Complete chronology
Full overview and deeper context for every journey step.
461–475
Son of a general
The biography of Romulus Augustulus is inseparable from that of his father Orestes, who was the more historically significant figure. Orestes had served as a secretary to Attila the Hun before the Hunnic empire collapsed, then transferred his abilities and ambitions into western Roman service. He rose to become magister militum — effectively the senior military commander — under the emperor Julius Nepos. The young Romulus was the instrument of his father's ambitions: a boy of Roman and presumably presentable descent who could be placed on the throne while Orestes controlled the military. The name chosen for the boy combined the legendary founder of Rome with a diminutive of Augustus — a grandiose construction that almost everyone noticed was ironic.
Names chosen to invoke greatness have a way of being remembered precisely when the greatness fails to materialise.
475
Orestes seizes power
In August 475, Orestes moved against Julius Nepos with the support of the federate barbarian troops — Germanic soldiers serving within the Roman military system — who made up the bulk of the western army. Nepos fled to Dalmatia, where he would continue to be recognised as emperor by the eastern court in Constantinople and by some western officials for years afterward. Orestes had achieved his coup but not resolved the underlying tension: the same federate troops who had brought him to power immediately began demanding land grants in Italy — an expectation that had fuelled previous military revolts and that Orestes refused to satisfy. He had used soldiers he could not pay what they actually wanted.
A military coup that relies on promises it cannot keep has solved one problem by creating a larger one.
475–476
Ten months on the throne
The reign of Romulus Augustulus is notable almost entirely for its brevity and for the name attached to its end. The boy emperor cannot have exercised any real authority — he was perhaps fourteen years old and was clearly a proxy for his father's power. Orestes governed, managed what remained of the western administrative apparatus, and tried to hold off the demands of the federates for land. The federates were led by Odoacer, a chieftain of mixed Germanic background who had served in the Roman military and understood its machinery well. Their demands were clear; Orestes's refusal was equally clear. The confrontation that followed was not a clash of civilisations but a fairly straightforward military mutiny.
The figure with the title and the figure with the power are sometimes different people, and when they diverge, the title becomes a liability.
476
Odoacer's revolt
Odoacer's revolt was swift and militarily decisive. Orestes was captured and executed at Piacenza in late August 476. The teenage emperor surrendered without resistance — there was none to offer. Odoacer deposed him, and at this point made a decision of historical importance: rather than putting Romulus to death, he sent him into comfortable exile at the Castellum Lucullanum, a fortified villa at Pizzofalcone near Naples. The reasons are not fully clear — contemporary sources suggest that Odoacer considered the boy too young and too evidently a pawn to merit execution, or that there was something in his bearing that inspired pity. He was given an annual pension and appears to have lived there quietly for decades.
The fact that some historical turning points end in mercy rather than blood can make them harder to recognise as turning points.
476
The imperial regalia sent east
The most politically significant act associated with Romulus's deposition was not his deposition itself but what happened to the symbols of western imperial power. Odoacer sent the imperial diadem and other regalia to Constantinople with a message to Zeno: one emperor was sufficient for the entire Roman world, and Odoacer would govern Italy under eastern nominal authority while exercising effective independence. Zeno's response was characteristically oblique — he replied that Julius Nepos, still alive in Dalmatia, was technically the legitimate western emperor and should be recognised. Odoacer ignored this. But the sending of the regalia marked the moment when the western imperial office was formally acknowledged, even by the man who had just abolished it, as no longer necessary.
Sometimes the most revealing act is not the seizure of power but what the seizer chooses to do with the symbols of what they have seized.
476–c. 511
Comfortable exile
The last historically attested reference to Romulus Augustulus is in a letter written by Cassiodorus on behalf of the Ostrogothic king Theodoric the Great, probably around 507–511. The letter appears to increase his pension, suggesting he was still alive at that point and that the new Italian administration was maintaining the arrangement Odoacer had put in place. The castellum he was held in was a substantial fortified complex on a promontory above the Bay of Naples — not a prison in the conventional sense but a place from which he had no reason and perhaps no ability to depart. He grew old there, historically invisible. Archaeology has found evidence of continued occupation of the site into the early medieval period.
A figure placed at the hinge of history can spend the rest of their life in total obscurity, unknown even to those who remember the event they gave their name to.
476 AD
Was 476 really the end?
For contemporaries, 476 was not necessarily a cataclysmic date. Julius Nepos continued to be recognised in some quarters as the legitimate western emperor until his murder in 480. The eastern empire continued without interruption. Trade, law, and even local Roman administration continued in Italy and elsewhere for years. The designation of 476 as the key date comes primarily from Gibbon and the historiographical tradition that followed him, looking for a clean end to a process that was actually gradual and contested. Historians have argued that the real 'fall' of Rome was dispersed across centuries — the sack of 410, the division after Theodosius, the loss of North Africa in the 430s and 440s, the deposition of 476, and the final end of senatorial resistance in the 530s.
The dates we assign to the beginnings and ends of historical eras say as much about what we need to understand as about what actually happened.
476 AD
The significance of the name
The coincidence of names was not lost on contemporaries. Several ancient writers noted the irony: that the empire should end with a figure who bore the names of its legendary founder (Romulus) and its first actual emperor (Augustus, of which Augustulus was a diminutive — literally 'little Augustus'). The names carried the full weight of Roman history and made the contrast with the reality of 476 all the more pointed. A boy puppet, placed on the throne by his ambitious father, deposed after ten months, exiled to a coastal villa — and bearing the grandest names the Roman world had produced. Whether this irony was deliberately constructed by Orestes, who chose the names, or was simply the way it turned out, it gave the ending of the western empire a narrative neatness that history rarely provides.
History occasionally produces ironies so precise that they seem constructed, and the most durable ones are those that require no embellishment.
After 476
A symbolic end
The Romulus Augustulus legacy is almost purely symbolic, and the symbolism is borrowed from the event rather than from the man. He was a passive instrument of Orestes's ambitions, a teenage figurehead for a military coup, and a convenient person to remove when that coup failed. Yet his name appears on more timelines than those of many rulers who actually governed, because it attaches to a date that helps people organise the end of antiquity. The convention of 476 as the fall of the Western Roman Empire is taught widely, challenged constantly, and retained because the alternatives are harder: a process stretching through military defeats, fiscal exhaustion, lost provinces, barbarian settlement, eastern continuity, and changing identities. The boy who did almost nothing became the label for almost everything.
Historical significance is not always earned by action — sometimes it is assigned by position, by timing, and by the needs of those who later tell the story.