This is a thrilling piece of historical reconstruction. Patrick Howarth draws on the wealth of evidence provided by recent archaeological finds, as well as on Hungarian sources not known in the West, to give us the first authentic account of the life of Attila.
He also provides a careful study of the Attila legends which grew up through the centuries, ranging from Roman chronicle through the "Nibelungenlied" to Hollywood epic. The contrast between fiction and truth is startling.
The early Christian chroniclers called Attila the Scourge of God and thought he had been sent to punish people for their sins. Italian artists portrayed him with horns. The resulting popular picture was of a bloodthirsty tyrant. Basing his presentation in particular on an account left by a man who dined with Attila and knew his family, Patrick Howarth shows him to have been a man of clemency, tolerance and wisdom, albeit a highly successful man of war.
Attila reigned for only eight years. After consolidating an empire which extended to the Caspian he came near to toppling the Roman Empire in both East and West. At one point he was at the gates of Constantinople, demanding and receiving large tributes in gold. His armies then marched through France and Italy, capturing one great city after another.
The sister of a Roman emperor sent him a ring as a proposal of marriage, and he left Italy only after a dramatic meeting with Pope Leo the Great. He died on his wedding night after he returned from Italy. His grave is still being sought.
Author(s): Patrick Howarth
Publisher: Constable and Company
Year: 1994
Language: English
Pages: 206+XII
City: London
Acknowledgements 9
Illustrations 11
Contemporary Rulers 13
1. A Much-Maligned People 15
2. The Huns Move West 18
3. Tribal Warfare 24
4. The Magnet of Empire 29
5. Attila Becomes King of the Huns 35
6. Attila’s Kingdom 41
7. The Threat to Constantinople 48
8. The City Constantine Built 53
9. The Court of Theodosius II 60
10. A Plot to Murder Attila 66
11. The Murder Plot Discovered 73
12. The Weakness of the West 79
13. The Empress in Ravenna 85
14. The Revival of the Western Empire 90
15. Proposal of Marriage 95
16. Invasion of France 100
17. Battle Is Joined 106
18. The Catalaunian Fields 112
19. Invasion of Italy 119
20. The Cities of Lombardy Fall 125
21. Attila and the Pope 130
22. The Wedding Night and After 137
23. The Sons of Attila 143
24. Empires Dissolve 147
25. The Huns and Their Successors 153
26. Nibelung and Edda 159
27. Venetian and French Portrayals 167
28. Drama and Opera 172
29. "The Hun Is at the Gate" 178
30. The Hungarian Tradition 183
Notes 189
Bibliography 197
Index 201