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Gallic Empire

The Gallic Empire[a] or the Gallic Roman Empire are names used in modern historiography for a breakaway part of the Roman Empire that functioned de facto as a separate state from 260 to 274.[b] It originated during the Crisis of the Third Century, when a series of Roman military leaders and aristocrats declared themselves emperors and took control of Gaul and adjacent provinces without attempting to conquer Italy or otherwise seize the central Roman administrative apparatus.[7]

Gallic Empire
260–274
The Gallic Empire under Postumus by 262 (in blue), with the Roman Empire.
Capital
Common languages
GovernmentMixed, functionally absolute monarchy
Emperor 
• 260–269
Postumus
• 269
Marius
• 269–270
Victorinus
• 270–274
Tetricus I
Historical eraLate Antiquity
• Established
260
274
Preceded by
Succeeded by

The Gallic Empire was established by Postumus in 260 in the wake of barbarian invasions and instability in Rome, and at its height included the territories of Germania, Gaul, Britannia, and (for a time) Hispania. After Postumus' assassination in 269 it lost much of its territory, but continued under a number of emperors and usurpers. It was retaken by Roman emperor Aurelian after the Battle of Châlons in 274.

History

Origins

The Roman Crisis of the Third Century continued as the Emperor Valerian was defeated and captured by the Sasanian Empire of Persia in the Battle of Edessa, together with a large part of the Roman field army in the east. This left his son Gallienus in very shaky control. Shortly thereafter, the Palmyrene leader Odaenathus gained control of a wide swath of the east, including Egypt, Syria, Judea, and Arabia Petraea; while he was nominally loyal to the Roman government, his domain was de facto independent and has come to be referred to as the Palmyrene Empire.

The governors in Pannonia staged unsuccessful local revolts. The Emperor left for the Danube to attend to their disruption. This left Postumus, who was governor of Germania Superior and Inferior, in charge at the Rhine border. An exceptional administrator, Postumus had also ably protected Germania Inferior against an invasion led by the Franks in the summer of 260. In fact, Postumus defeated the Frankish forces at Empel so decisively that there would be no further Germanic raids for ten years. This all combined to make Postumus one of the most powerful men in the western reaches of the Roman Empire.

 
The Gallic Empire at its greatest territorial extent, after its creation by Postumus in 260.

Gallienus's son Saloninus and the praetorian prefect Silvanus remained at Colonia Agrippina (Cologne), to keep the young heir out of danger and perhaps also as a check on Postumus' ambitions. Before long, however, Postumus besieged Colonia Agrippina and put the young heir and his guardian to death, making his revolt official. Postumus is thought to have established his capital there or at Augusta Treverorum (Trier).[8] Lugdunum (Lyon) was one of the most important cities in the area under his control.

Postumus did not make any effort to extend his control into Italy or to depose Gallienus. Instead, he established parallel institutions modelled on the Roman Empire's central government: his regime had its own praetorian guard, two annually elected consuls (not all of the names have survived), and probably its own senate. According to the numismatic evidence, Postumus held the office of consul five times.

Postumus successfully fended off a military incursion by Gallienus in 263, and was never challenged by him again. However, in early 269 he was challenged by Laelianus, who was probably one of his own commanders. Laelianus was declared emperor at Mogontiacum (Mainz) by his Legio XXII Primigenia. In response, Postumus quickly retook Mogontiacum and Laelianus was killed. In the aftermath of the battle, however, Postumus was overthrown and killed by his own troops, reportedly because he did not allow them to sack the city.[9][10]

After Postumus

 
Coin of Tetricus, last emperor (271–274) of the Gallic Empire

An officer in Postumus' army, Marcus Aurelius Marius, was installed as Emperor upon Postumus's death, but died very shortly after; ancient sources writing much later state that he reigned only two days, though it is more likely, based on the numismatic record, that he reigned for a few months.[11] Subsequently, the tribune of the praetorians, Marcus Piavonius Victorinus came to power, being recognized as Emperor in northern Gaul and Britannia, but not in Hispania.[12] Meanwhile, Roman Emperor Gallienus had been killed in a coup in 268, and his successor in the central Roman provinces, Claudius Gothicus, re-established Roman authority in Gallia Narbonensis and parts of Gallia Aquitania; there is some evidence that the provinces of Hispania, which did not recognize Postumus's successors in Gaul, may have realigned with Rome then.[12][13]

