The History of Rome - 160- East vs. West
Episode Date: November 28, 2011In the late 390s, the generals and ministers who dominated Arcadius and Honorius battled with each other for control of the Empire. ...
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This podcast is sponsored by IQ Bar.
I've got good news and bad news.
Here's the bad news.
Most protein bars are packed with sugar and unpronounceable ingredients.
The good news?
There's a better option.
I'm Will and I created IQ bar plant protein bars to empower doers like you with clean,
delicious, low sugar brain and body fuel.
IQ bars are packed with 12 grams of protein, brain nutrients like magnesium and lions mane,
and zero weird stuff.
And right now, you can get 20% off all.
all IQ bar products, plus free shipping.
Try our delicious IQ bar sampler pack with seven plant protein bars, four hydration mixes,
and four enhanced coffee sticks.
Clean ingredients, amazing taste, and you'll love how you feel.
Refuel smarter, hydrate harder, caffeinate larger with IQ bar.
Go to eat IQbar.com and enter code bar 20 to get 20% off all IQ bar products plus free shipping.
Again, go to eat IQbar.com and enter code bar 20.
Hello, and welcome to the history of Rome.
Episode 160, East versus West.
In the summer of 395, Estilico led practically the only Roman army of consequence left in the empire into Thrace
to face down Alaric and his rampage and Goths.
But right at the moment when it appeared that victory was within his grasp,
Astilico suddenly decided to detach the eastern contingent of his army and return it to Constantinople,
before leading the rest of his army back towards the west.
Preparing to make his last stand,
Alaric wound up simply watching the Roman army dissipate
without so much as a sword being drawn.
Scholars long blame the machinations of the Eastern Praetorian prefect Rufinus
for the order to break up Stilico's army,
but it is just as likely that Stilko himself
never had any intention of bringing Alaric to battle
and was just happy for any excuse to withdraw.
As later events would show,
As much as imperial propaganda liked to paint the Goths as out-of-control monsters, the courts of both
East and West knew that they were actually an incredibly valuable military resource to be utilized,
not some terrible foreign enemy to be defeated at all costs.
Put simply, crushing the Goths would have meant crippling the long-term war-making power of the
empire. And beyond that, the courts of East and West also understood that crushing the Goths
would have meant losing a potential ace in the hole to be laid down in the high-stakes
game of political poker they were playing with each other. Aside from long-term geopolitical
strategy, Stilico had another incentive for breaking up his army. Whether he was the instigator
of the coming assassination of Rufinus or just an interested third party is unknown, but it is
hard to believe Stilico didn't know what was going to happen when the eastern troops returned to
Constantinople.
Heading back east under the command of an ethnically goth general named Guinness,
the troops arrived the great capital city in the late summer of 395.
The emperor Arcadius came out to the army's camp to greet them, and the prefect
Rufinus was by his side.
But when they arrived, a handpicked company of soldiers surrounded the shocked prefect,
and unceremoniously hacked him to death.
Rufinus had apparently been so focused on his enemy Stilico, that he failed
to see just how many enemies he was generating right there at home, not the least of whom was the new
Empress, Eudoxia. It's not that Rufinus didn't know Eudoxia was a deadly rival for power.
After all, her marriage to Arcadius earlier that April had been publicly opposed by the
prefect, as he had been pushing his own daughter on the emperor. And you can't really stand in the way
of a woman's path to power and then expect roses and thank you cards when she slipped past
you into the emperor's bedroom.
Udoxia quickly got together with one of Rufinus' court enemies, a eunuch named Eutropius,
and together they conspired to topple the prefect, all likely with Stilico's nod and wink,
if not outright support.
But if Stilico was thinking that the fall of Rufinus would lead the Eastern Court to recognize
his claim to regency over Constantinople, well, then he was let down.
Eutropius and Eudoxia simply stepped into the power vacuum left by the prefect and controlled
Arcadius for their own purposes, rebuffing all of Stilico's political advances.
Shut out once again from the east. In 396, Stilicho turned his attention to his own backyard
to ensure its stability when he inevitably went back across the Alps to confront Alaric.
The rise of Eutropius and Eudoxia as enemies of the Vandal General meant that the Goths
needed to be brought into Stilico's sphere and fast.
Alaric must not be allowed to sign a peace deal with Constantinople.
He must be brought to heal by the West, and if not converted into an active ally,
then at least sidelined for any intra-imperial struggle.
Stilico's biggest fear, of course, was a vaguely noble one.
He feared that Constantinople would give the Gothic king the Roman generalship that he had been
craving as the price for an alliance, a price that Stilico thought way too high and way
too dangerous to the long-term health of the empire.
