In the 5th century, the Western Roman Empire did not die only from external enemies — it also destroyed itself through ruthless power struggles.
🏛️ Stilicho’s downfall
Stilicho was Rome’s most powerful general, a “barbarian” (of Vandal origin) loyal to the Empire.
- The dilemma: to defend Italy against the Visigothic king Alaric, he had to strip the Rhine frontier of its best legions.
- The fall: despite his victories, he became a victim of court intrigue and was executed in 408 on the orders of Emperor Honorius. His death left Rome without a defender.
🏚️ Alaric and the sack of Rome (410)
Alaric I, king of the Visigoths, was not a simple invader. He had served in the Roman army and demanded land and gold for his people.
- The shock: in 410, after being betrayed by the emperor, Alaric seized Rome and looted it for three days. It was a psychological earthquake. “The city that conquered the world is conquered,” wrote Saint Jerome.
- In Gaul: the Visigoths eventually settled in the southwest (Aquitaine), creating the first autonomous barbarian kingdom on Gallic soil.
🎭 The carousel of usurpers in Gaul
While the legitimate emperor stayed shut inside Ravenna, Gaul became a playground for rebels.
- Constantine III: a Roman soldier proclaimed emperor in Britain who crossed to Gaul in 407 to try to restore order.
- Anarchy: multiple military leaders proclaimed themselves emperor at the same time, fighting each other instead of stopping Vandals and Suebi. This permanent civil war was the real cause of Roman powerlessness.
🛡️ Aetius: “the last of the Romans”
Amid this chaos, General Aetius managed to preserve a semblance of authority for 20 years.
- His tactic: using one barbarian group against another (for example, Huns against Burgundians).
- His achievement: he was the architect of victory against Attila in 451. But like Stilicho, he was assassinated by his own emperor, jealous of his glory — sealing Rome’s fate.
🧠 Key takeaways
- Civil wars: Romans fought for the throne while “barbarians” entered.
- Alaric: proved Rome was no longer invulnerable (410).
- Stilicho & Aetius: the last great defenders, both betrayed by their emperors.
- Consequence: the Roman army ceased to exist as a unified institution.
📸 Image credits
- Diptych of Stilicho — [Public Domain], via Wikimedia Commons
- Alaric entering Rome — [Public Domain], via Wikimedia Commons