The Mediterranean World in Late Antiquity, 395-700 AD

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THE EMPIRE AND THE BARBARIANS

class, as did Pope Gregory the Great.^36 Germanic law existed in uneasy jux-
taposition with Roman; the Ostrogothic kingdom had one law for the Goths
and another for the Roman population, while successive Visigothic law codes,
beginning with the Code of Euric (c. 476) and the Romanizing Lex Romana
Visigothorum of Alaric II (506), followed by an extensive programme of law-
making in the Visigothic kingdom of the sixth and seventh centuries, gradu-
ally brought about a unifi cation of the German and the Roman traditions.^37
The eastern government pursued a pragmatic policy, knowing that it was in
no position to impose a western emperor, but not admitting (or, no doubt,
believing) that the current regimes were permanent. When the time came, it
was ready to use one against another. The fact that the Goths in Italy, like the
Vandals and, at this period, the Visigoths, were Arian was, perhaps paradoxi-
cally, a help to imperial diplomacy, for it made it possible to represent Justini-
an’s invasion of Italy in 535 in religious terms. Seeking aid from the catholic
Franks, the emperor wrote:


The Goths have seized Italy, which is our possession, by force, and have
not only refused to return it, but have committed wrongs against us
which are past endurance. For this reason we have been forced to go to
war against them, a war in which both our common hatred of the Goths
and our orthodox faith dictates that you should join us, so as to dislodge
the Arian heresy.
(Proc., Wars IV.5.8–9)

The imperial rhetoric was backed by gold, and by the promise of more if the
Franks agreed; not surprisingly, perhaps, they were not to prove very loyal
allies.
In studying the process of barbarian settlement in the territory of the
western empire, we must distinguish between formal grants made by suc-
cessive emperors and governments and the longer process of informal set-
tlement patterns. In practice, a continuous process of settlement reaching
back at least to the fourth century had long ago undermined Roman control
of the west and, through the use of non-Romans as troops, had eroded
any sense in which there could still be a single Roman army. Control of the
land, and therefore of tax revenues, was also seriously affected (see below).^38
Contemporary literary sources written from the Roman point of view are
imbued with anti-barbarian stereotyping, and give only a very imperfect
and one-sided picture of the process and extent of settlement, and conse-
quently historians have turned to the evidence from archaeological fi nds,
especially those from graves, as markers of different barbarian ‘cultures’.
However, this approach has also been challenged as too simplistic and as
methodologically unsound; reading off ethnicity from grave goods can be
as deceptive as taking the literary sources at face value.^39 The reasons for
settlement might vary greatly, from invasion and imperial grants of land to
resettlement through service in the Roman army, and it is often diffi cult to

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