The western Roman emperor, Honorius (r. 395-423), …

Years: 388 - 531

The western Roman emperor, Honorius (r. 395-423), because large parts of Spain are outside his control, commissions his sister, Galla Placidia, and her husband Ataulf, the Visigoth king, to restore order in the Iberian Peninsula, and he gives them the rights to settle in and to govern the area in return for defending it.

The highly romanized Visigoths manage to subdue the Suevi and to compel the Vandals to sail for North Africa.

In 484 they establish Toledo as the capital of their Spanish monarchy.

The Visigothic occupation is in no sense a barbarian invasion, however.

Successive Visigothic kings rule Spain as patricians who hold imperial commissions to govern in the name of the Roman emperor.

There are no more than three hundred thousand Germanic people in Spain, which has a population of four million, and their overall influence on Spanish history is generally seen as minimal.

They are a privileged warrior elite, though many of them live as herders and farmers in the valley of the Tagus and on the central plateau.

Hispano-Romans continue to run the civil administration, and Latin continues to be the language of government and of commerce.

 

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