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Attila
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Clovis the First
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Belisarius
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Charles Martel
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Pepin the Short
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Charlemagne
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Olaf Tryggvesson
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William the Conqueror
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Godfrey de Bouillon
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Saladin
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Edward I of England
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Edward III of England
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Edward the Black Prince
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Bertrand du Guesclin
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Henry V of England
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John Huniades
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Warwick the Kingmaker
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Hernando Cortez
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Francisco Pizarro
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Gaspard de Coligni
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Henry IV of France
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Sir Francis Drake
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Sir Walter Raleigh
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Miles Standish
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Albrecht von Wallenstein
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Gustavus Adolphus
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Marshal Turenne
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Charles XII of Sweden
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John, Duke of Marlborough
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Prince Eugene of Savoy
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General James Wolfe
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Frederick the Great
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Lord Robert Clive
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Francois Kellerman
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Michel Nev
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Napoleon Bonaparte
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Arthur, Duke of Wellington
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Lord Horation Nelson
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Israel Putnam
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Anthony Wayne
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Francis Marion
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John Paul Jones
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Tecumseh
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James Lawrence
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Stephen Decatur
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Oliver Hazard Perry
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Sam Houston
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Winfield Scott
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Ulysses Simpson Grant
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William Tecumseh Sherman
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Philip Henry Sheridan
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Robert Edmund Lee
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Letter from Lee to his Son
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Thomas Jonathan Jackson
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David Glascoe Farragut
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David Dixon Porter
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Giuseppe Garibaldi
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Count Von Moltke
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George Dewey
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Attila
By Archdeacon Farrar, D.D., F.R.S.
(Reigned 434-453)
T
he
Goths were "improvable barbarians;" but the Huns
whom Attila led to ravage the fair peninsula were mere
Tartar savages of the lowest stamp.
All the other invaders of Italy were of Teutonic
origin, but the Huns were Mongols—of such perfect
hideousness that Jornandes regarded them as the
offspring of witches and demons. Attila, son of
Mundzuk, "the scourge of God," resembled his soldiers
in his flat, swarthy features, deep-set, fierce,
rolling black eyes, and stunted figure. The Huns were
uncivilizable savages, who might harry a continent, but
neither under Attila, nor Genghis, nor Timour, could
ever found an organized kingdom. This terrific and
brutal little Kalmuck, with his bead-like eyes, this
skin-clad devourer of raw flesh, delighted to lay waste
whole empires with fire and sword, and to terrify the
world. In 434 he became king of the Huns with his
brother Bleda. In 445 Bleda died, possibly by murder;
and in 445 Attila, now sole king of the Huns, invaded
the Eastern Empire, and ravaged it even to the gates of
Constantinople. He was only bought off from destroying
it by an enormous tribute. The infamous plot to
assassinate him by the treachery of Edecon, who was
one of his counsellors, was discovered and foiled, and
Attila sent message after message filled with insults
to Theodosius II. In 451 his vast army moved westward,
and devastated Gaul. It was met in the Mauriac plain
and defeated by Ætius in the tremendous battle of
Chalons, after a carnage among the most frightful that
the world has ever seen. The Huns were only saved from
final destruction by the heroic boldness of Attila. He
had a vast hill of saddles and other spoils erected,
and declared his determination to burn himself alive
rather than be taken captive. He led back his shattered
host to Pannonia, and there in his wooden palace
meditated revenge. In the one authentic glimpse which
we get of his mode of life, we see him at a banquet,
while his nobles and warriors caroused and burst into
peals of laughter at the buffooneries of an idiot and a
jester. But the Hunnish king sat grave and silent,
caressing the cheeks of the boy Ernak, his favorite
son, whom the augur pointed out as the heir of his
destinies.
In 452 he once more put his myriads in motion and
invaded Italy.
Everywhere the land was as the garden of Eden before him; behind
him it was a desolate wilderness. Encouraged by the
omen of some storks leaving their nest, he stormed and
destroyed Aquileia, and, razing city after city into
heaps of blackened ruins, advanced to Milan, boasting
that "where his horses' hoofs trod the grass never
grew." Rome awaited with trembling a fate which seemed
to threaten unprecedented catastrophe. But in this
awful crisis the Pope, Leo I, showed himself the true
Defensor civitatis. He headed a splendid embassy
to the camp of Attila. Already Leo had helped to trace
with firm hand the deep lines of Christian orthodoxy
which were accepted by the Church at the fourth great
Ecumenical Council of Chalcedon in 451 as her final
utterance as to the true Godhead, the perfect Manhood,
the invisible yet distinct union of both Godhead and
Manhood, in the person of her Lord. Now Leo showed what
miracle could be achieved by the irresistible might of
weakness. Attila's god was a naked iron sword of
gigantic size, which had been accidentally found by a
herdsman and presented to him, but which he palmed off
on his nation as the authentic sword of the Scythian
war-god. Yet he was easily overawed by the majesty of
religion. He scorned the guilty, corrupt courtiers of
Constantinople, but he almost trembled before a holy
man. Already in 451 he had spared the defenceless city
of Troyes at the entreaty of its bishop, St. Lupus, and
had asked the benefit of his prayers. And when he gazed
on the calm countenance; noble presence, and dauntless
demeanor of Pope Leo, an awful dread fell upon him.
Alaric had conquered Rome, but Alaric had died
immediately afterward. How if it would be so with
Attila? He yielded, he retired; he said—or perhaps he
said—that he could conquer men, but that the wolf
(Lupus) and the lion (Leo) had learnt how to conquer
him. The tide of brutal and barbarous invasion was
rolled back again, and the world and the city saw that
while the Emperor Valentinian had been ready to fly,
the Pope Leo was not afraid to advance, and that "when
the successor of Cæsar had been proved useless, the
successor of St. Peter had been a very present help."
Indirectly Attila was the strengthener of the Papacy,
and the founder of Venice. That stately and gorgeous
city owes its origin to the Italians who fled in terror
before the brutal Huns from ruined Padua to the islands
and lagoons at the mouth of the Piave.
Attila, "The Scourge of God."
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In retiring, Attila had demanded once more the hand and
dower of Honoria, the disgraced sister of Theodosius
II. But in 453 he added a beautiful maiden, Ildico, to
his innumerable wives. He retired from the banquet
after a deep carouse, and in the morning was found dead
amid a flood of gore by which he had been suffocated,
while Ildico sat weeping beneath her veil by the dead
king's bedside. He died as a fool dieth; and his
warriors gashed their cheeks and wept tears of blood,
and gave him a splendid burial. And his name passed
into legend as the King Etzel of the Niebelungen Lied,
and Alti of the Saga. But his "loutish sons" quarrelled
among themselves. The Teutons, Goths, Gepidæ, Alani,
and Heruli reasserted their independence in the great
victory of Netad in Pannonia in 454; and though the
Huns left their name in Hungary, henceforth the empire
of Attila became mere "driftwood, on its way to
inevitable oblivion."
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