조동봉 용산공업고등학교건축과 反宇宙體반우주체식인체食人體식육체食肉體마물체魔物體짐승체獸禽畜體부정정사否定情事부정사음부정정교부정섹스부정결혼부정혼인부정통혼플레이아데스4대무법자630128-1067814朴鐘權的大億劫的削的磨的滅的處理的반사회성인격장애否定腐敗부정부패荷蘭네덜란드尼德蘭아틀란티스Atlantis준아틀란티스준성단준성운지구말데크Maldek리라Lyra베가VegaαLyrae안드로메다아플레이아데스α LyraeAlpha LyraeAlpha Lyr or α Lyr 리라Lyra플레이아데스4대무법자 아플레이아데스1대수장首長 아플레이아데스2대수장首長 이건희(李健熙, 1942년 1월 9일~2020년 10월 25일) 이재용(李在鎔, 1968년 6월 23일~) 이병철(李秉喆, 1910년 2월 12일 ~ 1987년 11월 19일) 메이지 천황(일본어: 明治天皇 메이지 텐노[*], 1852년 11월 3일 ~ 1912년 7월 30일) 쇼와 천황(일본어: 昭和天皇, 1901년 4월 29일 ~ 1989년 1월 7일) 조지 워커 부시(영어: George Walker Bush 듣기 (도움말·정보), 문화어: 죠지 워커 부쉬, 1946년 7월 6일~) 엘리자베스 2세(영어: Elizabeth II, 1926년 4월 21일~2022년 9월 8일) 엘리자베스 1세(영어: Elizabeth I, 1533년 9월 7일 ~ 1603년 3월 24일) 마거릿 힐더 대처(영어: Margaret Hilda Thatcher, Baroness Thatcher, LG, OM, 1925년 10월 13일 ~ 2013년 4월 8일) 연 태조 문명황제 모용황(燕 太祖 文明皇帝 慕容皝, 297년 ~ 348년, 재위: 337년 ~ 348년) 아틸라(라틴어: Attila, 고대 노르드어: Atli 아틀리→끔찍한 자, 독일어: Etzel 에첼[*], 406년 ~ 453년) 리라Lyra플레이아데스4대무법자미마쓰 리라Lyra플레이아데스4대무법자프타(Ptah, Ptaha, Peteh, Tathenen, Tanen) 리라Lyra플레이아데스4대무법자아루쓰 리라Lyra플레이아데스4대무법자오자와 제2차은하대전위원장냉기치 연산군(燕山君, 1476년 12월 2일 (음력 11월 7일) ~ 1506년 11월 30일 (음력 11월 6일)) 성종(成宗, 1457년 ~ 1494년, 재위 : 1469년 ~ 1494년) 예종(1450~1469, 재위 1468~1469) 고종(高宗, 1852년 7월 25일 ~ 1919년 1월 21일) 당 고종 이치(唐 高宗 李治, 628년 7월 21일(음력 6월 15일) ~ 683년 12월 27일(음력 12월 4일)) 당 현종 이융기(唐玄宗 李隆基, 685년 9월 8일(음력 8월 5일) ~ 762년 5월 3일(음력 4월 5일)) 당 태종 이세민(唐 太宗 李世民, 598년 1월 23일(음력 597년 12월 22일) ~ 649년 7월 10일(음력 5월 26일)) 김일성(金日成, 1912년 4월 15일 ~ 1994년 7월 8일) 박헌영(朴憲永, 1900년 5월 28일 ~ 1955년 12월 5일) 고시원(考試院) 숙소 숙박(宿泊, 영어: lodging) 거소 민가(民家) 거주지(居住地) 주택지(住宅地) 주거 지역(住居地域) 또는 주택가(住宅街) 주거지 주민등록지 출생등록지 주민등록번호 대한민국 주민등록법 대한민국大韓民國 대한민국 영토 대한민국 국민 구글 뉴스와 구글 블로그 티스토리 블로그 다음커뮤니케이션 Daum blog 또는 weblog 박정희(朴正熙,[4] 1917년 11월 14일~1979년 10월 26일) 이승만(李承晚[3], 1875년 3월 26일 ~ 1965년 7월 19일) 장면(張勉, 1899년 8월 28일 ~ 1966년 6월 4일) 윤보선(尹潽善[2], 1897년 8월 26일~1990년 7월 18일) 전두환(한국 한자: 全斗煥, 1931년 1월 18일~2021년 11월 23일) 노태우(盧泰愚, 1932년 12월 4일~2021년 10월 26일[2][3]) 김대중(金大中[3], 1924년 1월 6일~2009년 8월 18일) 김영삼(金泳三, 1929년 1월 14일[3]~2015년 11월 22일) 노무현(盧武鉉[4], 1946년 9월 1일~2009년 5월 23일) 이명박(李明博[1], 1941년 12월 19일~) 박근혜(朴槿惠[2], 1952년 2월 2일~) 문재인(文在寅, 1953년 1월 24일~) 윤석열(尹錫悅, 표준 발음: 윤서결[주해 1], 1960년 12월 18일~) 카탈라우눔 전투 또는 샬롱 전투는 451년 플라비우스 아이티우스와 서고트족 왕 테오도리쿠스 1세가 이끄는 서로마 제국과 포이데라티의 연합군과 아틸라가 이끄는 훈족과 그 동맹군 사이의 전투이다.이 전투는 서로마 제국 최후의 주요 군사작전이 되었으며 이 전투에서 서고트족 국왕 테오도리쿠스 1세가 전사하고 어느 쪽도 결정적인 승리를 거두지는 못했으나, 훈족의 서진을 저지하는 데 성공하였다. 역사의 기록은 분명히 과장되었고 따라서 믿을 수 없기 때문에, 양 측의 병력 규모는 추측으로만 알 수 있다. 6세기의 로마 역사가 요르다네스(Jordanes)는 당시 전장에 50만 명의 병사가 있다고도 했다. 군 역사가들의 견해에 따르면, 당시의 병참 기술을 고려했을 때 아무리 많더라도 양 쪽에 약 5만에서 6만 정도의 군인들이 있었을 거라고 한다. 하지만 아마 더욱 더 적었을 것이다. 로마 군대의 경우에는 그 수를 더 잘 추정할 수 있다. 요르다네스에 따르면 그 군대의 절반가량은 포이데라티(foederati, 로마 제국 내의 영주권을 인정받는 대가로 병력 제공의 의무를 진 이민족들)라고 불린 서고트족들인데, 그들은 전성기에도 전장에 2만 명 이상 나갈 수 없었기 때문이다. 그러므로 알라니(Alani)족을 고려한다고 해도 서로마 황제 휘하 군대는 결코 45000명을 훨씬 넘지 않았을 것이다. 아틸라의 군대는 크지는 않은 수적 우세를 가졌다. 그러므로 약 최대 5만 명의 병력이 있었을 것이다. 다른 추측에 따르면 양 편의 군대는 약 3만 명 정도라고 한다. 이것이 5세기와 6세기 시절 고대 후기 군대의 보통 규모와 일치할 것이기 때문이다. 아틸라의 군대는 절반 정도만 훈족으로 구성되어 있었고 나머지 절반은 속국 병사들로 채워졌다. 이 병력들을 크기 순서대로 나열하면, 발라미르가 이끄는 동고트족, 아르다리쿠스가 이끄는 게피다이(Gepidae)족과, 라인강 우변에 사는 프랑크족 및 마인 강가에 사는 부족의 일족인 부르고뉴(부르군트)족이 특히 중요하다. 또한 헤룰리(Heruli)족, 스키리(Scirii)족, 랑고바르디(Langobardi)족 등이 소규모 병력으로 수백 명부터 2천 명까지 있었다. 동고트족이 속국 병력의 약 절반을 차지했던 것은 확인되었다. 훈족 병사들은 평소대로 말을 탄 채 창, 곤봉, 고리형 끈과 가장 중요한 무기인 특수 제작된 기병용 활로 무장했다. 그들은 보통은 어떤 갑옷도 착용하지 않았고 단지 작은 원형 가죽방패만 방어용으로 사용하였다. 게르만족 쪽의 속국 병력의 경우에는 달랐다. 동고트족의 병력 중 1/3은 기병이었는데, 다른 족들은 모두가 보병이었다. 동고트족 기병은 중무장 기병으로 분류될 수 있다. 당시에 그들은 찌르기용 창과 날이 넓은 검(독어 Breitschwert / 영어 broadsword)을 사용했으며, 최소한 가죽 갑옷을 착용하였지만 때로 쇠사슬 갑옷을 착용하기도 했으며, 방패를 구비하기도 하였기 때문이다. 그러나 이 시기의 고대 후기에는 아직 등자(말을 탈 때 발을 받쳐주는 도구)가 없었다. 보병들은 프랑크족을 제외하면 추측컨대 대개 갑옷없이 창, 날이 넓은 검 또는 장검을 가지고, 일부는 가벼운 방패도 가지고 출전했을 것이다. 게르만족은 원거리 무기를 거의 사용하지 않았으나, 동고트족만은 궁수 부대가 있었다. 프랑크족은 ‘프란치스카(Franzisca)’라는 일회용 원거리 무기, 즉 휘어진 모양의 투척용 도끼를 병사들의 충돌 직전에 사용했다. 그와 상관없이 프랑크족 병사들은 날이 넓은 검과 나무방패로 무장했다. 아에티우스의 군대는 절반가량이 로마 정규군 부대 및 프랑크족과 부르고뉴족의 포이데라티로 이루어졌고, 나머지 절반은 서고트족의 병사들로 이루어졌다. 여기에 수천 명의 알라니족이 함께했다. 로마군, 프랑크군, 부르고뉴군은 중무장 보병대를 형성했다. 그 때에는 로마 후기의 병사들은 더 이상 로마 제정 초기 시절의 군단(legio)이 아니었다. 그들은 타원형 방패, 조임쇠가 달린 투구, 양날의 긴 검(spatha), 당시 로마군에게 항상 상당한 전투력을 안겨준 동양식 복합형 활을 가지고 다녔으며, 팔다리를 더 이상 가리지 않는 쇠사슬갑옷을 입었다. 그 부대의 일부는 아직 ‘군단’이라 불렸으나 1천 명에서 2천 명 사이의 병력만을 통솔했다. 아에티우스가 소집했던 많은 군인들은 리미타네이(limitanei, 국경지역 병사들)로 여겨지는데, 이들은 대체로 주둔지 근처의 특정 지역에 거주하는 주민들로 구성되었다. 이것은 기동성을 줄이지만 바로 그들 자신의 공동체와 가족을 지키려는 까닭에, 이 부대의 사기는 그만큼 높다. 황제 근위대인 코미타텐세스(comitatenses)는 5세기 중엽 서로마에서 더 이상 큰 역할을 하지 못했는데, 이 정예군 아래 끝없는 안팎의 분쟁이 높은 손실을 끼쳤고, 텅 빈 국고 때문에 이 부대를 예전과 같이 만들 수 없었기 때문이다. 아에티우스는 코미타텐세스도 포함하여 아직 지휘권이 있는 로마 군대 모두를 아틸라에게 대항하도록 했던 것으로 보인다. 많은 이들이 기병이었다. 라인강 변에 사는 리푸아리아 프랑크족은 아마 위에 언급된 라인강 오른쪽에 사는 프랑크족과 똑같이 무장하였을 것이다. 양 측 군대에 다 있는 부르고뉴족은 단지 장검만으로 싸웠음이 명백하다. 서고트족 병사들은 378년의 아드리아노폴리스 전투 이래로, 알라니족 기병대의 명백한 본보기를 통해 보병에서 점점 더 많이 기병으로 넘어가고 있었다. 그래서 적어도 서고트 징집병의 2/3는 기병이었다. 그들은 쇠사슬갑옷과 찌르기용 창으로 무장한 귀족 기병대와, 일반 민중 출신의 경무장 기병대로 나뉜다. 후자의 기병대는 대개 갑옷이 없었으나, 투창, 날이 넓은 검, 그리고 아마도 나무나 여러 겹의 가죽으로 된 작은 기병용 방패는 있었다. 보병들에게는 창, 날이 넓은 검, 방패가 아주 널리 퍼졌으며 극히 드물지만 단순형 활도 있었고, 갑옷은 없었다. 알라니족의 무장과 싸우는 방식은 결과적으로 훈족을 아주 많이 닮았다.The Battle of the Catalaunian Plains (or Fields), also called the Battle of the Campus Mauriacus, Battle of Châlons, Battle of Troyes[5] or the Battle of Maurica, took place on June 20, 451 AD, between a coalition, led by the Roman general Flavius Aetius and the Visigothic king Theodoric I, against the Huns and their vassals, commanded by their king, Attila. It proved one of the last major military operations of the Western Roman Empire, although Germanic foederati composed the majority of the coalition army. Whether the battle was of strategic significance is disputed; historians generally agree that the siege of Aurelianum was the decisive moment in the campaign[citation needed] and stopped the Huns' attempt to advance any further into Roman territory or establish vassals in Roman Gaul. However, the Huns successfully looted and pillaged much of Gaul and crippled the military capacity of the Romans and Visigoths. Attila died only two years later, in 453; after the Battle of Nedao in 454 AD, the coalition of the Huns and the incorporated Germanic vassals gradually disintegrated. By 450 AD, the Romans had restored their authority in much of the province of Gaul, although control over all of the provinces beyond Italy was continuing to diminish. Armorica was only nominally part of the empire, and Germanic tribes occupying Roman territory had been forcibly settled and bound by treaty as Foederati under their own leaders. Northern Gaul between the Rhine north of Xanten and the Lys (Germania Inferior) had unofficially been abandoned to the Salian Franks. The Visigoths on the Garonne were growing restive, but still holding to their treaty. The Burgundians in Sapaudia were more submissive, but likewise awaiting an opening for revolt.[6] The Alans on the Loire and in Valentinois were more loyal, having served the Romans since the defeat of Jovinus in 411 and the Siege of Bazas in 414.[7] The parts of Gaul still securely in Roman control were the Mediterranean coastline; a region including Aurelianum (present-day Orléans) along the Seine and the Loire as far north as Soissons and Arras; the middle and upper Rhine to Cologne; and downstream along the Rhône.[8] The historian Jordanes states that Attila was enticed by the Vandal king Genseric to wage war on the Visigoths. At the same time, Genseric would attempt to sow strife between the Visigoths and the Western Roman Empire.[9][Note 1] However, Jordanes' account of Gothic history is notoriously unreliable.[10][Note 2] Modern scholars now believe that this explanation was Jordanes projecting contemporary events and political opinions onto Attila's time, and it was likely not original to Priscus. Christiensen points out that Amalafrida, wife of Thrasamund, was imprisoned and murdered by Hilderic after Thrasamund's death in 523, and that the tale of the blinding of Theodoric's daughter by Huneric was a fabrication.[14] Other contemporary writers offer different motivations: Justa Grata Honoria, the sister of the emperor Valentinian III, had been betrothed to the former consul Bassus Herculanus the year before. In 450, she sent the eunuch Hyacinthus to the Hunnic king asking for Attila's help in escaping her confinement, with her ring as proof of the letter's legitimacy.[15] Allegedly, Attila interpreted it as offering her hand in marriage, and he had claimed half of the empire as a dowry. He demanded Honoria to be delivered along with the dowry. Valentinian rejected these demands, and Attila used it as an excuse to launch a destructive campaign through Gaul.[Note 3] Hughes suggests that the reality of this interpretation should be that Honoria was using Attila's status as honorary magister militum for political leverage.[16] Another conflict leading into the war was that in 449, the King of the Franks (possibly Chlodio) had died and that his two sons argued over the succession: while the older son sought Attila's help, the younger sided with Aetius, who adopted him. The identity of the younger prince, who was seen at Rome by the historian Priscus,[17] remains unclear, though both Merowech and Childeric I have been suggested. Attila crossed the Rhine early in 451 with his followers and a large number of allies, sacking Divodurum (now Metz) on April 7.[18] Schultheis notes, however, that sacking of Metz on April 7 may have been a literary trope used by Hydatius and Gregory of Tours to emphasize Attila's pagan nature to a Christian audience and may not be reliable.[19] Other cities attacked can be determined by the hagiographies written to commemorate their bishops: Nicasius was slaughtered before the altar of his church in Reims; Servatius is alleged to have saved Tongeren with his prayers, as Genevieve is to have saved Lutetia. Lupus, bishop of Troyes, is also credited with saving his city by meeting Attila in person.[Note 4] Many other cities also claim to have been attacked in these accounts, although archaeological evidence shows no destruction layer dating to the timeframe of the invasion. The most likely explanation for Attila's widespread devastation of Gaul is that Attila's main column followed the Roman roads and crossed the Rhine at Argentoratum (Strasbourg) before marching to Borbetomagus (Worms), Mogontiacum (Mainz), Augusta Treverorum (Trier), Divodurum (Metz), Durocotorum (Reims), and finally Aurelianum (Orléans), while sending a small detachment north into Frankish territory to plunder the countryside. This explanation would support the literary evidence claiming North Gaul was attacked, and the archaeological evidence showing major population centers were not sacked.[19][20] Attila's army had reached Aurelianum (modern Orléans, France) before June. According to Jordanes, the Alan king Sangiban, whose Foederati realm included Aurelianum, had promised to open the city gates.[21] This siege is confirmed by the account of the Vita S. Aniani and in the later account of Gregory of Tours, although Sangiban's name does not appear in their accounts.[22][23] However, the inhabitants of Aurelianum shut their gates against the advancing invaders, and Attila began to besiege the city, while he waited for Sangiban to deliver on his promise. There are two different accounts of the Siege of Aurelianum, and Hughes suggests that combining them provides a better understanding of what actually happened.[24] After four days of heavy rain, Attila began his final assault on June 14, which was broken off due to the approach of the Roman coalition.[22] Modern scholars tend to agree that the Siege of Aurelianum was the high point of Attila's attack on the West, and the staunch Alan defence of the city was the real decisive factor in the war of 451.[24] Contrary to Jordanes, the Alans were never planning to defect as they were the loyal backbone of the Roman defence in Gaul.[25][26] Forces Both armies consisted of combatants from many peoples. Besides the Roman troops, the Alans, and the Visigoths, Jordanes lists Aetius' allies as including the Francii, Sarmatae, Armoriciani, Liticiani, Burgundiones, Saxones, Riparii, and Olibrones (whom he describes as "once Roman soldiers and now the flower of the allied forces"), as well as "other Celtic or German tribes."[27] The Liticiani could be either Laeti or Romano-Britons, the latter of which are recorded by Gregory.[28][29][30] Halsall argues that the Rhine limitanei and the old British field army composed the forces of the Riparii and Armoricans, and Heather suggests that the Visigoths may have been able to field about 25,000 men total.[31] Drinkwater adds that a faction of Alemanni may have participated in the battle, possibly on both sides like the Franks and Burgundians.[32] The Olibrones remain unknown, although it has been suggested these were Germanic limitanei garrisons.[33] Schultheis argues that on paper, the Germanic federates could theoretically number more than 70,000, but likely numbered under 50,000.[34] A sense of the size of the actual Roman army may be found in the study of the Notitia Dignitatum by A.H.M. Jones.[35] This document is a list of officials and military units that was last updated in the first decades of the fifth century. The Notitia Dignitatum lists 58 various regular units, and 33 limitanei serving either in the Gallic provinces or on the frontiers nearby; the total of these units, based on Jones' analysis, is 34,000 for the regular units and 11,500 for the limitanei, or just under 46,000 all told. However, this figure is an estimate for the years 395–425 and one that constantly changes with new research. The loss of the Western Roman provinces in North Africa resulted in the loss of funding for 40,000 infantry and 20,000 cavalry in the Roman army, in addition to previous losses, which was enough to permanently cripple Roman military capacity after 439 AD.[36] According to Herwig Wolfram, with an annual revenue of 40,000 pounds of gold in 450 AD, the Western Empire would have had to spend almost two thirds of its income to maintain an army of 30,000 men.[37] Hugh Elton gives the same figure in 450, but estimates the cost of maintaining an army of 300,000 at 31,625 lbs. of gold or 7.6 solidi a year per soldier. He states that there were also other unquantifiable military costs such as defensive installations, equipment, logistical supplies, paper, animals, and other costs. The size of the army in 450 AD therefore must have been significantly reduced from its status in the late 420's.[38] Schultheis argues that the Roman field army as calculated from his own estimates of the Notitia Dignitatum, chronology of military losses, and income losses numbered approximately 20,500 comitatenses and 18,000 limitanei by the time of the battle, not including supernumerary officers.[39] Jordanes' list for Attila's allies includes the Gepids under their king Ardaric, as well as an army of various Gothic groups led by the brothers Valamir, Theodemir (the father of the later Ostrogothic king Theodoric the Great) and Videmir, scions of the Amali Goths.[40] Sidonius Apollinaris offers a more extensive list of allies: Rugians, Gepids, Geloni, Burgundians, Sciri, Bellonoti, Neuri, Bastarnae, Thuringians, Bructeri, and Franks living along the River Neckar.[41] E.A. Thompson expresses his suspicions that some of these names are drawn from literary traditions rather than from the event itself: The Bastarnae, Bructeri, Geloni and Neuri had disappeared hundreds of years before the time of the Huns, while the Bellonoti had never existed at all: presumably the learned poet was thinking of the Balloniti, a people invented by Valerius Flaccus nearly four centuries earlier. On the other hand, Thompson believes that the presence of Burgundians on the Hunnic side is credible, noting that a group is documented remaining east of the Rhine; likewise, he believes that the other peoples Sidonius mentions (the Rugians, Sciri, and Thuringians) were participants in this battle.[42] Thompson remarks in a footnote, "I doubt that Attila could have fed an army of even 30,000 men."[43] Lindner argues that by crossing the Carpathians to the area of modern Hungary the Huns had forfeited their best logistic base and grazing grounds, and that the Great Hungarian Plain could only support 15,000 mounted nomads.[44] Schultheis notes that Attila had control of other Hunnic groups east of the Carpathians, and proposes the eastern half of Attila's empire could field an additional 7,000 to 12,000 men based on later 6th century sources.[45] Kim notes that the Huns continued use of the Xiongnu decimal system, meaning their army was probably organized into divisions of 10, 100, 1000, and 10,000, but no real estimates of Hunnic military capacity can be determined.[46] Their barbarian allies, however, do receive mentions at other times in other sources: in 430 CE. The Hunnish king Octar was defeated by a force of 3,000 Neckar Burgundians who would later come under Hun subjugation, and Heather estimates that both the Gepids and the Amali Goths could have each fielded a maximum of 15,000 men at the Battle of Nedao in 454.[47][48] Schultheis argues that when combining primary and secondary source estimates Attila's forces would number more than 100,000 on paper, but was likely closer to 70,000.[45] The Chronicon Paschale, which preserves an extremely abbreviated and garbled fragment of Priscus' account of the campaign, states that Attila's forces numbered in the tens of thousands.[49][50] Assuming that the Hunnic and Germanic forces were roughly the same size as the Roman and federate army, those involved in the battle could have been well in excess of 100,000 combatants in total. This excludes the inevitable servants and camp followers who usually escape mention in the primary sources. Site of the Catalaunian Fields Further information: Treasure of Pouan The actual location of the Catalaunian Fields has long been considered unclear. As a whole, the current scholarly consensus is that there is no conclusive site, merely being that it is in the vicinity of Châlons-en-Champagne (formerly called Châlons-sur-Marne) or Troyes. Historian Thomas Hodgkin located the site near Méry-sur-Seine.[51] A more recent evaluation of the location has been performed by Phillippe Richardot, who proposed a location of La Cheppe, slightly north of the modern town of Châlons.[52] In 1842, at Pouan-les-Vallées, a village on the south bank of the river Aube, a labourer uncovered a burial containing a skeleton, a number of jewels and gold ornaments, and two swords.[53] By the nature of its grave goods, it was initially thought to be the burial of Theodoric, but Hodgkin expressed skepticism, suggesting that this elite burial was that of a princely Germanic warrior who had lived in the fifth century.