The History of Rome - 153- Adrianople
Episode Date: October 2, 2011Operating with faulty intelligence and desperate to defeat the Goths on his own, Valens forced the disasterous Battle of Adrianople in August 378....
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Hello and welcome to the history of Rome.
Episode 153, Adrian Ople.
In early 377 AD, after months of deprivation, frustration, and humiliation, the Goths
finally snapped.
They had begged for entry into the Roman Empire because they thought they might find
refuge there.
Instead, they had been unforgivably mistreated by the local authorities.
What was the point of fleeing from the Huns who, and I can't believe I messed this up, used composite bows, not compound bows, because compound bows weren't invented until like the 1960s and God help us all if the Huns had ever gotten a hold of compound bows?
Anyway, what was the point of fleeing from the Huns if the Romans were going to prove just as menacing a threat?
Was this a case of out of the frying pan and into the fire?
Not exactly, more a case of out of the frying pan and on to the ground next to the fire.
Still in danger, but not quite so immediately, especially given the military situation on the Danube frontier.
The Goths may have been weak from a year of flight and harassment, but as we saw last time,
the Romans were not exactly in tip-top shape themselves.
They were outnumbered locally and run by a commander whose judgment has to be
seriously questioned. You'll recall from last week that following Lupe Kines's botched attempt to blackmail
the Goths into submission by taking their leaders hostage, the Turvengai leader Fritigern promised to go
to his people and calm them down. Instead, as much snapped as his fellow Goths, Fritigern stirred them
to war. The morning after the fatal banquet, Lupikinus led a Roman army out of Marcionopolis
toward the Gothic camp, where he hoped to put down their rabble-rousing once in front.
for all. But Fritigern and the Goths were now eager for a fight, and when Lupe Kines arrived,
he was hit full in the face by a bunch of really ticked-off Gothic warriors.
Like most of the engagements will run through over the next couple of years, the battle that ensued
is not well described, but it appears that Lupe Kinas' army was overwhelmed, broken, and put to
flight. Once the Goths were ready to move on, there was literally no one around.
to stop them. The immediate vicinity had been defended only by the Roman forces the Goths had just
broken. What garrisons remained on the frontier line were spread out and isolated. Attempting to do
something about the Goths without reinforcements would have been suicide, so these garrisons
simply sat tight behind their walls and waited. The word immediately went out to east and west
that the Goths were loose in the central part of the empire. In the east, Valens had to have greeted
this news with a profanity-laced tirade. I know that I would have anyway. The emperor was
gearing up for a major war against the Sassanids, and the last time he had checked, the Goths
were supposed to be supplying troops for that major war. Now they've gone berserk,
smashed the local Roman army, and are running amok in Thrace? What the hell happened?
As had been the case with Constantine II twice during his reign, Valens.
was left with a problem that could only be solved by moving in a major force to contain the
damage right at the moment when he absolutely could not pull troops off the Syrian frontier.
Hell and damnation.
In the West, the young Emperor Gratian received word of the Gothic revolt and immediately wanted
to do something to help.
But in his rush to be helpful, he got a bit carried away.
Pretty soon orders were flying around to the effect that the whole of the Rhine legions were
to pack up at once and march east.
But proving that General Merebutus, the one who had elevated Valentinian II,
still had absolutely no confidence in Gratian's military judgment,
and that Gratian's power at this point was not at all absolute,
the Roman High Command rewrote the orders in transit.
A major force from the Rhine could and should be detached to go fight the Goths,
but to leave the Rhine unprotected, no matter how common it had been the last few years,
would have been dereliction of duty.
As we will soon see, the decision to leave the Rhine well-defendant would come back to do whatever the opposite of haunt the Romans is.
The Western Expeditionary Force that was sent was led by a general named Rickomir, who, so far as I can tell, is in no way related to the more famous Rickermere, we'll deal with a bit down the road.
The movement of the Goths is no certain thing during 377, so we don't know exactly how the year went blow by blow,
but after running off Lupecinus, the Goths appeared to have barreled south toward Adrian Opel,
pillaging away to their heart's contempt.
After the humiliations of the previous year, first being chased off their land by the Huns,
then being exploited by the Romans, you can bet that they had some rage to burn off,
and Mercy was not presently in their vocabulary.
