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- [ra.msstate.edu:pub/history/articles/article.attila.txt]
-
- This is a draft of an article that was published in a slightly different
- form in MHQ: The Quarterly Journal of Military History. All citations should
- be to the published version and not to this draft.
-
-
-
- ATTILA THE HUN AND THE BATTLE OF CHALONS
-
- by Arther Ferrill
-
-
- No one represents the unbridled fury and savagery of bar-
- barism as much as Attila the Hun. Even in the twentieth cen-
- tury one of the worst names that could be found for the Germans
- was to call them Huns. Attila, as the greatest Hun leader,
- is the stereotypical sacker of cities and killer of babies.
- In his own day he and his Huns were known as the "Scourge of
- God," and the devastation they caused in Gaul before the great
- Battle of Chalons in 451 AD became a part of medieval folklore
- and tradition.
- The clash at Chalons was one of those rare monumental
- conflicts, pitting against one another two of the towering
- figures of Late Antiquity, the fierce and passionate Attila
- and the noble Ae?tius, sometimes called "the last of the Ro-
- mans." By 451 Aetius had been the foremost general in the
- Roman Empire for many years, and he was also the chief polit-
- ical adviser to the Emperor of the West, Valentinian III. In
- the previous forty years the once great Empire had suffered
- staggering setbacks, especially in the West. Ae?tius had done
- more than anyone else to keep what remained of the Roman world
- strong and prosperous.
- Despite Ae?tius' efforts, when Attila crossed the Rhine
- with the Huns in 451, he threatened a tottering relic of pow-
- er. The Western Roman Empire had already been ravaged by
- Visigoths, Vandals, Suebi, Alamanni, Burgundians and other
- barbarian tribes. Visigoths had an independent kingdom in
- Aquitaine, and Vandals occupied North Africa with a capital
- at Carthage. Roman rule in many parts of Gaul and Spain was
- merely nominal. Although Aetius had waged his own personal
- fight against the tide of the times, he had not been able to
- hold back the wave of invasions that had rolled over the West
- ever since Alaric and the Visigoths had sacked the city of
- Rome in 410.
- One of the most fascinating features of the story of At-
- tila and the Huns is that the background to their potent pen-
- etration of Roman Gaul and the decisive Battle of ChE?lons is
- every bit as spellbinding as the actual combat itself. Al-
- though parts of the story are nearly incredible, the evidence
- for it is reasonably good--as good, at least, as evidence ever
- is for the fifth century AD. It is a tale of lust for sex and
- power, for money and land, and the principal actors are as
- colorful as any who ever lived.
- The Huns themselves were a people of mystery and terror.
- Arriving on the fringes of the Roman Empire in the late fourth
- century, riding their war horses out of the great steppes of
- Asia, they struck fear into Germanic barbarians and Romans
- alike. Some scholars believe that they had earlier moved
- against the Chinese Empire but were turned away and swept to-
- wards Rome instead. As they approached the Black Sea and con-
- quered the Ostrogoths, they also drove the Visigoths across
- the Danube into the Roman Empire and caused the crisis that
- led to the astounding defeat of the Roman army under the Em-
- peror Valens at Adrianople in 378 AD.
- Those early Huns, using the traditional tactics of mount-
- ed archers, seemed like monsters from the darkness to their
- more civilized contemporaries. The Roman historian Ammianus
- Marcellinus, writing at the end of the fourth century, de-
- scribed their savage customs and elaborated on their military
- tactics:
-
- The nation of the Huns...surpasses all other barbarians
- in wildness of life....And though [the Huns] do just bear
- the likeness of men (of a very ugly pattern), they are
- so little advanced in civilization that they make no use
- of fire, nor any kind of relish, in the preparation of
- their food, but feed upon the roots which they find in
- the fields, and the half-raw flesh of any sort of animal.
- I say half-raw, because they give it a kind of cooking
- by placing it between their own thighs and the backs of
- their horses....
- When attacked, they will sometimes engage in regular
- battle. Then, going into the fight in order of columns,
- they fill the air with varied and discordant cries. More
- often, however, they fight in no regular order of battle,
- but by being extremely swift and sudden in their move-
- ments, they disperse, and then rapidly come together
- again in loose array, spread havoc over vast plains, and
- flying over the rampart, they pillage the camp of their
- enemy almost before he has become aware of their ap-
- proach. It must be owned that they are the most terrible
- of warriors because they fight at a distance with missile
- weapons having sharpened bones admirably fastened to the
- shaft. When in close combat with swords, they fight
- without regard to their own safety, and while their enemy
- is intent upon parrying the thrust of the swords, they
- throw a net over him and so entangle his limbs that he
- loses all power of walking or riding.
