History's Greatest Battles
Where the course of history has been decided on the battlefield. These are the battles that made us -- a detailed, entertaining, and tangent-free program about history's greatest battles. In this program, we embark on a journey through the constancy of human conflict, where the fates of nations and the course of history have been decided on the battlefield. This program delves into our world-history's most significant and seminal battles, exploring not just the events themselves but their profound impact on the world timeline we live in today. Each episode is meticulously crafted by ardent and dedicated history fans with a passion for military history and an appreciation for the art of storytelling. Join us as we unravel the strategies, heroics, and consequences that have shaped civilizations and forged the destiny of entire continents.
History's Greatest Battles
The Battle of Adrianople, 378 A.D. The End of the Western Roman Empire. The End of Infantry Dominance for 1,000 Years. Ascendance of Cavalry.
The Battle of Adrianople in 378 AD was the combat event that shattered the illusion of Rome’s invincibility and declared the Goths as more than a wandering horde. Adrianople was their grim debut as architects of a new power dynamic in western European history, where the balance of civilization itself seemed to tremble. On that blood-soaked field, the disciplined ranks of Roman infantry, long the cornerstone of imperial might, were swept aside by the devastating ferocity and mobility of Gothic cavalry. The echoes of that day did more than announce the Gothic ascendance; they signaled a profound shift in the art of war. The dominance of the well-armored foot soldier, which had defined centuries of Roman military supremacy, crumbled beneath the relentless momentum of mounted warriors. From this moment onward, cavalry would carve its legend into the fabric of European warfare, reshaping strategies and redefining power for the next thousand years.
Adrianople. August 9, 378 A.D.
Gothic Forces: 50,000 infantry and 50,000 cavalry.
Byzantine Forces: 40,000 infantry and 20,000 cavalry.
Additional Reading and Episode Research:
- Rolfe Translation: Ammianus Marcellinus.
- Oman, Charles. The Art of War in the Middle Ages.
- Thompson, E.A. Romans and Barbarians.
- Heather, Peter. Goths and Romans.
Thanks for tuning in to this episode of History’s Greatest Battles. If you know somebody that enjoys this genre of history, please share the podcast with them.
In the summer of 378 AD, near the rolling plains of Thrace in what is now modern-day Bulgaria, a Roman army marched to confront a Gothic horde. Beneath the punishing sun, two worlds collided, one desperately clinging to the old order, the other heralding the chaos of a new age.
This Roman defeat shattered the cultural and military foundation of the ancient world. On this day, the might of the Roman Empire crumbled before an enemy it underestimated, unleashing chaos that would reshape Europe for centuries. The empire’s borders, once symbols of unyielding strength, buckled. The dominance of Roman legions ended, and a new era of warfare began, one ruled by the thunder of cavalry.
For the men on that battlefield, it was a living hell. Infantry crushed under hooves, choked by dust, and pinned so tightly they could not even raise their swords. Thousands were slaughtered, including the emperor himself, their blood seeding the end of an empire. What followed changed the world: the collapse of Rome’s western half, the rise of medieval kingdoms, and the transformation of war itself. This battle forged the path to the world we know today.
Let's now experience the Battle of Adrianople.
Welcome to History's Greatest Battles, Season One, Episode 88: The Battle of Adrianople; the 9th of August, 378 CE.
Gothic Forces: 50,000 infantry and 50,000 cavalry.
Byzantine Romanic Forces: 40,000 infantry and 20,000 cavalry.
The Battle of Adrianople in 3 78 was the combat event that shattered the illusion of Rome’s invincibility and declared the Goths as more than a wandering horde. Adrianople was their grim debut as architects of a new power dynamic in western European history, where the balance of civilization itself seemed to tremble. On that blood-soaked field, the disciplined ranks of Roman infantry, long the cornerstone of imperial might, were swept aside by the devastating ferocity and mobility of Gothic cavalry. The echoes of that day did more than announce the Gothic ascendance; they signaled a profound shift in the art of war. The dominance of the well-armored foot soldier, which had defined centuries of Roman military supremacy, crumbled beneath the relentless momentum of mounted warriors. From this moment onward, cavalry would carve its legend into the fabric of European warfare, reshaping strategies and redefining power for the next thousand years.
After Constantine the Great, the man who had unified the empire under a single Christian banner, died in 337 AD, the hope for a stable succession dissipated. Constantine's vision was simple yet naïve: that his three sons, blood-bound brothers, would divide the vast Roman Empire peacefully among themselves. Western Europe, Southeastern Europe, and the East were designated for each, respectively. However, ambition and greed quickly eroded any sense of familial loyalty. The empire plunged into fraternal bloodshed as the brothers turned against one another, each vying for total control.
