LCM of 3 Numbers Calculator LCM of 4 Numbers Calculator LCM of 5 Numbers Calculator LCD Calculator How to find LCM LCM and HCF Questions Least Common Denominator Calculator Greatest Common Divisor Calculator HCF Calculator HCF of 3 Numbers Calculator HCF of 4 Numbers Calculator GCD Calculator Greatest Common Factor Calculator Least Common Multiple Calculator Common Factors Calculator

Alaric History

Alaric Entering Athens (by Unknown, Public Domain)
Alaric Entering Athens
Unknown (Public Domain)

Alaric I (r. 394-410 CE) was a Gothic military commander who is famous for sacking Rome in 410 CE, which was the first time the city had been sacked in over 800 years. Although little of his family is known, we do know that he became the chief of the Tervingi and Greuthungi tribes (later known as the Visigoth and Ostrogoth, respectively). He led his fellow Goths on a rampage through the Balkans and into Italy, sacking the Roman capital, and then moving further south and dying soon after in 410 CE. After Alaric's death, his brother-in-law Athaulf led the Goths into Gaul.

Alaric Comes to Power

For centuries the people of Rome lived comfortably behind the walls of their city. The empire was continually expanding, and the Roman army, under a long series of capable military commanders, kept the dreaded barbarians safely away from the city's gates. Unfortunately, the supremacy of Rome began to slowly decay when the empire was split into two by Diocletian, and the power base gradually moved to Constantinople and to the emperor who resided there. This shift in political and economic power left Rome weak and vulnerable. A young, former Roman commander took advantage of this situation and sacked the once eternal city: his name was Alaric.

Although labeled as a barbarian, Alaric was a Christian who received his military training in the Roman army. He commanded the Gothic allies, fighting alongside the Romans at the Battle of River Frigidus in 394 CE, a battle waged between the eastern emperor Theodosius I and the western usurper emperor Eugenius. Shortly after the battle, in 395 CE, Emperor Theodosius, the last to unite and rule both halves of the empire, died. The Roman Empire was again divided. Alaric's nemesis (and later ally) the ambitious Flavius Stilicho (359-408 CE) became regent (or at least claimed to be) for the former emperor's two sons, Arcadius and Honorius (395–423 CE). Arcadius became emperor in the east (dying in 408 CE), while the younger Honorius would eventually assume the throne in the west.

Alaric & Stilicho

When the Salarian Gate was opened by an unnamed sympathizer, an army of “barbarians” led by Alaric entered Rome, and a three-day pillage began.

Stilicho, magister militum or commander-in-chief (and son of a Roman mother and Vandal father), clashed with Alaric. This conflict stemmed from a treaty signed in 382 CE between the Romans and the Goths, after the Gothic War, which allowed them to settle in the Balkans but only as allies, not citizens. The treaty further required them to serve in the Roman army, something that alarmed many of the Goths. And, as they had feared, their extensive losses at Frigidus validated their concern; they had been placed in the front lines, ahead of the regular Roman legions, as "sacrificial lambs".

Alaric lived under the mistaken delusion that the Roman government in the west was stable and would last forever, providing security for his people. In an attempt to force a rewrite of the treaty, Alaric and his army took advantage of the growing tension between the east and west and ransacked cities throughout the Balkans and into Greece, eventually invading Italy in 402 CE. He demanded not only grain for his people but also recognition as citizens of the empire, as well as his appointment as magister militum, an equal in the Roman army; Stilicho vehemently refused these demands. Although Alaric was forced to retreat at Verona, in 406 CE an attempt was made for compromise. Through his agent, Jovius, the Roman commander listened to Alaric's demand for legal rights to their land with annual payments of gold and grain. In return, Alaric was to assist Stilicho in his plan to invade the east; with Arcadius in full power in the east, Stilicho had already secured himself in the west (he had married his daughter to Emperor Honorius), and with the help of Alaric, he would attack the east, dethroning Arcadius.

