Everything about Groans Of The Britons totally explained
The Groans of the Britons (
Latin:
gemitus Britannorum) is the name of the final appeal made by the post-Roman population of
Britain for assistance against foreign invasion. It describes a people in extreme danger and was an attempt to persuade the late
Western Roman Empire to send troops across the
English Channel to help defend its
former subjects from the Saxons. The collapsing Empire had few military resources to spare and, as is briefly described here, the record is ambiguous on what was the response to the appeal, if any.
The message
Dated to c.
446, the message is recorded by
Gildas in his
De Excidio Britanniae, and later
Bede, as being a last-ditch plea for assistance to
Aëtius,
military leader of the
Western Roman Empire who spent most of the 440s fighting insurgents in
Gaul and
Hispania (although some believe that the 'Agitius' mentioned is actually
Aegidius). The usurper
Constantine III had taken the last Roman troops from Britain in
407 and the civilian administration had been expelled by the natives a little later, leaving the inhabitants to fend for themselves during increasingly fraught times.
The plea as recorded by Gildas reads:
» To Agitius [Aetius]
, thrice consul, the groans of the Britons... the barbarians drive us to the sea, the sea drives us to the barbarians, between these two means of death we're either killed or drowned.
Problems of dating and interpretation
Barbarians refers to the
Saxon settlers who had been living alongside the Britons since the
430s. Their attacks continued and no military assistance was ever sent. A visit by
Germanus, a former Roman general and by then
Bishop of Auxerre, in around 446–7 could have constituted Aetius' response, but c.
440 is a more widely accepted date for this second mission of his to Britain.
The reference to Aetius' third consulship however is useful in dating the increasing strife in Britain during this period. That Gildas' mention of the appeal is a minor part of a much larger religious
polemic however, means that the image described may be more
hyperbolic than realistic, especially as his sources were probably derived from oral tradition. The traditional picture of society in post-Roman Britain as being besieged and chaotic is also being increasingly challenged by archaeological evidence.
Traditionally, the barbarian Saxons were settlers, invited by
Vortigern to aid him in battling the Picts but by
442 the Britons had lost control of their guests and
Romano-British society was finally breaking down. Germanus had led the Britons to a great victory ten or fifteen years earlier and it may have been that he was sent by Aetius in lieu of troops, to provide military and spiritual guidance to the Britons on how to defend and govern themselves.
The Saxon troubles continued for many years until the
Battle of Mount Badon in the late fifth century which ushered in two generations of peace.
Also see
Battle of Mons Badonicus
Gwent
Sub-Roman Britain
Wessex
GododdinFurther Information
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