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Honorius (emperor)

Honorius (9 September 384 – 15 August 423) was Roman emperor from 393 to 423. He was the younger son of emperor Theodosius I and his first wife Aelia Flaccilla. After the death of Theodosius, Honorius ruled the western half of the empire while his brother Arcadius ruled the eastern half. In 410, during Honorius's reign over the Western Roman Empire, Rome was sacked for the first time in almost 800 years.

Honorius
Detail of Honorius as depicted on the consular diptych of Probus, AD 406.
Roman emperor
(in the West)
Augustus23 January 393 – 15 August 423
(senior from 17 January 395)
PredecessorTheodosius I
SuccessorJoannes
Co-rulersArcadius (East, 393–408)
Theodosius II (East, 408–423)
Constantine III (Gaul, 409–411)
Constans II (Gaul, 409–411)
Constantius III (West, 421)
Born9 September 384
Constantinople
(now Istanbul, Turkey)
Died15 August 423 (aged 38)
Ravenna, Italy
Burial
SpouseMaria (m. 398, died 407)
Thermantia (m. 408, divorced)
DynastyTheodosian
FatherTheodosius I
MotherAelia Flaccilla
ReligionNicene Christianity

Even by the standards of the Western Empire, Honorius's reign was precarious and chaotic. His early reign was supported by his principal general, Stilicho, who was successively Honorius's guardian (during his childhood) and his father-in-law (after the emperor became an adult).

Family

Honorius was born to Emperor Theodosius I and Empress Aelia Flaccilla on 9 September 384 in Constantinople.[1] He was brother to Arcadius and Pulcheria. In 386, his mother died, and in 387, Theodosius married Galla who had taken a temporary refuge in Thessaloniki with her family, including her brother Valentinian II and mother Justina, away from usurper Magnus Maximus. Theodosius and Galla had a daughter, Galla Placidia, making Honorius her half-brother. Honorius, Arcadius, and Galla Placidia were the only children of Theodosius to survive into adulthood.

Emperor

 
Marble bust of a child emperor, possibly Honorius.[2][3]

Early reign

After holding the consulate at the age of two in 386, Honorius was declared augustus by his father Theodosius I, and thus co-ruler, on 23 January 393, after the death of Valentinian II and the usurpation of Eugenius.[4] When Theodosius died, in January 395, Honorius and Arcadius divided the Empire, so that Honorius became Western Roman emperor at the age of ten.[5]

During the early part of his reign, Honorius depended on the military leadership of the general Stilicho, who had been appointed by Theodosius[6] and was of mixed Vandal and Roman ancestry.[7] To strengthen his bonds with the young emperor and to make his grandchild an imperial heir, Stilicho married his daughter Maria, to him.[8] The epithalamion written for the occasion by Stilicho's court poet Claudian survives.[9] Honorius was also influenced by the Popes of Rome. So it was that Pope Innocent I and Western bishops may have been successful in persuading Honorius to write to his brother, arguing for convening a synod in Thessalonica.[10]

 
Aureus of Honorius

At first Honorius based his capital in Milan, but when the Visigoths under King Alaric I entered Italy in 401 he moved his capital to the coastal city of Ravenna, which was protected by a ring of marshes and strong fortifications.[11] While the new capital was easier to defend, it was poorly situated to allow Roman forces to protect Central Italy from the increasingly regular threat of barbarian incursions. It was significant that the Emperor's residence remained in Ravenna until the overthrow of Romulus Augustulus in 476. That was probably the reason why Ravenna was chosen not only as the capital of the Ostrogothic Kingdom in Italy, but also for the seat of the Byzantine exarchs as well.[11]

Stilicho and the defense of Italy

Honorius' reign experienced continued barbarian incursions into Gaul, Italy and Hispania. At the same time, a host of usurpers rose up.

 

The first crisis faced by Honorius was a revolt led by Gildo, the comes Africae and magister utriusque militiae per Africam, in Northern Africa, which lasted for two years (397–398).[12] It was eventually subdued by Stilicho, under the local command of Mascezel, the very brother of Gildo.[13]

The next crisis was the Visigothic invasion of Italy in 402 under the command of their king, Alaric. Stilicho was absent in Raetia in the latter months of 401, when Alaric, who was also the Eastern Empire's magister militum in Illyricum, suddenly marched with a large army through the Julian Alps and entered Italy.[14]

Stilicho hurried back to protect Honorius and the legions of Gaul and Britain were summoned to defend Italy. Honorius, at Milan, was besieged by Alaric, who marched into Liguria. Stilicho narrowly defeated Alaric at Pollentia, on the river Tanarus on Easter Day (6 April 402). Alaric retreated to Verona, where Stilicho attacked him again yet the battle was not entirely conclusive. The Visigoths were allowed to retreat back to Illyricum.[15] In 405 Stilicho met an invasion of Italy led across the Danube by Radagaisus. They brought devastation to the heart of the Empire, until Stilicho defeated them in 406 and recruited most of them into his forces.[11] Then, in 405 or 406, a number of tribes, according to some sources allegedly including Vandals, Alans, and Suebi, crossed the Rhine and invaded Gaul.

