BOOK XVIII. CHAPTER I
A.D. 375.
Se. In the mean time the
swift wheel of Fortune, which continually alternates
adversity with prosperity, was giving Bellona the Furies
for her allies, and arming her for war; and now transferred
our disasters to the East, as many presages and portents
foreshowed by undoubted signs.
2. For after many true prophecies
uttered by diviners and augurs, dogs were seen to
recoil from howling wolves, and the birds of night
constantly uttered querulous and mournful cries; and
lurid sunrises made the mornings dark. Also,
at Antioch, among the tumults and squabbles of the
populace, it had come to be a custom for any one who
fancied himself ill treated to cry out in a licentious
manner, “May Valens be burnt alive!” And
the voices of the criers were constantly heard ordering
wood to be carried to warm the baths of Valens, which
had been built under the supertendence of the emperor
himself.
3. All which circumstances all
but pointed out in express words that the end of the
emperor’s life was at hand. Besides all
these things, the ghost of the king of Armenia, and
the miserable shades of those who had lately been
put to death in the affair of Theodorus, agitated numbers
of people with terrible alarms, appearing to them
in their sleep, and shrieking out verses of horrible
import.
4. ... and its death indicated an
extensive and general calamity arising from public
losses and deaths. Last of all, when the ancient
walls of Chalcedon were thrown down in order to build
a bath at Constantinople, and the stones were torn
asunder, on one squared stone which was hidden in
the very centre of the walls these Greek verses were
found engraved, which gave a full revelation of what
was to happen:
"All hopotan nymphai drosere kata astu
choreie Terpomenai strepsontai eusteeiphas kat aguias Kai teichos loutroio
polustonon essetai alkai De tote myria phyla polyspereon anthropon Istrou
kallirooio poron peraonta syn aichme Kai Skythiken olesei choren kai Musida
gaian Paionies d epibanta syn syn elpisi mainomenesin Autou kai bioto o
telos kai deris ephexei."
TRANSLATION.
“But when young wives and damsels
blithe, in dances that delight,
Shall glide along the city streets, with
garlands gaily bright;
And when these walls, with sad regrets,
shall fall to raise a bath,
Then shall the Huns in multitude break
forth with might and wrath.
By force of arms the barrier-stream of
Ister they shall cross,
O’er Scythic ground and Moesian
lands spreading dismay and loss:
They shall Pannonian horsemen brave, and
Gallic soldiers slay,
And nought but loss of life and breath
their course shall ever stay.”
BOOK XVIII. CHAPTER II
Se. The following circumstances
were the original cause of all the destruction and
various calamities which the fury of Mars roused up,
throwing everything into confusion by his usual ruinous
violence: the people called Huns, slightly mentioned
in the ancient records, live beyond the Sea of Azov,
on the border of the Frozen Ocean, and are a race
savage beyond all parallel.
2. At the very moment of their
birth the cheeks of their infant children are deeply
marked by an iron, in order that the usual vigour of
their hair, instead of growing at the proper season,
may be withered by the wrinkled scars; and accordingly
they grow up without beards, and consequently without
any beauty, like eunuchs, though they all have closely-knit
and strong limbs, and plump necks; they are of great
size, and low legged, so that you might fancy them
two-legged beasts, or the stout figures which are
hewn out in a rude manner with an axe on the posts
at the end of bridges.
3. They are certainly in the
shape of men, however uncouth, but are so hardy that
they neither require fire nor well-flavoured food,
but live on the roots of such herbs as they get in
the fields, or on the half-raw flesh of any animal,
which they merely warm rapidly by placing it between
their own thighs and the backs of their horses.
4. They never shelter themselves
under roofed houses, but avoid them as people ordinarily
avoid sepulchres as things not fitted for common use.
Nor is there even to be found among them a cabin thatched
with reed; but they wander about, roaming over the
mountains and the woods and accustom themselves to
bear frost and hunger and thirst from their very cradles.
And even when abroad they never enter a house unless
under the compulsion of some extreme necessity; nor,
indeed, do they think people under roofs as safe as
others.
5. They wear linen clothes, or
else garments made of the skins of field-mice:
nor do they wear a different dress out of doors from
that which they wear at home; but after a tunic is
once put round their necks, however it becomes worn,
it is never taken off or changed till, from long decay,
it becomes actually so ragged as to fall to pieces.
6. They cover their heads with
round caps, and their shaggy legs with the skins of
kids; their shoes are not made on any lasts, but are
so unshapely as to hinder them from walking with a
free gait. And for this reason they are not well
suited to infantry battles, but are nearly always
on horseback, their horses being ill-shaped, but hardy;
and sometimes they even sit upon them like women if
they want to do anything more conveniently. There
is not a person in the whole nation who cannot remain
on his horse day and night. On horseback they
buy and sell, they take their meat and drink, and
there they recline on the narrow neck of their steed,
and yield to sleep so deep as to indulge in every variety
of dream.
7. And when any deliberation
is to take place on any weighty matter, they all hold
their common council on horseback. They are not
under the authority of a king, but are contented with
the irregular government of their nobles, and under
their lead they force their way through all obstacles.
8. Sometimes when provoked, they
fight; and when they go into battle, they form in
a solid body, and utter all kinds of terrific yells.
They are very quick in their operations, of exceeding
speed, and fond of surprising their enemies.
With a view to this, they suddenly disperse, then
reunite, and again, after having inflicted vast loss
upon the enemy, scatter themselves over the whole
plain in irregular formations: always avoiding
a fort or an entrenchment.
9. And in one respect you may
pronounce them the most formidable of all warriors,
for when at a distance they use missiles of various
kinds tipped with sharpened bones instead of the usual
points of javelins, and these bones are admirably
fastened into the shaft of the javelin or arrow; but
when they are at close quarters they fight with the
sword, without any regard for their own safety; and
often while their antagonists are warding off their
blows they entangle them with twisted cords, so that,
their hands being fettered, they lose all power of
either riding or walking.
10. None of them plough, or even
touch a plough-handle: for they have no settled
abode, but are homeless and lawless, perpetually wandering
with their waggons, which they make their homes; in
fact they seem to be people always in flight.
Their wives live in these waggons, and there weave
their miserable garments; and here too they sleep with
their husbands, and bring up their children till they
reach the age of puberty; nor, if asked, can any one
of them tell you where he was born, as he was conceived
in one place, born in another at a great distance,
and brought up in another still more remote.
11. In truces they are treacherous
and inconstant, being liable to change their minds
at every breeze of every fresh hope which presents
itself, giving themselves up wholly to the impulse
and inclination of the moment; and, like brute beasts,
they are utterly ignorant of the distinction between
right and wrong. They express themselves with
great ambiguity and obscurity; have no respect for
any religion or superstition whatever; are immoderately
covetous of gold; and are so fickle and irascible,
that they very often on the same day that they quarrel
with their companions without any provocation, again
become reconciled to them without any mediator.
12. This active and indomitable
race, being excited by an unrestrainable desire of
plundering the possessions of others, went on ravaging
and slaughtering all the nations in their neighbourhood
till they reached the Alani, who were formerly called
the Massagetae; and from what country these Alani
come, or what territories they inhabit (since my subject
has led me thus far), it is expedient now to explain:
after showing the confusion existing in the accounts
of the geographers, who ... at last have found out
... of truth.
13. The Danube, which is greatly
increased by other rivers falling into it, passes
through the territory of the Sauromatae, which extends
as far as the river Don, the boundary between Asia
and Europe. On the other side of this river the
Alani inhabit the enormous deserts of Scythia, deriving
their own name from the mountains around; and they,
like the Persians, having gradually subdued all the
bordering nations by repeated victories, have united
them to themselves, and comprehended them under their
own name. Of these other tribes the Neuri inhabit
the inland districts, being near the highest mountain
chains, which are both precipitous and covered with
the everlasting frost of the north. Next to them
are the Budini and the Geloni, a race of exceeding
ferocity, who flay the enemies they have slain in
battle, and make of their skins clothes for themselves
and trappings for their horses. Next to the Geloni
are the Agathyrsi, who dye both their bodies and their
hair of a blue colour, the lower classes using spots
few in number and small the nobles broad
spots, close and thick, and of a deeper hue.
15. Next to these are the Melanchaenae
and the Anthropophagi, who roam about upon different
tracts of land and live on human flesh. And these
men are so avoided on account of their horrid food,
that all the tribes which were their neighbours have
removed to a distance from them. And in this
way the whole of that region to the north-east, till
you come to the Chinese, is uninhabited.
16. On the other side the Alani
again extend to the east, near the territories of
the Amazons, and are scattered among many populous
and wealthy nations, stretching to the parts of Asia
which, as I am told, extend up to the Ganges, a river
which passes through the country of the Indians, and
falls into the Southern Ocean.
17. Then the Alani, being thus
divided among the two quarters of the globe (the various
tribes which make up the whole nation it is not worth
while to enumerate), although widely separated, wander,
like the Nomades, over enormous districts.
But in the progress of time all these tribes came
to be united under one generic appellation, and are
called Alani....
18. They have no cottages, and
never use the plough, but live solely on meat and
plenty of milk, mounted on their waggons, which they
cover with a curved awning made of the bark of trees,
and then drive them through their boundless deserts.
And when they come to any pasture-land, they pitch
their waggons in a circle, and live like a herd of
beasts, eating up all the forage carrying,
as it were, their cities with them in their waggons.
In them the husbands sleep with their wives in
them their children are born and brought up; these
waggons, in short, are their perpetual habitation,
and wherever they fix them, that place they look upon
as their home.
19. They drive before them their
flocks and herds to their pasturage; and, above all
other cattle, they are especially careful of their
horses. The fields in that country are always
green, and are interspersed with patches of fruit
trees, so that, wherever they go, there is no dearth
either of food for themselves or fodder for their
cattle. And this is caused by the moisture of
the soil, and the number of the rivers which flow
through these districts.
20. All their old people, and
especially all the weaker sex, keep close to the waggons,
and occupy themselves in the lighter employments.
But the young men, who from their earliest childhood
are trained to the use of horses, think it beneath
them to walk. They are also all trained by careful
discipline of various sorts to become skilful warriors.
And this is the reason why the Persians, who are originally
of Scythian extraction, are very skilful in war.
21. Nearly all the Alani are
men of great stature and beauty; their hair is somewhat
yellow, their eyes are terribly fierce; the lightness
of their armour renders them rapid in their movements;
and they are in every respect equal to the Huns, only
more civilized in their food and their manner of life.
