The Barbarian West, A.D. 400-1000: The Early Middle Ages [1952 ed.]
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“Into the comparatively few pages at his disposal, Mr. Wallace-Hadrill has contrived to pack a surprising amount of stimulating discussion, covering many of the problems which have exercised historians during the present century. Attention may be called, in particular, to his judicious summing-up of the contrasting theories of the extent of Mediterranean trade after the fall of the empire in the west, and his reminder of the pitfalls, both in the economic and in other fields, presented by the defective nature of our sources and the state in which they have been preserved....the book reads smoothly, and interest is sustained even when the untidy tenth century, so difficult to summarize, is reached. The author is to be congratulated on a suggestive and valuable essay on a period of European history which has possibly received less attention than it deserves from the present generation of English students.”—H. ST. L. B. MOSS, The English Historical Review
“Impresses by its sober and patient probing and testing of the mortal remains of these six centuries”—Eastern Churches Quarterly
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The Barbarian West, A.D. 400-1000 - J M Wallace-Hadrill
© Barakaldo Books 2020, all rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted by any means, electrical, mechanical or otherwise without the written permission of the copyright holder.
Publisher’s Note
Although in most cases we have retained the Author’s original spelling and grammar to authentically reproduce the work of the Author and the original intent of such material, some additional notes and clarifications have been added for the modern reader’s benefit.
We have also made every effort to include all maps and illustrations of the original edition the limitations of formatting do not allow of including larger maps, we will upload as many of these maps as possible.
THE BARBARIAN WEST
THE EARLY MIDDLE AGES A.D. 400-1000
BY
J. M. WALLACE-HADRILL
Table of Contents
Contents
Table of Contents 5
PREFACE 6
CHAPTER I—INTRODUCTORY 7
CHAPTER II—MARE NOSTRUM 15
CHAPTER III—ITALY AND THE LOMBARDS 30
CHAPTER IV—THE FRANKS (1) 45
CHAPTER V—THE FRANKS (2) 61
CHAPTER VI—IMPERIUM CHRISTIANUM 79
SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY 96
GENERAL 96
SPECIAL STUDIES 96
(1) Literary and Artistic 96
(2) Economic and Social 96
(3) Political 97
SOME FURTHER READING (revised 1961) 97
REQUEST FROM THE PUBLISHER 99
PREFACE
THE reader who requires a balanced introduction to the early Middle Ages will do best to turn without delay to the general books cited at the end of this volume, which, so far from seeking in any particular to replace, I gratefully build upon. In them, and in other books and articles that scholars will at once detect my debt to, will be found proper consideration of much that I have lacked space to cover, such, for example, as the history of barbarian Spain; or have relegated to a secondary position, like the development of the papacy, and early medieval administration; or I feel is still problematical, like the continuing pressure of Byzantium upon Western thought and action. These are integral parts of the full picture. Mine is only a sketch of certain aspects that interest me particularly, and which I think are sufficiently indicated by my title: the Roman West became barbarized; and yet it looked back. It remembered Rome. I ask myself not ‘Why?’ for that is obvious, but ‘How?’
Some readers may find the chronology difficult to follow and, especially in the last chapter, may become confused by the names and numbers of many kings. To have added genealogical tables would materially have increased the length of the book; but instant help may be had from the books I cite in my bibliography or in such a work as Steinberg’s Historical Tables, which is easily obtainable.
Sir Maurice Powicke, my mother and my wife have all, in different ways, given me help I could not have foregone; and I thank them for their generosity. I have also to thank the Cambridge University Press for permission to use Map 28a from the map volume of the Cambridge Medieval History.
A second impression (1957) has given me the opportunity to correct a few mistakes and to make certain slight additions to the text. I have added a further section to the bibliography which I have revised again for the fourth impression (1961).
J. M. W-H.
CHAPTER I—INTRODUCTORY
DURING the year A.D. 376 the Romans learned that the tribes living in the northern world, beyond the Danube frontier, were in motion. This kind of thing had happened before, and no doubt official quarters were reluctant to credit alarmist reports. But soon it became clear that the reports were anything but alarmist. The Huns, the most terrible of the barbarian peoples, had been stirred to life and were sweeping south towards the imperial frontiers, refugees streaming before them.
Our first task must be to distinguish some of the features of the civilization that was thus threatened.
We must observe, in the first place, that the time immediately preceding the irruption had been far from restful. The fourth century had, for the Romans, been an age of unquiet. That Peace of which the founder-Emperor, Augustus, had dreamt had slipped gradually away. The imperial frontiers had long since been advanced to a point where defence against external dangers was itself a burden sufficiently huge to create a new series of internal problems, economic and social. These did not, in themselves, prove fatal to the structure of the Empire; but they modified it. What were they?
