Berichus and the Evidence for Aspar’s Political Power and Aims in the Last Years of Theodosius II’s Reign
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.18778/2084-140X.08.13Keywords:
Byzantium, Huns, Aspar, Theodosius II, Byzantine foreign policy, Byzantine military eliteAbstract
The article examines Priscus’s account of the conflict that emerged between the leader of the Roman embassy, Maximinus, and the Hunnic envoy, Berichus. The barbarian got offended by the remarks concerning the lack of competence and influence of Aspar and Areobindus. A detailed analysis of this short passage – entailing the persona of Berichus himself, the reasons for his anger, and the possible explanations for Maximinus’s behaviour – can provide us with evidence regarding the political position of Aspar in the last years of the reign of Theodosius II. Most scholars use this example to illustrate Aspar’s falling out of favour and power; it is more likely, however, that the situation was actually more complex. The political struggle between Chrysaphius, a proponent of the policy of reconciliation with the Huns, and Zeno, the opponent of such policies, makes it far more probable that the government feared that their diplomatic effort might be hijacked by the opposing faction. Therefore, it was political differences – and not the failures in the war of 447 – that were the reason for Aspar’s falling out with the emperor. This would also mean that Zeno and Aspar shared similar views on how to solve the Hunnic problem, which would be the basis for their cooperation, resulting in the overthrowing of Chrysaphius and the crowning of Marcian in 450.
Downloads
References
Chronica Gallica a. CCCCLII, [in:] Chronica Gallica, ed. T. Mommsen, Berolini 1892, p. 646–662 [= Monumenta Germaniae historica, Auctores antiquissimi].
Google Scholar
The Chronicle of Marcellinus, ed. et trans. B. Croke, Sydney 1995 [= Byzantina Australiensia, 7].
Google Scholar
Chronicon Paschale, vol. I–II, ed. L. Dindorfius, Bonnae 1832 [= Corpus scriptorum historiae byzantinae, 14–15].
Google Scholar
The Ecclesiastical History of Evagrius Scholasticus, ed. et. trans. M. Whitby, Liverpool 2000 [= Translated Texts for Historians, 33].
Google Scholar
Ioannis Malalae Chronographia, rec. I. Thurn, Beriolini–Novi Eboraci 2000 [= Corpus fontium historiae byzantinae. Series Berolinensis, 35].
Google Scholar
Iordanes, Romana, [in:] Iordanis Romana et Getica, rec. T. Mommsen, Berolini 1882, p. 1–52 [= Monumenta Germaniae historica, Auctores antiquissimi].
Google Scholar
Priscus, Fragmenta, [in:] The Fragmentary Classicising Historians of the Later Roman Empire. Eunapius, Olympiodorus, Priscus and Malchus, ed. et trans. R.C. Blockley, vol. II, Liverpool 1983, p. 221–401.
Google Scholar
Procopius, History of the Wars, vol. II, Books 3–4. (Vandalic War), trans. H.B. Dewing, Cambridge Massachusetts 1916 [= Loeb Classical Library, 81].
Google Scholar
Theophanis Chronographia, vol. I–II, rec. C. de Boor, Lipsiae 1883–1885.
Google Scholar
Altheim F., Geschichte der Hunnen, vol. IV, 2Berlin 1975.
Google Scholar
Bachrach B., A History of the Alans in the West. From Their First Appearance in the Sources of Classical Antiquity through the Early Middle Ages, Minneapolis 1973.
Google Scholar
Bleeker R.A., Aspar and Attila: The Role of Flavius Ardaburius Aspar in the Hun Wars of the 440s, “Ancient World” 3, 1980, p. 23–28.
Google Scholar
Blockley R.C., East Roman Foreign Policy. Formation and Conduct from Diocletian to Anastasius, Leeds 1992.
Google Scholar
Bóna I., Das Hunnenreich, Stuttgart 1991.
Google Scholar
Burgess R.W., The Accession of Marcian in the Light of Chalcedonian Apologetic and Monophysite Polemic, “Byzantinische Zeitschrift” 86/87, 1994, p. 27–68.
Google Scholar
Burns T.S., A History of the Ostrogoths, Bloomington 1984.
Google Scholar
Bury J.B., History of the Later Roman Empire from the Death of Theodosius I to the Death of Justinian, AD 395 to AD 565, London 1923.
Google Scholar
Croke B., Anatolius and Nomus: Envoys to Attila, “Byzantinoslavica” 42, 1981, p. 159–170.
Google Scholar
Croke B., Dynasty and Ethnicity. Emperor Leo I and the Eclipse of Aspar, “Chiron” 35, 2005, p. 147–203.
Google Scholar
Demandt A., Geschichte der Spätantike, 2München 2008 [= Alte Geschichte in Beck’s historischer Bibliothek].
Google Scholar
Feld K., Barbarische Bürger. Die Isaurier und das Römische Reich, Berlin 2005.
Google Scholar
Gautier E., Genséric. Roi de Carthage, Paris 1951.
Google Scholar
Glušanin E.P., Voennaja znat’ rannej Vizantii, Varnaul 1991.
Google Scholar
Gordon C.D., The Age of Attila. Fifth-Century Byzantium and the Barbarians, Michigan 1961.
