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"We are to be thrown overboard by the Empire" ~ The short reign of...Julius Nepos
Gloria Romanorum ^ | May 9, 2019 | Florentius

Posted on 05/10/2019 6:49:10 AM PDT by Antoninus

May 9 is one of several possible dates given for the death of the last Western Roman emperor, Julius Nepos, in the year AD 480.

“Wait,” you say. “I thought the last Western Emperor was Romulus Augustulus who was deposed by Odoacer the Scirian in AD 476.” Well, about that...

Julius Nepos was named Western Emperor by the ailing Eastern Roman emperor Leo in AD 473. Leo did this because he opposed the puppet emperor Glycerius who had been raised by the Burgundian general Gundobad. According to the Chronicle of John of Antioch, this Gundobad had personally beheaded the Western emperor Anthemius the previous year in the service of uncle, the treacherous generalissimo, Ricimer. According to the Fragmentary History of Priscus:

When the Eastern emperor Leo learned of Glycerius’s accession, he marshaled an army against him under the command of Nepos, who when he captured Rome subdued Glycerius without a fight. He drove him out of the palace and appointed him bishop of Salon [that is, Salona in Dalmatia across the Adriatic]. Glycerius made a mockery of the office for eight months. Nepos was immediately proclaimed emperor and began to rule Rome. [Taken from Given: Fragmentary History of Priscus, page 171]
The contemporary poet Apollinaris Sidonius described Julius Nepos as: “a man whose character, no less than the success of his arms, entitles us to hail him as Supreme Augustus.” [Taken from Hodgkin: Italy and Her Invaders, page 346]

Unfortunately for Nepos, he possessed neither sufficient military strength nor support in Italy to establish a lasting reign. The only accomplishment Nepos could claim during the 14 months he held the imperial authority in Italy was the ceding of practically all of Gaul to Euric, king of the Visigoths in exchange for peace. Sidonius, who had been an early supporter of Nepos, laments this shameful negotiation and the subsequent quitting of his homeland by the Romans, saying: “For all these daring experiments of our devotion our reward, as I hear, is that we are to be thrown overboard by the Empire. Oh! blush, I pray you, for this peace which is neither expedient nor honorable.” [Taken from Hodgkin: Italy and Her Invaders, page 493]

The abandonment of Gaul for a tenuous peace seemed an unpopular move in Italy as well. The history of what happened next is exceedingly hazy, but it appears that the Roman forces under a certain Ecdicius were recalled from Gaul, arrived in Italy, and were subsequently placed under the command of Orestes. This Orestes was a man with a long pedigree of service to the Roman empire, most memorably as an ambassador to Attila in AD 449. Once named Magister Militum, Orestes quickly seized the opportunity to depose Nepos and install his own son as emperor—Romulus Augustulus.

As his support in Italy evaporated, Julius Nepos fled to Dalmatia to join his previous adversary, Glycerius, in exile. There he remained quiet as events unfolded in Italy. The barbarian warlord Odoacer deposed Augustulus and declared himself king of Italy in AD 476. Writing to Constantinople in AD 477, the Roman Senate, no doubt as a mouthpiece for Odoacer, declared that they no longer needed an emperor—that the emperor of the East was sufficient for them with Odoacer as their protector—and they returned the imperial insignia of the west to Zeno.

To this embassy, Zeno replied (as per the near-contemporary historian, Malchus):
The western Romans had received two men from the eastern Empire and had driven one out, Nepos, and killed the other, Anthemius. Now, he said, they knew what ought to be done. While their emperor was still alive, they should hold no other thought than to receive him back on his return. [taken from the De Imperatoribus Romanis website ~ Julius Nepos by Ralph W. Mathisen]
Needless to say, Odoacer had no interest in re-instating Nepos, though he seems to have tolerated his presence in nearby Salona for a few more years. In AD 480, however, things suddenly came to a head. Some of the sources claim that Nepos was in the process of gathering resources for an attempt to retake his throne in Italy when he was suddenly slain by two retainers. One source (Photius, writing a summary of the lost history of Malchus) claims that the assassination of Nepos was instigated by none other than Glycerius himself.

Taking advantage of the situation, Odoacer used the assassination as an excuse to invade Dalmatia, thereby extending his rule over the region and establishing the boundaries of the barbarian kingdom of Italy. Odoacer would rule this kingdom until until AD 493 when he was slain by Theodoric the Ostrogoth.

Meanwhile, in the farther reaches of Gaul, a Roman rump state—the so-called "kingdom" of Soissons, survived until AD 486 under the leadership of the general Syagrius.


