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| Of the campaign of Theodosius. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter V.—Of the campaign of Theodosius.
Now at
this time Theodosius, on account alike of the splendour of his
ancestry,828
828 His father, a distinguished general in Britain and elsewhere, was
treacherously slain in 376, probably because an oracle warned Valens of
a successor with a name beginning “ΘΕΟΔ.” cf. Soc.
iv. 19. Soz. vi. 35. Ammian. xxix. I. 29. | and of his own courage, was a
man of high repute. For this reason being from time to time stricken by
the envy of his rivals, he was living in Spain, where he had been born
and brought up.829
829 At
his paternal estate at Cauca in Spain; to the east of the Vaccæi
in Tarraconensis. | The emperor,
being at a loss what measures to take, now that the barbarians, puffed
up by their victory, both were and seemed well nigh invincible, formed
the idea that a way out of his difficulties would be found in the
appointment of Theodosius to the supreme command. He therefore lost no
time in sending for him from Spain, appointing830
830 χειροτονήσας. Vide note on page 125. |
him commander in chief and despatching him at the head of the assembled
forces.
Defended by his faith Theodosius
marched confidently forth. On entering Thrace, and beholding the
barbarians advancing to meet him, he drew up his troops in order of
battle. The two lines met, and the enemy could not stand the attack and
broke. A rout ensued, the foe taking to flight and the conquerors
pursuing at full speed. There was a great slaughter of the barbarians,
for they were slain not only by Romans but even by one another. After
the greater number of them had thus fallen, and a few of those who had
been able to escape pursuit had crossed the Danube, the great captain
dispersed the troops which he commanded among the neighbouring towns,
and forthwith rode at speed to this emperor Gratianus, himself the
messenger of his own triumph. Even to the emperor himself, astounded at
the event, the tidings he carried seemed incredible, while others
stung with
envy gave out that he had run away and lost his army. His only reply
was to ask his gainsayers to send and ascertain the number of the
barbarian dead, “For,” said he, “even from their
spoils it is easy to learn their number.” At these words the
emperor gave way and sent officers to investigate and report on the
battle.831
831 Theodoret’s is the sole authority for this connexion of the
association of Theodosius in the Empire with a victory, and his alleged
facts do not fit in with others which are better supported. Gratian, a
vigorous and sensible lad of nineteen, seems to have felt that the
burden was too big for his shoulders, and to have looked out for a
suitable colleague. For the choice which he made, or was advised to
make, he had good ground in the reputation already won by Theodosius in
Britain and in the campaign of 373 against the Sarmatians and Quadi,
and the elevation of the young general (born in 346, he was thirty two
when Gratian declared him Augustus at Sirmium, Jan. 19, 379) was
speedily vindicated. Theodoret, with his contempt for exact chronology,
may have exaggerated one of the engagements of the guerrilla warfare
waged by the new emperor after his accession, when he carefully avoided
the error of Valens in risking all on a pitched battle. By the end of
379 he had driven the barbarians over the Balkan range. Dr. Stokes
(Dict. Christ. Biog. iv. 960) points out that between Aug. 9, 378, and
Jan. 19, 379, there was not time for news to travel from Hadrianople to
Mitrovitz, where Gratian was, for couriers to fetch Theodosius thither
from remoter Spain, for Theodosius then in the winter months to
organize and carry out a campaign. | E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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