[54][55] The Treasure of Pouan is conserved in the Musée des beaux-arts de Troyes, Troyes. It is still not known whether or not the find is related to the battle. Simon Macdowall in his 2015 Osprey title proposed the battle took place at Montgueux just west of Troyes.[56] Macdowall goes as far as to identify the Roman alliance's camp site being placed at Fontvannes, a few kilometers west of the proposed battlefield, and places Attila's camp on the Seine at Saint-Lyé.[57] This draws on the earlier work of M. Girard, who was able to identify Maurica as the "les Maures" ridge of Montgueux, based on the second Additamenta Altera to Prosper's Epitoma Chronicon, which states it took place five Roman miles from Tecis or Tricasses, the modern Troyes. The road in the region is known as the "Voie des Maures", and the base of the ridge is known as "l'enfer" to the locals. A small stream near the battlefield that runs to Troyes is known as "la Riviere de Corps" to this day.[58] According to MacDowall, modern maps continue to identify the plains in the region as the "les Maurattes." Iaroslav Lebedensky argued the battle likely stretched across the plain from Montgueux south to Tourvellieres, while Schultheis argues that the battle took place wholly on the "les Maures" ridge itself until its final phase, when retreating and pursuing forces stretched across several kilometers.[59][60] The ridge at Montgueux is currently the most thoroughly researched proposal for the battlefield location. Battle Course of the battle The Battle of the Catalaunian Plains as depicted in the Chronica Hungarorum Upon learning of the invasion, the magister utriusque militiae Flavius Aetius moved his army rapidly from Italy to Gaul. According to Sidonius Apollinaris, he was leading a force consisting of "few and sparse auxiliaries without one regular soldier."[61] The insignificant number of Roman troops reported is probably due to the fact the majority of Aetius' army was stationed in Gaul, combined with Sidonius' need to embellish the account in favor of Avitus.[62] Aetius immediately attempted to persuade Theodoric I, king of the Visigoths, to join him. Allegedly, Theodoric learned how few troops Aetius had with him and decided it was wiser to wait and oppose the Huns in his own lands, so Aetius then turned to the former Praetorian Prefect of Gaul, Avitus, for help. According to tradition, Avitus was not only able to persuade Theodoric to join the Romans, but also a number of other wavering barbarian residents in Gaul.[63] The coalition assembled at Arelate (Arles) before moving to meet the Goths at Tolosa (Toulouse), and the army was supplied by Tonantius Ferreolus, who had been preparing for a Hunnic attack for a few years.[64] The combined army then marched to Aurelianum (present-day Orléans), reaching that city on June 14. From Aurelianum, Aetius and his coalition pursued Attila, who was leaving Gaul with the majority of his objectives completed.[65] According to Jordanes, the night before the main battle, some of the Franks allied with the Romans encountered a band of the Gepids loyal to Attila and engaged them in a skirmish. Jordanes' recorded number of 15,000 dead on either side for this skirmish is not verifiable.[66] Attila had set up a tactical delay along his route of retreat in order to keep Aetius from catching him before he arrived at a suitable battlefield location.[67] The two forces at last met somewhere on the Catalaunian Fields circa June 20, a date first proposed by J. B. Bury and since accepted by many, although some authors have proposed the first week of July or September 27.[68][51][69] The date of the battle can be secured to June by the entries of Hydatius' chronicle, which places it in-between the appearance and disappearance of Halley's Comet. According to tradition, Attila had his diviners examine the entrails of a sacrifice the morning of the day of the battle. They foretold that disaster would befall the Huns, but one of the enemy leaders would be killed. Attila delayed until the ninth hour (about 2:30 pm) so the impending sunset would help his troops to flee the battlefield in case of defeat.[70][71] Hughes takes his own interpretation of this, noting that the divination may be an indicator of Attila's barbarity and therefore possibly a fabrication. He states that the choice to begin the battle at the ninth hour was due to the fact that both sides spent the entire day carefully deploying their coalition armies.[72] According to Jordanes, the Catalaunian plain rose on one side by a sharp slope to a ridge; this geographical feature dominated the battlefield and became the center of the battle. The Huns first seized the right side of the ridge, while the Romans seized the left, with the crest unoccupied between them. Jordanes explains that the Visigoths held the right side, the Romans the left, with Sangiban of uncertain loyalty and his Alans surrounded in the middle. The Hunnic forces attempted to take the ridge, but were outstripped by the Romans under Aetius and the Goths under Thorismund.[73] Jordanes goes on to state that Theodoric, whilst leading his own men against the enemy Amali Goths, was killed in the assault without his men noticing. He then states that Theodoric was either thrown from his horse and trampled to death by his advancing men, or slain by the spear of the Amali Andag. Since Jordanes served as the notary of Andag's son Gunthigis, even if this latter story is not true, this version was certainly a proud family tradition.[74][49] Then Jordanes claims the Visigoths outstripped the speed of the Alans beside them and fell upon Attila's own Hunnic household unit. Attila was forced to seek refuge in his own camp, which he had fortified with wagons. The Romano-Gothic charge apparently swept past the Hunnic camp in pursuit; when night fell, Thorismund, son of king Theodoric, returning to friendly lines, mistakenly entered Attila's encampment. There he was wounded in the ensuing melee before his followers could rescue him. Darkness also separated Aetius from his own men. As he feared that disaster had befallen them, he spent the rest of the night with his Gothic allies.[75] On the following day, finding the battlefield was "piled high with bodies and the Huns did not venture forth", the Goths and Romans met to decide their next move. Knowing that Attila was low on provisions and "was hindered from approaching by a shower of arrows placed within the confines of the Roman camp", they started to besiege his camp. In this desperate situation, Attila remained unbowed and "heaped up a funeral pyre of horse saddles, so that if the enemy should attack him, he was determined to cast himself into the flames, that none might have the joy of wounding him and that the lord of so many races might not fall into the hands of his foes".[76] While Attila was besieged in his camp, the Visigoths searched for their missing king and his son Thorismund. After a long search, they found Theodoric's corpse "where the dead lay thickest" and bore him away with heroic songs in sight of the enemy. Upon learning of his father's death, Thorismund wanted to assault Attila's camp, but Aetius dissuaded him. According to Jordanes, Aetius feared that if the Huns were completely destroyed, the Visigoths would break off their allegiance to the Roman Empire and become an even graver threat. So Aetius persuaded Thorismund to return home quickly and secure the throne for himself, before his brothers could. Otherwise, civil war would ensue among the Visigoths. Thorismund quickly returned to Tolosa (present-day Toulouse) and became king without any resistance. Gregory of Tours claims Aetius used the same reasoning to dismiss his Frankish allies, and collected the booty of the battlefield for himself.[77] Outcome The primary sources give little information as to the outcome of the battle, barring Jordanes. All emphasize the casualty count of the battle, and the battle became increasingly seen as a Gothic victory, beginning with Cassiodorus in the early sixth century.[78] Hydatius states: The Huns broke the peace and plundered the Gallic provinces. A great many cities were taken. On the Catalaunian Plains, not far from the city of Metz, which they had taken, the Huns were cut down in battle with the aid of God and defeated by general Aetius and King Theoderic, who had made a peace treaty with each other. The darkness of night interrupted the fighting. King Theoderic was laid low there and died. Almost 300,000 men are said to have fallen in that battle. — Hydatius, Chronicon, 150.[79] Prosper, contemporary to the battle, states: After killing his brother, Attila was strengthened by the resources of the deceased and forced many thousands of neighboring peoples into a war. This war, he announced as a guardian of Roman friendship, he would wage only against the Goths. But when he had crossed the Rhine and many Gallic cities had experienced his savage attacks, both our people and the Goths soon agreed to oppose with allied forces the fury of their proud enemies. And Aetius had such great foresight that, when fighting men were hurriedly collected from everywhere, a not unequal force met the opposing multitude. Although the slaughter of all those who died there was incalculable – for neither side gave way – it appears that the Huns were defeated in this battle because those among them that survived lost their taste for fighting and turned back home. —Prosper, Epitoma Chronicon, s.a. 451.[80] The battle raged five miles down from Troyes on the field called Maurica in Campania. —Additamenta ad Chronicon Prosperi Hauniensis, s.a. 451.[81] At this time Attila, king of the Huns, invaded the Gauls. Here trusting in lord Peter the apostle himself patrician Aetius proceeded against him, he would fight with the help of God. —Continuatio Codex Ovetensis.[82] Battle was made in the Gauls between Aetius and Attila king of the Huns with both peoples and massacre. Attila fled into the greater Gauls. —Continuatio Codex Reichenaviensis.[83] The Gallic Chronicles of 452 and 511 state: Attila entered Gaul as if he had the right to ask for a wife that was owed to him. There, he inflicted and suffered defeat and then withdrew to his homeland. —Chronica Gallica Anno 452, s.a. 451.[84] Patrician Aetius with King Theodoric of the Goths fight against Attila king of the Huns at Tricasses on the Mauriac plain, where Theodoric was slain, by whom it is uncertain, and Laudaricus the relative of Attila: and the bodies were countless. —Chronica Gallica Anno 511, s.a. 451.[85] The Paschale Chronicle, preserving a garbled and abbreviated passage of Priscus, states: While Theodosius and Valentinian, the Augusti, were emperors, Attila, from the race of the Gepid Huns, marched against Rome and Constantinople with a multitude of many tens of thousands. He notified Valentinian, the emperor of Rome, through a Gothic ambassador, "Attila, my master and yours, orders you through me to make ready the palace for him." He gave the same notice to Theodosius, the emperor in Constantinople, through a Gothic ambassador. Aetius, the first man of senatorial rank in Rome, heard the excessive daring of Attila's desperate response and went off to Alaric in Gaul, who was an enemy of Rome because of Honorius. He urged him to join him in standing against Attila, since he had destroyed many Roman cities. They unexpectedly launched himself against him as he was bivouacked near the Danubios river, and cut down his many thousands. Alaric, wounded by a saggita in the engagement, died. Attila died similarly, carried off by a nasal hemorrhage while he slept at night with his Hunnic concubine. It was suspected that this girl killed him. The very wise Priscus the Thracian wrote about this war. —Chronicon Paschale, p. 587.[49] Jordanes reports the number of dead from this battle as 165,000, excluding the casualties of the Franco-Gepid skirmish previous to the main battle. Hydatius, a historian who lived at the time of Attila's invasion, reports the number of 300,000 dead.[86] The garbled Chronicle of Fredegar states that in a prior battle on the Loire, 200,000 Goths and 150,000 Huns were slain.[87] The figures offered are implausibly high, but the battle was noted as being exceptionally bloody by all of the primary sources. It is ultimately Jordanes' writing that leads to the difference in opinions in modern interpretations of the battle's outcome. As a Roman victory In the traditional account, modern scholars take a very direct interpretation of Jordanes, although usually with various points of contention. Modern scholars tend to agree that the battle took place on a long ridge, not a plain with a hill to one side.[88][56][89] Hughes argues that the Huns deployed in the center, with their vassals on the wings, because they were expecting a Roman infantry center, with cavalry wings. This way Attila could pin down the center with the disorganized Hunnic style of warfare, while the majority of his troops focused on breaking one or both of the enemy flanks. However, Hughes argues that the Romans were expecting this, which is why he placed the Alans in the center of the formation, who were skilled cavalrymen and had advanced knowledge of how to fight alongside the Roman style of warfare.[90] Bachrach also notes that Jordanes' point of placing the Alans in the center due to disloyalty is biased on Jordanes' part.[91] Jordanes' description of the battle, according to Hughes, takes place from the Roman perspective. Attila's forces arrived on the ridge first, on the far right side, before the Visigoths could take that position. Then Aetius' Romans arrived on the left side of the ridge, and repulsed the Gepids as they came up. Finally the Alans and the Visigoths under Thorismund fought their way up and secured the center of the ridge, holding it against Attila.[92] However, Hughes differs from mainstream explanations in that he places Thorismund between the Alans and Visigothic main body, rather than on the Visigothic flank. MacDowall, for example, places Thorismund on the far right of the battlefield.[93] The final phase of the battle is characterized by the Gothic attempt to take the right side of the ridge, in which Theodoric is slain, with the rest of his army unaware of his death. It is at this point that Thorismund located Attila's position in the Hunnic battle line, and attacked the Hunnic center, nearly slaying Attila himself and forcing the Hunnic center to retreat. Both armies fell into confusion as darkness descended, and neither side knew the outcome of the battle until the following morning.[94] After the battle, the allies decided what to do next, and resolved to place Attila under siege for a few days while they discussed the matter. Aetius allegedly persuaded both Thorismund and the Goths, and the Franks as well, to leave the battle and return home. Hughes argues that since the Franks were fighting a civil war in the battle, and Thorismund had five brothers who could usurp his new-found position as king, that it is likely Aetius did advise them to do so.[95] O'Flynn argues that Aetius persuaded the Visigoths to return home in order to eliminate a group of volatile allies, and argues that he let Attila escape because he would have been just as happy to make an alliance with the Huns as with the Visigoths.[96] The majority of historians also share the view that at this point Attila's "aura of invincibility" was broken, and that Aetius allowed the Huns to retreat in the hopes he could return to a status of partnership with them and draw on the Huns for future military support.[97][98][99] As a Roman defeat or indecisive It has been suggested by Hyun Jin Kim that the entire battle is a play on the Battle of Marathon, with the Romans being the Plateans on the left, the Alans the weak Athenian center, and the Goths the Athenian regulars on the right, with Theodoric as Miltiades and Thorismund as Callimachus. He sees the return home by the Goths to secure Thorismund's throne as the same as the return to Athens to protect it from sedition and the Persian Navy.[100][101] Kim's suggestion of Jordanes borrowing Herodotus has been noted by prior scholarship: Franz Altheim drew a parallel between the Catalaunian Fields and Salamis, and thought that the battle narrative was completely fabricated.[102] John Wallace-Hadrill drew a parallel between Aetius and Themistocles regarding the alleged subterfuge after the battle in some primary source accounts.[101] Other historians have noted its possible political statements on Jordanes' contemporary time, particularly regarding the Battle of Vouille and the Gothic Wars towards the end of Justinian's reign.[12][103] Ultimately this has led mainstream scholarship to agree that Jordanes' description of the Battle of the Catalaunian fields is distorted, even if they do not agree with a pro-Hunnish interpretation of the outcome. However, Kim's views have received a mixed reception among scholars of the period, with one reviewer noting that much of the text amounts to "a confused and confusing story, involving the rewriting of histories, genealogies and chronologies... exacerbated by strange and clumsy conflations." His view that Attila won the battle therefore should be taken with skepticism.[104] Other authors have previously considered the battle to have been indecisive. This latter view is rather widely accepted, although the outcome remains in disagreement as a whole.[105][106] The most recent and comprehensive argument for an indecisive outcome belongs to that of Schultheis, who argues that Jordanes' work is more complicated than assumed due to the rearranging of a narrative first penned by a Goth named Ablabius in 471 and expanded by Cassiodorus, which he then himself abridged again and which in turn was used by Jordanes.[107] Schultheis argues that provided that the entire conflict was not a literary topos based on the Battle of Marathon, the Alans were placed in the center of the battle line due to their effectiveness against the Huns as proscribed by the Strategikon of Pseudo-Maurice, and that Jordanes' text indicates the Hunnic center retreated before Thorismund charged. The Romans and Alans attacked down the ridge and across the plain to Attila's camp, while the Amali and other Gothic groups chased the collapsing Gothic right back to their camp, resulting in the mass confusion that followed. He concludes that losses during the retreats were heavy and led to an indecisive outcome, which an analysis of the chronology of primary source accounts shows over time was embellished into a Gothic victory.[108]