They plunder and hunt as far as the Sea of Azov and
the Cimmerian Bosphorus, ravaging also Armenia and
Media.
22. And as ease is a delightful
thing to men of a quiet and placid disposition, so
danger and war are a pleasure to the Alani, and among
them that man is called happy who has lost his life
in battle. For those who grow old, or who go
out of the world from accidental sicknesses, they
pursue with bitter reproaches as degenerate and cowardly.
Nor is there anything of which they boast with more
pride than of having killed a man: and the most
glorious spoils they esteem the scalps which they
have torn from the heads of those whom they have slain,
which they put as trappings and ornaments on their
war horses.
23. Not is there any temple or
shrine seen in their country, nor even any cabin thatched
with straw, their only idea of religion being to plunge
a naked sword into the ground with barbaric ceremonies,
and then they worship that with great respect, as
Mars, the presiding deity of the regions over which
they wander.
24. They presage the future in
a most remarkable manner; for they collect a number
of straight twigs of osier, then with certain secret
incantations they separate them from one another on
particular days; and from them they learn clearly
what is about to happen.
25. They have no idea of slavery,
inasmuch as they themselves are all born of noble
families; and those whom even now they appoint to be
judges are always men of proved experience and skill
in war. But now let us return to the subject
which we proposed to ourselves.
BOOK XVIII. CHAPTER III
Se. Therefore the Huns, after
having traversed the territories of the Alani, and
especially of that tribe of them who border on the
Gruthungi, and who are called Tanaitae, and having
slain many of them and acquired much plunder, they
made a treaty of friendship and alliance with those
who remained. And when they had united them to
themselves, with increased boldness they made a sudden
incursion into the extensive and fertile districts
of Ermenrichus, a very warlike prince, and one whom
his numerous gallant actions of every kind had rendered
formidable to all the neighbouring nations.
2. He was astonished at the violence
of this sudden tempest, and although, like a prince
whose power was well established he long attempted
to hold his ground, he was at last overpowered by a
dread of the evils impending over his country, which
were exaggerated by common report, till he terminated
his fear of great danger by a voluntary death.
3. After his death Vithimiris
was made king. He for some time maintained a
resistance to the Alani, relying on the aid of other
tribes of the Huns, whom by large promises of pay
he had won over to his party; but, after having suffered
many losses, he was defeated by superior numbers and
slain in battle. He left an infant son named Viderichus,
of whom Alatheus and Saphrax undertook the guardianship,
both generals of great experience and proved courage.
And when they, yielding to the difficulties of the
crisis, had given up all hope of being able to make
an effectual resistance, they retired with caution
till they came to the river Dniester, which lies between
the Danube and the Dnieper, and flows through a vast
extent of country.
4. When Athanaric, the chief
magistrate of the Thuringians (against whom, as I
have already mentioned, Valens had begun to wage war,
to punish him for having sent assistance to Procopius),
had become informed of these unexpected occurrences,
he prepared to maintain his ground, with a resolution
to rise up in strength should he be assailed as the
others had been.
5. At last he pitched his camp
at a distance in a very favourable spot near the banks
of the Dniester and the valleys of the Gruthungi, and
sent Muderic, who afterwards became Duke of the Arabian
frontier, with Lagarimanus and others of the nobles,
with orders to advance for twenty miles, to reconnoitre
the approach of the enemy while in the mean time he
himself, without delay, marshalled his troops in line
of battle.
6. However, things turned out
in a manner very contrary to his expectations.
For the Huns (being very sagacious in conjectures)
suspecting that there must be a considerable multitude
further off, contrived to pass beyond those they had
seen, and arranged themselves to take their rest where
there was nothing at hand to disturb them; and then,
when the moon dispelled the darkness of night, they
forded the river, which was the best plan that presented
itself, and fearing lest the piquets at the outposts
might give the alarm to the distant camp, they made
all possible speed and advanced with the hope of surprising
Athanaric himself.
7. He was stupefied at the suddenness
of their onset, and after losing many of his men,
was compelled to flee for refuge to the precipitous
mountains in the neighbourhood, where, being wholly
bewildered with the strangeness of this occurrence,
and the fear of greater evils to come, he began to
fortify with lofty walls all the territory between
the banks of the river Pruth and the Danube, where
it passes through the lands of the Taifali, and he
completed this line of fortification with great diligence,
thinking that by this step he should secure his own
personal safety.
8. While this important work
was going on, the Huns kept pressing on his traces
with great speed, and they would have overtaken and
destroyed him if they had not been forced to abandon
the pursuit from being impeded by the great quantity
of their booty. In the mean time a report spread
extensively through the other nations of the Goths,
that a race of men, hitherto unknown, had suddenly
descended like a whirlwind from the lofty mountains,
as if they had risen from some secret recess of the
earth, and were ravaging and destroying everything
which came in their way. And then the greater
part of the population which, because of their want
of necessaries had deserted Athanaric, resolved to
flee and to seek a home remote from all knowledge
of the barbarians; and after a long deliberation where
to fix their abode, they resolved that a retreat into
Thrace was the most suitable for these two reasons:
first of all, because it is a district most fertile
in grass; and also because, by the great breadth of
the Danube, it is wholly separated from the barbarians,
who were already exposed to the thunderbolts of foreign
warfare. And the whole population of the tribe
adopted this resolution unanimously.
BOOK XVIII. CHAPTER IV
A.D. 376.
Se. Accordingly, under the
command of their leader Alavivus, they occupied the
banks of the Danube; and having sent ambassadors to
Valens, they humbly entreated to be received by him
as his subjects, promising to live quietly, and to
furnish a body of auxiliary troops if any necessity
for such a force should arise.
2. While these events were passing
in foreign countries, a terrible rumour arose that
the tribes of the north were planning new and unprecedented
attacks upon us: and that over the whole region
which extends from the country of the Marcomanni and
Quadi to Pontus, a barbarian host composed of different
distant nations, which had suddenly been driven by
force from their own country, was now, with all their
families, wandering about in different directions on
the banks of the river Danube.
3. At first this intelligence
was lightly treated by our people, because they were
not in the habit of hearing of any wars in those remote
districts till they were terminated either by victory
or by treaty.
4. But presently, as the belief
in these occurrences grew stronger, being confirmed,
too, by the arrival of the foreign ambassadors, who,
with prayers and earnest entreaties, begged that the
people thus driven from their homes and now encamped
on the other side of the river, might be kindly received
by us, the affair seemed a cause of joy rather than
of fear, according to the skilful flatterers who were
always extolling and exaggerating the good fortune
of the emperor; congratulating him that an embassy
had come from the furthest corners of the earth unexpectedly,
offering him a large body of recruits; and that, by
combining the strength of his own nation with these
foreign forces, he would have an army absolutely invincible;
observing further that, by the yearly payment for
military reinforcements which came in every year from
the provinces, a vast treasure of gold might be accumulated
in his coffers.
5. Full of this hope he sent
forth several officers to bring this ferocious people
and their waggons into our territory. And such
great pains were taken to gratify this nation which
was destined to overthrow the empire of Rome, that
not one was left behind, not even of those who were
stricken with mortal disease. Moreover, having
obtained permission of the emperor to cross the Danube
and to cultivate some districts in Thrace, they crossed
the stream day and night, without ceasing, embarking
in troops on board ships and rafts, and canoes made
of the hollow trunks of trees, in which enterprise,
as the Danube is the most difficult of all rivers
to navigate, and was at that time swollen with continual
rains, a great many were drowned, who, because they
were too numerous for the vessels, tried to swim across,
and in spite of all their exertions were swept away
by the stream.
6. In this way, through the turbulent
zeal of violent people, the ruin of the Roman empire
was brought on. This, at all events, is neither
obscure nor uncertain, that the unhappy officers who
were intrusted with the charge of conducting the multitude
of the barbarians across the river, though they repeatedly
endeavoured to calculate their numbers, at last abandoned
the attempt as hopeless: and the man who would
wish to ascertain the number might as well (as the
most illustrious of poets says) attempt to count
the waves in the African sea, or the grains of sand
tossed about by the zephyr.
7. Let, however, the ancient
annals be accredited which record that the Persian
host which was led into Greece, was, while encamped
on the shores of the Hellespont, and making a new
and artificial sea, numbered in battalions at
Doriscus; a computation which has been unanimously
regarded by all posterity as fabulous.
8. But after the innumerable
multitudes of different nations, diffused over all
our provinces, and spreading themselves over the vast
expanse of our plains, who filled all the champaign
country and all the mountain ranges, are considered,
the credibility of the ancient accounts is confirmed
by this modern instance. And first of all Fritigern
was received with Alavivus; and the emperor assigned
them a temporary provision for their immediate support,
and ordered lands to be assigned them to cultivate.
9. At that time the defences
of our provinces were much exposed, and the armies
of barbarians spread over them like the lava of Mount
Etna. The imminence of our danger manifestly
called for generals already illustrious for their
past achievements in war: but nevertheless, as
if some unpropitious deity had made the selection,
the men who were sought out for the chief military
appointments were of tainted character. The chief
among them were Lupicinus and Maximus, the one being
Count of Thrace, the other a leader notoriously wicked and
both men of great ignorance and rashness.
10. And their treacherous covetousness
was the cause of all our disasters. For (to pass
over other matters in which the officers aforesaid,
or others with their unblushing connivance, displayed
the greatest profligacy in their injurious treatment
of the foreigners dwelling in our territory, against
whom no crime could be alleged) this one melancholy
and unprecedented piece of conduct (which, even if
they were to choose their own judges, must appear
wholly unpardonable) must be mentioned.
11. When the barbarians who had
been conducted across the river were in great distress
from want of provisions, those detested generals conceived
the idea of a most disgraceful traffic: and having
collected hounds from all quarters with the most insatiable
rapacity, they exchanged them for an equal number
of slaves, among whom were several sons of men of
noble birth.
12. About this time also, Vitheric,
the king of the Gruthungi, with Alatheus and Saphrax,
by whose influence he was mainly guided, and also
with Farnobius, approached the bank of the Danube,
and sent envoys to the emperor to entreat that he
also might be received with the same kindness that
Alavivus and Fritigern had experienced.
