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THEODORIC , See also: king of the
See also: Ostrogoths (c
.
454-526)
.
Referring to the article Goias for a general statement of the position of this, the greatest ruler that the See also: Gothic nation produced, we add here some details of a more See also: personal kind
.
Theodoric was See also: born about the See also: year 454, and was the son of Theudemir, one of three See also: brothers who reigned over the See also: East Goths, at that See also: time settled in See also: Pannonia
.
The See also: day of his See also: birth coincided with the arrival of the See also: news of a victory of his See also: uncle Walamir over the sons of See also: Attila
.
The name of Theodoric's See also: mother was Erelieva, and she is called the concubine of Theudemir
.
The See also: Byzantine historians generally See also: call him son of Walamir, apparently because the latter was the best known member of the royal fraternity
.
At the age of seven he was sent as a hostage to the See also: court of Constantinople, and there spent ten years of his See also: life, which doubtless exercised a most important influence on his subsequent career
.
Soon after his return to his See also: father (about 471) he secretly, with a comitatus of so,000 men, attacked the king of the Sarmatians, and wrested from him the important city of Singidunum (Belgrade)
.
In 473 Theudemir, now chief king of the Ostrogoths, invaded See also: Moesia and See also: Macedonia, and obtained a permanent See also: settlement for his See also: people near Thessalonica
.
Theodoric took the chief See also: part in this expedition, the result of which was to remove the Ostrogoths from the now barbarous Pannonia, and to See also: settle them as foederati in the See also: heart of the See also: empire
.
About 474 Theudemir died, and for the fourteen following years Theodoric was chiefly engaged in a series of profitless See also: wars, or rather plundering, expeditions, partly against the emperor See also: Zeno, but partly against a See also: rival Gothic chieftain, another Theodoric, son of Triarius.2 In 488 he set out at the See also: head of his people to win See also: Italy from See also: Odoacer
.
There is no doubt that he had for this enterprise the sanction of the emperor, only too anxious to be rid of so troublesome aSee also: guest
.
But the precise nature of the relation which was to unite the two See also: powers in the event of Theodoric's success was, perhaps purposely, See also: left vague
.
Theodoric's See also: complete See also: practical independence, combined with a See also: great show of deference for the empire, reminds us somewhat of the relation of the old East See also: India See also: Company to the See also: Mogul dynasty at See also: Delhi, but the Ostrogoth was sometimes actually at war with his imperial friend
.
The invasion and See also: conquest of Italy occupied more than four years (488-493)
.
Theodoric, vtho marched round the head of the Venetian Gulf, had to fight a fierce See also: battle with the Gepidae, probably in the valley of the Save
.
At the Sontius (Isonzo) he found his passage barred by Odoacer, over whom he gained a complete victory (28th of See also: August 489)
.
A yet more decisive victory followed on the 3oth See also: September at See also: Verona
.
Odoacer fled to See also: Ravenna, and it seemed as if the conquest of Italy was complete
.
It was delayed, however, for three years by the treachery of Tufa, an officer who had deserted from the service of Odoacer, and of See also: Frederic the Rugian, one of the companions of Theodoric, as well as by the intervention of the Burgundians on behalf of Odoacer
.
A sally was made from Ravenna by the besieged king, who was defeated in a bloody battle in the See also: Pine See also: Wood
.
At length (26th of See also: February 493) the long and severe blockade of Ravenna was ended by a capitulation, the terms of which Theodoric disgracefully violated by slaying Odoacer with his own See also: hand (15th of See also: March 493)
.
(See ODOACER.)
The
See also: thirty-three years' reign of Theodoric was a time of unexampled happiness for Italy
.
Unbroken See also: peace reigned within her See also: borders (with the exception of a trifling See also: raid made by Byzantine corsairs on the See also: coast of Apulia in 508)
.
The
2In one of the intervals of friendship with the emperor in 483 Theodoric was made master of the See also: household troops and in 484 See also: consul
.
venality of the See also: Roman officials and the turbulence of the Gothic nobles were sternly repressed
.
Marshes were drained, harbours formed, the See also: burden of the taxes lightened, and the See also: state of See also: agriculture so much improved that Italy, from a corn-importing, became a corn-exporting country
.
Moreover Theodoric, though adhering to the Arian creed of his forefathers, was during the greater part of his reign so conspicuously impartial in religious matters that a See also: legend which afterwards became current represented him as actually putting to See also: death a Catholic deacon who had turned Arian in See also: order to win his favour
.
At the time of the contested papal election between See also: Symmachus and See also: Laurentius (496-502), Theodoric's See also: mediation was welcomed by both contending parties
.
Unfortunately, at the very close of his reign (524), the Emperor See also: Justin's persecution of the Arians led him into a policy of reprisals
.
He forced See also: Pope See also: John to undertake a
See also: mission to Constantinople to plead for toleration, and on his return threw him into prison, where he died
.
Above all, he sullied his fame by the execution of Boetius and Symmachus (see BOETIUS)
.
It should be observed, however, that the See also: motive for these acts of violence was probably See also: political rather than religious—jealousy of intrigues with the imperial court rather than zeal on behalf of the Arian confession
.
Theodoric's death, which is said to have been hastened by remorse for the execution of Symmachus, occurred on the 3oth of August 526
.
He was buried in the See also: mausoleum which is still one of the marvels of Ravenna (q.v.), and his See also: grandson See also: Athalaric, a boy of ten years, succeeded him, under the regency of his mother See also: Amalasuntha
.
Genealogy of Theodoric . THEUDEMIR= Erelieva. d . 474 A first wife= TivonoRre=Audefleda, or a 454-526. See also: sister of See also: Clovis,
concubine
.
I i king of the Franks
.
Ostrogoth() Theudegotho, AIIAL.ASUNTHA=Eutharic,
(or Arevagni), married d
.
534. a descendant
married See also: Sigismund, of the Amals
.
Alaric II., king of the
king of the Burgundians
.
West Goths
.
I ATHALARIC, Witigis=MATASUexrnA=Germanus,
Segeric, d
.
534. See also: nephew of
Amalari: , murdered Justinian
.
king of the by his
West Goths, father's Germanus Postumus,
d
.
531. orders, 522. put to death by
Photos, 665
.
Amalafrida. a full sister of Theodoric, married Thrasamund, king of the See also: Vandals, and was mother, by an earlier See also: marriage, of Theodahad (d
.
536)
.
AuTHORITIEs.—The authorities for the life of Theodoric are very imperfect. jordanes, See also: Procopius, and the curious fragment known as Anonymus Valesii (printed at the end of See also: Ammianus See also: Marcellinus) are the chief See also: direct See also: sources of narrative, but far the most important indirect source is the Variae (state-papers) of See also: Cassiodorus, chief See also: minister of Theodoric
.
Malchus furnishes some interesting particulars as to his early life, and' it is possible to extract a little information from the turgid See also: panegyric of Ennodius
.
Among See also: German scholars F
.
See also: Dahn (Konige der Germanen, ii., iii. and iv.), J
.
K
.
F
.
Manse (Geschichte See also: des Ostgothischen Reichs in Italien, 1824), and Sartorius (Versuch uber die Regierung der Ostgothen, &c.) have done most to illustrate Theodoric's principles of See also: government
.
The See also: English reader may consult See also: Gibbon's Decline and Fall, See also: chap. xxxix., and See also: Hodgkin's Italy and her Invaders, vol. iii
.
(1885), his introduction to Letters of Cassiodorus (1886) and Theodoric the Goth (See also: London and New See also: York, 1891)
.
For the legends connected with the name of Theodoric see the article DIETRICH OF See also: BERN
.
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