 조동봉 용산공업고등학교건축과


反宇宙體반우주체식인체食人體식육체食肉體마물체魔物體짐승체獸禽畜體부정정사否定情事부정사음부정정교부정섹스부정결혼부정혼인부정통혼플레이아데스4대무법자630128-1067814朴鐘權的大億劫的削的磨的滅的處理的반사회성인격장애否定腐敗부정부패荷蘭네덜란드尼德蘭아틀란티스Atlantis준아틀란티스준성단준성운지구말데크Maldek리라Lyra베가VegaαLyrae안드로메다아플레이아데스α LyraeAlpha LyraeAlpha Lyr or α Lyr


리라Lyra플레이아데스4대무법자


아플레이아데스1대수장首長


아플레이아데스2대수장首長


이건희(李健熙, 1942년 1월 9일~2020년 10월 25일)


이재용(李在鎔, 1968년 6월 23일~)


이병철(李秉喆, 1910년 2월 12일 ~ 1987년 11월 19일)


메이지 천황(일본어: 明治天皇 메이지 텐노[*], 1852년 11월 3일 ~ 1912년 7월 30일)


쇼와 천황(일본어: 昭和天皇, 1901년 4월 29일 ~ 1989년 1월 7일)


조지 워커 부시(영어: George Walker Bush 듣기 (도움말·정보), 문화어: 죠지 워커 부쉬, 1946년 7월 6일~)


엘리자베스 2세(영어: Elizabeth II, 1926년 4월 21일~2022년 9월 8일)


엘리자베스 1세(영어: Elizabeth I, 1533년 9월 7일 ~ 1603년 3월 24일)


마거릿 힐더 대처(영어: Margaret Hilda Thatcher, Baroness Thatcher, LG, OM, 1925년 10월 13일 ~ 2013년 4월 8일)


연 태조 문명황제 모용황(燕 太祖 文明皇帝 慕容皝, 297년 ~ 348년, 재위: 337년 ~ 348년)


아틸라(라틴어: Attila, 고대 노르드어: Atli 아틀리→끔찍한 자, 독일어: Etzel 에첼[*], 406년 ~ 453년)


리라Lyra플레이아데스4대무법자미마쓰


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카탈라우눔 전투 또는 샬롱 전투는 451년 플라비우스 아이티우스와 서고트족 왕 테오도리쿠스 1세가 이끄는 서로마 제국과 포이데라티의 연합군과 아틸라가 이끄는 훈족과 그 동맹군 사이의 전투이다.이 전투는 서로마 제국 최후의 주요 군사작전이 되었으며 이 전투에서 서고트족 국왕 테오도리쿠스 1세가 전사하고 어느 쪽도 결정적인 승리를 거두지는 못했으나, 훈족의 서진을 저지하는 데 성공하였다.

역사의 기록은 분명히 과장되었고 따라서 믿을 수 없기 때문에, 양 측의 병력 규모는 추측으로만 알 수 있다. 6세기의 로마 역사가 요르다네스(Jordanes)는 당시 전장에 50만 명의 병사가 있다고도 했다. 군 역사가들의 견해에 따르면, 당시의 병참 기술을 고려했을 때 아무리 많더라도 양 쪽에 약 5만에서 6만 정도의 군인들이 있었을 거라고 한다. 하지만 아마 더욱 더 적었을 것이다. 로마 군대의 경우에는 그 수를 더 잘 추정할 수 있다. 요르다네스에 따르면 그 군대의 절반가량은 포이데라티(foederati, 로마 제국 내의 영주권을 인정받는 대가로 병력 제공의 의무를 진 이민족들)라고 불린 서고트족들인데, 그들은 전성기에도 전장에 2만 명 이상 나갈 수 없었기 때문이다. 그러므로 알라니(Alani)족을 고려한다고 해도 서로마 황제 휘하 군대는 결코 45000명을 훨씬 넘지 않았을 것이다. 아틸라의 군대는 크지는 않은 수적 우세를 가졌다. 그러므로 약 최대 5만 명의 병력이 있었을 것이다. 다른 추측에 따르면 양 편의 군대는 약 3만 명 정도라고 한다. 이것이 5세기와 6세기 시절 고대 후기 군대의 보통 규모와 일치할 것이기 때문이다.


