14 XII: Eric Fournier (West Chester), Anticipating disaster: Honorius, forbearance and the limits of religious coercion in late Roman North Africa
Abstract
Following Valens’ defeat at the hands of the Goths at the Battle of Adrianople in August 378 and immediately before Alaric’s sack of Rome in August 410, both Gratian and Honorius issued temporary forbearance measures that relaxed the otherwise coercive religious policies against Donatists in North Africa. This paper, which focuses on Honorius, analyzes this episode as a case study in how the late Roman government reacted to disasters and crises in the religious sphere. These episodes are particularly puzzling because they go against the tendency of increasing coercion against schismatics and heretics expressed by late Roman laws and imperial propaganda. The paper argues that late Roman religious policy that attempted to enforce theological orthodoxy was mainly the product of episcopal lobbying and petitions, and therefore could be suspended when more pressing concerns such as the loyalty of a crucial province for the food supply of the city of Rome hung in the balance.