Disambiguation evidence for Sack of Rome 455 AD via surface form

"Sack of Rome (455)"


As subject (50)

Triples where this entity appears as subject under the label "Sack of Rome (455)".

Predicate Object
associatedWith Empress Licinia Eudoxia
associatedWith Petronius Maximus
associatedWith Pope Leo I
combatant Vandals
combatant Western Roman Empire
commander Genseric
conflict decline of the Western Roman Empire
country Western Roman Empire
describedIn later Latin chronicles
describedIn works of Procopius
duration about two weeks
followed Sack of Rome 410 AD
surface form: Sack of Rome (410)
followedBy Sack of Rome 455 AD self-linksurface differs
surface form: Sack of Rome (546)
follows Sack of Rome 410 AD
surface form: Sack of Rome (410) by the Visigoths
hasCause assassination of Emperor Valentinian III
hasCause breach of marriage alliance between Vandals and Western Roman Empire
hasCause invitation by Empress Licinia Eudoxia (according to some sources)
hasCause political instability in the Western Roman Empire
hasEffect consolidation of Vandal power in the western Mediterranean
hasEffect economic loss for Rome
hasEffect further weakening of Western Roman imperial authority
hasEffect psychological shock in the Roman world
hasEndTime 455-06-16
hasStartTime 455-06-02
instanceOf historical event
instanceOf military conflict
instanceOf sack
involvedEthnicGroup Alans
involvedEthnicGroup Roman Empire
surface form: Romans
involvedEthnicGroup Vandals
location Rome
location Western Roman Empire
method siege followed by organized plunder
notableFeature Pope Leo I negotiated with Genseric
notableFeature Vandals carried off large quantities of treasure
notableFeature Vandals removed spoils from the Temple in Jerusalem previously taken by Titus
notableFeature Vandals took many Romans as captives
notableFeature systematic looting rather than mass slaughter
opposingCommander Petronius Maximus
opposingCommander Roman Senate
surface form: Roman Senate (collective leadership)
partOf Fall of the Western Roman Empire
partOf Late Antiquity
pointInTime 455
pointInTime 5th century
religiousContext Christianity dominant in the Roman Empire
result Vandal victory
result extensive plundering of Rome
significantEventFor Rome
significantEventFor Vandal Kingdom
significantEventFor Western Roman Empire

As object (2)

Triples where some other subject referred to this entity as "Sack of Rome (455)".

Sack of Rome 410 AD followedBy
"Sack of Rome (455)"
↳ resolves to Sack of Rome 455 AD
surface form: Sack of Rome (410)
Vandals notableEvent
"Sack of Rome (455)"
↳ resolves to Sack of Rome 455 AD