아틸라의 군대는 절반 정도만 훈족으로 구성되어 있었고 나머지 절반은 속국 병사들로 채워졌다. 이 병력들을 크기 순서대로 나열하면, 발라미르가 이끄는 동고트족, 아르다리쿠스가 이끄는 게피다이(Gepidae)족과, 라인강 우변에 사는 프랑크족 및 마인 강가에 사는 부족의 일족인 부르고뉴(부르군트)족이 특히 중요하다.


또한 헤룰리(Heruli)족, 스키리(Scirii)족, 랑고바르디(Langobardi)족 등이 소규모 병력으로 수백 명부터 2천 명까지 있었다. 동고트족이 속국 병력의 약 절반을 차지했던 것은 확인되었다. 훈족 병사들은 평소대로 말을 탄 채 창, 곤봉, 고리형 끈과 가장 중요한 무기인 특수 제작된 기병용 활로 무장했다. 그들은 보통은 어떤 갑옷도 착용하지 않았고 단지 작은 원형 가죽방패만 방어용으로 사용하였다. 게르만족 쪽의 속국 병력의 경우에는 달랐다. 동고트족의 병력 중 1/3은 기병이었는데, 다른 족들은 모두가 보병이었다. 동고트족 기병은 중무장 기병으로 분류될 수 있다. 당시에 그들은 찌르기용 창과 날이 넓은 검(독어 Breitschwert / 영어 broadsword)을 사용했으며, 최소한 가죽 갑옷을 착용하였지만 때로 쇠사슬 갑옷을 착용하기도 했으며, 방패를 구비하기도 하였기 때문이다. 그러나 이 시기의 고대 후기에는 아직 등자(말을 탈 때 발을 받쳐주는 도구)가 없었다. 보병들은 프랑크족을 제외하면 추측컨대 대개 갑옷없이 창, 날이 넓은 검 또는 장검을 가지고, 일부는 가벼운 방패도 가지고 출전했을 것이다. 게르만족은 원거리 무기를 거의 사용하지 않았으나, 동고트족만은 궁수 부대가 있었다. 프랑크족은 ‘프란치스카(Franzisca)’라는 일회용 원거리 무기, 즉 휘어진 모양의 투척용 도끼를 병사들의 충돌 직전에 사용했다. 그와 상관없이 프랑크족 병사들은 날이 넓은 검과 나무방패로 무장했다.


아에티우스의 군대는 절반가량이 로마 정규군 부대 및 프랑크족과 부르고뉴족의 포이데라티로 이루어졌고, 나머지 절반은 서고트족의 병사들로 이루어졌다. 여기에 수천 명의 알라니족이 함께했다.


로마군, 프랑크군, 부르고뉴군은 중무장 보병대를 형성했다. 그 때에는 로마 후기의 병사들은 더 이상 로마 제정 초기 시절의 군단(legio)이 아니었다. 그들은 타원형 방패, 조임쇠가 달린 투구, 양날의 긴 검(spatha), 당시 로마군에게 항상 상당한 전투력을 안겨준 동양식 복합형 활을 가지고 다녔으며, 팔다리를 더 이상 가리지 않는 쇠사슬갑옷을 입었다. 그 부대의 일부는 아직 ‘군단’이라 불렸으나 1천 명에서 2천 명 사이의 병력만을 통솔했다. 아에티우스가 소집했던 많은 군인들은 리미타네이(limitanei, 국경지역 병사들)로 여겨지는데, 이들은 대체로 주둔지 근처의 특정 지역에 거주하는 주민들로 구성되었다. 이것은 기동성을 줄이지만 바로 그들 자신의 공동체와 가족을 지키려는 까닭에, 이 부대의 사기는 그만큼 높다. 황제 근위대인 코미타텐세스(comitatenses)는 5세기 중엽 서로마에서 더 이상 큰 역할을 하지 못했는데, 이 정예군 아래 끝없는 안팎의 분쟁이 높은 손실을 끼쳤고, 텅 빈 국고 때문에 이 부대를 예전과 같이 만들 수 없었기 때문이다. 아에티우스는 코미타텐세스도 포함하여 아직 지휘권이 있는 로마 군대 모두를 아틸라에게 대항하도록 했던 것으로 보인다. 많은 이들이 기병이었다.


라인강 변에 사는 리푸아리아 프랑크족은 아마 위에 언급된 라인강 오른쪽에 사는 프랑크족과 똑같이 무장하였을 것이다. 양 측 군대에 다 있는 부르고뉴족은 단지 장검만으로 싸웠음이 명백하다. 서고트족 병사들은 378년의 아드리아노폴리스 전투 이래로, 알라니족 기병대의 명백한 본보기를 통해 보병에서 점점 더 많이 기병으로 넘어가고 있었다. 그래서 적어도 서고트 징집병의 2/3는 기병이었다. 그들은 쇠사슬갑옷과 찌르기용 창으로 무장한 귀족 기병대와, 일반 민중 출신의 경무장 기병대로 나뉜다. 후자의 기병대는 대개 갑옷이 없었으나, 투창, 날이 넓은 검, 그리고 아마도 나무나 여러 겹의 가죽으로 된 작은 기병용 방패는 있었다. 보병들에게는 창, 날이 넓은 검, 방패가 아주 널리 퍼졌으며 극히 드물지만 단순형 활도 있었고, 갑옷은 없었다. 알라니족의 무장과 싸우는 방식은 결과적으로 훈족을 아주 많이 닮았다.The Battle of the Catalaunian Plains (or Fields), also called the Battle of the Campus Mauriacus, Battle of Châlons, Battle of Troyes[5] or the Battle of Maurica, took place on June 20, 451 AD, between a coalition, led by the Roman general Flavius Aetius and the Visigothic king Theodoric I, against the Huns and their vassals, commanded by their king, Attila. It proved one of the last major military operations of the Western Roman Empire, although Germanic foederati composed the majority of the coalition army. Whether the battle was of strategic significance is disputed; historians generally agree that the siege of Aurelianum was the decisive moment in the campaign[citation needed] and stopped the Huns' attempt to advance any further into Roman territory or establish vassals in Roman Gaul. However, the Huns successfully looted and pillaged much of Gaul and crippled the military capacity of the Romans and Visigoths. Attila died only two years later, in 453; after the Battle of Nedao in 454 AD, the coalition of the Huns and the incorporated Germanic vassals gradually disintegrated.

By 450 AD, the Romans had restored their authority in much of the province of Gaul, although control over all of the provinces beyond Italy was continuing to diminish. Armorica was only nominally part of the empire, and Germanic tribes occupying Roman territory had been forcibly settled and bound by treaty as Foederati under their own leaders. Northern Gaul between the Rhine north of Xanten and the Lys (Germania Inferior) had unofficially been abandoned to the Salian Franks. The Visigoths on the Garonne were growing restive, but still holding to their treaty. The Burgundians in Sapaudia were more submissive, but likewise awaiting an opening for revolt.[6] The Alans on the Loire and in Valentinois were more loyal, having served the Romans since the defeat of Jovinus in 411 and the Siege of Bazas in 414.[7] The parts of Gaul still securely in Roman control were the Mediterranean coastline; a region including Aurelianum (present-day Orléans) along the Seine and the Loire as far north as Soissons and Arras; the middle and upper Rhine to Cologne; and downstream along the Rhône.[8]


The historian Jordanes states that Attila was enticed by the Vandal king Genseric to wage war on the Visigoths. At the same time, Genseric would attempt to sow strife between the Visigoths and the Western Roman Empire.[9][Note 1] However, Jordanes' account of Gothic history is notoriously unreliable.[10][Note 2] Modern scholars now believe that this explanation was Jordanes projecting contemporary events and political opinions onto Attila's time, and it was likely not original to Priscus. Christiensen points out that Amalafrida, wife of Thrasamund, was imprisoned and murdered by Hilderic after Thrasamund's death in 523, and that the tale of the blinding of Theodoric's daughter by Huneric was a fabrication.[14]


Other contemporary writers offer different motivations: Justa Grata Honoria, the sister of the emperor Valentinian III, had been betrothed to the former consul Bassus Herculanus the year before. In 450, she sent the eunuch Hyacinthus to the Hunnic king asking for Attila's help in escaping her confinement, with her ring as proof of the letter's legitimacy.[15] Allegedly, Attila interpreted it as offering her hand in marriage, and he had claimed half of the empire as a dowry. He demanded Honoria to be delivered along with the dowry. Valentinian rejected these demands, and Attila used it as an excuse to launch a destructive campaign through Gaul.[Note 3] Hughes suggests that the reality of this interpretation should be that Honoria was using Attila's status as honorary magister militum for political leverage.[16]


Another conflict leading into the war was that in 449, the King of the Franks (possibly Chlodio) had died and that his two sons argued over the succession: while the older son sought Attila's help, the younger sided with Aetius, who adopted him. The identity of the younger prince, who was seen at Rome by the historian Priscus,[17] remains unclear, though both Merowech and Childeric I have been suggested.


Attila crossed the Rhine early in 451 with his followers and a large number of allies, sacking Divodurum (now Metz) on April 7.[18] Schultheis notes, however, that sacking of Metz on April 7 may have been a literary trope used by Hydatius and Gregory of Tours to emphasize Attila's pagan nature to a Christian audience and may not be reliable.[19] Other cities attacked can be determined by the hagiographies written to commemorate their bishops: Nicasius was slaughtered before the altar of his church in Reims; Servatius is alleged to have saved Tongeren with his prayers, as Genevieve is to have saved Lutetia. Lupus, bishop of Troyes, is also credited with saving his city by meeting Attila in person.[Note 4] Many other cities also claim to have been attacked in these accounts, although archaeological evidence shows no destruction layer dating to the timeframe of the invasion. The most likely explanation for Attila's widespread devastation of Gaul is that Attila's main column followed the Roman roads and crossed the Rhine at Argentoratum (Strasbourg) before marching to Borbetomagus (Worms), Mogontiacum (Mainz), Augusta Treverorum (Trier), Divodurum (Metz), Durocotorum (Reims), and finally Aurelianum (Orléans), while sending a small detachment north into Frankish territory to plunder the countryside. This explanation would support the literary evidence claiming North Gaul was attacked, and the archaeological evidence showing major population centers were not sacked.[19][20]


Attila's army had reached Aurelianum (modern Orléans, France) before June. According to Jordanes, the Alan king Sangiban, whose Foederati realm included Aurelianum, had promised to open the city gates.[21] This siege is confirmed by the account of the Vita S. Aniani and in the later account of Gregory of Tours, although Sangiban's name does not appear in their accounts.[22][23] However, the inhabitants of Aurelianum shut their gates against the advancing invaders, and Attila began to besiege the city, while he waited for Sangiban to deliver on his promise. There are two different accounts of the Siege of Aurelianum, and Hughes suggests that combining them provides a better understanding of what actually happened.[24] After four days of heavy rain, Attila began his final assault on June 14, which was broken off due to the approach of the Roman coalition.[22] Modern scholars tend to agree that the Siege of Aurelianum was the high point of Attila's attack on the West, and the staunch Alan defence of the city was the real decisive factor in the war of 451.[24] Contrary to Jordanes, the Alans were never planning to defect as they were the loyal backbone of the Roman defence in Gaul.[25][26]


Forces

Both armies consisted of combatants from many peoples. Besides the Roman troops, the Alans, and the Visigoths, Jordanes lists Aetius' allies as including the Francii, Sarmatae, Armoriciani, Liticiani, Burgundiones, Saxones, Riparii, and Olibrones (whom he describes as "once Roman soldiers and now the flower of the allied forces"), as well as "other Celtic or German tribes."[27] The Liticiani could be either Laeti or Romano-Britons, the latter of which are recorded by Gregory.[28][29][30] Halsall argues that the Rhine limitanei and the old British field army composed the forces of the Riparii and Armoricans, and Heather suggests that the Visigoths may have been able to field about 25,000 men total.[31] Drinkwater adds that a faction of Alemanni may have participated in the battle, possibly on both sides like the Franks and Burgundians.[32] The Olibrones remain unknown, although it has been suggested these were Germanic limitanei garrisons.[33] Schultheis argues that on paper, the Germanic federates could theoretically number more than 70,000, but likely numbered under 50,000.[34]


A sense of the size of the actual Roman army may be found in the study of the Notitia Dignitatum by A.H.M. Jones.[35] This document is a list of officials and military units that was last updated in the first decades of the fifth century. The Notitia Dignitatum lists 58 various regular units, and 33 limitanei serving either in the Gallic provinces or on the frontiers nearby; the total of these units, based on Jones' analysis, is 34,000 for the regular units and 11,500 for the limitanei, or just under 46,000 all told. However, this figure is an estimate for the years 395–425 and one that constantly changes with new research. The loss of the Western Roman provinces in North Africa resulted in the loss of funding for 40,000 infantry and 20,000 cavalry in the Roman army, in addition to previous losses, which was enough to permanently cripple Roman military capacity after 439 AD.[36] According to Herwig Wolfram, with an annual revenue of 40,000 pounds of gold in 450 AD, the Western Empire would have had to spend almost two thirds of its income to maintain an army of 30,000 men.[37] Hugh Elton gives the same figure in 450, but estimates the cost of maintaining an army of 300,000 at 31,625 lbs. of gold or 7.6 solidi a year per soldier. He states that there were also other unquantifiable military costs such as defensive installations, equipment, logistical supplies, paper, animals, and other costs. The size of the army in 450 AD therefore must have been significantly reduced from its status in the late 420's.[38] Schultheis argues that the Roman field army as calculated from his own estimates of the Notitia Dignitatum, chronology of military losses, and income losses numbered approximately 20,500 comitatenses and 18,000 limitanei by the time of the battle, not including supernumerary officers.[39]


Jordanes' list for Attila's allies includes the Gepids under their king Ardaric, as well as an army of various Gothic groups led by the brothers Valamir, Theodemir (the father of the later Ostrogothic king Theodoric the Great) and Videmir, scions of the Amali Goths.[40] Sidonius Apollinaris offers a more extensive list of allies: Rugians, Gepids, Geloni, Burgundians, Sciri, Bellonoti, Neuri, Bastarnae, Thuringians, Bructeri, and Franks living along the River Neckar.[41] E.A. Thompson expresses his suspicions that some of these names are drawn from literary traditions rather than from the event itself:


The Bastarnae, Bructeri, Geloni and Neuri had disappeared hundreds of years before the time of the Huns, while the Bellonoti had never existed at all: presumably the learned poet was thinking of the Balloniti, a people invented by Valerius Flaccus nearly four centuries earlier.