-
-
- Obviously, when the Huns first appeared on the edges of
- the Roman Empire, they made a strong impression, but after
- their initial threats they settled down along the Danube, par-
- ticularly in the Great Hungarian Plain, and for almost fifty
- years they served the Romans as allies more often than they
- attacked them as enemies. In return, the Eastern Emperor,
- beginning in the 420's, paid them an annual subsidy. On the
- whole, this uneasy relationship worked well although there
- were times when the Huns threatened to intervene directly in
- imperial affairs.
- The decisive turn of events came with the accession of
- Attila as King of the Huns. The new ruler was much more ag-
- gressive and ambitious than his predecessors had been, and ar-
- rogance sometimes made him unpredictable. There is a story
- that he claimed to own the actual sword of Mars, and that other
- barbarian chiefs could not look the King of the Huns directly
- in the eyes without flinching. Attila was a striking figure,
- and Edward Gibbon in The History of the Decline and Fall of
- the Roman Empire offered a famous description of the person-
- ality and appearance of the Hun, based on an ancient account:
-
- His features, according to the observation of a Gothic
- historian, bore the stamp of his national origin...a
- large head, a swarthy complexion, small, deep-seated
- eyes, a flat nose, a few hairs in the place of a beard,
- broad shoulders, and a short square body, of a nervous
- strength, though of a disproportioned form. The haughty
- step and demeanour of the king of the Huns expressed the
- consciousness of his superiority above the rest of man-
- kind; and he had a custom of fiercely rolling his eyes,
- as if he wished to enjoy the terror which he in-
- spired....He delighted in war; but, after he had ascended
- the throne in a mature age, his head, rather than his
- hand, achieved the conquest of the North; and the fame
- of an adventurous soldier was usefully exchanged for that
- of a prudent and successful general.
-
- At the outset of his reign (sometime after 435) Attila
- demanded more money, and the Eastern Emperor, Theodosius II,
- obligingly doubled the annual subsidy. For various reasons,
- however, the new king began in the late 440's to look to the
- West as the main area of opportunity for the Huns. For the
- next decade and a half after his accession Attila was the most
- powerful foreign potentate in the affairs of the Western Roman
- Empire. His Huns had become a sedentary nation and were no
- longer the horse nomads of the earlier days. The Great Hun-
- garian Plain did not offer as much room as the steppes of Asia
- for grazing horses, and the Huns were forced to develop an
- infantry to supplement their now much smaller cavalry. As one
- leading authority has recently said, "When the Huns first ap-
- peared on the steppe north of the Black Sea, they were nomads
- and most of them may have been mounted warriors. In Europe,
- however, they could graze only a fraction of their former
- horse-power, and their chiefs soon fielded armies which re-
- sembled the sedentary forces of Rome." By the time of Attila
- the army of the Huns had become like that of most barbarian
- nations in Europe. It was, however, very large, as we shall
- see, and capable of conducting siege operations, which most
- other barbarian armies could not do effectively.
- In any event the Hunnic invasion of Gaul was a huge un-
- dertaking. The Huns had a reputation for cruelty that was not
- undeserved. In the 440's one of Attila's attacks against the
- East in the Balkans aimed at a city in the Danubian provinces,
- Naissus (441-42). It was located about a hundred miles south
- of the Danube on the Nischava River. The Huns so devastated
- the place that when Roman ambassadors passed through to meet
- with Attila several years later, they had to camp outside the
- city on the river. The river banks were still filled with
- human bones, and the stench of death was so great that no one
- could enter the city. Many cities of Gaul would soon suffer
- the same fate.
- After securing a strong position on the Roman side of the
- Danube the Huns were checked by the famous Eastern Roman
- general, Aspar, as they raided Thrace (442). Then, in 447,
- Attila descended into the Balkans in another great war against
- the East. The Huns marched as far as Thermopylae and stopped
- only when the Eastern Emperor, Thodosius II, begged for terms.
- Attila accepted payment of all tribute in arrears and a new
- annual tribute of 2,100 pounds of gold. The Huns were also
- given considerable territory south of the Danube. One source
- says of this campaign, "There was so much killing and blood-
- letting that no one could number the dead. The Huns pillaged
- the churches and monasteries, and slew the monks and
- virgins....They so devastated Thrace that it will never rise
- again and be as it was before." This strong victory in the
- East left Attila free to plan the attack on the West that
- culminated in the invasion of Gaul.
- Another of the great barbaric chieftains of the age,
- Gaiseric, King of the Vandals, played a role in the prelude
- to Chalons. He urged Attila to attack the Visigoths in the
- West because of the hostility between Vandals and Visigoths.
