By Eric G. L. Pinzelli,
Certain figures in history undertake actions that reverberate down
through time; their successes and failure continue to have consequences
centuries after they have died. One such man was Flavius Stilicho,
magister utriusque militiae of the Western Roman Empire, guardian of the
child Emperor Honorius, senior military commander of all Roman forces
in the west and de facto ruler of the Western Empire from the death of
Theodosius I in January 395 until his execution on August 23rd, 408.
Stilicho (365-408) was half-Roman, half Vandal. In 383 Stilicho served
on an embassy to the Persian king Shāpūr III, afterward marrying Serena,
the favorite niece of the emperor Theodosius. In 385 he was appointed
master of the soldiery (magister militum) in Thrace, and shortly
afterwards directed energetic campaigns in Britain against Picts, Scots
and Saxons, and along the Rhine against other barbarians. Stilicho and
Serena were named guardians of the youthful Honorius when the latter was
created joint emperor in 394 with special jurisdiction over Italy,
Gaul, Britain, Spain and Africa, and Stilicho was even more closely
allied to the imperial family in the following year by betrothing his
daughter Maria to his ward and by receiving the dying injunctions of
Theodosius to care for his children.
Rivalry had already existed
between Stilicho and Rufinus, the praetorian praefect of the East, who
had exercised considerable influence over the emperor and who now was
invested with the guardianship of Arcadius. Consequently in 395, after a
successful campaign against the Germans on the Rhine, Stilicho marched
to the east, nominally to expel the Goths and Huns from Thrace, but
really with the design of displacing Rufinus, and by connivance with
these same barbarians he procured the assassination of Rufinus at the
close of the year, and thereby became virtual master of the empire. In
396 he fought in Greece against the Visigoths, but an arrangement was
effected whereby their chieftain Alaric was appointed master of the
soldiery in Illyricum (397). In 398 he quelled Gildo's revolt in Africa
and married his daughter Maria to Honorius. Two years later he was
consul. He thwarted the efforts of Alaric to seize lands in Italy by his
victories at Pollentia and Verona in 402-3 and forced him to return to
Illyricum, but was criticized for having withdrawn the imperial forces
from Britain and Gaul to employ against the Goths. He maneuvered so
skillfully in the campaign against Radagaisus, who led a large force of
various Germanic peoples into Italy in 405, that he surrounded the
barbarian chieftain on the rocks of Fiesole near Florence and starved
him into surrender.
Empress Maria had died and in early 408
Honorius married another daughter of Stilicho, Thermantia. Stilicho’s
influence, however, had declined. It was rumored that he wished to have
his son Eucherius elevated to the throne. Reports reached him early in
408 that his army was disaffected. Then came news of the death of the
Eastern emperor, Arcadius, and Stilicho proposed to go to
Constantinople. Olympius, a palace official, spread the rumor that
Stilicho was preparing to put his own son on the Eastern throne, and so
the troops in Pavia killed nearly all of the officials present on August
13. Stilicho went to Ravenna but was imprisoned by Honorius’ orders. He
was beheaded on August 22; his son Eucherius was put to death shortly
thereafter.
In the disturbances which followed the downfall and
execution of Stilicho, the wives and children of barbarian foederati
throughout Italy were slain by the local Romans. The Gothic army broke
through the gates of Rome and sacked the city in August of 410. Many
historians argue that the removal of Stilicho was the main catalyst
leading to this monumental event, the first barbarian capture of Rome in
nearly eight centuries and a part of the fall of the Western Roman
Empire.
Art by Vilius Petrauskas: King Alaric and his staff during the siege of Rome.
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