13. But when, as seemed best
for the interests of the state, these ambassadors
had been rejected, and were in great anxiety as to
what they should do, Athanaric, fearing similar treatment,
departed; recollecting that long ago when he was discussing
a treaty of alliance with Valens, he had treated that
emperor with contempt, in affirming that he was bound
by a religious obligation never to set his foot on
the Roman territory; and that by this excuse he had
compelled the emperor to conclude a peace in the middle
of the war. And he, fearing that the grudge which
Valens bore him for this conduct was still lasting,
withdrew with all his forces to Caucalandes, a place
which, from the height of its mountains and the thickness
of its woods, is completely inaccessible; and from
which he had lately driven out the Sarmatians.
BOOK XVIII. CHAPTER V
Se. But the Thuringians,
though they had some time since received permission
to cross the river, were still wandering up and down
the banks, being hindered by a twofold obstacle; first,
that in consequence of the mischievous dissimulation
of the said generals they were not supplied with the
necessary provisions; and also because they were designedly
detained that they might the more easily be plundered
under the wicked semblance of traffic.
2. And when they ascertained
these facts, they began to grumble, and proposed to
resist the evils which they apprehended from the treachery
of these men by open force; and Lupicinus, who feared
that they would resist, brought up his troops close
to them, in order to compel them to be gone with all
possible rapidity.
3. The Gruthungi seized this
as a favourable opportunity, and seeing that the Roman
soldiers were occupied in another quarter, and that
the vessels which used to go up and down, to prevent
them from crossing, were now stationary, crossed the
river on roughly-made rafts, and pitched their camp
at a great distance from Fritigern.
4. But he, by his innate foresight,
provided against everything that could happen, and
marching on slowly as well in obedience to the commands
he had received as to allow time for other powerful
kings to join him, came by slow marches to Marcianopolis,
arriving later than he was expected. And here
another atrocious occurrence took place, which kindled
the torches of the Furies for general calamity.
5. Alavivus and Fritigern were
invited to a banquet; while Lupicinus drew up his
soldiers against the chief host of the barbarians,
and so kept them at a distance from the walls of the
town; though they with humble perseverance implored
admission in order so to procure necessary provisions,
professing themselves loyal and obedient subjects.
At last a serious strife arose between the citizens
and the strangers who were thus refused admittance,
which gradually led to a regular battle. And
the barbarians, being excited to an unusual pitch of
ferocity when they saw their relations treated as
enemies, began to plunder the soldiers whom they had
slain.
6. But when Lupicinus, of whom
we have already spoken, learnt by secret intelligence
that this was taking place, while he was engaged in
an extravagant entertainment, surrounded by buffoons,
and almost overcome by wine and sleep, he, fearing
the issue, put to death all the guards who, partly
as a compliment and partly as a guard to the chiefs,
were on duty before the general’s tent.
7. The people who were still
around the walls heard of this with great indignation,
and rising up by degrees into a resolution to avenge
their kings, who, as they fancied, were being detained
as prisoners, broke out with furious threats.
And Fritigern, being a man of great readiness of resource,
and fearing that perhaps he might be detained with
the rest as a hostage, exclaimed that there would
be a terrible and destructive conflict if he were
not allowed to go forth with his companions in order
to pacify the multitude, who he said had broken out
in this tumult from believing that their leaders had
been trepanned and murdered under show of courtesy.
Having obtained permission, they all went forth, and
were received with cheers and great delight; they
then mounted their horses and fled, in order to kindle
wars in many quarters.
8. When Fame, ever the malignant
nurse of bad news, bruited this abroad, the whole
nation of the Thuringians became suddenly inflamed
with a desire for war; and among many preparations
which seemed to betoken danger, the standards of war
were raised according to custom, and the trumpets
poured forth sounds of evil omen; while the predatory
bands collected in troops plundering and burning villages,
and throwing everything that came in their way into
alarm by their fearful devastations.
9. Against these hosts, Lupicinus,
having collected his forces with the greatest possible
rapidity, advanced with more rashness than prudence,
and halted in battle array nine miles from the city.
The barbarians, perceiving this, charged our battalions
before we expected them, and dashing upon the shields
with which they covered their bodies, they cut down
all who fell in their way with their swords and spears;
and urged on by their bloodthirsty fury, they continued
the slaughter, till they had taken our standards,
and the tribunes and the greater part of the soldiers
had fallen, with the exception of the unhappy general,
who could find nothing to do but, while all the rest
were fighting, to betake himself to flight, and return
full gallop to the city. And then the enemies,
clothing themselves in the arms of the Romans whom
they had slain, pushed on their devastating march
without hindrance.
10. And since, after recounting
various other exploits, we have now come to this portion
of our subject, we call upon our readers (if we shall
ever have any) not to expect a minute detail of everything
that took place, or of the number of the slain, which
indeed it would be utterly impossible to give.
It will be sufficient to abstain from concealing any
part of the truth by a lie, and to give the general
outline of what took place: since a faithful
honesty of narration is always proper if one would
hand events down to the recollection of posterity.
11. Those who are ignorant of
antiquity declare that the republic was never so overwhelmed
with the darkness of adverse fortune; but they are
deceived in consequence of the stupor into which they
are thrown by these calamities, which are still fresh
in their memory. For if the events of former
ages, or even of those immediately preceding our own
times are considered, it will be plain that such melancholy
events have often happened, of which I will bring
to mind several instances.
12. The Teutones and the Cimbri
came suddenly from the remote shores of the ocean,
and overran Italy; but, after having inflicted enormous
disasters on the Roman republic, they were at last
overcome by our illustrious generals, and being wholly
vanquished, learnt by their ultimate destruction what
martial valour, combined with skill, can effect.
13. Again, in the reign of the
Emperor Marcus Aurelius, the insane fury of a number
of different nations combined together, after fearful
wars ... would have left but a small part of them.
14. But, soon after these calamitous
losses, the state was re-established in all its former
strength and prosperity; because the soberness of
our ancestry had not yet become infected with the luxury
and softness of a more effeminate way of life, and
had not learnt to indulge in splendid banquets, or
the criminal acquisition of riches. But both
the highest classes and the lowest living in harmony,
and imbued with one unanimous spirit, eagerly embraced
a glorious death in the cause of the republic as a
tranquil and quiet haven.
15. The great multitudes of the
Scythian nations, having burst through the Bosphorus,
and made their way to the shores of the Sea of Azov
with 2000 ships, inflicted fearful losses on us by
land and sea; but also lost a great portion of their
own men, and so at last returned to their own country.
16. Those great generals, the
Decii, father and son, fell fighting against the barbarians.
The cities of Pamphylia were besieged, many islands
were laid waste; Macedon was ravaged with fire and
sword. An enormous host for a long time blockaded
Thessalonica and Cyzicus. Arabia also was taken;
and so at the same time was Nicopolis, which had been
built by the Emperor Trajan as a monument of his victory
over the Dacians.
17. After many fearful losses
had been both sustained and inflicted Philippopolis
was destroyed, and, unless our annals speak falsely,
100,000 men were slaughtered within its walls.
Foreign enemies roved unrestrained over Epirus, and
Thessaly, and the whole of Greece; but after that
glorious general Claudius had been taken as a colleague
in the empire (though again lost to us by an honourable
death), the enemy was routed by Aurelian, an untiring
leader, and a severe avenger of injuries; and after
that they remained quiet for a long time without attempting
anything, except that some bands of robbers now and
then ranged the districts in their own neighbourhood,
always, however, to their own injury. And now
I will return to the main history from which I have
digressed.
BOOK XVIII. CHAPTER VI
Se. When this series of occurrences
had been made generally known by frequent messengers,
Sueridus and Colias, two nobles of the Goths,
who had some time before been friendly received with
their people, and had been sent to Hadrianople to
pass the winter in that city, thinking their own safety
the most important of all objects, looked on all the
events which were taking place with great indifference.
2. But, on a sudden, letters
having arrived from the emperor, in which they were
ordered to cross over to the province of the Hellespont,
they asked, in a very modest manner, to be provided
with money to defray the expenses of their march,
as well as provisions, and to be allowed a respite
of two days. But the chief magistrate of the city
was indignant at this request, being also out of humour
with them on account of some injury which had been
done to property of his own in the suburbs, and collected
a great mob of the lowest of the people, with a body
of armourers, of whom there is a great number in that
place, and led them forth armed to hasten the departure
of the Goths. And ordering the trumpeters to
sound an alarm, he menaced them with destruction unless
they at once departed with all speed, as they had been
ordered.
3. The Goths, bewildered by this
unexpected calamity, and alarmed at this outbreak
of the citizens, which looked more as if caused by
a sudden impulse than by any deliberate purpose, stood
without moving. And being assailed beyond all
endurance by reproaches and manifestations of ill
will, and also by occasional missiles, they at last
broke out into open revolt; having slain several of
those who had at first attacked them with too much
petulance, and having put the rest to flight, and
wounded many with all kinds of weapons, they stripped
their corpses and armed themselves with the spoils
in the Roman fashion; and then, seeing Fritigern near
them, they united themselves to him as obedient allies,
and blockaded the city. They remained some time,
maintaining this difficult position and making promiscuous
attacks, during which they lost some of their number
by their own audacity, without being able to avenge
them; while many were slain by arrows and large stones
hurled from slings.
4. Then Fritigern, perceiving
that his men, who were unaccustomed to sieges, were
struggling in vain, and sustaining heavy losses, advised
his army to leave a force sufficient to maintain the
blockade, and to depart with the rest, acknowledging
their failure, and saying that “He did not war
with stone walls.” Advising them also to
lay waste all the fertile regions around without any
distinction, and to plunder those places which were
not defended by any garrisons.
5. His counsel was approved,
as his troops knew that he was always a very able
commander in bringing their plans to success; and then
they dispersed over the whole district of Thrace,
advancing cautiously; while those who came of their
own accord to surrender, or those whom they had taken
prisoners, pointed out to them the richest towns, and
especially those where it was said that supplies of
provisions could be found. And in addition to
their natural confidence they were greatly encouraged
by this circumstance, that a multitude of that nation
came in daily to join them who had formerly been sold
as slaves by the merchants, with many others whom,
when at their first passage of the river they were
suffering from severe want, they had bartered for a
little bad wine or morsels of bread.
6. To these were added no inconsiderable
number of men skilled in tracing out veins of gold,
but who were unable to endure the heavy burden of
their taxes; and who, having been received with the
cheerful consent of all, they were of great use to
them while traversing strange districts showing
them the secret stores of grain, the retreats of men,
and other hiding-places of divers kinds.
