- Hermeric
Hermeric (died 441) was the
Suevi cKing of Galicia from perhaps as early as 406 and certainly no later than 419 until his retirement in 438. [Thompson, 217. He was first mentioned by Hydatius in 419, it being Isidore who makes him king from 406.] He was a pagan and an enemy of theRoman Empire throughout his life. He is given a reign of thirty two years in most manuscripts of Isidore of Seville's "Historia Suevorum", but fourteen years in one manuscript.Thompson, 129 and 306n32.]Hermeric led the Suevi across the frozen
Rhine along with theVandals andAlans in December 409. They crossedGaul and thePyrenees and settled in theHispania . WhileTheodore Mommsen believed the Suevi were "foederati " and Ernst Stein seconded the notion by believing they had made an agreement with theRoman usurper Magnus Maximus whereby they received the western half of Iberia, there is no primary evidence for any alliance between the Suevi and Rome.Thompson, 153–154.] In 411 (according to Ludwig Schmidt) or 417 (according to Felix Dahn), Hermeric made a treaty with theRoman emperor Honorius , but in fact the only event of note in 411 was the division of Iberia "sorte" (by lot) between the barbarian peoples. The east of the province ofGallaecia with its capital ofBraga (Bracara Augusta) fell to the Suevi, while the west of the province went to the populousHasdingi .Between 416 and 418, the
Visigoths underWallia made war on Hermeric on behalf of Rome. In 419, after a personal dispute between Hermeric and the Vandal kingGunderic , the Vandals attacked the Suevi and trapped Hermeric in the Nervasian (Erbasian) Mountains before the Roman generalAsterius intervened and the Vandals retreated.Thompson, 165.] Thereafter, until the Vandals left Spain for Africa in 429, Hermeric remained peaceful, but in 430 he began to raid Gallaecia. In 431 a Gallaecian namedHydatius went toFlavius Aëtius to plead for help against the Suevi, but Aëtius delayed until 432 the sending of the legateCensorius . According to Hydatius' "Chronicle" of contemporary events, the Gallaecian "plebs" in the better-fortified strongpoints defeated Hermeric and his men, inflicting heavy casualties and taking many prisoners, which forced the Sueves to release the Gallaecian families they had taken captive (430).Thompson, 178.]In 435, "on episcopal intervention", possibly Hydatius', Hermeric made peace with the Gallaecians.Thompson, 179 and 301n94.] In that same year, Hermeric negotiated through the Catholic bishop
Symphosius directly with theWestern Roman Emperor . In 437, Censorius made a second expedition accompanied by Fretimund.After seven years of illness, Hermeric was forced to retire from the kingship in 438 and pass it on to his son
Rechila . The story, recorded in Isidore, that Hermeric sent Rechila toBaetica to defeatAndevotus , "Romanae militiae dux", is false, as there is no contemporary evidence that Hermeric retained any authority after his abdication. [Thompson, 120.] There appears to have been no principle of elective monarchy among the Suevi and the successes of their raids may have accounted for the contentment of their people. Hermeric's royal line lasted until 456.In 429, there appeared briefly a Suevic military leader named
Heremigarius operating inLusitania who may have been a joint monarch with Hermeric, but there is no primary source to prove it.Thompson, 166.]Notes
ources
*Thompson, E. A. "Romans and Barbarians: The Decline of the Western Empire". Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1982. ISBN 0 299 08700 X.
*Kulikowski, Michael. [http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0031-8299%28200021%2F22%2954%3A1%2F2%3C123%3ATCOT%22H%3E2.0.CO%3B2-T "The Career of the 'Comes Hispaniarum' Asterius."] "Phoenix", Vol. 54, No. 1/2. (Spring–Summer, 2000), pp. 123–141.
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