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The
Austuriani, or, as the Roman historian Ammianus Marcellinus
(c.330-c.400) prefers to call them, Austoriani, were a federation of
Libyan tribes that became increasingly dangerous for the Roman Empire
in the fourth century. In his Roman History
28.6, he describes how the tribal warriors attacked the Roman cities of
Tripolitana and waged war against general Romanus. This happened
between 364 and 378. The translation was made by J.C. Rolfe,
and was taken from LacusCurtius.
From
here [...] let us come to the sorrows of the African province of
Tripoli, over which (I think) even Justice herself has wept; and from
what cause these blazed out like flames will appear when my narrative
is completed.
The
Austoriani, who are neighbors to those regions, are savages, always
ready for sudden raids and accustomed to live by murder and robbery.
These were subdued for a time, but then returned to their natural
turbulence, for which they seriously alleged this reason: A
certain man of their country, Stachao by name, when he was wandering
freely in our territory, it being a time of peace, committed some
violations of the laws, among which the most conspicuous was, that he
tried by every kind of deceit to betray the province, as was proved by
most trustworthy testimony. Accordingly he was burned to death.
To
avenge his execution, under the pretext that he was a countryman of
theirs and had been unjustly condemned, like beasts aroused by madness,
they sallied forth from their homes while Jovian was still ruling [363-364], and, fearing to come near Lepcis,
a city strong in its walls and population, they encamped for three days
in the fertile districts near the city. There they slaughtered the
peasants, whom sudden fear had paralysed or had compelled to take
refuge in caves, burned a great deal of furniture which could not be
carried off, and returned laden with immense spoils, taking with them
also as prisoner one Silva, the most eminent of the local magistrates,
who chanced to be found in the country with his wife and children.
The
people of Lepcis, greatly alarmed by this sudden calamity, before the
evils which the insolence of the barbarians threatened should
increase, implored the protection of Romanus, the newly-promoted
commanding-general for Africa. As soon as he arrived, leading his
military forces, and was asked to lend his aid in these troubles, he
declared that he would not move his camp unless provisions in abundance
should first be brought and 4,000 dromedaries equipped. The
unhappy citizens were stupefied by this answer, and declared that after
suffering from fires and pillage they could not procure a remedy for
their tremendous losses by providing such enormous supplies. Whereupon
the general, after deluding them by spending forty days there, marched
away without actually attempting anything.
The
people of Tripolitana, disappointed in this hope and fearing the worst,
when the lawful day for the popular assembly (which with them comes
once a year) had arrived, appointed Severus and Flaccianus as envoys,
who were to take to Valentinian golden statues of Victory because of his accession to power, and to tell him fearlessly of the lamentable ruin of the province. As
soon as Romanus heard of this, he sent a swift horseman to Remigius,
the chief-marshal of the court, a relative of his by marriage and a
partner in his robberies, asking him to see to it that the
investigation of this affair should be assigned by the emperor's
authority to the deputy governor Vincentius and himself. The
envoys came to the court, and being given audience with the emperor,
stated orally what they had suffered; and they presented decrees,
containing a full account of the whole affair. Since the emperor, after
reading these, neither believed the communication of the marshal, who
countenanced the misdeeds of Romanus, nor the envoys, who gave
contrary testimony, a full investigation was promised, but it was put
off, in the way in which supreme powers are usually deceived among the
distractions to which the powerful are liable.
While
the people of Tripolitana were long in a state of anxiety and suspense,
looking for some aid from the emperor's military support, the hordes of
barbarians again came up, given confidence by what had happened before;
and after overrunning the territory of Lepcis and Oea
with death and devastation, went away again, laden with vast heaps of
booty; a number of decurions were put to death, among whom the former
high-priest Rusticianus and the aedile Nicasius were conspicuous. But
the reason why this inroad could not be prevented was that, although at
the request of the envoys the charge of military affairs also had been
entrusted to the governor Ruricius, it was soon afterwards transferred
to Romanus. When
now the news of this newly inflicted catastrophe was sent to Gaul, it
greatly angered the emperor. Accordingly, Palladius, a tribune and
secretary, was sent to pay the wages that were due the soldiers in
various parts of Africa, and to investigate and give a fully
trustworthy report of what had happened at Tripolitana.