Victorinus spent most of his reign dealing with insurgencies and attempting to recover the Gaulish territories taken by Claudius Gothicus. He was assassinated in 271, but his mother Victoria took control of his troops and used her power to influence the selection of his successor.[12] With Victoria's support, the governor of Gallia Aquitania, Gaius Pius Esuvius Tetricus was made Emperor, and was recognized in Britannia and the parts of Gaul that had recognized Victorinus.[14] Tetricus fought off Germanic barbarians who had begun ravaging Gaul after the death of Victorinus, and was able to re-take Gallia Aquitania and western Gallia Narbonensis while Claudius Gothicus's successor Aurelian was in the east fighting the Palmyrene Empire, now in open revolt against Roman authority under Queen Zenobia. Tetricus established the imperial court at Trier, and in 273 he elevated his son, also named Tetricus, to the rank of Caesar.

The following year the younger Tetricus was made co-consul with his father, but the area under their control grew weak from internal strife, including a mutiny led by the usurper Faustinus.[14] By that time Aurelian had defeated the Palmyrene Empire and had made plans to reconquer the west. He moved into Gaul and defeated Tetricus at the Battle of Châlons in 274. According to some sources, Tetricus offered to surrender in exchange for clemency for him and his son before the battle.[14] This detail may be later propaganda, but either way, Aurelian was victorious, and the Gallic Empire was effectively ended.[14] In contrast with his propaganda after the recent defeat of Zenobia, Aurelian did not present his recapture of Gaul as a victory over a foreign enemy, and indeed many officials who had served in the army and administration of the Gallic Empire continued their careers, including Tetricus, who was appointed to an administrative post in Italy.[7]

Causes

The Gallic Empire was symptomatic of the fragmentation of power during the third-century crisis. It has also been taken to represent autonomous trends in the western provinces, including proto-feudalistic tendencies among the Gaulish land-owning class whose support has sometimes been thought to have underpinned the strength of the Gallic Empire,[15] and an interplay between the strength of Roman institutions and the growing importance of provincial concerns.[16]

One of Postumus' primary objectives as emperor was evidently the defense of the Germanic frontier. In 261, he repelled mixed groups of Franks and Alamanni to hold the Rhine limes secure (though lands beyond the upper Rhine and Danube had to be abandoned to the barbarians within a couple of years).[17] In so doing, Postumus positioned himself avowedly as not only the defender and restorer of Gaul, but also as the upholder of the Roman name.[8][c]

The usurpation of power over Britain and northern Gaul by Carausius just twenty years later reflects a continuing trend by which local loyalties from the landed aristocracy and deteriorating morale in the legions enabled Carausius to seize power in Britain.[citation needed] Similarly with the withdrawal of legions after 408, many Britons desired a localized Roman authority rather than nationalist revolt. The desire for Roman order and institutions was entirely compatible with a degree of national or regional separatism.

List of Gallic Emperors

The Gallic Emperors are known primarily from the coins they minted.[18] The political and military history of the Gallic Empire can be sketched through the careers of these emperors. Their names are as follows:[19]

Postumus the Younger, Empress Victoria and Victorinus Junior are included in the list of the Thirty Tyrants, but there are no coins or inscriptions about them.