The situation in Britain was even more difficult. The British provinces were isolated, lacking support from the Empire, and the soldiers supported the revolts of Marcus (406–407), Gratian (407), and Constantine III. Constantine invaded Gaul in 407, occupying Arles, and while Constantine was in Gaul, his son Constans ruled over Britain.[16] By 410, Britain may have been told to look after its own affairs and expect no aid from Rome, although it has been argued that the order was sent to the people of Bruttium in Italy, not Britain.[17]

The western empire was effectively overstretched due to the massive invasion of Alans, Suebi and Vandals who, although they had been repulsed from Italy in 406, moved into Gaul on 31 December 406,[16] and arrived in Hispania in 409. In early 408, Stilicho attempted to strengthen his position at court by marrying his second daughter, Thermantia, to Honorius after the death of the Empress Maria in 407.[18] Another invasion by Alaric was prevented in 408 by Stilicho when he forced the Roman Senate to pay 4,000 pounds of gold to persuade the Goths to leave Italy.[19]

 
Marble cameo of Honorius and his wife Maria, probably based on an old cameo of Caligula and Agrippina.[20]

Honorius, in the meantime, was at Bononia, on his way from Ravenna to Ticinum, when the news reached him of his brother's death in May 408. He at first was planning to go to Constantinople to help set up the court during the transition from Arcadius to Theodosius II.[21] Summoned from Ravenna for advice, Stilicho advised Honorius not to go, and proceeded to go himself. In Stilicho's absence, a minister named Olympius gained the confidence of Honorius. He convinced the emperor that his father-in-law was conspiring with the barbarians to overthrow him.[22]

On his return to Ravenna, Honorius ordered the arrest and execution of Stilicho. With Stilicho's fall, Honorius moved against all of his former father-in-law's allies, killing and torturing key individuals and ordering the confiscation of the property of anyone who had borne any office while Stilicho was in command. Honorius's wife Thermantia was taken from the imperial throne and given over to her mother; Eucherius, the son of Stilicho, was put to death.[23] The purge also massacred the families of Stilicho's foederati troops, and they defected en masse to Alaric.[23]

In October 408, Alaric returned to Italy to claim more gold and land to settle in, as feudatory vassals of the Empire, which Stilicho had promised him.[24] The city bought him off with 5,000 lbs of gold and 30,000 lbs of silver after a short siege with Rome on the verge of famine.[24]

A palace revolution in Honorius' court led meanwhile to a change of ministers, and those hostile to the Goths were replaced by officers favorable to Alaric, who began peace negotiations. While the embassy was absent, a new change occurred at Ravenna, and Honorius disclaimed the peace which was on the verge of being concluded.[25] The enraged Alaric returned to Rome in late 409 and forced the Senate to elect Priscus Attalus as emperor, who ratified Alaric's former treaty with Stilicho.[25]

Sack of Rome

Rome had been under Visigothic siege since shortly after Stilicho's deposition and execution in the summer of 408.[26] In 410, the Eastern Roman Empire sent six legions (6,000 men; due to changes in tactics, legions of this period were about 1,000 soldiers, down from the 6,000-soldier legions of the Republic era and Empire period up to late 4th century)[27] from Ravenna to aid Honorius, but Alaric ambushed the legions on the way, and only a handful of them reached Rome.[28] Lacking a strong general to control the by-now mostly Germanic Roman army, Honorius could do little to attack Alaric's forces directly, and apparently adopted the only strategy he could in the situation: wait passively for the Visigoths to grow weary and spend the time marshalling what forces he could. Unfortunately, this course of action appeared to be the product of Honorius' indecisive character and he suffered much criticism for it both from contemporaries and later historians.

To counter Attalus, Honorius tried to negotiate with Alaric in addition to restricting grain shipments to Rome from North Africa. Attalus dispatched an army to conquer Africa and restore the grain supply to Rome, but the governor, Heraclian, who was loyal to Honorius, wiped out this force as soon as it landed on the coast.[29] As Rome was dependent on North African grain for sustenance, the populace was faced with the prospect of famine, and they blamed Attalus for the impending calamity. Growing desperate, Attalus searched for means of pacifying the people, but found himself, in consequence of conciliatory expenditures, incapable of satisfying his debt to Alaric, and thus alienated both Romans and Goths. In turn he came out to be exploited in political terms. Confronted with the increasing unpopularity and truculence of Attalus, Alaric dethroned him in 410 and proposed to renew negotiations with Honorius.[29] Honorius, overconfident at Attalus' fall and the victory of his general Heraclian over Attalus' African expeditionary force, refused negotiation, and declared Alaric the eternal enemy of the Republic.[30]

Stricken by starvation, somebody opened Rome's defenses to Alaric and the Goths poured in. The city had not been under the control of a foreign force since an invasion of Gauls some eight centuries before. The sack itself was notably mild as sacks go. For example, churches and religious statuary went unharmed.[31] The psychological blow to the contemporary Roman world was considerably more painful. The shock of this event reverberated from Britain to Jerusalem, and inspired Augustine to write his magnum opus, The City of God.

Constantius and the beginning of erosion of the Western Empire

 
Christian pendant of Empress Maria, daughter of Stilicho, and wife of Honorius. The pendant reads, around a central cross (clockwise):
HONORI
MARIA
SERHNA
VIVATIS
STELICHO.
Latin and Greek characters were intermingled in this one. The letters form a Christogram.
Louvre, Paris.

The revolt of Constantine III in the west continued through this period. In 409, Gerontius, Constantine III's general in Hispania, rebelled against him, proclaimed Maximus Emperor, and besieged Constantine at Arles.[32] Honorius now found himself an able commander, Constantius, who defeated Maximus and Gerontius, and then Constantine, in 411.

Gaul was again a source of troubles for Honorius: just after Constantius's troops had returned to Italy, Jovinus revolted in northern Gaul, with the support of Alans, Burgundians, and the nobility of Gallic descent.[33] Jovinus tried to negotiate with the invading Goths of Ataulf (412), but his proclamation of his brother Sebastianus as Augustus made Ataulf seek alliance with Honorius. Honorius had Ataulf defeat and execute Jovinus in 413.[34] At the same time, Heraclianus raised the standard of revolt in North Africa, but failed during an invasion of Italy. Defeated, he fled back to Carthage and was killed.[34]

In 414, Constantius attacked Ataulf, who proclaimed Priscus Attalus emperor again. Constantius drove Ataulf into Hispania, and Attalus, having again lost Visigoth support, was captured and deposed once again. In the eleventh consulship of Honorius and the second of Constantius, the Emperor entered Rome in triumph, with Attalus at the wheels of his chariot. Honorius punished Attalus by cutting off his right finger and thumb, inflicting the same fate with which Attalus had threatened Honorius. Remembering how Attalus had suggested that Honorius should retire to some small island, he returned the favor by banishing Attalus to the island of Lipara.[35]

