Observations upon the Prophecies of Daniel, and the Apocalypse of St. John eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 243 pages of information about Observations upon the Prophecies of Daniel, and the Apocalypse of St. John.

Observations upon the Prophecies of Daniel, and the Apocalypse of St. John eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 243 pages of information about Observations upon the Prophecies of Daniel, and the Apocalypse of St. John.

  ——­Cujus solum amissas post saecula multa
  Pannonias revocavit iter, jam credere promptum est.
  Quid faciet bellis.

The Poet means, that by the coming of Avitus the Hunns yielded more easily to the Goths.  This was written by Sidonius in the beginning of the reign of Avitus:  and his reign began in the end of the year 455, and lasted not one full year.

Jornandes tells us:  Duodecimo anno regni Valiae, quando & Hunni post pene quinquaginta annos invasa Pannonia, a Romanis & Gothis expulsi sunt. And MarcellinusHierio & Ardaburio Coss.  Pannoniae, quae per quinquaginta annos ab Hunnis retinebantur, a Romanis receptae sunt:  whence it should seem that the Hunns invaded and held Pannonia from the year 378 or 379 to the year 427, and then were driven out of it.  But this is a plain mistake:  for it is certain that the Emperor Theodosius left the Empire entire; and we have shewed out of Prosper, that the Hunns were in quiet possession of Pannonia in the year 432.  The Visigoths in those days had nothing to do with Pannonia, and the Ostrogoths continued subject to the Hunns till the death of Attila, A.C. 454; and Valia King of the Visigoths did not reign twelve years.  He began his reign in the end of the year 415, reigned three years, and was slain A.C. 419, as Idacius, Isidorus, and the Spanish manuscript Chronicles seen by Grotius testify.  And Olympiodorus, who carries his history only to the year 425, sets down therein the death of Valia King of the Visigoths, and conjoins it with that of Constantius which happened A.C. 420.  Wherefore the Valia of Jornandes, who reigned at the least twelve years, is some other King.  And I suspect that this name hath been put by mistake for Valamir King of the Ostrogoths:  for the action recorded was of the Romans and Ostrogoths driving the Hunns out of Pannonia after the death of Attila; and it is not likely that the historian would refer the history of the Ostrogoths to the years of the Visigothic Kings.  This action happened in the end of the year 455, which I take to be the twelfth year of Valamir in Pannonia, and which was almost fifty years after the year 406, in which the Hunns succeeded the Vandals and Alans in Pannonia.  Upon the ceasing of the line of Hunnimund the son of Hermaneric, the Ostrogoths lived without Kings of their own nation about forty years together, being subject to the Hunns.  And when Alaric began to make war upon the Romans, which was in the year 444, he made Valamir, with his brothers Theodomir and Videmir the grandsons of Vinethar, captains or kings of these Ostrogoths under him.  In the twelfth year of Valamir’s reign dated from thence, the Hunns were driven out of Pannonia.

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Observations upon the Prophecies of Daniel, and the Apocalypse of St. John from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.