Start Shortly after the death of the important Gothic king Euric (484), Clovis saw opportunities to attack the Romans south of the Somme. The bishop of Tours
Gregory reports that in the fifth year of Clovis' reign, a war broke out with Syagrius. Clovis declared war on Syagrius and demanded that the battlefield be chosen, after which Syagrius faced the military conflict fearlessly, according to the historian. However, Gregory did not indicate where the battle took place, but the Soissons area is usually seen as the place of the battle.
Size of the armies Regarding the composition and numerical strength of the armies, we are largely in the dark. The bishop of Tours does not mention numbers, but based on comparable armies from that time it is estimated that Clovis' army was between 6,000 and 12,000 men strong. Syagrius' army was similar to this and consisted soldiers of both Frankish and Gallo-Roman descent in addition to
bucellari.
Battle of Soissons With an army large enough to go to war, Clovis arrived at Soisson where Syagrius resided. He challenged him to fight and on the plain outside the city the armies lined up. Gregory mentions that
Chararic, a relative of Clovis, stood aside with his troops at the battlefield, hoping to become an ally of the winner. In the battle of Soissons, the army of Clovis prevailed during the battle. Syagrius, who saw that his army was losing, fled and sought shelter from King
Alaric, Eurik's successor, in Toulouse.
Conquest of Northern Gaul Syagrius flight did not mean that the entire area between the Loire and Somme suddenly fell into Clovis' hands. He had to take into account other leaders in the region and there must have been cities that kept their gates closed to him. It is clear that Trier was not conquered without a fight. Hans Hubert Anton emphatically connects the rise of Clovis with the end of Arbogastus. Historians assume that he also appropriated his territory. According to him, Arbogast fled to
Chartres.
The death of Syagrius Gregory of Tours further informs us that Clovis sent messengers to Alaric with the ultimatum to deliver Syagrius under penalty of war. The reality was whole different. Although Clovis had defeated Syagrius and conquered northern Gaul, in the eyes of Alaric, whose hegemony stretched over almost the entire area between the Strait of Gibraltar and the Loire to the Alps in the east, he was a political dwarf. The most likely course of events was that Alaric did not want problems in his border areas during his intervention in Italy against Odoaker in 490, and according to historians is that the most likely reason he delivered Syagrius to Clovis. Clovis eventually had Syagrius secretly murdered. ==Epilogue==