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Western Roman Empire

The Western Roman Empire comprised the western provinces of the Roman Empire at any time during which they were administered by a separate independent Imperial court; in particular, this term is used in historiography to describe the period from 395 to 476, where there were separate coequal courts dividing the governance of the empire in the Western and the Eastern provinces, with a distinct imperial succession in the separate courts. The terms Western Roman Empire and Eastern Roman Empire were coined in modern times to describe political entities that were de facto independent; contemporary Romans did not consider the Empire to have been split into two empires but viewed it as a single polity governed by two imperial courts as an administrative expediency. The Western Roman Empire collapsed in 476, and the Western imperial court in Ravenna was formally dissolved by Justinian in 554. The Eastern imperial court lasted until 1453.

Western Roman Empire
395–476/480b
Labarum
(the usual type
according to coins)
The Western Roman Empire in 418 AD, following the abandonment of Britannia and the settlement of the Visigoths, Burgundians, and Suebi within imperial territory as foederati
StatusWestern division of the Roman Empirea
CapitalMediolanum
(286–330, 395–401)[1]
Constantinople
(330–395)
Ravenna
(401–403, 408–450, 457–461, 475–476)
Rome
(403–408, 450–457, 461–475)[2]Salona/Spalatumc
(475–480)
Common languagesLatin (official)
Regional / local languages
Religion
Polytheistic Roman Religion until 4th century
Nicene Christianity (state church) after 380
Demonym(s)Roman
GovernmentAutocracy
Roman Emperor 
• 395–423
Honorius
• 457–461
Majorian
• 474–480
Julius Nepos
• 475–476
Romulus Augustulus
LegislatureRoman Senate
Historical eraLate antiquity
• Death of Emperor Theodosius I
17 January 395
• Deposition of Emperor Romulus
4 September 476
• Murder of Julius Nepos
9 May 480
Area
395[3]2,000,000 km2 (770,000 sq mi)
CurrencyRoman currency
  1. ^ Since the Western Roman Empire was not a distinct state separate from the Eastern Roman Empire, there was no particular official term that designated the Western provinces or their government, which was simply known at the time as the "Roman Empire". Terms such as Imperium Romanum Occidentale and Hesperium Imperium were either never in official usage or invented by later medieval or modern historians long after the Western Roman court had fallen. In the ancient era the Latin term often used was "S.P.Q.R." ("Senatus Populusque Romanus" ["Senate and People of Rome"] Latin) used in documents, on flags and banners and carved/engraved on buildings.
  2. ^ Whilst the deposition of Emperor Romulus Augustulus in 476 is the most commonly cited end date for the Western Roman Empire, the last Western Roman emperor Julius Nepos, was assassinated in 480, when the title and notion of a separate Western Empire were abolished. Another suggested end date is the reorganization of the Italian peninsula and abolition of separate Western Roman administrative institutions under Emperor Justinian during the latter half of the 6th century.
  3. ^ The de jure last emperor, Julius Nepos, reigned for five years in exile from Salona/Spalatum in Dalmatia.[4][5][6]

Though the Empire had seen periods with more than one emperor ruling jointly before, the view that it was impossible for a single emperor to govern the entire Empire was institutionalised with reforms to Roman law by emperor Diocletian following the disastrous civil wars and disintegrations of the Crisis of the Third Century. He introduced the system of the tetrarchy in 286, with two senior emperors titled Augustus, one in the East and one in the West, each with an appointed Caesar (junior emperor and designated successor). Though the tetrarchic system would collapse in a matter of years, the East–West administrative division would endure in one form or another over the coming centuries. As such, the Western Roman Empire would exist intermittently in several periods between the 3rd and 5th centuries. Some emperors, such as Constantine I and Theodosius I, governed as the sole Augustus across the Roman Empire. On the death of Theodosius I in 395, he divided the empire between his two sons, with Honorius as his successor in the West, governing briefly from Mediolanum and then from Ravenna, and Arcadius as his successor in the East, governing from Constantinople.

In 476, after the Battle of Ravenna, the Roman Army in the West suffered defeat at the hands of Odoacer and his Germanic foederati. Odoacer forced the deposition of emperor Romulus Augustulus and became the first King of Italy. In 480, following the assassination of the previous Western emperor Julius Nepos, the Eastern emperor Zeno dissolved the Western court and proclaimed himself the sole emperor of the Roman Empire. The date of 476 was popularized by the 18th-century British historian Edward Gibbon as a demarcating event for the end of the Western Empire and is sometimes used to mark the transition from Antiquity to the Middle Ages. Odoacer's Italy, and other barbarian kingdoms, many of them representing former Western Roman allies that had been granted lands in return for military assistance, would maintain a pretense of Roman continuity through the continued use of the old Roman administrative systems and nominal subservience to the Eastern Roman court.

In the 6th century, emperor Justinian I re-imposed direct Imperial rule on large parts of the former Western Roman Empire, including the prosperous regions of North Africa, the ancient Roman heartland of Italy and parts of Hispania. Political instability in the Eastern heartlands, combined with foreign invasions and religious differences, made efforts to retain control of these territories difficult and they were gradually lost for good. Though the Eastern Empire retained territories in the south of Italy until the eleventh century, the influence that the Empire had over Western Europe had diminished significantly. The papal coronation of the Frankish King Charlemagne as Roman Emperor in 800 marked a new imperial line that would evolve into the Holy Roman Empire, which presented a revival of the Imperial title in Western Europe but was in no meaningful sense an extension of Roman traditions or institutions. The Great Schism of 1054 between the churches of Rome and Constantinople further diminished any authority the emperor in Constantinople could hope to exert in the west.

Background

As the Roman Republic expanded, it reached a point where the central government in Rome could not effectively rule the distant provinces. Communications and transportation were especially problematic given the vast extent of the Empire. News of invasion, revolt, natural disasters, or epidemic outbreak was carried by ship or mounted postal service, often requiring much time to reach Rome and for Rome's orders to be returned and acted upon. Therefore, provincial governors had de facto autonomy in the name of the Roman Republic. Governors had several duties, including the command of armies, handling the taxes of the province and serving as the province's chief judges.[7]

Prior to the establishment of the Empire, the territories of the Roman Republic had been divided in 43 BC among the members of the Second Triumvirate: Mark Antony, Octavian and Marcus Aemilius Lepidus. Antony received the provinces in the East: Achaea, Macedonia and Epirus (roughly modern Greece, Albania and the coast of Croatia), Bithynia, Pontus and Asia (roughly modern Turkey), Syria, Cyprus, and Cyrenaica.[8] These lands had previously been conquered by Alexander the Great; thus, much of the aristocracy was of Greek origin. The whole region, especially the major cities, had been largely assimilated into Greek culture, Greek often serving as the lingua franca.[9]

 
The Roman Republic before the conquests of Octavian

Octavian obtained the Roman provinces of the West: Italia (modern Italy), Gaul (modern France), Gallia Belgica (parts of modern Belgium, the Netherlands and Luxembourg), and Hispania (modern Spain and Portugal).[8] These lands also included Greek and Carthaginian colonies in the coastal areas, though Celtic tribes such as Gauls and Celtiberians were culturally dominant. Lepidus received the minor province of Africa (roughly modern Tunisia). Octavian soon took Africa from Lepidus, while adding Sicilia (modern Sicily) to his holdings.[10]

Upon the defeat of Mark Antony, a victorious Octavian controlled a united Roman Empire. The Empire featured many distinct cultures, all experienced a gradual Romanization.[11] While the predominantly Greek culture of the East and the predominantly Latin culture of the West functioned effectively as an integrated whole, political and military developments would ultimately realign the Empire along those cultural and linguistic lines. More often than not, Greek and Latin practices (and to some extent the languages themselves) would be combined in fields such as history (e.g., those by Cato the Elder), philosophy and rhetoric.[12][13][14]

Rebellions and political developments

 
  Roman Empire in 117 CE at its greatest extent, at the time of Trajan's death

Minor rebellions and uprisings were fairly common events throughout the Empire. Conquered tribes or oppressed cities would revolt, and the legions would be detached to crush the rebellion. While this process was simple in peacetime, it could be considerably more complicated in wartime. In a full-blown military campaign, the legions were far more numerous – as, for example, those led by Vespasian in the First Jewish–Roman War. To ensure a commander's loyalty, a pragmatic emperor might hold some members of the general's family hostage. To this end, Nero effectively held Domitian and Quintus Petillius Cerialis, Governor of Ostia, who were respectively the younger son and brother-in-law of Vespasian. Nero's rule was ended by a revolt of the Praetorian Guard, who had been bribed in the name of Galba. The Praetorian Guard, a figurative "sword of Damocles", was often perceived as being of dubious loyalty, primarily due its role in court intrigues and in overthrowing several emperors, including Pertinax and Aurelian.[16][17] Following their example, the legions at the borders increasingly participated in civil wars. For instance, legions stationed in Egypt and the eastern provinces would see significant participation in the civil war of 218 between Emperor Macrinus and Elagabalus.[18]

As the Empire expanded, two key frontiers revealed themselves. In the West, behind the rivers Rhine and Danube, Germanic tribes were an important enemy. Augustus, the first emperor, had tried to conquer them but had pulled back after the disastrous Battle of the Teutoburg Forest.[19] Whilst the Germanic tribes were formidable foes, the Parthian Empire in the East presented the greatest threat to the Empire. The Parthians were too remote and powerful to be conquered and there was a constant Parthian threat of invasion. The Parthians repelled several Roman invasions, and even after successful wars of conquest, such as those implemented by Trajan or Septimius Severus, the conquered territories were forsaken in attempts to ensure a lasting peace with the Parthians. The Parthian Empire would be succeeded by the Sasanian Empire, which continued hostilities with the Roman Empire.[20]

Controlling the western border of Rome was reasonably easy because it was relatively close to Rome itself and also because of the disunity among the Germans. However, controlling both frontiers simultaneously during wartime was difficult. If the emperor was near the border in the East, the chances were high that an ambitious general would rebel in the West and vice versa. This wartime opportunism plagued many ruling emperors and indeed paved the road to power for several future emperors. By the time of the Crisis of the Third Century, usurpation became a common method of succession: Philip the Arab, Trebonianus Gallus and Aemilianus were all usurping generals-turned-emperors whose rule would end with usurpation by another powerful general.[21][22][23]

Crisis of the Third Century

 
The Roman, Gallic and Palmyrene Empires in 271 AD

With the assassination of the emperor Alexander Severus on 18 March 235, the Roman Empire sank into a 50-year period of civil war, now known as the Crisis of the Third Century. The rise of the bellicose Sasanian Empire in place of Parthia posed a major threat to Rome in the east, as demonstrated by Shapur I's capture of Emperor Valerian in 259. Valerian's eldest son and heir-apparent, Gallienus, succeeded him and took up the fight on the eastern frontier. Gallienus' son, Saloninus, and the Praetorian Prefect Silvanus were residing in Colonia Agrippina (modern Cologne) to solidify the loyalty of the local legions. Nevertheless, Marcus Cassianius Latinius Postumus – the local governor of the German provinces – rebelled; his assault on Colonia Agrippina resulted in the deaths of Saloninus and the prefect. In the confusion that followed, an independent state known in modern historiography as the Gallic Empire emerged.[24]

Its capital was Augusta Treverorum (modern Trier), and it quickly expanded its control over the German and Gaulish provinces, all of Hispania and Britannia. It had its own senate, and a partial list of its consuls still survives. It maintained Roman religion, language, and culture, and was far more concerned with fighting the Germanic tribes, fending off Germanic incursions and restoring the security the Gallic provinces had enjoyed in the past, than in challenging the Roman central government.[25] However, in the reign of Claudius Gothicus (268 to 270), large expanses of the Gallic Empire were restored to Roman rule. At roughly the same time, several eastern provinces seceded to form the Palmyrene Empire, under the rule of Queen Zenobia.[26]

In 272, Emperor Aurelian finally managed to reclaim Palmyra and its territory for the empire. With the East secure, his attention turned to the West, invading the Gallic Empire a year later. Aurelian decisively defeated Tetricus I in the Battle of Châlons, and soon captured Tetricus and his son Tetricus II. Both Zenobia and the Tetrici were pardoned, although they were first paraded in a triumph.[27][28]

Tetrarchy

 
The organization of the Empire under the Tetrarchy

Diocletian was the first emperor to divide the Roman Empire into a Tetrarchy. In 286 he elevated Maximian to the rank of Augustus (emperor) and gave him control of the Western Empire while he himself ruled the East.[29][30][31] In 293, Galerius and Constantius Chlorus were appointed as their subordinates (caesars), creating the First Tetrarchy. This system effectively divided the Empire into four major regions, as a way to avoid the civil unrest that had marked the 3rd century. In the West, Maximian made Mediolanum (now Milan) his capital, and Constantius made Trier his. In the East, Galerius made his capital Sirmium and Diocletian made Nicomedia his. On 1 May 305, Diocletian and Maximian abdicated, replaced by Galerius and Constantius, who appointed Maximinus II and Valerius Severus, respectively, as their caesars, creating the Second Tetrarchy.[32]

The Tetrarchy collapsed after the unexpected death of Constantius in 306. His son, Constantine the Great, was declared Western emperor by the British legions,[33][34][35][36] but several other claimants arose and attempted to seize the Western Empire. In 308, Galerius held a meeting at Carnuntum, where he revived the Tetrarchy by dividing the Western Empire between Constantine and Licinius.[37] However, Constantine was more interested in conquering the whole empire than he was in the stability of the Tetrarchy, and by 314, began to compete against Licinius. Constantine defeated Licinius in 324, at the Battle of Chrysopolis, where Licinius was taken prisoner, and later murdered.[38] After Constantine unified the empire, he refounded the city of Byzantium in modern-day Turkey as Nova Roma ("New Rome"), later called Constantinople, and made it the capital of the Roman Empire.[39] The Tetrarchy was ended, although the concept of physically splitting the Roman Empire between two emperors remained. Although several powerful emperors unified both parts of the empire, this generally reverted into an empire divided into an East and a West upon their deaths, as happened after the deaths of Constantine and Theodosius I.[40][41]

Further divisions

 
Division of the Roman Empire among the Caesars appointed by Constantine I: from west to east, the territories of Constantine II, Constans I, Dalmatius and Constantius II. After the death of Constantine I (May 337), this was the formal division of the Empire, until Dalmatius was killed and his territory divided between Constans and Constantius.

The Roman Empire was under the rule of a single emperor, but, with the death of Constantine in 337, the empire was partitioned between his surviving male heirs.[40] Constantius, his third son and the second by his wife Fausta (Maximian's daughter)[42] received the eastern provinces, including Constantinople, Thrace, Asia Minor, Syria, Egypt, and Cyrenaica; Constantine II received Britannia, Gaul, Hispania, and Mauretania; and Constans, initially under the supervision of Constantine II, received Italy, Africa, Illyricum, Pannonia, Macedonia, and Achaea. The provinces of Thrace, Achaea and Macedonia were shortly controlled by Dalmatius, nephew of Constantine I and a caesar, not an Augustus, until his murder by his own soldiers in 337.[43] The West was unified in 340 under Constans, who was assassinated in 350 under the order of the usurper Magnentius. After Magnentius lost the Battle of Mursa Major and committed suicide, a complete reunification of the whole Empire occurred under Constantius in 353.[42]

Constantius II focused most of his power in the East. Under his rule, the city of Byzantium – only recently re-founded as Constantinople – was fully developed as a capital. At Constantinople, the political, economic and military control of the Eastern Empire's resources would remain safe for centuries to come. The city was well fortified and located at the crossroads of several major trade and military routes. The site had been acknowledged for its strategic importance already by emperors Septimius Severus and Caracalla, more than a century prior.[44]

In 361, Constantius II became ill and died, and Constantius Chlorus' grandson Julian, who had served as Constantius II's Caesar, assumed power. Julian was killed in 363 in the Battle of Samarra against the Persian Empire and was succeeded by Jovian, who ruled for only nine months.[45] Following the death of Jovian, Valentinian I emerged as emperor in 364. He immediately divided the Empire once again, giving the eastern half to his brother Valens. Stability was not achieved for long in either half, as the conflicts with outside forces (barbarian tribes) intensified. In 376, the Visigoths, fleeing before the Ostrogoths, who in turn were fleeing before the Huns, were allowed to cross the river Danube and settle in the Balkans by the Eastern government. Mistreatment caused a full-scale rebellion, and in 378 they inflicted a crippling defeat on the Eastern Roman field army in the Battle of Adrianople, in which Emperor Valens also died. The defeat at Adrianople was shocking to the Romans, and forced them to negotiate with and settle the Visigoths within the borders of the Empire, where they would become semi-independent foederati under their own leaders.[46]

 
The division of the Empire after the death of Theodosius I, c. 395 AD, superimposed on modern borders
  Western Court under Honorius

More than in the East, there was also opposition to the Christianizing policy of the emperors in the western part of the Empire. In 379, Valentinian I's son and successor Gratian declined to wear the mantle of Pontifex Maximus, and in 382 he rescinded the rights of pagan priests and removed the Altar of Victory from the Roman Curia, a decision which caused dissatisfaction among the traditionally pagan aristocracy of Rome.[47]

The political situation was unstable. In 383, a powerful and popular general named Magnus Maximus seized power in the West and forced Gratian's half-brother Valentinian II to flee to the East for aid; in a destructive civil war the Eastern emperor Theodosius I restored him to power.[48] In 392, the Frankish and pagan magister militum Arbogast assassinated Valentinian II and proclaimed an obscure senator named Eugenius as emperor. In 394 the forces of the two halves of the Empire again clashed with great loss of life. Again Theodosius I won, and he briefly ruled a united Empire until his death in 395. He was the last emperor to rule both parts of the Roman Empire before the West fragmented and collapsed.[41]

Theodosius I's older son Arcadius inherited the eastern half while the younger Honorius got the western half. Both were still minors and neither was capable of ruling effectively. Honorius was placed under the tutelage of the half-Roman/half-barbarian magister militum Flavius Stilicho,[49] while Rufinus became the power behind the throne in the east. Rufinus and Stilicho were rivals, and their disagreements would be exploited by the Gothic leader Alaric I who again rebelled in 408 following the massacre by Roman legions of thousands of barbarian families who were trying to assimilate into the Roman empire.[50]

Neither half of the Empire could raise forces sufficient even to subdue Alaric's men, and both tried to use Alaric against the other half. Alaric himself tried to establish a long-term territorial and official base, but was never able to do so. Stilicho tried to defend Italy and bring the invading Goths under control, but to do so he stripped the Rhine frontier of troops and the Vandals, Alans, and Suevi invaded Gaul in large numbers in 406. Stilicho became a victim of court intrigues and was killed in 408. While the East began a slow recovery and consolidation, the West began to collapse entirely. Alaric's men sacked Rome in 410.[51]

History

Reign of Honorius

 
Gold solidus of Honorius

Honorius, the younger son of Theodosius I, was declared Augustus (and as such co-emperor with his father) on 23 January in 393, at the age of 9. Upon the death of Theodosius, Honorius inherited the throne of the West at the age of ten whilst his older brother Arcadius inherited the East. The western capital was initially Mediolanum, as it had been during previous divisions, but it was moved to Ravenna in 401 upon the entry of the Visigothic king Alaric I into Italy. Ravenna, protected by abundant marshes and strong fortifications, was far easier to defend and had easy access to the imperial fleet of the Eastern Empire but made it more difficult for the Roman military to defend the central parts of Italy from regular barbarian incursions.[52] Ravenna would remain the western capital until 450 when Valentinian III moved the court back to Rome. Most western emperors from 450 until 475 reigned from Rome. The last de facto western emperor Romulus Augustulus resided in Ravenna from 475 until his deposition in 476 and Ravenna would later be the capital of both the Ostrogothic Kingdom and the Exarchate of Ravenna.[53][54]

Despite the moved capital, economic power remained focused on Rome and its rich senatorial aristocracy which dominated much of Italy and Africa in particular. After Emperor Gallienus had banned senators from army commands in the mid-3rd century, the senatorial elite lost all experience of – and interest in – military life.[55] In the early 5th century the wealthy landowning elite of the Roman Senate largely barred its tenants from military service, but it also refused to approve sufficient funding for maintaining a sufficiently powerful mercenary army to defend the entire Western Empire. The West's most important military area had been northern Gaul and the Rhine frontier in the 4th century, when Trier frequently served as a military capital of sorts for the Empire. Many leading Western generals were barbarians.[56]

The reign of Honorius was, even by Western Roman standards, chaotic and plagued by both internal and external struggles. The Visigothic foederati under Alaric, magister militum in Illyricum, rebelled in 395. Gildo, the Comes Africae and Magister utriusque militiae per Africam, rebelled in 397 and initiated the Gildonic War. Stilicho managed to subdue Gildo but was campaigning in Raetia when the Visigoths entered Italy in 402.[57] Stilicho, hurrying back to aid in defending Italy, summoned legions in Gaul and Britain with which he managed to defeat Alaric twice before agreeing to allow him to retreat back to Illyria.[58]