Having ethnically barbarian generals was fine, after all, he was one, but having one who
doubled as the king of a barbarian nation, well, the implications of that conflict of interest
were just too terrifying to contemplate. So Stilico spent $3.96 marching up and down the
Rhine, making deals with the Germans to get them to sit tight, raising new recruits and extra cash
along the way.
While Stilico was thus occupied,
Allerick continued to plunder the central empire, more or less at will.
Not that he was on some hell-bent-for-leather trip.
He too was looking for a political arrangement rather than a military victory,
so as plundering campaigns went, it was actually pretty mild,
and cities were, of course, more than welcome to pay their way out of any potential sacking.
Eutropius, for his part, just sort of let Alaric run,
because he too was looking to strike a deal and didn't want to make enemies with the man he was
trying to make his ally. It's also written a few places that the Huns were starting to make
trouble near Syria, so it's entirely possible that even had he wanted to, Eutropius would have been
unable to muster the resources to do anything about Alaric. In 397 though, Stilico felt like he was
ready to do something about Alaric. So he gathered up an army, partially composed of veterans and
partially composed of new recruits, and sailed them over to Corinth.
This was a gutsy move for the Vandal General, as Greece clearly belonged to Constantinople.
To up and land an army there without permission could easily be seen as an act of war.
And in case you're wondering, no, Stilico did not have permission to up and land an army there.
But he did have a moral argument that someone had to do something about the Goths, and are we
not one united empire? So he landed his army and began to wage war on Alaric. But as with his campaign
in 395, it was a war of positional maneuvering rather than open field battling. Alaric marched here,
Stilico marched there. Alaric marched there, Stilico marched here. The Vandal General's objective
was to checkmate Alaric, not destroy him. But again, as with the campaign of 395, Stilico would be
forced to break off his offensive before even checkmate could be achieved. There is no explicit reason
given for Stilico's decision to withdraw from Greece, and speculation ranges from the general
believing that his new troops might not be a match for the Goth should it come down to a battle,
to the fact that Eutropius had Stilico declared a public enemy for waging this unsanctioned war,
which undercut the political rationale for the campaign. But I have always suspected that the situation in
North Africa might have been a major catalyst. Ah, what situation in North Africa, you ask? I'll get to that
in a second. But before we move on, I should note that this was the second time that Stilico will have
Alaric on the run and fail to finish the job. It will also not be the last time. And eventually, the
gossipy backstabbers in Milan will start to wonder if the barbarian general running their army
maybe doesn't have Rome's best interests at heart
and was instead looking to form some pan-barbarian alliance
that would someday conquer Rome,
either from within or from without.
Far-fetched in paranoid?
Perhaps.
But why else would Stilico keep letting Alaric get away?
The situation in North Africa
was that in mid-3997,
a revolt against Milan had broken out,
led by the local governor,
and likely instigated by Yler.
utropius. The governor, a man named Gildo, is an interesting character, and it's kind of a shame I
haven't gotten to him until just now, because I'm about to kill him off. Gildo was of Berber descent,
and had been a close associate of the Theodotian family, serving the elder Theodosius loyally
during the campaign against Firmus. As a reward for this loyalty, the younger Theodosius promoted Gildo
up the ranks, until by 386, the Berber General was more or less in charge of the entire
North African coast, not counting Egypt, of course. With the consent of theodosius, for the next
decade, Gildo served as a nearly autonomous dictator of Africa, whose principal assignment was
maintaining the all-important grain shipments bound for Italy. He ruthlessly and effectively
carried out his assignment, and so he was left alone. But when his people, he was
patron Theodosius died, Gildo's loyalties and motives became far less clear.
Technically, he was a part of the Western Empire and subject to the Court of Milan.
But he had been on his own for so long that Stilico viewed him with suspicion, and Eutropius viewed him with hope.
In mid-3997, Gildo allowed himself to be swayed by Eutropius, and he pledged his loyalty to Arcadius and the Court of Constantinople.
This shift in the political gravity of the empire came so hot on the heels of Stilico's withdrawal from Greece
that I wonder, but I have no evidence to support this bit of speculation,
whether Gildo's imminent side switching wasn't known privately before it was announced publicly.
In any case, it sure was lucky that Stilico and his army were back in Italy
right at the moment when they needed to head south to defend Milan's claim to the grain shipments,
which Gildo had begun to withhold.
Stilicoe sprang into action when the grain stopped coming,
because he knew that any disruption to the food supplies
would have been devastating to his political legitimacy,
especially since earlier that year he had lost his most important political ally.
