mdo757 said:
The Battle of Mons Lactarius (also known as Battle of the Vesuvius) took place in 553 during the Gothic War waged on behalf of Justinian I against the Ostrogoths in Italy. I do not know why you can not see the words Rome, Roman, Italy
I see the words, but I’m not sure what you’re trying to prove exactly. Are you suggesting that the Bishop of the city of Rome was responsible for the destruction of tribes like the Vandals and the Ostrogoths simply because the Eastern
Roman Empire’s military carried it out? If so, that doesn’t make any logical sense to me.
mdo757 said:
... And again the Roman empire was vast, and different nations served the Roman military for Rome also.
Different nations served the Eastern Roman Emperor during the fall of the three tribes, but those nations were not serving the
city of Rome, let alone the city’s
bishop.
Now, if you had originally picked the Longobards/Lombards as one of the three uprooted tribes, then you could have made a case that the papacy was partly responsible for their demise, since it is a well-established fact that the Roman See called in the Franks to save itself from the Longobards, and the Eastern Emperor played absolutely no part in it. But there is simply no evidence concerning any papal involvement in the fall of the Heruli, Vandals, or Ostrogoths, and all contemporary historians who wrote on the matter placed sole responsibility for the Vandals and Ostrogoths at the feet of the Byzantine emperors.
And BTW; when the Heruli kingdom was destroyed by the Longobards, both the Heruli kingdom and the Longobards were north of the Danube and outside of the empire, so at that point in time the Longobards were not serving the Roman military. They had been subjugated by the Heruli for several decades when they started an uprising early in the 6th Century and overtook Heruli lands. Usually when historicists talk about the destruction of the “Heruli†they are referring to Odoacer’s kingdom in Italy in 493AD, but as I explained to brakelite early in the thread, Odoacer’s kingdom was little more than a mixed band of mercenaries with representatives from several tribes, Heruls included.
In Christ,
Acts6:5