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Battle of Adrianople
Overview
The Battle of Adrianople (9 August 378 CE) was a catastrophic Roman defeat in which a Gothic coalition destroyed a Roman army and killed Emperor Valens. @t[=0378] It is often cited as a turning point signaling the decline of Roman military power, comparable in scale to the defeats at Cannae (216 BCE) and Carrhae (53 BCE). 1
Key Facts
- Date: 9 August 378 CE @t[=0378]
- Location: Adrianople (modern Edirne, Turkey), Roman province of Thracia @t[=378]
- Belligerents: Eastern Roman Empire vs. Gothic coalition (Thervingi Visigoths, Greuthungi/Ostrogoths, Alans) @t[=378]
- Commanders: Emperor Valens (Rome, killed), Fritigern (Thervingi, d. c. 380 CE) @t[=378]
- Result: Decisive Gothic victory @t[=378] 2
- Roman losses: Approximately two-thirds of the army (~10,000–20,000 killed), including Valens @t[=378] 2 3
Background
The battle was the culmination of the Gothic War (376–382 CE). @t[0376..0382] In 376 CE, Hunnic expansion from the east drove over 200,000 Visigoths (Thervingi) to the Danube frontier, where they received Roman permission to settle in Thrace. @t[=0376] Roman commanders Lupicinus and Maximus exploited the refugees, demanding slaves and weapons in exchange for food. Facing starvation, the Goths revolted under Fritigern. Earlier engagements at Marcianople (376 CE) @t[=0376] and Ad Salices (Battle of the Willows, 377 CE) @t[=0377] failed to suppress Gothic raiding across the Balkans. 1
By 378 CE, Valens — who had been campaigning against Persia — returned to Constantinople under pressure from its citizens and marched against Fritigern. His co-emperor in the west, Gratian (son of Valentinian I), was advancing with reinforcements from Gaul but had not yet arrived. 2
The Battle
- Valens attacked without waiting for Gratian's western reinforcements, reportedly driven by jealousy of his nephew's military successes @t[=378] 2 1
- Fritigern sent peace envoys on the morning of battle — historians regard this as a stalling tactic to await the return of ~10,000 Greuthungi cavalry who were away foraging @t[=378] 2 1
- Roman cavalry on the left flank was routed when the Greuthungi arrived and struck unexpectedly @t[=378]
- Roman infantry, already exhausted from an eight-mile march in August heat without food or water, was surrounded and annihilated @t[=378] 2
- Valens was mortally wounded; his body was never recovered @t[=378] 2
Significance
- Demonstrated the vulnerability of Roman legions to heavy cavalry and the dangers of poor scouting and low morale @t[378..] 3 1
- The Goths lacked siege equipment and could not take Adrianople itself; the Gothic War continued until 382 CE @t[378..382] 1
- Led to the Treaty of 382 CE: Emperor Theodosius I settled the Goths within the empire as foederati, granting land in exchange for military service @t[=0382] 3 4
- Alaric, a Visigoth and former Roman commander, sacked Rome in 410 CE — a downstream consequence of the foederati settlement @t[=0410] 1
- Often considered a harbinger of the fall of the Western Roman Empire (476 CE) @t[378..] 3 4
@q[missing]Line 9: "Location: Adrianople (modern Edirne, Turkey), Roman province of Thracia" - what is the source?
Need to verify whether the location claim has an explicit source citation in the document footnotes.
@q[missing]Line 10: "Belligerents: Eastern Roman Empire vs. Gothic coalition (Thervingi Visigoths,..." - what is the source?
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@q[missing]Line 11: "Commanders: Emperor Valens (Rome, killed), Fritigern (Thervingi, d. c. 380 CE)" - what is the source?
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@q[missing]Line 23: "Roman cavalry on the left flank was routed when the Greuthungi arrived and st..." - what is the source?
The cavalry routing claim does not appear to have an explicit footnote in the visible document content. A source citation should be added — Ammianus Marcellinus (Res Gestae, Book 31) is the primary source for this detail.
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Wasson, Donald L. "Battle of Adrianople." World History Encyclopedia, 2014. https://www.worldhistory.org/Battle_of_Adrianople/ ↩︎
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Ammianus Marcellinus, Res Gestae 31.12–13 (~390 CE) ↩︎
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Burns, T.S. Barbarians Within the Gates of Rome. Indiana University Press, 1994. ↩︎
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Heather, Peter. The Fall of the Roman Empire: A New History of Rome and the Barbarians. Oxford University Press, 2006.## Review Queue ↩︎