 
Barbarian invasions and the invasion of usurper Constantine III in the Western Roman Empire during the reign of Honorius, 407–409

The weakening of the frontiers in Britain and Gaul had dire consequences for the Empire. As the imperial government was not providing the military protection the northern provinces expected and needed, numerous usurpers arose in Britain, including Marcus (406–407), Gratian (407), and Constantine III who invaded Gaul in 407.[59] Britain was effectively abandoned by the empire by 410 due to the lack of resources and the need to look after more important frontiers. The weakening of the Rhine frontier allowed multiple barbarian tribes, including the Vandals, Alans and Suebi, to cross the river and enter Roman territory in 406.[60]

Honorius was convinced by the minister Olympius that Stilicho was conspiring to overthrow him, and so arrested and executed Stilicho in 408.[61] Olympius headed a conspiracy that orchestrated the deaths of key individuals related to the faction of Stilicho, including his son and the families of many of his federated troops. This led many of the soldiers to instead join with Alaric, who returned to Italy in 409 and met little opposition. Despite attempts by Honorius to reach a settlement and six legions of Eastern Roman soldiers sent to support him,[62] the negotiations between Alaric and Honorius broke down in 410 and Alaric sacked the city of Rome. Though the sack was relatively mild and Rome was no longer the capital of even the Western Empire, the event shocked people across both halves of the Empire as this was the first time Rome (viewed at least as the symbolic heart of the Empire) had fallen to a foreign enemy since the Gallic invasions of the 4th century BC. The Eastern Roman emperor Theodosius II, the successor of Arcadius, declared three days of mourning in Constantinople.[63]

Without Stilicho and following the sack of Rome, Honorius' reign grew more chaotic. The usurper Constantine III had stripped Roman Britain of its defenses when he crossed over to Gaul in 407, leaving the Romanized population subject to invasions, first by the Picts and then by the Saxons, Angli, and the Jutes who began to settle permanently from about 440 onwards. After Honorius accepted Constantine as co-emperor, Constantine's general in Hispania, Gerontius, proclaimed Maximus as emperor. With the aid of general Constantius, Honorius defeated Gerontius and Maximus in 411 and shortly thereafter captured and executed Constantine III. With Constantius back in Italy, the Gallo-Roman senator Jovinus revolted after proclaiming himself emperor, with the support of the Gallic nobility and the barbarian Burgundians and Alans. Honorius turned to the Visigoths under King Athaulf for support.[64] Athaulf defeated and executed Jovinus and his proclaimed co-emperor Sebastianus in 413, around the same time as another usurper arose in Africa, Heraclianus. Heraclianus attempted to invade Italy but failed and retreated to Carthage, where he was killed.[65]

With the Roman legions withdrawn, northern Gaul became increasingly subject to Frankish influence, the Franks naturally adopting a leading role in the region. In 418, Honorius granted southwestern Gaul (Gallia Aquitania) to the Visigoths as a vassal federation. Honorius removed the local imperial governors, leaving the Visigoths and the provincial Roman inhabitants to conduct their own affairs. As such, the first of the "barbarian kingdoms", the Visigothic Kingdom, was formed.[66]

Escalating barbarian conflicts

 
Germanic and Hunnic invasions of the Roman Empire, 100–500 AD

Honorius' death in 423 was followed by turmoil until the Eastern Roman government installed Valentinian III as Western emperor in Ravenna by force of arms, with Galla Placidia acting as regent during her son's minority. Theodosius II, the Eastern emperor, had hesitated to announce the death of Honorius and in the ensuing interregnum, Joannes was nominated as Western emperor. Joannes' "rule" was short and the forces of the East defeated and executed him in 425.[67]

 
Boxwood relief depicting the liberation of a besieged city by a relief force, with those defending the walls making a sortie. Western Roman Empire, early 5th century AD

After a violent struggle with several rivals, and against Placidia's wish, Aetius rose to the rank of magister militum. Aetius was able to stabilize the Western Empire's military situation somewhat, relying heavily on his Hunnic allies. With their help Aetius undertook extensive campaigns in Gaul, defeating the Visigoths in 437 and 438 but suffering a defeat himself in 439, ending the conflict in a status quo ante with a treaty.[68]

Meanwhile, pressure from the Visigoths and a rebellion by Bonifacius, the governor of Africa, induced the Vandals under King Gaiseric to cross from Spain to Tingitana in what is now Morocco in 429. They temporarily halted in Numidia in 435 before moving eastward. With Aetius occupied in Gaul, the Western Roman government could do nothing to prevent the Vandals conquering the wealthy African provinces, culminating in the fall of Carthage on 19 October 439 and the establishment of the Vandal Kingdom. By the 400s, Italy and Rome itself were dependent on the taxes and foodstuffs from these provinces, leading to an economic crisis. With Vandal fleets becoming an increasing danger to Roman sea trade and the coasts and islands of the western and central Mediterranean, Aetius coordinated a counterattack against the Vandals in 440, organizing a large army in Sicily.[69]

However, the plans for retaking Africa had to be abandoned due to the immediate need to combat the invading Huns, who in 444 were united under their ambitious king Attila. Turning against their former ally, the Huns became a formidable threat to the Empire. Aetius transferred his forces to the Danube,[69] though Attila concentrated on raiding the Eastern Roman provinces in the Balkans, providing temporary relief to the Western Empire. In 449, Attila received a message from Honoria, Valentinian III's sister, offering him half the western empire if he would rescue her from an unwanted marriage that her brother was forcing her into. With a pretext to invade the West, Attila secured peace with the Eastern court and crossed the Rhine in early 451.[70] With Attila wreaking havoc in Gaul, Aetius gathered a coalition of Roman and Germanic forces, including Visigoths and Burgundians, and prevented the Huns from taking the city of Aurelianum, forcing them into retreat.[71] At the Battle of the Catalaunian Plains, the Roman-Germanic coalition met and defeated the Hunnic forces, though Attila escaped.[72]

Attila regrouped and invaded Italy in 452. With Aetius not having enough forces to attack him, the road to Rome was open. Valentinian sent Pope Leo I and two leading senators to negotiate with Attila. This embassy, combined with a plague among Attila's troops, the threat of famine, and news that the Eastern emperor Marcian had launched an attack on the Hun homelands along the Danube, forced Attila to turn back and leave Italy. When Attila died unexpectedly in 453, the power struggle that erupted between his sons ended the threat posed by the Huns.[73]

Internal unrest and Majorian

 
The Western Roman Empire during the reign of Majorian in 460 AD. During his four-year-long reign from 457 to 461, Majorian restored Western Roman authority in Hispania and most of Gaul. Despite his accomplishments, Roman rule in the west would last less than two more decades.

Valentinian III was intimidated by Aetius and was encouraged by the Roman senator Petronius Maximus and the chamberlain Heraclius to assassinate him. When Aetius was at court in Ravenna delivering a financial account, Valentinian suddenly leaped from his seat and declared that he would no longer be the victim of Aetius' drunken depravities. Aetius attempted to defend himself from the charges, but Valentinian drew his sword and struck the weaponless Aetius on the head, killing him on the spot.[74] On 16 March the following year, Valentinian himself was killed by supporters of the dead general, possibly acting for Petronius Maximus. With the end of the Theodosian dynasty, Petronius Maximus proclaimed himself emperor during the ensuing period of unrest.[75]

Petronius was not able to take effective control of the significantly weakened and unstable Empire. He broke the betrothal between Huneric, son of the Vandal king Gaiseric, and Eudocia, daughter of Valentinian III. This was seen as a just cause of war by King Gaiseric, who set sail to attack Rome. Petronius and his supporters attempted to flee the city at the sight of the approaching Vandals, only to be stoned to death by a Roman mob. Petronius had reigned only 11 weeks.[76] With the Vandals at the gates, Pope Leo I requested that the King not destroy the ancient city or murder its inhabitants, to which Gaiseric agreed and the city gates were opened to him. Though keeping his promise, Gaiseric looted great amounts of treasure and damaged objects of cultural significance such as the Temple of Jupiter Optimus Maximus. The severity of the Vandal sack of 455 is disputed, though with the Vandals plundering the city for a full fourteen days as opposed to the Visigothic sack of 410, where the Visigoths only spent three days in the city, it was likely more thorough.[77]

Avitus, a prominent general under Petronius, was proclaimed emperor by the Visigothic king Theodoric II and accepted as such by the Roman Senate. Though supported by the Gallic provinces and the Visigoths, Avitus was resented in Italy due to ongoing food shortages caused by Vandal control of trade routes, and for using a Visigothic imperial guard. He disbanded his guard due to popular pressure, and the Suebian general Ricimer used the opportunity to depose Avitus, counting on popular discontent. After the deposition of Avitus, the Eastern emperor Leo I did not select a new western Augustus. The prominent general Majorian defeated an invading force of Alemanni and was subsequently proclaimed Western emperor by the army and eventually accepted as such by Leo.[78]

Majorian was the last Western emperor to attempt to recover the Western Empire with his own military forces. To prepare, Majorian significantly strengthened the Western Roman army by recruiting large numbers of barbarian mercenaries, among them the Gepids, Ostrogoths, Rugii, Burgundians, Huns, Bastarnae, Suebi, Scythians and Alans, and built two fleets, one at Ravenna, to combat the strong Vandalic fleet. Majorian personally led the army to wage war in Gaul, leaving Ricimer in Italy. The Gallic provinces and the Visigothic Kingdom had rebelled following the deposition of Avitus, refusing to acknowledge Majorian as lawful emperor. At the Battle of Arelate, Majorian decisively defeated the Visigoths under Theoderic II and forced them to relinquish their great conquests in Hispania and return to foederati status. Majorian then entered the Rhone Valley, where he defeated the Burgundians and reconquered the rebel city of Lugdunum. With Gaul back under Roman control, Majorian turned his eyes to the Vandals and Africa. Not only did the Vandals pose a constant danger to coastal Italy and trade in the Mediterranean, but the province they ruled was economically vital to the survival of the West. Majorian began a campaign to fully reconquer Hispania to use it as a base for the reconquest of Africa. Throughout 459, Majorian campaigned against the Suebi in northwestern Hispania.[78]

The Vandals began to increasingly fear a Roman invasion. King Gaiseric tried to negotiate a peace with Majorian, who rejected the proposal. In the wake of this, Gaiseric devastated Mauretania, part of his own kingdom, fearing that the Roman army would land there. Having regained control of Hispania, Majorian intended to use his fleet at Carthaginiensis to attack the Vandals. Before he could, the fleet was destroyed, allegedly by traitors paid by the Vandals. Deprived of his fleet, Majorian had to cancel his attack on the Vandals and conclude a peace with Gaiseric. Disbanding his barbarian forces, Majorian intended to return to Rome and issue reforms, stopping at Arelate on his way. Here, Ricimer deposed and arrested him in 461, having gathered significant aristocratic opposition against Majorian. After five days of beatings and torture, Majorian was beheaded near the river Iria.[78]

Collapse

 
The Western and Eastern Roman Empire by 476

The final collapse of the Empire in the West was marked by increasingly ineffectual puppet emperors dominated by their Germanic magistri militum. The most pointed example of this is Ricimer, who effectively became a "shadow emperor" following the depositions of Avitus and Majorian. Unable to take the throne for himself due to his barbarian heritage, Ricimer appointed a series of puppet emperors who could do little to halt the collapse of Roman authority and the loss of the territories re-conquered by Majorian.[79] The first of these puppet emperors, Libius Severus, had no recognition outside of Italy, with the Eastern emperor Leo I and provincial governors in Gaul and Illyria all refusing to recognize him.[80]

Severus died in 465 and Leo I, with the consent of Ricimer, appointed the capable Eastern general Anthemius as Western emperor following an eighteen-month interregnum. The relationship between Anthemius and the East was good, Anthemius is the last Western emperor recorded in an Eastern law, and the two courts conducted a joint operation to retake Africa from the Vandals, culminating in the disastrous Battle of Cape Bon in 468. In addition Anthemius conducted failed campaigns against the Visigoths, hoping to halt their expansion.[79]

The trial and subsequent execution of Romanus, an Italian senator and friend of Ricimer, on the grounds of treachery in 470 made Ricimer hostile to Anthemius. Following two years of ill feeling, Ricimer deposed and killed Anthemius in 472, elevating Olybrius to the Western throne.[81] During the brief reign of Olybrius, Ricimer died and his nephew Gundobad succeeded him as magister militum. After only seven months of rule, Olybrius died of dropsy. Gundobad elevated Glycerius to Western emperor. The Eastern Empire had rejected Olybrius and also rejected Glycerius, instead supporting a candidate of their own, Julius Nepos, magister militum in Dalmatia. With the support of Eastern emperors Leo II and Zeno, Julius Nepos crossed the Adriatic Sea in the spring of 474 to depose Glycerius. At the arrival of Nepos in Italy, Glycerius abdicated without a fight and was allowed to live out his life as the Bishop of Salona.[82]

The brief rule of Nepos in Italy ended in 475 when Orestes, a former secretary of Attila and the magister militum of Julius Nepos, took control of Ravenna and forced Nepos to flee by ship to Dalmatia. Later in the same year, Orestes crowned his own young son as Western emperor under the name Romulus Augustus. Romulus Augustus was not recognised as Western emperor by the Eastern Court, who maintained that Nepos was the only legal Western emperor, reigning in exile from Dalmatia.[83]

On 4 September 476, Odoacer, leader of the Germanic foederati in Italy, captured Ravenna, killed Orestes and deposed Romulus. Though Romulus was deposed, Nepos did not return to Italy and continued to reign as Western emperor from Dalmatia, with support from Constantinople. Odoacer proclaimed himself ruler of Italy and began to negotiate with the Eastern emperor Zeno. Zeno eventually granted Odoacer patrician status as recognition of his authority and accepted him as his viceroy of Italy. Zeno, however, insisted that Odoacer had to pay homage to Julius Nepos as the emperor of the Western Empire. Odoacer accepted this condition and issued coins in the name of Julius Nepos throughout Italy. This, however, was mainly an empty political gesture, as Odoacer never returned any real power or territories to Nepos. The murder of Nepos in 480 prompted Odoacer to invade Dalmatia, annexing it to his Kingdom of Italy.[84]

Fall of the Empire

 
The city of Ravenna, Western Roman capital, on the Tabula Peutingeriana, a 13th-century medieval map possibly copied from a 4th- or 5th-century Roman original

By convention, the Western Roman Empire is deemed to have ended on 4 September 476, when Odoacer deposed Romulus Augustus, but the historical record calls this determination into question. Indeed, the deposition of Romulus Augustus received very little attention in contemporary times. Romulus was a usurper in the eyes of the Eastern Roman Empire and the remaining territories of Western Roman control outside of Italy, with the previous emperor Julius Nepos still being alive and claiming to rule the Western Empire in Dalmatia. Furthermore, the Western court had lacked true power and had been subject to Germanic aristocrats for decades, with most of its legal territory being under control of various barbarian kingdoms. With Odoacer recognising Julius Nepos, and later the Eastern emperor Zeno, as his sovereign, nominal Roman control continued in Italy.[85] Syagrius, who had managed to preserve Roman sovereignty in an exclave in northern Gaul (a realm today known as the Domain of Soissons) also recognized Nepos as his sovereign and the legitimate Western emperor.[86]

The authority of Julius Nepos as emperor was accepted not only by Odoacer in Italy, but by the Eastern Empire and Syagrius in Gaul (who had not recognized Romulus Augustulus). Nepos was murdered by his own soldiers in 480, a plot some attribute to Odoacer or the previous, deposed emperor Glycerius,[87] and the Eastern emperor Zeno chose not to appoint a new Western emperor. Zeno, recognizing that no true Roman control remained over the territories legally governed by the Western court, instead chose to abolish the juridical division of the position of emperor and declared himself the sole emperor of the Roman Empire. Zeno became the first sole Roman emperor since the division after Theodosius I, 85 years prior, and the position would never again be divided. As such, the (eastern) Roman emperors after 480 are the successors of the western ones, albeit only in a juridical sense.[88] These emperors would continue to rule the Roman Empire until the Fall of Constantinople in 1453, nearly a thousand years later.[89] As 480 marks the end of the juridical division of the empire into two imperial courts, some historians refer to the death of Nepos and abolition of the Western Empire by Zeno as the end of the Western Roman Empire.[86][90]

Despite the fall, or abolition, of the Western Empire, many of the new kings of western Europe continued to operate firmly within a Roman administrative framework. This is especially true in the case of the Ostrogoths, who came to rule Italy after Odoacer. They continued to use the administrative systems of Odoacer's kingdom, essentially those of the Western Roman Empire, and administrative positions continued to be staffed exclusively by Romans. The Senate continued to function as it always had, and the laws of the Empire were recognized as ruling the Roman population, though the Goths were ruled by their own traditional laws.[91] Western Roman administrative institutions, in particular those of Italy, thus continued to be used during "barbarian" rule and after the forces of the Eastern Roman empire re-conquered some of the formerly imperial territories. Some historians thus refer to the reorganizations of Italy and abolition of the old and separate Western Roman administrative units, such as the Praetorian prefecture of Italy, during the sixth century as the "true" fall of the Western Roman Empire.[85]

Roman cultural traditions continued throughout the territory of the Western Empire for long after its disappearance, and a recent school of interpretation argues that the great political changes can more accurately be described as a complex cultural transformation, rather than a fall.[92]

Political aftermath

 
Map of the Barbarian kingdoms (major kingdoms and the Roman Empire labelled below) of the western Mediterranean in 526, seven years before the campaigns of reconquest under Eastern emperor Justinian I
  The Roman Empire under Justinian
  The Ostrogothic Kingdom of Italy

After the fall of the Western Roman Empire, the Germanic kingdoms, often referred to as "barbarian kingdoms", founded during its collapse continued to grow and prosper. Their beginnings, together with the end of the Western Roman Empire, mark the transition from Late Antiquity to the Middle Ages. The practices of the barbarian kingdoms gradually replaced the old Roman institutions, specifically in the praetorian prefectures of Gaul and Italy, during the sixth and seventh centuries.[93] In many places, the Roman institutions collapsed along with the economic stability. In some regions, notably Gaul and Italy, the settlement of barbarians on former Roman lands seems to have caused relatively little disruption, with barbarian rulers using and modifying the Roman systems already in place.[94] The Germanic kingdoms in Italy, Hispania and Gaul continued to recognise the emperor in Constantinople as a somewhat nominal sovereign, the Visigoths minted coins in their names until the reign of Justinian I in the sixth century.[95]

 
6th-century Visigothic coin, struck in the name of Emperor Justinian I

Some territories under direct Roman control continued to exist in the West even after 480. The Domain of Soissons, a rump state in Northern Gaul ruled by Syagrius, survived until 486 when it was conquered by the Franks under King Clovis I after the Battle of Soissons. Syagrius was known as the "King of the Romans" by the Germanic peoples of the region and repeatedly claimed that he was merely governing a Roman province, not an independent realm.[86] Under Clovis I from the 480s to 511, the Franks would come to develop into a great regional power. After their conquest of Soissons, the Franks defeated the Alemanni in 504 and conquered all Visigothic territory north of the Pyrenees other than Septimania in 507. Relations between the Franks and the Eastern Empire appear to have been positive, with Emperor Anastasius granting Clovis the title of consul following his victory against the Visigoths. At the time of its dissolution in the 800s, the Frankish Kingdom had lasted far longer than the other migration period barbarian kingdoms. Its divided successors would develop into the medieval states of France (initially known as West Francia) and Germany (initially known as East Francia).[96]

A Mauro-Roman realm survived in the province of Mauretania Caesariensis until the early 8th century. An inscription on a fortification at the ruined city of Altava from the year 508 identifies a man named Masuna as the king of "Regnum Maurorum et Romanarum", the Kingdom of the Moors and Romans.[97] It is possible that Masuna is the same man as the "Massonas" who allied himself with the forces of the Eastern Roman Empire against the Vandals in 535.[98] This Kingdom was defeated by the Eastern Roman magister militum Gennadius in 578 and its coastal territories were incorporated into the Empire once more.[99]

Germanic Italy

 
Odoacer's Italy in 480 AD, following the annexation of Dalmatia

The deposition of Romulus Augustus and the rise of Odoacer as ruler of Italy in 476 received very little attention at the time.[85] Overall, very little changed for the people; there was still a Roman emperor in Constantinople to whom Odoacer had subordinated himself. Interregna had been experienced at many points in the West before and the deposition of Romulus Augustus was nothing out of the ordinary. Odoacer saw his rule as entirely in the tradition of the Roman Empire, not unlike Ricimer, and he effectively ruled as an imperial "governor" of Italy and was even awarded the title of patricius. Odoacer ruled using the Roman administrative systems already in place and continued to mint coins with the name and portrait of Julius Nepos until 480 and later with the name and portrait of the Eastern Augustus, rather than in his own name.[85]

When Nepos was murdered in Dalmatia in 480, Odoacer assumed the duty of pursuing and executing the assassins and established his own rule in Dalmatia at the same time.[100] Odoacer established his power with the loyal support of the Roman Senate, a legislative body that had continued even without an emperor residing in Italy. Indeed, the Senate seems to have increased in power under Odoacer. For the first time since the mid-3rd century, copper coins were issued with the legend S C (Senatus Consulto). These coins were copied by Vandals in Africa and also formed the basis of the currency reform carried out by Emperor Anastasius in the East.[101]

Under Odoacer, Western consuls continued to be appointed as they had been under the Western Roman Empire and were accepted by the Eastern Court, the first being Caecina Decius Maximus Basilus in 480. Basilus was made the praetorian prefect of Italy in 483, another traditional position which continued to exist under Odoacer.[102] Eleven further consuls were appointed by the Senate under Odoacer from 480 to 493 and one further Praetorian Prefect of Italy was appointed, Caecina Mavortius Basilius Decius (486–493).[103]

 
Solidus minted under Odoacer with the name and portrait of the Eastern emperor Zeno

Though Odoacer ruled as a Roman governor would have and maintained himself as a subordinate to the remaining Empire, the Eastern emperor Zeno began to increasingly see him as a rival. Thus, Zeno promised Theoderic the Great of the Ostrogoths, foederati of the Eastern Court, control over the Italian peninsula if he was able to defeat Odoacer.[104] Theoderic led the Ostrogoths across the Julian Alps and into Italy and defeated Odoacer in battle twice in 489. Following four years of hostilities between them, John, the Bishop of Ravenna, was able to negotiate a treaty in 493 between Odoacer and Theoderic whereby they agreed to rule Ravenna and Italy jointly. Theoderic entered Ravenna on 5 March and Odoacer was dead ten days later, killed by Theoderic after sharing a meal with him.[105]

 
Map of the realm of Theodoric the Great at its height in 523, following the annexation of the southern parts of the Burgundian kingdom. Theoderic ruled both the Visigothic and Ostrogothic kingdoms and exerted hegemony over the Burgundians and Vandals.