Northeastern Gaul became subject to even greater Frankish influence, while a treaty signed in 418 granted to the Visigoths southwestern Gaul, the former Gallia Aquitania. Under the influence of Constantius, Honorius issued the Edict of 418, which was designed to enable the Empire to retain a hold on the lands which were to be surrendered to the Goths.[36] This edict relaxed the administrative bonds that connected all the Seven Provinces (The Maritime Alps, Narbonensis Prima, Narbonensis Secunda, Novempopulania, Aquitania Prima, Aquitania Secunda and Viennensis) with the central government. It removed the imperial governors and allowed the inhabitants, as a dependent federation, to conduct their own affairs, for which purpose representatives of all the towns were to meet every year in Arles.[37]

In 417, Constantius married Honorius's sister, Galla Placidia, much against her will.[35] In 421, Honorius recognized him as co-emperor Constantius III;[38] however, when the announcement of his elevation was sent to Constantinople, Theodosius refused to recognise him. Constantius, enraged, began preparations for a military conflict with the eastern empire but before he could commence it, he died in September 421.[39]

In 420–422, another Maximus (or perhaps the same) gained and lost power in Hispania. By the time of Honorius's death in 423, Britain, Spain and Gaul had been ravaged by barbarians.[40] In his final years, Honorius reportedly developed a physical attraction to his half-sister, and in order to escape his unwelcome attentions, Galla Placidia and her children, the future emperor Valentinian III and his sister, Honoria, fled to Constantinople.[41]

Death

Honorius died of edema on 15 August 423, leaving no heir.[18] In the subsequent interregnum Joannes was nominated Emperor. The following year, however, the Eastern Emperor Theodosius II installed his cousin Valentinian III, son of Galla Placidia and Constantius III, as Emperor.

 
Reconstruction of Old St Peter's Basilica. The Mausoleum of Honorius is the domed structure at the extreme top left, behind the rotunda Sant'Andrea and the Vatican Obelisk.

The Mausoleum of Honorius was located on the Vatican Hill, accessed from the transept of the Old Saint Peter's Basilica. It was first used for Maria. Probably Thermantia and Honorius's sister Galla Placidia, and perhaps other imperial family members, were later buried there. In the 8th century it was transformed into a church, the Chapel of St Petronilla, which held the relics of the saint and was demolished when the New St Peter's was erected.[42][43]

The year 410 also saw Honorius reply to a British plea for assistance against local barbarian incursions, called the Rescript of Honorius. Preoccupied with the Visigoths, Honorius lacked any military capability to assist the distant province. According to the sixth century Byzantine scholar Zosimus, "Honorius wrote letters to the cities in Britain, bidding them to guard themselves."[44] This sentence is located randomly in the middle of a discussion of southern Italy; no further mention of Britain is made, which has led some modern academics to suggest that the rescript does not apply to Britain, but to Bruttium in Italy.[17][45][46]

Assessments

In his History of the Wars, Procopius mentions a likely apocryphal story where, on hearing the news that Rome had "perished", Honorius was initially shocked, thinking the news was in reference to a favourite chicken he had named "Roma".

At that time they say that the Emperor Honorius in Ravenna received the message from one of the eunuchs, evidently a keeper of the poultry, that Rome had perished. And he cried out and said, 'And yet it has just eaten from my hands!' For he had a very large cock, Rome by name; and the eunuch comprehending his words said that it was the city of Rome which had perished at the hands of Alaric, and the emperor with a sigh of relief answered quickly: 'But I thought that my fowl Rome had perished.' So great, they say, was the folly with which this emperor was possessed.
—Procopius, The Vandalic War (III.2.25–26)

While the tale is discounted as a rumour by more recent historians like Edward Gibbon, it is useful in understanding Roman public opinion towards Honorius.[47]

Honorius was negatively assessed by some 19th and 20th century historians, including J.B. Bury.[48]

Honorius issued a decree during his reign, prohibiting men from wearing trousers in Rome.[49] The last known gladiatorial games took place during the reign of Honorius,[50] who banned the practice in 399 and again in 404, reportedly due to the martyrdom of a Christian monk named Telemachus while he was protesting a gladiator fight.