7. Nor while these men led them
on as their guides did anything remain untouched by
them, except what was inaccessible or wholly out of
the way; for without any distinction of age or sex
they went forward destroying everything in one vast
slaughter and conflagration: tearing infants
even from their mother’s breast and slaying them;
ravishing their mothers; slaughtering women’s
husbands before the eyes of those whom they thus made
widows; while boys of tender and of adult age were
dragged over the corpses of their parents.
8. Lastly, numbers of old men,
crying out that they had lived long enough, having
lost all their wealth, together with beautiful women,
had their hands bound behind their back, and were
driven into banishment, bewailing the ashes of their
native homes.
BOOK XVIII. CHAPTER VII
A.D. 377.
Se. This news from Thrace
was received with great sorrow, and caused the Emperor
Valens much anxiety. He instantly sent Victor,
the commander of the cavalry, into Persia, to make
such arrangements in Armenia as were required by the
impending danger. While he himself prepared at
once to quit Antioch and go to Constantinople, sending
before him Profuturus and Trajan, both officers
of rank and ambition, but of no great skill in war.
2. When they arrived at the place
where it seemed most expedient to combat this hostile
multitude in detail and by ambuscades and surprises,
they very injudiciously adopted the ill-considered
plan of opposing the legions which had arrived from
Armenia to barbarians who were still raging like madmen.
Though the legions had repeatedly proved equal to
the dangers of a pitched battle and regular warfare,
they were not suited to encounter an innumerable host
which occupied all the chains of the lofty hills,
and also all the plains.
3. Our men had never yet experienced
what can be effected by indomitable rage united with
despair, and so having driven back the enemy beyond
the abrupt precipices of the Balkan, they seized upon
the rugged defiles in order to hem in the barbarians
on ground from which they would be unable to find
any exit, and where it seemed they might be overcome
by famine. They themselves intended to await the
arrival of Frigeridus, the duke, who was hastening
towards them with the auxiliaries from Pannonia and
other countries, and whom, at the request of Valens,
Gratian had commanded to march to the camp to aid those
who were menaced with total destruction.
4. After him, Richomeres, at
that time count of the domestics, who also, by the
command of Gratian, had moved forwards from Gaul, hastened
towards Thrace, bringing with him some cohorts,
which were cohorts in name, though the greater portion
of them had already deserted (if we would believe
some people), by the persuasion of Merobaudes, fearing
lest Gaul, now divested of all the troops, would be
ravaged without check after the barbarians had forced
the passage of the Rhine.
5. But Frigeridus was prevented
from moving by the gout, or at all events (as some
of his malicious detractors represented it), he pleaded
sickness as an excuse for not being present in the
struggles which were expected, and so Richomeres,
being unanimously called to the chief command, with
Profuturus and Trajan for his colleagues, advanced
towards the town of Salices at no great
distance from which was a countless host of barbarians,
arranged in a circle, with a great multitude of waggons
for a rampart around them, behind which, as if protected
by a spacious wall, they enjoyed ease and an abundance
of booty.
6. Filled with hopes of success,
the Roman generals resolved on some gallant
enterprise should fortune afford them an opportunity were
carefully watching the movements of the Goths! having
formed the design if they moved their camp
in any other direction, which they were very much
in the habit of doing to fall upon their
rear, making no doubt that they should slay many of
them, and recover a great portion of their spoil.
7. When the barbarians learnt
this, probably through the information of some deserter,
from whom they obtained a knowledge of our operations,
they remained for some time in the same place; but
at last, being influenced by fear of the opposing
army, and of the reinforcements which might be expected
to throng to them, they assembled, by a preconcerted
signal, the predatory bands dispersed in different
districts, and which, the moment they received the
orders of their leaders, returned like firebrands,
with the swiftness of birds, to their “encampment
of chariots” (as they call it), and thus gave
their countrymen confidence to attempt greater enterprises.
8. After this there was no cessation
of hostilities between the two parties except what
was afforded by a few short truces; for after those
men had returned to the camp whom necessity had forced
to quit it, the whole body which was crowded within
the circuit of the encampment, being full of fierce
discontent, excitement, and a most ferocious spirit,
and now reduced to the greatest extremities, were
eager for bloodshed: nor did their chiefs, who
were present with them, resist their desire; and as
the resolution to give battle was taken when the sun
was sinking, and when the approach of night invited
the sullen and discontented troops to rest, they took
some food quietly, but remained all night sleepless.
9. On the other hand the Romans,
knowing what was going on, kept themselves also awake,
fearing the enemy and their insane leaders as so many
furious wild beasts: nevertheless, with fearless
minds they awaited the result, which, though they
acknowledged it to be doubtful in respect of their
inferiority in number, they still trusted would be
propitious because of the superior justice of their
cause.
10. Therefore the next day, as
soon as it was light, the signal for taking arms having
been given by the trumpets on both sides, the barbarians,
after having, in accordance with their usual custom,
taken an oath to remain faithful to their standards,
attempted to gain the higher ground, in order that
from it they might descend down the steep like wheels,
overwhelming their enemy by the vigour of their attack.
When this was seen, our soldiers all flocked to their
proper regiments, and then stood firm, neither turning
aside nor in any instance even leaving their ranks
to rush forward.
11. Therefore when the armies
on both sides, advancing more cautiously, at last
halted and stood immovable, the warriors, with mutual
sternness, surveying each other with fierce looks.
The Romans in every part of their line sang warlike
songs, with a voice rising from a lower to a higher
key, which they call barritus, and so encouraged
themselves to gallant exertions. But the barbarians,
with dissonant clamour, shouted out the praises of
their ancestors, and amid their various discordant
cries, tried occasional light skirmishes.
12. And now each army began to
assail the other with javelins and other similar missiles;
and then with threatening shouts rushed on to close
combat, and packing their shields together like a testudo,
they came foot to foot with their foes. The barbarians,
active, and easily rallied, hurled huge bludgeons,
burnt at one end, against our men, and vigorously
thrust their swords against the opposing breasts of
the Romans, till they broke our left wing; but as
it recoiled, it fell back on a strong body of reserve
which was vigorously brought up on their flank, and
supported them just as they were on the very point
of destruction.
13. Therefore, while the battle
raged with vast slaughter, each individual soldier
rushing fiercely on the dense ranks of the enemy, the
arrows and javelins flew like hail; the blows of swords
were equally rapid; while the cavalry, too, pressed
on, cutting down all who fled with terrible and mighty
wounds on their backs; as also on both sides did the
infantry, slaughtering and hamstringing those who had
fallen down, and through fear were unable to fly.
14. And when the whole place
was filled with corpses, some also lay among them
still half alive, vainly cherishing a hope of life,
some of them having been pierced with bullets hurled
from slings, others with arrows barbed with iron.
Some again had their heads cloven in half with blows
of swords, so that one side of their heads hung down
on each shoulder in a most horrible manner.
15. Meanwhile, stubborn as the
conflict was, neither party was wearied, but they
still fought on with equal valour and equal fortune,
nor did any one relax in his sternness as long as
his courage could give him strength for exertion.
But at last the day yielded to the evening, and put
an end to the deadly contest: the barbarians all
withdrew, in no order, each taking his own path, and
our men returned sorrowfully to their tents.
16. Then having paid the honours
of burial to some among the dead, as well as the time
and place permitted, the rest of the corpses were left
as a banquet to the ill-omened birds, which at that
time were accustomed to feed on carcases as
is even now shown by the places which are still white
with bones. It is quite certain that the Romans,
who were comparatively few, and contending with vastly
superior numbers, suffered serious losses, while at
the same time the barbarians did not escape without
much lamentable slaughter.
BOOK XVIII. CHAPTER VIII
Se. Upon the melancholy termination
of this battle, our men sought a retreat in the neighbouring
city of Marcianopolis. The Goths, of their own
accord, fell back behind the ramparts formed by their
waggons, and for seven days they never once ventured
to come forth or show themselves. So our soldiers,
seizing the opportunity, raised a barrier, and shut
in some other vast multitudes of the barbarians among
the defiles of the Balkan, in hope, forsooth, that
this destructive host being thus hemmed in between
the Danube and the desert, and having no road by which
to escape, must perish by famine, since everything
which could serve to sustain life had been conveyed
into the fortified cities, and these cities were safe
from any attempt of the barbarians to besiege them,
since they were wholly ignorant of the use of warlike
engines.
2. After this Richomeres returned
to Gaul, to convey reinforcements to that country,
where a fresh war of greater importance than ever,
was anticipated. These events took place in the
fourth consulship of Gratian, and the first of Merobaudes,
towards the autumn of the year.
3. In the mean time Valens, having
heard of the miserable result of these wars and devastations,
gave Saturninus the command of the cavalry, and sent
him to carry aid to Trajan and Profuturus.
4. At that time, throughout the
whole countries of Scythia and Moesia, everything
which could be eaten had been consumed; and so, urged
equally by their natural ferocity and by hunger, the
barbarians made desperate efforts to force their way
out of the position in which they were enclosed but
though they made frequent attempts, they were constantly
overwhelmed by the vigour of our men, who made an effectual
resistance by the aid of the rugged ground which they
occupied; and at last, being reduced to the extremity
of distress, they allured some of the Huns and Alani
to their alliance by the hope of extensive plunder.
5. When this was known, Saturninus
(for by this time he had arrived and was busy in arranging
the outposts and military stations in the country)
gradually collected his men, and was preparing to retreat,
in pursuance of a sufficiently well-devised plan,
lest the multitude of barbarians by some sudden movement
(like a river which had burst its barriers by the
violence of a flood) should easily overthrow his whole
force, which had now been for some time watching the
place from which danger was suspected.
6. The moment that, by the seasonable
retreat of our men, the passage of these defiles was
opened, the barbarians, in no regular order, but wherever
each individual could find a passage, rushed forth
without hindrance to spread confusion among us; and
raging with a desire for devastation and plunder,
spread themselves with impunity over the whole region
of Thrace, from the districts watered by the Danube,
to Mount Rhodope and the strait which separates the
AEgean from the Black Sea, spreading ravage, slaughter,
bloodshed, and conflagration, and throwing everything
into the foulest disorder by all sorts of acts of violence
committed even on the free-born.
7. Then one might see, with grief,
actions equally horrible to behold and to speak of:
women panic-stricken, beaten with cracking scourges;
some even in pregnancy, whose very offspring, before
they were born, had to endure countless horrors:
here were seen children twining round their mothers;
there one might hear the lamentations of noble youths
and maidens all seized and doomed to captivity.
8. Again, grown-up virgins and
chaste matrons were dragged along with countenances
disfigured by bitter weeping, wishing to avoid the
violation of their modesty by any death however agonizing.