Head of Emperor Arcadius
Head of Emperor Arcadius
Osama Shukir Muhammed Amin (Copyright)

The deal would never come to pass. Alaric sat patiently, waiting for Stilicho to join him. Despite his good intentions, Stilicho, however, was delayed due to problems elsewhere in the west: the Gothic king Radagaisus invaded Italy; the Vandals, Alans, and Survi invaded Gaul; and the future emperor Constantine III (a viable threat to the throne) emerged victorious from Britain. These setbacks made money scarce and negotiations impossible. Alaric's patience wore thin, and his demand for 4,000 pounds of gold (payment for his waiting) went unheard. As a result, he began to slowly move his army closer to Italy. Although Stilicho wanted to pay the demands, the Roman Senate, under the leadership of a war hawk named Olympius disagreed, and the Senate considered Alaric's actions a declaration of war.

With Olympius' urging, the emperor decided to invade the east. Stilicho warned against the emperor leading the army, choosing to lead an army himself. With Stilicho away, Honorius and Olympius traveled to Ticinum, an Italian city just south of Milan, supposedly to review the troops; however, Olympius, without the permission of the emperor, ordered the killing of thousands of Gothic allies - an action that further angered Alaric. A final fatality of this massacre was Stilicho himself, who was accused of plotting with Alaric. As a result of this treachery, over 10,000 soldiers defected and joined Alaric's army. In 408 CE the Gothic army sacked the cities of Aquilea, Concordia, Altinum, Cremona, Bononia, Ariminum, and Picenum, choosing, however, to avoid Ravenna, the capital of the western empire and home of Emperor Honorius. Instead, Alaric set his sights on Rome, surrounding all 13 gates of the city, blockading the Tiber River and forcing widespread rationing; within weeks decaying corpses littered the city streets.

Alaric & the Sacking of Rome

As additional forces came to Alaric's side, Emperor Honorius did little to help the city and oppose Alaric. The Goths were still viewed as barbarians and no match for the armies of the empire. Although the treasury was virtually empty, the Senate finally succumbed, and wagons left the city carrying two tons of gold, 13 tons of silver, 4,000 silk tunics, 3,000 fleeces, and 3,000 pounds of pepper. Alaric eased the siege, still hoping to negotiate terms, but Honorius remained blind to the seriousness of the situation. While temporarily agreeing to Alaric's demands - something he never intended to honor - 6,000 Roman soldiers were sent to the city but were quickly defeated by Alaric's brother-in-law Athaulf.

Sack of Rome by the Visigoths
Sack of Rome by the Visigoths
JN Sylvestre (Public Domain)

Realizing further negotiations were impossible, especially after an ambush from the Roman commander Sarus, Alaric returned to the gates of Rome. He had tried everything, even attempting to name a sympathetic senator named Attalus appointed as a new Roman emperor failed. He took Honorius's sister Galla Placidia hostage but to no avail. An alliance asking for an annual payment of gold and grain, as well as the provinces of Venetia, Noricum, and Dalmatia, was refused. Alaric had few choices left, and on August 24, 410 CE, Alaric prepared to enter the city; Rome had not been sacked since 390 BCE. When the Salarian Gate was opened by an unnamed sympathizer, an army of “barbarians” entered Rome, and a three-day pillage began. While the homes of the wealthy were plundered, buildings burned, and pagan temples destroyed, St. Peter's and St. Paul's were left untouched. Oddly, when Honorius heard that Rome was perishing, he feared the worst - not because of his love of the city, but because he believed his beloved fighting cock named Rome had been killed.

Alaric left the city, intending to move into Sicily and later Africa. Unfortunately, he never realized his dream and died soon after in 410 CE. Athaulf assumed control of the army, eventually leading the Goths into Gaul. Alaric had made every attempt to secure a home for his fellow Goths: the sack of Rome was his final hope. The city would never recover. The burning of Rome was, according to pagan interpretation, the result of the city becoming Christian. Others viewed Rome as a symbol of the past; the new center of the empire was Constantinople. In 476 CE, 66 years after Alaric, the city finally fell to Odoacer, spelling the end to the Roman Empire in the west.

