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is faintly   marked by the obscure names and imperfect annals of Zeno, Anastasius, and Justin, who successively ascended to the   throne of Constantinople. During the same period, Italy   revived and flourished under the government of a Gothic king,   who might have deserved a statue among the best and bravest   of the ancient Romans.   Theodoric the Ostrogoth, the fourteenth in lineal descent of   the royal line of the Amali, was born in the neighborhood of   Vienna two years after the death of Attila. A recent victory had   restored the independence of the Ostrogoths; and the three   brothers, Walamir, Theodemir, and Widimir, who ruled that   warlike nation with united counsels, had separately pitched their habitations in the fertile though desolate province of   Pannonia. The Huns still threatened their revolted subjects,   but their hasty attack was repelled by the single forces of   Walamir, and the news of his victory reached the distant camp   of his brother in the same auspicious moment that the favorite   concubine of Theodemir was delivered of a son and heir. In the   eighth year of his age, Theodoric was reluctantly yielded by his father to the public interest, as the pledge of an alliance which   Leo, emperor of the East, had consented to purchase by an   annual subsidy of three hundred pounds of gold. The royal   hostage was educated at Constantinople with care and   tenderness. His body was formed to all the exercises of war,   his mind was expanded by the habits of liberal conversation;   he frequented the schools of the most skilful masters; but he   disdained or neglected the arts of Greece, and so ignorant did   he always remain of the first elements of science, that a rude   mark was

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