Here some wealthy nobleman was dragged along like
a wild beast, complaining, of fortune as merciless
and blind, who in a brief moment had stripped him
of his riches, of his beloved relations, and his home;
had made him see his house reduced to ashes, and had
reduced him to expect either to be torn limb from
limb himself, or else to be exposed to scourging and
torture, as the slave of a ferocious conqueror.
9. But the barbarians, like beasts
who had broken loose from their cages, pouring unrestrainedly
over the vast extent of country, marched upon a town
called Dibaltum, where they found Barzimeres, a tribune
of the Scutarii, with his battalion, and some of the
Cornuti legion, and several other bodies of infantry
pitching a camp, like a veteran general of great experience
as he was.
10. Instantly (as the only means
of avoiding immediate destruction) he ordered the
trumpet to give the signal for battle; and strengthening
his flanks, rushed forward with his little army in
perfect order. And he made so gallant a struggle,
that the barbarians would have obtained no advantage
over him, if a strong body of cavalry had not come
round upon him from behind, while his men were panting
and weary with their exertions: so at last he
fell, but not without having inflicted great slaughter
on the barbarians, though the vastness of their numbers
made their losses less observed.
BOOK XVIII. CHAPTER IX
Se. After this affair had
terminated, the Goths, being uncertain what next to
do, went in quest of Frigeridus, with the resolution
to destroy him wherever they could find him, as a
formidable obstacle to their success; and having rested
for a while to refresh themselves with sleep and better
food than usual, they then pursued him like so many
wild beasts, having learnt that by Gratian’s
order he had returned into Thrace, and had pitched
his camp near Beraea, intending to wait there to see
how affairs would turn out.
2. They hastened accordingly,
that by a rapid march they might carry out their proposed
plan; but Frigeridus, who knew as well how to command
as to preserve his troops, either suspected their plans,
or else obtained accurate information respecting them
from the scouts whom he had sent out; and therefore
returned over the mountains and through the thick
forests into Illyricum; being full of joy at the success
which an unexpected chance threw in his way.
3. For as he was retreating,
and moving on steadily with his force in a solid column,
he came upon Farnobius, one of the chieftains of the
Goths, who was roaming about at random with a large
predatory band, and a body of the Taifali, with whom
he had lately made an alliance, and who (if it is
worth mentioning), when our soldiers were all dispersed
for fear of the strange nations which were threatening
them, had taken advantage of their dispersion to cross
the river, in order to plunder the country thus left
without defenders.
4. When their troops thus suddenly
came in sight, our general with great prudence prepared
to bring on a battle at close quarters, and, in spite
of their ferocious threats, at once attacked the combined
leaders of the two nations; and would have slain them
all, not leaving a single one of them to convey news
of their disaster, if, after Farnobius, hitherto the
much-dreaded cause of all these troubles, had been
slain, with a great number of his men, he had not
voluntarily spared the rest on their own earnest supplication;
and then he distributed those to whom he had thus
granted their lives in the districts around the Italian
towns of Modena, Reggio, and Parma, which he allotted
to them to cultivate.
5. It is said that this nation
of the Taifali was so profligate, and so immersed
in the foulest obscenities of life, that they indulged
in all kinds of unnatural lusts, exhausting the vigour
both of youth and manhood in the most polluted défilements
of debauchery. But if any adult caught a boar
or slew a bear single-handed, he was then exempted
from all compulsion of submitting to such ignominious
pollution.
BOOK XVIII. CHAPTER X
Se. It was when autumn was
passing into winter that terrible whirlwinds swept
over Thrace; and as if the Furies were throwing everything
into confusion, awful storms extended even into distant
regions.
2. And now the people of the
Allemanni, belonging to the district of Lintz, who
border on the Tyrol, having by treacherous incursions
violated the treaty which had been made with them some
time before, began to make attempts upon our frontier;
and this calamity had the following lamentable beginning.
3. One of this nation who was
serving among the guards of the emperor, returned
home at the call of some private business of his own;
and being a very talkative person, when he was continually
asked what was doing in the palace, he told them that
Valens, his uncle, had sent for Gratian to conduct
the campaign in the East, in order that by their combined
forces they might drive back the inhabitants of the
countries on our eastern frontier, who had all conspired
for the overthrow of the Roman state.
4. The people of Lintz greedily
swallowed this intelligence, looking on it as if it
concerned themselves also as neighbours, being so rapid
and active in their movements; and so they assembled,
in predatory bands, and when the Rhine was sufficiently
frozen over to be passable, in the month of February....
The Celtae, with the Petulantes legion, repulsed them,
but not without considerable loss.
5. These Germans, though thus
compelled to retreat, being aware that the greater
part of our army had been despatched into Illyricum,
where the emperor was about to follow to assume the
command, became more bold than ever, and conceived
the idea of greater enterprises. Having collected
the inhabitants of all the adjacent countries into
one body, and with 40,000 armed men, or 70,000, as
some, who seek to enhance the renown of the emperor,
have boasted, they with great arrogance and confidence
burst into our territories.
6. Gratian, when he heard of
this event, was greatly alarmed, and recalling the
cohorts which he had sent on before into Pannonia,
and collecting others whom he had prudently retained
in Gaul, he committed the affair to the conduct of
Nannienus, a leader of great prudence and skill, joining
with him as his colleague with equal power, Mellobaudes,
the count-commander of the domestics and king of the
Franks, a man of great courage and renown in war.
7. Nannienus took into his consideration
the variable chances of fortune, and therefore voted
for acting slowly and with caution, while Mellobaudes,
hurried away by a fierce desire for fighting, according
to his usual custom, was eager at once to march against
the enemy; and would not brook delay.
8. Presently a horrid shout was
raised by the enemy, and the trumpeters on our side
also gave the signal for battle, upon which a fierce
engagement began near Colmar. On both sides numbers
fell beneath the blows of arrows and hurled javelins.
9. But while the battle was raging,
the multitude of the enemy appeared so countless,
that our soldiers, avoiding a conflict with them on
the open field, dispersed as best they could among
the different narrow paths overgrown with trees; but
they afterwards stood their ground firmly, and by
the boldness of their carriage and the dazzling splendour
of their arms, when seen from a distance, made the
barbarians fear that the emperor himself was at hand.
10. And they suddenly turned
their backs, still offering occasional resistance,
to leave no chance for safety untried; but at last
they were routed with such slaughter that of their
whole number not above 9,000, as was reckoned, escaped,
and these owed their safety to the thickness of the
woods. Among the many bold and gallant men who
perished was their king, Priarius, who had been the
principal cause of this ruinous war.
11. Gratian was greatly delighted
and encouraged by this success; and intending now
to proceed to the East, he secretly crossed the Rhine,
and turned his march to the left, being full of sanguine
hopes, and resolving, if fortune should only favour
his enterprise, to destroy the whole of this treacherous
and turbulent nation.
12. And as intelligence of this
design was conveyed to the people of Lintz by repeated
messengers, they, who had already been reduced to
great weakness by the almost entire destruction of
their forces, and were now greatly alarmed at the
expected approach of the emperor, hesitated what to
do, and as neither by resistance, nor by anything
which they could do or devise, did they perceive any
possibility of obtaining ever so brief a respite,
they withdrew with speed to their hills, which were
almost inaccessible from the steepness of their precipices,
and reaching the most inaccessible rocks by a winding
path, they conveyed thither their riches and their
families, and prepared to defend them with all their
might.
13. Having deliberated on this
difficulty, our general selected 500 men of proved
experience in war out of each legion, to station opposite
to the entrances to this wall of rock. And they,
being further encouraged by the fact that the emperor
himself was continually seen actively employed among
the front rank, endeavoured to scale the precipices,
not doubting but that if they could once set foot
upon the rocks they should instantly catch the barbarians,
like so much game, without any conflict; and so an
engagement was commenced towards the approach of noon,
and lasted even to the darkness of night.
14. Both sides experienced heavy
losses. Our men slew numbers, and fell in numbers;
and the armour of the emperor’s body-guard, glittering
with gold and brilliant colours, was crushed beneath
the weight of the heavy missiles hurled upon them.
15. Gratian held a long deliberation
with his chief officers; and it seemed to them fruitless
and mischievous to contend with unreasonable obstinacy
against these rugged and overhanging rocks; at last
(as is usual in such affairs), after various opinions
had been delivered, it was determined, without making
any more active efforts, to blockade the barbarians
and reduce them by famine; since against all active
enterprises the character of the ground which they
occupied was a sufficient defence.
16. But the Germans still held
out with unflinching obstinacy, and being thoroughly
acquainted with the country, retreated to other mountains
still more lofty than those which they occupied at
first. Thither also the emperor turned with his
army, with the same energy as before, seeking for
a path which might lead him to the heights.
17. And when the barbarians saw
him thus with unwearied perseverance intent upon their
destruction, they surrendered; and having by humble
supplication obtained mercy, they furnished a reinforcement
of the flower of their youth to be mingled with our
recruits, and were permitted to retire in safety to
their native land.
18. It is beyond all belief how
much vigour and rapidity of action Gratian, by the
favour of the eternal Deity, displayed in gaining this
seasonable and beneficial victory, which broke the
power of the Western tribes at a time when he was
preparing to hasten in another direction. He
was indeed a young prince of admirable disposition,
eloquent, moderate, warlike, and merciful, rivalling
the most admirable of his predecessors, even while
the down of youth was still upon his cheeks; the only
drawback to his character being that he was sometimes
drawn into ridiculous actions, when, in consequence
of temptations held out by his minions and favourites,
he imitated the vain pursuits of Cæsar Commodus;
but he was never bloodthirsty.
19. For as that prince, because
he had been accustomed to slay numbers of wild beasts
with his javelins in the sight of the people, and prided
himself beyond measure on the skill with which he slew
a hundred lions let loose at the same time in the
amphitheatre with different missiles, and without
ever having to repeat his shot; so Gratian, in the
enclosures called preserves, slew wild beasts with
his arrows, neglecting much serious business for this
amusement, and this at a time when if Marcus Antoninus
had resumed the empire he would have found it hard,
without colleagues of equal genius to his own, and
without the most serious deliberation of counsel,
to remedy the grievous disasters of the republic.
20. Therefore having made all
the arrangements which the time would permit for the
affairs of Gaul, and having punished the traitor of
the Scutarii who had betrayed to the barbarians the
intelligence that the emperor was about to depart
with all speed for Illyricum, Gratianus quitted the
army, and passing through the fortress known as that
of Arbor Felix, he proceeded by forced marches to
carry his assistance to those who needed it.