See also

 
Solidus of Honorius

References

  1. ^ McEvoy 2013, p. 137.
  2. ^ "Oberhaupt von Kaiser Honorius als Kind, spätes 4. Jahrhundert n. Chr. (Marmor)". MeisterDrucke (in German). Retrieved 14 March 2023.
  3. ^ http://laststatues.classics.ox.ac.uk, LSA-833 (J. Lenaghan)
  4. ^ Williams, Stephen and Gerard Friell. Theodosius: The Empire at Bay. Yale University Press, 1994, p. 129
  5. ^ Blockley 2003, p. 113.
  6. ^ McEvoy 2013, p. 188.
  7. ^ Frasetto, Michael (2003). Encyclopedia of Barbarian Europe: Society in Transformation. Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO. ISBN 1576072630, p. 320. Google Books.
  8. ^ McEvoy 2013, p. 141.
  9. ^ Bury 1889, p. 77.
  10. ^ Bury 1889, p. 105.
  11. ^ a b c Bury 1889, p. 110
  12. ^ Bury 1889, p. 76.
  13. ^ McEvoy 2013, p. 157.
  14. ^ Bury 1889, p. 108.
  15. ^ Bury 1889, p. 109.
  16. ^ a b Bury 1889, p. 111
  17. ^ a b Birley 2005, pp. 461–463.
  18. ^ a b Jones, p. 442
  19. ^ Hussey, Joan M. (1957). The Cambridge Medieval History. Cambridge University Press. p. 268.
  20. ^ Fleischer, Jens; Hannestad, Niels; Lund, John; Nielsen, Marjatta (2001). Late Antiquity: Art in Context. Museum Tusculanum Press. pp. 146–150. ISBN 9788772896397.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  21. ^ Bury 1889, p. 112.
  22. ^ Bury 1889, p. 113.
  23. ^ a b McEvoy 2013, p. 184.
  24. ^ a b Elton 2018, p. 178.
  25. ^ a b Elton 2018, p. 179.
  26. ^ Bury 1889, pp. 174–175.
  27. ^ J. Norwich, Byzantium: The Early Centuries, 136[full citation needed]
  28. ^ Adrian Goldsworthy, The Fall of the West: The Slow Death of the Roman Superpower, paperback edition published in 2010 by Phoenix, an imprint of Orion Books Ltd, London, p. 310
  29. ^ a b Gibbon, p. 1118[full citation needed]
  30. ^ Gibbon, p. 1119
  31. ^ Bury 1889, pp. 183–184.
  32. ^ Bury 1889, p. 142.
  33. ^ Bury 1889, p. 145.
  34. ^ a b Bury 1889, p. 146
  35. ^ a b Bury 1889, p. 150
  36. ^ Bury 1889, p. 153.
  37. ^ Bury 1889, p. 154.
  38. ^ Bury 1889, p. 151.
  39. ^ Bury 1889, p. 155.
  40. ^ Bury 1889, p. 211.
  41. ^ Bury 1889, p. 156.
  42. ^ "The Roman Imperial Mausoleum in Late Antiquity".
  43. ^ Roger Pearse (16 May 2014). "Old St Peters, the Circus of Caligula and the Phrygianum". Roger Pearse's blog. Retrieved 1 December 2015.
  44. ^ Zosimus, vi.10.2
  45. ^ Halsall, Guy Barbarian migrations and the Roman West, 376–568 Cambridge University Press; illustrated edition (2007) ISBN 978-0-521-43491-1 pp. 217–218
  46. ^ Discussion in Martin Millett, The Romanization of Britain, (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1990) and in Philip Bartholomew 'Fifth-Century Facts' Britannia vol. 13, 1982 p. 260
  47. ^ Edward Gibbon, The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire Volume 3 (Harrison and Sons, 1854), p. 460.
  48. ^ Summarising Procopius' account of Honorius's reign, wrote: "His name would be forgotten among the obscurest occupants of the Imperial throne were it not that his reign coincided with the fatal period in which it was decided that western Europe was to pass from the Roman to the Teuton." After listing the disasters of those 28 years, Bury concluded:"[Honorius] himself did nothing of note against the enemies who infested his realm, but personally he was extraordinarily fortunate in occupying the throne till he died a natural death and witnessing the destruction of the multitude of tyrants who rose up against him."John Bagnall Bury, History of the Later Roman Empire, 1923 (New York: Dover, 1958), p. 213
  49. ^ Codex Theodosianus 14.10.2–3, tr. C. Pharr, "The Theodosian Code," p. 415.
  50. ^ "The Reign of Honorius – Telemachus and the End of the Gladiators" by Linda Alchin, "Honorius", 5 March 2015, retrieved 12 October 2016

Sources

Primary sources

  • Aurelius Victor, "Epitome de Caesaribus", English version of Epitome de Caesaribus
  • Zosimus, "Historia Nova", Books 4–6 Historia Nova

Secondary sources

  • Birley, Anthony Richard (2005). The Roman Government of Britain. Oxford University Press.
  • Blockley, R.C. (2003). "The dynasty of Theodosius". In Garnsey, Peter; Cameron, Averil (eds.). The Cambridge Ancient History. Vol. XIII: The Late Empire, A.D. 337-425. Cambridge University Press.
  • Doyle, Chris. Honorius: The Fight for the Roman West AD 395-423. Roman Imperial Biographies. Routledge. (2018)
  • Doyle, Christopher. The Endgame of Treason: Suppressing Rebellion and Usurpation in the Late Roman Empire AD 397‑411. (2014) National University of Ireland Galway. Unpublished doctoral thesis. https://aran.library.nuigalway.ie/handle/10379/4631
  • Elton, Hugh (2018). The Roman Empire in Late Antiquity: A Political and Military History. Cambridge University Press.
  • Kovács, Tamás. “410: Honorius, His Rooster, and the Eunuch (Procop. Vand. 1.2.25–26).” Graeco-Latina Brunensia 25, no. 2 (2020): 131–48. https://doi.org/10.5817/GLB2020-2-10.
  • Mathisen, Ralph, "Honorius (395–423 A.D.)", De Imperatoribus Romanis
  • McEvoy, Meaghan A. (2010). 'Rome and the transformation of the imperial office in the late fourth - mid-fifth centuries A.D.', Papers of the British School at Rome 78: 151–192.
  • McEvoy, Meaghan A. (2013). Child Emperor Rule in the Late Roman West, A.D. 367-455. Oxford Classical Monographs. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-966481-8.
  • McEvoy, Meaghan A. (2013). 'The mausoleum of Honorius: late Roman imperial Christianity and the city of Rome in the fifth century', in Rosamond McKitterick, John Osbourne, Carol M. Richards, Joanna Story (eds.), Old St Peter's, Rome, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press: 119–136.
  • Jones, Arnold Hugh Martin; Martindale, J. R.; Morris, John, eds. (1971). "Fl. Honorius 3". Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire. Vol. I, AD 260–395. ISBN 9780521072335.
  • Bury, John Bagnell (1889). A History of the Later Roman Empire from Arcadius to Irene (395 A.D. to 800 A.D.). Macmillan Publishers.
  • Gibbon. Edward Decline & Fall of the Roman Empire (1888)[full citation needed]

