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See also: king of the
See also: Ostrogoths, was chosen king after the See also: death of his See also: uncle Ildibad in 541, his real name being, as is seen from the coinage issued by him, Baduila
.
The See also: work of his See also: life was the restoration of the See also: Gothic See also: kingdom in See also: Italy and he entered upon the task at the very beginning of his reign, See also: collecting together and inspiring the Goths and winning a victory over the troops of the emperor Justinian, near See also: Faenza
.
Having gained another victory in 542, this See also: time in the valley of Mugello, he See also: left See also: Tuscany for Naples, captured that city and then received the submission of the provinces of Lucania, Apulia and See also: Calabria
.
See also: Totila's See also: conquest of Italy was marked not only by celerity but also by mercy, and See also: Gibbon says " none were deceived, either See also: friends or enemies, who depended on his faith or his clemency." Towards the end of 545 the Gothic king took up his station at See also: Tivoli and prepared to starve See also: Rome into surrender, making at the same time elaborate preparations for checking the progress of Bellsarius who was advancing to its See also: relief
.
The Imperial See also: fleet, moving up the See also: Tiber and led by the See also: great general, only just failed to succour the city, which must then, perforce, open its See also: gates to the Goths
.
It was plundered, although Totila did not carry out his See also: threat to make it a pasture for cattle, and when the Gothic army withdrew into Apulia it was from a scene of desolation
.
But its walls and other fortifications were soon restored, and Totila again marching against it was defeated by See also: Belisarius, who, however, did not follow up his See also: advantage
.
Several cities were taken by the Goths, while Belisarius remained inactive and then left Italy, and in 549 Totila advanced a third time against Rome, which he captured through the treachery of some of its defenders
.
His next exploit was the conquest and See also: plunder of See also: Sicily, after which he subdued See also: Corsica and See also: Sardinia and sent a Gothic fleet against the coasts of See also: Greece
.
By this time the emperor Justinian was taking energetic See also: measures to check the Goths
.
The conduct of a new See also: campaign was entrusted to the See also: eunuch Narses; Totila marched against him and was defeated and killed at the See also: battle of Tagina in See also: July
552
.
See E
.
Gibbon, Decline and Fall, edited by J . B . See also: Bury (1898), vol. iv; T
.
See also: Hodgkin, Italy and her Invaders (1896), vol. iv. and Kampfner, Totila, See also: Konig der Ostgoten (1889)
.
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