Related World History Topics

  • Abd al-Rahman I History
  • Abd al-Rahman III History
  • Abraham, the Patriarch History
  • Abu Bakr History
  • Achaemenid Empire History
  • Achilles History
  • Acquarossa History
  • Aedile History
  • Aegean History
  • Aegina History
  • Aethelwulf of Wessex History
  • Agamemnon (Person) History
  • Agamemnon (Play) History
  • Agesilaus II History
  • Agni History
  • Agora History
  • Agrigento History
  • Agrippina the Younger History
  • Ahuitzotl History
  • Ahura Mazda History
  • Aihole History
  • Ajanta History
  • Akhenaten History
  • Akkad History
  • Alaric History
  • Albrecht Dürer History
  • Alcestis History
  • Alexander I of Scotland History
  • Alexander I the Philhellene History
  • Alexander II of Scotland History
  • Alexander III of Scotland History
  • Alexander Selkirk History
  • Alexandra David-Néel History
  • Alexios I Komnenos History
  • Ali ibn Abi Talib History
  • Alphabet History
  • Amarna Letters History
  • Amarna Period of Egypt History
  • Amastris History
  • Amazon Women History
  • Amber in Antiquity History
  • Amorite History
  • Amos History
  • Amun History
  • Anastasios I History
  • Anaxagoras History
  • Anaximander History
  • Ancient Armenia History
  • Ancient Celtic Pottery History
  • Ancient Celtic Sculpture History
  • Ancient Celts History
  • Ancient Chinese Art History
  • Ancient Chinese Philosophy History
  • Ancient Chinese Warfare History
  • Ancient Cyprus History
  • Ancient Egyptian Law History
  • Ancient Egyptian Literature History
  • Ancient Egyptian Mythology History
  • Ancient Egyptian Vizier History
  • Ancient Egyptian Writing History
  • Ancient Greek Comedy History
  • Ancient Greek Medicine History
  • Ancient Greek Tragedy History
  • Ancient Greek Warfare History
  • Ancient India History
  • Ancient Ireland History
  • Ancient Israelite Art History
  • Ancient Japan History
  • Ancient Korea History
  • Ancient Korean Coinage History
  • Ancient Olympic Games History
  • Ancient Persian Art and Architecture History
  • Ancient Persian Government History
  • Ancient Persian Governors History
  • Ancient Persian Mythology History
  • Ancient Persian Religion History
  • Ancient Persian Warfare History
  • Ancient Rome History
  • Ancient Timekeeping History
  • Ancient Volterra History
  • Andrea Mantegna History
  • Andrea Palladio History
  • Andromache History
  • Anglo-Powhatan Wars History
  • Animal Husbandry History
  • Anjar History
  • Ankhsenamun History
  • Anna Komnene History
  • Anne Bonny History
  • Antigone History
  • Antigonus I History
  • Antinomian Controversy History
  • Antinous History
  • Antioch History
  • Antiochia ad Cragum History
  • Antonine Plague History
  • Antonine Wall History
  • Antoninus Pius History
  • Anu History
  • Apis History
  • Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha  History
  • Aqueduct History
  • Arabia History
  • Archaeology History
  • Ardagh Chalice History
  • Ares History
  • Argula von Grumbach History
  • Ariadne History
  • Aristarchus of Samos History
  • Aristotle History
  • Arjuna History
  • Ark of the Covenant History
  • Armenian Mythology History
  • Arsacid Dynasty of Armenia History
  • Arsinoe II Philadelphus History
  • Artaphernes History
  • Artaxerxes II History
  • Artemis History
  • Aryan History
  • Asclepius History
  • Asherah History
  • Ashoka the Great History
  • Ashur History
  • Ashurbanipal History
  • Asia Minor History
  • Assyrian Warfare History
  • Astarte History
  • Asuka Period History
  • Atahualpa History
  • Atalanta History
  • Athena History
  • Atlantis History
  • Attila the Hun History
  • Augustine of Hippo History
  • Aulos History
  • Aurelian History
  • Aytap History
  • Aztec Sacrifice History
  • Aztec Warfare History
  • Azuchi-Momoyama Period History