October 9, 2021
IT HASN'T FALLEN YET, JUST SHIFTED WEST:
Rome Didn't Fall When You Think It Did. Here's Why That Fabricated History Still Matters Today (EDWARD J. WATTS, OCTOBER 6, 2021, TIME)
Although everyone from schoolchildren to scholars now learn that the Western Roman Empire fell in 476, 5th century Romans did not see anything particularly special about Odoacer's coup. Nine different Western Roman emperors had risen and fallen since 455 and most of them had been overthrown by barbarian commanders like Odoacer. In four cases, the barbarian generals toppled one emperor and delayed appointing another. One of these imperial vacancies stretched for 20 months, a span longer than the entire reigns of more than 20 previous Roman emperors. Even Romulus Augustus himself was a usurper who assumed the imperial office after an imperfectly executed coup that left Julius Nepos, the legitimate emperor Romulus replaced, still in charge of Western Roman imperial territories in what is now Croatia. In other words, while the West had lost an imperial usurper in 476, it still had a legitimate Roman emperor.Odoacer maintained most of the structures of the Roman government during the nearly 17 years he controlled the state. The Senate continued to meet in Rome just as it had for nearly a millennium. Latin remained the language of administration. Roman law governed the land. Roman armies continued to fight and win victories on the frontiers. And Roman emperors appeared on the coins that Odoacer minted. These coins showed Julius Nepos at first and then, after Nepos's death in 480, they featured the busts of the Eastern Roman emperors who reigned in Constantinople.These aspects of Roman life continued after the Gothic ruler Theoderic overthrew Odoacer in 493. Theoderic proved even more successful than Odoacer in reviving Italian fortunes after the political chaos of the mid-5th century. His armies campaigned successfully in modern Croatia, Serbia and France. He made much of Spain into a protectorate for a time. Large scale repairs were made to churches and public buildings throughout Italy. Either Theoderic or Odoacer undertook renovations to the Colosseum following which senators proudly inscribed their names and offices on their seats.Rather than imagining that Roman rule had ended in 476, Italians in the late 5th and early 6th centuries spoke about its recovery. Bishop Ennodius of Pavia spoke of the "filth" that Theoderic "washed away from the greater part of Italy," leaving Rome, as it emerged from "the ashes," "living again." Theoderic's military victories meant that "the Roman empire has returned to its former boundary" and returned "the culture of our ancestors" to Romans who had lived in the regions he reconquered. Ennodius even went so far as to claim that "the revival of Roman renown brought Theoderic forward" as a rival to Alexander the Great because he had sparked a Roman "Golden Age."How did it happen that Odoacer's coup, the beginning of this Roman resurgence, instead came to be seen as the fall of Rome? The answer lies not in Italy but in Constantinople.
Posted by Orrin Judd at October 9, 2021 7:28 AM
