Honorius was the worst emperor, he could have had the Gothic armies fight for him under much much better conditions than eventually had to be given, and instead he got Rome sacked. He was a possibly the worst emperor in western history.
Stilicho certainly wasn't death to Honorius, not for 13 years. If you mean Stilicho blocked Honorius' road to real power, sure. But death no, he needed an emperor to give him legitimacy.If you were Honorius wouldn't you have done the same? Skilled and charismatic generals were death to emperors at this point. Iron Law of Organizations.
The guy was a kid when he took the purple - you can't blame him for what happened during the early period of his reign.
Now, his reign was the dagger in the heart of the WRE, but imho, there is no reason why an Honorius who emerged from his adolescence as a great and effective reformer couldn't have reformed the WRE around Italy, I guess...
But even that would have been a successor state vulnerable to predation from the ERE and attack from the "barbarian" successor states.
Not to get into a fight about facts and a history which is poorly understood due to the paucity of sources but...Stilicho certainly wasn't death to Honorius, not for 13 years. If you mean Stilicho blocked Honorius' road to real power, sure. But death no, he needed an emperor to give him legitimacy.
Of course, an effective reformer Honorius would get a very different appreciation from posterity. As you say he'd have faced the same giant problems that Stilicho's real successor Aetius did and would have been as unlikely to overcome them. But the Honorius who actually existed did something worse than just being ineffective, he murdered his best general and allowed his army to desert, thus eliminating the strongest force for keeping the WRE together in some form. If only he'd stuck to being ineffective! I emphasize structural factors, particularly in those historical eras where our information about conjectural factors is limited and/or unreliable. In the case of the WRE I don't believe a strong emperor could have succeeded unless he got really lucky at retaking Africa. Majorian was a capable general and strategically minded enough to focus his efforts where it counted but he still failed. As for Honorius, IMO very stupid people do have the agency to make a bad situation worse.
Supposing a smart Honorius... alright, I like the thought experiment.Not to get into a fight about facts and a history which is poorly understood due to the paucity of sources but...
And none of this is meant to disagree with you...
But if you were Honorius without the benefit of hindsight, and with the imperfect and biased information which he had... What would you do?
Stilicho commanded your army and at any moment could have turned on the capital and taken over. Yes, he was loyal when you were a kid, but now when you are older and can move against him, is that relationship the same?
I think not.
So... There is a guy who can overthrow you and take the throne and has all the resources and ability to do so... Do you not move against him?
Ultimately, it was disastrous, but Honorius was not exactly a seer.
I think he was acting entirely about self preservation of the little world (however debauched and run by debauched persons it may have been) and acted rationally.
The guy wasn't Trajan or Constantine or Diocletian. He was a kid who grew up raising pigeons and having his every need catered to by slaves. He had no perspective. And he knew , I think that he wasn't going to be able to counter someone like Stilicho in open conflict. So he acted out of petty spite and base fear.
Again, we don't have great records about what happened at the time, but I think that we don't look at a lot of history from the perspective of the people living it.
The Balkans made it out OK-ish, but only in the sixth century. It remained a mess from the first Goth incursion until well after the WRE fell. The ERE held on to the cities where it drew some taxes but most of it, and all of the food needed for Constantinople, came from Asia Minor, the Levant and particularly Egypt. The various barbarian peoples wandering and sometimes settling in its European lands provided mercenaries, also a useful resource but at very high cost.Augustus' power was not based on his supposed virtue but on the fact that he controlled the army and who controls the army owns the empire. That's a fact that did not change in all of Roman history.
So I have to agree with Yakman here that there is not much Honorius could have done to preserve his position.
Another thing to keep in mind is that the barbarian threat wasn't really understood in that particular moment. Yes whole tribes crossing into the empire and making a mess in Gauls was grave but that didn't necessarily meant the empire was on the brink of extinction.
Goths already made a mess in the East not so long ago and that part of the Empire made it out okayish so why the West would be different ?
