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
1 - THE GOTHS BEFORE CONSTANTINE
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 GOTHS HAD A MOMENTOUS IMPACT ON ROMAN HISTORY, appearing as if out of nowhere in the early decades of the third century. When we first meet them, it is in the company of other barbarians who, together, made devastating incursions into the eastern provinces of the Roman empire. The mid third century, particularly from the 240s till the early 300s, was an era of constant civil war between Roman armies, civil war that in turn encouraged barbarian invasions. Contact with the Roman empire, and particularly with the Roman army, had helped to militarize barbarian society, and opportunistic raids all along the imperial frontiers exploited Roman divisions and distraction in the civil wars. When the Goths first appear, it is in this world of civil war and invasion. Unfortunately for the modern historian, it is not always easy to distinguish third-century Goths from other barbarians. The problem stems from the way ancient writers talked about barbarians in general and the Goths in particular.
‘SCYTHIANS’ AND GOTHS
To the Greek authors who wrote about them, the Goths were ‘Scythians’ and that is the name used almost without exception to describe them. The name ‘Scythian’ is very ancient, drawn from the histories of Herodotus, which were written in the fifth century B.C. and dealt with the Greek world at the time of the Persian Wars. For Herodotus, the Scythians were outlandish barbarians living north of the Black Sea in what are now Moldova and Ukraine. They lived on their horses, they ate their meat raw, they dressed in funny ways, and they were quintessentially alien not just to the world of the Greeks, but even to other barbarians nearer to the Greek world. Greek historical writing, like much of Greek literary culture, was intensely conservative of old forms, and canonized certain authors as perfect models to which later writers had to conform.
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- Information
- Rome's Gothic WarsFrom the Third Century to Alaric, pp. 14 - 33Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2006