In the first place, there was a labour problem. The defence in depth of an immense frontier had combined with the need to exploit all food-producing land to make every able-bodied man the object of strict and anxious state-supervision. But this, as so often happens, proved a self-destructive process; for the more rigidly men were pinned down to their wartime tasks the less able society proved to adapt itself to a rapidly changing situation. The Romans had inherited from the Greeks a strong sense of the rightness of social hierarchy. Each level of society had its function to perform; and between the levels the barriers were high. By and large, Rome had been built upon slave labour and the material achievements of her prosperity upon the exploitation of unwilling hands that shared in few of the advantages. It thus followed that in the hour of need the slave population would bear no more of the added burden than it could possibly avoid. The Later Empire was a hotbed of servile unrest.
To us, other solutions to this great social problem easily suggest themselves. Why, for example, should not stricter economy have been practised on non-essential expenditure? Why should not more interest have been taken in labour-saving methods and devices? If they could reply, the Romans would probably answer that age-long reliance on plentiful slave labour is not conducive to technical inventiveness.
As for cutting down on expenditure, no Emperor could have considered it for a moment. Fine towns and great households were the very substance of the Roman way of living. And so the Emperors continued to live beyond their means because the alternative was not to live at all. Nor, in any case, can we be certain that retrenchment at home would have done much to help Rome meet the vast additional costs of military defence on a tremendous frontier.
But rigidity of outlook and lack of adaptability showed themselves in most fields of social activity. Growing fiscal demands on the soil were met with declining, though by no means steadily declining, productivity. Endemic plague and the casualties of war further reduced an agricultural population to which the alternative of mass-brigandage was already making its appeal. Documents of the fourth century show us agricultural land going out of cultivation in every part of the Roman world, and particularly in the frontier areas. The great independent landlords saw what was happening and did what they could to check the process. Sometimes they were successful. The imperial administration also saw, but could devise no general alternative to the policy of settling the deserted properties and filling the legions with clans of barbarians.
Here, then, were some of the material difficulties that modified the shape and nature of the Empire in the fourth century; though of course there were others—most of them with roots deep in the past.
What did the Romans make of it? They were very used to speculation, not about themselves as persons so much as about society and the art of government. The shape of politics had always intrigued them, and the new threat to their Empire intensified the desire to speculate. They saw that their world was no longer the closed, Greek-speaking Mediterranean world of their ancestors, dominated by the traditions of the City of Rome. It was something bigger. Barbarians, tribesmen who knew no Greek and Latin, were part and parcel of it. Indeed, the great provinces themselves—Italy, Spain, Gaul—were already beginning to drift apart into distinct linguistic groups. Men were thinking and feeling as Europeans; but they still called themselves by the old name—Romans. Some of them were even occasionally making use of a new word, Romania, to describe the world they lived in. Self-consciousness of this sort was neither new nor unnatural, though it sometimes strikes historians as such. But it is difficult to interpret. The writers whose works we depend on were writing in the hot atmosphere of crisis about the things they loved and hated. We must not expect, and do not find, dispassion. Instead, we find distortion—not least from the pens of the really great men, of whom the fourth century was by no means devoid. There are thus, at first glance, two Romes: the ramshackle, material Rome whose disintegration fascinates the economic historian; and the Rome of men’s imagination that stands out bright with vitality from the written record. The task of the historian is to keep both Romes before him and to see that they are one.
As the material threat increased, so the Romans reflected with growing concern upon their cultural heritage. It was a complex heritage, having many facets. There was a religious facet—the cult of the pagan gods under whom the ancient world had grown up; a literary facet—the corpus of classical literature, prose and verse, of which a few strands have floated down to modern times; a legal facet, finally: and of this last something more must be said, difficult though it is.
The science of law was the bedrock of the Roman art of government. Both under the Republic and the Empire it had been zealously guarded and wisely adapted, somewhat after the fashion of our case-law. Its interpreters had not been narrow legal specialists but a learned aristocracy with the true end of law always before its eyes. So, to the ablest men of the fourth century, law and the science of law seemed their one incomparable legacy. In Gibbon’s phrase, it was the public reason of the Romans
. The business of preserving such a heritage, the mere technical process of the conservation of tradition in manuscript form, inevitably involved a risk of petrification. Jurisprudence, like society itself, was running through a narrow channel and its shape was conditioned by the contours of the gorge. All the same, classical jurisprudence in this, its final phase was something more than a matter of haphazard salvage. It was a living art, as it had always been. The same century that produced the forebear{1} of the great law books of the Emperors Theodosius II and Justinian produced also a new venture, the collation of Mosaic with Roman Law. Furthermore, the teaching of the law schools was going on all over Europe, perhaps without as much interruption as was once supposed, and the Western legal tradition was, like the Eastern, still in the keeping of learned men, trained to love jurisprudence as the fine flower of Antiquity.
