The Merovingians put Game of Thrones to shame, with palace intrigue, shocking betrayal, and brother murdering brother. This can be seen in the life of Theudebert, grandson of Clovis, enemy of Emperor Justinian and Beowulf's Hygelac, and one of the greatest Frankish kings. Thread:
The Franks did not have primogeniture - the principle that the first son inherits everything - so when Clovis died in 511, his realm was split up amongst his four living sons: Theuderic, Theudebert's father, got Metz, Childebert, Paris, Chlodomer, Orléans, and Lothar, Soissons.
The Frankish realm was new and insecure, surrounded by the kingdoms, like the Visigoths, Ostrogoths, and Burgundians, that had carved up the Rome. To its north were still pagan tribes that had never been ruled by Rome, and to its east the still strong Eastern Roman Empire.
We don't know when Theudebert was born, but Gregory of Tours tells us he was already an "elegant and able young man" when Clovis died. Shortly afterwards, in 516, his father sent him with an army against Danish raiders. Theudabert routed them and killed their king, Chlochilaich.
The Danish king Chlochilaich is generally considered to be the Geatish king Hygelac from Beowulf; the raid that led to his death is also mentioned in that epic poem.
Theudebert was betrothed to a Lombard princess, Wisigard, but when his father sent him to lead an army against the Visigoths he forgot her and took a married woman Deuteria as his mistress instead.
When Theuderic was on his deathbed in 533, his brothers immediately began plotting to take his lands. Theudebert sped home and was crowned as his heir. Unable to depose him, his uncle Childebert adopted him as a son and teamed up with him against Theudebert's other uncle, Lothar.
The two men led their armies against Lothar, who fled into the woods. Clovis' widow, Clotild, prayed for peace between her sons, and a great storm came upon the army. Theudebert and Childebert took this as a sign from God and made peace with Lothar.
Theudebert, still living with his mistress, refused to marry Wisigard. His subjects forced him to give Deuteria up and marry, but his new royal wife died soon afterwards and he took yet another woman.
When Theodoric, Ostrogothic king of Italy, died in 526, his daughter, who was also Theudebert's cousin, ran away with a slave and was dragged back by her mother's troops. In revenge, she poisoned her mother during communion and was killed in turn by the king of Tuscany.
The Byzantine historian Procopius claims Amalasuntha was actually killed because she was too Romanized and was offering to hand over her kingdom to Emperor Justinian. Either way, her death in 535 provoked a Byzantine invasion of Italy and war against the Ostrogoths the same year.
It's unlikely Justinian would have needed an excuse. He was engaged in a campaign to retake the Western Roman Empire. His armies, led by his legendary general Belisarius, had already retaken Vandal Africa, and it's likely he would have seized any opportunity to invade Italy.
According to Gregory, her death inspired the Franks to invade as well. Theudebert took his army across the Alps in 539 and defeated both the Goths and the Byzantines. Although he was driven back by disease, he returned to Gaul with vast amounts of plunder.
Procopius describes this in a very different way. He claims the Franks were tempted by the weakness of both the Goths and the Byzantines and violated treaties with both to invade. When the Frankish troops arrived, the Goths believed they were allies up until they turned on them.
He describes the Frankish warriors as "armed with only a sword, shield and ax" which they throw "so to shatter the shields of the enemy and kill the men."
The Franks, only recently converted to Catholicism, began to ritually sacrifice Gothic women and children before overrunning a Byzantine army as well. In their moment of victory, however, they were struck by an outbreak of dysentery, halting their advance.
At this point, Belisarius sent a letter to Theudebert, upbraiding him for his treachery. Happy with the plunder he had taken and shamed by the letter, Theudebert retreated back into Gaul.
Theudebert's conflict with the Byzantines can also be seen in his coins. Previous Frankish kings issued coins with the name and face of the Byzantine emperor, maintaining the fiction that they were Roman subjects. Theudebert broke this tradition, issuing coins in his own name.
His reign wasn't all war and scheming, however. Gregory praises him repeatedly for his generosity towards the church, such as his loan to the Bishop of Verdun which he refused to take repayment for.
