Heraclianus

Heraclianus
Usurper of the Western Roman Empire
Reign Summer 412- Spring 413
Predecessor Honorius
Successor Honorius
Died March 7, 413
Carthage

Heraclianus[1] (Ancient Greek: Ἡρακλειανὸς, Herakleianòs; died at Carthage, March 7, 413) was a provincial governor and a usurper of the Roman Empire (412-413) opposed to Emperor Honorius.

Biography

Opposition to Priscus Attalus

The first known act of Heraclianus was the killing of the powerful Magister militum Stilicho (August 22, 408)[2] for Emperor Honorius, who wanted to remove his influential general. Honorius rewarded Heraclianus with the appointment to the rank of Comes Africae, Governor of the important province of Africa, in late 408.[3]

According to Orosius, Heraclianus was sent to Africa in 409. Orosius also states that the Governor of Africa in 408 was "John", who was killed by the people of his province.[4] However, in another account, Zosimus states that Heraclianus was the successor of Bathanarius, brother-in-law of Stilicho, put to death by Honorius.[5]

Coin minted by Priscus Attalus.

In 409, with the help of the Visigoths of King Alaric I, Priscus Attalus rebelled against Honorius, whose seat of power was in Ravenna, and set up his own court in Rome.[6] Heraclianus remained loyal to Honorius and tightly controlled African ports to restrict the grain supply to the city of Rome and starve Rome out.[7]

Attalus did not initially send an army in Africa against Heraclianus, as it would have to have been under Visigothic lead.[8] Deceived by false prophecies or moved by his own jealousy of the Visigoths, he sent a lone representative, Constans, counting on his authority alone to depose Heraclianus or convince the provincials to rebel.[9] However, Constans was killed,[10] and Heraclianus sent Honorious the great sum he'd confiscated from the envoys, intended to bribe the local population.[11] Alaric wanted to send an army against Heraclianus under the command of his own man Drumas. But, Attalus opposed this, and Alaric deposed him in 410.[12] As Alaric intended to send a rather small army of only 500 men, it is probable that Heraclianus had only a very small force at his own disposal. However, it is also probable that Heraclianus had the support of the local population, as Emperor Honorius had recently issued a tolerance edict in favour of the Donatists, a Christian sect very popular in Africa.[13] According to the historian Adrian Goldsworthy, Attalus sent a Roman commander with regular troops to secure the province of Africa, but these were seriously defeated by the Roman troops of Heraclianus, who for the time being remained loyal to the Emperor Honorius.[14]

Usurpation against Honorius

The Byzantine Emperor Honorius, Jean-Paul Laurens, 1880.

In 412 Heraclianus was designated for the consulate of the year 413, but in all probability he was never appointed Consul: confident in his own power and instigated by Sabinus,[15] his son-in-law, he rebelled against Honorius and proclaimed himself Augustus.[16] His first act was to interrupt the grain supply to the city of Rome, as he had successfully done against Priscus Attalus.[17] Next he gathered several ships along with troops to invade Italy.[18] Honorius had Heraclianus and his supporters proclaimed enemies of the State and condemned to death with an edict issued in Ravenna on July 7, 412.[19]

In 413 Heraclianus arrived in Italy with a large army to fight Honorius, but he was defeated and killed.[20] With regards to his death, there are two versions: According to some sources, Heraclianus arrived in Italy and moved towards Rome, but he was frightened by the arrival of Comes Marinus. He left his army and fled to Carthage, where he was put to death on March 7.[21] The second version sees Heraclius defeated at Utriculum (maybe Oriculum, in Umbria, halfway between Rome and Ravenna), in a battle with 50,000 deaths, then fleeing to Carthage, where he would be put to death by envoys sent by Honorius in the temple of Memoria.[22] Sabinus, Heraclianus' son-in-law, fled to the eastern court at Constantinople but was later sent back and then exiled.[23]

Heraclianus' name does not appear in the Fasti consulares, the list of all Roman consuls, as Honorius probably revoked his appointment and left Lucius as Consul without colleague.[24] Heraclianus' acts were revoked; his possessions, 2,000 lb of gold and land of the same value, were confiscated and given to Flavius Constantius.[25]

Jerome accused Heraclianus of mistreating those who had fled from Rome to Carthage on the occasion of Attalus' usurpation (Heraclianus imprisoned the noblewomen Anicia Faltonia Proba, Anicia Iuliana and Demetrias, and freed them only after a huge payment), and of being a drunken and corrupt man.[26]

Notes

  1. Jones, pg. 539
  2. Canduci, pg. 156
  3. Jones, pg. 539
  4. Orosius, 7:42:10
  5. Zosimus, 5:37:6
  6. Bury, pg. 117
  7. Bury, pg. 120
  8. Bury, pg. 120
  9. Bury, pg. 119
  10. Bury, pg. 119
  11. Zosimus, 6:10:2
  12. Bury, pg. 120
  13. After Attalus' deposition, Honorius renewed the persecution against the Donatists, sending to Heraclianus an edict that nullified the previous one.
  14. Adrian Goldsworthy, The Fall of the West: The Slow Death of the Roman Superpower, paperback edition published in 2010 by Phoenix, an imprint of Orion Books Ltd, London, p.300.
  15. Orosius.
  16. Bury, pg. 146
  17. Orosius, 7:42:12
  18. Bury, pg. 146
  19. Jones, pg. 540
  20. Canduci, pg. 156
  21. Orosius; Marcellinus.
  22. Hydatius.
  23. Jones, pg. 968
  24. Jones, pg. 540
  25. Jones, pg. 540
  26. Jerome, Ep. 130.7

Bibliography

Primary sources

Secondary sources

Preceded by
Imp. Caesar Honorius Augustus IX,
Imp. Caesar Flavius Theodosius Augustus V
Consul of the Roman Empire
413
Served alongside: Fl. Lucius
Succeeded by
Fl. Constantius,
Fl. Constans
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