External links

  • This shows laws passed by Honorius relating to Christianity.
Regnal titles
Preceded by Western Roman emperor
395–423
with Constantius III (421)
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by Roman consul
386
with Euodius
Succeeded by
Preceded by Roman consul II
394
with Arcadius
Succeeded by
Preceded by Roman consul III
396
with Arcadius
Succeeded by
Preceded by Roman consul IV
398
with Eutychianus
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Vincentius
Fravitta
Roman consul V
402
with Arcadius
Succeeded by
Preceded by Roman consul VI
404
with Aristaenetus
Succeeded by
Preceded by Roman consul VII
407
with Theodosius II
Succeeded by
Preceded by Roman consul VIII
409
with Theodosius II
Succeeded by
Varanes
Tertullus
Preceded by Roman consul IX
412
with Theodosius II
Succeeded by
Preceded by Roman consul X
415
with Theodosius II
Succeeded by
Preceded by Roman consul XI
417–418
with Constantius III and Theodosius II
Succeeded by
Preceded by Roman consul XII
422
with Theodosius II
Succeeded by

honorius, emperor, honorius, september, august, roman, emperor, from, younger, emperor, theodosius, first, wife, aelia, flaccilla, after, death, theodosius, honorius, ruled, western, half, empire, while, brother, arcadius, ruled, eastern, half, during, honoriu. Honorius 9 September 384 15 August 423 was Roman emperor from 393 to 423 He was the younger son of emperor Theodosius I and his first wife Aelia Flaccilla After the death of Theodosius Honorius ruled the western half of the empire while his brother Arcadius ruled the eastern half In 410 during Honorius s reign over the Western Roman Empire Rome was sacked for the first time in almost 800 years HonoriusDetail of Honorius as depicted on the consular diptych of Probus AD 406 Roman emperor in the West Augustus23 January 393 15 August 423 senior from 17 January 395 PredecessorTheodosius ISuccessorJoannesCo rulersArcadius East 393 408 Theodosius II East 408 423 Constantine III Gaul 409 411 Constans II Gaul 409 411 Constantius III West 421 Born9 September 384Constantinople now Istanbul Turkey Died15 August 423 aged 38 Ravenna ItalyBurialOld St Peter s BasilicaSpouseMaria m 398 died 407 Thermantia m 408 divorced DynastyTheodosianFatherTheodosius IMotherAelia FlaccillaReligionNicene ChristianityEven by the standards of the Western Empire Honorius s reign was precarious and chaotic His early reign was supported by his principal general Stilicho who was successively Honorius s guardian during his childhood and his father in law after the emperor became an adult Contents 1 Family 2 Emperor 2 1 Early reign 2 2 Stilicho and the defense of Italy 2 3 Sack of Rome 2 4 Constantius and the beginning of erosion of the Western Empire 2 5 Death 3 Assessments 4 See also 5 References 6 Sources 6 1 Primary sources 6 2 Secondary sources 7 External linksFamily EditHonorius was born to Emperor Theodosius I and Empress Aelia Flaccilla on 9 September 384 in Constantinople 1 He was brother to Arcadius and Pulcheria In 386 his mother died and in 387 Theodosius married Galla who had taken a temporary refuge in Thessaloniki with her family including her brother Valentinian II and mother Justina away from usurper Magnus Maximus Theodosius and Galla had a daughter Galla Placidia making Honorius her half brother Honorius Arcadius and Galla Placidia were the only children of Theodosius to survive into adulthood Emperor Edit Marble bust of a child emperor possibly Honorius 2 3 Early reign Edit After holding the consulate at the age of two in 386 Honorius was declared augustus by his father Theodosius I and thus co ruler on 23 January 393 after the death of Valentinian II and the usurpation of Eugenius 4 When Theodosius died in January 395 Honorius and Arcadius divided the Empire so that Honorius became Western Roman emperor at the age of ten 5 During the early part of his reign Honorius depended on the military leadership of the general Stilicho who had been appointed by Theodosius 6 and was of mixed Vandal and Roman ancestry 7 To strengthen his bonds with the young emperor and to make his grandchild an imperial heir Stilicho married his daughter Maria to him 8 The epithalamion written for the occasion by Stilicho s court poet Claudian survives 9 Honorius was also influenced by the Popes of Rome So it was that Pope Innocent I and Western bishops may have been successful in persuading Honorius to write to his brother arguing for convening a synod in Thessalonica 10 Aureus of Honorius At first Honorius based his capital in Milan but when the Visigoths under King Alaric I entered Italy in 401 he moved his capital to the coastal city of Ravenna which was protected by a ring of marshes and strong fortifications 11 While the new capital was easier to defend it was poorly situated to allow Roman forces to protect Central Italy from the increasingly regular threat of barbarian incursions It was significant that the Emperor s residence remained in Ravenna until the overthrow of Romulus Augustulus in 476 That was probably the reason why Ravenna was chosen not only as the capital of the Ostrogothic Kingdom in Italy but also for the seat of the Byzantine exarchs as well 11 Stilicho and the defense of Italy EditHonorius reign experienced continued barbarian incursions into Gaul Italy and Hispania At the same time a host of usurpers rose up Honorius on the consular diptych of Anicius Petronius Probus 406 The first crisis faced by Honorius was a revolt led by Gildo the comes Africae and magister utriusque militiae per Africam in Northern Africa which lasted for two years 397 398 12 It was eventually subdued by Stilicho under the local command of Mascezel the very brother of Gildo 13 The next crisis was the Visigothic invasion of Italy in 402 under the command of their king Alaric Stilicho was absent in Raetia in the latter months of 401 when Alaric who was also the Eastern Empire s magister militum in Illyricum suddenly marched with a large army through the Julian Alps and entered Italy 14 Stilicho hurried back to protect Honorius and the legions of Gaul and Britain were summoned to defend Italy Honorius at Milan was besieged by Alaric who marched into Liguria Stilicho narrowly defeated Alaric at Pollentia on the river Tanarus on Easter Day 6 April 402 Alaric retreated to Verona where Stilicho attacked him again yet the battle was not entirely conclusive The Visigoths were allowed to retreat back to Illyricum 15 In 405 Stilicho met an invasion of Italy led across the Danube by Radagaisus They brought devastation to the heart of