Theudebert ultimately died in 548. Gregory just says he fell ill; the Byzantine historian Agathias says he was killed during a hunt. Either way, he left a legacy of military success and generosity to the Catholic Church that would be held up as an ideal for generations of Franks.
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Gallo-Roman bishop Sidonius Apollinaris wrote a letter to his uncle describing his meeting with the Visigothic King Theodoric II, sometime in the 450s. Sidonius describes him as a temperate and Christian ruler, giving a picture of the life of a Post-Roman Germanic king. A thread:
Before daybreak, the king prayed with a small group of priests, before devoting his mornings to the administration of his kingdom and meetings with foreign diplomats.
He hunted for pleasure, a servant carrying his bow for him. Theodoric was such an expert archer that he would ask his companions what to shoot, never missing the target they selected.
One Roman legion was founded by Augustus and is last attested fighting against the Islamic conquest of Egypt. It had the longest known service history of any Roman legion - 680 years. Its history is that of the empire itself. A thread on Legio V Macedonia:
Legio V was one of the original 28 legions raised by Octavian in 43 BC. It almost certainly fought at the Battle of Actium in 31 BC against Marc Anthony before being transferred to Macedonia in 30 BC, where it acquired it's nickname. It would remain in the province until 6 AD.
In 62 AD, some detachments were sent to Armenia to fight the Parthians. Traditionally a Roman client, the Parthians had managed to put their own man in the throne. Legio V was part of the army sent to remove him. Although Rome suffered some defeats, they did so in the end.
Almost everyone has at least heard of the Huns, Goths, Vandals, Franks, and Saxons, and of their legendary leaders like Attila, Clovis, and Hengist and Horsa. However, few know anything about Odoacer, the general turned king who actually ended the Western Roman Empire. A thread:
It's not clear what, exactly, Odoacer was, although he certainly wasn't considered Roman. Classical sources variously call him a Hun or a member of various east Germanic tribes that had just broken out of Attila's collapsing empire.
The earliest supposed mention of Odoacer is from the Life of St Severinus. The future king, then a young man, met the holy ascetic while traveling through the Alps to Italy, who told him, "Go to Italy, go, now covered with mean hides; soon you will make rich gifts to many."
Were the armies of the Germanic kingdoms of Post-Roman Europe essentially Roman, the descendants of Late Roman field armies; essentially Germanic, the descendants of tribal warbands; or something in between? A thread:
It's clear that all of them were based around the retinues of powerful individuals, whether kings, lesser noblemen, or even bishops. However, the political and social role of such men was more complex than might be imagined, acting variously as royal officials or elite soldiers.
The 6th century Frankish Salic Law describes two types of royal retainers: the higher ranking antrustiones and the pueri regis - literally "royal boys." The antrustiones, at least, were a legally distinct category, with a higher weregild than ordinary citizens.
I wanted to do a thread on the complex relationship between civil wars and barbarian invasions in the last decades of the Western Roman Empire. I decided to illustrate this through the life of one man: Aegidius, a Roman general who made himself an independent ruler:
Aegidius began as a loyal supporter of Majorian, one of the last capable western emperors, who took power in 457. The two men had served together in the army, and Aegidius was made Magister Militum per Gallias - commander of Roman forces in Gaul.
They had their work cut out for them. By this point, Rome had lost control of much of its territory to semi-independent barbarian kingdoms, including the critical breadbasket of North Africa. They had to force these rulers to submit to imperial authority.
One of the commonly given causes of the fall of the Western Roman Empire is the barbarianization of its army - the army was increasingly made up of foreign Germanic tribesmen, with a corresponding decrease in loyalty and effectiveness. Was this true? A thread:
It isn't really in doubt that the Roman Army was increasingly made up of ethnic Germans, both recruited individually into professional field army units and incorporated as whole tribes of Foedreti. Still, the majority of soldiers were probably born within the empire.
An analysis of soldiers mentioned in sources found that 52% were born in Gaul and Illyricum, and only about 25% were born outside the empire's borders. However, they appear to have been more numerous in the most elite units, and this was still an increase over the early empire.