History of the Franks
Book 2
9. The question who was the first of the kings of the Franks is
disregarded by many writers. Though the history of Sulpicius Alexander
tells much of them, still it does not name their first king, but says
that they had dukes. However, it is well to relate what he says of them.
For when he tells that Maximus, losing all hope of empire, remained within
Aquileia, almost beside himself, he adds: "At that time the Franks
burst into the province of Germany under Genobaud, Marcomer, and Sunno,
their dukes, and having broken through the boundary wall they slew most
of the people and laid waste the fertile districts especially, and aroused
fear even in Cologne. And when word was carried to Trèves, Nanninus
and Quintinus, the military officers to whom Maximus had intrusted his
infant son and the defense of the Gauls, assembled an army and met at
Cologne. Now the enemy, laden with plunder after devastating the richest
parts of the provinces, had crossed the Rhine, leaving a good many of
their men on Roman soil all ready to renew their ravages. An attack upon
these turned to the advantage of the Romans, and many Franks perished
by the sword near Carbonnière. And when the Romans were consulting
after their success whether they ought to cross into Francia, Nanninus
said no, because he knew the Franks would not be unprepared and would
doubtless be stronger in their own land. And since thi displeased Quintinus
and the remainder of the officers, Nanninus returned to Mayence, and Quintinus
crossed the Rhine with his army near the stronghold of Neuss, and at his
second camp from the river he found dwellings abandoned by their occupants
and great villages deserted. For the Franks pretended to be afraid and
retired into the more remote tracts, where they built an abattis on the
edge of the woods. And so the cowardly soldiers burned all the dwellings,
thinking that to rage against them was the winning of victory, and they
passed a wakeful night under the burden of their arms. At the first glimmer
of dawn they entered the wooded country under Quintinus as commander of
the battle, and wandered in safety till nearly midday, entangling
themselves in the winding paths. At last, when they found everything solidly
shut up by great fences, they struggled to make their exit into the marshy
fields which were adjacent to the woods, and the enemy appeared here and
there, and sheltered by trunks of trees or standing on the abattis as
if on the summit of towers, they sent as if from engines a shower of arrows
poisoned by the juices of herbs, so that sure death followed even superficial
wounds inflicted in places that were not mortal. Later the army was surrounded
by the enemy in greater number, and it eagerly rushed into the open places
which the Franks had left unoccupied. And the horsemen were the first
to plunge into the morasses, and the bodies of men and animals fell indiscriminately
together, and they were overwhelmed by their own confusion. The foot soldiers
also who had escaped the hoofs of the horses were impeded by the mud,
and extricated themselves with difficulty, and hid again in panic in the
woods from which they had struggled a little before. And so the ranks
were thrown into disorder and the legions cut in pieces. Heraclius, tribune
of the Jovinians, and nearly all the officers were slain, when night and
the lurking places of the woods offered a safe escape to a few."
This he narrated in the third book of his History.
And in the fourth book, when he tells
of the killing of Victor son of Maximus, the tyrant, he says: "At
that time Carietto and Sirus who had been appointed in place of Nanninus,
were absent in the province of Germany with the army opposed to the Franks".
And a little later when the Franks had taken booty from Germany, he added:
"Arbogastes, wishing no further delay, warned Cæsar that the
punishment due must be exacted from the Franks, unless they speedily restored
all the plunder they had taken the previous year when the legions were
destroyed, and delivered up the instigators of the war to be punished
for their treachery in breaking the peace." He related that this
had been done under the leadership of dukes and says further: "A
few days later he held a hasty conference with Marcomer and Sunno, princes
[note: 'Regalabus'] of the Franks and required hostages
of them as usual, and then retired to Treves to spend the winter."
But when he calls them princes, we do not know whether they were kings
or held in the place of kings. Still the same writer, when he told of
the hard straits of the emperor Valentinian, added this: "While events
of various sorts were taking place in the East throughout Thrace, the
public order was disturbed in Gaul. Valentinian the emperor was shut up
in Vienne in the palace, and reduced almost below the position of a private
person, and the military command was given over to the Frankish allies,
and even the civil offices fell under the control of Arbogast's faction,
and no one of all the oathbound soldiery was found to dare to heed
the familiar speech or obey the command of the emperor." Then he
says: "In the same year Arbogast pursued with heathenish hate the
princes of the Franks, Sunno and Marcomer, and hastened to Cologne in
the depth of winter, since he knew that all the retreats of Francia could
be safely penetrated and ravaged with fire when the woods, left bare and
dry by the fall of the leaves, could not conceal men lying in ambush.
And so he gathered an army and crossed the Rhine, and devastated the country
of the Brictori, near the bank, and also the district which the Chamavi
inhabit, and no one met him any where, except that a few of the Ampsivarii
and Chatti appeared with Marcomer as duke on the ridges of distant hills."
At another time this writer, no longer mentioning dukes and princes, openly
asserts that the Franks had a king, and without mentioning his name he
says: " Then the tyrant Eugenius undertook a military expedition,
and hastened to the Rhine to renew in the customary way the old alliances
with the kings of the Alemanni and the Franks and to threaten the barbarian
nations at that time with a great army." So much the historian mentioned
above wrote about the Franks.