Social unrest had not proved very propitious to the established pagan cults of the Empire. The gods—and they were many—who had blessed the Romans in victory were now being called to account, as gods often are when times are bad. Other religious cults were finding adherents; and one in particular, Christianity, was moving from strength to strength. It was no newcomer, of course. Modern research tends to show that Christian communities were established in the West at an earlier date than was once supposed possible. But by the close of the fourth century, the strictest exponents of the pagan Roman tradition looked upon Christianity as their most formidable enemy and the principal element in the social disintegration they strove to prevent.{2} The historian cannot accept their verdict as it stands, any more than he can accept without qualification the Christian retort that, so far from destroying Antiquity, Christianity preserved what was best in it. He will see that there is some truth in both assertions and will understand that both were the outcome of the deepest personal conviction.
If we are to appreciate the predominant rôle of Christianity in the threatened Empire and to see why the future of Europe was to be bound up with its victory, we shall need to glance at its early relationship with Rome. But first we must distinguish between three of the main strands in the Christian tradition. With one of them—Arianism—the Christianity practised by most of the Germanic invaders of the Western Empire, we shall be a good deal concerned later on, and can afford to neglect now. The others were the Western tradition (especially as propounded in Roman Africa) and the Eastern tradition.
Eastern Christianity had grown up at the crossroads of Hellenistic and Oriental culture. It had absorbed something from both—sufficient indeed, to cause some to hold that the historic facts of the faith, uncomfortable facts, had been lost sight of. East Roman Christians saw the Kingdom of God on earth as a symbol of the Kingdom of Heaven and only secondly as an historic reality valid because of the facts of the Incarnation and the Resurrection. The greatest of the Eastern lathers, Origen of Caesarea, had laid himself open to attack on these grounds. One critic, Porphyry, even argued that though he was a Christian in his manner of life, he was a Hellene in his religious thought and adapted Neo-Platonism to the interpretation of the Scriptures. This, of course, was a gross over simplification; Origen was one of a select company whose works taught Christians not to be afraid of pagan culture; but it had a germ of truth in it. Another Caesarean, Eusebius, took Origen’s Christianity one stage further on its journey as a political and social force in writings that exercised a profound influence upon the Emperors. The Roman Emperor, for Eusebius, was the Expected One, the David of Christian prophecy, and his Empire the Messianic Kingdom.
Interpretations such as these go a long way to explain not the grip of Christianity upon the masses but the change in outlook of the Emperors themselves, from fierce hostility through spasmodic tolerance to personal, and finally official, acquiescence. War-leadership always brings with it an increase in power for public men, and a seeking after whatever will enhance personal prestige. The sacrosanct character of late Roman imperialism was of this kind. Origen and Eusebius made it possible for the Emperor Constantine to hail in Christianity, after proper trial, the most successful of the mystery cults, in which the magic of Christ’s name wrought great things for his servants and ensured them prosperous peace and victorious war. In short, the official Christianity of Constantine and of the new capital he established at the eastern extremity of his Empire was Christianity with the detonator removed. Augustus was one kind of Pontifex Maximus, Constantine another.
In the West, Christianity took a different course and met a sterner enemy; for the City of Rome was the historic home of classical paganism. That contemporaries fully appreciated this contrast is indicated by the issue of certain memorial coins on the occasion of the dedication of the new Eastern capital, Constantinople. On them appear busts of the personifications of New and Old Rome. New Rome, a female figure, bears on her shoulder the globe, balanced upon the Cross of Christ. Old Rome is depicted as the She-Wolf with her twins, above whom hover the Pantheon of pagan Rome. Some of the coins even show shepherds approaching the cave of the twins, as if in active counterpart to the shepherds of Bethlehem.
Constantine had striven to make Old Rome the seat of the new imperial cult of Christ, and had lost. The West was full of Christians, but not Rome. The senatorial families had stood their ground and driven him to found his New Rome, where he could be as Christian as he pleased. Politically, this had the effect of completing the isolation of Constantine and his successors from Rome—a tendency already well developed through long years of campaigning. Cologne, Sirmium, Milan and Antioch had often proved