Consuls of the Gallic Empire

Year Consul Consul
260 Postumus (second time)[21] Honoratianus[22]
261 Postumus (third time)[21] unknown[23]
262 unknown[23]
263
264
265 Postumus (fourth time)[21]
266
267 unknown[23]
269 Postumus (fifth time)[23] Victorinus (first time)[23]
269 unknown[23] unknown[23]
270 Victorinus (second time)[21] Sanctus[23]
271 Tetricus (first time)[21] unknown[23]
272 Tetricus (second time)[21]
273 Tetricus (third time)[21]
Year and sequence unknown:
? Censor (twice)[23] Lepidus (twice)[23]
? Dialis[23] Bassus[23]
? "Apr."[23] "Ruf."[23]

Family tree

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The regime had no distinct name or style that has survived on official monuments, inscriptions or coins; its titles and administrative structures followed the models of the central Roman government.[2] Occasionally modern historians use the Latin phrase Imperium Galliarum to refer to the state, derived from a passage in Eutropius: Victorinus postea Galliarum accepit imperium, "Victorinus took command of the Gallic provinces".[3]
  2. ^ The year of Postumus' accession was either 259 or 260. In the past, the year 259 was favoured; today, however, most scholars consider that the summer or fall of 260 is the more likely date that Postumus was hailed emperor.[4][5] The exact dating depends on several factors, including when the emperor Valerian was captured and disgraced. Other dates cited in this article must be pushed back by one year for those who take 259 as the year of Postumus' accession.[6]
  3. ^ Gallic emperors are called adsertores Romani nominis in the Historia Augusta.

References

  1. ^ Bourne, R. J. (2001). Aspects of the relationship between the Central and Gallic Empires in the mid to late third century AD with special reference to coinage studies. Archaeopress. p. 22.
  2. ^ Drinkwater 1987, pp. 126–127.
  3. ^ Drinkwater 1987, p. 15.
  4. ^ Polfer (Postumus)
  5. ^ Drinkwater 1987, p. 97.
  6. ^ Drinkwater 1987, pp. 95–106.
  7. ^ a b Goldsworthy, Adrian (2009). The Fall of the West. Weidenfeld & Nicolson. pp. 116–117.
  8. ^ a b Drinkwater 1987, pp. 24–27.
  9. ^ Aurelius Victor 33.8.
  10. ^ Eutropius 9.9.1.
  11. ^ Polfer, Michael (June 24, 1999). "Marius (A.D. 269)". De Imperatoribus Romanis: An Online Encyclopedia of Roman Rulers and Their Families. Retrieved July 10, 2009.
  12. ^ a b c Polfer, Michel (June 3, 2000). "Victorinus (A.D. 269–271)". De Imperatoribus Romanis: An Online Encyclopedia of Roman Rulers and Their Families. Retrieved July 10, 2009.
  13. ^ Weigel, Richard D. (June 19, 2001). "Claudius II Gothicus (268–270)". De Imperatoribus Romanis: An Online Encyclopedia of Roman Rulers and Their Families. Retrieved July 10, 2009.
  14. ^ a b c d Polfer, Michel (January 28, 2000). "Tetricus I (AD 271–273)". De Imperatoribus Romanis: An Online Encyclopedia of Roman Rulers and Their Families. Retrieved July 10, 2009.
  15. ^ Drinkwater 1987, p. 239.
  16. ^ Drinkwater 1987, pp. 247–8.
  17. ^ Drinkwater 1987, pp. 226–7.
  18. ^ Drinkwater 1987, p. 16.
  19. ^ Drinkwater 1987, p. 102.
  20. ^ Richard Abdy. "The Domitian II coin from Chalgrove: a Gallic emperor returns to history". Retrieved 29 October 2013.
  21. ^ a b c d e f g Drinkwater (1987), p. 188.
  22. ^ Potter (2004), p. 260
  23. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Polfer, Michel (2000), "Postumus (A.D. 260-269)", De Imperatoribus Romanis

Bibliography

  • Drinkwater, J. F. (1987). The Gallic Empire: Separatism and Continuity in the north-western provinces of the Roman Empire, A.D. 260-274. Stuttgart: Steiner. ISBN 978-3515048064.