Renatus Profuturus Frigeridus, whom
we have already mentioned, in his story of the capture and destruction
of Rome by the Goths, says: "Meantime when Goare had gone over to
the Romans, Respendial, king of the Alamanni, turned the army of his people
from the Rhine, since the Vandals were getting the worse of the war with
the Franks, having lost their king Godegisil, and about 20,000 of the
army, and all the Vandals would have been exterminated if the army of
the Alamanni [note: Alamanni for Alani] had not come to
their aid in time." It is surprising to us that when he names the
kings of the other nations he does not name the king of the Franks as
well. However, when he says that Constantine, after seizing imperial power,
commanded his son Constantius to come to him from the Spains, he speaks
as follows: "The tyrant Constantine summoned from the Spains his
son Constans, also a tyrant, in order to consult with him about their
general policy; and so Constans left at Saragossa his court and his wife,
and gave Gerontius charge over all in the Spains, and hastened to his
father without breaking his journey. And when they met, many days passed
and there was no danger from Italy, and Constantine gave himself up to
gluttony and urged his son to return to Spain. And while Constans was
sending his troops forward, being still with his father, news came from
Spain that Maximus, one of his clients, had been given imperial authority
by Gerontius, and was securing a following of the barbarians. Alarmed
at this, they sent Edobeccus forward to the German tribes, and Constans
and Decimus Rusticus, now a prefect,-he had been master of the offices,-hastened
to the Gauls, with the intention of presently returning to Constantine
with the Franks and Alamanni and all the soldiers."
<< Previous Page
Next
Page >>
© 2004-2007 Northvegr.
Most of the material on this site is in the public domain. However, many people have worked very hard to bring these texts to you so if you do use the work, we would appreciate it if you could give credit to both the Northvegr site and to the individuals who worked to bring you these texts. A small number of texts are copyrighted and cannot be used without the author's permission. Any text that is copyrighted will have a clear notation of such on the main index page for that text. Inquiries
can be sent to info@northvegr.org.
Northvegr™ and the Northvegr symbol are trademarks and service marks
of the Northvegr Foundation.
|
> Northvegr™ Foundation
>> About Northvegr Foundation
>> What's New
>> Contact Info
>> Link to Us
>> E-mail Updates
>> Links
>> Mailing Lists
>> Statement of Purpose
>> Socio-Political Stance
>> Donate
> The Vík - Online Store
>> More Norse Merchandise
> Advertise With Us
> Heithni
>> Books & Articles
>> Trúlög
>> Sögumál
>>
Heithinn Date Calculator
>> Recommended Reading
>>
The 30 Northern Virtues
> Recommended Heithinn Faith Organizations
>> Alfaleith.org
> NESP
>> Transcribe Texts
>> Translate Texts
>> HTML Coding
>> PDF Construction
> N. European Studies
>> Texts
>> Texts in PDF Format
>> NESP Reviews
>> Germanic Sources
>> Roman Scandinavia
>> Maps
> Language Resources
>> Zoëga Old Icelandic Dict.
>> Cleasby-Vigfusson Dictionary
>> Sweet's Old Icelandic Primer
>> Old Icelandic Grammar
>> Holy Language Lexicon
>> Old English Lexicon
>> Gothic Grammar Project
>> Old English Project
>> Language Resources
> Northern Family
>> Northern Fairy Tales
>> Norse-ery Rhymes
>>
Children's Books/Links
>> Tafl
>> Northern Recipes
>> Kubb
> Other Sections
>> The Holy Fylfot
>> Tradition Roots
Please Visit Our Sponsors
- Référencement
- Alfaleith.org - Heithni, Viðartrú
- Odin's Journey
- Baman - Iceland/Aboriginal Australia
- Biker's Booty
- Création site Internet Paris
- Pagan T-shirts
- Appartements
- Chalets au Québec
- Logo Designers
- Web Design
- Appartements Montreal
- Espace Bureau Montreal
- London Tours
- Spanish Property Legal Advice
- Multi Pret Hypotheque
- Company Logo Design
- Wiccan T-shirts
- Art Gallery, Painting artists
- free logo design reviews
- Heathen, Heathenism, Norse Pagan
- Logo design by LogoBee
- Pagan Shirts
- Norse Pagan Religion
- Triumph, BSA, Norton, Euro Motorcycles - Accessories
- Logo Maker
- Logo Design - Business Logos, Inc.
- Logo Design - Logo Maker
- Create A Website
- Wiccan Shirts
- Mortgages
- Multi-Prêts Hypothèques
- Viking T-shirts
- Hewlett Packard Ink Cartridges
- Indian Recipes
- Logo Design London
- Logo Design
- Logo Design UK
- Subvention et financement PME
- Heathen T-shirts
- Medical Alert, Emergency response
- orlando hotels
- Slot Machines for Vikings
- Norse Pagan Clothing and Merchandise
- New Homes
- Branding Irons
- Bachelor Degree Online
- Online Degree
- College Degree
- Heathen, Viking and Norse Texts
- Création site Internet
- Montreal Web Design
- Free Dish Network Satellite TV
- Discount ink cartridge & laser cartridge
- DUI Lawyers & DWI Attorneys
- Promotional Products
- Ready-Made Company Logos
- Canadian Art Dealer
- Best CD Rates
- Laser Toner Cartridge
- Logotyper & Grafiska Profilprogram
- Banner Design
- Custom Logo Design
Web site design and coding by Golden Boar Creations
|
|