and Bonifatius during the reign of Emperor Valentinian III. This war took place on Italian soil and was decided in the Battle of Rimini. Despite Aëtius losing the battle, the civil war ended in his favor, because Bonifatius was wounded in battle and eventually died of his injuries.
The Roman Civil War of 425 was a short civil war between the West Roman Emperor Joannes and the East Roman Emperor Theodosius II. After rising tensions, battles took place in Italy between the armies of both halves of the empire. Despite this, the conflict did not end by battle, but as a result of a conspiracy in which the Western emperor was captured and killed shortly afterwards.
The Roman civil war of 427-429 was a civil war during the reign of the West Roman emperor Valentinian III. In that period there was a power struggle going on between the generals Felix and Bonifatius that degenerated into an armed conflict. When the central government tried to deput Bonifatius as governor of North-Africa, he separated his territory from the empire without proclaiming himself emperor. He carried the personal loyalty of the African troops and lead them at his discretion during this war. Bonifatius was able to successfully defy and resist state authority. The civil war ended with a truce after which peace was made.
The Frankish War of 431–432 was a short war between the Franks and the Western Roman Empire under Emperor Valentinian III. Like the previous Frankish war, the Roman army was led by the Roman general Aetius and the participation of Chlodio, the king of the Salian Franks is uncertain. The war ended in a Roman victory after which both sides agreed to a peace treaty.