Theodosius I was succeeded by the eighteen-year-old Arcadius in the East, and the ten-year-old Honorius in the West. The notion of imperial unity persisted, although divergences between the two realms deepened. A Western Roman general of half-
Vandal origin
Stilicho announced that the dying Theodosius had appointed him the guardian of both emperors, but his claim to rule the
Eastern Roman Empire was challenged by the
praetorian prefect Rufinus. Taking advantage of their conflict,
Alaric I the leader of a group of Goths who became known as
Visigoths established a new power centre in the Balkans. Attacking the empire from the east, the Huns pillaged Syria and Cappadocia. Rufinus' opponents blamed him for the calamities and a Gothic commander in Roman service,
Gainas murdered him in November 395. During the ensuing power struggle, the
eunuch Eutropius assumed power with Arcadius' consent. In 397, Stilicho invaded
Achaea allegedly to attack Alaric, but Eutropius was worried about Stilicho's ambitions. On his advice, Arcadius declared Stilicho a public enemy, forcing him to return to the west. Eutropius was unpopular and the Gothic troops' riot in
Phrygia provided an excuse for Gainas to achieve his deposition in 399. Gainas took control of state administration, but an anti-Gothic riot in Constantinople enabled Arcadius to remove him with the support of an other Gothic general
Fravitta. The empire faced new waves of mass migrations likely triggered by the Huns' westward expansion. Around 405, a mixed group of peoples invaded Italy under the command of a Gothic chieftain
Radagaisus, but Stilicho overcame them
at Florence. On 31 December 406, tens of thousands of Vandals, Alans,
Suebi, Sarmatians and "hostile Pannonians"
crossed the Rhine into Gaul. Insecurity led to insurrections in Britain, and the rebellious troops proclaimed their commanders emperors, but only one of them,
Constantine III could consolidate his position. He crossed the Channel and restored peace along the Rhine through treaties with the Franks, Alemanni and
Burgundians. The western crisis compromised Stilicho's position. When Arcadius died on 1 May 408, his seven-year-old son
Theodosius II succeeded him under the tutelage of the praetorian prefect
Anthemius. A Hunnic leader,
Uldin invaded the Balkans and demanded a tribute, but Anthemius forced him to abandon the campaign by bribing his lieutenants. Taking advantage of the Romans' distrust of Stilicho's foreign mercenaries, his former protégé
Olympius staged a coup and achieved Stilicho's execution. Searching for a new homeland, the Vandals and their allies left Gaul and invaded the
Iberian Peninsula in 409. Constantine III appointed his son
Constans to take command of the defence, but the general
Gerotnius disobeyed and proclaimed one
Maximus emperor in
Tarraco. Alaric invaded Italy in the autumn of 408. He demanded tribute and his appointment to a senior military office, but his negotiations with Honorius failed. On his demand, the Senatus proclaimed a Roman aristocrat
Priscus Attalus emperor, but Honorius resisted at Ravenna with the support of Eastern Roman reinforcements. Alaric attacked Rome and the Visigoths
sacked the city on 24 August 410. As historian
Peter Heather emphasizes, the Visigoths carried out "one of the most civilized sacks of a city ever witnessed", but their capture of the old capital shocked the Roman world. After abandoning Rome, Alaric decided to conquer the wealthy northern African provinces, but a storm destroyed his fleet and he died in southern Italy. As Honorius could no more guarantee the defense of Britain, he suggested the provincials to provide for their own protection in 410. The influx of Roman coins stopped, indicating that Britain
ceased to be an integral part of the Roman world. The Vandals and their allies took control of most Roman provinces in Iberia, and Alaric's successor,
Athaulf led the Visigoths to Gaul from Italy. Maximus attacked Constantine III in Gaul, but his troops deserted him on the unexpected arrival of Honorius' army under the command of the general
Constantius. Maximus fled, and Constantine III was executed, but Western Roman unity was not restored. With the support of the Burgundians, Alans and Visigoths, a Gallic aristocrat
Jovinus was declared emperor on the Rhine. His alliance with the Visigoths proved transitory because Honorius convinced Athaulf to desert Jovinus promising food supply to his people. Although Athaulf murdered Jovian, the Romans failed to deliver the promised grain. Athaulf married Honorius' half-sister
Galla Placidia who had been captured during the sack of Rome, but fell victim to a Visigothic conspiracy in 415. Constantius restored Roman rule in southern and central Iberia and ceded
Aquitania Secunda to the Visigoths in return for their assistance against the Vandals, Alans and Suebi. , a prominent figure in the court of two Western Roman emperors, her half-brother
