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March 11, 2011 Leave a Comment

The Barbarians Overrun the Roman Empire

by Jack Le Moine
CC BY-SA 3.0 image from Wikipedia.
CC BY-SA 3.0 image from Wikipedia.

This is the story of when the natives of France let the Roman Empire do their fighting for them. Continuing our series on France’s Wars. Did you ever notice that in almost every great war in history, France has been involved in some way? These stories emphasize the French role in these wars.

SUMMARY: The mass movement of peoples across the Eurasian continent landmass brought wave after wave of barbarian invasions across the Rhine and into the area of ancient Gaul, present day France. Against this pounding of peoples across the centuries, Rome fell, Gaul descended into the Dark Ages, and France was born.

DURATION: 376-499 AD

BACKGROUND:  Gaul (today’s France) had become thoroughly Romanized by the 4th. century AD Meanwhile, climate change and population increase had caused the nomadic peoples across the northern Eurasian landmass to migrate. In the east, China stood fast; in the south, the Parthian and the Byzantine Empires held their own; in the west, a decayed Roman Empire proved to be the weakest barrier.

MAJOR COUNTRIES

  • France
    In this era, Gaul was just a province of the Roman Empire. Its destiny was controlled by Rome’s.
  • Major Barbarian Tribes:
    • Visigoths, the first to invade and stay,
    • Ostrogoths (took Italy),
    • Vandals (north Africa),
    • Huns (defeated),
    • Burgundians (defeated by the Franks),
    • and Franks (who ended up with France).
  • Roman Empire
    Centuries before, with control of just a portion of Italy, it was able to generate legion after legion to meet emergencies. But that was then; now it could not recruit and its people would not serve. In this era, a depleted army defended a fearful but unwilling populace.

MAJOR LEADERS

  • France
    Clovis, the Frank who ended up with Gaul.
  • Visigoths
    Aleric who led the sack of Rome.
  • Huns
    Attila, so legendary for his ruthlessness that some Barbarian tribes allied with Rome to defeat him.
  • Roman Empire
    Stilicho, the last great Roman general.
Invasions of Roman Empire
Invasions of the Roman Empire
CC BY-SA 2.5 image from Wikipedia.

NARRATIVE: The Visigoths broke the Roman army in the east in 378 but were stopped in their southern and eastern thrust by the fortifications of Constantinople. The path of least resistance was west, through Greece, around the Adriatic Sea, into Italy (sacking Rome in 410) and eventually into Gaul and Spain

The Huns invaded Gaul from the Rhine but were stopped by a combined army of Romans and barbarians at Chalons. They later failed in an invasion of Italy, retreated and eventually dismembered in the constant barbarian turmoil in the depths of the continent.

The Vandals crossed Gaul starting in 406, sacking Reims, Amiens, Arras, Tournai and other lesser-known towns in their journey to Spain and later Africa.

The Burgundians invaded in 411 and settled in the eastern part of Gaul. The Franks invaded the northeastern part of Gaul in 486 under Clovis. Burgundy was conquered after 500 and the Visigoths after the Battle of Vouille in 507. Henceforth, Gaul was the land of the Franks – France.

AFTERMATH: These invasions inaugurated the Dark Ages where learning and commerce declined. Government devolved to the local level known as Feudalism. Civilization held on but by the skin of its teeth.


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Further Information: here and here and below.

Filed Under: Europe - Western, g 1 AD - 499 AD, Military Tagged With: a Le Moine_Jack, Barbarian Invasions, France, Roman Empire, s France's Wars

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