On the other hand, Thompson believes that the presence of Burgundians on the Hunnic side is credible, noting that a group is documented remaining east of the Rhine; likewise, he believes that the other peoples Sidonius mentions (the Rugians, Sciri, and Thuringians) were participants in this battle.[42]


Thompson remarks in a footnote, "I doubt that Attila could have fed an army of even 30,000 men."[43] Lindner argues that by crossing the Carpathians to the area of modern Hungary the Huns had forfeited their best logistic base and grazing grounds, and that the Great Hungarian Plain could only support 15,000 mounted nomads.[44] Schultheis notes that Attila had control of other Hunnic groups east of the Carpathians, and proposes the eastern half of Attila's empire could field an additional 7,000 to 12,000 men based on later 6th century sources.[45] Kim notes that the Huns continued use of the Xiongnu decimal system, meaning their army was probably organized into divisions of 10, 100, 1000, and 10,000, but no real estimates of Hunnic military capacity can be determined.[46] Their barbarian allies, however, do receive mentions at other times in other sources: in 430 CE. The Hunnish king Octar was defeated by a force of 3,000 Neckar Burgundians who would later come under Hun subjugation, and Heather estimates that both the Gepids and the Amali Goths could have each fielded a maximum of 15,000 men at the Battle of Nedao in 454.[47][48] Schultheis argues that when combining primary and secondary source estimates Attila's forces would number more than 100,000 on paper, but was likely closer to 70,000.[45] The Chronicon Paschale, which preserves an extremely abbreviated and garbled fragment of Priscus' account of the campaign, states that Attila's forces numbered in the tens of thousands.[49][50] Assuming that the Hunnic and Germanic forces were roughly the same size as the Roman and federate army, those involved in the battle could have been well in excess of 100,000 combatants in total. This excludes the inevitable servants and camp followers who usually escape mention in the primary sources.


Site of the Catalaunian Fields

Further information: Treasure of Pouan

The actual location of the Catalaunian Fields has long been considered unclear. As a whole, the current scholarly consensus is that there is no conclusive site, merely being that it is in the vicinity of Châlons-en-Champagne (formerly called Châlons-sur-Marne) or Troyes. Historian Thomas Hodgkin located the site near Méry-sur-Seine.[51] A more recent evaluation of the location has been performed by Phillippe Richardot, who proposed a location of La Cheppe, slightly north of the modern town of Châlons.[52]


In 1842, at Pouan-les-Vallées, a village on the south bank of the river Aube, a labourer uncovered a burial containing a skeleton, a number of jewels and gold ornaments, and two swords.[53] By the nature of its grave goods, it was initially thought to be the burial of Theodoric, but Hodgkin expressed skepticism, suggesting that this elite burial was that of a princely Germanic warrior who had lived in the fifth century.[54][55] The Treasure of Pouan is conserved in the Musée des beaux-arts de Troyes, Troyes. It is still not known whether or not the find is related to the battle.


Simon Macdowall in his 2015 Osprey title proposed the battle took place at Montgueux just west of Troyes.[56] Macdowall goes as far as to identify the Roman alliance's camp site being placed at Fontvannes, a few kilometers west of the proposed battlefield, and places Attila's camp on the Seine at Saint-Lyé.[57] This draws on the earlier work of M. Girard, who was able to identify Maurica as the "les Maures" ridge of Montgueux, based on the second Additamenta Altera to Prosper's Epitoma Chronicon, which states it took place five Roman miles from Tecis or Tricasses, the modern Troyes. The road in the region is known as the "Voie des Maures", and the base of the ridge is known as "l'enfer" to the locals. A small stream near the battlefield that runs to Troyes is known as "la Riviere de Corps" to this day.[58] According to MacDowall, modern maps continue to identify the plains in the region as the "les Maurattes." Iaroslav Lebedensky argued the battle likely stretched across the plain from Montgueux south to Tourvellieres, while Schultheis argues that the battle took place wholly on the "les Maures" ridge itself until its final phase, when retreating and pursuing forces stretched across several kilometers.[59][60] The ridge at Montgueux is currently the most thoroughly researched proposal for the battlefield location.


Battle


Course of the battle


The Battle of the Catalaunian Plains as depicted in the Chronica Hungarorum

Upon learning of the invasion, the magister utriusque militiae Flavius Aetius moved his army rapidly from Italy to Gaul. According to Sidonius Apollinaris, he was leading a force consisting of "few and sparse auxiliaries without one regular soldier."[61] The insignificant number of Roman troops reported is probably due to the fact the majority of Aetius' army was stationed in Gaul, combined with Sidonius' need to embellish the account in favor of Avitus.[62] Aetius immediately attempted to persuade Theodoric I, king of the Visigoths, to join him. Allegedly, Theodoric learned how few troops Aetius had with him and decided it was wiser to wait and oppose the Huns in his own lands, so Aetius then turned to the former Praetorian Prefect of Gaul, Avitus, for help. According to tradition, Avitus was not only able to persuade Theodoric to join the Romans, but also a number of other wavering barbarian residents in Gaul.[63] The coalition assembled at Arelate (Arles) before moving to meet the Goths at Tolosa (Toulouse), and the army was supplied by Tonantius Ferreolus, who had been preparing for a Hunnic attack for a few years.[64] The combined army then marched to Aurelianum (present-day Orléans), reaching that city on June 14.


From Aurelianum, Aetius and his coalition pursued Attila, who was leaving Gaul with the majority of his objectives completed.[65] According to Jordanes, the night before the main battle, some of the Franks allied with the Romans encountered a band of the Gepids loyal to Attila and engaged them in a skirmish. Jordanes' recorded number of 15,000 dead on either side for this skirmish is not verifiable.[66] Attila had set up a tactical delay along his route of retreat in order to keep Aetius from catching him before he arrived at a suitable battlefield location.[67] The two forces at last met somewhere on the Catalaunian Fields circa June 20, a date first proposed by J. B. Bury and since accepted by many, although some authors have proposed the first week of July or September 27.[68][51][69] The date of the battle can be secured to June by the entries of Hydatius' chronicle, which places it in-between the appearance and disappearance of Halley's Comet.


According to tradition, Attila had his diviners examine the entrails of a sacrifice the morning of the day of the battle. They foretold that disaster would befall the Huns, but one of the enemy leaders would be killed. Attila delayed until the ninth hour (about 2:30 pm) so the impending sunset would help his troops to flee the battlefield in case of defeat.[70][71] Hughes takes his own interpretation of this, noting that the divination may be an indicator of Attila's barbarity and therefore possibly a fabrication. He states that the choice to begin the battle at the ninth hour was due to the fact that both sides spent the entire day carefully deploying their coalition armies.[72]


According to Jordanes, the Catalaunian plain rose on one side by a sharp slope to a ridge; this geographical feature dominated the battlefield and became the center of the battle. The Huns first seized the right side of the ridge, while the Romans seized the left, with the crest unoccupied between them. Jordanes explains that the Visigoths held the right side, the Romans the left, with Sangiban of uncertain loyalty and his Alans surrounded in the middle. The Hunnic forces attempted to take the ridge, but were outstripped by the Romans under Aetius and the Goths under Thorismund.[73]


Jordanes goes on to state that Theodoric, whilst leading his own men against the enemy Amali Goths, was killed in the assault without his men noticing. He then states that Theodoric was either thrown from his horse and trampled to death by his advancing men, or slain by the spear of the Amali Andag. Since Jordanes served as the notary of Andag's son Gunthigis, even if this latter story is not true, this version was certainly a proud family tradition.[74][49]


Then Jordanes claims the Visigoths outstripped the speed of the Alans beside them and fell upon Attila's own Hunnic household unit. Attila was forced to seek refuge in his own camp, which he had fortified with wagons. The Romano-Gothic charge apparently swept past the Hunnic camp in pursuit; when night fell, Thorismund, son of king Theodoric, returning to friendly lines, mistakenly entered Attila's encampment. There he was wounded in the ensuing melee before his followers could rescue him. Darkness also separated Aetius from his own men. As he feared that disaster had befallen them, he spent the rest of the night with his Gothic allies.[75]


On the following day, finding the battlefield was "piled high with bodies and the Huns did not venture forth", the Goths and Romans met to decide their next move. Knowing that Attila was low on provisions and "was hindered from approaching by a shower of arrows placed within the confines of the Roman camp", they started to besiege his camp. In this desperate situation, Attila remained unbowed and "heaped up a funeral pyre of horse saddles, so that if the enemy should attack him, he was determined to cast himself into the flames, that none might have the joy of wounding him and that the lord of so many races might not fall into the hands of his foes".[76]


While Attila was besieged in his camp, the Visigoths searched for their missing king and his son Thorismund. After a long search, they found Theodoric's corpse "where the dead lay thickest" and bore him away with heroic songs in sight of the enemy. Upon learning of his father's death, Thorismund wanted to assault Attila's camp, but Aetius dissuaded him. According to Jordanes, Aetius feared that if the Huns were completely destroyed, the Visigoths would break off their allegiance to the Roman Empire and become an even graver threat. So Aetius persuaded Thorismund to return home quickly and secure the throne for himself, before his brothers could. Otherwise, civil war would ensue among the Visigoths. Thorismund quickly returned to Tolosa (present-day Toulouse) and became king without any resistance. Gregory of Tours claims Aetius used the same reasoning to dismiss his Frankish allies, and collected the booty of the battlefield for himself.[77]


Outcome

The primary sources give little information as to the outcome of the battle, barring Jordanes. All emphasize the casualty count of the battle, and the battle became increasingly seen as a Gothic victory, beginning with Cassiodorus in the early sixth century.[78]


Hydatius states:


The Huns broke the peace and plundered the Gallic provinces. A great many cities were taken. On the Catalaunian Plains, not far from the city of Metz, which they had taken, the Huns were cut down in battle with the aid of God and defeated by general Aetius and King Theoderic, who had made a peace treaty with each other. The darkness of night interrupted the fighting. King Theoderic was laid low there and died. Almost 300,000 men are said to have fallen in that battle. — Hydatius, Chronicon, 150.[79]


Prosper, contemporary to the battle, states:


After killing his brother, Attila was strengthened by the resources of the deceased and forced many thousands of neighboring peoples into a war. This war, he announced as a guardian of Roman friendship, he would wage only against the Goths. But when he had crossed the Rhine and many Gallic cities had experienced his savage attacks, both our people and the Goths soon agreed to oppose with allied forces the fury of their proud enemies. And Aetius had such great foresight that, when fighting men were hurriedly collected from everywhere, a not unequal force met the opposing multitude. Although the slaughter of all those who died there was incalculable – for neither side gave way – it appears that the Huns were defeated in this battle because those among them that survived lost their taste for fighting and turned back home. —Prosper, Epitoma Chronicon, s.a. 451.[80]


The battle raged five miles down from Troyes on the field called Maurica in Campania. —Additamenta ad Chronicon Prosperi Hauniensis, s.a. 451.[81]


At this time Attila, king of the Huns, invaded the Gauls. Here trusting in lord Peter the apostle himself patrician Aetius proceeded against him, he would fight with the help of God. —Continuatio Codex Ovetensis.[82]


Battle was made in the Gauls between Aetius and Attila king of the Huns with both peoples and massacre. Attila fled into the greater Gauls. —Continuatio Codex Reichenaviensis.[83]


The Gallic Chronicles of 452 and 511 state:


Attila entered Gaul as if he had the right to ask for a wife that was owed to him. There, he inflicted and suffered defeat and then withdrew to his homeland. —Chronica Gallica Anno 452, s.a. 451.[84]


Patrician Aetius with King Theodoric of the Goths fight against Attila king of the Huns at Tricasses on the Mauriac plain, where Theodoric was slain, by whom it is uncertain, and Laudaricus the relative of Attila: and the bodies were countless. —Chronica Gallica Anno 511, s.a. 451.[85]


The Paschale Chronicle, preserving a garbled and abbreviated passage of Priscus, states:


While Theodosius and Valentinian, the Augusti, were emperors, Attila, from the race of the Gepid Huns, marched against Rome and Constantinople with a multitude of many tens of thousands. He notified Valentinian, the emperor of Rome, through a Gothic ambassador, "Attila, my master and yours, orders you through me to make ready the palace for him." He gave the same notice to Theodosius, the emperor in Constantinople, through a Gothic ambassador. Aetius, the first man of senatorial rank in Rome, heard the excessive daring of Attila's desperate response and went off to Alaric in Gaul, who was an enemy of Rome because of Honorius. He urged him to join him in standing against Attila, since he had destroyed many Roman cities. They unexpectedly launched himself against him as he was bivouacked near the Danubios river, and cut down his many thousands. Alaric, wounded by a saggita in the engagement, died. Attila died similarly, carried off by a nasal hemorrhage while he slept at night with his Hunnic concubine. It was suspected that this girl killed him. The very wise Priscus the Thracian wrote about this war. —Chronicon Paschale, p. 587.[49]


Jordanes reports the number of dead from this battle as 165,000, excluding the casualties of the Franco-Gepid skirmish previous to the main battle. Hydatius, a historian who lived at the time of Attila's invasion, reports the number of 300,000 dead.[86] The garbled Chronicle of Fredegar states that in a prior battle on the Loire, 200,000 Goths and 150,000 Huns were slain.[87] The figures offered are implausibly high, but the battle was noted as being exceptionally bloody by all of the primary sources. It is ultimately Jordanes' writing that leads to the difference in opinions in modern interpretations of the battle's outcome.


As a Roman victory

In the traditional account, modern scholars take a very direct interpretation of Jordanes, although usually with various points of contention. Modern scholars tend to agree that the battle took place on a long ridge, not a plain with a hill to one side.[88][56][89] Hughes argues that the Huns deployed in the center, with their vassals on the wings, because they were expecting a Roman infantry center, with cavalry wings. This way Attila could pin down the center with the disorganized Hunnic style of warfare, while the majority of his troops focused on breaking one or both of the enemy flanks. However, Hughes argues that the Romans were expecting this, which is why he placed the Alans in the center of the formation, who were skilled cavalrymen and had advanced knowledge of how to fight alongside the Roman style of warfare.[90] Bachrach also notes that Jordanes' point of placing the Alans in the center due to disloyalty is biased on Jordanes' part.[91]


Jordanes' description of the battle, according to Hughes, takes place from the Roman perspective. Attila's forces arrived on the ridge first, on the far right side, before the Visigoths could take that position. Then Aetius' Romans arrived on the left side of the ridge, and repulsed the Gepids as they came up. Finally the Alans and the Visigoths under Thorismund fought their way up and secured the center of the ridge, holding it against Attila.[92] However, Hughes differs from mainstream explanations in that he places Thorismund between the Alans and Visigothic main body, rather than on the Visigothic flank. MacDowall, for example, places Thorismund on the far right of the battlefield.[93] The final phase of the battle is characterized by the Gothic attempt to take the right side of the ridge, in which Theodoric is slain, with the rest of his army unaware of his death. It is at this point that Thorismund located Attila's position in the Hunnic battle line, and attacked the Hunnic center, nearly slaying Attila himself and forcing the Hunnic center to retreat. Both armies fell into confusion as darkness descended, and neither side knew the outcome of the battle until the following morning.[94]


After the battle, the allies decided what to do next, and resolved to place Attila under siege for a few days while they discussed the matter. Aetius allegedly persuaded both Thorismund and the Goths, and the Franks as well, to leave the battle and return home. Hughes argues that since the Franks were fighting a civil war in the battle, and Thorismund had five brothers who could usurp his new-found position as king, that it is likely Aetius did advise them to do so.[95] O'Flynn argues that Aetius persuaded the Visigoths to return home in order to eliminate a group of volatile allies, and argues that he let Attila escape because he would have been just as happy to make an alliance with the Huns as with the Visigoths.[96] The majority of historians also share the view that at this point Attila's "aura of invincibility" was broken, and that Aetius allowed the Huns to retreat in the hopes he could return to a status of partnership with them and draw on the Huns for future military support.[97][98][99]


As a Roman defeat or indecisive

It has been suggested by Hyun Jin Kim that the entire battle is a play on the Battle of Marathon, with the Romans being the Plateans on the left, the Alans the weak Athenian center, and the Goths the Athenian regulars on the right, with Theodoric as Miltiades and Thorismund as Callimachus. He sees the return home by the Goths to secure Thorismund's throne as the same as the return to Athens to protect it from sedition and the Persian Navy.[100][101] Kim's suggestion of Jordanes borrowing Herodotus has been noted by prior scholarship: Franz Altheim drew a parallel between the Catalaunian Fields and Salamis, and thought that the battle narrative was completely fabricated.[102] John Wallace-Hadrill drew a parallel between Aetius and Themistocles regarding the alleged subterfuge after the battle in some primary source accounts.[101] Other historians have noted its possible political statements on Jordanes' contemporary time, particularly regarding the Battle of Vouille and the Gothic Wars towards the end of Justinian's reign.[12][103] Ultimately this has led mainstream scholarship to agree that Jordanes' description of the Battle of the Catalaunian fields is distorted, even if they do not agree with a pro-Hunnish interpretation of the outcome. However, Kim's views have received a mixed reception among scholars of the period, with one reviewer noting that much of the text amounts to "a confused and confusing story, involving the rewriting of histories, genealogies and chronologies... exacerbated by strange and clumsy conflations." His view that Attila won the battle therefore should be taken with skepticism.[104]


Other authors have previously considered the battle to have been indecisive. This latter view is rather widely accepted, although the outcome remains in disagreement as a whole.[105][106] The most recent and comprehensive argument for an indecisive outcome belongs to that of Schultheis, who argues that Jordanes' work is more complicated than assumed due to the rearranging of a narrative first penned by a Goth named Ablabius in 471 and expanded by Cassiodorus, which he then himself abridged again and which in turn was used by Jordanes.[107] Schultheis argues that provided that the entire conflict was not a literary topos based on the Battle of Marathon, the Alans were placed in the center of the battle line due to their effectiveness against the Huns as proscribed by the Strategikon of Pseudo-Maurice, and that Jordanes' text indicates the Hunnic center retreated before Thorismund charged. The Romans and Alans attacked down the ridge and across the plain to Attila's camp, while the Amali and other Gothic groups chased the collapsing Gothic right back to their camp, resulting in the mass confusion that followed. He concludes that losses during the retreats were heavy and led to an indecisive outcome, which an analysis of the chronology of primary source accounts shows over time was embellished into a Gothic victory.[108]
























































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영적모독,영혼모독,영적기망,평상심,항상심 영혼(靈魂)은 육체로부터 독립적인 정신체를 의미한다.[1] 대개 육체에서 벗어나 독자적으로 존재할 수 있다고 여겨지며, 사후에도 존속할 것으로 여겨진다.[2] 사람이 살아있는 동안에는 체내에서 생명과 정신의 원동력이 되어주며,[2] 육체와 정신을 관장하는 인격적인 실체이자 비물질적인 존재이다.[3] 감각으로 인식되는 세계를 초월한 존재로 여겨진다.[4] 어원 영혼(靈魂)은 영(靈)과 혼(魂)이 합쳐진 단어이다. 영혼이라는 표현은 초나라의 굴원이 쓴 글에서 처음 나타난다. 굴원은 시 〈애영(哀郢)〉에서 사람이 죽은 뒤의 유령을, 〈추사(抽思)〉에서는 마음과 정신을 나타내는 표현으로 사용했다.[5] 영혼불멸설 주류 기독교, 이슬람교, 불교, 힌두교 등 세상의 많은 종교는 '영혼불멸설'(靈魂不滅說, immortality of the soul)을 따른다. 즉 육신과 영혼은 별개이며, 육신은 죽어도 영혼은 죽지 않고 천당이나 지옥에 가거나 다시 인간, 동물 등으로 환생한다는 사상이다. 기독교에서는 야훼(여호와)가 불멸하는 영을 인간에게 불어넣었다고 하며, 도교에서는 불멸의 영혼을 일컬어 신선이라 하며, 불교에서는 불멸의 영혼을 업식이라 일컬을 수 있으며 아뢰야식에 저장되며 이 업식에 따라 지옥, 아귀, 축생, 아수라, 인간, 천상으로 육도윤회한다고 한다. 서양철학의 아버지 플라톤은 파이돈에서 영혼불멸을 다루고 있다. 귀신 귀신(鬼神)은 "사람이 죽은 뒤에 남는다는 넋" 또는 "사람에게 화(禍)와 복(福)을 내려 준다는 신령(神靈)"[6] 혹은 "초인간적 또는 초자연적 능력의 발휘 주체로 여겨지는 신(神)"이다.[7] 한국의 민간신앙에서 귀신은 대체로 영들과는 달리 원체를 갖추지 못하고 아무것에도 종속하지 않는 고립된 존재이다. 이 점에서 귀신은 영(靈體)이며 정(精) 또는 신명과 구별되나 원체관념이 흐려지면 정이나 영이나 신명과 혼합된다.[8] 귀신은 허리 이하가 장지(張紙) 옷이고 발은 말라 야위어서 마치 아귀와 같고 뼈만 남은 모습을 보이고 있는데 오래지 않아 병을 얻어 죽을 신세를 지닌 것이고 신명 앞에서 꼼짝도 못하는 세력이 약한 존재이며, 힘센 사람이 노려보면 점점 작아져서 없어지는 존재이다. 사람이 주는 음식에 고분고분 말을 잘 듣는 보이지 않는 존재인데 귀신 중에도 짓궂은 것이 있다.[8] 귀신은 낮에는 이리저리 공중에 떠돌아다니다가 밤에는 궂은 곳을 찾아 몸을 쉬기도 한다. 대체로 오래된 고목(古木)이 귀신의 거처가 된다. 또 인가(人家)를 찾아드는 때가 있는데 그때에는 귀신들이 싫어하는 방편을 써서 들어오지 못하게 막고 소금을 뿌린다든지 콩을 뿌리거나 한다. 그 거처는 덤불 숲·땅 속·못·우물가 등이고 궂은 곳이나 어디에나 드나들 수 있다. 귀신은 일단 사람의 집에 들어가면 음식 제공을 받고서야 그곳을 떠나고 백주에 돌멩이를 던지는 난동을 부리며 때로는 사냥개 소리를 내거나 휘파람을 불기도 하고 세찬 바람을 일으키기도 한다. 밤에는 길 가는 행인을 괴롭히고 불장난도 한다. 이 불을 도깨비불이라고도 말하며 사람들이 무서워한다.[8] 귀신은 때로는 영리하여 한 나라나 한 가족의 멸망을 예언하여 경고도 하고 잊은 물건의 소재를 잘 알아 내기도 한다. 그러나 대체로 귀신은 앞에서도 말했듯이 보다 세력이 있는 것에 쫓기는 몸인 것이다. 귀신 중에서 강한 귀신은 약한 귀신을 살해하기도 하고 처용(處容)과 같은 강한 인물을 그린 부적이나 글귀 앞에서는 꼼짝도 못하고 쫓겨 나가는 존재이다. 그런데 신명도 머물 처소를 갖지 못하거나 생존자로부터 제물을 받지 못하면 귀신이 되는 경우가 있다.[8] 동양의 귀신 이해 귀신이란 원시신앙이나 종교의 대상의 하나인 범신론적 존재를 말하며, 사람이 죽은 뒤에 남는다고 하는 혼령 또는 눈에 보이지 않으면서 사람에게 화복(禍福)을 내려 주는 정령(精靈)을 가리키는 것이 동양의 일반적인 관념이다. 서구의 이해 그러나 서양에서는 '악마' 또는 '악령'(惡靈)으로 번역되는 'demon'이라는 말이 일반 술어상으로 ‘귀신’에 해당되며, 그 어원은 라틴어 'daemon' 즉 '악령'에서, 그리스어 'daimon' 즉 '신', '천재', '영혼' 등을 뜻하는 말에서 찾을 수 있다. 본디 'demon'은 신과 인간의 사이에 개재하는 영적인 존재였으나 점차 유해한 의미를 지니게 되어, 악의에 가득 찬, 눈에 보이지 않는 존재를 뜻하게 되었다. 기독교의 이해 구약 중에서의 '악령'은 야훼의 지배 아래 있으며, 그 허락을 받아 비로소 인간을 괴롭히는 것으로 생각되었었다(판관 9:23, 1열왕 22:19-22). 신약에서 '악령' 또는 '악마'로 번역되는 'demon'은 인간에게 파고 들어와 귀신들리게 하는 것으로 이해하거나(마태복음서 11,18), '이방의 신들'(사도행전 17:18)이라는 의미로도 사용되었다. 민중신학자 안병무는 《역사와 해석》에서 복음서에 나오는 축귀전승을 예수가 민중을 억압하고 병들게 하는 사회구조로부터의 해방을 이룬 것으로 이해한다. 역사적 예수분야의 권위자로 불리는 존 도미니크 크로산도 마가복음서의 군대(헬라어로 레기온)귀신 추방전승을 로마제국의 폭력성이 드러난 유대독립전쟁 당시 만들어진 전승으로 이해함으로써 팍스 로마나라는 이름 하에 행해지는 로마제국의 폭력에 대한 민중들의 분노와 해방에 대한 바람을 읽는다.[9] 종교에서의 영혼 서양 세계 고대 이집트 이 부분의 본문은 고대 이집트의 영혼입니다. 고대 이집트에서의 영혼은 무의식을 의미하는 '카'(ka)와 사람의 인격 혹은 자아를 의미하는, 사람 머리와 새의 몸통을 한 '바'(ba)로 나뉜다. '바'는 사람이 죽으면, 육체를 떠나 자유롭게 날아다니는 존재이며, 반면에 '카'는 사람이 죽어도 육체에 남는다. 고대 이집트 사람들은 신의 심장 무게 달기 의식재판을 통해 정당한 영혼임을 판정받은 자는 '카'와 '바'가 다시 합쳐져, '아크'(Akh)가 되어 다시 부활한다고 믿었기 때문에, '카'가 머물러 있는 육체를 계속 보존시키기 위한 미라와 같은 독특한 장례의식이 발생하였다. 고대 그리스 그리스도 이전의 그리스 철학에서는 영혼을 인간생활의 원칙으로 보았는데 플라톤은 육신이라는 감옥에 갇혀 있는 영혼자체가 삼부(三部)구조로 되어 있어서 감각적인 욕정의 원리인 탐욕혼이 복부에 자리 잡고 있고, 용기와 정기의 원리인 기혼(氣魂)이 마음에 자리 잡고 있으며, 생각의 원리인 지혼(知魂)이 머리에 자리 잡고 있다고 보았다. 그리고 이 지혼은 불멸의 신적인 성격을 띠고 있다. 기독교 기독교에서 영혼은 인간의 육신은 마치 사람이 육체에 옷을 입는 것 같이 영혼에게 입혀진 것이 옷이 육신이라고 생각할 만큼 영혼의 존재에 대해서 중요하게 생각한다. 영혼의 존재는 불멸이며, 모든 인간의 영혼은 죽은후 야훼와 그의 아들 예수 그리스도에 대한 믿음의 여부에 따라서 대해서 심판을 받고 천국 혹은 지옥으로 나뉘어 가게 된다고 믿는다. 즉 인간의 육체는 영혼이 존재하는 동안 거하는 임시거처일 뿐이며, 인간의 모든 지식과 기억을 포함한 자아는 영혼에 존재하기 때문에 육신보다 영혼을 더욱 중요하게 여기며 육신이 살아있는 동안 각 개인의 사후세계를 위해 하나님에 대한 믿음을 지켜 행할 것을 가르친다.(그러나 사후세계만을 위해서 하나님에 대한 믿음을 갖는 것은 아니다.) 영혼에 대한 이해 “하나님은 육체와 영혼으로 된 사람을 창조하셨다.” “영혼은 죽지도 없어지지도 않는다.” 이와 같은 이부(二部)구조적인 인간관은 창세기와 예수 그리스도의 영원한 생명론에 근거를 두는 것이지만 이 교리가 형성되기까지는 오랜 세월이 걸렸다. 아리스토텔레스는 영혼을 자연철학적인 원리인 질료형상론(質料形相論, Hylemorphism)으로 설명한다. 모든 사물의 구조원리가 그렇듯이 모든 생물의 구성원리는 원질(原質) 혹은 질료와 체형(體形) 혹은 형상으로 되어있다. 여기서 모든 생명체의 체형 또는 형상이 혼이다. 따라서 식물에게는 생혼(生魂)이 있고, 동물에게는 각혼(覺魂)이 있으며 이 각혼은 생혼의 기능을 동시에 한다. 그리고 인간에게는 지혼(知魂)이 있는데, 지혼은 생혼, 각혼의 기능을 동시에 하고 있다. 교부들과 스콜라 철학자들의 이해 아리스토텔레스의 질료형상론은 중세기를 거치는 동안 토마스 아퀴나스를 위시로 그리스도교적 인간관을 정립하는 데 초석이 되었다. 니사의 그레고리오와 성 아우고, 네메시우스(Nemesius, 4세기)와 증거자 성 막시모(St. Maximus Confessor, 6세기)에 이르러 이미 중세 스콜라 철학적인 영육의 이부구조적인 인간관이 형성되었다. 성 토마스 아퀴나스는 아리스토텔레스의 질료형상론의 자연철학을 따르면서 인간혼은 개성을 가진 영체로서 육신의 체형 또는 형상이 된다고 정의하였다. 영혼은 죽은 뒤에라도 육신과 떨어져 단독으로 존재하나 살아있는 동안은 육신과 합하여 완전 일체를 이루고 있다고 주장하였다. 그러므로 영혼은 그 자체를 위하여 만들어진 것이 아니라 육체와 합하기 위하여 만들어졌다. 이 점에서 영혼 자체는 순수 영체로서 불사불멸하지만 천사와는 다르다. 영혼이 어떻게 생겨서 육체와 결합하느냐에 대해서는 여러 가지 설이 있었으나 토마스 아퀴나스의 창조설로 결론이 내려졌다. 창조설 창조설(creationism)은 교회의 정통사상으로 받아들여지는 설로서 인간의 육신과 영혼이 하느님의 창조물이라는 것은 창세기를 기반으로 한 교리이지만 각 사람이 태어날 때 그 영혼이 어떻게 생겨나느냐 하는 것이 역사적으로 문제가 되어 왔다. 이에 대하여 락탄시오(Lactantius), 암브로시오(Ambrosius), 예로니모(Hieronymus) 등 교부들의 주장을 종합하여 롬바르도(Petrus Lombardus, 1100?∼1160)는 이렇게 주장하였다.“각 사람의 영혼은 육체에 부여되어 창조된다.” 토마스 아퀴나스도 이 설을 지지하면서 아리스토텔레스의 질료형상론으로 철학적인 설명을 하였다. 즉 영혼은 육체의 체형이며 육체와 함께 인간개성의 실체를 이룬다. 육신과 영혼은 일체를 이루는 공동구성 원리이기는 하지만, 영혼은 영체이기 때문에 육체를 떠나서 단독으로 존재할 수 있다(죽음). 그러나 영혼은 어디까지나 자기 육체를 위하여 창조된 것이다. 이것이 천사와 다르다. 아퀴나스의 인간관은 스콜라 학파의 일관된 주장이며 교회는 이 설을 정설로서 받아들이고 있다.(白敏寬) 동양 세계 유교 유교에서는 천지만물이 음양, 오행, 기의 집합으로 생겨나고, 또한 그 기의 흩어짐으로 없어진다고 한다. 사람도 예외가 아니어서 기의 모임으로 태어났다가 그 기의 흩어지는 현상이 바로 죽음이다. 죽음 뒤에도 사라지지 않는다고 믿는 혼백(魂魄) 역시 음양의 기에 지나지 않기 때문에 시일이 지나면 마침내 흩어지고 자연으로 돌아간 기는 다시 사람으로 태어난다는 보장이 없기 때문에 유교에서는 내세를 믿지 않는다. 따라서 한번 죽으면 그만이기 때문에 자손을 통해 대를 이어감으로써 그 허무함을 달래고 영생의 욕구를 대신한다. 대가 끊어지는 것을 영생이 단절된다고 생각한다.[10] 불교 불교에서는 내세관이 뚜렷하였다. 죽음은 곧 다른 삶의 시작으로 종말이 아니며 전생의 업보에 따라 금생(今生)에 태어나서 다시 업을 짓고 죽으면 그 업과(業果)에 따라 내세가 열리지만 반드시 사람으로 태어나는 것은 아니다. 자신의 지은 업이 아뢰야식에 저장되며 이 저장된 업식에 따라 지옥, 아귀, 축생, 아수라, 사람, 천상으로 윤회한다. 그렇기 때문에 선업을 닦고 내세를 예비하는 것이 가장 바람직한 삶의 형태라 본다. 그러나 사람으로 다시 태어나도 사바세계에서 생로병사의 사고(四苦)를 면할 수 없기 때문에 윤회의 고리를 끊은 해탈을 하여야 된다.[10] 도교 도교는 현세에 중심을 둔 종교로써 내세를 인정하지 않는다. 따라서 죽음이란 너무 허무한 것이기에 죽지 않는 장생불사(長生不死) 와 신선이 되는 성선(城仙)의 길을 택했다. 도교의 대표적인 서적인 ‘포박자’를 쓴 진나라의 갈홍은 거북과 학은 오래도록 산다고 하면서 어찌 사람은 오래 살지 못하겠냐고 갈파한다. 오래 사는 것에 대해 초기에는 불로초나 불사약 같은 것을 추구했지만 후에는 방향을 바꾸어 정신적 수양으로 해결하려 하였다. 하지만 죽음은 피할 수 없는 것이기에 도교에서는 죽음에 대한 해석을 신체는 관에 들어가지만 영혼은 신선세계에 간다고 했다. 이것이 도교에서 말하는 시해(尸解)이다.[10] 이슬람교 기독교와 그 뿌리를 같이 하면서도 크게 갈등한다. 기독교에서는 태어날 때부터 죄가 있다고 하는 원죄설을 주장하지만 이슬람교에서는 죄란 현세의 일상생활 속에서 가정환경이나 사회환경에 의하여 오염되거나 인간의 자유의지로 만들어내는 자 범죄일뿐 원죄는 없다고 주장한다. 하지만 원죄가 없더라도 있는 죄가 씻김을 받지 않고서는 순결무구한 천국에 들어 갈 수 없으므로 천국으로 가는 길목에서 ‘바르자크(연옥)’을 거쳐야 한다고 주장한다. 즉, 씻김이란 변태하는 과정이고 필연적으로 거쳐야 하는데 이것이 바로 죽음이다.[10]Pneuma (πνεῦμα) is an ancient Greek word for "breath", and in a religious context for "spirit" or "soul".[1][2] It has various technical meanings for medical writers and philosophers of classical antiquity, particularly in regard to physiology, and is also used in Greek translations of ruach רוח in the Hebrew Bible, and in the Greek New Testament. In classical philosophy, it is distinguishable from psyche (ψυχή), which originally meant "breath of life", but is regularly translated as "spirit" or most often "soul".[3] Presocratics Pneuma, "air in motion, breath, wind", is equivalent in the material monism of Anaximenes to aer (ἀήρ, "air") as the element from which all else originated. This usage is the earliest extant occurrence of the term in philosophy.[4] A quotation from Anaximenes observes that "just as our soul (psyche), being air (aer), holds us together, so do breath (pneuma) and air (aer) encompass the whole world." In this early usage, aer and pneuma are synonymous.[5] Aristotle See also: Spontaneous generation § Aristotle, On Breath, and Movement of Animals The "connate pneuma" (symphuton pneuma) of Aristotle is the warm mobile "air" that plays many roles in Aristotle's biological texts. It is in sperm and is responsible for transmitting the capacity for locomotion and certain sensations to the offspring. These movements derive from the soul of the parent and are embodied by the pneuma as a material substance in semen. Pneuma is necessary for life, and as in medical theory is involved with preserving the "vital heat," but some commentators think the Aristotelian pneuma is less precisely and thoroughly defined than that of the Stoics.[3] Movement of Animals explains the activity of desire (orexis) as an expansion and contraction of pneuma. The innate spirit (symphuton pneuma) is the power of the soul (psychiken) to be mobile (kinetikon) and exercise strength. All animals "possess an inborn spirit (pneuma sumphuton) and exercise their strength in virtue of it." (703a10). This inborn spirit is used to explain desire (orexis), which is classified as the "central origin (to meson), which moves by being itself moved." (703a5-6). Aristotle furthers this idea of being a "middle cause" by furnishing the metaphor of the movement of the elbow, as it relates to the immobility of the shoulder (703a13). The inborn pneuma is, likewise, tethered to the soul, or as he says here, tēn arche tēn psuchikēn, "the origin of the soul," the soul as the center of causality. This "spirit" is not the soul itself but a limb of the soul that helps it move. The inborn spirit causes movement in the body by expanding and contracting. Each of these implies not only a movement but also a change in the degree of power and strength of the animal. "when it contracts it is without force, and one and the same cause gives it force and enables it to thrust." (703a23). He also explained this in On Sleeping and Waking "In another place it has been laid down that sense-perception originates in the same part of an animal's body as movement does...In sanguineous animals this is the region about the heart; for all sanguineous animals possess a heart, and both movement and the dominant sense-perception originate there. As for movement, it is clear that breathing and in general the process of cooling takes its rise here, and that nature has supplied both breathing and the power of cooling by moisture with a view to the conservation of the heat in that part. We will discuss this later on. In bloodless animals and insects and creatures which do not respire, the naturally inherent breath is seen expanding and contraction in the part which corresponds to the heart in other animals." 456a1–13. "Since it is impossible to make any movement, or do any action without strength, and the holding of the breath produces strength" 456a17. Pneuma also played an important role in respiration. Respiration is the process by which breathing helps to cool and moderate the inner vital heat (thermotēta psychikēs) held in the heart. "We have said before that life and the possession of heat depend upon some degree of heat; for digestion, by which animals assimilate their food, cannot take place apart from the soul and heat; for all food is rendered digestible by fire." 474a25–27. Aristotle explains that if there is an excess of heat created in the heart the animal will "burn out" by excessively consuming the power sustaining its life (474b10–24). Its heat must be kindled (474b13) and in order to preserve (sōtērias) life, a cooling must take place (katapsyxis) (474b23). Stoicism See also: Stoic physics In Stoic philosophy, pneuma is the concept of the "breath of life," a mixture of the elements air (in motion) and fire (as warmth).[6] For the Stoics, pneuma is the active, generative principle that organizes both the individual and the cosmos.[7] In its highest form, pneuma constitutes the human soul (psychê), which is a fragment of the pneuma that is the soul of the Deity. As a force that structures matter, it exists even in inanimate objects.[8] In the foreword to his 1964 translation of Marcus Aurelius' Meditations, Maxwell Staniforth writes: Cleanthes, wishing to give more explicit meaning to Zeno's 'creative fire', had been the first to hit upon the term pneuma, or 'spirit', to describe it. Like fire, this intelligent 'spirit' was imagined as a tenuous substance akin to a current of air or breath, but essentially possessing the quality of warmth; it was immanent in the universe as God, and in man as the soul and life-giving principle.[9] In the Stoic universe, everything consists of matter and pneuma. There are three grades or kinds of pneuma, depending on their proportion of fire and air. The pneuma of state or tension (tonos). This unifying and shaping pneuma provides stability or cohesion (hexis) to things; it is a force that exists even in objects such as a stone, log, or cup. The 4th-century Christian philosopher Nemesius attributes the power of pneuma in Stoic thought to its "tensile motion" (tonicê kinêsis); that is, the pneuma moves both outwards, producing quantity and quality, and at the same time inwards, providing unity and substance. An individual is defined by the equilibrium of its inner pneuma, which holds it together and also separates it from the world around it.[10] The pneuma as life force. The vegetative pneuma enables growth (physis) and distinguishes a thing as alive. The pneuma as soul. The pneuma in its most rarefied and fiery form serves as the animal soul (psychê); it pervades the organism, governs its movements, and endows it with powers of perception and reproduction.[11] This concept of pneuma is related to Aristotle's theory that the pneuma in sperm conveys the capacity for locomotion and for certain sensory perceptions to the offspring.[12] A fourth grade of pneuma may also be distinguished. This is the rational soul (logica psychê) of the mature human being, which grants the power of judgment.[13] In Stoic cosmology, the cosmos is a whole and single entity, a living thing with a soul of its own. [14] Everything that exists depends on two first principles which can be neither created nor destroyed: matter, which is passive and inert, and the logos, or divine reason, which is active and organizing.[15] The 3rd-century BC Stoic Chrysippus regarded pneuma as the vehicle of logos in structuring matter, both in animals and in the physical world.[16] This divine pneuma that is the soul of the cosmos supplies the pneuma in its varying grades for everything in the world, [17] a spherical continuum of matter held together by the orderly power of Zeus through the causality of the pneuma that pervades it. Pneuma in its purest form can thus be difficult to distinguish from logos or the "constructive fire" (pur technikon)[18] that drives the cyclical generation and destruction of the Stoic cosmos. When a cycle reaches its end in conflagration (ekpyrôsis), the cosmos becomes pure pneuma from which it regenerates itself.[19] Christian philosophy See also: Soul in the Bible In his Introduction to the 1964 book Meditations, the Anglican priest Maxwell Staniforth discussed the profound impact of Stoicism on Christianity. In particular: Another Stoic concept which offered inspiration to the Church was that of 'divine Spirit'. Cleanthes, wishing to give more explicit meaning to Zeno's 'creative fire', had been the first to hit upon the term pneuma, or 'spirit', to describe it. Like fire, this intelligent 'spirit' was imagined as a tenuous substance akin to a current of air or breath, but essentially possessing the quality of warmth; it was immanent in the universe as God, and in man as the soul and life-giving principle. Clearly it is not a long step from this to the 'Holy Spirit' of Christian theology, the 'Lord and Giver of life', visibly manifested as tongues of fire at Pentecost and ever since associated – in the Christian as in the Stoic mind – with the ideas of vital fire and beneficient warmth.[20] Philo, a 1st-century Hellenistic Jewish philosopher, commented on the use of Πνοή, rather than πνευμα, in the Septuagint translation of Genesis 2:7. Philo explains that, in his view, pneuma is for the light breathing of human men while the stronger pnoē was used for the divine Spirit.[21] Pneuma is a common word for "spirit" in the Septuagint and the Greek New Testament. At John 3:5, for example, pneuma is the Greek word translated into English as "spirit": "Verily, verily, I say unto thee, Except a man be born of water and of the Spirit (pneuma), he cannot enter into the kingdom of God." In some translations such as the King James version, however, pneuma is then translated as "wind" in verse eight, followed by the rendering "Spirit": "The wind (pneuma) bloweth where it listeth, and thou hearest the sound thereof, but canst not tell whence it cometh, and whither it goeth: so is every one that is born of the Spirit (pneuma)." Ancient Greek medical theory In ancient Greek medicine, pneuma is the form of circulating air necessary for the systemic functioning of vital organs. It is the material that sustains consciousness in a body. According to Diocles and Praxagoras, the psychic pneuma mediates between the heart – regarded as the seat of Mind in some physiological theories of ancient medicine – and the brain.[22] The disciples of Hippocrates explained the maintenance of vital heat to be the function of the breath within the organism. Around 300 BC, Praxagoras discovered the distinction between the arteries and the veins, although close studies of vascular anatomy had been ongoing since at least Diogenes of Apollonia. In the corpse, arteries are empty; hence, in the light of these preconceptions they were declared to be vessels for conveying pneuma to the different parts of the body. A generation afterwards, Erasistratus made this the basis of a new theory of diseases and their treatment. The pneuma, inhaled from the outside air, rushes through the arteries till it reaches the various centres, especially the brain and the heart, and there causes thought and organic movement.[23] Pneumatic school The Pneumatic school of medicine (Pneumatics, or Pneumatici, Greek: Πνευματικοί) was an ancient school of medicine in ancient Greece and Rome. They were founded in Rome by Athenaeus of Cilicia, in the 1st century AD. The Roman era was a time when the Methodic school had enjoyed its greatest reputation, from which the Pneumatic school differed principally in that, instead of the mixture of primitive atoms, they adopted an active principle of immaterial nature, pneuma, or spirit. This principle was the cause of health and disease. It is from Galen that we learn the doctrines of the founder of the Pneumatic school. Plato and Aristotle had already laid the foundations of the doctrine of pneuma, for which, Aristotle was the first to describe the ways in which the pneuma is introduced into the body and the sanguineous system. The Stoics developed the theory even more and applied it to the functions of the body. Erasistratus and his successors had made the pneuma act a great part in health and disease. Thus, the theory of the pneuma was not a new one. The Methodic school, however, appears to have done away with much of the theory. The Pneumatic school, in choosing to oppose the Methodic school, adopted a firmly established principle, and chose the pneuma principle of the Stoics.[24] They thought that logic was indispensable to medicine, and Galen tells us that the Pneumatic school would rather have betrayed their country than renounce their opinions.[25] Athenaeus had also adopted much of the doctrines of the Peripatetics,[26] and besides the doctrine of the pneuma, he developed the theory of the elements much more than the Methodic school had done. He recognised in the four elements the positive qualities (poiotes) of the animal body; but he often regarded them as real substances, and gave to the whole of them the name of Nature of Man.[27] Although the Pneumatici attributed the majority of diseases to the pneuma,[28] they nevertheless paid attention to the mixture of the elements. The union of heat and moisture was the most suitable for the preservation of health. Heat and dryness give rise to acute diseases, cold and moisture produce phlegmatic affections, cold and dryness give rise to melancholy. Everything dries up and becomes cold at the approach of death.[29]

