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Late Roman Infantryman vs Gothic Warrior - AD 376-82 (Paperback)
Loot Price: R344
Discovery Miles 3 440
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(17%)
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Late Roman Infantryman vs Gothic Warrior - AD 376-82 (Paperback)
Series: Combat
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List price R415
Loot Price R344
Discovery Miles 3 440
You Save R71 (17%)
Expected to ship within 9 - 15 working days
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Ravaged by civil war and pressure from the Huns to the east, in
late summer AD 376 the Gothic tribe of the Theruingi - up to
200,000 people under their leader Fritigern - gathered on the
northern bank of the River Danube and asked the Eastern Roman
emperor, Valens, for asylum within the empire. After agreeing to
convert to Arian Christianity and enrol in the Roman Army, the
Goths were allowed to cross the Danube and settle in the province
of Thrace. Far more people crossed the Danube than the Romans
expected, however, and with winter approaching, the local Roman
commander, Lupicinus, lacked the resources to feed the newcomers
and did not possess sufficient troops to control them. Treated
poorly and running out of food, the Goths very quickly lost faith
in the Roman promises. Meanwhile, other Gothic tribes also sought
permission to cross the Danube. The Greuthungi were refused
permission, but soon learned that local Roman garrisons had been
depleted to supervise the march of the Theruingi to the town of
Marcianopolis, close to the eastern shore of the Black Sea. Taking
advantage of this, the Greuthungi also entered Roman territory.
Camping outside Marcianopolis, Lupicinus denied the Goths access to
the town's food stores, provoking the Theruingi to begin
skirmishing with the Roman troops. Fritigern convinced Lupicinus to
let the Gothic leaders go and calm their people, but they did
nothing to quell the warlike temper of his warriors. Lupicinus
summoned troops to him, but in late 376 these Roman forces were
defeated - the first of several defeats for the Romans that would
culminate in the fateful battle of Adrianople in August 378, at
which Roman forces led by the emperor himself confronted the Gothic
host. The aftermath and repercussions of Adrianople have been much
debated, but historians agree that it marks a decisive moment in
the history of the Roman world. This fully illustrated book
investigates the fighting men of both sides who clashed at the
battles of Marcianopolis, Ad Salices and Adrianople, as the fate of
the Western Roman Empire hung in the balance.
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