The ensuing years were marked by a tangled web of betrayals, battles, and assassinations. None of Constantine's sons died of old age; instead, they were systematically eliminated by their own kin and power-hungry generals. With the demise of the royal bloodline, generals from the army seized power, setting aside familial ties for personal ambition.
By 364 AD, amidst the chaos, a new leader emerged: Valentinian I. Born of humble origins but possessing exceptional military prowess, Valentinian climbed the ranks through sheer ability and strategic acumen. As emperor, he focused on strengthening the empire's northern frontier along the Danube River, a critical boundary against barbarian incursions. To secure the Eastern part of the empire, he appointed his brother Valens as co-emperor, stationing him in Constantinople. Together, they aimed to shoulder the empire’s burdens, hoping their combined leadership would restore stability.
Valentinian’s reign was cut short when he died in 375 AD, succumbing to illness before his time. His 16-year-old son, Gratian, inherited the throne but lacked the experience and authority to influence his uncle, Valens, who now held significant sway in the Eastern Empire.
Valens proved to be an ill-suited ruler for the empire’s dire circumstances. The Middle East remained a hotbed of conflict, with Byzantine forces struggling against the Persians under Shapur II. Valens, preoccupied with eastern affairs, neglected his northern territories, leaving them vulnerable to emerging threats. When war erupted with the Goths, Valens was unprepared and overconfident, failing to adequately address the growing menace.
The Goths, a resilient and warlike people, began their journey in the icy expanses of Scandinavia. They migrated southward into northeastern Europe, settling in the steppes of eastern Russia for generations before moving into the Balkans in the early third century AD. These were not mere wanderers; the Goths were active raiders and conquerors, carving a path of destruction as they advanced. By 270 AD, they had ravaged the Balkans, reaching as far as Greece before being decisively defeated at the Battle of Naissus.
Despite their defeat, the Goths did not perish. Instead, they forged an uneasy alliance with the Roman Empire, living as semi-autonomous allies for the next century. During this period, the Goths became a crucial source of manpower for the Roman and Byzantine armies, replenishing dwindling ranks with their fierce warriors. However, this peace was fragile, maintained more by necessity than genuine harmony.
The Gothic people eventually split into two main factions: the Visigoths in the west and the Ostrogoths in the east. The Byzantines had subdued the Visigoths, forging a fragile alliance, while the Ostrogoths remained in the Russian steppes. By the early 370s, the Ostrogoths faced a new threat: the Huns, a formidable force pushing westward from Asia. Defeated in their attempts to repel the Huns, the Ostrogoths fled west, displacing the Visigoths and driving them into the Danube River valley, the traditional northeastern border of the Roman Empire.
Desperate for refuge, the Visigoths approached Byzantine territory, seeking permission to settle within the empire’s borders. Valens, seeking to keep them under control, imposed harsh conditions: every male under military age was given as a hostage, and all Gothic weapons were surrendered to Byzantine officials. This approach starkly contrasted with previous Gothic allies who had been treated with dignity and integrated into the Roman legions. Valens's contemptuous treatment sowed the seeds of resentment among the Visigoths.
In 377 AD, Valens marched against the Persians, leaving two subordinates, Lupicinus and Maximus, in charge of disarming the Visigoths. These men, driven by greed, exploited the situation by accepting bribes and abusing the Gothic population in exchange for leniency. When the Ostrogoths arrived seeking their own sanctuary, Valens refused them entry. Undeterred, the Ostrogoths, backed by the Visigoths, crossed the Danube, escalating tensions.
The tipping point came when the Visigothic leader, Fritigern, united his people with the Ostrogoths to confront Byzantine corruption and extortion. An attempted assassination by Lupicinus and Maximus resulted in the death of Fritigern’s co-commander, Alavius, igniting the flames of rebellion.
Enraged by the betrayal, Fritigern led his men against a Byzantine force at Marianopolis in eastern Bulgaria, securing a victory and joining forces with Ostrogothic chieftains Alatheus and Syphax. Valens, eager to crush the rebellion, hastily concluded a truce with the Persians and dispatched his generals, Saturninus, Trajan, and Profuturus, to drive the Goths northward. They pushed Fritigern’s forces into the marshy lands near the Danube’s mouth, leading to an inconclusive battle where Fritigern managed to retreat through the marshes.
Despite employing traditional defensive tactics by encircling their wagons into fortified laagers, the Goths, now bolstered by nomadic horsemen, began looting northern Greece. Valens, recognizing the escalating threat, marched to Thrace and appealed to his nephew Gratian in Italy for reinforcements, as the Goths were allying with Germanic tribes and destabilizing the empire’s northern frontier.
Gratian responded by suppressing German uprisings along the Rhine, defeating the Allemani and Franks in Gaul before marching down the Danube to support his uncle. By the summer of 378 AD, Valens’s generals had repelled the Goths from Thrace, but the conflict was far from over. The Goths retreated to Adrianople, establishing a fortified position in a strategic peninsula between the Adriatic, Black Sea, and Dardanelles. Fritigern’s Visigoths, alongside Ostrogoths, Alans, and Sarmatians, amassed a formidable force of approximately 100,000 warriors and 200,000 dependents, setting the stage for a decisive confrontation.
