| Goar | |
|---|---|
| King of the Alans | |
| Reign | before 406 – late 440s |
| Successor | Sangiban |
Goar (born before 390, died between 446 and 450) was a leader of theAlans in 5th-centuryGaul. Around the time that theVandals and other Alans underRespendialcrossed the Rhine in 405 or 406, Goar's band of Alans quickly joined theRomans, and subsequently played a role in the internal politics ofGaul.
This section includes alist of references,related reading, orexternal links,but its sources remain unclear because it lacksinline citations. Please helpimprove this section byintroducing more precise citations.(October 2020) (Learn how and when to remove this message) |
Goar is first mentioned as 'Goare' in theFrigeridus fragment,[note 1] embedded inGregory of Tours's work, describing theVandal–Frankish war that preceded theCrossing of the Rhine (the crossing was dated to 31 December 406 byProsper of Aquitaine).[2] According to Frigeridus, the Roman-alliedFranks were inflicting heavy casualties on the Vandals over the course of probably several battles, killing 20,000 Vandal warriors and their kingGodigisel, and were on the verge of exterminating the tribe.[3] At that point – according to MacDowall (2016) probably in the summer or autumn of 406 – another Alan king, Respendial, came to the Vandals' rescue and defeated the Franks,[3] "although Goar had gone over to the Romans." It's unclear from Frigeridus' account whether Goar actually joined the Franks in fighting against the Vandals and Respendial's Alans;[citation needed] but in any case, other sources make clear that Goar's Alans were eventually settled in Gaul nearOrléans by the Romans, while the Vandals, Suevi, and Respendial's Alans continued intoSpain.[3] According to bishopHydatius' chronicle, the Vandals were the first to arrive in Spain in September or October 409,[2] while Gregory notes that Suebi and Alans (presumably those led by Respendial[2]) followed them later.[1] It is not stated where these groups originated, although most historians identify these Alans with those settled byGratian inPannonia c. 380.[citation needed]
Goar next appears in 411, when he andGundahar, king of theBurgundians, joined in setting up the Gallo-Roman senatorJovinus asRoman Emperor atMainz (as described byOlympiodorus of Thebes).[page needed] At the time, another usurping emperor,Constantine III, was being besieged atArles byHonorius' general, the future emperorConstantius III. Constantine's supporters in northern Gaul defected to Jovinus, contributing to Constantine's defeat. Jovinus then threatened Constantius with "Burgundians,Alamanni, Franks, Alans, and all his army" (presumably including Goar). Jovinus' usurpation was put down two years later, however, when theVisigoths entered Gaul after their sack of Rome the previous year. The Visigothic kingAthaulf, after a period of indecision, sided with the government of Honorius inRavenna and defeated Jovinus atValentia. The Alan and Burgundian response to this defeat is not recorded.
After defeating Jovinus, the Visigoths came into renewed conflict with Honorius; this conflict culminated with the siege ofBazas in 414. According toPaulinus of Pella, who was among the besieged at the time, the Visigoths were supported by a group of Alans (whose king he describes, but does not name). Paulinus, who had previously established a friendship with the Alan king, persuaded him to break with the Goths and side with the Roman defenders of the city. The Alan leader did so, turning over his wife and son to the Romans as hostages. The Visigoths thereupon withdrew from Bazas and retreated to Spain, while the Alans were settled as Roman allies.
Historians are divided as to whether Paulinus' unnamed Alan king should be identified with Goar, or with some other Alan leader—otherwise unknown—who might have been accompanying the Visigoths since Italy or before. The former identification would imply that Goar had allied himself with Athaulf after the Goths' defeat of Jovinus; the latter hypothesis would imply that from this time on there was a second, distinct group of Alans in Gaul, in addition to those of Goar.
In hisLife of St.Germanus of Auxerre,Constantius of Lyon describes a confrontation between Germanus and a king of the Alans c. 446. This king had been ordered byAetius to put down a revolt ofBagaudae inArmorica, but Germanus persuaded him to hold off his attack while he got confirmation of the orders from the emperor in Italy. Constantius gives the name of this king as "Eochar", but many historians see this as a scribal error for "Gochar" (since Goar's name appears in some sources in this form). Other historians object to this identification, since it would imply that Goar's career as leader of the Alans lasted over forty years.
Also, theChronica Gallica of 452 reports that another Alan leader,Sambida, was given land aroundValentia in 440, several years before Germanus' confrontation with the Alans. If only one kingdom of Alans is assumed to have existed in Gaul, this would imply that Goar had already been succeeded by Sambida before 440, and that Sambida was then succeeded by Eochar. If, on the other hand, two kingdoms are assumed, Eochar could be identical to Goar, a successor of Goar, or a successor of Sambida.
TheChronica Gallica describes another grant of land to Alans byAetius two years later (442), in which the Romans occupying the land opposed the grant and had to be driven out by force. Neither the leader of these Alans, nor the location of the land, is mentioned in theChronica; but many historians associate this event with Goar as well.
In any case, Goar's Alans are universally identified with the Alans ofOrléans, who helped repelAttila's invasion in 451, and who were led at that time bySangiban—putting the end of Goar's reign, if the identification with Eochar is accepted, somewhere between 446 and 450.