Augustinian Cowardly EscapismA better policy by the late WRE emperors could have allowed the WRE it survive in some form, perhaps as a regional power based around Italy and southern Gaul, in a manner analogous to the survival of the Byzantine state two centuries later. The empire certainly had some significant advantages over the barbarians, such as the administrative infrastructure of the empire and the support of the Catholic church, which could have held it together if the leadership of the empire had been of a higher calibre.
I cannot see any realistic scenario where the WRE restores the boarders and returns to dominate Europe.
there was little chance that he would have been able to do so.Augustinian Cowardly Escapism
What if Julian had lived much longer and restored the gods that had held Rome together for the centuries when it was strongest?
The empire was pretty christian by then, and not many people actually liked Julian, who wasn't an exceptional emperor anyway,so there was very little, if any chance of that appening. And either way, while it would have been cultiurally important, it wouldn't have had any affect on keeping the empire going as a polity. There's literally no argument or evidence that reverting to Jupiter worship would have fixed any of the structural tax, elite buy-in, and diplomatic problems that doomed the empire.Augustinian Cowardly Escapism
What if Julian had lived much longer and restored the gods that had held Rome together for the centuries when it was strongest?
ridiculous.Rome had structural issue's that led to significant decline in army recruitment going towards its fall. Perhaps you would think that the old gods were more warlike allowing for more war enthusiasm and recruits yet the Romans had to change the legionary requirments several times in their history for the sake of being able to recruit more men so a systematic shortage requiring reform had propped up before. For example Marius his reforms during the time of the Republic. It was difficult for Rome to have it's required reforms in imperial times, there were not many emperors that lived long enough and had build up enough support to be able to do some reforms and the senators hardly had power or even interrest.
Good to see someone finally answer the Punic propagandist, the snake oil salesman from Hippo. We have already discussed his view in this thread with the implication that there were some who held the opposite view but we haven't seen anyone proclaim it.Augustinian Cowardly Escapism
What if Julian had lived much longer and restored the gods that had held Rome together for the centuries when it was strongest?
Roosters Crow in the Morning, Chickenhawks When Your Day Is DoneRome had structural issues that led to significant decline in army recruitment going towards its fall. Perhaps you would think that the old gods were more warlike. allowing for more war enthusiasm and recruits, yet the Romans had to change the legionary requirements several times in their history for the sake of being able to recruit more men, so a systematic shortage requiring reform had propped up before. For example Marius his reforms during the time of the Republic.
There is this weird modern conception that people back in the day were 'better' than people now.Roosters Crow in the Morning, Chickenhawks When Your Day Is Done
When did the requirement for all patrician youth to serve end? Typical of their original patriotism, in one Second Century BC Cadet Legion battle, every richkid 18-year-old died. Lives sacrificed from patriotic bravery also left openings for class mobility.
RIDICULOUS.Also, one of the big problems was loss of elite support. Basically rich people got increasingly less interested and invested in the overall sucess of the empire, and the biggest problem was this led to decreased taxes. Taxes allow you to pay, equip, and feed soldiers, no taxes, no army, hence why losing Carthage was so terrible, it was one of the primary centers of tax production in the west. That's a primary factor in the strength of Rome, efficient, wide-reaching taxation system that let them raise enough money to equip 6-figure strong standing army. Basically all other concerns RE: the military are secondary.
RIDICULOUS.
This fascination with the legions is just silly. They were a massive drain on the public finances, and were primarily used to topple the Empire. There was nothing, not in the least, until Atilla, which would justify the size and scope of the Roman legion system. It was bad public policy from the start.
RIDICULOUS.
This fascination with the legions is just silly. They were a massive drain on the public finances, and were primarily used to topple the Empire. There was nothing, not in the least, until Atilla, which would justify the size and scope of the Roman legion system. It was bad public policy from the start.
Also, the idea that the rich of the early Empire were happy go lucky paying their taxes and then they got corrupt later on is pretty silly.