21. About this time, while Frigeridus
was with great wisdom devising many schemes likely
to prove of advantage to the general safety, and was
preparing to fortify the defiles of the Succi,
to prevent the enemy (who, by the rapidity of their
movements and their fondness for sallies, were always
threatening the northern provinces like a torrent)
from extending their inroads any further he was superseded
by a count named Maurus, a man cruel, ferocious, fickle,
and untrustworthy. This man, as we have related
in our account of preceding transactions being one
of Julian’s body-guard to whom the defence of
the palace was expressly committed, while that prince
was doubting about accepting the imperial authority,
took the chain from his own neck and offered it to
him for a diadem.
22. Thus, in the most critical
aspect of our difficulties, a cautious and energetic
general was removed, when, even if he had previously
retired into private life, he ought, from the greatness
of the affairs which required his superintendence,
to have been brought back again to the camp.
BOOK XVIII. CHAPTER XI
A.D. 378.
Se. About the same time Valens
quitted Antioch, and, after a long journey, came to
Constantinople, where he stayed a few days, being made
anxious by a trifling sedition among the citizens.
He intrusted the command of the infantry, which had
previously been committed to Trajan, to Sebastian,
who at his request had been lately sent to him from
Italy, being a general of well-known vigilance; and
he himself went to Melanthias, a country palace belonging
to the emperors, where he conciliated the soldiers
by giving them their pay, furnishing them with provisions,
and frequently addressing them in courteous speeches.
2. Having left this place, he
proceeded according to the stages he had marked out,
and came to a station named Nice, where he learnt from
intelligence brought by his scouts, that the barbarians,
who had collected a rich booty, were returning loaded
with it from the districts about Mount Rhodope, and
were now near Hadrianople. They, hearing of the
approach of the emperor with a numerous force, were
hastening to join their countrymen, who were in strong
positions around Beraea and Nicopolis; and immediately
(as the ripeness of the opportunity thus thrown in
his way required) the emperor ordered Sebastian to
hasten on with three hundred picked soldiers of each
legion, to do something (as he promised) of signal
advantage to the commonweal.
3. Sebastian pushed on by forced
marches, and came in sight of the enemy near Hadrianople;
but as the gates were barred against him, he was unable
to approach nearer, since the garrison feared that
he had been taken prisoner by the enemy, and won over
by them: so that something to the injury of the
city might happen, like what had formerly taken place
in the case of Count Actus, who had been cunningly
taken prisoner by the soldiers of Magnentius, and
who thus caused the opening of the passes of the Julian
Alps.
4. At last, though late, they
recognized Sebastian, and allowed him to enter the
city. He, then, as well as he could, refreshed
the troops under his command with food and rest, and
next morning secretly issued forth, and towards evening,
being partially concealed by the rising ground and
some trees, he suddenly caught sight of the predatory
bands of the Goths near the river Maritza, where,
favoured by the darkness of night, he charged them
while in disorder and unprepared, routing them so
completely that, with the exception of a few whom swiftness
of foot saved from death, the whole body were slain,
and he recovered such an enormous quantity of booty,
that neither the city, nor the extensive plains around
could contain it.
5. Fritigern was greatly alarmed;
and fearing lest this general, who as we have often
heard succeeded in all his undertakings, should surprise
and utterly destroy his different detachments, which
were scattered at random over the country, intent
only on plunder, he called in all his men near the
town of Cabyle, and at once made off, in order to gain
the open country, where he would not be liable to
be straitened for want of provisions, or harassed
by secret ambuscades.
6. While these events were proceeding
in Thrace, Gratian having sent letters to inform his
uncle of the energy with which he had overcome the
Allemanni, and forwarded his baggage by land, himself,
with a picked band of his quickest troops, crossed
the Danube, reached Bononia, and afterwards Sirmium,
where he halted four days. He then descended the
river to the Camp of Mars, where he was laid up by
an intermittent fever, and, being suddenly assailed
by the Alani, lost a few of his followers.
BOOK XVIII. CHAPTER XII
Se. At this time Valens was
disturbed by a twofold anxiety, having learned that
the people of Lintz had been defeated, and also because
Sebastian, in the letters which he sent from time to
time, exaggerated what had taken place by his pompous
language. Therefore he advanced from Melanthias,
being eager by some glorious exploit to equal his youthful
nephew, by whose virtue he was greatly excited.
He was at the head of a numerous force, neither unwarlike
nor contemptible, and had united with them many veteran
bands, among whom were several officers of high rank,
especially Trajan, who a little while before had been
commander of the forces.
2. And as by means of spies and
observation it was ascertained that the enemy were
intending to blockade the different roads by which
the necessary supplies must come, with strong divisions,
he sent a sufficient force to prevent this, despatching
a body of the archers of the infantry and a squadron
of cavalry, with all speed, to occupy the narrow passes
in the neighbourhood.
3. Three days afterwards, when
the barbarians, who were advancing slowly, because
they feared an attack in the unfavourable ground which
they were traversing, arrived within fifteen miles
from the station of Nice, which was the aim of their
march, the emperor, with wanton impetuosity, resolved
on attacking them instantly, because those who had
been sent forward to reconnoitre (what led to such
a mistake is unknown) affirmed that their entire body
did not exceed ten thousand men.
4. Marching on with his army
in battle array, he came near the suburb of Hadrianople,
where he pitched his camp, strengthening it with a
rampart of palisades, and then impatiently waited for
Gratian. While here, Richomeres, Count of the
Domestici, arrived, who had been sent on by that emperor
with letters announcing his immediate approach.
5. And imploring Valens to wait
a little while for him that he might share his danger,
and not rashly face the danger before him single handed,
he took counsel with his officers as to what was best
to be done.
6. Some, following the advice
of Sebastian, recommended with urgency that he should
at once go forth to battle; while Victor, master-general
of the cavalry, a Sarmatian by birth, but a man of
slow and cautious temper, recommended him to wait
for his imperial colleague, and this advice was supported
by several other officers, who suggested that the
reinforcement of the Gallic army would be likely to
awe the fiery arrogance of the barbarians.
7. However, the fatal obstinacy
of the emperor prevailed, fortified by the flattery
of some of the princes, who advised him to hasten with
all speed, so that Gratian might have no share in
a victory which, as they fancied, was already almost
gained.
8. And while all necessary preparations
were being made for the battle, a presbyter of the
Christian religion (as he called himself), having
been sent by Fritigern as his ambassador, came, with
some colleagues of low rank, to the emperor’s
camp; and having been received with courtesy, he presented
a letter from that chieftain, openly requesting that
the emperor would grant to him and to his followers,
who were now exiles from their native homes, from
which they had been driven by the rapid invasions
of savage nations, Thrace, with all its flocks and
all its crops, for a habitation. And if Valens
would consent to this, Fritigern would agree to a
perpetual peace.
9. In addition to this message,
the same Christian, as one acquainted with his commander’s
secrets, and well trusted, produced other secret letters
from his chieftain who, being full of craft and every
resource of deceit, informed Valens, as one who was
hereafter to be his friend and ally, that he had no
other means to appease the ferocity of his countrymen,
or to induce them to accept conditions advantageous
to the Roman state, unless from time to time he showed
them an army under arms close at hand, and by frightening
them with the name of the emperor, recalled them from
their mischievous eagerness for fighting. The
ambassadors retired unsuccessful, having been looked
on as suspicious characters by the emperor.
10. When the day broke which
the annals mark as the fifth of the Ides of August,
the Roman standards were advanced with haste, the baggage
having been placed close to the walls of Hadrianople,
under a sufficient guard of soldiers of the legions;
the treasures and the chief insignia of the emperor’s
rank were within the walls, with the prefect and the
principal members of the council.
11. Then, having traversed the
broken ground which divided the two armies, as the
burning day was progressing towards noon, at last,
after marching eight miles, our men came in sight
of the waggons of the enemy, which had been stated
by the scouts to be all arranged in a circle.
According to their custom, the barbarian host raised
a fierce and hideous yell, while the Roman generals
marshalled their line of battle. The right wing
of the cavalry was placed in front; the chief portion
of the infantry was kept in reserve.
12. But the left wing of the
cavalry, of which a considerable number were still
straggling on the road, were advancing with speed,
though with great difficulty; and while this wing
was deploying, not as yet meeting with any obstacle,
the barbarians being alarmed at the terrible clang
of their arms and the threatening crash of their shields
(since a large portion of their own army was still
at a distance, under Alatheus and Saphrax, and, though
sent for, had not yet arrived), again sent ambassadors
to ask for peace.
13. The emperor was offended
at the lowness of their rank, and replied, that if
they wished to make a lasting treaty, they must send
him nobles of sufficient dignity. They designedly
delayed, in order by the fallacious truce which subsisted
during the negotiation to give time for their cavalry
to return, whom they looked upon as close at hand;
and for our soldiers, already suffering from the summer
heat, to become parched and exhausted by the conflagration
of the vast plain; as the enemy had, with this object,
set fire to the crops by means of burning faggots and
fuel. To this evil another was added, that both
men and cattle were suffering from extreme hunger.
14. In the meantime Fritigern,
being skilful in divining the future, and fearing
a doubtful struggle, of his own head sent one of his
men as a herald, requesting that some nobles and picked
men should at once be sent to him as hostages for
his safety, when he himself would fearlessly bring
us both military aid and supplies.
15. The proposition of this formidable
chief was received with praise and approbation, and
the tribune Equitius, a relation of Valens, who was
at that time high steward of the palace, was appointed,
with general consent, to go with all speed to the
barbarians as a hostage. But he refused, because
he had once been taken prisoner by the enemy, and had
escaped from Dibaltum, so that he feared their vengeful
anger; upon this Richomeres voluntarily offered himself,
and willingly undertook to go, thinking it a bold
action, and one becoming a brave man; and so he set
out, bearing vouchers of his rank and high birth.
16. And as he was on his way
towards the enemy’s camp, the accompanying archers
and Scutarii, who on that occasion were under the command
of Bacurius, a native of Iberia, and of Cassio, yielded,
while on their march, to an indiscreet impetuosity,
and on approaching the enemy, first attacked them
rashly, and then by a cowardly flight disgraced the
beginning of the campaign.
17. This ill-timed attack frustrated
the willing services of Richomeres, as he was not
permitted to proceed; in the mean time the cavalry
of the Goths had returned with Alatheus and Saphrax,
and with them a battalion of Alani; these descending
from the mountains like a thunderbolt, spread confusion
and slaughter among all whom in their rapid charge
they came across.