Honorius and her son
Valentinian III Constantius married the widowed Galla Placidia and the childless Honorius appointed them Augustus and
Augusta early in 421, but Theodosius II did not acknowledge Constantius' promotion. Constantius died while planning a military campaign against the Eastern Roman Empire, and Galla Placidia lost Honorius' favor. She fled to Constantinople along with her children,
Valentinian and
Honoria shortly before Honorius died on 15 August 423. Three months later a high-ranking official,
John was elected emperor in Rome, but Theodosius proclaimed the six-year-old Valentinian Caesar. In preparation for an invasion from the Eastern Roman Empire, John ordered the ("curator of the palace")
Flavius Aetius to hire Hunnic mercenary troops. Aetius who had spent years with the Huns as a hostage succeeded, but by the time he returned to Italy, an Eastern Roman expeditionary force had defeated John's army. John was executed and Valentinian was acknowledged as the new emperor in the west. Aetius persuaded his Hunnic mercenaries to leave Italy in return for his appointment as the new military commander in Gaul. As Valentinian was still a minor, high-ranking officers like Aetius and the military commander of Africa
Bonifatius were competing for power. The Vandals and Alans suffered heavy losses during their fights with the Romans and Visigoths in Iberia and their king
Gaiseric decided to guide them to northern Africa in 429. They landed at
Tangiers and Bonifatius was unable to stop their advance. The Eastern Roman general
Aspar came to the rescue of
Carthage, but Bonifatius was ordered to return to Italy, probably by Galla Placidia who needed his support against Aetius. Bonifacius routed Aetius
at Rimini, but he died of the wounds received in the battle. Aetius secured the Huns' support, enforcing his appointment as the
supreme commander of the Western Roman army in 433. In two years the Eastern Roman reinforcements left Carthage and Valentinian concluded a peace treaty with the Vandals, acknowledging their acquisition of much of northern Africa. The Huns had meanwhile established their new power base in the plains along the river
Tisza and Valentinian had to cede Pannonia to them. The Huns extracted 350 pounds of gold as a yearly tribute from the Eastern Roman Empire, and the amount was doubled in a new treaty in 434. The same treaty prohibited the Romans to receive fugitives from the
Hunnic Empire, but the influx of asylum seekers could not be stopped. The Vandals resumed the war and
captured Carthage in 439. Theodosius dispatched relief troops to north Africa, but a Hunnic invasion of the northern Balkans forced him to abandon the naval campaign. In return for the renewal of the peace treaty, Theodosius agreed to pay a higher yearly tribute, probably 1,400 pounds of gold, but after his fleet returned from northern Africa he ceased to pay it. In 442 Valentinian acknowledged the Vandals' conquest of two wealthy provinces, Africa proconsularis and
Byzacena in return for their abandonment of the rest of the
Maghreb. The Vandals built a new fleet and emerged as a major naval power in the western Mediterranean. To enforce the tribute payment from the Eastern Romans, the Hunnic king Attila plundered the Balkans as far as Constantinople and
Thermopylae in 447. He only withdrew his troops when Theodosius agreed to pay 6,000 pounds of gold in compensation for the arrears and increase the annual tribute to 2,100 pounds of gold. around 460 The childless Theodosius died in a riding accident on 28 July 450. His sister
Pulcheria chose an elderly military commander
Marcian as her husband without consulting with Valentinian. She allegedly acted in concern with the all-powerful Aspar who had been Marcian's superior in the army. Marcian was proclaimed emperor in Constantinople in late August. On learning of Attila's plan about a military campaign in the west he stopped tribute payments to the Huns. Attila launched a massive incursion into Gaul at the head of a mixed army of Huns and subject peoples. Aetius assembled Roman, Visigothic and Burgundian troops and engaged the enemy
at the Catalaunian fields in June 451. Although the battle was inconclusive, Attila withdrew from Gaul. Next year he invaded Italy, but supply problems and an epidemic forced him to again withdraw. He died unexpectedly of bleeding in 453. In a year, the Hunnic Empire collapsed due to a civil war between his sons and a revolt of the subject peoples. With the Hunnic threat vanishing, Valentinian got rid of the domineering Aetius with the assistance of his eunuch courtier
Heraclius who murder the general in September 454. Aetius' death was revenged by his two retainers who assassinated Valentinian on 16 March 455. Officials who were staying at Rome proclaimed one of their number
