Page 60 - All About History 58 - 2017 UK
P. 60

What If...

      ATTILA THE HUN HAD SURVIVED HIS WEDDING NIGHT?



        found the new wife weeping and the king dead, drowned in
        his own blood. This is the image that Priscus wanted to
        create — that of a bloodthirsty tyrant who got his just desserts
        by divine judgement.
          Whether he really died that way or not, who knows. He was
        actually at an advanced age, probably in his 50s at the time,
        the normal age of death at the time, so there’s no reason to
        suspect that he was poisoned. Right there after he died, there
        was a huge civil war because his sons couldn’t agree what
        would go to whom. There was a huge civil war between the
        Eastern and Western half [of the Hunnic Empire] and then, of
        course, the state imploded as a consequence. The Eastern half
        survived but the Western side completely fragmented.
        If Attila hadn’t died that night, what do you think
        would have happened?                            Attila planned to attack the Eastern Roman
                                                        Empire to force them to pay tributes again
        My guess would be that he would have invaded the Eastern
        Roman Empire. They did not have a sizeable army with which
        to attack the Huns, so it’s unlikely they could have defended   “He could have conquered Europe,
        the Balkans from another Hunnic incursion. But Attila
        wouldn’t have been able to take Constantinople because he   but I don’t think he would have”
        had no navy — a prerequisite to take that impregnable fortress
        — so he probably would have rampaged through the Balkans   How would Europe have been different after that?
        yet again and the Eastern Romans would have ended up   We would never have had a Frankish Europe. When the
        paying some kind of tribute to pay him off as usual.  Hunnic Empire imploded and the Western Roman Empire
                                                       followed suit, there was an incredible power vacuum in
        Would this have meant the Roman Empire would have   Western Europe. This allowed the Franks to unify what
        fallen earlier that 476 CE?                    is essentially Western Europe and that evolves into the
        The Western Roman Empire would never have disintegrated   Holy Roman Empire.
        in the way it did after his death. That’s a bit of a perplexing   If neither the Western Roman or Hunnic Empires dissolved,
        statement but the reason that it collapsed in 476 CE is because   then we would have had a state called Hunnia somewhere in
        there was a whole bunch of Germanic tribes and Hunnic   Europe and the Franks would have been confined to Belgium
        troops that were originally under the rule of the Huns that left   and the Netherlands. France would be in Belgium rather than
        the Hunnic state and marched into Italy. They were the ones   what is now France.
        who put an end to Roman imperium in the West.
          If Attila had not died, and had been able to control those   Would Attila have tried to conquer the Roman Empire?
        tribes, then of course the Western Romans would have paid   No, I seriously doubt that. First of all, the Hunnic Empire was
        a bit of tribute, but their rule in Italy would have remained   already massive. It had extended to such a degree that it was
        intact. We might have actually seen a continuation of the   difficult to control under a single ruler. That’s what Attila
        Western Roman Empire for a lot longer than what actually   effectively attempted — he created a dictatorship and tried to
        happened in history.                           run things by himself and that caused all kinds of problems.


        How would it be different?                                                 O Death of Attila            O The Huns
                                                                                    After marrying an
                                                                                                                 divided
                                                                                                                 The empire is split
                                                                                    East German woman,
                                                                                    Ildico, Attila dies on his   between Attila’s
                                  O Betrayal of brother                             wedding night, possibly      three sons but civil
                                    Attila likely murders                           after choking on a severe    war soon breaks
                                    Bleda and becomes                               nosebleed. 453 CE            out. 454 CE
                                    the single ruler of
                                    the Huns, shifting
                                    their centre of
        Real timeline               power west. 445 CE                                     Real timeline


                                                                                           Alternate timeline
        O Attila comes                  O A new target
          to power                       Attila begins
          Following the death of         plotting a new
          Rugila, Attila and his         attack on the
          brother Bleda become           Eastern Roman                            O Attila rides on  O Balkans defeated
          rulers of the Huns in          Empire to force                            Attila marries Ildico   Attila easily defeats
          the West and East              them to pay tribute                        but their wedding   the Eastern Roman
          respectively. 434 CE           to him. 452 CE                             night passes    Empire, sacking
                                                                                    without incident.   the Balkans. But he
                                                                                    The next day, he   leaves immediately,
                                                                                    rides for Eastern   after receiving
                                                                                    Rome. 453 CE    tributes. 454 CE


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