In April of 397, at the age of 58, Ambrose of Milan had died.
Ambrose had been the bishop of the Italian capital for 20,000,
23 years and is justly recognized not just as one of the most influential men in the history of the Catholic Church, which he obviously was, but also as one of the most influential men in the history of the world period.
He provided a continuity of leadership through an age during which no fewer than six different men laid claim to the imperial throne of Milan, and so it was he, way more than they, who really came to define that age and the future trajectory of both the church and the state.
To say nothing of the fact that back in 386, he had personally converted a 30-something-year-old religious seeker named Augustine to Christianity, which is why I hold Ambrose personally responsible for all those times I had to read select portions of the city of God for the test on Friday.
Stilico spent the rest of 397 and the early part of 38 scrambling to deal with the loss of the African grain.
and showing off his administrative acumen, he was largely successful in the effort, bringing down supplies from Gaul to make up for the shortfall.
This was only a temporary solution, but it was enough of a solution that far from toppling the Vandal General, his prestige was actually elevated, and he became stronger than ever.
So strong, in fact, that he was able to push through the marriage of his daughter to the now 14-year-old Honorius, meaning that Stilico was now not just the guardian.
of the emperor, but also his father-in-law, which also meant that down the road he was going to be
the grandfather of any and all imperial heirs.
But as strong as his standing was right at that moment, Stilico knew it would all be pulled
right out from under him if he failed to turn back on the North African grain shipments.
In the spring of 38, then, Estilico ordered an invasion force to head south, topple Gildo,
and retake the farms and ports of the region.
The Vandal General did not lead this force personally, but instead left it in the hands of a commander Stilico knew would pursue the destruction of Gildo with a relentless zeal, Gildo's brother and now mortal enemy, Mezchazel.
The two brothers had once been as close as you'd expect brothers to be, but they had had a falling out, and Meskazel, fearing for his life, had fled North Africa for the safety of Italy.
As punishment for the flight, Gildo took the rather extreme step of executing Meskazel's two sons.
So Stilico recognized that if there was one man in the empire who was not going to rest until Gildo's head was on a stick, it was Meskazel.
So he gave the Berber General command of the invasion force and left it to him to interpret the vague orders to retake North Africa, however he saw fit.
Meskazel's forces landed in Africa, and though they were outnumbered,
by the army that greeted them, Gildo's forces crumpled almost immediately.
The ease of Meskazel's victory has been explained variously as the result of his own troops
being far superior in discipline and skill. After all, the North African brigades never faced
the kind of threats faced daily by their northern comrades, or possibly as the result of bribes from
Meskazel, who knew that his brother's ruthless tendencies had not endeared him to many over the years.
Probably. It was a little from column A and a little from column B.
Gildo immediately recognized that the jig was up, and that making a run for Constantinople
was his only chance at survival.
Mez-Kazel was obviously not going to be lenient in his victory.
But as Gildo's ship set sail for the east, a storm kicked up and blew the boat back ashore.
Washed up and recognized, Gildo was thrown into chains by some local magistrates looking to make a good
impression on Meskazel. But before his brother could get to him, Gildo was able to commit suicide.
Though he had succeeded in his mission far faster than anyone could have predicted, I'd be willing
to bet that Meskazel himself was mostly just bitter about the outcome of the invasion,
since he had not been able to kill Gildo with his own bare hands. But he did not have long to
stew in his bitterness. Recalled to Milan, Meskazel was greeted by the population as a hero.
but a few weeks later he and Stilico went out for a stroll, and while crossing a bridge, poor Meskazel lost his footing and plunged off the bridge to his death.
Stilico swore up and down that it was an accident, but it's really, really hard not to conclude that having successfully used the Berber to retake Africa, that Stilico did away with Meskazel before his power and popularity grew to rival Stilikos.
These were dangerous times, and the stakes were high.
But Stilico swore it was an accident, and what are you going to do?
Argue with the father-in-law of the emperor?
With his North African gambit having come to nothing,
back in Constantinople,
Eutropius returned to the other major political and military power
that could be possibly used as leverage against Stilico,
Alaric and his Goths.
Eutropius decided that the time had finally come to give the Gothic king
what he wanted, an official command in the Eastern Roman army, which had the further effect
of essentially deputizing the Gothic warriors into said Eastern Roman army, which was partly
the point of Alaric wanting the command in the first place. He had been angling for the command
for two main reasons. First, it meant that his people were now hooked into the official
imperial supply lines. So rather than having to go through the rigor morale of plundering, the Goths
could now kick back and wait for regular shipments of food and supplies.
