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Everything about The Taifals totally explainedThe Taifals, Taifali, Taifalae, Tayfals, or Theifali were a barbarian people settled by the late Roman Empire in Poitou in the fourth century. They served as dediticii and laeti in the Roman and subsequently Merovingian militaries. They were a nomadic, bellicose people, fighting primarily as cavalry.
Settlement in Oltenia
One of the earliest mentions of the Taifals puts them in the following of the Gothic king Cniva when he campaigned in Dacia and Moesia in 250 and the years following. They were probably not Germanic (though some sources consider them closely related to the Goths), but rather related to the Sarmatians, with whom they emigrated from the Central Asiatic steppes.
In the late third century they settled on the Danube on both sides of the Carpathians, dividing the territory with the Goths, who maintained political authority over all of it. In Spring 291 they formed a special alliance with the Gothic Thervingi, forming a tribal confederation from this date until 376, and fought the Vandals and Gepids: Tervingi, pars alia Gothorum, adiuncta manu Taifalorum, adversum Vandalos Gipedesque concurrunt. Along with the Victufali, the Taifals and Thervingi were the tribes mentioned as having possessed the former Roman province of Dacia by 350 "at the very latest". They were at that time independent of Gothia.
In 328 Constantine the Great conquered Oltenia and the Taifals, probably taking this opportunity to resettle a large number in Phrygia, in the diocese of Nicholas of Myra. In 332 he sent his son Constantine II to attack the Thervingi, who were routed. According to Zosimus (ii.31.3), a 500-man Taifal cavalry regiment engaged the Romans in a "running fight", and there's no evidence that this campaign was a failure. By 358 the Taifals were independent foederati of Rome and Oltenia lay outside Roman control. They launched campaigns as allies of the Romans from their own Oltenic bases, against the Limigantes (358 and 359) and the Sarmatians (358). However, campaigns against the Thervingi by the emperor Valens in 367 and 368 were inhibited by the independence of Oltenia. In 365 the emperor ordered the construction of defensive towers in Dacia Ripensis, but whether this was Oltenia is unclear. Archaeological evidence evidences no sedes Taifalorum (Taifal settlements) west of the river Olt. Athanaric had refused to extend his defensive preparations to the Taifalian territory and the Huns forced the Taifals to abandon Oltenia and western Muntenia by 370. The Taifals allied with the Greuthungi of Farnobius against Rome; they crossed the Danube in 377, but were defeated in late autumn that year. The Taifals were prominent among the survivors of Farnobius' coalition. After the Visigothic victory at Adrianople (378), their king Athanaric began to assail the Taifals. The breaking of the alliance between Thervingia and Taifal may have had something to do with disagreements over tactics in light of the Huns and the crossing of the Danube, the Taifals being horsemen and the Thervingi infantry.
Sometime before their conversion to Christianity, Ammianus Marcellinus wrote:
It is said that this nation of the Taifali was so profligate, and so immersed in the foulest obscenities of life, that they indulged in all kinds of unnatural lusts, exhausting the vigour both of youth and manhood in the most polluted defilements of debauchery. But if any adult caught a boar or slew a bear single-handed, he was then exempted from all compulsion of submitting to such ignominious pollution.
The Taifals were probably never Arians. There conversion to the Catholic faith probably occurred through Roman evangelism in the mid fifth century.
Colonii and laeti of the Empire
Subsequent to their defeat and falling out with Athanaric, the Taifals were officially resettled as colonii to farm lands in northern Italy (Modena, Parma, Reggio, Emilia) and Aquitaine by the victorious general Frigeridus. Abandoned Oltenia was settled by the Huns c. 400. Some Taifals allied with the Huns as early as 378, and some were later still allied with them at the Battle of Chalons (451). However, the victory of Adrianople in 378 meant that those Taifals who remained with the Visigoths fought against their cousins at Chalon. In 412, the Taifals entered Aquitaine in the train of the Visigoths.
The Taifals were often teamed with the Sarmatians and the Citrati iuniores by the Romans and subsequently by Clovis I. According to the Notitia Dignitatum of the early fifth century, there was a unit called the Equites Taifali established by Honorius under the comes Britanniarum in Britannia between 395 and 398. Possibly this unit may have been sent to the island by Stilicho in 399, and they may have been the same unit as the Equites Honoriani seniores mentioned around the same time. Thus, the Equites Honoriani Taifali seniores served in Britain while the Equites Honoriani Taifali iunores served in Gaul under the magister Equitum. They used the dragon-and-pearl device on their shields.