Theoderic inherited Odoacer's role as acting viceroy for Italy and ostensibly a patricius and subject of the emperor in Constantinople. This position was recognized by Emperor Anastasius in 497, four years after Theoderic had defeated Odoacer. Though Theodoric acted as an independent ruler, he meticulously preserved the outward appearance of his subordinate position. Theoderic continued to use the administrative systems of Odoacer's kingdom, essentially those of the Western Roman Empire, and administrative positions continued to be staffed exclusively by Romans. The senate continued to function as it always had and the laws of the Empire were recognized as ruling the Roman population, though the Goths were ruled by their own traditional laws. As a subordinate, Theoderic did not have the right to issue his own laws, only edicts or clarifications.[106] The army and military offices were exclusively staffed by the Goths, however, who largely settled in northern Italy.[107]

Though acting as a subordinate in domestic affairs, Theodoric acted increasingly independent in his foreign policies. Seeking to counterbalance the influence of the Empire in the East, Theoderic married his daughters to the Visigothic king Alaric II and the Burgundian prince Sigismund. His sister Amalfrida was married to the Vandal king Thrasamund and he married Audofleda, sister of the Frankish king Clovis I, himself.[108] Through these alliances and occasional conflicts, the territory controlled by Theoderic in the early sixth century nearly constituted a restored Western Roman Empire. Ruler of Italy since 493, Theoderic became king of the Visigoths in 511 and exerted hegemony over the Vandals in North Africa between 521 and 523. As such, his rule extended throughout the western Mediterranean. The Western imperial regalia, housed in Constantinople since the deposition of Romulus Augustulus in 476, were returned to Ravenna by Emperor Anastasius in 497.[109] Theoderic, by now Western emperor in all but name, could not, however, assume an imperial title, not only because the notion of a separate Western court had been abolished but also due to his "barbarian" heritage, which, like that of Ricimer before him, would have barred him from assuming the throne.[79]

With the death of Theodoric in 526, his network of alliances began to collapse. The Visigoths regained autonomy under King Amalaric and the Ostrogoths' relations with the Vandals turned increasingly hostile under the reign of their new king Athalaric, a child under the regency of his mother Amalasuntha.[110] After the collapse of Theoderic's control of the western Mediterranean, the Frankish Kingdom rose to become the most powerful of the barbarian kingdoms, having taken control of most of Gaul in the absence of Roman governance.[96]

Amalasuntha continued the policies of conciliation between the Goths and Romans, supporting the new Eastern emperor Justinian I and allowing him to use Sicily as a staging point during the reconquest of Africa in the Vandalic War. With the death of Athalaric in 534, Amalasuntha crowned her cousin and only relative Theodahad as king, hoping for his support. Instead, Amalasuntha was imprisoned and, even though Theodahad assured Emperor Justinian of her safety, she was executed shortly after. This served as an ideal casus belli for Justinian, who prepared to invade and reclaim the Italian peninsula for the Roman Empire.[110]

Imperial reconquest

 
The Eastern Roman Empire, by reoccupying some of the former Western Roman Empire's lands, enlarged its territory considerably during Justinian's reign from 527 (red) to 565 (orange).

With Emperor Zeno having juridically reunified the Empire into one imperial court, the remaining Eastern Roman Empire continued to lay claim to the areas previously controlled by the Western court throughout Late Antiquity and the Middle Ages. Though military campaigns had been conducted by the Western court prior to 476 with the aim of recapturing lost territory, most notably under Majorian, the reconquests, if successful at all, were only momentary. It was as a result of the campaigns of the generals Belisarius and Narses on behalf of the Eastern Roman emperor Justinian I from 533 to 554 that long-lasting reconquests of Roman lands were witnessed.[111]

Despite also suffering from barbarian incursions, the Eastern Empire had survived the fifth century mostly intact. The Western Roman Empire, less urbanized than the Eastern and more thinly populated, may have experienced an economic decline throughout the Late Empire in some provinces.[112] Southern Italy, northern Gaul (except for large towns and cities), and to some extent Spain and the Danubian areas may have suffered. The East fared better economically, especially as Emperors such as Constantine the Great and Constantius II had invested heavily in the eastern economy. As a result, the Eastern Empire could afford large numbers of professional soldiers and to augment them with mercenaries, while the Western Roman Empire could not afford this to the same extent. Even after major defeats, the East could, although not without difficulties, buy off its enemies with a ransom or "protection money".[113] Numbering more than 300,000 soldiers, the Eastern Roman army of Justinian I was among the most powerful in the world.[114]

Unlike the Visigoths and Ostrogoths, the Vandals in Africa minted their own coinage and were both de facto and de jure independent, often being enemies of both the Western and Eastern Roman Empires.[115] With the pro-Roman Vandal king Hilderic having been deposed by Gelimer in 530,[116] Justinian prepared an expedition led by Belisarius. It swiftly retook North Africa between June 533 and March 534, returning the wealthy province to Roman rule. Following the reconquest, Justinian swiftly reintroduced the Roman administrations of the province, establishing a new Praetorian Prefecture of Africa and taking measures to decrease Vandal influence, eventually leading to the complete disappearance of the Vandalic people.[117]

 
 
Justinian I (left) was the first Eastern emperor to attempt to reconquer the territories of the Western Roman Empire, undertaking successful campaigns in Africa and Italy in the 500s. Manuel I Komnenos (right) was the last, campaigning in southern Italy in the 1150s.

Following the execution of the pro-Roman Ostrogoth queen Amalasuntha and the refusal of Ostrogoth King Theodahad to renounce his control of Italy, Justinian ordered the expedition to move on to reconquer Italy, ancient heartland of the Empire. From 534 to 540, the Roman forces campaigned in Italy and captured Ravenna, the Ostrogothic and formerly Western Roman capital, in 540. The Gothic resistance revived under King Totila in 541. They were finally defeated following campaigns by the Roman general Narses, who also repelled invasions into Italy by the Franks and Alemanni, though some cities in northern Italy continued to hold out until the 560s. Justinian promulgated the Pragmatic Sanction to reorganize the governance of Italy and the province was returned to Roman rule. The end of the conflict saw Italy devastated and considerably depopulated, which, combined with the disastrous effects of the Plague of Justinian, made it difficult to retain over the following centuries.[118]

At the time of the collapse of the Western Empire in 476–480, the Visigoths controlled large areas of southern Gaul as well as a majority of Hispania. Their increased domain had been partly conquered and partly awarded to them by the Western emperor Avitus in the 450s–60s.[119] Justinian undertook some limited campaigns against them, recovering portions of the southern coast of the Iberian peninsula. Here, the province of Spania would last until the 620s, when the Visigoths under King Suintila reconquered the south coast.[120] These regions remained under Roman control throughout the reign of Justinian. Three years after his death, the Lombards invaded Italy. The Lombards conquered large parts of the devastated peninsula in the late 500s, establishing the Lombard Kingdom. They were in constant conflict with the Exarchate of Ravenna, a polity established to replace the old Praetorian Prefecture of Italy and enforce Roman rule in Italy. The wealthiest parts of the province, including the cities of Rome and Ravenna, remained securely in Roman hands under the Exarchate throughout the seventh century.[121]

 
Map of the Eastern Roman Empire in 717 AD. Over the course of the seventh and eighth centuries, Islamic expansion had ended Roman rule in Africa and though some bastions of Roman rule remained, most of Italy was controlled by the Lombards.

Although other Eastern emperors occasionally attempted to campaign in the West, none were as successful as Justinian. After 600, events conspired to drive the Western provinces out of Constantinople's control, with imperial attention focused on the pressing issues of war with Sasanian Persia and then the rise of Islam. For a while, the West remained important, with Emperor Constans II ruling from Syracuse in Sicily a Roman Empire that still stretched from North Africa to the Caucasus in the 660s. Thereafter, imperial attention declined, with Constantinople itself being besieged in the 670s, renewed war with the Arabs in the 680s, and then a period of chaos between 695 and 717, during which time Africa was finally lost once and for all, being conquered by the Umayyad Caliphate. Through reforms and military campaigns, Emperor Leo III attempted to restore order in the Empire, but his doctrinal reforms, known as the Iconoclastic Controversy, were extremely unpopular in the West and were condemned by Pope Gregory III.[122]

The Roman Empire was not the only Christian nation affected by the Islamic conquests, the Visigothic Kingdom finally fell to the Umayyad Caliphate in the 720s.[123][124] The Kingdom of Asturias was founded by Pelagius of Asturias around the same time and was the first Christian realm to be established in Iberia following the defeat of the Visigoths.[125] Asturias would be transformed into the Kingdom of León in 924,[126] which would develop into the predecessors of modern-day Spain.[127]

The religious disagreements between Rome and Constantinople eventually led to the breakdown in imperial rule over Rome itself, and the gradual transition of the Exarchate of Ravenna into the independent Papal States, led by the Pope. In an attempt to gain support against the Lombards, the Pope called for aid from the Frankish Kingdom instead of the Eastern Empire, eventually crowning the Frankish king Charlemagne as "Roman Emperor" in 800 AD. Though this coronation was strongly opposed by the Eastern Empire, there was little they could do as their influence in Western Europe decreased. After a series of small wars in the 810s, Emperor Michael I recognized Charlemagne as an "Emperor". He refused to recognize him as a "Roman Emperor" (a title which Michael reserved for himself and his successors), instead recognizing him as the slightly less prestigious "Emperor of the Franks".[128]

Imperial rule continued in Sicily throughout the eighth century, with the island slowly being overrun by the Arabs during the course of the ninth century. In Italy, a few strongholds in Calabria provided a base for a later, modest imperial expansion, which reached its peak in the early eleventh century, with most of southern Italy under Roman rule of a sort. This, however, was undone by further civil wars in the Empire, and the slow conquest of the region by the Empire's former mercenaries, the Normans, who finally put an end to imperial rule in Western Europe in 1071 with the conquest of Bari.[129] The last emperor to attempt reconquests in the West was Manuel I Komnenos, who invaded southern Italy during a war with the Norman Kingdom of Sicily in the 1150s. The city of Bari willingly opened its gates to the emperor and after successes in taking other cities in the region,[130] Manuel dreamed of a restored Roman Empire and a union between the churches of Rome and Constantinople, separated since the schism of 1054. Despite initial successes and Papal support, the campaign was unsuccessful and Manuel was forced to return east.[131]

Legacy

 
 
On the left: Emperor Honorius on the consular diptych of Anicius Petronius Probus (406)
On the right: Consular diptych of Constantius III (a co-emperor with Honorius in 421), produced for his consulate in 413 or 417.

As the Western Roman Empire crumbled, the new Germanic rulers who conquered its constituent provinces maintained most Roman laws and traditions. Many of the invading Germanic tribes were already Christianized, although most were followers of Arianism. They quickly changed their adherence to the state church of the Roman Empire. This helped cement the loyalty of the local Roman populations, as well as the support of the powerful Bishop of Rome. Although they initially continued to recognize indigenous tribal laws, they were more influenced by Roman law and gradually incorporated it.[93] Roman law, particularly the Corpus Juris Civilis collected on the orders of Justinian I, is the basis of modern civil law. In contrast, common law is based on Germanic Anglo-Saxon law. Civil law is by far the most widespread system of law in the world, in force in some form in about 150 countries.[132]

 
Romance languages, languages that developed from Latin following the collapse of the Western Roman Empire, are spoken in Western Europe to this day, with the exception of Romanian, which developed from the Latin spoken in the eastern provinces and the early Eastern Empire. Their extent in Western Europe almost reflects the continental borders of the old Empire.

Latin as a language did not disappear. Vulgar Latin combined with neighboring Germanic and Celtic languages, giving rise to modern Romance languages such as Italian, French, Spanish, Portuguese, Romanian, and a large number of minor languages and dialects. Today, more than 900 million people are native speakers of Romance languages worldwide. In addition, many Romance languages are used as lingua francas by non-native speakers.[133]

Latin also influenced Germanic languages such as English and German.[134] It survives in a "purer" form as the language of the Catholic Church; the Catholic Mass was spoken exclusively in Latin until 1969. As such it was also used as a lingua franca by ecclesiasticals. It remained the language of medicine, law, and diplomacy (most treaties were written in Latin[citation needed]), as well as of intellectuals and scholarship, well into the 18th century. Since then the use of Latin has declined with the growth of other lingua francas, especially English and French.[135] The Latin alphabet was expanded due to the split of I into I and J, and of V into U, V, and, in places (especially Germanic languages and Polish), W. It is the most widely used alphabetic writing system in the world today.[citation needed] Roman numerals continue to be used in some fields and situations, though they have largely been replaced by Arabic numerals.[136]

A very visible legacy of the Western Roman Empire is the Catholic Church. Church institutions slowly began to replace Roman ones in the West, even helping to negotiate the safety of Rome during the late 5th century.[73] As Rome was invaded by Germanic tribes, many assimilated, and by the middle of the medieval period (c. 9th and 10th centuries) the central, western, and northern parts of Europe had been largely converted to Roman Catholicism and acknowledged the Pope as the Vicar of Christ. The first of the Barbarian kings to convert to the Church of Rome was Clovis I of the Franks; other kingdoms, such as the Visigoths, later followed suit to garner favor with the papacy.[137]

When Pope Leo III crowned Charlemagne as "Roman Emperor" in 800, he both severed ties with the outraged Eastern Empire and established the precedent that no man in Western Europe would be emperor without a papal coronation.[138] Although the power the Pope wielded changed significantly throughout the subsequent periods, the office itself has remained as the head of the Catholic Church and the head of state of the Vatican City. The Pope has consistently held the title of "Pontifex Maximus" since before the fall of the Western Roman Empire and retains it to this day; this title formerly used by the high priest of the Roman polytheistic religion, one of whom was Julius Caesar.[47][139]

The Roman Senate survived the initial collapse of the Western Roman Empire. Its authority increased under the rule of Odoacer and later the Ostrogoths, evident by the Senate in 498 managing to install Symmachus as pope despite both Theodoric of Italy and Emperor Anastasius supporting another candidate, Laurentius.[140] Exactly when the senate disappeared is unclear, but the institution is known to have survived at least into the 6th century, inasmuch as gifts from the senate were received by Emperor Tiberius II in 578 and 580. The traditional senate building, Curia Julia, was rebuilt into a church under Pope Honorius I in 630, probably with permission from the Eastern emperor, Heraclius.[141]

Nomenclature

Marcellinus Comes, a sixth-century Eastern Roman historian and a courtier of Justinian I, mentions the Western Roman Empire in his Chronicle, which primarily covers the Eastern Roman Empire from 379 to 534. In the Chronicle, it is clear that Marcellinus made a clear divide between East and West, with mentions of a geographical east ("Oriens") and west ("Occidens") and of an imperial east ("Orientale imperium" and "Orientale respublica") and an imperial west ("Occidentalie imperium", "Occidentale regnum", "Occidentalis respublica", "Hesperium regnum", "Hesperium imperium" and "principatum Occidentis"). Furthermore, Marcellinus specifically designates some emperors and consuls as being "Eastern", "Orientalibus principibus" and "Orientalium consulum" respectively.[142] The term Hesperium Imperium, translating to "Western Empire", has sometimes been applied to the Western Roman Empire by modern historians as well.[143]

Though Marcellinus does not refer to the Empire as a whole after 395, only to its separate parts, he clearly identifies the term "Roman" as applying to the Empire as a whole. When using terms such as "us", "our generals", and "our emperor", Marcellinus distinguished both divisions of the Empire from outside foes such as the Sasanian Persians and the Huns.[142] This view is consistent with the view that contemporary Romans of the 4th and 5th centuries continued to consider the Empire as a single unit, although more often than not with two rulers instead of one.[90] The first time the Empire was divided geographically was during the reign of Diocletian, but there was precedent for multiple emperors. Before Diocletian and the Tetrarchy, there had been a number of periods where there were co-emperors, such as with Caracalla and Geta in 210–211, who inherited the imperial throne from their father Septimius Severus, but Caracalla ruled alone after the murder of his brother.[144]

Attempted restorations of a Western court

 
 
Maps of the Exarchates within the Roman Empire in 600 AD. The Exarchates of Ravenna (left) and Africa (right) were established by the Eastern Empire to better administer the reconquered Western territories.

The positions of Eastern and Western Augustus, established under Emperor Diocletian in 286 as the Tetrarchy, had been abolished by Emperor Zeno in 480 following the loss of direct control over the western territories. Declaring himself the sole Augustus, Zeno only exercised true control over the largely intact Eastern Empire and over Italy as the nominal overlord of Odoacer.[88] The reconquests under Justinian I would bring back large formerly Western Roman territories into Imperial control, and with them the Empire would begin to face the same problems it had faced under previous periods prior to the Tetrarchy when there had been only one ruler. Shortly after the reconquest of North Africa a usurper, Stotzas, appeared in the province (though he was quickly defeated).[145] As such, the idea of dividing the Empire into two courts out of administrative necessity would see a limited revival during the period that the Eastern Empire controlled large parts of the former West, both by courtiers in the East and enemies in the West.[146][147]

The earliest attempt at crowning a new Western emperor after the abolition of the title occurred already during the Gothic Wars under Justinian. Belisarius, an accomplished general who had already successfully campaigned to restore Roman control over North Africa and large parts of Italy, including Rome itself, was offered the position of Western Roman emperor by the Ostrogoths during his siege of Ravenna (the Ostrogothic, and previously Western Roman, capital) in 540. The Ostrogoths, desperate to avoid losing their control of Italy, offered the title and their fealty to Belisarius as Western Augustus. Justinian had expected to rule over a restored Roman Empire alone, with the Codex Justinianeus explicitly designating the new Praetorian Prefect of Africa as the subject of Justinian in Constantinople.[148] Belisarius, loyal to Justinian, feigned acceptance of the title to enter the city, whereupon he immediately relinquished it. Despite Belisarius relinquishing the title, the offer had made Justinian suspicious and Belisarius was ordered to return east.[146]

At the end of Emperor Tiberius II's reign in 582, the Eastern Roman Empire retained control over relatively large parts of the regions reconquered under Justinian. Tiberius chose two Caesares, the general Maurice and the governor Germanus, and married his two daughters to them. Germanus had clear connections to the western provinces, and Maurice to the eastern provinces. It is possible that Tiberius was planning to divide the empire into western and eastern administrative units once more.[147] If so, the plan was never realized. At the death of Tiberius, Maurice inherited the entire empire as Germanus had refused the throne. Maurice established a new type of administrative unit, the Exarchate, and organized the remaining western territories under his control into the Exarchate of Ravenna and the Exarchate of Africa.[149]

Later claims to the Imperial title in the West

 
Denarius of Frankish king Charlemagne, who was crowned as Karolus Imperator Augustus in the year 800 by Pope Leo III due to, and in opposition to, the Roman Empire in the East being ruled by Irene, a woman. His coronation was strongly opposed by the Eastern Empire.

