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| Calamities of the Barbarians who had been the Usurper John's Allies. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter
XLIII.—Calamities of the Barbarians who had been the
Usurper John’s Allies.
After the death of the usurper,
the barbarians whom he had called to his assistance against the Romans,
made preparations for ravaging the Roman provinces. The emperor being
informed of this, immediately, as his custom was, committed the
management of the matter to God; and continuing in earnest prayer, he
speedily obtained what he sought; for it is worth while to give
attention to disasters which befell the barbarians.1033
1033Who these barbarians were it is impossible to find
out precisely, and that not because no mention is made of barbarian
inroads on the imperial territories, but because so many are mentioned
by the chronographers and the historians of the Goths (Jornandes,
Prosper Aquitanus, Marcellinus, &c.) that it is impossible to
identify this with any of them to the exclusion of the rest. Rougas
also appears in these historians as Rouas (in Priscus), Roas (in
Jornandes), Rugilas (in Prosper Aquitanus), and is said to be related
to Attila; but nothing certain can be drawn from the accounts.
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For their chief, whose name was Rougas, was struck dead with a
thunderbolt. Then a plague followed which destroyed most of the men who
were under him: and as if this was not sufficient, fire came down from
heaven, and consumed many of the survivors. This filled the barbarians
with the utmost terror; not so much because they had dared to take up
arms against a nation of such valor as the Romans possessed, as that
they perceived them to be assisted by a mighty God. On this occasion,
Proclus the bishop preached a sermon in the church in which he applied
a prophecy out of Ezekiel to the deliverance effected by God in the
late emergency, and was in consequence much admired. This is the
language of the prophecy:1034
1034Ezek.
xxxviii. 2, 22, 23. Ambrose
has also used this prophecy, applying it to the Goths, and exhorted
Gratian to make war against them. Cf. Ambrose, de Fide, 2. 16.
The quotation here is from the LXX.
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‘And thou, son of man, prophesy against Gog the
prince of Rhos, Mosoch, and Thobel. For I will judge him with death,
and with blood, and with overflowing rain, and with hail-stones. I will
also rain fire and brimstone upon him, and upon all his bands, and upon
many nations that are with him. And I will be magnified, and glorified,
and I will be known in the eyes of many nations: and they shall know
that I am the Lord.’
This application of the prophecy was received with great
applause, as I have said, and enhanced the estimation in which Proclus
was held. Moreover the providence of God rewarded the meekness of the
emperor in various other ways, one of which was the following. E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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