External links

  • Gallic Empire
  • Jona Lendering, "Gallic Empire"
  • Gallic Empire coinage

gallic, empire, gallic, roman, empire, names, used, modern, historiography, breakaway, part, roman, empire, that, functioned, facto, separate, state, from, originated, during, crisis, third, century, when, series, roman, military, leaders, aristocrats, declare. The Gallic Empire a or the Gallic Roman Empire are names used in modern historiography for a breakaway part of the Roman Empire that functioned de facto as a separate state from 260 to 274 b It originated during the Crisis of the Third Century when a series of Roman military leaders and aristocrats declared themselves emperors and took control of Gaul and adjacent provinces without attempting to conquer Italy or otherwise seize the central Roman administrative apparatus 7 Gallic Empire260 274The Gallic Empire under Postumus by 262 in blue with the Roman Empire CapitalColonia Agrippina Cologne 260 271 Augusta Treverorum Trier 271 274 1 Common languagesLatin official Regional local languagesGovernmentMixed functionally absolute monarchyEmperor 260 269Postumus 269Marius 269 270Victorinus 270 274Tetricus IHistorical eraLate Antiquity Established260 Battle of Chalons274Preceded by Succeeded byRoman Empire Roman EmpireThe Gallic Empire was established by Postumus in 260 in the wake of barbarian invasions and instability in Rome and at its height included the territories of Germania Gaul Britannia and for a time Hispania After Postumus assassination in 269 it lost much of its territory but continued under a number of emperors and usurpers It was retaken by Roman emperor Aurelian after the Battle of Chalons in 274 Contents 1 History 1 1 Origins 1 2 After Postumus 2 Causes 3 List of Gallic Emperors 4 Consuls of the Gallic Empire 5 Family tree 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 8 1 Bibliography 9 External linksHistory EditOrigins Edit The Roman Crisis of the Third Century continued as the Emperor Valerian was defeated and captured by the Sasanian Empire of Persia in the Battle of Edessa together with a large part of the Roman field army in the east This left his son Gallienus in very shaky control Shortly thereafter the Palmyrene leader Odaenathus gained control of a wide swath of the east including Egypt Syria Judea and Arabia Petraea while he was nominally loyal to the Roman government his domain was de facto independent and has come to be referred to as the Palmyrene Empire The governors in Pannonia staged unsuccessful local revolts The Emperor left for the Danube to attend to their disruption This left Postumus who was governor of Germania Superior and Inferior in charge at the Rhine border An exceptional administrator Postumus had also ably protected Germania Inferior against an invasion led by the Franks in the summer of 260 In fact Postumus defeated the Frankish forces at Empel so decisively that there would be no further Germanic raids for ten years This all combined to make Postumus one of the most powerful men in the western reaches of the Roman Empire The Gallic Empire at its greatest territorial extent after its creation by Postumus in 260 Gallienus s son Saloninus and the praetorian prefect Silvanus remained at Colonia Agrippina Cologne to keep the young heir out of danger and perhaps also as a check on Postumus ambitions Before long however Postumus besieged Colonia Agrippina and put the young heir and his guardian to death making his revolt official Postumus is thought to have established his capital there or at Augusta Treverorum Trier 8 Lugdunum Lyon was one of the most important cities in the area under his control Postumus did not make any effort to extend his control into Italy or to depose Gallienus Instead he established parallel institutions modelled on the Roman Empire s central government his regime had its own praetorian guard two annually elected consuls not all of the names have survived and probably its own senate According to the numismatic evidence Postumus held the office of consul five times Postumus successfully fended off a military incursion by Gallienus in 263 and was never challenged by him again However in early 269 he was challenged by Laelianus who was probably one of his own commanders Laelianus was declared emperor at Mogontiacum Mainz by his Legio XXII Primigenia In response