Google Scholar
Heather P., Goths and Romans 332–489, Oxford 1991 [= Oxford Historical Monographs].
Google Scholar
Hohlfelder R.L., Marcian’s Gamble. A Reassessment of Eastern Imperial Policy toward Attila AD 450–453, “American Journal of Ancient History” 9, 1984, p. 54–69.
Google Scholar
Holum K.G., Theodosian Empresses. Women and Imperial Dominion in Late Antiquity, Berkeley–London 1981.
Google Scholar
Jones A.H.M., The Later Roman Empire 284–602. A Social, Economic and Administrative Survey, Oxford 1964.
Google Scholar
Karayannopulos J., Byzantinische Miszellen, [in:] Studia in honorem Veselini Beševliev, ed. V. Georgiev, Sofia 1978.
Google Scholar
Kelly C., Neither Conquest nor Settlement: Attila’s Empire and Its Impact, [in:] The Cambridge Companion to the Age of Attila, ed. M. Maas, Cambridge 2015 [= Cambridge Companions to the Ancient World], p. 193–208.
Google Scholar
Kim H.J., The Huns, Romans and the Birth of Europe, Cambridge 2013.
Google Scholar
Kosiński R., The Emperor Zeno. Religion and Politics, trans. M. Fijak, Cracow 2010 [= Byzantina et Slavica Cracoviensia, 6].
Google Scholar
Laniado A., Aspar and His Phoideratoi: John Malalas on a Special Relationship, [in:] Governare e riformare l’impero al momento della sua divisione. Oriente, Occidente, Illirico, ed. U. Roberto, L. Mecella, Rome 2016, p. 325–344 [= Collection de l’École française de Rome, 507].
Google Scholar
Lee A.D., The Eastern Empire: Theodosius to Anastasius, [in:] Cambridge Ancient History, vol. XIV, ed. A. Cameron, B. Ward-Perkins, M. Whitby, Cambridge 2008, p. 33–62.
Google Scholar
Lee A.D., Theodosius and His Generals [in:] Theodosius II. Rethinking the Roman Empire in Late Antiquity, ed. C. Kelly, Cambridge–New York 2013 [= Cambridge Classical Studies], p. 90–108.
Google Scholar
Lensky N., Captivity among the Barbarians and Its Impact on the Fate of the Roman Empire, [in:] The Cambridge Companion to the Age of Attila, ed. M. Maas, Cambridge 2015, p. 230–246.
Google Scholar
Maenchen-Helfen O., The World of Huns. Studies in Their History and Culture, ed. M. Knight, Berkeley–London 1973.
Google Scholar
McEvoy M., Becoming Roman? The Not-So-Curious Case of Aspar and the Ardaburii, “Journal of Late Antiquity” 9, 2016, p. 483–511.
Google Scholar
Prostko-Prostyński J., Attila and Novae, [in:] Novae. Legionary Fortress and Late Antique Town, vol. I, A Companion to the Study of Novae, ed. T. Derda, P. Dyczek, J. Kolendo, Warsaw 2008, p. 133–140.
Google Scholar
Rouche M., Attila. La violence nomade, Paris 2009.
Google Scholar
Scott L., Aspar and the Burden of Barbarian Heritage, “Byzantine Studies / Études byzantines” 3, 1976, p. 59–69.
Google Scholar
Stein E., Histoire du Bas-Empire, Paris 1959.
Google Scholar
Stickler T., Aëtius. Gestaltungsspielräume eines Heermeisters im ausgehenden Weströmischen Reich, München 2002.
Google Scholar
Stickler T., Die Hunnen, München 2007.
Google Scholar
Thompson E.A., The Foreign Policies of Theodosius II and Marcian, “Hermathena” 76, 1950, p. 58–75.
Google Scholar
Thompson E.A., A History of Attila and the Huns, Oxford 1948.
Google Scholar
Thompson E.A., The Isaurians under Theodosius II, “Hermathena” 48, 1946, p. 18–31.
Google Scholar
Tyszkiewicz L., Hunowie w Europie. Ich wpływ na Cesarstwo Wschodnie i Zachodnie oraz na ludy barbarzyńskie, Wrocław 2004 [= Acta Universitatis Wratislaviensis, 2695].
Google Scholar
Urbaniec A., Wpływ patrycjusza Aspara na cesarską elekcję Leona, “U Schyłku Starożytności. Studia Źródłoznawcze” 11, 2011, p. 173–201.
Google Scholar
Vernadsky G., Flavius Ardabur Aspar, “Sudost-Forschungen” 6, 1941, p. 38–72.
Google Scholar
Vössing K., Das Königreich der Vandalen. Geiserichs Herrschaft und das Imperium Romanum, Darmstadt 2014.
Google Scholar
Wilczyński M., Gejzeryk i “czwarta wojna punicka”, Oświęcim 2016.
Google Scholar
Wirth G., Attila. Das Hunnenreich und Europa, Stuttgart 1999.
Google Scholar
Zuckermann C., L’Empire d’Orient et les Huns. Notes sur Priscus, “Travaux et mémoires du Centre de recherches d’histoire et civilisation byzantines” 12, 1994, p. 159–182.
Google Scholar
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2018 Łukasz Pigoński
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.