While Gaiseric has not become a household name like other 'barbarian'
leaders such as Attila or Genghis Khan, his sack of Rome in AD455 has
made his tribe, the Vandals, synonymous with mindless destruction.
Gaiseric, however, was no moronic thug, proving himself a highly
skilful political and military leader and was one of the dominant
forces in Western Mediterranean region for almost half a century.The
book starts with a concise history of the Vandals before Gaiseric's
reign and analyses the tactics and weaponry with which they carved a
path across the Western Roman Empire to Spain. It was in Spain that
Gaiseric became their king and he that led the Vandals across the
straits of Gibraltar to seize a new home in North Africa, depriving
Rome of one of its most important remaining provinces and a key source
of grain. Roman attempts at reconquest were defeated and the Balearic
Islands, Sicily, Corsica and Sardinia were all added to Gaiseric's
kingdom. His son, Huneric, was even betrothed to Eudoxia, daughter of
the Emperor Valentinian III and it was her appeal for help after her
father's murder that led Gaiseric to invade and sack Rome. He took
Eudoxia and the other imperial ladies back to Africa with him,
subsequently defeating further attempts by the Eastern Roman Empire to
recapture the vital North African territory. Ian Hughes' analysis of
the Gaiseric as king and general reveals him as the barbarian who did
more than anyone else to bring down the Western Roman Empire, but also
as a great leader in his own right and one of the most significant men
of his age.
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The Vandal Who Destroyed Rome
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781473890305
Publisert
2023
Utgiver
Independent Publishers Group (Chicago Review Press)
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter