A Short History of Spain- Part 3: The Visigothic Legacy

The Visi Who?

The Visig­oths. You’ve heard of them, but you can’t real­ly remem­ber why. Often lost in his­to­ry, the Visig­oths (East­ern Goths as opposed the West­ern Ostro­goths) actu­al­ly played an over­sized role in the tran­si­tion from Roman Europe to what we com­mon­ly refer to as Medieval Europe. Not the least of their con­tri­bu­tions to this tran­si­tion was the sack of Rome itself under their leader Alar­ic, in 410 AD. While the West­ern Empire would con­tin­ue to limp for­ward for a few more decades, The Visig­oths were set­tling most of Gaul (mod­ern France) and His­pania (The Iber­ian Penin­su­la) uncontested.

In the Span­ish con­text, the Visig­oths ruled for only 250 years and are often remem­bered for their trib­al infight­ing and the lack of polit­i­cal orga­ni­za­tion that facil­i­tat­ed the Umayyad (Mus­lim) Con­quest of the Penin­su­la in 711 AD. While these may be true, the Visig­oths left two often unap­pre­ci­at­ed lega­cies to Spain’s history.


A Christian State

First and fore­most, the Visig­oths made Spain a Catholic nation. This is no small his­tor­i­cal mile­stone. Catholi­cism became (and remains to some extent) a core fea­ture of the nation’s iden­ti­ty. What do we mean when we say Catholic nation? After all, by the arrival of the Visig­oths to the Iber­ian Penin­su­la much of the Roman pop­u­la­tion was already con­vert­ed to Chris­tian­i­ty. Nev­er­the­less, it was a non-polit­i­cal faith that was prac­ticed out­side the scope of state pow­er. When the Visig­oths arrived, they bought a new Chris­tian­i­ty with them. This was not the Nicene Chris­tian­i­ty still prac­ticed by the Penin­su­la’s roman­ized natives, but rather Ari­an­ism, which (with­out going into detail, did not rec­og­nize the Holy Trin­i­ty as we under­stand it today). As the Visig­oths began to con­sol­i­date pow­er on the Penin­su­la, they real­ized that con­vert­ing to Nicene (Roman) Chris­tian­i­ty could be a tool to facil­i­tate fur­ther con­sol­i­da­tion of nation­al pow­er. Their con­ver­sion indeed elim­i­nat­ed much of the fric­tion between the new rul­ing class and their native His­pan­ic sub­jects. The key to change, how­ev­er, was in estab­lish­ing this Nicene Chris­t­ian faith as an ele­ment of state pow­er. Rather than a hered­i­tary monar­chy, Visig­oth­ic kings were to be cho­sen by a coun­cil of bish­ops. This enor­mous polit­i­cal influ­ence bestowed upon the cler­gy would be a key fea­ture of the future Span­ish nation, even after the estab­lish­ment of an hered­i­tary nobil­i­ty. Fur­ther­more, it would serve as the basis for the eccle­si­as­tic fuero (the legal rights grant­ed in per­pe­tu­ity to the church as an institution).

Modern Toledo, long ago the capitol city of Visigothic Iberia

Modern Toledo, long ago the capitol city of Visigothic Iberia

The second legacy of the Visigoths is even more fascinating. Although the Visigoths are caricatured as illiterate bearded Germanic barbarians, their enlightened sense of justice resulted in one of the most important legal frameworks since the Hammurabi Code. This is not to say that there had been no law since the Babylonians. The Romans had extensive legal frameworks and were famous for the brutal enforcement of their laws. That being said, these systems were bifurcated providing one set of standards for the ruling class and another for the subject class. In Rome it was the citizen/non-citizen divide. 

In 654, the Visigoth King Recceswinth published the Lex Visigothorum. In the same way that the Visigoths closed the gap spiritually with their subjects via their conversion to Roman Christianity, this new legal code took the revolutionary step of applying a common set of laws to all Iberians, both Visigoths and former Roman subjects. It was a universal code. Furthermore, it offered remarkable protection to women, guaranteeing them the right to inherit property and independently manage business interests. Although grossly diluted over time, the Lex would form the basis for Castilian code re-established by Ferdinand III in the thirteenth century and thus permeate an ideal (if not often always well implemented) Iberian legal framework over the centuries. 

These “closing of the gaps” in Iberian culture and politics failed to prevent the history-changing Islamic conquest of the Peninsula beginning in 711 AD, but it did create a national identity built around religion and common law that would serve as the spine of the eventual resistance to Muslim rule and the subsequent Reconquista. Visitors in Spain today will see little evidence of the Visigoths. Some architecture remains, especially in Toledo, which served as the capitol of Visigothic Iberia. Spain’s Gothic past is hidden behind the more palpable legacies of the Romans, Arabs, and Catholic monarchies. The Visigoths, while not the bricks of Spain’s edifice, certainly deserve to be recognized as the mortar.

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