The Roman
Empire was an institution so influential and truly historical that, in many
ways, the world refused to let it die. The Eastern Roman Empire lingered on
until the fall of Constantinople in the 15th Century under Emperor Constantine
XI while in the west, the Roman Empire was restored in 800 AD as the Holy Roman
Empire which survived until the 19th Century when it was dissolved by Emperor
Francis II in 1802 under pressure from Napoleon Bonaparte. However, the one area
which most fascinates is the old Western Roman Empire which ended, rather
ingloriously, with the overthrow of the young Emperor Romulus Augustulus in 476
AD. His reign was short, almost insignificant in perspective, but also extremely
interesting.
It is one of the strange twists of history that the last
Emperor of Rome was also the son of a man who once served the single greatest
threat the Roman Empire had ever faced, namely; Attila the Hun. Known as "the
Scourge of God", Attila's right hand man during his invasions was a man named
Orestes. It was Orestes who later became a Roman general himself, though by this
time, the once mighty Western Roman Empire had been reduced to most of the
Italian peninsula and a small holding in the south of Gaul. Ruling at this time
was the Emperor Julius Nepos, appointed in 474 by the Emperors of the East, Leo
and Zeno, though he himself was not very strong and it was Nepos who appointed
Orestes to the post of Patrician and Master of Soldiers for the Western Empire.
Obviously, this was not a wise decision on the part of Nepos as when the
Emperor ordered the new Patrician to march against Gaul, the ambitious Orestes
immediately marched into Ravenna on August 28, 475, forced Nepos to flee to
Dalmatia, and made his son Romulus Emperor two months later on October 31. The
new monarch was probably around 10 to 14-years-old and would not have been able
to count on significant international recognition were it not for the fact that
the Emperor Leo of the East, who had appointed Julius Nepos, had died the
previous year. Because of his youth, the new Emperor was nicknamed "Agustulus"
or "the little Augustus" by those around him. The real power continued to be
with his father Orestes who effectively ran the empire, or what was left of it,
in the name of his son.
Orestes
attended to diplomatic efforts first, in actions that in hindsight seems quite a
bit like obsessing over details in the face of disaster. He secured recognition
for Emperor Romulus from the Eastern Empire and negotiated peace treaties with
the German princes ruling in Spain, Africa and Gaul. While this ensured peace
for a few years, at least from these individuals, the throne of Romulus was far
from secure and such diplomatic efforts amounted to little more than making beds
in a burning house.
During this era, the decay of the once mighty Roman
Empire was in its final stages, and a clear indication of the depths to which
Rome had fallen is how few Romans there were who could actually bestir
themselves to fight for the Empire. The Roman military now consisted of
barbarians of various tribes, acting as mercenaries, who had no real loyalty to
Rome or the young Emperor Romulus but who expected to be paid. These men,
fierce, brutal and increasingly exasperated, were Orestes' biggest problem. Gold
coins were struck and distributed in Rome, Milan and Ravenna bearing the image
of Romulus Augustulus but these few tokens were nothing compared to what the
barbarian mercenaries were demanding.
In 476, when Orestes to give land
to the assorted Heruls, Scirians and Torcilingi who were demanded compensation
for their service, they dropped all semblance of loyalty to the young Emperor
Romulus and turned instead to the German chieftain Odoacer. Odoacer, himself a
"barbarian" of mixed Scirian and Hunnish ancestry, was somewhat more shrewd and
promised the disgruntled soldiers all that they had been denied by Orestes if
they would support his own ambition to become king. Seeing the opportunity for
something as better than a certainty of nothing, they made an official agreement
with Odoacer on August 23, 476 and immediately turned to attack Orestes, hardly
bothering at all about his son who actually sat on the imperial throne.
Orestes came
out to meet them but was forced to retreat to Pavia, which soon fell to Odoacer.
The barbarians closed in on Orestes near Piacenza and on August 28, captured and
beheaded him. With that victory, the power behind the throne was gone, and in
effect, the campaign was all but over. Odoacer moved on to Ravenna where he
killed the Emperor's uncle, Paulus in late August or early September. Once the
city was taken, Odoacer turned his attention to the nominal ruler, Emperor
Romulus Augustulus. Sources differ over how Odoacer reacted to the boy. Some
imply that he was harshly removed and banished, barely escaping with his life.
Others say that the chieftain took a liking to the hapless, young monarch.
According to one source, because of his youth and handsome appearance he decided
to depose Romulus rather than execute him and then sent the former emperor into
exile in Campania with his family where he paid him an annual pension of 6,000
solidi. However, Odoacer also forced Romulus to formally abdicate his position,
sending a "letter of resignation" to Emperor Zeno of the Eastern Empire,
effectively recognizing Constantinople as the one and only capital of the
Empire.
If true, this may have been due to the fact that the Emperor
Julius Nepos in Dalmatia, who still considered himself the true Western Emperor
in exile, was plotting to regain his throne in Italy. In fact, the message from
Odoacer seeking recognition of his claim to be King of Italy arrived in
Constantinople on the very same day as a message from Emperor Nepos seeking
Byzantine money and troops to help in reclaiming his lost dominions. Not wishing
to further endanger the shaky imperial hierarchy, Emperor Zeno decided to back
the man his predecessors had placed on the throne and advised the envoys from
Odoacer to deal with Nepos as the Western Emperor and seek his rank of Patrician
from him before Zeno would confirm it.
Of course, Nepos was never able
to retake his throne and the Western Roman Empire formally came to an end after
the ten month reign of Romulus Augustulus. By then, nothing remained with
Odoacer in command of Italy and the few holdings in Gaul rapidly taken in by the
Visigoths. In point of fact though, the boy best known as "the last Roman
Emperor" might not have been so were it not for the attraction of his name,
recalling the legendary co-founder of Rome, allowing for a nice illustration of
the Roman civilization coming full circle from one Romulus to another. In
actuality, Emperor Romulus was the pawn of his father and nothing more, a
usurper who had taken the throne from the legitimate Emperor Nepos who continued
to claim Italy from his base in Dalmatia for the rest of his life. Little is
known of the young emperor's life in exile. He sent the imperial regalia to
Emperor Zeno, who recognized Odoacer as King of Italy, but it seems that he
continued to be at least somewhat active, founding the monastery at Lucullanum
with the support of his very religious mother.
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