Frustrated by earlier setbacks, Valens replaced his generals with an Italian commander, Sebastiani, who advocated for guerrilla tactics aimed at weakening the Goths through raids and attrition. Confident that the Goths could be starved into submission, Sebastiani advised continuing this strategy. However, Valens, driven by envy over Gratian’s successes, dismissed Sebastiani’s counsel, seeking a swift and decisive victory to restore his reputation.
Ignoring strategic advice, Valens marched his 60,000-strong army, 40,000 infantry and 20,000 cavalry, out of Adrianople on August 9, 378 AD. Approaching the Gothic wagon camp under the scorching summer sun, Valens pretended to negotiate, buying time to rest his exhausted troops and assess the enemy's position. As the day wore on, both sides prepared for the impending clash.
Chaos erupted as Valens’s emissaries approached the Gothic lines. For reasons still unclear, their Iberian escorts loosed arrows into the camp before fleeing in disorder. What followed was inevitable. The Visigoths, already on edge, erupted in fury. At that moment, the earth itself seemed to tremble as the Ostrogothic cavalry, 50,000 strong, returned to the battlefield, their timing perfect, their presence devastating.
Led by fierce Alan riders, the Gothic cavalry surged forward, descending on the Byzantine lines. Valens’s troops, caught mid-deployment, were unprepared for the ferocity of the assault. On the right flank, the Byzantine cavalry clashed with the Gothic horsemen. They fought with grit and resolve, holding their ground against the initial assault, their weapons rising and falling in desperate arcs. Meanwhile, Byzantine cavalry on the left surged forward, attempting to outmaneuver the Gothic lines. Yet without the support of infantry, their attack lacked the weight needed to break through. Exposed and outnumbered, they became easy prey for the Gothic riders.
The fate of the battle was sealed on the right. As the Byzantine cavalry buckled under the relentless Gothic assault, the Ostrogoths unleashed their fury. They smashed into the collapsing flank, shattering its cohesion and driving the chaos deep into the heart of the infantry lines. The Byzantine infantry, still scrambling to form their ranks, was struck with catastrophic force. Encircled by Gothic cavalry, they were blinded by a choking storm of dust, their shields and swords rendered useless in the confusion.
The noose tightened mercilessly. Ammianus Marcellinus, who chronicled the horror, described the grim reality: the infantry, packed so tightly by the Gothic cavalry’s relentless pressure, could not even draw their swords. Those who managed found no room to wield them. The Gothic cavalry, relentless and methodical, unleashed volley after volley of arrows into the suffocating ranks of Roman infantry. The screams of the wounded and dying filled the air as the legionnaires fell where they stood.
Then, as if the day had not already sealed Rome’s doom, Fritigern made his final move. He opened the gates of his wagon camp, unleashing his infantry into the fray. Their advance brought a fresh wave of slaughter. The Gothic warriors, armed with brutal slashing swords and heavy battle-axes, cut through the beleaguered Romans like executioners. Thousands of infantrymen fell, their lines collapsing under the weight of the onslaught. Only when the bodies of their comrades lay thick upon the ground did the surviving Romans find the space to maneuver. With desperate effort, a handful broke free of the Gothic encirclement.
Valens, stationed with the reserves at the rear, could only watch as the center of his army disintegrated. When the Gothic warriors finally reached his position, the emperor himself took up arms, fighting side by side with his remaining men. Yet even here, the weight of Gothic numbers proved overwhelming. The reserves broke under the pressure, and Valens, wounded and surrounded, fell in the chaos. According to most accounts, Valens was dragged from the battlefield to a peasant’s hut. That night, the Goths, unaware of their prize, surrounded the hut and set it ablaze. The emperor of Rome perished in the flames, his empire burning with him.
Valens was only the most prominent victim of the carnage. Nearly all his top commanders fell that day, alongside an estimated 40,000 soldiers, a devastating blow to the Eastern Roman army. The cost to the Goths remains unrecorded, though by all accounts their casualties were light. It was a staggering, lopsided victory.
In the grim ledger of Roman failures, Valens stands as the architect of his empire’s humiliation. He ignored sound military counsel from Sebastiani, choosing instead to bow to public pressure, a decision rooted in vanity and fear rather than strategy. Valens allowed the clamor of the masses to dictate his actions, leading him to personally march against the Goths. By doing so, he abandoned Sebastiani’s proven strategy of attrition, a method that could have starved the enemy into submission without a pitched battle.