BOOK XVIII. CHAPTER XIII
Se. And while arms and missiles
of all kinds were meeting in fierce conflict, and
Bellona, blowing her mournful trumpet, was raging more
fiercely than usual, to inflict disaster on the Romans,
our men began to retreat; but presently, roused by
the reproaches of their officers, they made a fresh
stand, and the battle increased like a conflagration,
terrifying our soldiers, numbers of whom were pierced
by strokes from the javelins hurled at them, and from
arrows.
2. Then the two lines of battle
dashed against each other, like the beaks (or rams)
of ships, and thrusting with all their might, were
tossed to and fro, like the waves of the sea.
Our left wing had advanced actually up to the waggons,
with the intent to push on still further if they were
properly supported; but they were deserted by the rest
of the cavalry, and so pressed upon by the superior
numbers of the enemy, that they were overwhelmed and
beaten down, like the ruin of a vast rampart.
Presently our infantry also was left unsupported, while
the different companies became so huddled together
that a soldier could hardly draw his sword, or withdraw
his hand after he had once stretched it out. And
by this time such clouds of dust arose that it was
scarcely possible to see the sky, which resounded
with horrible cries; and in consequence, the darts,
which were bearing death on every side, reached their
mark, and fell with deadly effect, because no one
could see them beforehand so as to guard against them.
3. But when the barbarians, rushing
on with their enormous host, beat down our horses
and men, and left no spot to which our ranks could
fall back to deploy, while they were so closely packed
that it was impossible to escape by forcing a way
through them, our men at last began to despise death,
and again took to their swords and slew all they encountered,
while with mutual blows of battle-axes, helmets and
breastplates were dashed in pieces.
4. Then you might see the barbarian
towering in his fierceness, hissing or shouting, fall
with his legs pierced through, or his right hand cut
off, sword and all, or his side transfixed, and still,
in the last gasp of life, casting round him defiant
glances. The plain was covered with carcases,
strewing the mutual ruin of the combatants; while the
groans of the dying, or of men fearfully wounded,
were intense, and caused great dismay all around.
5. Amidst all this great tumult
and confusion, our infantry were exhausted by toil
and danger, till at last they had neither strength
left to fight, nor spirits to plan anything; their
spears were broken by the frequent collisions, so
that they were forced to content themselves with their
drawn swords, which they thrust into the dense battalions
of the enemy, disregarding their own safety, and seeing
that every possibility of escape was cut off from
them.
6. The ground, covered with streams
of blood, made their feet slip, so that all that they
endeavoured to do was to sell their lives as dearly
as possible; and with such vehemence did they resist
their enemies who pressed on them, that some were
even killed by their own weapons. At last one
black pool of blood disfigured everything, and wherever
the eye turned, it could see nothing but piled-up
heaps of dead, and lifeless corpses trampled on without
mercy.
7. The sun being now high in
the heavens, having traversed the sign of Leo, and
reached the abode of the heavenly Virgo, scorched the
Romans, who were emaciated by hunger, worn out with
toil, and scarcely able to support even the weight
of their armour. At last our columns were entirely
beaten back by the overpowering weight of the barbarians,
and so they took to disorderly flight, which is the
only resource in extremity, each man trying to save
himself as well as he could.
8. While they were all flying
and scattering themselves over roads with which they
were unacquainted, the emperor, bewildered with terrible
fear, made his way over heaps of dead, and fled to
the battalions of the Lancearii and the Mattiarii,
who, till the superior numbers of the enemy became
wholly irresistible, stood firm and immovable.
As soon as he saw him. Trajan exclaimed that
all hope was lost, unless the emperor, thus deserted
by his guards, could be protected by the aid of his
foreign allies.
9. When this exclamation was
heard, a count named Victor hastened to bring up with
all speed the Batavians, who were placed in the reserve,
and who ought to have been near at hand, to the emperor’s
assistance; but as none of them could be found, he
too retreated, and in a similar manner Richomeres
and Saturninus saved themselves from danger.
10. So now, with rage flashing
in their eyes, the barbarians pursued our men, who
were in a state of torpor, the warmth of their veins
having deserted them. Many were slain without
knowing who smote them; some were overwhelmed by the
mere weight of the crowd which pressed upon them; and
some were slain by wounds inflicted by their own comrades.
The barbarians spared neither those who yielded nor
those who resisted.
11. Besides these, many half
slain lay blocking up the roads, unable to endure
the torture of their wounds; and heaps of dead horses
were piled up and filled the plain with their carcases.
At last a dark moonless night put an end to the irremediable
disaster which cost the Roman state so dear.
12. Just when it first became
dark, the emperor being among a crowd of common soldiers,
as it was believed for no one said either
that he had seen him, or been near him was
mortally wounded with an arrow, and, very shortly
after, died, though his body was never found.
For as some of the enemy loitered for a long time
about the field in order to plunder the dead, none
of the defeated army or of the inhabitants ventured
to go to them.
13. A similar fate befell the
Cæsar Decius, when fighting vigorously against the
barbarians; for he was thrown by his horse falling,
which he had been unable to hold, and was plunged
into a swamp, out of which he could never emerge,
nor could his body be found.
14. Others report that Valens
did not die immediately, but that he was borne by
a small body of picked soldiers and eunuchs to a cabin
in the neighbourhood, which was strongly built, with
two stories; and that while these unskilful hands
were tending his wounds, the cottage was surrounded
by the enemy, though they did not know who was in it;
still, however, he was saved from the disgrace of
being made a prisoner.
15. For when his pursuers, while
vainly attempting to force the barred doors, were
assailed with arrows from the roof, they, not to lose
by so inconvenient a delay the opportunity of collecting
plunder, gathered some faggots and stubble, and setting
fire to them, burnt down the building, with those
who were in it.
16. But one of the soldiers dropped
from the windows, and, being taken prisoner by the
barbarians, revealed to them what had taken place,
which caused them great concern, because they looked
upon themselves as defrauded of great glory in not
having taken the ruler of the Roman state alive.
This same young man afterwards secretly returned to
our people, and gave this account of the affair.
17. When Spain had been recovered
after a similar disaster, we are told that one of
the Scipios was lost in a fire, the tower in which
he had taken refuge having been burnt. At all
events it is certain that neither Scipio nor Valens
enjoyed that last honour of the dead a regular
funeral.
18. Many illustrious men fell
in this disastrous defeat, and among them one of the
most remarkable was Trajan, and another was Sebastian;
there perished also thirty-five tribunes who had no
particular command, many captains of battalions, and
Valerianus and Equitius, one of whom was master of
the horse and the other high steward. Potentius,
too, tribune of the promoted officers, fell in the
flower of his age, a man respected by all persons
of virtue, and recommended by the merits of his father,
Ursicinus, who had formerly been commander of the forces,
as well as by his own. Scarcely one-third of
the whole army escaped.
19. Nor, except the battle of
Cannae, is so destructive a slaughter recorded in
our annals; though, even in the times of their prosperity,
the Romans have more than once had to deplore the uncertainty
of war, and have for a time succumbed to evil Fortune;
while the well-known dirges of the Greeks have bewailed
many disastrous battles.
BOOK XVIII. CHAPTER XIV
Se. Such was the death of
Valens, when he was about fifty years old, and had
reigned rather less than fourteen years. We will
now describe his virtues, which were known to many,
and his vices.
2. He was a faithful and steady
friend a severe chastiser of ambition a
rigid upholder of both military and civil discipline always
careful that no one should assume importance on account
of any relationship to himself; slow both in conferring
office, and in taking it away; a very just ruler of
the provinces, all of which he protected from injury,
as if each had been his own house; devoting singular
care to the lessening the burdens of the state, and
never permitting any increase of taxation. He
was very moderate in the exaction of debts due to
the state, but a vehement and implacable foe to all
thieves, and to every one convicted of peculations;
nor in affairs of this kind was the East, by its own
confession, ever better treated under any other emperor.
3. Besides all this, he was liberal
with due regard to moderation, of which quality there
are many examples, one of which it will be sufficient
to mention here: As in palaces there are
always some persons covetous of the possessions of
others, if any one petitioned for lapsed property,
or anything else which it was usual to apply for, he
made a proper distinction between just and unjust
claims, and when he gave it to the petitioner, while
reserving full liberty to any one to raise objections,
he often associated the successful candidate with three
or four partners, in order that those covetous suitors
might conduct themselves with more moderation, when
they saw the profits for which they were so eager
diminished by this device.
4. Of the edifices, which in
the different cities and towns he either repaired
or built from their foundations, I will say nothing
(to avoid prolixity), allowing those things to speak
for themselves. These qualities, in my opinion,
deserve the imitation of all good men. Now let
us enumerate his vices.
5. He was an immoderate coveter
of great wealth; impatient of labour, he affected
an extreme severity, and was too much inclined to cruelty;
his behaviour was rude and rough; and he was little
imbued with skill either in war or in the liberal
arts. He willingly sought profit and advantage
in the miseries of others, and was more than ever intolerable
in straining ordinary offences into sedition or treason;
he cruelly encompassed the death or ruin of wealthy
nobles.
6. This also was unendurable,
that while he wished to have it appear that all actions
and suits were decided according to the law, and while
the investigation of such affairs was delegated to
judges especially selected as the most proper to decide
them, he still would not allow any decision to be
given which was contrary to his own pleasure.
He was also insulting, passionate, and always willing
to listen to all informers, without the least distinction
as to whether the charges which they advanced were
true or false. And this vice is one very much
to be dreaded, even in private affairs of everyday
occurrence.
7. He was dilatory and sluggish;
of a swarthy complexion; had a cast in one eye, a
blemish, however, which was not visible at a distance;
his limbs were well set; his figure was neither tall
nor short; he was knock-kneed, and rather pot-bellied.
8. This is enough to say about
Valens: and the recollection of his contemporaries
will fully testify that this account is a true one.
But we must not omit to mention that when he had learnt
that the oracle of the tripod, which we have related
to have been moved by Patricius and Hilanus,
contained those three prophetic lines, the last of
which is,
"En pedioisi Mimantos alalkomenoisin area."
“Repelling murd’rous war in
Mimas’ plain;”
he, being void of accomplishments
and illiterate, despised them at first; but as his
calamities increased, he became filled with abject
fear, and, from a recollection of this same prophecy,
began to dread the very name of Asia, where he had
been informed by learned men that both Homer and Cicero
had spoken of the Mountain of Mimas over the town of
Erythrae.