However,
during such delays caused by consultations and waiting for supplies,
the Austoriani, made insolent by two successful raids, flew to the spot
like birds of prey made more savage by the incitement of blood, and
after slaying all those who did not escape danger by flight, carried
off the booty which they had previously left behind, besides cutting
down the trees and vines. Then
one Mychon, a high-born and powerful townsman, was caught in the
suburbs but gave them the slip before he was bound; and because he was
lame and it was wholly impossible for him to make good his escape, he
threw himself into an empty well; but the barbarians pulled him out
with his rib broken, and placed him near the city gates; there, at the
pitiful entreaties of his wife, he was ransomed but was drawn up by a
rope to the battlements, and died after two days. Then
the savage marauders, roused to greater persistence, assailed the very
walls of Lepcis, which re-echoed with the mournful wailing of the
women, who had never before been besieged by an enemy, and were
half-dead with a terror to which they were unused. But after blockading
the city for eight days together, during which some of the besiegers
were wounded without accomplishing anything, they returned in saddened
mood to their own abodes.
Because
of this the citizens, despairing of being saved and resorting to the
last hope, although the envoys they had already sent had not yet
returned, dispatched Jovinus and Pancratius to give the emperor a
trustworthy account of what they had seen and had personally suffered.
These envoys, by inquiring of those mentioned above (Severus, whom they
met at Carthage,
and Flaccianus), what they had done, learned that they had been ordered
to make their report to the deputy and the general. Of these Severus
was at once attacked by a painful illness and died; but the
aforementioned envoys nevertheless hastened by long marches to the
court.
After
this, Palladius had entered Africa, and Romanus, intending to block in
advance the purpose for which he had come, in order to secure his own
safety, had ordered the officers of the companies through certain
confidants of his secrets, that they should hand over to Palladius the
greater part of the pay which he had brought, since he was an
influential man and in close relations with the highest officials of
the palace; and so it was done. Palladius
immediately, being thus enriched, proceeded to Lepcis, and in order to
succeed in ferreting out the truth, he took with him to the devastated
regions two eloquent and distinguished townsmen, Erechthius and
Aristomenes, who freely told him of their own troubles and those of
their fellow-citizens and neighbors. They
openly showed him everything, and after he had seen the lamentable
ashes of the province, he returned, and reproaching Romanus for his
inactivity, threatened to give the emperor a true report of everything
that he had seen. Then Romanus, filled with anger and resentment,
assured him that he also would then at once report that Palladius, sent
as an incorruptible notary, had diverted to his own profit all the
money intended for the soldiers. Therefore,
since his conscience was witness to disgraceful acts, Palladius then
came to an understanding with Romanus, and on his return to the palace,
he misled Valentinian by the atrocious art of lying, declaring that the
people of Tripolitana had no cause for complaint. Accordingly, he was
sent again to Africa with Jovinus, the last of all the envoys (for
Pancratius had died at Trier),
in order with the deputy to examine in person the value of the
work of the second deputation also. Besides this, the emperor gave
orders that the tongues of Erechthius and Aristomenes should be cut
out, since the aforesaid Palladius had intimated that they had made
some offensive statements.
The
secretary, following the deputy, as had been arranged, came to
Tripolitana. As soon as Romanus learned of this, with all speed he sent
his attendant thither, and with him an adviser of his, Caecilius by
name, a native of that province. Through these all the townspeople were
induced - whether by bribes or deceit is uncertain - to make grave
charges against Jovinus, positively declaring that they had given him
no commission to report what he had reported to the emperor. In fact,
their dishonesty went so far that even Jovinus himself was forced to
endanger his own life by confessing that he had lied to the emperor.
