Genseric The Vandal Sacks Rome [Heroes Of The Middle Ages]
A FEW years after the death of Attila, Rome was once more in the hands of an invader, Genseric the Vandal. The Vandals were great wanderers. They slowly made their way from the shores of the Baltic Sea to the Danube, passed through what is now France, and went south into Spain. Only eight or nine miles from Spain, just across what is now the Strait of Gibraltar, lay Africa.
Northern Africa
belonged to Rome. It was one of her most valued provinces because, while Italy
could not raise enough grain to feed her people, Africa could supply all that
was needed. Genseric longed to add Africa to his domain, and he was more
fortunate than most men who wish to invade a country, for after a little while
he received a cordial invitation to come to Africa and bring his soldiers with
him. The invitation was given by no less a man than the brave general Boniface,
who had been appointed governor of the province. This is the way it came about.
Aëtius was jealous of the success of Boniface, and he persuaded the mother of
the child emperor to send the governor a letter recalling him. Then he himself
wrote a letter to his "friend" Boniface with the warning that the
empress was angry with him, and he would lose his head if he risked it in Rome.
Boniface was in a hard position. He concluded that the safest thing for him to
do was to remain where he was, and ask Genseric to help him to hold Africa.
Genseric did not
wait to be urged. He hurried across the Strait of Gibraltar and began his
career of violence. A Vandal conquest was more severe than that of any other
tribe, for the Vandals seemed to delight in ruining everything that came into
their power. They killed men, women, and children; they burned houses and
churches; and they destroyed whatever treasures they could not carry away with
them. Some said that whenever they conquered a country, they cut down every
fruit tree within its limits. This is why people who seem to enjoy spoiling
things are sometimes called vandals.
After a while
Boniface discovered how he had been tricked by Aëtius, and he begged Genseric
to leave the country; but the barbarian refused, and Boniface could not drive
him away. Genseric and his followers settled in Africa, making the city of
Carthage the capital of their kingdom, and they became a nation of pirates.
They built light swift vessels and ravaged the shore of any country where they
expected to find plunder.
All this time
Genseric had his eyes fixed upon Italy, and again he was fortunate enough to be
invited to a land which he was longing to invade. This time the widow of a murdered
emperor begged him to come and avenge her wrongs. He wasted no time but crossed
the narrow sea and marched up to the walls of Rome. Behold, the gates were
flung open, and once more Leo, now a hoary-headed man, came forth with his
clergy, all in their priestly robes, to beg the Vandals to have mercy. Generic
made some promises, but they were soon broken. For fourteen days the Vandals
did what they would. They were in no hurry; they had plenty of ships to carry
away whatever they chose; and after they had chosen, there was little but the
walls remaining. They snatched at gold and silver and jewels, of course, but
they took also brass, copper, and bronze, silken robes, and even furniture.
Works of art were nothing to them unless they were of precious metal and could
be melted; and what they did not care to take with them, they broke or burned.
The widowed empress had expected to be treated with the greatest honour, but
the Vandals stripped off her jewels and threw her and her two daughters on
board their ships to be carried to Africa as prisoners.
Genseric kept his
nation together as long as he lived; and indeed, though the Romans made many
expeditions against the Vandals, it was nearly eighty years before the pirates
were conquered.