In addition to remaining as a concept for an administrative unit in the remaining Empire, the ideal of the Roman Empire as a mighty Christian Empire with a single ruler further continued to appeal to many powerful rulers in western Europe. With the papal coronation of Charlemagne as "Emperor of the Romans" in 800 AD, his realm was explicitly proclaimed as a restoration of the Roman Empire in Western Europe under the concept of translatio imperii. Though the Carolingian Empire collapsed in 888 and Berengar, the last "Emperor" claiming succession from Charlemagne, died in 924, the concept of a papacy- and Germanic-based Roman Empire in the West would resurface in the form of the Holy Roman Empire in 962. The Holy Roman Emperors would uphold the notion that they had inherited the supreme power and prestige of the Roman emperors of old until the dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire in 1806.[150]

Charlemagne, and the subsequent Holy Roman Emperors, were not, and did not claim to be, rulers of a restored Western Roman Empire. Pope Leo III and contemporary historians were fully aware of that the notion of a separate Western court had been abolished over three centuries prior and considered the Roman Empire to be "one and indivisible". The ruler of the Roman Empire at the time of Charlemagne's coronation was Irene of Athens, the mother of emperor Constantine VI who she had deposed. Leo III considered Irene to be a usurper and illegitimate to rule due to her gender and as such considered the imperial throne to be vacant. Thus, Charlemagne was not crowned as the ruler of the Western Roman Empire and successor to Romulus Augustulus, but rather as the successor of Constantine VI and as sole Roman Emperor. Irene was deposed and replaced by Emperor Nikephoros soon after, and the Eastern Empire refused to recognize the Imperial title of Charlemagne. Following several wars in the 810s Emperor Michael I Rangabe eventually recognized Charlemagne as an "Emperor", but as the slightly humiliating "Emperor of the Franks" rather than "Roman Emperor", a title he reserved for himself.[128] For centuries to come, the "revived" Western court and the Eastern court, in direct succession to the Roman emperors of old, would make competing claims to be rulers of the whole Roman Empire. With the Eastern Empire terming the Holy Roman Empire as an "Empire of the Franks", the term "Empire of the Greeks" was popularized in the Frankish court as a way to refer to the Empire centered in Constantinople.[151]

Following the end of the Eastern Roman Empire after the Fall of Constantinople in 1453 and the dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire in 1806, the title of "Emperor" became widespread among European monarchs. The Austrian Empire laid claim to be the heir of the Holy Roman Empire as Austria's Habsburgs attempted to unite Germany under their rule.[152] The German Empire, established in 1871, also claimed to be a successor of Rome through the lineage of the Holy Roman Empire.[153] Both of these empires used the imperial title Kaiser (derived from the Latin word "Caesar"), the German word for emperor. The German Empire and Austria-Hungary, successor of the Austrian Empire, would both fall in the aftermath of the First World War along with the Russian and Ottoman Empires who had both claimed succession from the Eastern Roman Empire.[154][155][156]

List of Western Roman emperors

With junior colleagues listed below the reign of each emperor.

Tetrarchy (286–313)

 
Bust of Emperor Maximian, the first Western Roman emperor

Maximian was elevated to caesar by Diocletian in 285, after Diocletian defeated Carinus.[159] He became Western emperor in 286, with the establishment of the Tetrarchy. On 1 May 305, both Maximian and Diocletian abdicated, leaving Constantius and Galerius as emperors.[160]

Constantius Chlorus was elevated to caesar in 293, under Maximian. Constantius became the Western emperor in 305, after the abdication of Maximian.[160] Constantius died on 25 July 306, leaving a highly contested succession in his wake.[163]

Valerius Severus was elevated to caesar by Constantius in 305, after the abdication of Maximian and Diocletian. After the death of Constantius in 306, Severus became Western emperor. Severus was forced to deal with the revolt of Maxentius, the son of Maximian. Maxentius invaded in early 307, and captured the Western Empire.[164] He had Severus put to death soon after his capture.[165]

Maxentius was proclaimed emperor in 306, in opposition to Valerius Severus. He succeeded in capturing the Western Empire in 307, and had Severus killed soon after.[166] The Western Empire was invaded in 312 by Constantine, who on 28 October 312 decisively defeated Maxentius, who drowned when his forces were pushed back into the Tiber river.[167]

Licinius was made emperor of the Eastern Empire, and parts of the Western Empire, all of which was actually held by Maxentius, at the Council of Carnuntum, which was held in 308 in order to try to end the civil war in the Western Empire. Constantine invaded Licinius' section of the Western Empire in 313, and forced him to sign a treaty in which he forfeited his claim to the Western Empire, and only controlled the Eastern Empire.[168]

Constantinian dynasty (309–363)

 
Bust of Constantine I, the founder of the Constantinian dynasty

Constantine I was proclaimed augustus of the Western Empire by his father's troops on 25 July 306 and was accepted as caesar by Galerius later that year. In 307 Maximian promoted him to augustus and in 309 he proclaimed himself as the Western emperor, in opposition to Maxentius and Licinius. He was the sole Western emperor from 312 to 324, when he became both Western emperor and Eastern emperor.[169]

Constantine II was proclaimed caesar of the Eastern Empire in late 317. In 335, Constantine I allotted the inheritance his sons would receive after his death, which would take place two years later in 337, giving Constantine II control of Gaul, Britannia and Hispania. Constantine II's relationship with Constans I was tense, and in 340, Constantine took advantage of Constans absence from Italy and invaded it. However, in the same year, he was ambushed by Constans' forces in Aquilea, and was killed.[170]

  • Constans I 337–350 (Emperor of Italy and Africa: 337–340, Western emperor: 340–350).[162]

Constans was proclaimed emperor of Italy and Africa in 337, after the death of Constantine I. After Constantine II was killed in 340, while attempting to invade Constans' territory in Italy, Constans took control of the entire Western Empire. Constans was contemptuous of his army, who as a result proclaimed Magnentius as emperor in 350. Constans fled toward Hispania, but was captured and executed by an agent of Magnentius on the border.[171]

Constantius II was proclaimed caesar in 334, and became Eastern emperor in 337, after the death of Constantine I. After Constans was killed by the usurper Magnentius, Constantius laid claim to the Western Empire, and after defeating Magnentius in 351, took possession of it, becoming sole emperor. Constantius II died in 361, of a violent fever.[172]

Julian was proclaimed caesar in 355, before becoming emperor in 361, after Constantius II died of a violent fever in 361. Julian died in March 363, of wounds sustained during the Battle of Samarra.[173]

Non-dynastic (363–364)

When Julian died in 363, he left no heir, causing a succession crisis. The Roman Army elected Jovian as sole emperor. Jovian reigned only seven months, in which he signed a humiliating peace treaty with the Sasanian Empire, under Shapur II. In this agreement, Rome surrendered five provinces and 18 fortresses to the Sasanians, in exchange for a 30-year truce. Jovian died on 16 February 364, due to either indigestion or charcoal vapour inhalation.[174]

Valentinianic dynasty (364–392)

 
Bust of Emperor Valentinian II, a member of the Valentinianic dynasty's second generation of emperors

After the death of Jovian, Valentinian I was elected. He divided the Empire between himself and his younger brother, Valens, giving himself the West and Valens the East. Valentinian spent much of his reign defending Gaul against repeated attacks by barbarian tribes, only leaving the region in 373. In 375, while meeting with the Quadi, he suffered a stroke brought on by rage.[175]

Valentinian I elevated his son, Gratian, to augustus in 367, however after his death in 375 his leading generals elevated his much younger son, Valentinian II, to augustus alongside Gratian and Valens who was emperor in the East.[176] Gratian showed a strong preference for the barbarian mercenaries in his army, especially his Alanic guard, which inflamed the Roman population, to the point that in 383, Roman troops in Britain declared Magnus Maximus emperor, in opposition to Gratian. Maximus landed troops in Gaul, and attacked Gratian's troops near Paris. Gratian was defeated, and fled to Lyons, where he was murdered on 25 August 383.[177]

After the death of Gratian, Valentinian II succeeded him, although he only controlled Italy itself, with all other Western Roman provinces recognizing Maximus. In 387 Maximus invaded Italy, to depose Valentinian. Valentinian fled to the court of Theodosius, where he succeeded in convincing Theodosius to attack Maximus, and to reinstate himself as Western emperor, which was done after Maximus was defeated in battle near Aquileia.[177] Valentinian continued to rule the Western Empire until 392, when he was probably murdered by Arbogast.[178]

Magnus Maximus was elected emperor by his men in 383, in opposition to Gratian, and defeated him in battle in 383. Maximus was recognized as the Western emperor by Eastern emperor Theodosius I in 384, however this recognition was revoked by him when Maximus invaded Italy and deposed Valentinian II in 387. Valentinian II fled to the Eastern Roman Empire, and convinced Theodosius I to invade the Western Roman Empire and restore him to the Western Roman throne, which he did in 388. Maximus was defeated in battle near Aquileia, and executed.[177][179][181][182]

Theodosian dynasty (392–455)

 
Emperor Honorius, as depicted by Jean-Paul Laurens in 1880
  • Theodosius I: 394–395 (Eastern Roman emperor: 379–394, sole emperor: 394–395)[162]

Theodosius was proclaimed Eastern Emperor by Gratian on 19 January 379, after securing victory against invading barbarians along the Danube. He became sole emperor in August 394, after defeating the usurper Eugenius. Theodosius died of edema in January 395.[183]

  • Honorius: 395–423[162]
    • Constantine III: 409–411[162] (Not recognized by Eastern emperor but recognized by Honorius; accepted by the Senate)
      • Constans II: 409–411[162] (Not recognized by Honorius and Eastern emperor; recognized only by Constantine III; not accepted by the Senate)
    • Attalus: 409–410[184] (Not recognized by Honorius and Eastern emperor; accepted by the Senate)
    • Constantius III: 421[162]

Honorius became Western emperor in 395, after the death of his father Theodosius. His reign was beset by barbarian invasions, and for much of his early reign, until 408, he was controlled by Stilicho, whose influence over Honorius would create a standard for puppet Western Emperors. After 408 his reign was greatly influenced by the general Constantius, who briefly reigned as his co-emperor for a few months before dying of natural causes. He also faced the usurpation of Priscus Attalus, a senator who was proclaimed emperor at Rome in 409. Honorius died of edema in 423.[185][184]

  • Joannes: 423–425[184] (Not recognized by Eastern emperor; accepted by the Senate)

Valentinian III was designated Honorius' heir in 421, although he was not proclaimed caesar, only given the title of nobilissimus puer. In 423, after the death of Honorius, a usurper named Joannes rose up, forcing Valentinian III to flee with his family to the court of the Eastern emperor Theodosius II. Joannes was defeated by Theodosius in Ravenna.

Valentinian III was killed on 16 March 455, by Optila, a friend of Aetius, whom Valentinian had killed.[186]

Non-dynastic (455–480)

The following last emperors of the West were all accepted by the Senate but five of them (Petronius Maximus, Libius Severus, Olybrius, Glycerius, and Romulus Augustus) were never recognized as colleagues by the Emperor of the East.[187] Whether Avitus was recognized by the Emperor of the East or not is unclear.[188]

Petronius Maximus became the Western Roman emperor on 17 March 455, after assassinating Valentinian III.[189] During his short reign, he provoked Gaiseric, the Vandal king, into invading the Western Empire and sacking Rome, by breaking a marriage agreement made between Gaiseric and Valentinian III. Maximus and his son Palladius attempted to flee on 31 May 455, however they were apprehended by a group of peasants, and either killed by them, or by palace servants wishing to curry favor with them.[190][191]

  • Avitus: 455–456 (Unclear whether recognized by the Emperor of the East or not)

Avitus was proclaimed Western emperor on 9 July 455, with the support of the Visigoth King Theodoric II. While he held support from the Visigoths, his rule alienated both the Roman Senate and people. In 456 Ricimer, a senior officer, had Avitus deposed, and ruled the Western Empire through a series of puppet emperors until his death in 472.[192]

Majorian was proclaimed Western emperor 1 April 456, officially by Eastern emperor Leo I, however in reality Leo's decision was swayed by the influence of Ricimer. On 7 August 461, Majorian was compelled to abdicate, and reportedly died five days later of dysentery, although modern historians have asserted he was likely murdered.[193]

Libius Severus was proclaimed Western emperor on 19 November 461. His rule, even as a puppet emperor, extended little beyond Italy, with Aegidius splitting off from the Western Empire, and establishing the Kingdom of Soissons. Libius Severus incited the hostility of the Vandals, who invaded Italy and Sicily. During these events, Libius Severus died on 14 November 465, possibly due to being poisoned by Ricimer.[194]

Anthemius was proclaimed Western emperor on 12 April 467 by Leo I. Under Anthemius, the Western Empire, which had become increasingly isolated from the Eastern Empire, grew closer, although this collaboration came too late to save the Western Empire. Anthemius' friendly attitude towards the Eastern Empire angered Ricimer, who deposed him in March or April of 472.[195]

Olybrius was proclaimed emperor in April 472. His brief reign, lasting only five or six months, was dominated by Gundobad, who had replaced his uncle Ricimer as the true power behind the throne, after the former's death. Olybrius died in October or November 472, of edema.[196]

After the death of both Olybrius and Ricimer, Glycerius was proclaimed Western emperor by the Western Roman army, on 3 or 5 May 473.[197] He was deposed by Julius Nepos in July 474, and sent to live in a monastery, where he remained until his death.[198]

The Eastern Roman Empire had rejected the coronation of both Olybrius and Glycerius, instead supporting Julius Nepos, magister militum in Dalmatia as Western Roman emperor. Nepos, with support from the East, deposed Glycerius in the spring of 474.[82] Orestes, magister militum of Nepos, deposed him a year later in 475, forcing Nepos to flee Ravenna to his estates in Dalmatia. Orestes crowned his son Romulus as Western emperor, though the Eastern Empire and the Western possessions outside of Italy maintained recognition of Nepos as the legitimate Emperor.[83] Nepos continued to rule as "Western emperor" in exile in Dalmatia until his murder in 480 and would be the last holder of the title.[87]

Romulus Augustus was crowned as Western emperor after his father Orestes deposed Julius Nepos.[83] The rule of Romulus would be brief; in the autumn of 476 the foederati under the control of Odoacer rebelled when their demands for a third of the land of Italy were ignored.[200] Orestes was captured and executed on 28 August the same year and Romulus was deposed by Odoacer a week later. Romulus was spared and allowed to live in the Castellum Lucullanum in Campania, where he might have been alive as late as 507 AD.[201]

With the deposition of Romulus Augustus by Odoacer, direct Roman control ceased to exist in Italy. Odoacer assumed control of the peninsula as a de jure representative of Western Roman emperor Nepos. With the death of Nepos in 480, the Eastern Roman emperor Zeno abolished the title and position of Western Roman emperor and assumed the role of Odoacer's sovereign. The position of Roman emperor would never again be divided, though some new candidates for the position of Western emperor were proposed during and after the Eastern Roman re-conquests of the sixth century, such as Belisarius in 540 and Germanus in 582.[146][147]

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Further reading

  • Börm, Henning (2018). Westrom: Von Honorius bis Justinian. Kohlhammer. ISBN 978-3170332164.
  • Heather, Peter (2003). The Visigoths from the Migration Period to the Seventh Century: An Ethnographic Perspective. Boydell & Brewer Ltd. ISBN 978-1843830337.
  • Kolb, Frank (1987). Diocletian und die Erste Tetrarchie : Improvisation oder Experiment in der Organisation monarchischer Herrschaft?. Walter de Gruyter. ISBN 978-3110109344.
  • Merills, Andy; Miles, Richard (2007). The Vandals. Wiley-Blackwell. ISBN 978-1405160681.

External links

  • De Imperatoribus Romanis. Scholarly biographies of many Roman emperors, including those of the Western Roman Empire.
  • . Navigable and interactive map of the Roman Empire.
  • The Fall of Rome Podcast. Podcast concerning the Fall of the Western Roman Empire by PhD historian Patrick Wyman.