Second, it meant that Alaric would now have access to the inner circle of Roman military planning and execution,
and as long as he was in the room, nothing like the exploitation of the Goths that had happened at the frigates
would ever happen again.
Alarick standing with his own people was at an all-time high, and though he was now technically subject to Arcadius,
and by extension Eutropius.
In practice, he was subject to no one at all.
As great as this all was for Alaric, however,
the deal wound up sowing the seeds of Eutropius's demise.
There were more than a few people in the empire
who were not at all happy about the deal,
especially the people who had just been terrorized by the Goths
and who were now obligated to supply them in perpetuity.
Maybe Eutropius could have weathered that political storm,
but later in 398, he proceeded to make another key mistake that wound up pushing his career
completely off the rails.
A branch of the Huns had apparently gotten a little too friendly with the Roman front lines,
and it became clear that they would have to be pushed back.
But rather than assign one of his generals to see to that pushing back, Eutropius decided to
take command for himself, which, remember, please, that Eutropius is a eunuch, with all the prejudicial
baggage that status entails.
Secretly running the empire as a high-ranking court official was one thing.
That's the sort of thing you'd expect a eunuch to be up to.
But leading troops in battle, while that was hugely offensive to conservative Roman sensibilities.
The worst part of it, though, came later, when Eutropius' command proved to be entirely successful.
Rather than take to the shadows like a eunuch should, Eutropius boldly stepped forward, took credit for the
victory and paraded himself around Constantinople in triumph.
And then came the final affront.
In January 399, Eutropius had himself named one of the consuls for the year.
This was simply too much for most people to handle.
Unix were not consoles.
Period.
End of story.
But Eutropius's hubris had gotten the better of him, and he simply assumed that he was untouchable.
He was not.
The exact sequence of events that wound up toppling Eutropius began in the spring of 399.
Some Gothic auxiliaries who had been settled in Asia Minor began to complain that Eutropius had not
delivered on promises made during the previous year's campaign against the Huns,
and when they decided their complaints were falling on deaf ears,
they picked up their swords to see if maybe Constantinople would listen to that.
Eutropius did indeed listen, but instead of delivering on his promises,
he sent some troops under the command of the Gothic General Gynus,
who we met earlier at the assassination of Rufinus to put down the burgeoning revolt.
But Gynes, being ethnically goth, sympathized with the leaders of the revolt,
and did not try very hard to put them down.
Instead, he opened up talks with them,
not revolving on how to resettle them,
but revolving around what was to be done with the eunuch.
Meanwhile, in Constantinople, a backroom campaigned
oust the arrogant Eutropius began to unfold, matching the talks that were going on out in the
field.
Spearheaded by a minister named Erelian, the campaign eventually received the blessing and then
the backing of the Empress Eudoxia, who had begun to feud with Eutropius now that he was
getting too big for his britches.
In mid-399, Eutropius opened up a dispatch from Guinness, and instead of reading about how
the rabble had been defeated, he instead read about how the two-year-old.
sides had united in demanding Eutropius step down from office. This ultimatum was the cue for Erelian's
conspiracy to spring into action and destroy Eutropius's political credibility with the emperor,
and with Eudoxia on board, they were able to quickly isolate the eunuch. Eutropius's four years
in power were over, and he was either exiled or executed, depending on which source you believe.
But the coalition to eliminate Eutropius turned on itself the minute it's.
succeeded. Arrellian had been a convenient ally for Gynes as long as they shared the same enemy,
but the minister was long suspected of having anti-armie biases, and as soon as Eutropius was out of
the picture, the Gothic general turned the leverage he held as the most powerful general in the east
against his one-time ally, which is to say that Erellion disappears from the historical record,
almost as suddenly as he had appeared in the first place. As the 5th century dawned then,
The Eastern Empire was essentially run by Eudoxia in the palace and Guinness out in the field.
Arcadius, now 23 years old, was nowhere to be seen, as indifferent as he likely was incompetent.
In the west, Stilico continued to run the show for Honorius, who was no better than his older brother,
and in the middle was Alaric and his Goths, now an officially sanctioned arm of the Eastern Roman army.
Next week, Stilico will continue to outlast his enemies in the east, as Gynes will fall almost as fast as he had risen.
Stilico will also continue his on-again-off-again wars with the Goths, who will pretty soon get it into their heads to invade Italy, but as had happened twice before, Alaric will once again escape Stilico's clutches.
And it was the rumors of barbarian collusion as much as anything else that we'll eventually see the Vandal General finally toppled from power.
