Ajidica
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- Nov 29, 2006
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Interesting, thanks.From what I remember, the sixth century wars were explicitly reconquests.
You're right that initially Odovacar and then Thiudareiks employed the legal argument that they were effectively viceroys for the Emperor, although they called themselves kings, which didn't technically mean that they weren't viceroys but kind of made it seem like they weren't. Thiudareiks also apparently referred to himself as Augustus in limited contexts, especially after he organized a protectorate over Visigothic Gaul and Iberia following the Visigoths' defeat by Clovis in the Battle of Campus Vogladensis, making him more or less as powerful as the Western Emperors of the fifth century. This legal argument was not employed by the Vandals and Alans in Africa, as far as we know, which we don't really, because Victor of Vita is the main textual source for Vandal Africa and he was way too salty about their heresy to be all that reliable. You can tell that the heretics were getting at least some, uh, "converts" because of his shrill imprecations against heresy in the text.
I think it's better to say legal "argument" here instead of "fiction" because the Empire still remained, culturally, the center of the world. Things changed in the Ostrogothic lands, to be sure, but they didn't change that much. It's very easy to read Thiudareiks' reign, for example, as basically that of an Emperor - his squabbles with annoying aristocrats, military victories on the frontier, a passel of reform schemes for the military, and so on and so forth. The Goths were apparently mostly Arians but there had been Arian Emperors too. They were not that far in dress and armament and style from the late Roman military. Thiudareiks clearly ran Italy as a sovereign, even though officially he'd conquered it in Emperor Zenon's name. The imperials squabbled with the Goths a bit over ceremonial things, and over who was really supposed to rule Sirmion in the Balkans, but otherwise they had more or less normal relations until the early 530s and the crisis in the Italian monarchy. I can't say if Ioustinianos was secretly plotting to reconquer Italy before Amalasiuntha offered to flee with her treasury to Constantinople, but what little I know about their official relations was that up to that point they had been basically correct.
What changed that, on the argument of some late antiquarians, was the Byzantine conquest in the first place. Ioustinianos' propaganda differed from the fifth-century line; instead of the Ostrogoths, Gepids, Visigoths, Franks, and Burgundians being basically Roman military gentry sliding neatly into governing roles throughout a still-intact Roman Empire, he told a story of barbarian conquest from outside to justify a war to get it all under his control. The western rulers had always been somewhat distinct, but not in a way that was fundamentally irreconcilable with being "basically" Roman, too; Ioustinianos changed that, first with his propaganda, and then with his wars. Guy Halsall has written about transformations in the West around the year 600, and while some of these transformations are associated with economic and social forces, or with political developments having little to do with the Emperor, Ioustinianos' story is crucial to understanding a great deal of it.
Besides Halsall, can you recommend any authors for late Roman/ post-Roman Europe (450 to 1000 roughly)? I'm really suffering without access to a university library and I'm not earning quite enough to purchase all the books off Amazon. (Stingy library system requires me to pay an "alumni fee" to check books out now that it has been more than 6 months after graduation. Never mind how much I paid them in tuition fees.) The best my local library can do for that time period is Peter Heather, Norwich, and some authors who wrote back when people thought decriminalizing homosexuality was a racy topic. From what I can tell not a single public library in Minnesota owns a book by Halsall. Any suggestions?