Presence in Merovingian Gaul
Also according to the Notitia, there was a praefectus Sarmatarum et Taifalorum gentilium, Pictavis in Galia, that is, a Sarmatian and Taifal prefect in Poitiers in Gaul. The region of Poitou was even called Thifalia or Theiphalia (Theofalgicus) in the sixth century. The Taifals were instrumental in defeating the Visigothic cavalry hand to hand at the Battle of Vouillé in 507. Finally, the Notitia refers to a troop called the Comites Taifali who were formed by the emperor Theodosius the Great and served in the Eastern Empire.
Under the Merovingians, Theiphalia had its own dux (duke). It is possible that the Taifal laeti who had served the Romans also served as garrisons for the Franks, but this isn't referred to in primary records. The laeti were formally integrated into the Merovingian military establishment under Childebert I. Gregory of Tours, the principal source fo the Taifals in the sixth century, says that a certain Frankish dux named Austrapius "oppressed" the Taifals (probably in the vicinity of Tiffauges); they revolted and killed him. The last mention of the Taifals as a distinct gens dates from year 565, but their Oltenic remnants almost certainly took part in the Lombard migration and invasion of Italy in 568.
One of the most famous Taifals was Saint Senoch, who founded an abbey at the Roman ruins which are now called Saint-Senoch. The Taifal influence extended into the ninth century and their fortresses, like Tiffauges and Lusignan, continued in use under the Carolingians. It has even been suggested that the Asiatic Taifals and Sarmatians influenced the Germanic arts. They also left their mark in the municipal nomenclature of the region: asides from Tiffauges, mentioned above, Taphaleschat in Corrèze, Toufailles and Toufailloux in Aquitaine, and Chauffailles (formerly Taïfailia) in Burgundy owe their names to Taifal settlement. Perhaps the town of Tafalla in the Navarre owes its name to these people, but if so, it's unknown if the Taifals were established in Hispania (probably to tame the Basques) by the Romans before 412 or by the Visigoths after that. The town of Taivola in northern Italy was also a Taifal settlement.
Sources
- Bachrach, Bernard S. "Procopius, Agathias and the Frankish Military."
Speculum, Vol. 45, No. 3. (Jul., 1970), pp 435–441.
- Bachrach, Bernard S. Merovingian Military Organization, 481–751. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1971.
- Bachrach, Bernard S. "Military Organization in Aquitaine under the Early Carolingians."
Speculum, Vol. 49, No. 1. (Jan., 1974), pp 1–33.
- Barnes, T. D. "Another Forty Missing Persons (A. D. 260–395)."
Phoenix, Vol. 28, No. 2. (Summer, 1974), pp 224–233.
- Barnes, T. D. "Constans and Gratian in Rome."
Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Vol. 79. (1975), pp 325–333.
- Greenberg, David. The Construction of Homosexuality. 1988.
- Gregory of Tours. The History of the Franks. 2 vol. O. M. Dalton, trans. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1967.
- Heather, Peter. "The Huns and the End of the Roman Empire in Western Europe."
The English Historical Review, Vol. 110, No. 435. (Feb., 1995), pp 4–41. (See map for Taifal migration route in Balkans, p. 8.)
- Lenski, Noel. "Initium mali Romano imperio: Contemporary Reactions to the Battle of Adrianople (in History and Ideology)."
Transactions of the American Philological Association, Vol. 127. (1997), pp 129–168.
- Maenchen-Helfen, J. Otto; Knight, Max (ed). The World of the Huns: Studies in their History and Culture. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1973. ISBN 0 520 01596 7.
- Musset, Lucien. The Germanic Invasions: The Making of Europe AD 400–600. Edward and Columba James, trans. London: Paul Elek, 1975. ISBN 0 236 17620 X. Originally published as Les Invasions: Les Vagues Germaniques. Paris: Presses Universitaires de France, 1965.
- Nickel, Helmut. "The Dragon and the Pearl."
Metropolitan Museum Journal, Vol. 26. (1991), pp 139–146.
- Nischer, E. C. "The Army Reforms of Diocletian and Constantine and Their Modifications up to the Time of the Notitia Dignitatum."
The Journal of Roman Studies, Vol. 13. (1923), pp 1–55.
- Thompson, E. A. The Visigoths in the Time of Ulfila. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1966.
- Wolfram, Herwig. History of the Goths. Thomas J. Dunlap, trans. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1988.
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