Rikamir and his troops appear to have met up with an expeditionary force peeled off by Valens
and sent in from the west.
Wary of an open confrontation,
Fritigern responded to the news of the arrival of the new Roman forces
by leading his people back north.
Rikamir followed until the Goths were once again contained to the lands near the border,
whereupon the Roman commanders decided to make a play at ending the conflict right then and there.
They attacked the Gothic position, but were unable to break the barbarians,
and the Battle of Adselisus turned out to be nothing but a bloody draw.
It looked like a permanent solution to the Gothic problem
was only going to come with the arrival of Valens,
a fact that the Eastern Augustus was well aware of.
In the wake of the news that the Goths were loose,
Valens, again like Constantine II,
rushed an embassy off to Shapur to work out a peace treaty with the Persians
that would free up his men to march west.
It took some time to get the terms worked out, and Valens had to agree to a treaty that was not at all favorable to Rome,
but in the winter of 378, the two empires were once again technically at peace.
Valens then assigned a skeleton crew to man the eastern frontier and turned the rest of his army west.
But Valens knew instinctively that his own army might not be enough to overwhelm the Goths,
and so he kept in communication with Gratian, constantly devised.
demanding more firepower from his younger colleague to help guarantee victory on the Danube.
Gratian, as we've already seen, did not need much convincing, and when Valens announced
that he was finally heading west, Gratian gathered up a mobile field army of his own and marched
them into Illyria.
By all accounts, then, it looked like the Goths were about to be hit hard from both sides,
and that the Gothic war would go down in history as just another temporary barbarian raid
rather than a full-scale war.
But all the troop movement along the Rhine
had caught the attention of the Alamani,
and they decided to take the opportunity
to launch a raid of their own.
The troops Maributas had refused to redeploy
did an excellent job slowing the progress of the Alamani,
but getting them back on the other side of the Rhine
was going to take a more concerted effort.
Gratian was forced to march his men back out of Alaria
to deal with the crisis.
writing to Valens that as soon as the Rhine was re-secured, he would be back, and that it shouldn't
take more than a couple of months. This is normally where you'd expect to hear that, of course,
it didn't take months for Gratian to push back the Alamani. It took years, which left Valens
to face the Goths alone. But the thing is, it did only take a few months. By the middle of summer
378, Gratian was back in Sirmium with his army, ready, willing, and able to help crush the
Goths. So the question is, why did Valens go off and face them alone? Which is what he's about to do?
It's a good question. A very good question. The Frosty reception the emperor received from the people
of Constantinople when he arrived there in May of 378 probably forms the beginning of the answer
to that question. Valens had never been popular in the capital, as evidenced by the ease with which
Procopius had been able to take control of the city ten years before, and Valens was now entering
the capital a year and a half after the Goths had broken free of all restraints.
Where the people of Constantinople wondered, have you been?
Valens was made acutely aware of the fact that the citizens of the city were not at all impressed
by his handling of the situation thus far.
They wanted no more delays.
They wanted action.
They wanted Valence to go out and do something about the Goths, and more than that, they wanted victory.
Serious leaders like to pretend that public opinion plays no role when serious men are making the serious decisions of state,
but the fact is that it does. Always has and always will.
Compounding Valence's public relations problem was the news from the Western Front that Gratian had just won a decisive victory against the Alamani.
So now people were not just asking why Valens hadn't acted yet.
They were asking why they were stuck with Valens at all.
If only Gratian were here, this whole mess would be cleaned up by now.
By the time Valens left Constantinople a few weeks later,
this was all rattling around inside of his head.
And at this point, the emperor looks an awful lot like a man was something to prove.
And as we all know, men with something to prove often blunder off
recklessly and wind up making a huge mess of things.
The other dynamic at work is that Valens was lolled into a false sense of security.
In June or July, an advanced guard of 2000 Romans moving west encountered a unit of Goths
and defeated them easily in a quick skirmish.
News of the victory spurred the notion that the Goths were eminently beatable.
They just needed to be hit the right way.
Plus, as this was yet another victory that Valem's himself was,
not present for, the skirmish likely also snowballed the emperor's own sense that he needed to get
in on the action to prove that he, too, was a great military leader.
In late July or early August, Roman scouts reported that a force of around 10,000 Goths was
moving south toward Adrian Opel.