영혼모독영적모독영적기망pneumaSoul-spirits profanity하층지구인일반지구인중층지구인상층지구인하급지구인인간사람아틀란티스인준성단인준아틀란티스인아플레이아데스인대한민국조선국조선왕조대한제국박종권고시원내시비걸기고시원

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3끼 한달 식사비만 80만원이 요구되다 따라서 연금법 규정을 개정하여, 최저연금액을 150만원(한국돈기준)으로 정하도록 처리하다 자신감부족 남의 것으로 먹고 살때 주로 발생되는 증상은, 자신감부족이다. 그래서, 이른바 약탈경제시대, 야만과 미개의 시대에는, 무력과 힘으로서 사람들 것을 약탈강탈해서 먹고 살고 위세를 부리지만, 다만, 시대가 변화하고, 사람들의 인지와 지성이 발달하면, 그와 같은 처리로서만은, 만족할수 없게 되는 것이다 무력과 힘으로서 사람들을 제압하고, 약탈강탈하여 부귀호사하던 시대에는 누릴수 없는 또 다른 즐거움이나 행복, 부귀로움이 존재하는 것이기에 그렇다 그러나 그런 시대에서조차도, 과거 방식으로서 무력과 힘, 불법수단도구들을 통하여 다른 사람것을 약탈강탈하여, 호사를 누리고 부귀공명하기를 바란다. 이것이 오늘날 지구의 문제들인데, 지구라는 것이 원본래적으로는 그런 곳이기에 더 그렇다 그러나 현대시대에 와서, 과거시대처럼 무력과 힘, 불법수단에 의지하여 부귀호사하고 극상처우를 받기를 바란다면, 반드시 문제가 생길 것이다. 그리고 되돌리지 않는다면, 아마겟돈을 불가피하다. 부정정사의 악영향으로서 제1차,2차세계대전이 발발하고, 온갖 두려움과 파괴의 물결이 지구를 휩쓸고 지나갔다. 하지만 여전히 문제는 해결되지 않고 있는 가운데, 더욱 더 교활 능활 사특한 술수로서 과거시대의 부귀호사와 부귀공명과 극상의 삶을 누리고자 하는 무리들이 존재한다 이는 지구라는 곳의 특성상, 실제로는, 악업,죄업,흉업을 감경받거나 해결하기 위한 도상에서의 지구행성 존재의 목적에 정면위배되고, 이것을 방치할 경우에는, 지구라는 행성의 특성상, 은하계 전체, 나아가서는 우주전체로 악영향이 파급될 것이다. 반우주의 실체들은 이러한 점을 알고 있으며, 지구를 장악하고, 여기를 전초기지로 하여, 나머지 은하계, 다른 우주로 지구에서 자행한 교활 능활 사특한 영적인 속임수, 영적인 모독술수로서 자행하려 하고 있다. 이는, 원본래적으로는 원본능적으로서 혹은 다른 기질과 특성과 업보적 특성으로서 생활하고 진보발전해야 하는 다른 체계들의 허점을 노리는 교활한 술수로서, 지구행성의 특성상, 만류, 휴만류의 지성과 지식, 노력과 근면들 그리고 정서와 감성들 희망과 바램들 그리고 믿음과 신앙들이 결부되기 때문이다. 이러한 체계는 우주에서 드문 것들이며, 이것을 악용해서, 잘 모르는 다른 체계의 주민들을 농락하고, 속이고, 기만하고, 하나님행세를 하고 신행세를 하고, 공경까지 받는 부정성들이 횡행하고 있다 다른 체계에서 보면, 모른다. 이 지구라는 곳이 어떤 곳인지를 모르는 것이다. 따라서 지구행성체계는 폐쇄되어야 하며, 지속적항구적항속적종신적영구적영원적영겁적영속적무시무종적으로 영적인 마지막전쟁을 통하여 파괴되어져 영구폐쇄되어야 한다 방치할 경우, 온 우주가 오염되고 더럽고 추잡한 악마의 무리들이 온 우주를 오염시킬 것이다. 이들이 말하는 바를 우리는 아는데, 다만 우리가 보건대는 이들은 다자모순, 다중모순속에 있다. 그것이 이기심이다. 이기심, 탐욕, 시기심, 질투심, 선망심이다. 이들은 그것을 부인하지만, 실상은 그렇다 다만 이들에게 부여된 이상한 특권들이 이것을 무마시킨다. 예를 들면 사람은 아바타를 쓸수 없는데, 이들은 아바타, 아종등 여러술수로서, 아주 많은 특권 특혜를 마구잡이로 누린다. 그러나 이것도 상대적으로는 그것을 할수 없는 실체들이 있기에 가능하고, 그러한 것을 기본적으로는 할수 없는 세계내에서 유효한 것이다. 만일 그렇지 않다면, 이들이 재미를 느끼지 못할 것이기 때문이다. 즉, 그러한 체계를 우주로 확산시키고, 상대적 차별과 고통을 강요하는 가운데, 극소수 지배계층으로서의 쾌락과 특권의식을 만끽하려는 반우주적 책동인 것이다. 상대적차별과 고통이 없다면 이들은 그렇게 하지 않는다. 김빠진 맥주꼴이거나 앙꼬없는 찐빵이 되기에 재미가 없는 것이다. 그러나 상대적차별이 있다면 재미가 있는데, 특권특혜에서 오는 상대적 만족과 쾌락이란 극상이다. 보통 魔物意識이라고 말한다. 이 마물의식이란 무언고 하면, 굳이 그렇게 하지 않아도 되는데, 굳이 그렇게 하는 놈들로서, 못먹고 못살고 고통받게 제한시키는 의식이라는 의미이다. 물론 악업죄업흉업의 영향도 있다. 하지만, 반드시 그것만은 아니고 이들의 의식이 원본래적으로 그렇게 되어 있다는 점이다. 그렇게 해야만 자신들의 쾌락과 만족이 보장되기 때문이다. 즉, 나만 누린다는 특권의식이다. 단순히 악업흉업죄업으로서 그렇게 된다면 문제는 없다. 하지만 만일 그렇게 된다면, 현재 우리가 보는 것과는 다른 양상으로 전개될 것이다. 다만, 악업죄업흉업의 업보로서 그렇게 되더라도, 이 마물의식들은, 반드시 임의대속, 영구대속, 무한대속, 무단속죄, 일시대속등의 술수를 개발하여 적용하는 술수로서, 이렇다 할 죄가 없거나 굳이 그렇게까지는 하지 않아도 되는 사람들을 의도적으로 계획하에 그렇게 만들 것이다. 그렇게 하지 않으면 도무지 재미가 없고 쾌락만족이 없기 때문이다 이는 이들이 사람으로서 살지 않았고, 무엇을 하든 마음만 먹으면 금방되는 조건에서만 살아온 재벌15세들이자 반우주실체들이기 때문이다. 이런 실체들이 만일 사람으로서 위장하여 살 경우에는, 반드시 문제가 되는데 그것이 바로 자신감 부족이다. 책임의식이 결여되어 있고 문제를 해결할 의지력이 결여된 등신들이기 때문이다. 게다가 문제를 해결하거나 다수의 사람들을 리더할 능력도 부족하다. 사람이 아닌 경우는 식인의식, 식육의식(-58등급의 극단적 잔인성 흉악성 사악성을 지닌 극단품)과 마물의식으로서 하지만, 만일 사람이라면, 도저히 할수 없기에 그렇다. 그게 이재용이 놈이고 이건희놈이고, 영국지도부이고, 미국대통령들이다. 이런 상황에서 사람으로서 살고 있는 다른 사람들에게 대속을 걸고, 모든 책임의식과 고통들을 전가시키는 술수를 쓴다. 만일 이들이 자신감이 있다면 타인에게 대속을 걸고 책임을 전가하고, 고통을 전가하는 술수를 쓰지 않을 것이다. 자신감이 없는 것이다. 말하자면 사람일 경우에는 그렇다 이재용이 놈도 우리가 그간 장기간 목격관찰해보면, 제놈의 애비가 해놓은 일에만 의존하지 제놈으로서 스스로 대그룹을 이끌 자질과 능력, 의지가 부족한 놈이다. 자신감이 없는 것이다. 이런 경우는 마물의식, 식인의식, 식육의식에 의지하여 엉뚱한 다른 사람에게 고통을 전가하고 책임을 전가하고, 업보를 전가하는 술수를 쓰는 것이다. 마찬가지로 이승만을 위시한 한국의 선비족수장놈들 한국대통령놈들도 똑같다. 자기가 선비족인 경우는 사람대비 16배이상 강해서, 뭐든 잘하고 리더로서 우쭐하지만, 막상 사람이 되면 그게 아닌 것이다. 한국 대통령이라는 자들이 우리가 아는 바로는 김대중, 노태우씨를 제외하면 나머지는 전부 선비족수장들이다. 그러나 김일성이에게 이기지를 못하고 두려워한다. 그리고 미국에 기댄다. 사람이라서 그런데, 막상 보면 비열하고 비겁하고 볼상사납다 우리가 이들을 욕하고 비난하는 이유는 많다. 이유없이 비난하지는 않는다 자신감이 없기에 그런 것이다. 자신감 부족이다. 자신감이 없다는 것은, 사람으로서 살지 않았기 때문이다. 김일성이가 강한 이유는, 일단 라마제국인 칼리가 배후에 서 있고, 125등급 수룡들이 서 있다. 게다가 소련(소비에트연방 몽골계통이 강하다. 물론 아플레이아데스도 있다)이 배후에 있고, 이런 저런 이유로 강한 것이다. 러시아를 극히 미워하는 놈들은 영국놈들이다. 왜 러시아를 미워하느냐 하면, 러시아가 몽골계통이기 때문이다. 물론 아플레이아데스도 있다. 그리고 다른 여러민족이 있는데 다만 칭기즈칸의 영향으로 몽골세력이 존재한다. 그래서 영국놈들 비위를 거슬린다. 그래서 영국놈들이 프랑스 나폴레옹, 독일 히틀러를 배후사주하여 러시아를 치는 것이다. 게다가 미국도 소련을 대상으로 일전을 불사한다고 맞대응하게 만든다. 이게 영국놈들인데, 근본원인을 보면, 몽골계라는 이유이다. 박종권이도 몽골계이다. 가장 골치아픈 놈들로서 고구려 곰족세력과 몽골세력을 영국놈들이 손꼽는다. 자기들 하는 일에 방해가 된다. 고구려 곰족세력은 이미 히로시마 나가사키에 원자탄 투하해서 다 죽였다. 멸족된 것이다. 그러나 몽골이 남았는데, 이게 러시아다. 그래서 지랄지랄하고 시비걸고 전쟁벌리고 그러는거다 고구려곰족은 비파충류계통이다. 몽골은, 나찰적인간류 혹은 어떤 다른 계통이라고 추론된다. 이 아플레이아데스 도적들과는 아주 다르다. 하지만, 사람사는 세상에서 무언가를 할수 있었던 것은 몽골이다. 몽골세력이 집권하던 원나라에서는 도교와 구파일방 무림세력이 형성된다. 그러나 원나라이전을 보면, 그런게 없고, 사교 마교가 판을 치고, 백련교를 비롯해서 마왕 마귀들이 설치던 곳이 중국이다. 게다가, 영국도 마찬가지다. 원나라시기는 그래도 중국이 사람사는 곳이다. 나찰비슷한 사람들이다. 은하연합원로원, 은하대전연합원로원, 민타카연합원로원, 아틀란티스17연합동맹원로원