western, roman, empire, western, empire, redirects, here, frankish, state, carolingian, empire, comprised, western, provinces, roman, empire, time, during, which, they, were, administered, separate, independent, imperial, court, particular, this, term, used, h. Western Empire redirects here For the Frankish State see Carolingian Empire The Western Roman Empire comprised the western provinces of the Roman Empire at any time during which they were administered by a separate independent Imperial court in particular this term is used in historiography to describe the period from 395 to 476 where there were separate coequal courts dividing the governance of the empire in the Western and the Eastern provinces with a distinct imperial succession in the separate courts The terms Western Roman Empire and Eastern Roman Empire were coined in modern times to describe political entities that were de facto independent contemporary Romans did not consider the Empire to have been split into two empires but viewed it as a single polity governed by two imperial courts as an administrative expediency The Western Roman Empire collapsed in 476 and the Western imperial court in Ravenna was formally dissolved by Justinian in 554 The Eastern imperial court lasted until 1453 Western Roman EmpireSenatus Populusque Romanus Imperium Romanum a395 476 480bLabarum the usual typeaccording to coins Chi RhoThe Western Roman Empire in 418 AD following the abandonment of Britannia and the settlement of the Visigoths Burgundians and Suebi within imperial territory as foederatiStatusWestern division of the Roman EmpireaCapitalMediolanum 286 330 395 401 1 Constantinople 330 395 Ravenna 401 403 408 450 457 461 475 476 Rome 403 408 450 457 461 475 2 Salona Spalatumc 475 480 Common languagesLatin official Regional local languagesReligionPolytheistic Roman Religion until 4th centuryNicene Christianity state church after 380Demonym s RomanGovernmentAutocracyRoman Emperor 395 423Honorius 457 461Majorian 474 480Julius Nepos 475 476Romulus AugustulusLegislatureRoman SenateHistorical eraLate antiquity Death of Emperor Theodosius I17 January 395 Deposition of Emperor Romulus4 September 476 Murder of Julius Nepos9 May 480Area395 3 2 000 000 km2 770 000 sq mi CurrencyRoman currencyPreceded by Succeeded byRoman Empire Eastern Roman EmpireKingdom of ItalyKingdom of the VisigothsKingdom of the VandalsKingdom of the FranksKingdom of the SuebiKingdom of the BurgundiansKingdom of the RomansKingdom of the Moors and RomansAlamanniaArmoricaSub Roman BritainKingdom of Gwynedd Since the Western Roman Empire was not a distinct state separate from the Eastern Roman Empire there was no particular official term that designated the Western provinces or their government which was simply known at the time as the Roman Empire Terms such as Imperium Romanum Occidentale and Hesperium Imperium were either never in official usage or invented by later medieval or modern historians long after the Western Roman court had fallen In the ancient era the Latin term often used was S P Q R Senatus Populusque Romanus Senate and People of Rome Latin used in documents on flags and banners and carved engraved on buildings Whilst the deposition of Emperor Romulus Augustulus in 476 is the most commonly cited end date for the Western Roman Empire the last Western Roman emperor Julius Nepos was assassinated in 480 when the title and notion of a separate Western Empire were abolished Another suggested end date is the reorganization of the Italian peninsula and abolition of separate Western Roman administrative institutions under Emperor Justinian during the latter half of the 6th century The de jure last emperor Julius Nepos reigned for five years in exile from Salona Spalatum in Dalmatia 4 5 6 Though the Empire had seen periods with more than one emperor ruling jointly before the view that it was impossible for a single emperor to govern the entire Empire was institutionalised with reforms to Roman law by emperor Diocletian following the disastrous civil wars and disintegrations of the Crisis of the Third Century He introduced the system of the tetrarchy in 286 with two senior emperors titled Augustus one in the East and one in the West each with an appointed Caesar junior emperor and designated successor Though the tetrarchic system would collapse in a matter of years the East West administrative division would endure in one form or another over the coming centuries As such the Western Roman Empire would exist intermittently in several periods between the 3rd and 5th centuries Some emperors such as Constantine I and Theodosius I governed as the sole Augustus across the Roman Empire On the death of Theodosius I in 395 he divided the empire between his two sons with Honorius as his successor in the West governing briefly from Mediolanum and then from Ravenna and Arcadius as his successor in the East governing from Constantinople In 476 after the Battle of Ravenna the Roman Army in the West suffered defeat at the hands of Odoacer and his Germanic foederati Odoacer forced the deposition of emperor Romulus Augustulus and became the first King of Italy In 480 following the assassination of the previous Western emperor Julius Nepos the Eastern emperor Zeno dissolved the Western court and proclaimed himself the sole emperor of the Roman Empire The date of 476 was popularized by the 18th century British historian Edward Gibbon as a demarcating event for the end of the Western Empire and is sometimes used to mark the transition from Antiquity to the Middle Ages Odoacer s Italy and other barbarian kingdoms many of them representing former Western Roman allies that had been granted lands in return for military assistance would maintain a pretense of Roman continuity through the continued use of the old Roman administrative systems and nominal subservience to the Eastern Roman court In the 6th century emperor Justinian I re imposed direct Imperial rule on large parts of the former Western Roman Empire including the prosperous regions of North Africa the ancient Roman heartland of Italy and parts of Hispania Political instability in the Eastern heartlands combined with foreign invasions and religious differences made efforts to retain control of these territories difficult and they were gradually lost for good Though the Eastern Empire retained territories in the south of Italy until the eleventh century the influence that the Empire had over Western Europe had diminished significantly The papal coronation of the Frankish King Charlemagne as Roman Emperor in 800 marked a new imperial line that would evolve into the Holy Roman Empire which presented a revival of the Imperial title in Western Europe but was in no meaningful sense an extension of Roman traditions or institutions The Great Schism of 1054 between the churches of Rome and Constantinople further diminished any authority the emperor in Constantinople could hope to exert in the west Contents 1 Background 1 1 Rebellions and political developments 1 2 Crisis of the Third Century 1 3 Tetrarchy 1 4 Further divisions 2 History 2 1 Reign of Honorius 2 2 Escalating barbarian conflicts 2 3 Internal unrest and Majorian 2 4 Collapse 2 5 Fall of the Empire 3 Political aftermath 3 1 Germanic Italy 3 2 Imperial reconquest 4 Legacy 4 1 Nomenclature 4 2 Attempted restorations of a Western court 4 3 Later claims to the Imperial title in the West 5 List of Western Roman emperors 5 1 Tetrarchy 286 313 5 2 Constantinian dynasty 309 363 5 3 Non dynastic 363 364 5 4 Valentinianic dynasty 364 392 5 5 Theodosian dynasty 392 455 5 6 Non dynastic 455 480 6 References 6 1 Citations 6 2 Sources 6 3 Web sources 7 Further reading 8 External linksBackground EditFurther information History of the Roman Empire and First division of the Roman Empire As the Roman Republic expanded it reached a point where the central government in Rome could not effectively rule the distant provinces Communications and transportation were especially problematic given the vast extent of the Empire News of invasion revolt natural disasters or epidemic outbreak was carried by ship or mounted postal service often requiring much time to reach Rome and for Rome s orders to be returned and acted upon Therefore provincial governors had de facto autonomy in the name of the Roman Republic Governors had several duties including the command of armies handling the taxes of the province and serving as the province s chief judges 7 Prior to the establishment of the Empire the territories of the Roman Republic had been divided in 43 BC among the members of the Second Triumvirate Mark Antony Octavian and Marcus Aemilius Lepidus Antony received the provinces in the East Achaea Macedonia and Epirus roughly modern Greece Albania and the coast of Croatia Bithynia Pontus and Asia roughly modern Turkey Syria Cyprus and Cyrenaica 8 These lands had previously been conquered by Alexander the Great thus much of the aristocracy was of Greek origin The whole region especially the major cities had been largely assimilated into Greek culture Greek often serving as the lingua franca 9 The Roman Republic before the conquests of Octavian Octavian obtained the Roman provinces of the West Italia modern Italy Gaul modern France Gallia Belgica parts of modern Belgium the Netherlands and Luxembourg and Hispania modern Spain and Portugal 8 These lands also included Greek and Carthaginian colonies in the coastal areas though Celtic tribes such as Gauls and Celtiberians were culturally dominant Lepidus received the minor province of Africa roughly modern Tunisia Octavian soon took Africa from Lepidus while adding Sicilia modern Sicily to his holdings 10 Upon the defeat of Mark Antony a victorious Octavian controlled a united Roman Empire The Empire featured many distinct cultures all experienced a gradual Romanization 11 While the predominantly Greek culture of the East and the predominantly Latin culture of the West functioned effectively as an integrated whole political and military developments would ultimately realign the Empire along those cultural and linguistic lines More often than not Greek and Latin practices and to some extent the languages themselves would be combined in fields such as history e g those by Cato the Elder philosophy and rhetoric 12 13 14 Rebellions and political developments Edit Roman Empire in 117 CE at its greatest extent at the time of Trajan s death vassal states 15 Minor rebellions and uprisings were fairly common events throughout the Empire Conquered tribes or oppressed cities would revolt and the legions would be detached to crush the rebellion While this process was simple in peacetime it could be considerably more complicated in wartime In a full blown military campaign the legions were far more numerous as for example those led by Vespasian in the First Jewish Roman War To ensure a commander s loyalty a pragmatic emperor might hold some members of the general s family hostage To this end Nero effectively held Domitian and Quintus Petillius Cerialis Governor of Ostia who were respectively the younger son and brother in law of Vespasian Nero s rule was ended by a revolt of the Praetorian Guard who had been bribed in the name of Galba The Praetorian Guard a figurative sword of Damocles was often perceived as being of dubious loyalty primarily due its role in court intrigues and in overthrowing several emperors including Pertinax and Aurelian 16 17 Following their example the legions at the borders increasingly participated in civil wars For instance legions stationed in Egypt and the eastern provinces would see significant participation in the civil war of 218 between Emperor Macrinus and Elagabalus 18 As the Empire expanded two key frontiers revealed themselves In the West behind the rivers Rhine and Danube Germanic tribes were an important enemy Augustus the first emperor had tried to conquer them but had pulled back after the disastrous Battle of the Teutoburg Forest 19 Whilst the Germanic tribes were formidable foes the Parthian Empire in the East presented the greatest threat to the Empire The Parthians were too remote and powerful to be conquered and there was a constant Parthian threat of invasion The Parthians repelled several Roman invasions and even after successful wars of conquest such as those implemented by Trajan or Septimius Severus the conquered territories were forsaken in attempts to ensure a lasting peace with the Parthians The Parthian Empire would be succeeded by the Sasanian Empire which continued hostilities with the Roman Empire 20 Controlling the western border of Rome was reasonably easy because it was relatively close to Rome itself and also because of the disunity among the Germans However controlling both frontiers simultaneously during wartime was difficult If the emperor was near the border in the East the chances were high that an ambitious general would rebel in the West and vice versa This wartime opportunism plagued many ruling emperors and indeed paved the road to power for several future emperors By the time of the Crisis of the Third Century usurpation became a common method of succession Philip the Arab Trebonianus Gallus and Aemilianus were all usurping generals turned emperors whose rule would end with usurpation by another powerful general 21 22 23 Crisis of the Third Century Edit Main article Crisis of the Third Century The Roman Gallic and Palmyrene Empires in 271 ADWith the assassination of the emperor Alexander Severus on 18 March 235 the Roman Empire sank into a 50 year period of civil war now known as the Crisis of the Third Century The rise of the bellicose Sasanian Empire in place of Parthia posed a major threat to Rome in the east as demonstrated by Shapur I s capture of Emperor Valerian in 259 Valerian s eldest son and heir apparent Gallienus succeeded him and took up the fight on the eastern frontier Gallienus son Saloninus and the Praetorian Prefect Silvanus were residing in Colonia Agrippina modern Cologne to solidify the loyalty of the local legions Nevertheless Marcus Cassianius Latinius Postumus the local governor of the German provinces rebelled his assault on Colonia Agrippina resulted in the deaths of Saloninus and the prefect In the confusion that followed an independent state known in modern historiography as the Gallic Empire emerged 24 Its capital was Augusta Treverorum modern Trier and it quickly expanded its control over the German and Gaulish provinces all of Hispania and Britannia It had its own senate and a partial list of its consuls still survives It maintained Roman religion language and culture and was far more concerned with fighting the Germanic tribes fending off Germanic incursions and restoring the security the Gallic provinces had enjoyed in the past than in challenging the Roman central government 25 However in the reign of Claudius Gothicus 268 to 270 large expanses of the Gallic Empire were restored to Roman rule At roughly the same time several eastern provinces seceded to form the Palmyrene Empire under the rule of Queen Zenobia 26 In 272 Emperor Aurelian finally managed to reclaim Palmyra and its territory for the empire With the East secure his attention turned to the West invading the Gallic Empire a year later Aurelian decisively defeated Tetricus I in the Battle of Chalons and soon captured Tetricus and his son Tetricus II Both Zenobia and the Tetrici were pardoned although they were first paraded in a triumph 27 28 Tetrarchy Edit Main article Tetrarchy The organization of the Empire under the Tetrarchy Diocletian was the first emperor to divide the Roman Empire into a Tetrarchy In 286 he elevated Maximian to the rank of Augustus emperor and gave him control of the Western Empire while he himself ruled the East 29 30 31 In 293 Galerius and Constantius Chlorus were appointed as their subordinates caesars creating the First Tetrarchy This system effectively divided the Empire into four major regions as a way to avoid the civil unrest that had marked the 3rd century In the West Maximian made Mediolanum now Milan his capital and Constantius made Trier his In the East Galerius made his capital Sirmium and Diocletian made Nicomedia his On 1 May 305 Diocletian and Maximian abdicated replaced by Galerius and Constantius who appointed Maximinus II and Valerius Severus respectively as their caesars creating the Second Tetrarchy 32 The Tetrarchy collapsed after the unexpected death of Constantius in 306 His son Constantine the Great was declared Western emperor by the British legions 33 34 35 36 but several other claimants arose and attempted to seize the Western Empire In 308 Galerius held a meeting at Carnuntum where he revived the Tetrarchy by dividing the Western Empire between Constantine and Licinius 37 However Constantine was more interested in conquering the whole empire than he was in the stability of the Tetrarchy and by 314 began to compete against Licinius Constantine defeated Licinius in 324 at the Battle of Chrysopolis where Licinius was taken prisoner and later murdered 38 After Constantine unified the empire he refounded the city of Byzantium in modern day Turkey as Nova Roma New Rome later called Constantinople and made it the capital of the Roman Empire 39 The Tetrarchy was ended although the concept of physically splitting the Roman Empire between two emperors remained Although several powerful emperors unified both parts of the empire this generally reverted into an empire divided into an East and a West upon their deaths as happened after the deaths of Constantine and Theodosius I 40 41 Further divisions Edit See also Christianization of the Roman Empire as diffusion of innovation Division of the Roman Empire among the Caesars appointed by Constantine I from west to east the territories of Constantine II Constans I Dalmatius and Constantius II After the death of Constantine I May 337 this was the formal division of the Empire until Dalmatius was killed and his territory divided between Constans and Constantius The Roman Empire was under the rule of a single emperor but with the death of Constantine in 337 the empire was partitioned between his surviving male heirs 40 Constantius his third son and the second by his wife Fausta Maximian s daughter 42 received the eastern provinces including Constantinople Thrace Asia Minor Syria Egypt and Cyrenaica Constantine II received Britannia Gaul Hispania and Mauretania and Constans initially under the supervision of Constantine II received Italy Africa Illyricum Pannonia Macedonia and Achaea The provinces of Thrace Achaea and Macedonia were shortly controlled by Dalmatius nephew of Constantine I and a caesar not an Augustus until his murder by his own soldiers in 337 43 The West was unified in 340 under Constans who was assassinated in 350 under the order of the usurper Magnentius After Magnentius lost the Battle of Mursa Major and committed suicide a complete reunification of the whole Empire occurred under Constantius in 353 42 Constantius II focused most of his power in the East Under his rule the city of Byzantium only recently re founded as Constantinople was fully developed as a capital At Constantinople the political economic and military control of the Eastern Empire s resources would remain safe for centuries to come The city was well fortified and located at the crossroads of several major trade and military routes The site had been acknowledged for its strategic importance already by emperors Septimius Severus and Caracalla more than a century prior 44 In 361 Constantius II became ill and died and Constantius Chlorus grandson Julian who had served as Constantius II s Caesar assumed power Julian was killed in 363 in the Battle of Samarra against the Persian Empire and was succeeded by Jovian who ruled for only nine months 45 Following the death of Jovian Valentinian I emerged as emperor in 364 He immediately divided the Empire once again giving the eastern half to his brother Valens Stability was not achieved for long in either half as the conflicts with outside forces barbarian tribes intensified In 376 the Visigoths fleeing before the Ostrogoths who in turn were fleeing before the Huns were allowed to cross the river Danube and settle in the Balkans by the Eastern government Mistreatment caused a full scale rebellion and in 378 they inflicted a crippling defeat on the Eastern Roman field army in the Battle of Adrianople in which Emperor Valens also died The defeat at Adrianople was shocking to the Romans and forced them to negotiate with and settle the Visigoths within the borders of the Empire where they would become semi independent foederati under their own leaders 46 The division of the Empire after the death of Theodosius I c 395 AD superimposed on modern borders Western Court under Honorius Eastern Court under ArcadiusMore than in the East there was also opposition to the Christianizing policy of the emperors in the western part of the Empire In 379 Valentinian I s son and successor Gratian declined to wear the mantle of Pontifex Maximus and in 382 he rescinded the rights of pagan priests and removed the Altar of Victory from the Roman Curia a decision which caused dissatisfaction among the traditionally pagan aristocracy of Rome 47 The political situation was unstable In 383 a powerful and popular general named Magnus Maximus seized power in the West and forced Gratian s half brother Valentinian II to flee to the East for aid in a destructive civil war the Eastern emperor Theodosius I restored him to power 48 In 392 the Frankish and pagan magister militum Arbogast assassinated Valentinian II and proclaimed an obscure senator named Eugenius as emperor In 394 the forces of the two halves of the Empire again clashed with great loss of life Again Theodosius I won and he briefly ruled a united Empire until his death in 395 He was the last emperor to rule both parts of the Roman Empire before the West fragmented and collapsed 41 Theodosius I s older son Arcadius inherited the eastern half while the younger Honorius got the western half Both were still minors and neither was capable of ruling effectively Honorius was placed under the tutelage of the half Roman half barbarian magister militum Flavius Stilicho 49 while Rufinus became the power behind the throne in the east Rufinus and Stilicho were rivals and their disagreements would be exploited by the Gothic leader Alaric I who again rebelled in 408 following the massacre by Roman legions of thousands of barbarian families who were trying to assimilate into the Roman empire 50 Neither half of the Empire could raise forces sufficient even to subdue Alaric s men and both tried to use Alaric against the other half Alaric himself tried to establish a long term territorial and official base but was never able to do so Stilicho tried to defend Italy and bring the invading Goths under control but to do so he stripped the Rhine frontier of troops and the Vandals Alans and Suevi invaded Gaul in large numbers in 406 Stilicho became a victim of court intrigues and was killed in 408 While the East began a slow recovery and consolidation the West began to collapse entirely Alaric s men sacked Rome in 410 51 History EditReign of Honorius Edit Main article Honorius emperor Gold solidus of Honorius Honorius the younger son of Theodosius I was declared Augustus and as such co emperor with his father on 23 January in 393 at the age of 9 Upon the death of Theodosius Honorius inherited the throne of the West at the age of ten whilst his older brother Arcadius inherited the East The western capital was initially Mediolanum as it had been during previous divisions but it was moved to Ravenna in 401 upon the entry of the Visigothic king Alaric I into Italy Ravenna protected by abundant marshes and strong fortifications was far easier to defend and had easy access to the imperial fleet of the Eastern Empire but made it more difficult for the Roman military to defend the central parts of Italy from regular barbarian incursions 52 Ravenna would remain the western capital until 450 when Valentinian III moved the court back to Rome Most western emperors from 450 until 475 reigned from Rome The last de facto western emperor Romulus Augustulus resided in Ravenna from 475 until his deposition in 476 and Ravenna would later be the capital of both the Ostrogothic Kingdom and the Exarchate of Ravenna 53 54 Despite the moved capital economic power remained focused on Rome and its rich senatorial aristocracy which dominated much of Italy and Africa in particular After Emperor Gallienus had banned senators from army commands in the mid 3rd century the senatorial elite lost all experience of and interest in military life 55 In the early 5th century the wealthy landowning elite of the Roman Senate largely barred its tenants from military service but it also refused to approve sufficient funding for maintaining a sufficiently powerful mercenary army to defend the entire Western Empire The West s most important military area had been northern Gaul and the Rhine frontier in the 4th century when Trier frequently served as a military capital of sorts for the Empire Many leading Western generals were barbarians 56 The reign of Honorius was even by Western Roman standards chaotic and plagued by both internal and external struggles The Visigothic foederati under Alaric magister militum in Illyricum rebelled in 395 Gildo the Comes Africae and Magister utriusque militiae per Africam rebelled in 397 and initiated the Gildonic War Stilicho managed to subdue Gildo but was campaigning in Raetia when the Visigoths entered Italy in 402 57 Stilicho hurrying back to aid in defending Italy summoned