Postumus quickly retook Mogontiacum and Laelianus was killed In the aftermath of the battle however Postumus was overthrown and killed by his own troops reportedly because he did not allow them to sack the city 9 10 After Postumus Edit Coin of Tetricus last emperor 271 274 of the Gallic Empire An officer in Postumus army Marcus Aurelius Marius was installed as Emperor upon Postumus s death but died very shortly after ancient sources writing much later state that he reigned only two days though it is more likely based on the numismatic record that he reigned for a few months 11 Subsequently the tribune of the praetorians Marcus Piavonius Victorinus came to power being recognized as Emperor in northern Gaul and Britannia but not in Hispania 12 Meanwhile Roman Emperor Gallienus had been killed in a coup in 268 and his successor in the central Roman provinces Claudius Gothicus re established Roman authority in Gallia Narbonensis and parts of Gallia Aquitania there is some evidence that the provinces of Hispania which did not recognize Postumus s successors in Gaul may have realigned with Rome then 12 13 Victorinus spent most of his reign dealing with insurgencies and attempting to recover the Gaulish territories taken by Claudius Gothicus He was assassinated in 271 but his mother Victoria took control of his troops and used her power to influence the selection of his successor 12 With Victoria s support the governor of Gallia Aquitania Gaius Pius Esuvius Tetricus was made Emperor and was recognized in Britannia and the parts of Gaul that had recognized Victorinus 14 Tetricus fought off Germanic barbarians who had begun ravaging Gaul after the death of Victorinus and was able to re take Gallia Aquitania and western Gallia Narbonensis while Claudius Gothicus s successor Aurelian was in the east fighting the Palmyrene Empire now in open revolt against Roman authority under Queen Zenobia Tetricus established the imperial court at Trier and in 273 he elevated his son also named Tetricus to the rank of Caesar The following year the younger Tetricus was made co consul with his father but the area under their control grew weak from internal strife including a mutiny led by the usurper Faustinus 14 By that time Aurelian had defeated the Palmyrene Empire and had made plans to reconquer the west He moved into Gaul and defeated Tetricus at the Battle of Chalons in 274 According to some sources Tetricus offered to surrender in exchange for clemency for him and his son before the battle 14 This detail may be later propaganda but either way Aurelian was victorious and the Gallic Empire was effectively ended 14 In contrast with his propaganda after the recent defeat of Zenobia Aurelian did not present his recapture of Gaul as a victory over a foreign enemy and indeed many officials who had served in the army and administration of the Gallic Empire continued their careers including Tetricus who was appointed to an administrative post in Italy 7 Causes EditThe Gallic Empire was symptomatic of the fragmentation of power during the third century crisis It has also been taken to represent autonomous trends in the western provinces including proto feudalistic tendencies among the Gaulish land owning class whose support has sometimes been thought to have underpinned the strength of the Gallic Empire 15 and an interplay between the strength of Roman institutions and the growing importance of provincial concerns 16 One of Postumus primary objectives as emperor was evidently the defense of the Germanic frontier In 261 he repelled mixed groups of Franks and Alamanni to hold the Rhine limes secure though lands beyond the upper Rhine and Danube had to be abandoned to the barbarians within a couple of years 17 In so doing Postumus positioned himself avowedly as not only the defender and restorer of Gaul but also as the upholder of the Roman name 8 c The usurpation of power over Britain and northern Gaul by Carausius just twenty years later reflects a continuing trend by which local loyalties from the landed aristocracy and deteriorating morale in the legions enabled Carausius to seize power in Britain citation needed Similarly with the withdrawal of legions after 408 many Britons desired a localized Roman authority rather than nationalist revolt The desire for Roman order and institutions was entirely compatible