Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- MAPS
- ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
- Prologue BEFORE THE GATES OF ROME
- 1 THE GOTHS BEFORE CONSTANTINE
- 2 THE ROMAN EMPIRE AND BARBARIAN SOCIETY
- 3 THE SEARCH FOR GOTHIC ORIGINS
- 4 IMPERIAL POLITICS AND THE RISE OF GOTHIC POWER
- 5 GOTHS AND ROMANS, 332–376
- 6 THE BATTLE OF ADRIANOPLE
- 7 THEODOSIUS AND THE GOTHS
- 8 ALARIC AND THE SACK OF ROME
- Epilogue THE AFTERMATH OF ALARIC
- GLOSSARY OF ANCIENT SOURCES
- BIOGRAPHICAL GLOSSARY
- FURTHER READING
- NOTES
- INDEX
Epilogue THE AFTERMATH OF ALARIC
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2015
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- MAPS
- ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
- Prologue BEFORE THE GATES OF ROME
- 1 THE GOTHS BEFORE CONSTANTINE
- 2 THE ROMAN EMPIRE AND BARBARIAN SOCIETY
- 3 THE SEARCH FOR GOTHIC ORIGINS
- 4 IMPERIAL POLITICS AND THE RISE OF GOTHIC POWER
- 5 GOTHS AND ROMANS, 332–376
- 6 THE BATTLE OF ADRIANOPLE
- 7 THEODOSIUS AND THE GOTHS
- 8 ALARIC AND THE SACK OF ROME
- Epilogue THE AFTERMATH OF ALARIC
- GLOSSARY OF ANCIENT SOURCES
- BIOGRAPHICAL GLOSSARY
- FURTHER READING
- NOTES
- INDEX
Summary
THE TRAUMA OF THE SACK OF ROME WAS AS MUCH psychological as physical. Those three painful days of August 410 entered into ongoing debate about the effects on the empire of the imperial conversion to Christianity, a debate that had been going on since Adrianople. It had flared up in practice, as we saw, in the besieged Rome of 408, when some suggested that the only way to stave off Alaric was to offer sacrifices to the old gods who had protected the city for so long. Those sacrifices, in all likelihood, were never offered, and then the city was sacked. Thus did pagans find themselves vindicated, though it was a melancholy satisfaction when Rome still smouldered around them. The sack put Christian authors on the defensive and they set out to rebut the pagan charge – now so much more plausible – that Christianity had brought about Rome's decline. A Spanish priest named Orosius produced an apologetical work in seven books which he called a History Against the Pagans. Orosius' history aimed to show that Rome's pagan past had been filled with many more disasters than its more recent Christian era. Far more subtle was St. Augustine's City of God, more than a thousand pages of closely argued history and theology, meditating on the divine plan for the world, and the role of the Roman empire in it, and the contrast between an earthly and a heavenly city, which latter offered up the prospect of eternal peace.
Needless to say, the simplistic and tendentious response of Orosius proved more popular. He, in his zeal to defend the role of Christianity, downplayed the horror of the sack of Rome. To be sure, the city had been plundered, but Alaric had given orders to protect the holy sites, particularly the basilica of the apostles Peter and Paul, and to avoid bloodshed as much as possible.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Rome's Gothic WarsFrom the Third Century to Alaric, pp. 178 - 184Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2006