legions in Gaul and Britain with which he managed to defeat Alaric twice before agreeing to allow him to retreat back to Illyria 58 Barbarian invasions and the invasion of usurper Constantine III in the Western Roman Empire during the reign of Honorius 407 409 The weakening of the frontiers in Britain and Gaul had dire consequences for the Empire As the imperial government was not providing the military protection the northern provinces expected and needed numerous usurpers arose in Britain including Marcus 406 407 Gratian 407 and Constantine III who invaded Gaul in 407 59 Britain was effectively abandoned by the empire by 410 due to the lack of resources and the need to look after more important frontiers The weakening of the Rhine frontier allowed multiple barbarian tribes including the Vandals Alans and Suebi to cross the river and enter Roman territory in 406 60 Honorius was convinced by the minister Olympius that Stilicho was conspiring to overthrow him and so arrested and executed Stilicho in 408 61 Olympius headed a conspiracy that orchestrated the deaths of key individuals related to the faction of Stilicho including his son and the families of many of his federated troops This led many of the soldiers to instead join with Alaric who returned to Italy in 409 and met little opposition Despite attempts by Honorius to reach a settlement and six legions of Eastern Roman soldiers sent to support him 62 the negotiations between Alaric and Honorius broke down in 410 and Alaric sacked the city of Rome Though the sack was relatively mild and Rome was no longer the capital of even the Western Empire the event shocked people across both halves of the Empire as this was the first time Rome viewed at least as the symbolic heart of the Empire had fallen to a foreign enemy since the Gallic invasions of the 4th century BC The Eastern Roman emperor Theodosius II the successor of Arcadius declared three days of mourning in Constantinople 63 Without Stilicho and following the sack of Rome Honorius reign grew more chaotic The usurper Constantine III had stripped Roman Britain of its defenses when he crossed over to Gaul in 407 leaving the Romanized population subject to invasions first by the Picts and then by the Saxons Angli and the Jutes who began to settle permanently from about 440 onwards After Honorius accepted Constantine as co emperor Constantine s general in Hispania Gerontius proclaimed Maximus as emperor With the aid of general Constantius Honorius defeated Gerontius and Maximus in 411 and shortly thereafter captured and executed Constantine III With Constantius back in Italy the Gallo Roman senator Jovinus revolted after proclaiming himself emperor with the support of the Gallic nobility and the barbarian Burgundians and Alans Honorius turned to the Visigoths under King Athaulf for support 64 Athaulf defeated and executed Jovinus and his proclaimed co emperor Sebastianus in 413 around the same time as another usurper arose in Africa Heraclianus Heraclianus attempted to invade Italy but failed and retreated to Carthage where he was killed 65 With the Roman legions withdrawn northern Gaul became increasingly subject to Frankish influence the Franks naturally adopting a leading role in the region In 418 Honorius granted southwestern Gaul Gallia Aquitania to the Visigoths as a vassal federation Honorius removed the local imperial governors leaving the Visigoths and the provincial Roman inhabitants to conduct their own affairs As such the first of the barbarian kingdoms the Visigothic Kingdom was formed 66 Escalating barbarian conflicts Edit Germanic and Hunnic invasions of the Roman Empire 100 500 ADHonorius death in 423 was followed by turmoil until the Eastern Roman government installed Valentinian III as Western emperor in Ravenna by force of arms with Galla Placidia acting as regent during her son s minority Theodosius II the Eastern emperor had hesitated to announce the death of Honorius and in the ensuing interregnum Joannes was nominated as Western emperor Joannes rule was short and the forces of the East defeated and executed him in 425 67 Boxwood relief depicting the liberation of a besieged city by a relief force with those defending the walls making a sortie Western Roman Empire early 5th century ADAfter a violent struggle with several rivals and against Placidia s wish Aetius rose to the rank of magister militum Aetius was able to stabilize the Western Empire s military situation somewhat relying heavily on his Hunnic allies With their help Aetius undertook extensive campaigns in Gaul defeating the Visigoths in 437 and 438 but suffering a defeat himself in 439 ending the conflict in a status quo ante with a treaty 68 Meanwhile pressure from the Visigoths and a rebellion by Bonifacius the governor of Africa induced the Vandals under King Gaiseric to cross from Spain to Tingitana in what is now Morocco in 429 They temporarily halted in Numidia in 435 before moving eastward With Aetius occupied in Gaul the Western Roman government could do nothing to prevent the Vandals conquering the wealthy African provinces culminating in the fall of Carthage on 19 October 439 and the establishment of the Vandal Kingdom By the 400s Italy and Rome itself were dependent on the taxes and foodstuffs from these provinces leading to an economic crisis With Vandal fleets becoming an increasing danger to Roman sea trade and the coasts and islands of the western and central Mediterranean Aetius coordinated a counterattack against the Vandals in 440 organizing a large army in Sicily 69 However the plans for retaking Africa had to be abandoned due to the immediate need to combat the invading Huns who in 444 were united under their ambitious king Attila Turning against their former ally the Huns became a formidable threat to the Empire Aetius transferred his forces to the Danube 69 though Attila concentrated on raiding the Eastern Roman provinces in the Balkans providing temporary relief to the Western Empire In 449 Attila received a message from Honoria Valentinian III s sister offering him half the western empire if he would rescue her from an unwanted marriage that her brother was forcing her into With a pretext to invade the West Attila secured peace with the Eastern court and crossed the Rhine in early 451 70 With Attila wreaking havoc in Gaul Aetius gathered a coalition of Roman and Germanic forces including Visigoths and Burgundians and prevented the Huns from taking the city of Aurelianum forcing them into retreat 71 At the Battle of the Catalaunian Plains the Roman Germanic coalition met and defeated the Hunnic forces though Attila escaped 72 Attila regrouped and invaded Italy in 452 With Aetius not having enough forces to attack him the road to Rome was open Valentinian sent Pope Leo I and two leading senators to negotiate with Attila This embassy combined with a plague among Attila s troops the threat of famine and news that the Eastern emperor Marcian had launched an attack on the Hun homelands along the Danube forced Attila to turn back and leave Italy When Attila died unexpectedly in 453 the power struggle that erupted between his sons ended the threat posed by the Huns 73 Internal unrest and Majorian Edit The Western Roman Empire during the reign of Majorian in 460 AD During his four year long reign from 457 to 461 Majorian restored Western Roman authority in Hispania and most of Gaul Despite his accomplishments Roman rule in the west would last less than two more decades Valentinian III was intimidated by Aetius and was encouraged by the Roman senator Petronius Maximus and the chamberlain Heraclius to assassinate him When Aetius was at court in Ravenna delivering a financial account Valentinian suddenly leaped from his seat and declared that he would no longer be the victim of Aetius drunken depravities Aetius attempted to defend himself from the charges but Valentinian drew his sword and struck the weaponless Aetius on the head killing him on the spot 74 On 16 March the following year Valentinian himself was killed by supporters of the dead general possibly acting for Petronius Maximus With the end of the Theodosian dynasty Petronius Maximus proclaimed himself emperor during the ensuing period of unrest 75 Petronius was not able to take effective control of the significantly weakened and unstable Empire He broke the betrothal between Huneric son of the Vandal king Gaiseric and Eudocia daughter of Valentinian III This was seen as a just cause of war by King Gaiseric who set sail to attack Rome Petronius and his supporters attempted to flee the city at the sight of the approaching Vandals only to be stoned to death by a Roman mob Petronius had reigned only 11 weeks 76 With the Vandals at the gates Pope Leo I requested that the King not destroy the ancient city or murder its inhabitants to which Gaiseric agreed and the city gates were opened to him Though keeping his promise Gaiseric looted great amounts of treasure and damaged objects of cultural significance such as the Temple of Jupiter Optimus Maximus The severity of the Vandal sack of 455 is disputed though with the Vandals plundering the city for a full fourteen days as opposed to the Visigothic sack of 410 where the Visigoths only spent three days in the city it was likely more thorough 77 Avitus a prominent general under Petronius was proclaimed emperor by the Visigothic king Theodoric II and accepted as such by the Roman Senate Though supported by the Gallic provinces and the Visigoths Avitus was resented in Italy due to ongoing food shortages caused by Vandal control of trade routes and for using a Visigothic imperial guard He disbanded his guard due to popular pressure and the Suebian general Ricimer used the opportunity to depose Avitus counting on popular discontent After the deposition of Avitus the Eastern emperor Leo I did not select a new western Augustus The prominent general Majorian defeated an invading force of Alemanni and was subsequently proclaimed Western emperor by the army and eventually accepted as such by Leo 78 Majorian was the last Western emperor to attempt to recover the Western Empire with his own military forces To prepare Majorian significantly strengthened the Western Roman army by recruiting large numbers of barbarian mercenaries among them the Gepids Ostrogoths Rugii Burgundians Huns Bastarnae Suebi Scythians and Alans and built two fleets one at Ravenna to combat the strong Vandalic fleet Majorian personally led the army to wage war in Gaul leaving Ricimer in Italy The Gallic provinces and the Visigothic Kingdom had rebelled following the deposition of Avitus refusing to acknowledge Majorian as lawful emperor At the Battle of Arelate Majorian decisively defeated the Visigoths under Theoderic II and forced them to relinquish their great conquests in Hispania and return to foederati status Majorian then entered the Rhone Valley where he defeated the Burgundians and reconquered the rebel city of Lugdunum With Gaul back under Roman control Majorian turned his eyes to the Vandals and Africa Not only did the Vandals pose a constant danger to coastal Italy and trade in the Mediterranean but the province they ruled was economically vital to the survival of the West Majorian began a campaign to fully reconquer Hispania to use it as a base for the reconquest of Africa Throughout 459 Majorian campaigned against the Suebi in northwestern Hispania 78 The Vandals began to increasingly fear a Roman invasion King Gaiseric tried to negotiate a peace with Majorian who rejected the proposal In the wake of this Gaiseric devastated Mauretania part of his own kingdom fearing that the Roman army would land there Having regained control of Hispania Majorian intended to use his fleet at Carthaginiensis to attack the Vandals Before he could the fleet was destroyed allegedly by traitors paid by the Vandals Deprived of his fleet Majorian had to cancel his attack on the Vandals and conclude a peace with Gaiseric Disbanding his barbarian forces Majorian intended to return to Rome and issue reforms stopping at Arelate on his way Here Ricimer deposed and arrested him in 461 having gathered significant aristocratic opposition against Majorian After five days of beatings and torture Majorian was beheaded near the river Iria 78 Collapse Edit See also Fall of the Western Roman Empire The Western and Eastern Roman Empire by 476The final collapse of the Empire in the West was marked by increasingly ineffectual puppet emperors dominated by their Germanic magistri militum The most pointed example of this is Ricimer who effectively became a shadow emperor following the depositions of Avitus and Majorian Unable to take the throne for himself due to his barbarian heritage Ricimer appointed a series of puppet emperors who could do little to halt the collapse of Roman authority and the loss of the territories re conquered by Majorian 79 The first of these puppet emperors Libius Severus had no recognition outside of Italy with the Eastern emperor Leo I and provincial governors in Gaul and Illyria all refusing to recognize him 80 Severus died in 465 and Leo I with the consent of Ricimer appointed the capable Eastern general Anthemius as Western emperor following an eighteen month interregnum The relationship between Anthemius and the East was good Anthemius is the last Western emperor recorded in an Eastern law and the two courts conducted a joint operation to retake Africa from the Vandals culminating in the disastrous Battle of Cape Bon in 468 In addition Anthemius conducted failed campaigns against the Visigoths hoping to halt their expansion 79 The trial and subsequent execution of Romanus an Italian senator and friend of Ricimer on the grounds of treachery in 470 made Ricimer hostile to Anthemius Following two years of ill feeling Ricimer deposed and killed Anthemius in 472 elevating Olybrius to the Western throne 81 During the brief reign of Olybrius Ricimer died and his nephew Gundobad succeeded him as magister militum After only seven months of rule Olybrius died of dropsy Gundobad elevated Glycerius to Western emperor The Eastern Empire had rejected Olybrius and also rejected Glycerius instead supporting a candidate of their own Julius Nepos magister militum in Dalmatia With the support of Eastern emperors Leo II and Zeno Julius Nepos crossed the Adriatic Sea in the spring of 474 to depose Glycerius At the arrival of Nepos in Italy Glycerius abdicated without a fight and was allowed to live out his life as the Bishop of Salona 82 The brief rule of Nepos in Italy ended in 475 when Orestes a former secretary of Attila and the magister militum of Julius Nepos took control of Ravenna and forced Nepos to flee by ship to Dalmatia Later in the same year Orestes crowned his own young son as Western emperor under the name Romulus Augustus Romulus Augustus was not recognised as Western emperor by the Eastern Court who maintained that Nepos was the only legal Western emperor reigning in exile from Dalmatia 83 On 4 September 476 Odoacer leader of the Germanic foederati in Italy captured Ravenna killed Orestes and deposed Romulus Though Romulus was deposed Nepos did not return to Italy and continued to reign as Western emperor from Dalmatia with support from Constantinople Odoacer proclaimed himself ruler of Italy and began to negotiate with the Eastern emperor Zeno Zeno eventually granted Odoacer patrician status as recognition of his authority and accepted him as his viceroy of Italy Zeno however insisted that Odoacer had to pay homage to Julius Nepos as the emperor of the Western Empire Odoacer accepted this condition and issued coins in the name of Julius Nepos throughout Italy This however was mainly an empty political gesture as Odoacer never returned any real power or territories to Nepos The murder of Nepos in 480 prompted Odoacer to invade Dalmatia annexing it to his Kingdom of Italy 84 Fall of the Empire Edit See also Historiography of the fall of the Western Roman Empire The city of Ravenna Western Roman capital on the Tabula Peutingeriana a 13th century medieval map possibly copied from a 4th or 5th century Roman original By convention the Western Roman Empire is deemed to have ended on 4 September 476 when Odoacer deposed Romulus Augustus but the historical record calls this determination into question Indeed the deposition of Romulus Augustus received very little attention in contemporary times Romulus was a usurper in the eyes of the Eastern Roman Empire and the remaining territories of Western Roman control outside of Italy with the previous emperor Julius Nepos still being alive and claiming to rule the Western Empire in Dalmatia Furthermore the Western court had lacked true power and had been subject to Germanic aristocrats for decades with most of its legal territory being under control of various barbarian kingdoms With Odoacer recognising Julius Nepos and later the Eastern emperor Zeno as his sovereign nominal Roman control continued in Italy 85 Syagrius who had managed to preserve Roman sovereignty in an exclave in northern Gaul a realm today known as the Domain of Soissons also recognized Nepos as his sovereign and the legitimate Western emperor 86 The authority of Julius Nepos as emperor was accepted not only by Odoacer in Italy but by the Eastern Empire and Syagrius in Gaul who had not recognized Romulus Augustulus Nepos was murdered by his own soldiers in 480 a plot some attribute to Odoacer or the previous deposed emperor Glycerius 87 and the Eastern emperor Zeno chose not to appoint a new Western emperor Zeno recognizing that no true Roman control remained over the territories legally governed by the Western court instead chose to abolish the juridical division of the position of emperor and declared himself the sole emperor of the Roman Empire Zeno became the first sole Roman emperor since the division after Theodosius I 85 years prior and the position would never again be divided As such the eastern Roman emperors after 480 are the successors of the western ones albeit only in a juridical sense 88 These emperors would continue to rule the Roman Empire until the Fall of Constantinople in 1453 nearly a thousand years later 89 As 480 marks the end of the juridical division of the empire into two imperial courts some historians refer to the death of Nepos and abolition of the Western Empire by Zeno as the end of the Western Roman Empire 86 90 Despite the fall or abolition of the Western Empire many of the new kings of western Europe continued to operate firmly within a Roman administrative framework This is especially true in the case of the Ostrogoths who came to rule Italy after Odoacer They continued to use the administrative systems of Odoacer s kingdom essentially those of the Western Roman Empire and administrative positions continued to be staffed exclusively by Romans The Senate continued to function as it always had and the laws of the Empire were recognized as ruling the Roman population though the Goths were ruled by their own traditional laws 91 Western Roman administrative institutions in particular those of Italy thus continued to be used during barbarian rule and after the forces of the Eastern Roman empire re conquered some of the formerly imperial territories Some historians thus refer to the reorganizations of Italy and abolition of the old and separate Western Roman administrative units such as the Praetorian prefecture of Italy during the sixth century as the true fall of the Western Roman Empire 85 Roman cultural traditions continued throughout the territory of the Western Empire for long after its disappearance and a recent school of interpretation argues that the great political changes can more accurately be described as a complex cultural transformation rather than a fall 92 Political aftermath Edit Map of the Barbarian kingdoms major kingdoms and the Roman Empire labelled below of the western Mediterranean in 526 seven years before the campaigns of reconquest under Eastern emperor Justinian I The Roman Empire under Justinian The Vandal Kingdom The Ostrogothic Kingdom of Italy The Visigothic Kingdom The Frankish Kingdom After the fall of the Western Roman Empire the Germanic kingdoms often referred to as barbarian kingdoms founded during its collapse continued to grow and prosper Their beginnings together with the end of the Western Roman Empire mark the transition from Late Antiquity to the Middle Ages The practices of the barbarian kingdoms gradually replaced the old Roman institutions specifically in the praetorian prefectures of Gaul and Italy during the sixth and seventh centuries 93 In many places the Roman institutions collapsed along with the economic stability In some regions notably Gaul and Italy the settlement of barbarians on former Roman lands seems to have caused relatively little disruption with barbarian rulers using and modifying the Roman systems already in place 94 The Germanic kingdoms in Italy Hispania and Gaul continued to recognise the emperor in Constantinople as a somewhat nominal sovereign the Visigoths minted coins in their names until the reign of Justinian I in the sixth century 95 6th century Visigothic coin struck in the name of Emperor Justinian ISome territories under direct Roman control continued to exist in the West even after 480 The Domain of Soissons a rump state in Northern Gaul ruled by Syagrius survived until 486 when it was conquered by the Franks under King Clovis I after the Battle of Soissons Syagrius was known as the King of the Romans by the Germanic peoples of the region and repeatedly claimed that he was merely governing a Roman province not an independent realm 86 Under Clovis I from the 480s to 511 the Franks would come to develop into a great regional power After their conquest of Soissons the Franks defeated the Alemanni in 504 and conquered all Visigothic territory north of the Pyrenees other than Septimania in 507 Relations between the Franks and the Eastern Empire appear to have been positive with Emperor Anastasius granting Clovis the title of consul following his victory against the Visigoths At the time of its dissolution in the 800s the Frankish Kingdom had lasted far longer than the other migration period barbarian kingdoms Its divided successors would develop into the medieval states of France initially known as West Francia and Germany initially known as East Francia 96 A Mauro Roman realm survived in the province of Mauretania Caesariensis until the early 8th century An inscription on a fortification at the ruined city of Altava from the year 508 identifies a man named Masuna as the king of Regnum Maurorum et Romanarum the Kingdom of the Moors and Romans 97 It is possible that Masuna is the same man as the Massonas who allied himself with the forces of the Eastern Roman Empire against the Vandals in 535 98 This Kingdom was defeated by the Eastern Roman magister militum Gennadius in 578 and its coastal territories were incorporated into the Empire once more 99 Germanic Italy Edit Odoacer s Italy in 480 AD following the annexation of Dalmatia The deposition of Romulus Augustus and the rise of Odoacer as ruler of Italy in 476 received very little attention at the time 85 Overall very little changed for the people there was still a Roman emperor in Constantinople to whom Odoacer had subordinated himself Interregna had been experienced at many points in the West before and the deposition of Romulus Augustus was nothing out of the ordinary Odoacer saw his rule as entirely in the tradition of the Roman Empire not unlike Ricimer and he effectively ruled as an imperial governor of Italy and was even awarded the title of patricius Odoacer ruled using the Roman administrative systems already in place and continued to mint coins with the name and portrait of Julius Nepos until 480 and later with the name and portrait of the Eastern Augustus rather than in his own name 85 When Nepos was murdered in Dalmatia in 480 Odoacer assumed the duty of pursuing and executing the assassins and established his own rule in Dalmatia at the same time 100 Odoacer established his power with the loyal support of the Roman Senate a legislative body that had continued even without an emperor residing in Italy Indeed the Senate seems to have increased in power under Odoacer For the first time since the mid 3rd century copper coins were issued with the legend S C Senatus Consulto These coins were copied by Vandals in Africa and also formed the basis of the currency reform carried out by Emperor Anastasius in the East 101 Under Odoacer Western consuls continued to be appointed as they had been under the Western Roman Empire and were accepted by the Eastern Court the first being Caecina Decius Maximus Basilus in 480 Basilus was made the praetorian prefect of Italy in 483 another traditional position which continued to exist under Odoacer 102 Eleven further consuls were appointed by the Senate under Odoacer from 480 to 493 and one further Praetorian Prefect of Italy was appointed Caecina Mavortius Basilius Decius 486 493 103 Solidus minted under Odoacer with the name and portrait of the Eastern emperor Zeno Though Odoacer ruled as a Roman governor would have and maintained himself as a subordinate to the remaining Empire the Eastern emperor Zeno began to increasingly see him as a rival Thus Zeno promised Theoderic the Great of the Ostrogoths foederati of the Eastern Court control over the Italian peninsula if he was able to defeat Odoacer 104 Theoderic led the Ostrogoths across the Julian Alps and into Italy and defeated Odoacer in battle twice in 489 Following four years of hostilities between them John the Bishop of Ravenna was able to