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End Of Roman Empire, U N C, Mar 2010

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Lecture based on the forthcoming book: Sam Moorhead and David Stuttard, AD 410 The Year that Shook Rome (British Museum Press, 2010)

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Page 1: End Of  Roman  Empire,  U N C,  Mar 2010
Page 2: End Of  Roman  Empire,  U N C,  Mar 2010

Why This Book?

• 1600th anniversary of sack of Rome by Alaric• Already c.200 theories about why the Roman

Empire fell• Since Gibbon barely anyone has told the story

of how it fell• Academic fixation on why has meant much of

the story has been overlooked or misunderstood

Page 3: End Of  Roman  Empire,  U N C,  Mar 2010

Barbarian Raids across Europe in the 260s AD

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AD 276 – 376Barbarians in the Empire

• First barbarians settled in Gaul by the emperor Probus (276-282)

• Treaty with the Goths c. 340

• Soldiers, slaves and farm-hands

Page 5: End Of  Roman  Empire,  U N C,  Mar 2010

Happy Days Are Here Again!

• Roman soldier spearing falling barbarian

• AD 355-61

• Felicium Tempus Reparatio

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But barbarians become Roman generals

Stilicho, generalissimo of the West during the reign of Honorius (395-408)

Half Vandal, half Roman

Page 7: End Of  Roman  Empire,  U N C,  Mar 2010

Enter Diocletian AD 284

Tetrarchs in Venice

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Class fixing Piercebridge Ploughman

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Rich getting richer

Hoxne Treasure, Suffolk

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Enter Constantine and Christianity

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The barbarian invasions 376-407

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Across the Danube

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Crisis at Hadrianople, 378

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Division of Empire, AD 395

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Order Restored?

Suppliant Goths under Theodosius’ family at Constantinople

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Battle of the River Frigidus, AD 394

Eugenius

Theodosius I The Roman army; citizens and increasingly barbarians

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Alaric unleashed - 395…

Ludwig Thiersch

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Alaric moves West – 401-3

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Honorius flees to Ravenna

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Usurpers and barbarians in Gaul

Constantine III 407-11

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Alaric besieges Rome 408

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Fruitless negotiations

Priscus Attalus 409-10

St Apollinaire, Ravenna

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Alaric sacks Rome 8/24Johan Winckelmann, etching, 1782

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Kenneth Setton, 1962

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Meanwhile in Ravenna…

John W. Waterhouse, 1883

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How should we view the barbarians?

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What did they want?

Esquiline Treasure, Rome (British Museum)

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Who were they? Refugees?

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Economic Migrants?

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Controlling access

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A threat to authority?

Page 32: End Of  Roman  Empire,  U N C,  Mar 2010

Clash with authority

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Migrant Workers

Page 34: End Of  Roman  Empire,  U N C,  Mar 2010

Swelling the ranks

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The old order of Rome

Symmachus, the Senate and Honorius

Page 36: End Of  Roman  Empire,  U N C,  Mar 2010

The old order in the West?

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Does the world need new leaders to face these changes?

Page 38: End Of  Roman  Empire,  U N C,  Mar 2010

The Road to Africa

The fields of Dougga

Appian Way

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Burial of Alaric, 410/11

Lithograph, 1895

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Galla Placidia c.388-450

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Wedding of Galla Placidia

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Galla Placidia ‘sold back’ to Rome for 600,000 modii of grain

Roman Modius on a coin of Nerva, AD 96-8

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Vandals take Africa, AD 439

Page 44: End Of  Roman  Empire,  U N C,  Mar 2010

The barbarian dream?

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Aesop

‘I’d rather have one

grain of corn than all the

jewels in the world.’

Page 46: End Of  Roman  Empire,  U N C,  Mar 2010

What of Rome? Last emperor of the West, Romulus Augustulus, deposed in AD 476

Page 47: End Of  Roman  Empire,  U N C,  Mar 2010

Ostrogothic Rome, AD 49

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Cannon: 14 feet; 15 tons; 500lb stone ball; Walls of Theodosius

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Mehmet II; Hagia Sophia as a Mosque

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What will the challenges of the next 100 years be?

• Environmental: water, sea-levels, temperature, desertification....food shortage

• Economic – shortage of scarce resources• Population increase• Migration, warfare and renegotiating the world order• The emergence of a new kind of leader able to cope in

a different world• How will archaeologists detect many of these changes

in coming millennia?