415

415
Westgotische Münze mit dem Porträt eines unbekannten Herrschers (um 415)
Westgotische Münze mit dem Porträt eines unbekannten Herrschers (um 415)
Bei den Westgoten kommt es zu mehreren Machtwechseln,
aus denen schließlich Wallia als Herrscher hervorgeht.
415 in anderen Kalendern
Äthiopischer Kalender407/408
Buddhistische Zeitrechnung958/959 (südlicher Buddhismus); 957/958 (Alternativberechnung nach Buddhas Parinirvana)
Chinesischer Kalender51. (52.) Zyklus

Jahr des Holz-Hasen 乙卯 (am Beginn des Jahres Holz-Tiger 甲寅)

Jüdischer Kalender4175/76 (19./20. September)
Koptischer Kalender131/132
Römischer Kalenderab urbe condita MCLXVIII (1168)

Ära Diokletians: 131/132 (Jahreswechsel November)

Seleukidische ÄraBabylon: 725/726 (Jahreswechsel April)

Syrien: 726/727 (Jahreswechsel Oktober)

Spanische Ära453
Vikram Sambat (Nepalesischer Kalender)471/472 (Jahreswechsel April)

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  • um 415: Priskos, Historiker († nach 472)

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Visigoths siliqua 415 77001061.jpg
Autor/Urheber: CNG, Lizenz: CC BY-SA 3.0

Visigoths in Gaul. Gaul. Uncertain king. 415-507.

AR Siliqua (1.37 g, 12h). In the name of the Honorius. Pseudo-Ravenna mint in Gaul. Struck circa AD 415.
D N HONORI-VS [P F] AVG, pearl-diademed, draped, and cuirassed bust right
VICTOR[I-]A AVGGG, Roma seated left on cuirass, holding Victory on globe in extended right hand, spear in left;
PSRV. Reinhart, Münzen -; RIC X 3703 var. (AVGG); MEC 1, -; Hunter, Byzantine -. VF, toned, small surface chip at 2 o’clock on obverse. Unique and unpublished.
In his notes on the reign of Honorius in RIC (p. 135), Kent notes that these siliquae with PSRV mintmark were probably struck by the Visigoths in Gaul. Although he notes only the legend AVGG in Honorius’ name, he ties this issue to the similar issues they struck in the name of Priscus Attalus (RIC 3701-2). As the issues in Attalus’ name have both AVGG and AVGGG, it is not surprising that the latter is also found on the siliquae in Honorius’ name.
The Visigoths were one of many Germanic tribes that invaded the Roman Empire in the fourth century AD. Their early period is most notable for their defeat of the emperor Valens at Adrianople in AD 378 and their sacking of Rome under Alaric in AD 410. Alaric’s successor, Athaulf, led the Visigoths into Gaul and Spain, where they subsequently fought against the Vandals and Suevi for the emperor Honorius. Honorius rewarded them, in AD 417, with his permission to settle as foederati in western Aquitaine. Over the following half-century, the Visigoths rendered relatively faithful service for the empire, until their king Euric conquered much of Gaul and established an independent kingdom. This kingdom was quickly squashed in AD 507 by the Franks under Clovis, and the center of Visigothic power moved to Spain, where it flourished and took hold. The majority of the later kings were relatively weak and ineffectual. A few exceptions were the following: Leovigild, an outstanding military and political leader whose long reign (AD 568-586) ushered in the royal line that continued until the end; Reccared, who officially abandoned Arianism for Catholicism; and Sisebut and Swinthila, whose efforts led to the final conquest of Byzantine possessions in Spain. By AD 711, the decentralizing of power in Visigothic Spain had left the kingdom weak in the face of the invading Arabs, who defeated Roderick, the last Visigothic king. Another Visigothic leader, Achila II, continued to rule in Septimania, but he was also killed by the Arabs in AD 714.