:''See
Anthemius (city) for the suburb of Constantinople on the Asiatic side of the Bosphorus, and
Anthemius of Tralles for an architect of
Hagia Sophia. For the Praetorian prefect and grandfather of the Emperor, see
Anthemius (praetorian prefect).''
'Procopius Anthemius' or 'Prokopios Anthemios' (c.
420 –
11 July 472) was a
Western Roman Emperor from
12 April 467 until his death.
One of the "
shadow emperors" of the
5th century, he was perhaps the last able emperor. Anthemius attempted to solve the two primary military challenges facing the remains of the
Western Roman Empire: the resurgent
Visigoths, under
Euric, whose domain straddled the
Pyrenees; and the unvanquished
Vandals, under
Gaiseric, in undisputed control of North Africa.
Anthemius was of the
gens Procopia. His reign began on a hopeful note. Anthemius had the backing of
Leo I, Emperor of the
Eastern Roman Empire, and had married his daughter to the chief military strongman of Italy,
Ricimer. A skilled general in
Illyricum,
Marcellinus, ceased his active opposition and pledged his allegiance to the new emperor. Anthemius also gained support from a backer far outside of the existing circle of possible supporters: one
Riothamus with a
Romano-British army joined with Anthemius, and the alliance attempted to encroach on Euric. However, Euric was able to defeat not only Riothamus's army and the various Roman forces, but annexed numerous
Gallic cities that still remained in Roman hands.
Meanwhile, the kingdom of the Vandals had presented a constant threat to Roman seafare in the Mediterranean, and Anthemius and his Eastern Roman colleague
Leo I undertook a concerted effort to dislodge them from North Africa (
468). As commanders were appointed the western patrician
Marcellinus and the eastern general
Basiliscus. Although the campaign against Gaiseric initially made significant gains,
Basiliscus allowed his fleet to be destroyed before
Carthage by Gaiseric. Thus the expedition ended in utter failure, and in its wake,
Marcellinus was murdered that same year on Sicily.
In 470, following all of this misfortune, Anthemius fell into a serious sickness, and believing that it was caused by sorcery, exacted vengeance on numerous prominent men. The ''
Magister Militum'', Ricimer, lost patience with Anthemius, summoned 6000 men who had been enlisted for the war against the Vandals, and began armed opposition in
Milan against Anthemius in
Rome. This conflict between emperor and military strongman ended five months later with Ricimer's conquest of Rome, and the capture and execution of Anthemius.
Sources for Anthemius's life are richer than for most fifth century Western Emperors, partly because of his origin in Constantinople, where the tradition of court histories was kept alive, and partly because of the details that can be extracted from a panegyric delivered
January 1 468 by the
Gallo-Roman poet
Sidonius Apollinaris. A son of Anthemius,
Anthemiolus, is mentioned in the near-contemporary ''
Chronica Gallica of 511''.
Early life
Anthemius was born in
Galatia, and came from a wealthy and distinguished and highly influential family in the eastern empire, a recent ancestor of his, Procopius, having been declared
Augustus at
Constantinoplein the brief rebellion against Valen's rule in AD 365, and his father, also called Procopius, being of patrician rank and having held the post of 'Master of Soldiers'. His maternal grandfather Anthemius was praetorian prefect and had acted as regent while Theodosius II was still a child.
Anthemius himself held military command in
Thrace in AD 453-4, and became '
Master of Soldiers' in 454-67. He also was appointed consul and granted the rank of patrician (patricius) in AD 455.
At Marcian's death, Anthemius was even understood to be the most likely man to succeed him to the throne of the eastern empire, accept that Aspar, the powerful 'Master of Soldiers', preferred to see one of his own men on the throne. Hence the choice fell upon
Leo instead.
Anthemius
Anthemius though was not the kind of man to hold a grudge against Leo and went on to serve him well, winning military victories for his emperor - first against the
Ostrogoths in
Illyricum from AD 459-464 and then against the
Huns at
Serdica (Sofia) in AD 466/7.
To further cement the relationship between the two men, Anthemius married Leo's daughter
Euphemia.
With the western throne having fallen vacant with the death of
Libius Severus in November AD 465, and the
Vandals proposing
Olybrius as their candidate,
Leo now saw it necessary to invest his own candidate. If only to prevent a western ruler with allegiances toward the Vandals. Also, a Vandal raid in AD 467 on the
Peloponnese in
Greece drove home to Leo just how great the threat posed by these
barbarians had become.
With Anthemius having shown such loyal service and being of distinguished descent, he was the ideal candidate. So, in AD 467 Leo nominated Anthemius as western emperor.
Anthemius, aware of
Ricimer's power in the west, first allied himself with him, by marrying his daughter Alypia to him.
His arrival in Rome was greeted by the support of the people, the allegiance of the barbarian federates and the support of the senate.
Emperor of the West
Anthemius being a champion of the east, he brought about the end of the hostilities between the eastern and western empire. And both empires soon after embarked on another giant effort to overcome the Vandals. A massive fleet was assembled to carry the troops to their destinations. But the commanders were badly chosen.
Basiliscus, who commanded the eastern fleet, was notoriously unreliable. Meanwhile the choice of
Marcellinus as the commander of the western fleet, no doubt angered
Ricimer, as he was Ricimer's foremost enemy.
Marcellinus successfully attacked
Sardinia and landed troops in
Tripolitania.
But Basiliscus led the eastern fleet into disaster against
Geiseric off
Carthage. Most of the fleet was sunk, its remainder fleeing to Sicily with Basiliscus and Marcellinus. There Marcellinus was killed, more than likely as a result of a plot by Ricimer.
Then in
Gaul a new threat arose as
Euric murdered his brother
Theodoric II and took over the ruel of the
Visigoths, and set out on an attempt to bring entire Gaul under his control.
Anthemius' attempt to put a stop to Euric's ambitions ended in a crushing defeat in a battle on the western bank of the river Rhône, in which the emperor's son
Anthemiolus and three leading Roman generals lost their lives.
Fall
After this setback, relations between Anthemius and Ricimer deteriorated sharply. For Ricimer obviously wanted to rid himself of yet another unsuccessful emperor and Anthemius well knew that Ricimer's past record proved that an emperor had good reason to be suspicious of Ricimer.
So bad did relations between the emperor and his '
Master of Soldiers' grow that
Italy was virtually divided in two; Ricimer ruling his part from Mediolanum (Milan) and Anthemius ruling his from Rome.
In AD 470 the
bishop of Ticinum (Pavia) managed to reconcile them, but the peace was not to last for long.
Already by AD 472 Ricimer marched south at the head of his army to depose Anthemius and in his place put Olybrius, the candidate favoured by the Vandals.
Backed up by a Visigoth force, Anthemius held out against the siege for three months, until eventually Ricimer;s troops managed to force their way across the
Pons Aelius (Ponte Sant'Angelo) and into Rome.
Anthemius disguised himself as a beggar in an attempt to flee. But he was betrayed and by order of Ricimer's nephew Gundobad Anthemius was beheaded in March or April AD 472.
External links
★
De Imperatoribus Romanis website: Anthemius, Ralph W. Mathisen (University of South Carolina)