TOPICS: History
KEYWORDS: anthemius; apollinarissidonius; attila; constantinople; dalmatia; ecdicius; euric; gaul; glycerius; gundobad; italy; johnofantioch; juliusnepos; lateantiquity; leo; malchus; odoacer; orestes; ostrogoths; photius; priscus; ricimer; romanempire; romulusaugustulus; soissons; syagrius; theodoric; visigoths; zeno
Yesterday was the 1,539th anniversary of the death of the last Western Roman Emperor, Julius Nepos.
1 posted on 05/10/2019 6:49:10 AM PDT by Antoninus
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To: SunkenCiv

Ancient history ping.


2 posted on 05/10/2019 6:49:46 AM PDT by Antoninus ("In Washington, swamp drain you.")
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To: Antoninus

Thanks for the information.... Interesting stuff. All this in the hazy time of Arthur as well!


3 posted on 05/10/2019 6:55:26 AM PDT by magyars4
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To: magyars4
Thanks for the information.... Interesting stuff. All this in the hazy time of Arthur as well!

That's a good point. I recently read a book called: "The Lantern Bearers" by Rosemary Sutcliffe that talks a little about that. It's part of the Roman Britain trilogy and deals with the fall of Roman Britain to the Saxons. Excellent reading.
4 posted on 05/10/2019 7:18:17 AM PDT by Antoninus ("In Washington, swamp drain you.")
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To: Antoninus; StayAt HomeMother; Ernest_at_the_Beach; 1ofmanyfree; 21twelve; 24Karet; ...
Thanks Antoninus.

5 posted on 05/10/2019 10:31:05 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (Imagine an imaginary menagerie manager imagining managing an imaginary menagerie.)
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To: Antoninus

I will check out the books....thanks!


6 posted on 05/10/2019 10:35:36 AM PDT by magyars4
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To: magyars4; Antoninus

I read Sutcliffe’s series of Roman-British novels (which I think start with “Eagle of the Ninth”) during my high school years, along with Mary Stewart’s “The Crystal Cave” and sequels. It appears that Romanized Britons, which included descendants of various people from around the Roman Empire, defended themselves in some fashion, but the old tribal identities also had survived in some fashion.

Wat’s Dyke, which faces a section of so-called Offa’s Dyke, had long been believed to have been built in response to Offa’s. Not many years ago it was RC dated and found to be some centuries older, but still post-Roman. It occurred to someone that there’d never been any scientific dating for Offa’s, and the RC dating that came from that showed it, too was hundreds of years older than King Offa, but still post-Roman.

The Wansdyke ran along much of the Saxon Shore, and all the way to the Severn, and is post-Roman. In the north there was of course Hadrian’s Wall. To the east there wasn’t much, but the Romans had built the Fossdyke connecting Lincoln to the River Trent and the CaerDyke between Cambridge and York, suggesting a need at the time to support a large population.

What Happened to Britain After the Romans Left?
From a lecture series presented by Professor Philip Daileader, Ph.D.
December 1, 2017
https://www.thegreatcoursesdaily.com/britain-after-the-romans-left/

big map from that page:
https://d3idks24kkd2lv.cloudfront.net/wp-content/uploads/2017/10/End.of_.Roman_.rule_.in_.Britain.383.410.jpg


7 posted on 05/10/2019 11:10:05 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (Imagine an imaginary menagerie manager imagining managing an imaginary menagerie.)
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To: SunkenCiv

Thanks! Post-Roman Britain is one of my favorite periods to study and read about-anything connected to it adds to the clarity if what are called-wrongly, I think-the Dark Ages-it wasn’t dark for anyone with money to buy the luxury goods like wine from Gaul/France, silks from the East, glass, marble, etc-still being shipped from all over the known world...

Canadian author Jack Whyte’s series of books-”The Camulod Chronicles” is heavy on the history, and an interesting take on those times-they are a good read...


8 posted on 05/10/2019 12:48:46 PM PDT by Texan5 ("You've got to saddle up your boys, you've got to draw a hard line"...)
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To: Antoninus

Glycerius was quite the slippery fellow.


9 posted on 05/10/2019 12:51:57 PM PDT by thesharkboy (Charter member of the Basket of Deplorables)
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To: SunkenCiv

We know from one of yesterday’s posts that an important Saxon buried around 580 had Christian grave-goods. So, there were some Christians in Britain even before the Pope’s missionaries arrived.


10 posted on 05/10/2019 1:28:23 PM PDT by colorado tanker
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To: magyars4

So kinda like the current congress trying to overthrow King Trump.


11 posted on 05/10/2019 4:57:52 PM PDT by minnesota_bound
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To: Texan5
My pleasure, Texan5.

12 posted on 05/10/2019 11:53:11 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (Imagine an imaginary menagerie manager imagining managing an imaginary menagerie.)
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To: colorado tanker
There's a small bit of evidence that Christianity had arrived in Pompeii before the 79 AD eruption.

13 posted on 05/10/2019 11:58:28 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (Imagine an imaginary menagerie manager imagining managing an imaginary menagerie.)
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