negotiate a treaty in 493 between Odoacer and Theoderic whereby they agreed to rule Ravenna and Italy jointly Theoderic entered Ravenna on 5 March and Odoacer was dead ten days later killed by Theoderic after sharing a meal with him 105 Map of the realm of Theodoric the Great at its height in 523 following the annexation of the southern parts of the Burgundian kingdom Theoderic ruled both the Visigothic and Ostrogothic kingdoms and exerted hegemony over the Burgundians and Vandals Theoderic inherited Odoacer s role as acting viceroy for Italy and ostensibly a patricius and subject of the emperor in Constantinople This position was recognized by Emperor Anastasius in 497 four years after Theoderic had defeated Odoacer Though Theodoric acted as an independent ruler he meticulously preserved the outward appearance of his subordinate position Theoderic continued to use the administrative systems of Odoacer s kingdom essentially those of the Western Roman Empire and administrative positions continued to be staffed exclusively by Romans The senate continued to function as it always had and the laws of the Empire were recognized as ruling the Roman population though the Goths were ruled by their own traditional laws As a subordinate Theoderic did not have the right to issue his own laws only edicts or clarifications 106 The army and military offices were exclusively staffed by the Goths however who largely settled in northern Italy 107 Though acting as a subordinate in domestic affairs Theodoric acted increasingly independent in his foreign policies Seeking to counterbalance the influence of the Empire in the East Theoderic married his daughters to the Visigothic king Alaric II and the Burgundian prince Sigismund His sister Amalfrida was married to the Vandal king Thrasamund and he married Audofleda sister of the Frankish king Clovis I himself 108 Through these alliances and occasional conflicts the territory controlled by Theoderic in the early sixth century nearly constituted a restored Western Roman Empire Ruler of Italy since 493 Theoderic became king of the Visigoths in 511 and exerted hegemony over the Vandals in North Africa between 521 and 523 As such his rule extended throughout the western Mediterranean The Western imperial regalia housed in Constantinople since the deposition of Romulus Augustulus in 476 were returned to Ravenna by Emperor Anastasius in 497 109 Theoderic by now Western emperor in all but name could not however assume an imperial title not only because the notion of a separate Western court had been abolished but also due to his barbarian heritage which like that of Ricimer before him would have barred him from assuming the throne 79 With the death of Theodoric in 526 his network of alliances began to collapse The Visigoths regained autonomy under King Amalaric and the Ostrogoths relations with the Vandals turned increasingly hostile under the reign of their new king Athalaric a child under the regency of his mother Amalasuntha 110 After the collapse of Theoderic s control of the western Mediterranean the Frankish Kingdom rose to become the most powerful of the barbarian kingdoms having taken control of most of Gaul in the absence of Roman governance 96 Amalasuntha continued the policies of conciliation between the Goths and Romans supporting the new Eastern emperor Justinian I and allowing him to use Sicily as a staging point during the reconquest of Africa in the Vandalic War With the death of Athalaric in 534 Amalasuntha crowned her cousin and only relative Theodahad as king hoping for his support Instead Amalasuntha was imprisoned and even though Theodahad assured Emperor Justinian of her safety she was executed shortly after This served as an ideal casus belli for Justinian who prepared to invade and reclaim the Italian peninsula for the Roman Empire 110 Imperial reconquest Edit Further information Vandalic War and Gothic War 535 554 The Eastern Roman Empire by reoccupying some of the former Western Roman Empire s lands enlarged its territory considerably during Justinian s reign from 527 red to 565 orange With Emperor Zeno having juridically reunified the Empire into one imperial court the remaining Eastern Roman Empire continued to lay claim to the areas previously controlled by the Western court throughout Late Antiquity and the Middle Ages Though military campaigns had been conducted by the Western court prior to 476 with the aim of recapturing lost territory most notably under Majorian the reconquests if successful at all were only momentary It was as a result of the campaigns of the generals Belisarius and Narses on behalf of the Eastern Roman emperor Justinian I from 533 to 554 that long lasting reconquests of Roman lands were witnessed 111 Despite also suffering from barbarian incursions the Eastern Empire had survived the fifth century mostly intact The Western Roman Empire less urbanized than the Eastern and more thinly populated may have experienced an economic decline throughout the Late Empire in some provinces 112 Southern Italy northern Gaul except for large towns and cities and to some extent Spain and the Danubian areas may have suffered The East fared better economically especially as Emperors such as Constantine the Great and Constantius II had invested heavily in the eastern economy As a result the Eastern Empire could afford large numbers of professional soldiers and to augment them with mercenaries while the Western Roman Empire could not afford this to the same extent Even after major defeats the East could although not without difficulties buy off its enemies with a ransom or protection money 113 Numbering more than 300 000 soldiers the Eastern Roman army of Justinian I was among the most powerful in the world 114 Unlike the Visigoths and Ostrogoths the Vandals in Africa minted their own coinage and were both de facto and de jure independent often being enemies of both the Western and Eastern Roman Empires 115 With the pro Roman Vandal king Hilderic having been deposed by Gelimer in 530 116 Justinian prepared an expedition led by Belisarius It swiftly retook North Africa between June 533 and March 534 returning the wealthy province to Roman rule Following the reconquest Justinian swiftly reintroduced the Roman administrations of the province establishing a new Praetorian Prefecture of Africa and taking measures to decrease Vandal influence eventually leading to the complete disappearance of the Vandalic people 117 Justinian I left was the first Eastern emperor to attempt to reconquer the territories of the Western Roman Empire undertaking successful campaigns in Africa and Italy in the 500s Manuel I Komnenos right was the last campaigning in southern Italy in the 1150s Following the execution of the pro Roman Ostrogoth queen Amalasuntha and the refusal of Ostrogoth King Theodahad to renounce his control of Italy Justinian ordered the expedition to move on to reconquer Italy ancient heartland of the Empire From 534 to 540 the Roman forces campaigned in Italy and captured Ravenna the Ostrogothic and formerly Western Roman capital in 540 The Gothic resistance revived under King Totila in 541 They were finally defeated following campaigns by the Roman general Narses who also repelled invasions into Italy by the Franks and Alemanni though some cities in northern Italy continued to hold out until the 560s Justinian promulgated the Pragmatic Sanction to reorganize the governance of Italy and the province was returned to Roman rule The end of the conflict saw Italy devastated and considerably depopulated which combined with the disastrous effects of the Plague of Justinian made it difficult to retain over the following centuries 118 At the time of the collapse of the Western Empire in 476 480 the Visigoths controlled large areas of southern Gaul as well as a majority of Hispania Their increased domain had been partly conquered and partly awarded to them by the Western emperor Avitus in the 450s 60s 119 Justinian undertook some limited campaigns against them recovering portions of the southern coast of the Iberian peninsula Here the province of Spania would last until the 620s when the Visigoths under King Suintila reconquered the south coast 120 These regions remained under Roman control throughout the reign of Justinian Three years after his death the Lombards invaded Italy The Lombards conquered large parts of the devastated peninsula in the late 500s establishing the Lombard Kingdom They were in constant conflict with the Exarchate of Ravenna a polity established to replace the old Praetorian Prefecture of Italy and enforce Roman rule in Italy The wealthiest parts of the province including the cities of Rome and Ravenna remained securely in Roman hands under the Exarchate throughout the seventh century 121 Map of the Eastern Roman Empire in 717 AD Over the course of the seventh and eighth centuries Islamic expansion had ended Roman rule in Africa and though some bastions of Roman rule remained most of Italy was controlled by the Lombards Although other Eastern emperors occasionally attempted to campaign in the West none were as successful as Justinian After 600 events conspired to drive the Western provinces out of Constantinople s control with imperial attention focused on the pressing issues of war with Sasanian Persia and then the rise of Islam For a while the West remained important with Emperor Constans II ruling from Syracuse in Sicily a Roman Empire that still stretched from North Africa to the Caucasus in the 660s Thereafter imperial attention declined with Constantinople itself being besieged in the 670s renewed war with the Arabs in the 680s and then a period of chaos between 695 and 717 during which time Africa was finally lost once and for all being conquered by the Umayyad Caliphate Through reforms and military campaigns Emperor Leo III attempted to restore order in the Empire but his doctrinal reforms known as the Iconoclastic Controversy were extremely unpopular in the West and were condemned by Pope Gregory III 122 The Roman Empire was not the only Christian nation affected by the Islamic conquests the Visigothic Kingdom finally fell to the Umayyad Caliphate in the 720s 123 124 The Kingdom of Asturias was founded by Pelagius of Asturias around the same time and was the first Christian realm to be established in Iberia following the defeat of the Visigoths 125 Asturias would be transformed into the Kingdom of Leon in 924 126 which would develop into the predecessors of modern day Spain 127 The religious disagreements between Rome and Constantinople eventually led to the breakdown in imperial rule over Rome itself and the gradual transition of the Exarchate of Ravenna into the independent Papal States led by the Pope In an attempt to gain support against the Lombards the Pope called for aid from the Frankish Kingdom instead of the Eastern Empire eventually crowning the Frankish king Charlemagne as Roman Emperor in 800 AD Though this coronation was strongly opposed by the Eastern Empire there was little they could do as their influence in Western Europe decreased After a series of small wars in the 810s Emperor Michael I recognized Charlemagne as an Emperor He refused to recognize him as a Roman Emperor a title which Michael reserved for himself and his successors instead recognizing him as the slightly less prestigious Emperor of the Franks 128 Imperial rule continued in Sicily throughout the eighth century with the island slowly being overrun by the Arabs during the course of the ninth century In Italy a few strongholds in Calabria provided a base for a later modest imperial expansion which reached its peak in the early eleventh century with most of southern Italy under Roman rule of a sort This however was undone by further civil wars in the Empire and the slow conquest of the region by the Empire s former mercenaries the Normans who finally put an end to imperial rule in Western Europe in 1071 with the conquest of Bari 129 The last emperor to attempt reconquests in the West was Manuel I Komnenos who invaded southern Italy during a war with the Norman Kingdom of Sicily in the 1150s The city of Bari willingly opened its gates to the emperor and after successes in taking other cities in the region 130 Manuel dreamed of a restored Roman Empire and a union between the churches of Rome and Constantinople separated since the schism of 1054 Despite initial successes and Papal support the campaign was unsuccessful and Manuel was forced to return east 131 Legacy EditFurther information Legacy of the Roman Empire Romance languages Corpus Juris Civilis Civil law legal system Latin alphabet Literature Bust sculpture Concrete and Cities On the left Emperor Honorius on the consular diptych of Anicius Petronius Probus 406 On the right Consular diptych of Constantius III a co emperor with Honorius in 421 produced for his consulate in 413 or 417 As the Western Roman Empire crumbled the new Germanic rulers who conquered its constituent provinces maintained most Roman laws and traditions Many of the invading Germanic tribes were already Christianized although most were followers of Arianism They quickly changed their adherence to the state church of the Roman Empire This helped cement the loyalty of the local Roman populations as well as the support of the powerful Bishop of Rome Although they initially continued to recognize indigenous tribal laws they were more influenced by Roman law and gradually incorporated it 93 Roman law particularly the Corpus Juris Civilis collected on the orders of Justinian I is the basis of modern civil law In contrast common law is based on Germanic Anglo Saxon law Civil law is by far the most widespread system of law in the world in force in some form in about 150 countries 132 Romance languages languages that developed from Latin following the collapse of the Western Roman Empire are spoken in Western Europe to this day with the exception of Romanian which developed from the Latin spoken in the eastern provinces and the early Eastern Empire Their extent in Western Europe almost reflects the continental borders of the old Empire Latin as a language did not disappear Vulgar Latin combined with neighboring Germanic and Celtic languages giving rise to modern Romance languages such as Italian French Spanish Portuguese Romanian and a large number of minor languages and dialects Today more than 900 million people are native speakers of Romance languages worldwide In addition many Romance languages are used as lingua francas by non native speakers 133 Latin also influenced Germanic languages such as English and German 134 It survives in a purer form as the language of the Catholic Church the Catholic Mass was spoken exclusively in Latin until 1969 As such it was also used as a lingua franca by ecclesiasticals It remained the language of medicine law and diplomacy most treaties were written in Latin citation needed as well as of intellectuals and scholarship well into the 18th century Since then the use of Latin has declined with the growth of other lingua francas especially English and French 135 The Latin alphabet was expanded due to the split of I into I and J and of V into U V and in places especially Germanic languages and Polish W It is the most widely used alphabetic writing system in the world today citation needed Roman numerals continue to be used in some fields and situations though they have largely been replaced by Arabic numerals 136 A very visible legacy of the Western Roman Empire is the Catholic Church Church institutions slowly began to replace Roman ones in the West even helping to negotiate the safety of Rome during the late 5th century 73 As Rome was invaded by Germanic tribes many assimilated and by the middle of the medieval period c 9th and 10th centuries the central western and northern parts of Europe had been largely converted to Roman Catholicism and acknowledged the Pope as the Vicar of Christ The first of the Barbarian kings to convert to the Church of Rome was Clovis I of the Franks other kingdoms such as the Visigoths later followed suit to garner favor with the papacy 137 When Pope Leo III crowned Charlemagne as Roman Emperor in 800 he both severed ties with the outraged Eastern Empire and established the precedent that no man in Western Europe would be emperor without a papal coronation 138 Although the power the Pope wielded changed significantly throughout the subsequent periods the office itself has remained as the head of the Catholic Church and the head of state of the Vatican City The Pope has consistently held the title of Pontifex Maximus since before the fall of the Western Roman Empire and retains it to this day this title formerly used by the high priest of the Roman polytheistic religion one of whom was Julius Caesar 47 139 The Roman Senate survived the initial collapse of the Western Roman Empire Its authority increased under the rule of Odoacer and later the Ostrogoths evident by the Senate in 498 managing to install Symmachus as pope despite both Theodoric of Italy and Emperor Anastasius supporting another candidate Laurentius 140 Exactly when the senate disappeared is unclear but the institution is known to have survived at least into the 6th century inasmuch as gifts from the senate were received by Emperor Tiberius II in 578 and 580 The traditional senate building Curia Julia was rebuilt into a church under Pope Honorius I in 630 probably with permission from the Eastern emperor Heraclius 141 Nomenclature Edit Marcellinus Comes a sixth century Eastern Roman historian and a courtier of Justinian I mentions the Western Roman Empire in his Chronicle which primarily covers the Eastern Roman Empire from 379 to 534 In the Chronicle it is clear that Marcellinus made a clear divide between East and West with mentions of a geographical east Oriens and west Occidens and of an imperial east Orientale imperium and Orientale respublica and an imperial west Occidentalie imperium Occidentale regnum Occidentalis respublica Hesperium regnum Hesperium imperium and principatum Occidentis Furthermore Marcellinus specifically designates some emperors and consuls as being Eastern Orientalibus principibus and Orientalium consulum respectively 142 The term Hesperium Imperium translating to Western Empire has sometimes been applied to the Western Roman Empire by modern historians as well 143 Though Marcellinus does not refer to the Empire as a whole after 395 only to its separate parts he clearly identifies the term Roman as applying to the Empire as a whole When using terms such as us our generals and our emperor Marcellinus distinguished both divisions of the Empire from outside foes such as the Sasanian Persians and the Huns 142 This view is consistent with the view that contemporary Romans of the 4th and 5th centuries continued to consider the Empire as a single unit although more often than not with two rulers instead of one 90 The first time the Empire was divided geographically was during the reign of Diocletian but there was precedent for multiple emperors Before Diocletian and the Tetrarchy there had been a number of periods where there were co emperors such as with Caracalla and Geta in 210 211 who inherited the imperial throne from their father Septimius Severus but Caracalla ruled alone after the murder of his brother 144 Attempted restorations of a Western court Edit Maps of the Exarchates within the Roman Empire in 600 AD The Exarchates of Ravenna left and Africa right were established by the Eastern Empire to better administer the reconquered Western territories The positions of Eastern and Western Augustus established under Emperor Diocletian in 286 as the Tetrarchy had been abolished by Emperor Zeno in 480 following the loss of direct control over the western territories Declaring himself the sole Augustus Zeno only exercised true control over the largely intact Eastern Empire and over Italy as the nominal overlord of Odoacer 88 The reconquests under Justinian I would bring back large formerly Western Roman territories into Imperial control and with them the Empire would begin to face the same problems it had faced under previous periods prior to the Tetrarchy when there had been only one ruler Shortly after the reconquest of North Africa a usurper Stotzas appeared in the province though he was quickly defeated 145 As such the idea of dividing the Empire into two courts out of administrative necessity would see a limited revival during the period that the Eastern Empire controlled large parts of the former West both by courtiers in the East and enemies in the West 146 147 The earliest attempt at crowning a new Western emperor after the abolition of the title occurred already during the Gothic Wars under Justinian Belisarius an accomplished general who had already successfully campaigned to restore Roman control over North Africa and large parts of Italy including Rome itself was offered the position of Western Roman emperor by the Ostrogoths during his siege of Ravenna the Ostrogothic and previously Western Roman capital in 540 The Ostrogoths desperate to avoid losing their control of Italy offered the title and their fealty to Belisarius as Western Augustus Justinian had expected to rule over a restored Roman Empire alone with the Codex Justinianeus explicitly designating the new Praetorian Prefect of Africa as the subject of Justinian in Constantinople 148 Belisarius loyal to Justinian feigned acceptance of the title to enter the city whereupon he immediately relinquished it Despite Belisarius relinquishing the title the offer had made Justinian suspicious and Belisarius was ordered to return east 146 At the end of Emperor Tiberius II s reign in 582 the Eastern Roman Empire retained control over relatively large parts of the regions reconquered under Justinian Tiberius chose two Caesares the general Maurice and the governor Germanus and married his two daughters to them Germanus had clear connections to the western provinces and Maurice to the eastern provinces It is possible that Tiberius was planning to divide the empire into western and eastern administrative units once more 147 If so the plan was never realized At the death of Tiberius Maurice inherited the entire empire as Germanus had refused the throne Maurice established a new type of administrative unit the Exarchate and organized the remaining western territories under his control into the Exarchate of Ravenna and the Exarchate of Africa 149 Later claims to the Imperial title in the West Edit See also Problem of two emperors Denarius of Frankish king Charlemagne who was crowned as Karolus Imperator Augustus in the year 800 by Pope Leo III due to and in opposition to the Roman Empire in the East being ruled by Irene a woman His coronation was strongly opposed by the Eastern Empire In addition to remaining as a concept for an administrative unit in the remaining Empire the ideal of the Roman Empire as a mighty Christian Empire with a single ruler further continued to appeal to many powerful rulers in western Europe With the papal coronation of Charlemagne as Emperor of the Romans in 800 AD his realm was explicitly proclaimed as a restoration of the Roman Empire in Western Europe under the concept of translatio imperii Though the Carolingian Empire collapsed in 888 and Berengar the last Emperor claiming succession from Charlemagne died in 924 the concept of a papacy and Germanic based Roman Empire in the West would resurface in the form of the Holy Roman Empire in 962 The Holy Roman Emperors would uphold the notion that they had inherited the supreme power and prestige of the Roman emperors of old until the dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire in 1806 150 Charlemagne and the subsequent Holy Roman Emperors were not and did not claim to be rulers of a restored Western Roman Empire Pope Leo III and contemporary historians were fully aware of that the notion of a separate Western court had been abolished over three centuries prior and considered the Roman Empire to be one and indivisible The ruler of the Roman Empire at the time of Charlemagne s coronation was Irene of Athens the mother of emperor Constantine VI who she had deposed Leo III considered Irene to be a usurper and illegitimate to rule due to her gender and as such considered the imperial throne to be vacant Thus Charlemagne was not crowned as the ruler of the Western Roman Empire and successor to Romulus Augustulus but rather as the successor of Constantine VI and as sole Roman Emperor Irene was deposed and replaced by Emperor Nikephoros soon after and the Eastern Empire refused to recognize the Imperial title of Charlemagne Following several wars in the 810s Emperor Michael I Rangabe eventually recognized Charlemagne as an Emperor but as the slightly humiliating Emperor of the Franks rather than Roman Emperor a title he reserved for himself 128 For centuries to come the revived Western court and the Eastern court in direct succession to the Roman emperors of old would make competing claims to be rulers of the whole Roman Empire With the Eastern Empire terming the Holy Roman Empire as an Empire of the Franks the term Empire of the Greeks was popularized in the Frankish court as a way to refer to the Empire centered in Constantinople 151 Following the end of the Eastern Roman Empire after the Fall of Constantinople in 1453 and the dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire in 1806 the title of Emperor became widespread among European monarchs The Austrian Empire laid claim to be the heir of the Holy Roman Empire as Austria s Habsburgs attempted to unite Germany under their rule 152 The German