Flavius Augustus Honorius
Flavius Augustus Honorius (
September 9,
384 -
August 15,
423) was a
emperor of the West (
395 - 423). He was the younger son of
Theodosius I and his first wife Aelia Flaccilla, and brother of the
Eastern emperor Arcadius.\n
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Bronze coin bearing the profile of Honorius |
Born in 384, Honorius became western emperor at the age of 11. For the first part of his reign he depended on the military leadership of the
Vandal general
Stilicho. To strengthen his bonds to the young emperor, Stilicho married his daughter Maria to him.
At first Honorius based his capital in
Milan. When the
Visigoths entered Italy in AD 402, Honorius moved his capital to
Ravenna, which was protected by a ring of marshes.
The most notable event of his reign was the assault and sack of
Rome on
August 24,
410 by the Visigoths under
Alaric. The city had not been under the control of a foreign force since an invasion of Gallic
Celts some seven centuries before. The shock of this event reverberated from Britain to Jerusalem, and inspired
Augustine to write his magnus opus,
The City of God.
Honorius was fond of raising chickens, and there is a story that when he heard the news that Rome had "perished", he was initially quite upset, but was relieved when he learned that the Rome in question was the city, not the chicken he had named after it.
His reign of twenty-eight years was one of the most disastrous in the Roman annals; the weakness and timidity of the emperor combined with the attacks of the Visigoths and Vandals contributed to the rapid disintegration of the empire. His influence on the current of events was purely negative.
\n\nCategory:Roman emperors\n\n\n\n