The historian Edward Gibbon captures the tragedy with ruthless precision in The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire: “The citizens, who are always brave at a distance from any real danger, declared, with confidence, that if they were supplied with arms, they alone would undertake to deliver the province from the ravages of an insulting foe. The vain reproaches of the ignorant multitude hastened the downfall of the Roman empire; they provoked the desperate rashness of Valens, who did not find, either in his reputation or in his mind, any motives to support with firmness the public contempt. He was soon persuaded by the successful achievements of his lieutenants to despise the power of the Goths.”
At Adrianople, Valens succumbed to the worst of human frailties: envy. Ignoring Sebastiani’s advice, he allowed his jealousy of Gratian’s growing reputation to cloud his judgment. Obsessed with proving his worth to both himself and his empire, Valens refused to wait for Gratian’s reinforcements. He marched into battle against overwhelming odds, 100,000 Gothic warriors against his 60,000, a gamble that would cost him everything.
The defeat at Adrianople stands among the darkest chapters in Roman history. Not since Hannibal annihilated a Roman army at Cannae in the Second Punic War had the empire faced such catastrophic loss. The terror that gripped Rome after Adrianople was reminiscent of the humiliation in the Teutoburg Forest, where Arminius and his German tribes destroyed two Roman legions in A.D. 9. Adrianople revived those ancient fears of barbarian ascendancy.
To the citizens of the empire, Adrianople was a chilling omen. The barbarians, who for centuries had gnawed at Rome’s edges, now appeared poised to devour it whole. Had the Gothic forces been more disciplined, better organized, and equipped with siege engines, they might have conquered the Eastern Roman Empire outright. Yet their battlefield prowess could not breach the walls of Roman cities. Constantinople, the great jewel of the East, remained untouched, its defenses unyielding. But the Goths turned their fury on the rest of southeastern Europe, ravaging the land unchecked.
In the wake of Valens’s death, Theodosius rose to the throne. With grim resolve, he set about rebuilding the shattered military, determined to restore Rome’s strength. Within five years, Theodosius, with Gratian’s support, turned the tide. He drove the Goths from Roman soil, reclaiming the Black Sea’s western coast and pushing them back across the Danube. Yet, in a pragmatic stroke, he allowed those who pledged loyalty to remain in the lands they had once plundered.
Over the next decade, Theodosius refined his strategy. Those Goths who resisted were crushed; those who surrendered were welcomed, either as settlers within the empire or as soldiers within its ranks. This policy brought seismic changes to the Eastern Roman army, transforming its very nature. For a millennium, the empire’s survival had rested on the disciplined shoulders of its legionaries, heavy infantry trained to perfection, their lines unshaken by any foe. But Adrianople shattered that tradition. As Goths filled the ranks, the Eastern Roman army evolved into a force dominated by cavalry, a shift that would alter the face of warfare for centuries to come.
These cavalry units, many drawn from the East, excelled as mounted archers. Their devastating range and mobility rendered traditional infantry formations increasingly obsolete. The age of the legionnaire was over. For the next thousand years, the mounted warrior ruled the battlefields of Europe. Only in the fifteenth century, with the rise of missile weapons like the longbow and crossbow, would the supremacy of cavalry finally be challenged.
Theodosius, for all his efforts, managed to keep a tenuous peace with the Goths. Yet peace tied to the strength of a single ruler is fragile, and when Theodosius died in 395 AD, the empire was left vulnerable. Into this void stepped Alaric, a Gothic leader of vision and ambition. Alaric rallied his people and began a sweeping campaign through southeastern Europe, a march that would ultimately bring him to the heart of the Roman world: Italy.
By 410 AD, after relentless pressure and three grueling sieges, Alaric achieved what once seemed unthinkable: he captured Rome and unleashed his warriors upon it in a brutal sack. By then, Rome’s political significance had waned. Ravenna, with its strategic location and defensible marshes, had become the empire’s administrative center. Yet the symbolic weight of Rome’s fall was immeasurable. Rome had stood unbroken by enemy hands since the seventh century B.C. Its fall in 410 AD was a seismic blow to the empire’s prestige, shaking the foundations of its identity.
In the aftermath, the Ostrogoths established themselves in Italy, while the Visigoths swept westward, carving a path through Gaul before settling in Spain. With these shifts, the Western Roman Empire fractured beyond repair. What remained was a patchwork of territories steeped in Gothic culture, bound by shared traditions but devoid of true political unity. Yet the conquerors were not immune to Rome’s enduring influence. Even as Gothic rule spread, its people absorbed Roman culture, language, and law, blending the old world with the new.
The Battle of Adrianople marked the beginning of the end for the Western Roman Empire. It shattered its military foundations and heralded a new era in warfare, where the mounted warrior reigned supreme across Europe’s battlefields. Theodosius’s death and the subsequent rise of leaders like Alaric demonstrated the shifting power dynamics within the empire, ultimately leading to its transformation and the rise of new powers in Europe.