Petronius Maximus as Valentinian's successor. He married Valentinian's widow
Licinia Eudoxia. Her elder daughter by Valentinian
Eudocia was married off to Maximus' son
Palladius breaking her engagement to Gaiseric's heir,
Huneric. The Vandals occupied the remnants of Roman Africa and Geiseric sent his fleet against Rome. News of the arrival of the Vandal ships caused panic in the city and a mob slaughtered Maximus and Palladius on 31 May. The Vandals
sacked Rome for two weeks and captured many prisoners, among them Licinia Eudoxia and her two daughters, Eudocia and
Placidia. While Rome was in anarchy, the Gallic troops proclaimed their commander
Avitus emperor. He hastened to Rome, but his attempts to secure his Gallic and Visigothic soldiers' food supply and salary at all costs caused a general discontent. In October 456, two powerful generals
Ricimer and
Majorian took up arms against him, enforcing his abdication. The two generals entered into negotiations with Marcian about Avitus' succession, but Marcian died in Constantinople on 26 January 457. Marcian's son-in-law
Anthemius was bypassed, and the still powerful Aspar secured the Eastern Roman throne for the
Thracian Leo I who had been his lieutenant. Leo rewarded Ricimer and Majorian with honors and the two generals agreed that Majorian was to rule the Western Empire first as Caesar, then as Augustus. Majorian restored imperial rule in Gaul and launched successful campaigns against the Visigoths and Suebi, but his position weakened after the Vandals
crushed his fleet. Assuming the role of king-maker, Ricimer captured and executed Majoran and proclaimed
Libius Severus, a man of unknown background, emperor in 461. Leo and most Western Roman generals did not acknowledge Severus' ascension. The Western Roman Empire quickly disintegrated as
Aegidius held sway over Gaul and
Marcellinus assumed power in Dalmatia. The Vandals seized
Corsica,
Sardinia and the
Balearic Island. Severus died in November 465. A sixteen-month-long interregnum followed until Ricimer and Leo accepted Anthemius as a compromise candidate. Marcellinus accompanied Anthemius to Rome and Ricimer married Anthemius' daughter
Alypia. Eastern and western forces were united for a common attack against the Vandals in Sardinia and Sicily, but during the campaign Marcellinus was murdered, likely on Ricimer's order. In Gaul, the imperial government left the provincials to their fate. After Aegidius died in 464, his son
Syagrius ruled the Roman enclaves. In the east, Leo I promoted the career of an Isaurian commander
Zeno to diminish Aspar's power. He married off his daughter
Ariadne to Zeno, but his younger daughter
Leontia was in short married to Aspar's son
Patricius who was made Caesar on this occasion. In 471 a popular riot broke out against Aspar and his mainly Gothic troops in Constantinople, enabling Leo to arrest and murder Aspar. The Gothic mercenaries mutinied and the rebellion enabled the Pannonian Goths, known as
Ostrogoths, to invade the Balkans, and the
Gepids to seize
Sirmium. Leo could only appease the Ostrogoths through land grants in Macedonia and Thrace. Relationship between Ricimer and Anthemius grew tense and Ricimer attacked Rome with the assistance with his Burgundian nephew
Gundobad. Leo appointed a Roman aristocrat
Olybrius to mediate between Anthemius and Ricimer. Olybrius had married Valentinian III's younger daughter Placidia. On his arrival to Rome, he was proclaimed emperor by Ricimer. In July 472
Rome surrendered and Ricimer's troops killed Anthemius, but both Ricimer and Olybrius died before the end of the year. After a five-month interregnum, Gundobad acclaimed
Glycerius, a court official, emperor, but Leo sent Marcellinus' nephew
Julius Nepos to Rome to claim the imperial throne. Gundobad's father, the Burgundian king
Gondioc, died in 473, and he left Italy to claim his inheritance. After his protector's departure, Glycerius abdicated in Julius Nepos' favor. In Constantinople, Leo was succeeded by his seven-year-old grandson
Leo II in 474. His father Zeno assumed the regency. When the child-emperor died before the end of the year Zeno became the new emperor. His mother-in-law
Verina and her brother
Basiliscus forced him to flee from Constantinople with the support of the Isaurian general
Illus and the Ostrogothic leader
Theoderic Strabo. Basiliscus was proclaimed emperor, but he lost popular support due to his interventions in church affairs. Zeno returned to Constantinople and deposed Basiliscus without much opposition in 476. In Rome, a powerful Pannonian general
Orestes mutinied against Julius Nepos, forcing him to withdraw to Dalmatia. Orestes proclaimed his son
Romulus Augustulus the new emperor at Ravenna, but he was unable to pay off his troops and they rebelled. One of their commanders,
Odoacer, captured Orestes and
deposed Romulus Augustulus on 4 September 476. ==Survival and reconquest==