Though we sadly don't have reliable troop numbers for the Roman army, the assumption is that
Valenz's force was somewhere between 20 and 30,000 strong, giving the emperor,
a two or three to one advantage.
Why hesitate with an advantage like that?
Valens advanced to Adrian Noble and occupied the city.
At this point, it appears that Rick Amir joined the emperor at Adrianople
to advise Valens on his next move.
The Western General was emphatic that Valens ought to wait for Gratian's reinforcement.
They were already in Illyria.
The only question was how quickly could they link up with Valens to help deliver the final blow.
Half of Valens' staff concurred with this opinion.
With the combined power of East and West, victory was practically guaranteed, so why risked defeat?
But Valens was more inclined to listen to the Hawks on his staff.
They reminded the Emperor that he already had a massive numerical advantage, that he was operating out of a heavily fortified position,
and that further delay just left time for the Goths to gather more men.
Hit them now before they are reinforced, and it'll be a walk in the park.
Plus, do we really need to remind you that if you wait for Gratian, that you'll be living with the fact that you had to be bailed out by your teenage nephew for the rest of your life?
Good luck with your reputation.
Valens's decision became apparent after Fritigern sent envoys about a peace deal.
The emperor dismissed them without even offering terms.
So there it was.
Valens was suffering from a PR problem, did not want to share the glory of victory with Gratian,
and believed that he had a sizable numerical advantage over the approaching Goths.
Except there was a huge, large, gigantic flaw in his rationale for forcing battle.
It was not 10,000 Goths approaching.
It was more like 15 or 20,000.
The scouts had reported only on Fritigern's Tervingi Infantry, which was
was indeed 10,000 strong.
What they had missed was the Grythungai cavalry, who were scattered across the countryside
foraging for supplies.
Add them together, and Valens was planning on marching off to face an enemy that could
possibly match him man for man.
And even if he did enjoy a slight numerical advantage, that was not going to make up for
the totally surprising come out of nowhere appearance of the Gertungi cavalry in the middle of the
battle.
Nothing drops your heart faster than the sudden appearance of unaccounted for enemy troops.
Am I right, fellas?
On the morning of August 9, Vailens led his army out of Adrian Opel, leaving behind only the Imperial Treasury and a small company of soldiers to guard the city walls.
The rest, he marched northwest toward the Goss.
And what a march it turned out to be.
Though we call what is about to ensue the Battle of Adrianople,
the Romans marched for a good seven or eight hours before they finally made contact with the enemy,
which did not exactly get the Romans off on the right foot.
Instead of meeting the Goths, rested and ready,
the Romans met them tired and panting in the afternoon heat.
But whatever, these were highly trained soldiers used to that kind of physical exertion.
It shouldn't be too big of a deal that our guys are exhausted, and their guys are fresh, right?
Fritigern had deployed his men in a compact mass protecting their wagon train, which was drawn up on a low hill.
At this point, the Romans really did have a numerical advantage.
So Fritigern's main objective was to stall for as long as possible until the Guthungai cavalry could be rounded up.
He and his men lit fires to create a huge smokescreen to confuse the situation, and then repeatedly asked to negotiate a peace.
But Valens refused all entreaties, convinced that Fritigern was stalling to allow time for potential reinforcements to arrive, which is, of course, exactly what the Gothic king was doing.
But though he was eager for battle, that did not mean that Valens ever actually gave the order to charge.
In one of those funny little twists of fate, the battle of Adrian Opel got going not because the opposing generals were ready for it too, but rather,
because an overzealous allied king on the Roman right flank advanced without orders.
Before anyone could pull him back, the Battle of Adrian Opel was on.
At first, the surprising commencement of hostilities worked out just fine for the Romans.
The eager beaver-allied king on the right was pushed back,
but the Roman left surged forward and before too long had pressed the Goths all the way back to their wagons.
Capturing the baggage train meant taking the time.
the women and the children and all of the Gothic possessions.
Another half an hour, maybe, and the Romans would have won Adrian Opel outright, accidental
start or no accidental start.
But then the cavalry arrived.
Literally, the cavalry arrived.
The Gertungai horsemen, who had not at all been taken into account when the Romans were
making their war plans, suddenly exploded onto the scene and broadside of the Roman left.
blowing right through the Roman cavalry which was supposed to be guarding the wing.