- A generation earlier Gaiseric's son had married the daughter
- of Theodoric I, King of the Visigoths, but in 442 the Roman
- Emperor Valentinian III agreed to the betrothal of his daugh-
- ter to Gaiseric's son, and the Visigothic princess was re-
- turned to her people with her nose and ears inhumanly
- mutilated. From that time on the enmity of Vandals and Visig-
- oths was great, and when Attila did cross the Rhine, the
- Visigoths joined Aetius against the Huns, but the Vandals
- stayed out of the war.
- Two other considerations proved especially important.
- One was the death of the Eastern Emperor Theodosius II, who
- fell from his horse and died in 450. His successor, Marcian
- (450-7), took a hard line on barbarian encroachment in the
- Balkans and refused to pay Attila the usual subsidy. The fury
- of the Hun was monstrous, but he decided to take out his wrath
- on the West, because it was weaker than the East,and because
- one of history's most peculiar scandals gave Attila a justi-
- fication for war with the Western Emperor. Honoria, Emperor
- Valentinian's sister, had been discovered in 449 in an affair
- with her steward. The unfortunate lover was executed, and
- Honoria, who was probably pregnant, was kept in seclusion. In
- a rage she smuggled a ring and a message to the King of the
- Huns and asked Attila to become her champion. He treated this
- as a marriage proposal and asked for half of the Western Em-
- pire as her dowry. So when he crossed the Rhine, he could
- claim that he merely sought by force what was his by right of
- betrothal to Honoria.
- After massive preparations Attila invaded the Rhine with
- a large army of Huns and allied barbarian tribes. In his force
- was a sizable body of Ostrogoths and other Germanic warriors,
- including Burgundians and Alans who lived on the barbarian
- side of the frontier. The Franks were split between pro- and
- anti-Roman factions. As early as April Attila took Metz, and
- fear swept through Gaul. Ancient accounts give figures that
- range between 300,000 and 700,000 for the army of the Huns.
- Whatever the size, it was clearly enormous for the fifth cen-
- tury AD. Some of the greatest cities of Europe were sacked
- and put to the torch: Rheims, Mainz, Strasbourg, Cologne,
- Worms and Trier. Paris fortunately had the advantage of hav-
- ing a saint in the city and was spared because of the minis-
- trations of St. Genvieve.
- After he secured the Rhine, Attila moved into central
- Gaul and put OrlCAans under siege. Had he gained his objec-
- tive, he would have been in a strong position to subdue the
- Visigoths in Aquitiane, but Ae?tius had put together a formi-
- dable coalition against the Hun. Working frenetically, the
- Roman leader had built a powerful alliance of Visigoths, Alans
- and Burgundians, uniting them with their traditional enemy,
- the Romans, for the defense of Gaul. Even though all parties
- to the protection of the Western Roman Empire had a common
- hatred of the Huns, it was still a remarkable achievement on
- Ae?tius' part to have drawn them into an effective military
- relationship.
- Attila had not expected such vigorous action on the part
- of the Romans, and he was too wise to let his army be trapped
- around the walls of Orleans, so he abandoned the siege, ac-
- cording to one source, on June 14. This gave the Romans and
- their allies the advantage in morale as the Huns withdrew into
- the open country of the modern Champagne district of France.
- There on the Catalaunian Plains (some believe closer to Troyes
- than to Chalons) a great battle was fought, probably about
- June 20. Attila seems to have been shaken by his sudden re-
- versal of fortune. Uncertain of victory and in the confusion
- of retreat, on the day of the battle he stayed behind his lines
- in the wagon laager until afternoon. It is likely that he
- planned to begin fighting late enough in the day to fall back
- under darkness of night should that prove necessary. He did
- finally move up his army in battle order.
- On the right wing of the Hunnic army Attila stationed the
- bulk of his Germanic allies. The Ostrogoths fought on the
- left, and in the center Attila took position with his best
- troops, the Huns. On the other side Aetius decide to put his
- least reliable troops, the Alans, in the center to take what-
- ever assault Attila directed towards them. The Visigoths were
- placed on the Roman right, and the Romans themselves took the
- left. Aetius clearly hoped to execute a double envelopment,
- hitting hard against the two weak flanks of Attila's army
- while fighting a defensive, holding action in the center.
- When the Romans on the left were able to seize some high ground
- on the flank of the Hunnic right wing during an initial skir-
- mish, they gained a considerable advantage.
- Thus began one of the Western world's greatest and most
- decisive battles. All the sources agree that it was a costly
- one in human lives: cadavera vero innumera ("truly countless
- bodies"), is the way one ancient author puts it. Attila
- struck hard against the Alans in the Roman center. As he drove
- them back the Romans on his right moved down in a sharp attack.
