“…the vicissitudes of
fortune, which spare neither man nor the proudest of his works, which buries
empires and cities in a common grave”.
Edward Gibbon, The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
Rome, Italy. 27 October. It is
eerie. The extent to which contemporary
Europe appears to look much like the Roman Empire on the eve of its demise.
Rome’s fall began with the loss of Britannia in 383 AD, Rome’s decline took far
longer. Over many years the Empire became de-stabilised by Visigoth hordes
driven from the east by horse-mounted Hunnic warriors pushing into Europe from
Central Asia. For a time Rome tried to integrate the Goths, or at least work
with them. Alaric, the great Goth king famously forged an alliance, and indeed
a friendship, with Roman General Flavius Stilicho. However, when Stilicho was
murdered in 408 AD by those close to the Emperor Honorius it was the last straw
and Alaric broke completely with Rome. Alaric’s willingness to work with a
perfidious Rome had been declining for some years. He tired of being promised a
homeland within the Empire that never came to pass, and he grew bitter that his
forces were used as front-line cannon-fodder in Rome’s seemingly interminable
border wars. Finally, in 408 AD Alaric marched on Rome, and in 410 AD he sacked
the Eternal City.
Rome never recovered. Between 410
AD and 455 AD the weakened Empire faced repeated attacks by the fearsome Huns, culminating
in the massive Battle of the Cataulanian Plains in 451 AD, in what is today modern
day France. It was an unlikely alliance of Roman General Flavius Aetius and
Goth King Theodoric I that defeated Attila the Hun. However, for the Empire it
was a Pyrrhic victory. Rome lost six of its best legions in the battle which effectively
sealed the Empire’s fate.
However, it was not military
might alone that defeated Rome. In October 439 AD the Vandal King Gaiseric, one
of the most under-estimated strategists in history, captured Carthage in what
is today Tunisia. Back then Carthage was the bread-basket of Rome, supplying
the vast bulk of the city’s food. For years Rome had been suffering economic
shocks. Without Carthage Rome simply starved.
Why did Rome decline? There were many
reasons. Edward Gibbon put it down to the adoption of Christianity as the ‘state’
religion and the loss of Roman virtues. However, perhaps the most compelling
reason was that by the fifth century Rome was politically decadent, led by a
deeply divided and utterly self-obsessed elite totally focussed on the inner
politics of Rome. It was arrogance that brought Rome down reinforced by a firmly
held and misplaced belief that it was superior and thus destined to rule.
In fact, Rome’s decline had been
evident for at least a century. In 286 AD Emperor Diocletian had split Rome
into an Eastern and a Western Empire because it had become effectively ungovernable.
The East and the West then went their own ways even fighting civil wars with
each other. Rome’s day was done.
Now, scroll forward some sixteen hundred years to modern day Europe. Look at a map of Europe and even today the
borders of many European states still reflect the tribal borders carved out
with blood in the fifth century AD. The similarities do not end there. ‘Europe’
has been the dominant world grouping for some 500 years. Even the US was, and
is, created in Europe’s image. The ‘Empire’ today is, of course, the EU. Like
Rome before it the EU is about to lose ‘Britannia’. And, like Diocletian Brussels
is simply unable to govern effectively the whole of a Europe that remains very
different from one end to the other. Today, the ‘barbarian hordes’ (the word barbarian derives from the Latin word
meaning to ‘babble’, i.e. not speak Latin) come not from the east but from the
south. And, like Roman citizens before them, many Europeans see such illegal mass
migration as akin to an invading horde.
Then there is the latter day
Geiseric, President Putin, who seeks to control much of Europe’s power and
energy supplies (look who sponsors the Champions League – Gazprom). For Putin, like
Gaiseric before him, control of a vital commodity is simply a means to a strategic
leverage end. Like Gaiseric, Putin seeks
at the very least an inflated ‘tribute’ from ‘Europe’, or like Attila the
freedom to ‘sack’ bits of it when and as he so pleases. Attila would have fully
understood the Putinian concept of ‘changing facts on the ground’ because that
is what he did.
The EU? Like Rome Europe’s latter
day ‘senators’ seem obsessed with the inner-workings and politics of Brussels,
are utterly divided over the future of the EU, ever more subject to repeated
economic shocks, and unable or unwilling to see the dangers lurking beyond
Europe’s borders. Chancellor Merkel as Caesar Augustus? I don’t think so.
In fact history does not repeat
itself, because by definition it cannot. Europe today is very different from is
fifth century predecessor, and in any case we Europeans are not organised into
tribes, are we? Moreover, to condemn all migrants as being part of one almighty
invading horde would not only be inaccurate, it would also be utterly unfair. But
then again the Huns, Vandals, and Visigoths were themselves very different, and
in the early days at least sought very different relationships with Rome. Critically, if Europe is to cope with massive immigration
surely the first duty of those in power is to separate good people from bad
people, irrespective of race, creed, religion etc.
What do repeat themselves are patterns
of power, and it is the ‘pattern’ of Rome’s fall that is perhaps most germane
to contemporary Europe. President Putin’s Weltmacht
and the growing challenge of illiberal power to the Western liberal order, and
the other-worldly fanaticism of IS and its ‘fighters’ both reveal one great
weakness that is shared by modern Europe and pre-medieval Rome. They both
refused to face up to reality. In Rome’s case by the time Aetius eventually
convinced the imperial family to face the precarious reality Rome was facing it
was far too late. In any case, like Stilicho before him, Aetius was murdered by
the Emperor for becoming too powerful. Rome
lost its last great general.
It is not yet too late for modern
Europe to face reality. However ‘tempus’ does indeed ‘fugit’.
Julian Lindley-French
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