Now the Roman left, which had been so close to winning the battle the minute before,
was now pushed back and became trapped between the Tervingai infantry, the Gratungai cavalry,
and the hill that the Goths had positioned their wagons on.
Crammed together, the Roman soldiers were too close to one another to maneuver,
retreat, or even fight for their lives.
and so they started to be slaughtered.
From the moment the Gothic cavalry arrived, the Battle of Adrian Opel was over.
The Romans wound up leaving fully two-thirds of their army dead in the field,
with only isolated pockets of soldiers escaping the carnage.
Valens himself was lost in the fighting.
No one knows exactly what happened to the emperor,
but a later story has him being taken to a nearby farmhouse after being wounded
and then dying when the goth set fire to the building.
But no contemporary account mentions this incident.
In all likelihood, he simply fell anonymously in the thick of the fray and was never heard from again,
becoming the second emperor in Roman history to die in battle, following the ignoble example
set by Decius at a Britus, 125 years before.
Valens was 50 years old and had ruled the eastern half of the empire for 14 years.
It is difficult to overstate the significance of the Battle of Adrian Noble.
Though you cannot trace the fall of the Western Empire back to any single event,
more people have tried to trace it back to Adrianople than just about anywhere else.
I should mention, though, that there is one area that the significance of Adrian
Opel is often overstated.
For years, military historians repeated a line about how the decisive role played by the
Gothic cavalry in the battle changed the nature of armed conflict in the West.
In this telling, Adrian Opel serves as the dividing line between the infantry battles of antiquity
and the heavy cavalry battles of the medieval period. That is, that once everyone saw how
effective the horsemen could be, they dropped their old infantry model and picked up a shiny
new cavalry model. Except, as we all know, the Romans and everyone else,
else, were already well aware of how effective cavalry was by the time of Adrian Opel,
and had long ago adopted a more horse-reliant model for their armed forces.
How long ago did I introduce Galeenus' mobile cavalry force?
Something like 40 episodes back, right?
To say that the world woke up on the morning after Adrian Opel and said,
my God, cavalry is now the thing, is to just ignore a whole century's worth of history.
It's a minor point, but since it's a point often wrapped up in accounts of the battle,
I figured I'd just go ahead and join in the debunking of it.
Now, as to the bits about the battle that can't be overstated,
the sheer obliteration of Valens' army definitely rocked the balance of power in the Mediterranean
and led to a total recalibration of Roman priorities.
Though the Roman Empire was still the biggest kid on the block,
they were fast becoming just another kid on the block, if that makes any sense.
The Goths and the Huns, and pretty soon the Vandals and the Franks,
were all about to prove that they were more than a match for the Roman armies they faced.
This had happened once before in the middle of the third century,
and the empire had almost cracked up as a result.
Only after a huge effort, a complete military and political rewerews,
organization and a healthy dose of luck, did an intact Roman Empire manage to limp into the
4th century. This time, however, they would not be so lucky, as this time only half the
empire would live to fight another day. And that was just the long-term impact of the battle.
The short-term impact of the battle was almost too nightmarish to contemplate. The emperor was
dead. His army destroyed. The eastern frontier was now manned by just a skeleton crew. The middle frontier
was manned by no one at all. A Gothic army was loose inside the empire that was now not just
unchecked, but unbeatable. North of the Danube, the Huns were only picking up steam, and who knew
when they were going to attack the empire directly. And to top it all off, at this darkest of dark hours,
Rome was ruled by a 19-year-old boy who had no inclination towards soldiering and a seven-year-old boy who was, well, a seven-year-old boy.
Many historians find only the days after Canny to be remotely comparable in terms of the sheer mind-blowing disastrousness of it all.
What were the Romans going to do now?
Next week, we will find out what the Romans are going to do now.
without a capable air ready to step in and rule the east,
Gratian will be forced to look outside of the family
and turn to the son of the man that his father Valentinian had turned to
time and time again to mop up the worst messes in the empire.
Stuck in a forced retirement in Spain,
Theodosius the younger will answer Gratian's call,
somehow managed to steer the east away from utter destruction,
and in the end, become the last man to serve,
as the sole and undisputed master of the Roman Empire.