When
this was known through Palladius, who had now returned, Valentinian,
being rather inclined to severity, gave orders that Jovinus, as the
originator of the false statement, with Caelestinus, Concordius, and
Lucius as accomplices and participants, should suffer capital
punishment; further, that Ruricius, the governor, should suffer death
as the author of a false report, the following also being counted
against him - that there were read in his report certain expressions of
his which seemed immoderate. Ruricius
was executed at Sitifis, the rest were punished at Utica through
sentence of the deputy-governor Crescens. Flaccianus, however, before
the death of the other envoys, was heard by the deputy and the general;
and when he stoutly defended his life, he was all but killed by the
angry soldiers, who rushed upon him with shouts and abusive language;
for they declared against him that the Tripolitani could not possibly
be defended for the reason that they themselves had declined to furnish
what was necessary for the campaign. And
for this reason Flaccianus was imprisoned, until the emperor, who had
been consulted about him, should make up his mind what ought to be
done. But he bribed his guards - so it was permissible to believe - and
made his escape to the city of Rome, where he kept in hiding until he
passed away by a natural death.
In
consequence of this remarkable end of the affair, Tripolitana, though
harassed by disasters from without and from within, remained silent,
but not without defense; for the eternal eye of Justice watched over
her, as well as the last curses of the envoys and the governor. For
long afterwards the following event came to pass: Palladius was
dismissed from service, and stript of the haughtiness with which he
swelled, and retired to a life of inaction. And
when Theodosius, that famous leader of armies, had come into Africa to
put an end to the dangerous attempts of Firmus, and, as he had been
ordered, examined the movable property of the outlawed Romanus, there
was found also among his papers the letter of one Meterius, containing
the words, "Meterius to Romanus his Lord and patron," and at the end,
after much matter that would here be irrelevant: "The disgraced
Palladius salutes you, and says that he was deposed for no other reason
than that in the cause of the people of Tripolitana he spoke to sacred
ears what was not true." When
this letter had been sent to the Palace and read, Meterius, on
being seized by order of Valentinian, admitted that the letter was his.
Therefore Palladius was ordered to be produced, but thinking of the
mass of crimes that he had concocted, at a halting-station, as darkness
was coming on, on noticing the absence of the guards, who on a festal
day of the Christian religion were spending the whole night in church,
he knotted a noose about his neck and strangled himself. When
this favorable turn of fortune was fully known and the instigator of
the awful troubles put to death, Erechthius and Aristomenes, who, when
they learned that it had been ordered that their tongues should be cut
out, as over-lavishly used, had withdrawn to far remote and hidden
places, now hastened from concealment; and when the emperor Gratian -
for Valentinian had died -was given trustworthy information of the
abominable deception, they were sent for trial to the proconsul
Hesperius and the deputy Flavianus. These officials, being men of
impartial justice combined with most rightful authority, having put
Caecilius to the torture, learned from his open confession that he
himself had persuaded his citizens to make trouble for the envoys by
false statements. This investigation was followed by a report, which
disclosed the fullest confirmation of the acts which had been
committed; to this no reply was made.
And
that these dramas should leave no awful tragic effect untried, this
also was added after the curtain had dropped. Romanus, setting out
to the Palace, brought with him Caecilius, who intended to accuse the
judges of having been biased in favor of the province; and being
received with favor by Merobaudes, he had sought that some more
witnesses whom he needed should be produced. When
these had come to Milan, and shown by credible evidence that they had
been brought there under false pretences to satisfy a grudge, they were
discharged and returned to their homes. Nevertheless, in Valentinianus'
lifetime, in consequence of what we have stated above, Remigius also
after retiring into private life strangled himself, as I shall show in
the proper place.
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Online 2007
Revision: 25 Dec. 2007 |