The establishment of an independent Vandal kingdom, …

Years: 445 - 445

The establishment of an independent Vandal kingdom, which soon includes most of what is now Tunisia and part of northern Algeria, has very adverse effects, although the Vandals have probably been no more deliberately destructive than other German invaders (the notion of “vandalism” will not be voiced before the eighteenth century).

The imperial authorities have to reduce the taxes of Mauretania by seven-eighths as a result of their devastation.

Over much of northern Tunisia, landowners are expelled and the properties handed over to Vandals.

Although the agricultural system remains based on the peasants, the expulsions have a serious effect on the towns with which the landowners had been connected.

Like other invading tribes except the Franks, the Vandals are divided from their subjects by their Arian heresy.

Although their persecution of Latin Christians is exaggerated by the latter, Vandal kings certainly exercise more pressure than others.

This is no doubt in response to the vigor of African Christianity, which keeps the loyalty even of those who have little to lose by the substitution of a Vandal for a Roman landlord.

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