the Empire until Stilicho defeated them in 406 and recruited most of them into his forces 11 Then in 405 or 406 a number of tribes according to some sources allegedly including Vandals Alans and Suebi crossed the Rhine and invaded Gaul The situation in Britain was even more difficult The British provinces were isolated lacking support from the Empire and the soldiers supported the revolts of Marcus 406 407 Gratian 407 and Constantine III Constantine invaded Gaul in 407 occupying Arles and while Constantine was in Gaul his son Constans ruled over Britain 16 By 410 Britain may have been told to look after its own affairs and expect no aid from Rome although it has been argued that the order was sent to the people of Bruttium in Italy not Britain 17 The western empire was effectively overstretched due to the massive invasion of Alans Suebi and Vandals who although they had been repulsed from Italy in 406 moved into Gaul on 31 December 406 16 and arrived in Hispania in 409 In early 408 Stilicho attempted to strengthen his position at court by marrying his second daughter Thermantia to Honorius after the death of the Empress Maria in 407 18 Another invasion by Alaric was prevented in 408 by Stilicho when he forced the Roman Senate to pay 4 000 pounds of gold to persuade the Goths to leave Italy 19 Marble cameo of Honorius and his wife Maria probably based on an old cameo of Caligula and Agrippina 20 Honorius in the meantime was at Bononia on his way from Ravenna to Ticinum when the news reached him of his brother s death in May 408 He at first was planning to go to Constantinople to help set up the court during the transition from Arcadius to Theodosius II 21 Summoned from Ravenna for advice Stilicho advised Honorius not to go and proceeded to go himself In Stilicho s absence a minister named Olympius gained the confidence of Honorius He convinced the emperor that his father in law was conspiring with the barbarians to overthrow him 22 On his return to Ravenna Honorius ordered the arrest and execution of Stilicho With Stilicho s fall Honorius moved against all of his former father in law s allies killing and torturing key individuals and ordering the confiscation of the property of anyone who had borne any office while Stilicho was in command Honorius s wife Thermantia was taken from the imperial throne and given over to her mother Eucherius the son of Stilicho was put to death 23 The purge also massacred the families of Stilicho s foederati troops and they defected en masse to Alaric 23 In October 408 Alaric returned to Italy to claim more gold and land to settle in as feudatory vassals of the Empire which Stilicho had promised him 24 The city bought him off with 5 000 lbs of gold and 30 000 lbs of silver after a short siege with Rome on the verge of famine 24 A palace revolution in Honorius court led meanwhile to a change of ministers and those hostile to the Goths were replaced by officers favorable to Alaric who began peace negotiations While the embassy was absent a new change occurred at Ravenna and Honorius disclaimed the peace which was on the verge of being concluded 25 The enraged Alaric returned to Rome in late 409 and forced the Senate to elect Priscus Attalus as emperor who ratified Alaric s former treaty with Stilicho 25 Sack of Rome Edit Main article Sack of Rome 410 Rome had been under Visigothic siege since shortly after Stilicho s deposition and execution in the summer of 408 26 In 410 the Eastern Roman Empire sent six legions 6 000 men due to changes in tactics legions of this period were about 1 000 soldiers down from the 6 000 soldier legions of the Republic era and Empire period up to late 4th century 27 from Ravenna to aid Honorius but Alaric ambushed the legions on the way and only a handful of them reached Rome 28 Lacking a strong general to control the by now mostly Germanic Roman army Honorius could do little to attack Alaric s forces directly and apparently adopted the only strategy he could in the situation wait passively for the Visigoths to grow weary and spend the time marshalling what forces he could Unfortunately this course of action appeared to be the product of Honorius indecisive character and he suffered much criticism for it both from contemporaries and later historians To counter Attalus Honorius tried to negotiate with Alaric in addition to restricting grain shipments to Rome from North Africa Attalus dispatched an army to conquer Africa and restore the grain supply to Rome but the governor Heraclian who was loyal to Honorius wiped out this force as soon as it landed on the coast 29 As Rome was dependent on North African grain for sustenance the populace was faced with the prospect of famine and they blamed Attalus for the impending calamity Growing desperate Attalus searched for means of pacifying the people but found himself in consequence of conciliatory expenditures incapable of satisfying his debt to Alaric and thus alienated both Romans and Goths In turn he came out to be exploited in political terms Confronted with the increasing unpopularity and truculence of Attalus Alaric dethroned him in 410 and proposed to renew negotiations with Honorius 29 Honorius overconfident at Attalus fall and the victory of his general Heraclian over Attalus African expeditionary force refused negotiation and declared Alaric the eternal enemy of the Republic 30 Stricken by starvation somebody opened Rome s defenses to Alaric and the Goths poured in The city had not been under the control of a foreign force since an invasion of Gauls some eight centuries before The sack itself was notably mild as sacks go For example churches and religious statuary went unharmed 31 The psychological blow to the contemporary Roman world was considerably more painful The shock of this event reverberated from Britain to Jerusalem and inspired Augustine to write his magnum opus The City of God Constantius and the beginning of erosion of the Western Empire Edit Christian pendant of Empress Maria daughter of Stilicho and wife of Honorius The pendant reads around a central cross clockwise HONORI MARIA SERHNA VIVATIS STELICHO Latin and Greek characters were intermingled in this one The letters form a Christogram Louvre Paris The revolt of Constantine III in the west continued through this period In 409 Gerontius Constantine III s general in Hispania rebelled against him proclaimed Maximus Emperor and besieged Constantine at Arles 32 Honorius now found himself an able commander Constantius who defeated Maximus and Gerontius and then Constantine in 411 Gaul