9. Lastly, after his
death, and the departure of the enemy, it is said
that a monument was found near the spot where he is
believed to have died, with a stone fixed into it
inscribed with Greek characters, indicating that some
ancient noble of the name of Mimas was buried there.
BOOK XVIII. CHAPTER XV
Se. After this disastrous
battle, when night had veiled the earth in darkness,
those who survived fled, some to the right, some to
the left, or wherever fear guided them, each man seeking
refuge among his relations, as no one could think
of anything but himself, while all fancied the lances
of the enemy sticking in their backs. And far
off were heard the miserable wailings of those who
were left behind the sobs of the dying,
and the agonizing groans of the wounded.
2. But when daylight returned,
the conquerors, like wild beasts rendered still more
savage by the blood they had tasted, and allured by
the temptations of groundless hope, marched in a dense
column upon Hadrianople, resolved to run any risk
in order to take it, having been informed by traitors
and deserters that the principal officers of State,
the insignia of the imperial authority, and the treasures
of Valens had all been placed there for safety, as
in an impregnable fortress.
3. And to prevent the ardour
of the soldiers from being cooled by delay, the whole
city was blockaded by the fourth hour; and the siege
from that time was carried on with great vigour, the
besiegers, from their innate ferocity, pressing in
to complete its destruction, while, on the other hand,
the garrison was stimulated to great exertions by their
natural courage.
4. And while the vast number
of soldiers and grooms, who were prohibited from entering
the city with their beasts, kept close to the walls
and to the houses which joined them, and fought gallantly,
considering the disadvantages under which they laboured
from the lowness of the ground which they occupied,
and baffled the rage of their assailants till the
ninth hour of the day, on a sudden three hundred of
our infantry, of those who were nearest the battlements,
formed themselves into a solid body, and deserted
to the barbarians, who seized upon them with avidity,
and (it is not known on what account) at once slaughtered
them all. And from that time forth it was remarked
that no one, even in the extremity of despair, adopted
any similar conduct.
5. Now while all these misfortunes
were at their height, suddenly there came a violent
thunderstorm, and rain pouring down from the black
clouds dispersed the bands of soldiers who were raging
around; and they returned to their camp, which was
measured out in a circle by their waggons; and being
more elated and haughty than ever, they sent threatening
letters to our men ... and an ambassador ... on condition
of safety to him.
6. But as the messenger did not
dare to enter the city, the letters were at last brought
in by a certain Christian; and when they had been read
and considered with all proper attention, the rest
of the day and the whole of the night was devoted
to preparing for defence. For inside the city
the gates were blocked up with huge stones; the weak
parts of the walls were strengthened, and engines
to hurl javelins or stones were fixed on all convenient
places, and a sufficient supply of water was also
provided; for the day before some of the combatants
had been distressed almost to death by thirst.
7. On the other hand the Goths,
considering the difficulty and uncertainty of all
warlike transactions, and becoming anxious at seeing
their bravest warriors wounded and slain, and their
strength gradually diminished, devised and adopted
a crafty counsel, which, however, was revealed to
us by Justice herself.
8. They seduced some picked soldiers
of our army, who had revolted to them the day before,
to pretend to escape back to their former comrades,
and thus gain admittance within the walls; and after
they had effected their entrance, they were secretly
to set fire to some part of the city, so that the
conflagration might serve as a secret signal, and while
the garrison and citizens were occupied in extinguishing
it, the walls might be left undefended, and so be
easily stormed.
9. The traitors did as they were
commanded; and when they came near the ditch they
stretched out their hands, and with entreaties requested
to be admitted into the city as Romans. When
they were admitted, however (since no suspicion existed
to hinder their admission), and were questioned as
to the plans of the enemy, they varied in their tale:
and in consequence they were put to the torture, and
having formally confessed what they had undertaken
to do, they were all beheaded.
10. Accordingly, every resource
of war having been prepared, the barbarians, at the
third watch discarding all fear from past failures,
rushed in enormous numbers against the blocked-up entrances
of the city, their officers urging them with great
obstinacy. But the provincials and imperial
guards, with the rest of the garrison, rose with fearless
courage to repel them, and their missiles of every
kind, even when shot at random among so vast a crowd,
could not fall harmless. Our men perceived that
the barbarians were using the same weapons which we
ourselves had shot at them: and accordingly an
order was given that the strings which fastened the
iron points to the javelins and arrows should be cut
before they were hurled or shot; so that while flying
they should preserve their efficacy, but when they
pierced a body or fell on the ground they should come
asunder.
11. While affairs were in this
critical state an unexpected accident had a considerable
influence on the result. A scorpion, a military
engine which in ordinary language is also known as
the wild-ass, being stationed opposite the dense array
of the enemy, hurled forth a huge stone, which, although
it fell harmless on the ground, yet by the mere sight
of it terrified them so greatly, that in alarm at the
strange spectacle they all fell back and endeavoured
to retreat.
12. But their officers ordering
the trumpets to sound a charge, the battle was renewed;
and the Romans, as before, got the advantage, not a
single javelin or bullet hurled by a slinger failing
of its effect. For the troops of the generals
who led the vanguard, and who were inflamed by the
desire of possessing themselves of the treasures which
Valens had so wickedly acquired, were followed closely
by others who were vain of exposing themselves to
as much danger as those of greater renown. And
some were wounded almost to death: others were
struck down, crushed by huge weights, or pierced through
their breasts with javelins; some who carried ladders
and attempted to scale the walls on different sides
were buried under their own burthens, being beaten
down by stones which were hurled upon them, and by
fragments of pillars and cylinders.
13. And yet, horrible as the
sight of this bloodshed was, so great was their ardour
that no one relaxed in his gallant exertions till the
evening, being encouraged by seeing many of the garrison
also fall by various wounds. So, without rest
or relaxation, both the besiegers and the besieged
fought with unwearied courage.
14. And now no kind of order
was observed by the enemy, but they fought in detached
bands and in skirmishes (which is the sign of the extremity
of despair); and at last, when evening came on, they
all returned to their tents, sorrowfully, each man
accusing his neighbour of inconsiderate rashness,
because they had not taken the advice of Fritigern,
and avoided the labours and dangers of a siege.
BOOK XVIII. CHAPTER XVI
Se. After the battle, the
soldiers devoted the whole night (which, as it was
summer, was not long) to tending the wounded with all
the remedies known to their nations, and when daylight
returned they began to discuss various plans, doubting
what to do. And after many plans had been proposed
and objected to, they at last decided to occupy Perinthus,
and then, every place where they could hear that any
treasures were stored up, the deserters and fugitives
having given them all the information they required,
so that they learnt what was in every house, to say
nothing of what was in every city. Adopting this
resolution unanimously, which they thought the best,
they advanced by slow marches, ravaging and burning
everything as they passed.
2. But those who had been besieged
in Hadrianople, after the barbarians had departed,
as soon as scouts of approved fidelity had reported
that the whole place was free from enemies, issued
forth at midnight, and avoiding the public causeways,
took out-of-way roads through the woods, and withdrew,
some to Philippopolis, and from thence to Serdica,
others to Macedonia; with all the wealth which they
had saved undiminished, and pressing on with the greatest
exertion and celerity, as if they were likely to find
Valens in those regions, since they were wholly ignorant
that he had perished in battle, or else certainly (as
is rather believed) burnt to death in the cottage.
3. Meanwhile the Goths, combining
with the Huns and Alani, both brave and warlike tribes,
and inured to toil and hardship, whom Fritigern had
with great ability won over to his side by the temptation
of great rewards fixed their camp near
Perinthus; but recollecting their previous losses,
they did not venture to come close to the city, or
make any attempt to take it; they, however, devastated
and entirely stripped the fertile territory surrounding
it, slaying or making prisoners of the inhabitants.
4. From hence they marched with
speed to Constantinople in battle array, from fear
of ambuscades; being eager to make themselves masters
of its ample riches, and resolved to try every means
to take that illustrious city. But while giving
way to extravagant pride, and beating almost against
the barriers of the gates, they were repulsed in this
instance by the Deity.
5. A body of Saracens (a nation
of whose origin and manners we have already given
a full account in several places), being more suited
for sallies and skirmishes than for pitched battles,
had been lately introduced into the city; and, as
soon as they saw the barbarian host, they sallied
out boldly from the city to attack it. There was
a stubborn fight for some time; and at last both armies
parted on equal terms.
6. But a strange and unprecedented
incident gave the final advantage to the eastern warriors;
for one of them with long hair, naked with
the exception of a covering round his waist shouting
a hoarse and melancholy cry, drew his dagger and plunged
into the middle of the Gothic host, and after he had
slain an enemy, put his lips to his throat, and sucked
his blood. The barbarians were terrified at this
marvellous prodigy, and from that time forth, when
they proceeded on any enterprise, displayed none of
their former and usual ferocity, but advanced with
hesitating steps.
7. As time went on their ardour
damped, and they began to take into consideration
the vast circuit of the walls (which was the greater
on account of the large space occupied by mansions
with gardens within it), the inaccessible beauties
of the city, and the immensity of its population;
also the vicinity of the strait which divides the Black
Sea from the AEgean. Then after destroying the
works which they had constructed, having sustained
greater losses than they had inflicted, they raised
the siege, and roamed at random over the northern provinces,
which they traversed without restraint as far as the
Julian Alps, which the ancients used to call the Venetian
Alps.
8. At this time the energy and
promptitude of Julius, the commander of the forces
on the other side of Mount Taurus, was particularly
distinguished; for when he learnt what had happened
in Thrace, he sent secret letters to all the governors
of the different cities and forts, who were all Romans
(which at this time is not very common), requesting
them, on one and the same day, as at a concerted signal,
to put to death all the Goths who had previously been
admitted into the places under their charge; first
luring them into the suburbs, in expectation of receiving
the pay which had been promised to them. This
wise plan was carried out without any disturbance
or any delay; and thus the Eastern provinces were
delivered from great dangers.
9. Thus have I, a Greek by birth,
and formerly a soldier, related all the events from
the accession of Nerva to the death of Valens, to the
best of my abilities; professing above all things to
tell the truth, which, as I believe, I have never
knowingly perverted, either by silence or by falsehood.
Let better men in the flower of their age, and of
eminent accomplishments, relate the subsequent events.
But if it should please them to undertake the task,
I warn them to sharpen their tongues to a loftier
style.