Empire established in 1871 also claimed to be a successor of Rome through the lineage of the Holy Roman Empire 153 Both of these empires used the imperial title Kaiser derived from the Latin word Caesar the German word for emperor The German Empire and Austria Hungary successor of the Austrian Empire would both fall in the aftermath of the First World War along with the Russian and Ottoman Empires who had both claimed succession from the Eastern Roman Empire 154 155 156 List of Western Roman emperors EditWith junior colleagues listed below the reign of each emperor Tetrarchy 286 313 Edit Main article Tetrarchy Bust of Emperor Maximian the first Western Roman emperor Maximian 286 305 157 Constantius I 293 305 158 Maximian was elevated to caesar by Diocletian in 285 after Diocletian defeated Carinus 159 He became Western emperor in 286 with the establishment of the Tetrarchy On 1 May 305 both Maximian and Diocletian abdicated leaving Constantius and Galerius as emperors 160 Constantius I 305 306 161 Valerius Severus 305 306 162 Constantius Chlorus was elevated to caesar in 293 under Maximian Constantius became the Western emperor in 305 after the abdication of Maximian 160 Constantius died on 25 July 306 leaving a highly contested succession in his wake 163 Severus II 306 307 162 Constantine I 306 307 162 Valerius Severus was elevated to caesar by Constantius in 305 after the abdication of Maximian and Diocletian After the death of Constantius in 306 Severus became Western emperor Severus was forced to deal with the revolt of Maxentius the son of Maximian Maxentius invaded in early 307 and captured the Western Empire 164 He had Severus put to death soon after his capture 165 Maxentius 307 312 162 Maxentius was proclaimed emperor in 306 in opposition to Valerius Severus He succeeded in capturing the Western Empire in 307 and had Severus killed soon after 166 The Western Empire was invaded in 312 by Constantine who on 28 October 312 decisively defeated Maxentius who drowned when his forces were pushed back into the Tiber river 167 Licinius 308 313 162 Licinius was made emperor of the Eastern Empire and parts of the Western Empire all of which was actually held by Maxentius at the Council of Carnuntum which was held in 308 in order to try to end the civil war in the Western Empire Constantine invaded Licinius section of the Western Empire in 313 and forced him to sign a treaty in which he forfeited his claim to the Western Empire and only controlled the Eastern Empire 168 Constantinian dynasty 309 363 Edit Main article Constantinian dynasty Bust of Constantine I the founder of the Constantinian dynasty Constantine I 306 337 Sole emperor 324 337 162 Constantine I was proclaimed augustus of the Western Empire by his father s troops on 25 July 306 and was accepted as caesar by Galerius later that year In 307 Maximian promoted him to augustus and in 309 he proclaimed himself as the Western emperor in opposition to Maxentius and Licinius He was the sole Western emperor from 312 to 324 when he became both Western emperor and Eastern emperor 169 Constantine II 337 340 Emperor of Gaul Britannia and Hispania 337 340 162 Constantine II was proclaimed caesar of the Eastern Empire in late 317 In 335 Constantine I allotted the inheritance his sons would receive after his death which would take place two years later in 337 giving Constantine II control of Gaul Britannia and Hispania Constantine II s relationship with Constans I was tense and in 340 Constantine took advantage of Constans absence from Italy and invaded it However in the same year he was ambushed by Constans forces in Aquilea and was killed 170 Constans I 337 350 Emperor of Italy and Africa 337 340 Western emperor 340 350 162 Constans was proclaimed emperor of Italy and Africa in 337 after the death of Constantine I After Constantine II was killed in 340 while attempting to invade Constans territory in Italy Constans took control of the entire Western Empire Constans was contemptuous of his army who as a result proclaimed Magnentius as emperor in 350 Constans fled toward Hispania but was captured and executed by an agent of Magnentius on the border 171 Constantius II 351 361 Eastern emperor 337 351 Sole emperor 351 361 162 Julian 355 361 162 Constantius II was proclaimed caesar in 334 and became Eastern emperor in 337 after the death of Constantine I After Constans was killed by the usurper Magnentius Constantius laid claim to the Western Empire and after defeating Magnentius in 351 took possession of it becoming sole emperor Constantius II died in 361 of a violent fever 172 Julian 361 363 Sole emperor 162 Julian was proclaimed caesar in 355 before becoming emperor in 361 after Constantius II died of a violent fever in 361 Julian died in March 363 of wounds sustained during the Battle of Samarra 173 Non dynastic 363 364 Edit Jovian 363 364 Sole emperor 162 When Julian died in 363 he left no heir causing a succession crisis The Roman Army elected Jovian as sole emperor Jovian reigned only seven months in which he signed a humiliating peace treaty with the Sasanian Empire under Shapur II In this agreement Rome surrendered five provinces and 18 fortresses to the Sasanians in exchange for a 30 year truce Jovian died on 16 February 364 due to either indigestion or charcoal vapour inhalation 174 Valentinianic dynasty 364 392 Edit Main article Valentinianic dynasty Bust of Emperor Valentinian II a member of the Valentinianic dynasty s second generation of emperors Valentinian I 364 375 162 Gratian 367 375 162 After the death of Jovian Valentinian I was elected He divided the Empire between himself and his younger brother Valens giving himself the West and Valens the East Valentinian spent much of his reign defending Gaul against repeated attacks by barbarian tribes only leaving the region in 373 In 375 while meeting with the Quadi he suffered a stroke brought on by rage 175 Gratian 375 383 162 Valentinian II 375 383 162 Valentinian I elevated his son Gratian to augustus in 367 however after his death in 375 his leading generals elevated his much younger son Valentinian II to augustus alongside Gratian and Valens who was emperor in the East 176 Gratian showed a strong preference for the barbarian mercenaries in his army especially his Alanic guard which inflamed the Roman population to the point that in 383 Roman troops in Britain declared Magnus Maximus emperor in opposition to Gratian Maximus landed troops in Gaul and attacked Gratian s troops near Paris Gratian was defeated and fled to Lyons where he was murdered on 25 August 383 177 Valentinian II 383 392 162 After the death of Gratian Valentinian II succeeded him although he only controlled Italy itself with all other Western Roman provinces recognizing Maximus In 387 Maximus invaded Italy to depose Valentinian Valentinian fled to the court of Theodosius where he succeeded in convincing Theodosius to attack Maximus and to reinstate himself as Western emperor which was done after Maximus was defeated in battle near Aquileia 177 Valentinian continued to rule the Western Empire until 392 when he was probably murdered by Arbogast 178 Magnus Maximus 383 388 179 180 Victor 383 384 388 179 181 182 Magnus Maximus was elected emperor by his men in 383 in opposition to Gratian and defeated him in battle in 383 Maximus was recognized as the Western emperor by Eastern emperor Theodosius I in 384 however this recognition was revoked by him when Maximus invaded Italy and deposed Valentinian II in 387 Valentinian II fled to the Eastern Roman Empire and convinced Theodosius I to invade the Western Roman Empire and restore him to the Western Roman throne which he did in 388 Maximus was defeated in battle near Aquileia and executed 177 179 181 182 Theodosian dynasty 392 455 Edit Main article Theodosian dynasty Emperor Honorius as depicted by Jean Paul Laurens in 1880 Theodosius I 394 395 Eastern Roman emperor 379 394 sole emperor 394 395 162 Theodosius was proclaimed Eastern Emperor by Gratian on 19 January 379 after securing victory against invading barbarians along the Danube He became sole emperor in August 394 after defeating the usurper Eugenius Theodosius died of edema in January 395 183 Honorius 395 423 162 Constantine III 409 411 162 Not recognized by Eastern emperor but recognized by Honorius accepted by the Senate Constans II 409 411 162 Not recognized by Honorius and Eastern emperor recognized only by Constantine III not accepted by the Senate Attalus 409 410 184 Not recognized by Honorius and Eastern emperor accepted by the Senate Constantius III 421 162 Honorius became Western emperor in 395 after the death of his father Theodosius His reign was beset by barbarian invasions and for much of his early reign until 408 he was controlled by Stilicho whose influence over Honorius would create a standard for puppet Western Emperors After 408 his reign was greatly influenced by the general Constantius who briefly reigned as his co emperor for a few months before dying of natural causes He also faced the usurpation of Priscus Attalus a senator who was proclaimed emperor at Rome in 409 Honorius died of edema in 423 185 184 Joannes 423 425 184 Not recognized by Eastern emperor accepted by the Senate Valentinian III was designated Honorius heir in 421 although he was not proclaimed caesar only given the title of nobilissimus puer In 423 after the death of Honorius a usurper named Joannes rose up forcing Valentinian III to flee with his family to the court of the Eastern emperor Theodosius II Joannes was defeated by Theodosius in Ravenna Valentinian III 425 455 162 Valentinian III was killed on 16 March 455 by Optila a friend of Aetius whom Valentinian had killed 186 Non dynastic 455 480 Edit The following last emperors of the West were all accepted by the Senate but five of them Petronius Maximus Libius Severus Olybrius Glycerius and Romulus Augustus were never recognized as colleagues by the Emperor of the East 187 Whether Avitus was recognized by the Emperor of the East or not is unclear 188 Petronius Maximus 455 Not recognized by Eastern emperor 162 Petronius Maximus became the Western Roman emperor on 17 March 455 after assassinating Valentinian III 189 During his short reign he provoked Gaiseric the Vandal king into invading the Western Empire and sacking Rome by breaking a marriage agreement made between Gaiseric and Valentinian III Maximus and his son Palladius attempted to flee on 31 May 455 however they were apprehended by a group of peasants and either killed by them or by palace servants wishing to curry favor with them 190 191 Avitus 455 456 Unclear whether recognized by the Emperor of the East or not Avitus was proclaimed Western emperor on 9 July 455 with the support of the Visigoth King Theodoric II While he held support from the Visigoths his rule alienated both the Roman Senate and people In 456 Ricimer a senior officer had Avitus deposed and ruled the Western Empire through a series of puppet emperors until his death in 472 192 Majorian 457 461 162 Majorian was proclaimed Western emperor 1 April 456 officially by Eastern emperor Leo I however in reality Leo s decision was swayed by the influence of Ricimer On 7 August 461 Majorian was compelled to abdicate and reportedly died five days later of dysentery although modern historians have asserted he was likely murdered 193 Libius Severus 461 465 Not recognized by Eastern emperor 162 Libius Severus was proclaimed Western emperor on 19 November 461 His rule even as a puppet emperor extended little beyond Italy with Aegidius splitting off from the Western Empire and establishing the Kingdom of Soissons Libius Severus incited the hostility of the Vandals who invaded Italy and Sicily During these events Libius Severus died on 14 November 465 possibly due to being poisoned by Ricimer 194 Anthemius 467 472 162 Anthemius was proclaimed Western emperor on 12 April 467 by Leo I Under Anthemius the Western Empire which had become increasingly isolated from the Eastern Empire grew closer although this collaboration came too late to save the Western Empire Anthemius friendly attitude towards the Eastern Empire angered Ricimer who deposed him in March or April of 472 195 Olybrius 472 Not recognized by Eastern emperor 162 Olybrius was proclaimed emperor in April 472 His brief reign lasting only five or six months was dominated by Gundobad who had replaced his uncle Ricimer as the true power behind the throne after the former s death Olybrius died in October or November 472 of edema 196 Glycerius 473 474 Not recognized by Eastern emperor 162 After the death of both Olybrius and Ricimer Glycerius was proclaimed Western emperor by the Western Roman army on 3 or 5 May 473 197 He was deposed by Julius Nepos in July 474 and sent to live in a monastery where he remained until his death 198 Julius Nepos 474 475 In exile 475 480 199 The Eastern Roman Empire had rejected the coronation of both Olybrius and Glycerius instead supporting Julius Nepos magister militum in Dalmatia as Western Roman emperor Nepos with support from the East deposed Glycerius in the spring of 474 82 Orestes magister militum of Nepos deposed him a year later in 475 forcing Nepos to flee Ravenna to his estates in Dalmatia Orestes crowned his son Romulus as Western emperor though the Eastern Empire and the Western possessions outside of Italy maintained recognition of Nepos as the legitimate Emperor 83 Nepos continued to rule as Western emperor in exile in Dalmatia until his murder in 480 and would be the last holder of the title 87 Romulus Augustus 475 476 Not recognized by Eastern emperor 199 Romulus Augustus was crowned as Western emperor after his father Orestes deposed Julius Nepos 83 The rule of Romulus would be brief in the autumn of 476 the foederati under the control of Odoacer rebelled when their demands for a third of the land of Italy were ignored 200 Orestes was captured and executed on 28 August the same year and Romulus was deposed by Odoacer a week later Romulus was spared and allowed to live in the Castellum Lucullanum in Campania where he might have been alive as late as 507 AD 201 With the deposition of Romulus Augustus by Odoacer direct Roman control ceased to exist in Italy Odoacer assumed control of the peninsula as a de jure representative of Western Roman emperor Nepos With the death of Nepos in 480 the Eastern Roman emperor Zeno abolished the title and position of Western Roman emperor and assumed the role of Odoacer s sovereign The position of Roman emperor would never again be divided though some new candidates for the position of Western emperor were proposed during and after the Eastern Roman re conquests of the sixth century such as Belisarius in 540 and Germanus in 582 146 147 References EditCitations Edit Christie 1991 p 236 Gillett Andrew 2001 Rome Ravenna and the Last Western Emperors Papers of the British School at Rome 69 131 167 doi 10 1017 S0068246200001781 ISSN 0068 2462 JSTOR 40311008 S2CID 129373675 Taagepera p 125 Salona World History Encyclopedia Retrieved 9 August 2020 Spalatum Split Livius www livius org Retrieved 9 August 2020 Julius Nepos Roman emperor Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 9 August 2020 Roman Governors a b Eck 2002 p 15f Samarin 1968 pp 662 663 Weigel 1992 p 88f Curchin 2004 p 130 Grant 1954 pp 91 94 Grant 1954 pp 30 45 Tenney 1930 p 35 Bennett Julian 1997 Trajan Optimus Princeps a Life and Times Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 16524 2 Fig 1 Regions east of the Euphrates river were held only in the years 116 117 Bowman Cameron amp Garnsey 2005 p 1 Aurelian Downey 1961 pp 249 250 Tucker 2010 p 75 Sasanian Dynasty Bowman Cameron amp Garnsey 2005 p 38 Bray 1997 p 38 Potter 2004 p 322 Bourne 2000 p 14 Postumus Smith 2013 p 179 Southern 2015 p 176 Vagi 2000 p 386 Barnes 2006 pp 6 7 Potter 2014 p 282 Southern 2007 pp 141 142 Cameron Ward Perkins amp Whitby 2000 p 42 Barnes 2006 pp 27 28 Odahl pp 78 79 Jones 1992 p 59 Lenski 2007 pp 61 62 Gibbons amp Bury 1974 p 14 Grant 1997 pp 47 48 Limberis 2012 p 9 a b Odahl p 275 a b Carr 2015 pp 40 43 a b Constantius Potter 2008 p 195 Dagron 1984 pp 15 19 Lascaratos amp Voros pp 615 619 Katz 1955 pp 88 89 a b Pontifex Maximus Bauer 2010 p 68 Vogt 1993 p 179 Frassetto 2003 pp 214 217 Burns 1994 p 244 Bury 2005 p 110 Deliyannis 2010 pp 153 156 Hallenbeck 1982 p 7 Gallienus Hugh 1996 pp 148 149 Bury 2005 p 108 Bury 2005 p 109 Bury 2005 p 138 Heather 2005 p 195 Bury 2005 p 113 Norwich 1989 p 136 Cline amp Graham 2011 p 303 Bury 2005 p 145 Bury 2005 p 146 Bury 2005 p 154 Goldsworthy 2010 p 305 Hughes 2012 pp 102 103 a b Heather 2000 p 11 Heather 2000 p 15 Bury 2005 p 292 Heather 2007 p 339 a b Heather 2000 pp 17 18 Given 2014 p 126 Given 2014 p 128 Bury 2005 pp 324 325 Heather 2000 p 379 a b c Majorian a b c Anthemius Libius Severus Gordon 2013 p 122f a b Glycerius a b c Bury 2005 p 408 MacGeorge 2002 p 62 a b c d Borm 2008 p 47ff a b c Elton 1992 pp 288 297 a b Martindale 1980 p 514 a b Williams amp Friell 1998 p 187 Nicol 2002 p 9 a b Bury 2015 p 278 Bury 1923 pp 422 424 Hunt et al 2001 p 256 a b Kidner et al 2008 pp 198 203 Heather 2005 p 191 Frassetto 2013 p 203 a b Goldberg 2006 p 6 Merills 2016 pp 199 224 Martindale 1980 p 734 Martindale 1980 pp 509 510 Bury 2005 p 410 Jones 1992 p 254f Moorhead 1994 pp 107 115 Barnish 1992 pp 35 37 Bury 1923 p 422 Wolfram 1990 p 283 Bury 2005 pp 422 424 Bury 2005 p 459 Bury 2005 pp 461 462 Amory 1997 p 8 a b Norwich 1989 p 215 Haldon 1997 pp 17 19 Gunderson pp 43 68 Luttwak 2009 p 512 Maas 2005 p 118 Merills 2016 pp 11 12 Bury 2005 pp 125 132 Bury 2005 pp 139 140 Treadgold 1997 p 216 Fouracre 2005 p 165 Thompson 1969 p 325 Noble 1984 p 31 Knowles amp Obolensky 1978 pp 108 109 Fouracre 2005 pp 256 258 Fouracre 2005 pp 275 276 Collins 1989 p 49 Collins 1983 p 238 Thomas 2010 p 21 a b Klewitz p 33 Ravegnani 2004 p 203 Norwich 1989 pp 112 113 Norwich 1989 p 116 Legal system Samarin 1968 p 666 Gottlieb 2006 p 196 Satow 2011 p 59 Bulliet et al 2010 p 192 Le Goff 1994 pp 14 21 Durant 1950 pp 517 551 Annuario Pontificio p 23 Levillain 2002 p 907 Kaegi 2004 p 196 a b Croke 2001 p 78 Wienand 2014 p 260 Goldsworthy 2009 pp 68 69 Martindale 1980 pp 1199 1200 a b c Moorhead 1994 pp 84 86 a b c Whitby 1988 p 7 The Code of Justinian Herrin 1987 p 156 Whaley 2012 pp 17 20 Fouracre amp Gerberding 1996 p 345 White 2007 p 139 Ball 2001 p 449 Watson 2014 pp 536 540 Tames 1972 p 55 Glazer 1996 pp 54 56 Potter 2008 pp 260 261 Potter 2008 p 344 Grant 1997 p 209 a b Grant 1997 p 210 Potter 2008 p 342 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac Norwich 1989 p 384 Grant 1997 pp 217 218 Grant 1997 p 223 Grant 1997 p 224 Grant 1997 pp 224 225 Grant 1997 p 226 Grant 1997 pp 235 236 Odahl pp 79 80 Grant 1997 pp 240 242 Grant 1997 pp 247 248 Grant 1997 pp 242 246 Grant 1997 pp 251 254 Norwich 1989 p 29 Norwich 1989 p 30 Norwich 1989 p 31 a b c Norwich 1989 p 32 Norwich 1989 p 34 a b c Adkins amp Adkins 1998 p 34 Hebblewhite 2016 p 20 a b Errington 2006 pp 36 37 a b Birley 2005 p 450 Grant 1997 pp 270 274 a b c Adkins amp Adkins 1998 p 35 Grant 1997 pp 282 285 Grant 1997 pp 298 302 E Glenn Hinson 1995 The Church Triumphant A History of Christianity Up to 1300 Mercer University Press p 14 ISBN 0 86554 436 0 Avitus The Imperial Index The Rulers of the Roman Empire From Augustus to Constantine XI Palaeologus Retrieved 8 December 2021 Drinkwater amp Elton 2002 p 116 Burns amp Jensen 2014 p 64 Collins 2010 p 88 Grant 1997 pp 310 312 Grant 1997 pp 315 317 Grant 1997 pp 317 319 Grant 1997 pp 319 321 Grant 1997 pp 322 323 Norwich 1989 p 171 Bury 1923 p 274 a b Norwich 1989 p 385 Gibbons amp Womersley 1994 p 402 Burns 1991 p 74 Sources Edit Adkins Lesley Adkins Roy A 1998 Handbook to Life in Ancient Rome Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195123326 Amory Patrick 1997 People and Identity in 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0333989142 Heather Peter 2007 The Fall of the Roman Empire A New History of Rome and the Barbarians Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195325416 Hebblewhite Mark 2016 The Emperor and the Army in the Later Roman Empire AD 235 395 Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 1317034308 Herrin Judith 1987 The Formation of Christendom Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0691008318 Hughes Ian 2012 Aetius Attila s Nemesis Pen and Sword ISBN 978 1848842793 Hunt Lynn Martin Thomas R Rosenwein Barbara H Hsia R Po chia Smith Bonnie G 2001 The Making of the West Peoples and Cultures Bedford ISBN 978 0312183653 Jones A H M 1992 The Later Roman Empire University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 978 0801832857 Kaegi Walter E 2004 Heraclius Emperor of Byzantium Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521814591 Katz Solomon 1955 The Decline of Rome and the Rise of Mediaeval Europe Ithaca NY Cornell University Press ASIN B002S62FYI Kaylor Noel Harold Phillips Philip Edward 2012 A Companion to Boethius in the Middle Ages Brill ISBN 978 9004183544 Kidner Frank L Bucur Maria Mathisen Ralph McKee Sally Theodore R 2008 Making Europe People Politics and Culture Houghton Mifflin ISBN 978 0618004799 Klewitz Hans Walter 1 January 1943 Eduard Eichmann Die Kaiserkronung im Abendland Ein Beitrag zur Geistesgeschichte des Mittelalters mit besonderer Berucksichtigung des kirchlichen Rechts der Liturgie und der Kirchenpolitik Zeitschrift der Savigny Stiftung fur Rechtsgeschichte Kanonistische Abteilung 32 1 509 525 doi 10 7767 zrgka 1943 32 1 509 S2CID 183386465 Archived from the original on 22 February 2018 Retrieved 21 February 2018 Knowles David Obolensky Dimitri 1978 The Middle Ages The Middle Ages Paulist Press ISBN 978 0809102761 Lascaratos J Voros D May 2000 Fatal Wounding of the Byzantine Emperor Julian the Apostate 361 363 A D Approach To The Contribution of Ancient Surgery World Journal of Surgery 24 5 615 9 doi 10 1007 s002689910100 PMID 10787086 S2CID 6654496 Le Goff Jacques 1994 Medieval Civilization 400 1500 B 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0582063037 Nicol Donald M 2002 The Immortal Emperor The Life and Legend of Constantine Palaiologos Last Emperor of the Romans Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521894098 Noble Thomas F X 1984 The Republic of St Peter The Birth of the Papal State 680 825 University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 978 0812212396 Norwich John Julius 1989 Byzantium The Early Centuries Knopf ISBN 978 0394537788 Odahl Charles M 2006 Constantine and the Christian Empire Roman Imperial Biographies Byzantinische Zeitschrift 99 1 doi 10 1515 BYZS 2006 260 S2CID 191436869 Archived from the original on 22 February 2018 Retrieved 15 February 2018 Potter David 2004 The Roman Empire at Bay AD 180 395 Routledge ISBN 978 0415100588 Potter David 2008 The Emperors of Rome The Story of Imperial Rome from Julius Caesar to the Last Emperor Quercus ISBN 978 1780877501 Potter David 2014 Ancient Rome A New History W W Norton ISBN 978 0500291245 Ravegnani Giorgio 2004 I bizantini in Italia in Italian Mulino ISBN 978 8815096906 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2018 Ralph W Mathisen Libius Severus De Imperatoribus Romanis www roman emperors org Archived from the original on 27 April 2018 Retrieved 8 December 2018 Ralph W Mathisen Majorian De Imperatoribus Romanis www roman emperors org Archived from the original on 22 August 2017 Retrieved 23 February 2018 Michael DiMaio Constantius II De Imperatoribus Romanis www roman emperors org Archived from the original on 11 September 2017 Retrieved 23 February 2018 Korner Christian Aurelian De Imperatoribus Romanis www roman emperors org Archived from the original on 9 July 2017 Retrieved 23 February 2018 Legal System The World Factbook Central Intelligence Agency www cia gov Archived from the original on 1 December 2017 Retrieved 24 February 2018 Lendering Jona Governor Roman Livius www livius org Archived from the original on 22 February 2018 Retrieved 15 February 2018 Lendering Jona Pontifex Maximus Livius www livius org Archived from the original on 22 February 2018 Retrieved 21 February 2018 Polfer Michael Postumus De Imperatoribus Romanis www roman emperors org Archived from the original on 5 August 2017 Retrieved 23 February 2018 Scott Samuel P The Code of Justinian Book 1 droitromain univ grenoble alpes fr Archived from the original on 25 February 2018 Retrieved 25 February 2018 Shapur Shahbazi A Sasanian Dynasty Encyclopedia Iranica www iranicaonline org Archived from the original on 17 November 2017 Retrieved 23 February 2018 Further reading EditBorm Henning 2018 Westrom Von Honorius bis Justinian Kohlhammer ISBN 978 3170332164 Heather Peter 2003 The Visigoths from the Migration Period to the Seventh Century An Ethnographic Perspective Boydell amp Brewer Ltd ISBN 978 1843830337 Kolb Frank 1987 Diocletian und die Erste Tetrarchie Improvisation oder Experiment in der Organisation monarchischer Herrschaft Walter de Gruyter ISBN 978 3110109344 Merills Andy Miles Richard 2007 The Vandals Wiley Blackwell ISBN 978 1405160681 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Western Roman Empire De Imperatoribus Romanis Scholarly biographies of many Roman emperors including those of the Western Roman Empire Digital Map of the Roman Empire Navigable and interactive map of the Roman Empire The Fall of Rome Podcast Podcast concerning the Fall of the Western Roman Empire by PhD historian Patrick Wyman Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Western Roman Empire amp oldid 1152782194, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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