was again a source of troubles for Honorius just after Constantius s troops had returned to Italy Jovinus revolted in northern Gaul with the support of Alans Burgundians and the nobility of Gallic descent 33 Jovinus tried to negotiate with the invading Goths of Ataulf 412 but his proclamation of his brother Sebastianus as Augustus made Ataulf seek alliance with Honorius Honorius had Ataulf defeat and execute Jovinus in 413 34 At the same time Heraclianus raised the standard of revolt in North Africa but failed during an invasion of Italy Defeated he fled back to Carthage and was killed 34 In 414 Constantius attacked Ataulf who proclaimed Priscus Attalus emperor again Constantius drove Ataulf into Hispania and Attalus having again lost Visigoth support was captured and deposed once again In the eleventh consulship of Honorius and the second of Constantius the Emperor entered Rome in triumph with Attalus at the wheels of his chariot Honorius punished Attalus by cutting off his right finger and thumb inflicting the same fate with which Attalus had threatened Honorius Remembering how Attalus had suggested that Honorius should retire to some small island he returned the favor by banishing Attalus to the island of Lipara 35 Northeastern Gaul became subject to even greater Frankish influence while a treaty signed in 418 granted to the Visigoths southwestern Gaul the former Gallia Aquitania Under the influence of Constantius Honorius issued the Edict of 418 which was designed to enable the Empire to retain a hold on the lands which were to be surrendered to the Goths 36 This edict relaxed the administrative bonds that connected all the Seven Provinces The Maritime Alps Narbonensis Prima Narbonensis Secunda Novempopulania Aquitania Prima Aquitania Secunda and Viennensis with the central government It removed the imperial governors and allowed the inhabitants as a dependent federation to conduct their own affairs for which purpose representatives of all the towns were to meet every year in Arles 37 In 417 Constantius married Honorius s sister Galla Placidia much against her will 35 In 421 Honorius recognized him as co emperor Constantius III 38 however when the announcement of his elevation was sent to Constantinople Theodosius refused to recognise him Constantius enraged began preparations for a military conflict with the eastern empire but before he could commence it he died in September 421 39 In 420 422 another Maximus or perhaps the same gained and lost power in Hispania By the time of Honorius s death in 423 Britain Spain and Gaul had been ravaged by barbarians 40 In his final years Honorius reportedly developed a physical attraction to his half sister and in order to escape his unwelcome attentions Galla Placidia and her children the future emperor Valentinian III and his sister Honoria fled to Constantinople 41 Death Edit Honorius died of edema on 15 August 423 leaving no heir 18 In the subsequent interregnum Joannes was nominated Emperor The following year however the Eastern Emperor Theodosius II installed his cousin Valentinian III son of Galla Placidia and Constantius III as Emperor Reconstruction of Old St Peter s Basilica The Mausoleum of Honorius is the domed structure at the extreme top left behind the rotunda Sant Andrea and the Vatican Obelisk The Mausoleum of Honorius was located on the Vatican Hill accessed from the transept of the Old Saint Peter s Basilica It was first used for Maria Probably Thermantia and Honorius s sister Galla Placidia and perhaps other imperial family members were later buried there In the 8th century it was transformed into a church the Chapel of St Petronilla which held the relics of the saint and was demolished when the New St Peter s was erected 42 43 The year 410 also saw Honorius reply to a British plea for assistance against local barbarian incursions called the Rescript of Honorius Preoccupied with the Visigoths Honorius lacked any military capability to assist the distant province According to the sixth century Byzantine scholar Zosimus Honorius wrote letters to the cities in Britain bidding them to guard themselves 44 This sentence is located randomly in the middle of a discussion of southern Italy no further mention of Britain is made which has led some modern academics to suggest that the rescript does not apply to Britain but to Bruttium in Italy 17 45 46 Assessments Edit The Favourites of the Emperor Honorius by John William Waterhouse 1883 In his History of the Wars Procopius mentions a likely apocryphal story where on hearing the news that Rome had perished Honorius was initially shocked thinking the news was in reference to a favourite chicken he had named Roma At that time they say that the Emperor Honorius in Ravenna received the message from one of the eunuchs evidently a keeper of the poultry that Rome had perished And he cried out and said And yet it has just eaten from my hands For he had a very large cock Rome by name and the eunuch comprehending his words said that it was the city of Rome which had perished at the hands of Alaric and the emperor with a sigh of relief answered quickly But I thought that my fowl Rome had perished So great they say was the folly with which this emperor was possessed Procopius The Vandalic War III 2 25 26 While the tale is discounted as a rumour by more recent historians like Edward Gibbon it is useful in understanding Roman public opinion towards Honorius 47 Honorius was negatively assessed by some 19th and 20th century historians including J B Bury 48 Honorius issued a decree during his reign prohibiting men from wearing trousers in Rome 49 The last known gladiatorial games took place during the reign of Honorius 50 who banned the practice in 399 and again in 404 reportedly due to the martyrdom of a Christian monk named Telemachus while he was protesting a gladiator fight See also Edit Solidus of Honorius Usurpers during Honorius reign Priscus Attalus in Rome two times both as a puppet of Alaric Maximus in Hispania Marcus Gratian Constantine III and Constans II in Gaul and Britain Jovinus and Sebastianus joint puppets of Gundahar and Goar Co emperors with Honorius Constantius III Succession to Honorius Joannes and Valentinian III Ancient Rome The Rise and Fall of an EmpireReferences Edit McEvoy 2013 p 137 Oberhaupt von Kaiser Honorius als Kind spates 4 Jahrhundert n Chr Marmor MeisterDrucke in German Retrieved 14 March 2023 http laststatues classics ox ac uk LSA 833 J Lenaghan Williams Stephen and Gerard Friell Theodosius The Empire at Bay Yale University Press 