First siege of Rome Attempting to come to an agreement with Honorius, Alaric asked for hostages, gold, and permission to move to Pannonia, but Honorius refused. Alaric and his Visigoths sacked
Ariminum and other cities as they moved south. Alaric's march was unopposed and leisurely, as if they were going to a festival, according to
Zosimus. The Goths under Alaric laid siege to the city in late 408. Panic swept through its streets, and there was an attempt to reinstate pagan rituals in the still religiously mixed city to ward off the Visigoths.
Pope Innocent I even agreed to it, provided it be done in private. The pagan priests, however, said the sacrifices could only be done publicly in the
Roman Forum, and the idea was abandoned. (1821–1896). New York, Sherpherd Gallery.
Serena, the wife of the
proscribed Stilicho and a cousin of emperor Honorius, was in the city and believed by the Roman populace, with little evidence, to be encouraging Alaric's invasion.
Galla Placidia, the sister of the emperor Honorius, was also trapped in the city and gave her consent to the Roman Senate to execute Serena, who was then strangled to death. Hopes of help from the Imperial government faded as the siege continued and Alaric took control of the
Tiber River, which cut the supplies going into Rome. Grain was rationed to one-half and then one-third of its previous amount. Starvation and disease rapidly spread throughout the city, and rotting bodies were left unburied in the streets. The envoys asked under what terms the siege could be lifted, and Alaric demanded all the gold and silver, household goods, and barbarian slaves in the city. One envoy asked what would be left to the citizens of Rome. Alaric replied, "Their lives." The barbarian slaves fled to Alaric as well, swelling his ranks to about 40,000. Many of the barbarian slaves were probably Radagaisus's former followers. Zosimus reports one such statue was of
Virtus, and that when it was melted down to pay off barbarians it seemed "all that remained of the Roman valor and intrepidity was totally extinguished". Honorius consented to the payment of the ransom, and with it the Visigoths lifted the siege and withdrew to
Etruria in December 408. the Senate sent an embassy to the imperial court at Ravenna to encourage the Emperor to come to terms with the Goths, and to give Roman aristocratic children as hostages to the Goths as insurance. Alaric would then resume his alliance with the Roman Empire. Honorius, under the influence of Olympius, refused and called in five
legions from
Dalmatia, totaling six thousand men. They were to go to Rome and garrison the city, but their commander, a man named Valens, marched his men into Etruria, believing it cowardly to go around the Goths. He and his men were intercepted and attacked by Alaric's full force, and almost all were killed or captured. Only 100 managed to escape and reach Rome. A second Senatorial embassy, this time including Pope Innocent I, was sent with Gothic guards to Honorius to plead with him to accept the Visigoths' demands. The imperial government also received word that Ataulf, Alaric's brother-in-law, had crossed the
Julian Alps with his Goths into Italy with the intent of joining Alaric. Honorius summoned together all available Roman forces in northern Italy. He placed 300 Huns of the imperial guard under the command of Olympius, and possibly the other forces as well, and ordered him to intercept Ataulf. They clashed near
Pisa, and despite his force supposedly killing 1,100 Goths and losing only 17 of his own men, Olympius was forced to retreat back to Ravenna. Zosimus seems to imply that only the Huns under Olympius took part in this fight. Jovius, the
praetorian prefect of Italy, replaced Olympius as the power behind the throne and received the title of
patrician. Jovius engineered a mutiny of soldiers in Ravenna who demanded the killing of
magister utriusque militiae Turpilio and
magister equitum Vigilantius; he had both men killed. Jovius was a friend of Alaric's and had been a supporter of Stilicho, and thus the new government was open to negotiations. of
Anicius Petronius Probus (406)|378x378px Infuriated, Alaric broke off negotiations, and Jovius returned to Ravenna to strengthen his relationship with the Emperor. Honorius was now firmly committed to war, and Jovius swore on the Emperor's head never to make peace with Alaric. Alaric himself soon changed his mind when he heard Honorius was attempting to recruit 10,000 Huns to fight the Goths. He gathered a group of Roman bishops and sent them to Honorius with his new terms. He no longer sought Roman office or tribute in gold. He now only requested lands in Noricum and as much grain as the Emperor found necessary. Alaric took
Portus and renewed the siege of Rome in late 409. Faced with the return of starvation and disease, the Senate met with Alaric. He demanded that they appoint one of their own as Emperor to rival Honorius, and he instigated the election of the elderly
Priscus Attalus to that end, a pagan who permitted himself to be baptized. Alaric was then made
magister utriusque militiae and his brother-in-law Ataulf was given the position
comes domesticorum equitum in the new, rival government, and the siege was lifted. Attalus and Alaric then marched to Ravenna, forcing some cities in northern Italy to submit to Attalus. Their arrival strengthened Honorius's resolve to await news of what had happened in Africa. Heraclian had defeated Attalus's force and cut supplies to Rome, threatening another famine in the city. Peter Heather speculates Sarus had also lost the election for the kingship of the Goths to Alaric in the 390s. On 24 August 410 the Visigoths entered Rome through its
Salarian Gate, according to some opened by treachery, according to others by want of food, and pillaged the city for three days. Many of the city's great buildings were ransacked, including the
mausoleums of
Augustus and
Hadrian, in which many
emperors of the past were buried; the ashes of the urns in both tombs were scattered. Any and all moveable goods were stolen all over the city. Some of the few places the Goths spared were the two major basilicas connected to
Peter and
Paul, though from the
Lateran Palace they stole a massive, 2,025-pound silver
ciborium that had been a gift from
Constantine. The
Basilica Aemilia and the
Basilica Julia were also burned. The people of Rome were devastated. Many Romans were taken captive, including the Emperor's sister,
Galla Placidia. Some citizens would be ransomed, others would be sold into slavery, and still others would be raped and killed.
Pelagius, a Roman monk from Britain, survived the siege and wrote an account of the experience in a letter to a young woman named Demetrias. Many Romans were tortured into revealing the locations of their valuables. One was the 85-year-old
Saint Marcella, who had no hidden gold as she lived in pious poverty. She was a close friend of St. Jerome, and he detailed the incident in a letter to a woman named Principia who had been with Marcella during the sack. Marcella died of her injuries a few days later. The sack was nonetheless, by the standards of the age, restrained. There was no general slaughter or wholesale enslavement of the city's inhabitants and the two main basilicas of Peter and Paul were nominated places of sanctuary. Most of the buildings and monuments in the city survived intact, though stripped of their valuables. Some refugees were robbed as they sought asylum, , 1883 The historian
Procopius records a story where, on hearing the news that Rome had "perished", Honorius was initially shocked, thinking the news was in reference to a favorite chicken he had named "Rome" (Latin,
Roma): ==Aftermath==