The invasions of the Roman Empire by Germanic tribes starting c.160C.E.
seems in hindsight like a sudden eruption of a brand new threat.
However, the growth of these tribes spanned two centuries before they
were able to successfully challenge Rome. There were three main lines
of development in this regard, two of them amounting to aggressive
policies on the Romans’ part. The most blatant of these was a policy
of mounting continuous attacks on the Germanic tribes bordering the
empire not just in order to keep them at bay, but also to keep the
legions busy and to win glory for the emperors. Naturally, this
provided incentive for various Germanic tribes to unite in bigger
confederations. The first notable example of such a confederation was
that of the Marcomanni who broke through the Danube frontier defenses
in the 160s and occupied so much of Marcus Aurelius’ reign. Another
Roman policy was to subsidize some tribes and turn them against others
to keep them all weak and divided. In the long run, this sometimes
backfired, because it gave some Germanic leaders the wealth to attract
followers and build up their own power. In additions to wars, there
were other points of contact between the Germanic tribes and the richer
Roman civilization. Trade was the most obvious, but there were men who
crossed the frontier to fight in the Roman army, as well as others who
were taken as slaves by the Romans and made their way back home.
Through these contacts they learned Roman military and diplomatic
techniques, which helped them unite in bigger confederations and fight
more effectively against the legions.
Eventually, all these factors encouraged Germanic leaders to attack
Rome for a variety of reasons. One was to keep their own warriors
busy. Another was to win plunder with which they could reward their
warriors and attract new ones to their standards. Finally, such raids
into Roman territory would hopefully keep the Romans off balance and
preempt Roman attacks on their territories. By the mid second century,
we can see various Germanic tribes coalescing into several large
confederations and peoples: the Marcomanni, Franks, Goths, and
Alemanni. Pressure kept building up between and behind these peoples,
unleashing the first of their invasions, that of the Marcomanni, in the
160s. Unfortunately, that was only the beginning of centuries of such
conflict.