- The forward momentum of the Huns in the center exposed their
- flank to an attack by Theodoric, King of the Visigoths, and
- as night fell, the Huns had taken a beating though losses on
- both sides were extraordinary. Attila retreated to the safety
- of his laager, and the archers of the Huns kept the Romans at
- bay. Theodoric had lost his life in the battle.
- In fact at this point the battle was over. Some on the
- Roman side wanted Ae?tius to resume the fighting the next day,
- but he chose not to. Perhaps he wanted to leave Attila with
- his forces, though battered, still intact in order to keep the
- barbarians of Gaul united behind Rome. In any event, he en-
- couraged the new King of the Visigoths to hurry back to
- Aquitaine to secure his accession to the throne. Attila began
- his withdrawal back across the Rhine and was able to effect
- it easily. Many have criticized Aa?tius for making things too
- easy for the Huns, for not destroying their army, but it is
- not necessary to introduce political considerations to ex-
- plain the Roman commander's motives. Militarily he did the
- right thing. The sources make it clear that the Roman alli-
- ance also took heavy losses at Chalons, and Attila was merely
- a wounded tiger. He continued to have considerable military
- power. Although the Hun had been beaten in a bloody battle,
- it was probably wise for Aetius to allow his savage foe a line
- of retreat. To have driven Attila the Hun out of the Empire
- was satisfaction enough. It is true that in the following
- year Attila invaded Italy and caused much suffering before he
- withdrew, but if he had launched a successful counterattack
- in Gaul the whole course of Western history might have been
- changed. Unlike most other barbarians of the age, the Huns
- were not Christians, and their respect for the Graeco-Roman
- Christian civilization of the Late Empire was much more lim-
- ited even than that of Visigoth and Vandal.
- For various reasons twentieth century "scientific" his-
- torians have minimized and even ridiculed the concept of "de-
- cisive battles". There is a widespread belief that human
- events are rarely determined on the battlefield. In the nine-
- teenth century Edward Creasy's book, The Fifteen Decisive Bat-
- tles of the World (originally published in 1851) became a best
- seller and exercised considerable influence. (Incidentally
- Creasy included the Battle of Chalons on his list.) But the
- early twentieth century saw a change. Hans Delbru?ck totally
- ignored Chalons in his monumental History of the Art of War
- Within the Framework of Political History (1920-21), and one
- of the foremost authorities on the Late Roman Empire, J.B.
- Bury, refused, as some others have done, even to call it by
- its traditional name:
-
- The Battle of Maurica [Chalons] was a battle of nations,
- but its significance has been enormously exaggerated in con-
- ventional history. It cannot in any reasonable sense be des-
- ignated as one of the critical battles of the world....The
- danger did not mean so much as has been commonly assumed. If
- Attila had been victorious...there is no reason to suppose
- that the course of history would have been seriously altered.
-
-
- To be sure, the exact location of the battle has been
- disputed and is in doubt. In that general area of modern
- France it has been a favorite occupation of retired colonels
- to spend their weekends looking for evidence of the battle-
- field. But there are many extremely important ancient battles
- whose exact locations are uncertain: Plataea, Issus, Cannae,
- Zama, and Pharsalus, to name but a few. Considering the pau-
- city of ancient evidence uncertainty of that sort is to be
- expected, and it can hardly be used as evidence that the bat-
- tles were not important. As to exaggerating the danger of
- Attila and the Huns, why were they less dangerous than Hanni-
- bal and the Carthaginians or Alaric and the Visigoths?
- It is true that the threat of the Huns to Rome had not
- been entirely removed by Aa?tius' victory at Chalons. Though
- beaten and forced to retreat across the Rhine, Attila still
- had a powerful force, and he had not learned his lesson. The
- next year (452) he crossed over the Alps and moved down into
- Italy, launching another great invasion that terrorized the
- inhabitants of the Western Roman Empire. In some ways this
- second invasion of the West was even more savage than the
- first. The city of Aquileia at the tip of the Adriatic was
- wiped off the face of the earth. The fugitives from that piti-
- ful city are supposed to have fled into the lagoons of the
- Adriatic and to have founded the new city of Venice. Much of
- the Po Valley--Milan, Verona, and Padua--was devastated and
- depopulated. The Hun had pillaged and destroyed Northern It-
- aly! Aa?tius found it much more difficult to persuade Visig-
- oths and Alans to help in the defense of Italy than he had a
- year earlier in organizing them to protect Gaul.