with a degree of national or regional separatism List of Gallic Emperors EditThe Gallic Emperors are known primarily from the coins they minted 18 The political and military history of the Gallic Empire can be sketched through the careers of these emperors Their names are as follows 19 Postumus 260 269 Laelianus 269 usurper Marius 269 Victorinus 269 270 Domitian II 271 usurper 20 Tetricus the Elder 270 274 Tetricus the Younger 270 274 son of Tetricus Caesar Faustinus 274 usurper Postumus the Younger Empress Victoria and Victorinus Junior are included in the list of the Thirty Tyrants but there are no coins or inscriptions about them Consuls of the Gallic Empire EditYear Consul Consul260 Postumus second time 21 Honoratianus 22 261 Postumus third time 21 unknown 23 262 unknown 23 263264265 Postumus fourth time 21 266267 unknown 23 269 Postumus fifth time 23 Victorinus first time 23 269 unknown 23 unknown 23 270 Victorinus second time 21 Sanctus 23 271 Tetricus first time 21 unknown 23 272 Tetricus second time 21 273 Tetricus third time 21 Year and sequence unknown Censor twice 23 Lepidus twice 23 Dialis 23 Bassus 23 Apr 23 Ruf 23 Family tree EditLaelianus269Postumus260 269Marcus Aurelius Marius269Victoria271Tetricus I271 274Postumus Junior260 269Victorinus268 271Tetricus II271 274Victorinus Junior271See also EditRoman governors of Germania Inferior Bagaudae Jublains archeological site Consul Gallic Empire Notes Edit The regime had no distinct name or style that has survived on official monuments inscriptions or coins its titles and administrative structures followed the models of the central Roman government 2 Occasionally modern historians use the Latin phrase Imperium Galliarum to refer to the state derived from a passage in Eutropius Victorinus postea Galliarum accepit imperium Victorinus took command of the Gallic provinces 3 The year of Postumus accession was either 259 or 260 In the past the year 259 was favoured today however most scholars consider that the summer or fall of 260 is the more likely date that Postumus was hailed emperor 4 5 The exact dating depends on several factors including when the emperor Valerian was captured and disgraced Other dates cited in this article must be pushed back by one year for those who take 259 as the year of Postumus accession 6 Gallic emperors are called adsertores Romani nominis in the Historia Augusta References Edit Bourne R J 2001 Aspects of the relationship between the Central and Gallic Empires in the mid to late third century AD with special reference to coinage studies Archaeopress p 22 Drinkwater 1987 pp 126 127 Drinkwater 1987 p 15 Polfer Postumus Drinkwater 1987 p 97 Drinkwater 1987 pp 95 106 a b Goldsworthy Adrian 2009 The Fall of the West Weidenfeld amp Nicolson pp 116 117 a b Drinkwater 1987 pp 24 27 Aurelius Victor 33 8 Eutropius 9 9 1 Polfer Michael June 24 1999 Marius A D 269 De Imperatoribus Romanis An Online Encyclopedia of Roman Rulers and Their Families Retrieved July 10 2009 a b c Polfer Michel June 3 2000 Victorinus A D 269 271 De Imperatoribus Romanis An Online Encyclopedia of Roman Rulers and Their Families Retrieved July 10 2009 Weigel Richard D June 19 2001 Claudius II Gothicus 268 270 De Imperatoribus Romanis An Online Encyclopedia of Roman Rulers and Their Families Retrieved July 10 2009 a b c d Polfer Michel January 28 2000 Tetricus I AD 271 273 De Imperatoribus Romanis An Online Encyclopedia of Roman Rulers and Their Families Retrieved July 10 2009 Drinkwater 1987 p 239 Drinkwater 1987 pp 247 8 Drinkwater 1987 pp 226 7 Drinkwater 1987 p 16 Drinkwater 1987 p 102 Richard Abdy The Domitian II coin from Chalgrove a Gallic emperor returns to history Retrieved 29 October 2013 a b c d e f g Drinkwater 1987 p 188 Potter 2004 p 260 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Polfer Michel 2000 Postumus A D 260 269 De Imperatoribus Romanis Bibliography Edit Drinkwater J F 1987 The Gallic Empire Separatism and Continuity in the north western provinces of the Roman Empire A D 260 274 Stuttgart Steiner ISBN 978 3515048064 External links EditGallic Consuls Gallic Empire Jona Lendering Gallic Empire Gallic Empire coinage Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gallic Empire amp oldid 1154840820, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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