1994 p 129 Blockley 2003 p 113 McEvoy 2013 p 188 Frasetto Michael 2003 Encyclopedia of Barbarian Europe Society in Transformation Santa Barbara ABC CLIO ISBN 1576072630 p 320 Google Books McEvoy 2013 p 141 Bury 1889 p 77 Bury 1889 p 105 a b c Bury 1889 p 110 Bury 1889 p 76 McEvoy 2013 p 157 Bury 1889 p 108 Bury 1889 p 109 a b Bury 1889 p 111 a b Birley 2005 pp 461 463 a b Jones p 442 Hussey Joan M 1957 The Cambridge Medieval History Cambridge University Press p 268 Fleischer Jens Hannestad Niels Lund John Nielsen Marjatta 2001 Late Antiquity Art in Context Museum Tusculanum Press pp 146 150 ISBN 9788772896397 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Bury 1889 p 112 Bury 1889 p 113 a b McEvoy 2013 p 184 a b Elton 2018 p 178 a b Elton 2018 p 179 Bury 1889 pp 174 175 J Norwich Byzantium The Early Centuries 136 full citation needed Adrian Goldsworthy The Fall of the West The Slow Death of the Roman Superpower paperback edition published in 2010 by Phoenix an imprint of Orion Books Ltd London p 310 a b Gibbon p 1118 full citation needed Gibbon p 1119 Bury 1889 pp 183 184 Bury 1889 p 142 Bury 1889 p 145 a b Bury 1889 p 146 a b Bury 1889 p 150 Bury 1889 p 153 Bury 1889 p 154 Bury 1889 p 151 Bury 1889 p 155 Bury 1889 p 211 Bury 1889 p 156 The Roman Imperial Mausoleum in Late Antiquity Roger Pearse 16 May 2014 Old St Peters the Circus of Caligula and the Phrygianum Roger Pearse s blog Retrieved 1 December 2015 Zosimus vi 10 2 Halsall Guy Barbarian migrations and the Roman West 376 568 Cambridge University Press illustrated edition 2007 ISBN 978 0 521 43491 1 pp 217 218 Discussion in Martin Millett The Romanization of Britain Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1990 and in Philip Bartholomew Fifth Century Facts Britannia vol 13 1982 p 260 Edward Gibbon The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire Volume 3 Harrison and Sons 1854 p 460 Summarising Procopius account of Honorius s reign wrote His name would be forgotten among the obscurest occupants of the Imperial throne were it not that his reign coincided with the fatal period in which it was decided that western Europe was to pass from the Roman to the Teuton After listing the disasters of those 28 years Bury concluded Honorius himself did nothing of note against the enemies who infested his realm but personally he was extraordinarily fortunate in occupying the throne till he died a natural death and witnessing the destruction of the multitude of tyrants who rose up against him John Bagnall Bury History of the Later Roman Empire 1923 New York Dover 1958 p 213 Codex Theodosianus 14 10 2 3 tr C Pharr The Theodosian Code p 415 The Reign of Honorius Telemachus and the End of the Gladiators by Linda Alchin Honorius 5 March 2015 retrieved 12 October 2016Sources EditPrimary sources Edit Aurelius Victor Epitome de Caesaribus English version of Epitome de Caesaribus Zosimus Historia Nova Books 4 6 Historia NovaSecondary sources Edit Birley Anthony Richard 2005 The Roman Government of Britain Oxford University Press Blockley R C 2003 The dynasty of Theodosius In Garnsey Peter Cameron Averil eds The Cambridge Ancient History Vol XIII The Late Empire A D 337 425 Cambridge University Press Doyle Chris Honorius The Fight for the Roman West AD 395 423 Roman Imperial Biographies Routledge 2018 Doyle Christopher The Endgame of Treason Suppressing Rebellion and Usurpation in the Late Roman Empire AD 397 411 2014 National University of Ireland Galway Unpublished doctoral thesis https aran library nuigalway ie handle 10379 4631 Elton Hugh 2018 The Roman Empire in Late Antiquity A Political and Military History Cambridge University Press Kovacs Tamas 410 Honorius His Rooster and the Eunuch Procop Vand 1 2 25 26 Graeco Latina Brunensia 25 no 2 2020 131 48 https doi org 10 5817 GLB2020 2 10 Mathisen Ralph Honorius 395 423 A D De Imperatoribus Romanis McEvoy Meaghan A 2010 Rome and the transformation of the imperial office in the late fourth mid fifth centuries A D Papers of the British School at Rome 78 151 192 McEvoy Meaghan A 2013 Child Emperor Rule in the Late Roman West A D 367 455 Oxford Classical Monographs Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 966481 8 McEvoy Meaghan A 2013 The mausoleum of Honorius late Roman imperial Christianity and the city of Rome in the fifth century in Rosamond McKitterick John Osbourne Carol M Richards Joanna Story eds Old St Peter s Rome Cambridge Cambridge University Press 119 136 Jones Arnold Hugh Martin Martindale J R Morris John eds 1971 Fl Honorius 3 Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire Vol I AD 260 395 ISBN 9780521072335 Bury John Bagnell 1889 A History of the Later Roman Empire from Arcadius to Irene 395 A D to 800 A D Macmillan Publishers Gibbon Edward Decline amp Fall of the Roman Empire 1888 full citation needed External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Honorius This list of Roman laws of the fourth century shows laws passed by Honorius relating to Christianity Regnal titlesPreceded byTheodosius I Western Roman emperor395 423with Constantius III 421 Succeeded byJoannesPolitical officesPreceded byArcadiusBauto Roman consul386with Euodius Succeeded byValentinian IIEutropiusPreceded byTheodosius IAbundatius Roman consul II394with Arcadius Succeeded byAnicius Hermogenianus OlybriusAnicius ProbinusPreceded byAnicius Hermogenianus OlybriusAnicius Probinus Roman consul III396with Arcadius Succeeded byCaesariusNonius AtticusPreceded byCaesariusNonius Atticus Roman consul IV398with Eutychianus Succeeded byMallius TheodorusEutropiusPreceded byVincentiusFravitta Roman consul V402with Arcadius Succeeded byTheodosius IIRumoridusPreceded byTheodosius IIRumoridus Roman consul VI404with Aristaenetus Succeeded byStilichoAnthemiusPreceded byArcadiusAnicius Petronius Probus Roman consul VII407with Theodosius II Succeeded byAnicius Auchenius BassusPhilippusPreceded byAnicius Auchenius BassusPhilippus Roman consul VIII409with Theodosius II Succeeded byVaranesTertullusPreceded byTheodosius II Roman consul IX412with Theodosius II Succeeded byHeraclianusLuciusPreceded byConstantius IIIConstans Roman consul X415with Theodosius II Succeeded byTheodosius IIJunius Quartus PalladiusPreceded byTheodosius IIJunius Quartus Palladius Roman consul XI417 418with Constantius III and Theodosius II Succeeded byMonaxiusPlintaPreceded byAgricolaEustathius Roman consul XII422with Theodosius II Succeeded byAvitus MarinianusAsclepiodotus Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w 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