- For awhile it appeared that Italy would be lost to the
- invaders, but actually Attila's position was weaker than the
- Romans realized, undoubtedly because of the serious losses he
- had suffered the previous year at ChE?lons. There is a famous
- tradition that Pope Leo I met Attila in Northern Italy at the
- confluence of the Minicio and the Po and persuaded him to
- leave Italy with a display of eloquence and a show of elabo-
- rate sacerdotal robes. There occurred, according to legend,
- one of the most famous miracles in the history of Christian-
- ity--St. Peter and St. Paul appeared to Attila threatening him
- with instant death if he ignored the urgings of Leo.
- In an act that added immeasurably to the influence of the
- fledgling papacy, an obliging Attila led his army out of It-
- aly. It was probably not so much the influence of Leo as the
- fact that his troops were short of supplies that motivated the
- great barbarian leader. There had been a famine in Italy in
- 450-51, and logistical support had never been a strong point
- for barbarian armies. Also a plague swept through the army
- of the Huns, and the Eastern Emperor Marcian sent an army
- across the Danube to strike into the heartland of the Huns'
- territory. When these factors are added to the disastrous
- loses the year earlier at Chalons, it is obvious why Attila
- was able to see merit in the humanitarian arguments of Pope
- Leo.
- In any event, the great Hun spared Rome and withdrew from
- Italy. Twice in successive years, at Chalons and in Northern
- Italy, the menace of the Huns had proved incapable of bringing
- the Western Empire to its knees. Perhaps Rome's last great
- service to the West was to serve as a buffer between the Asi-
- atic Huns and the Germanic barbarians whose destiny was to lay
- the medieval foundations of the modern, western nations. Ae-
- tius had been blamed by many Italians for not having destroyed
- Attila and the Huns in Gaul, but "the last of the Romans" had
- contributed substantially to the ruin of the once proud bar-
- barian nation. Its place in the pages of history was over.
- In the next year after the retreat from Italy Attila died
- an appropriately barbarian death. He took a new, young, beau-
- tiful bride, a damsel named Ildico, though he already had a
- coterie of wives. The wedding day was spent in heavy drinking
- and partying, and the King of the Huns took his new bride to
- bed that night in drunken lust. The next morning it was dis-
- covered that he had died--drowned in his drunkenness in his
- own nosebleed. The new bride was found quivering in fear in
- the great man's bedquarters. The empire of the Huns dissi-
- pated nearly as quickly as its most famous leader. In 454 the
- Ostrogoths and other Germanic tribes revolted against the
- Huns, and the sons of Attila, who had quarreled among them-
- selves, could not deal with the crisis. In the words of Bury,
- the Huns were "scattered to the winds."
- Even in the last days of the Roman Empire in the West it
- was still possible for the imperial general Aetius to mobilize
- a major military force in defense of Gaul. During his ascen-
- dancy in the 430's, 40s and early 50s Rome had lost much, par-
- ticularly to the Vandals in North Africa, yet had remained
- powerful enough to thwart the ambitions of Attila the Hun.
- Naturally, there was jealousy and rivalry between Aa?tius and
- his superior, the Emperor Valentinian III. The General's suc-
- cess against the Huns and his effective treatment of the
- Visigoths in Gaul actually helped to make him unnecessary any
- longer, and in 454 Valentinian killed him personally with the
- imperial sword. One of the Emperor's advisers said, "You have
- cut off your right hand with your left." The next year two
- of Ae?tius' followers killed the Emperor, and within a gener-
- ation, by 476, there would no longer be a Roman Emperor in the
- West. Ae?tius was truly "the last of the Romans."
-
-
- Recommended Readings
-
-
- There are many excellent books on the Late Roman Empire
- and on the Huns. I list several of the most important ones
- here, but their bibliographies contain many more specialized
- works.
-
-
- J.B. Bury, History of the Later Roman Empire, 2 vols.,
- London and New York (reprint of 1923 ed.).
-
- Arther Ferrill, The Fall of the Roman Empire: The Mil-
- itary Explanation, London and New York 1986
-
- Edward Gibbon, The History of the Decline and Fall of the
- Roman Empire, with Introduction, Notes and Appendices by J.B.
- Bury, 7 vols., London 1909-14.
-
- Thomas Hodgkin, Italy and Her Invaders, 2 vols., 2nd ed.,
- Oxford 1892.
-
- A.H.M. Jones, The Later Roman Empire 284-602, 4 vols.,
- Oxford 1964.
-
- Otto J. Maenchen-Helfen, The World of the Huns, Berkeley
- 1973.
-
- E.A. Thompson, A History of Attila and the Huns, Oxford
- 1948.
-
-
-